'Nothing, I think, for centuries
past', Anna Barbauld wrote of the anti-slavery
movement in 1789, 'has done the nation so
much honour, because it must have proceeded
from the most liberal motives-the purest love
of humanity and justice.' [1]
For many Dissenters, the nascent movement
against cruelty to animals could 'do the nation
honour' for much the same reasons-if it were
more fully realised. Whereas the anti-slavery
movement had acquired a high profile by the
1790s, what we would call the animal-rights
movement, which at this point was often little
more than social recognition of the need for
kindness to animals, lagged behind. Several
cultural currents, however, were in place
to anticipate-and in many respects promote-the
social movement toward animal rights that
began with Parliamentary debate over an anti-bull-baiting
bill in 1800 and 1802, continued with the
founding of the first Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals in 1809, and led eventually
to the Victorian era's increased awareness
of cruelty to animals, which, if it did not
totally abolish the problem, helped to stigmatise
animal abuse as socially unacceptable in the
manner it is stigmatised today.
During
the late eighteenth century, despite its later
emergence as a social problem in its own right,
raising human consciousness of cruelty to
animals was often piggybacked (pardon the
pun) onto a set of social issues centred on
liberal consciousness-raising about man's
inhumanity to man-especially slavery. [2]
For Dissenters in particular, anti-slavery,
writes historian David Turley, was 'part of
a religious, philanthropic, and reform complex'
that included pacifism, political reform,
and, often, animal rights as well. [3]
Although direct links between Dissent and
the animal rights movement have not been clearly
drawn to date, the degree to which humanity
towards animals harmonised with Dissenting
moral and political beliefs makes it likely
that Dissenters generally supported increased
awareness of cruelty and measures to prevent
it. [4]
'Based on the dissenters' unitarian concept
of life', writes Marlon Ross, 'a seamless
thread runs from practical experience through
moral conduct to political action. To cut
that thread at any point would be to alter
the character of all three spheres.' [5]
The implicit foundation unifying these types
of activism-a humane extension of sympathy
not only to powerless humans but to other
subject and powerless animal creatures-owed
its emotional dimension not only to generalised
ideas of 'sensibility' and pity but to Christian
ideals of 'mercy, pity, peace, and love',
in Blake's terms, that undergirded Dissenting
morality and conduct. 'Whatever we do by another',
wrote George Nicholson in On the Primeval
Diet of Man (1801), a tract linking
slavery to the consumption of animal flesh,
'we do by ourselves'. This idea of the mutuality
between human beings and their social and
natural environments was a staple of Dissenting
thought and the basis for much Dissenting
activism. In the minds of liberal social activists,
including Dissenting activists, anti-slavery
and the cause of animal rights became philosophically
linked, united by the theological belief in
the common subjection of human and animal
creation before God. 
In
the eighteenth century, increasing awareness
of cruelty to animals and the moral basis
of pro-animal activism was reinforced by children's
literature, which throughout the eighteenth
century had used animals as prompts to the
growth of young readers' consciences. An educator
and a popular writer for children as well
as a poet and public intellectual, Anna Letitia
Barbauld (1743-1825), a lifelong member of
the liberal Dissenting community centred around
Warrington Academy and prominent Unitarian
intellectuals such as Joseph Priestley, helped
to shape and establish this moral mission.
Her Hymns in Prose for Children (1781),
reprinted in many editions throughout the
nineteenth century, makes frequent use of
animals and the natural world to impart to
children a fairly benevolent but unsentimental
view of nature, indicating a belief in the
correctness and inevitability of natural hierarchies.
'[Animals] may thank [God] in their hearts,
but we can thank him with our tongues; we
are better than they, and can praise him better',
Barbauld writes in Hymn II. 'Trees that blossom
and little lambs that skip about, if you could,
you would say how good he is; but you are
dumb, we will say it for you.' [6]
Samuel Johnson, disappointed at what he saw
as Barbauld's waste of her classical education
on children's writing and marriage to 'a little
Presbyterian parson', [7]
ridiculed her pedagogical use of animals to
reinforce human feelings of superiority: 'She
tells the children', he writes, ' "This
is a cat, and that is a dog, with four legs
and a tail; see there! You are much better
than a cat or a dog, for you can speak." '
[8]
Moira Ferguson has pointed out that the education
in natural order found in children's literature
of the period is an implicit education in
social order as well, training young readers
as proper subjects as well as moral beings.
[9]
As her work for children and adults demonstrates,
education in social and intellectual 'order'
and systems of hierarchy was an important
aspect of Barbauld's work as well. [10]
Thus, writing for children can become an occasion
for 'education' far beyond the standard injunctions
to children to follow the Golden Rule, obey
their parents or governesses, and be kind
to animals-it can be the first stage in the
inculcation of what Gary Kelly has identified
as the revolutionary middle-class values of
community, responsibility, the denial of present
gratification for future good, foresight,
and self-monitoring. [11]
These values, highly characteristic of and
dear to Rational Dissenters, are integral
to a politically and socially responsible
self such as those liberal Dissenters and
activists hoped to create in a new generation
of English subjects.
Despite
her apparent advocacy of hierarchical systems
in the natural world, Barbauld was no mere
apologist for political hierarchies. Like
many Dissenters, whose politically liberal,
anti-hierarchical tendencies were rooted in
centuries of 'outsider' status and denial
of civil rights under the Test and Corporation
Acts, Barbauld calls for a reconfiguration
of existing social structures according to
what liberal Dissenters saw as common-sense
and universal values of equality, mercy, and
peace, which drove their political protest
and activism in such causes as anti-slavery,
governmental reform, pacifism, and animal
rights. In her poems 'The Mouse's Petition'
and 'The Caterpillar', Barbauld draws upon
these interconnected cultural strains to fashion
morality tales which, despite their sentimentally
exciting animal subjectivities and their subtle
whimsy, are primarily for adults, not children.
Using the tropes and forms of children's writing-particularly
the themes of human tyranny over powerless
animals-in combination with the very adult
and characteristically Dissenting political
and moral concerns of pacifism, the abuse
of political power, and examination of one's
own position as a morally aware member of
society enables Barbauld simultaneously to
engage with a number of culturally sensitive
issues and literary forms. Thus, she increases
the psychological and emotional effectiveness
of what are at heart political petitions among
a readership that had likely been reared on
sentimental moral tales of animals subject
to human tyranny and was becoming increasingly
aware-if only to a small degree-of the animal
cruelty omnipresent in English society.
Accounts
of this cruelty make difficult reading for
twenty-first-century animal lovers. Visitors
to the menagerie housed at the Tower of London
could bring a live dog or cat as food for
the lions and tigers, to save the price of
admission. [12]
Larks were trapped en masse and sold
as food; horses had their ears and tails cropped
for a stylish appearance; pigs intended for
the table were beaten to death with knotted
ropes to tenderise their flesh. [13]
Throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries, in the name of 'science' (which
was sometimes little more than pseudoscience,
although William Harvey's discovery of the
circulatory system in 1628 was made possible
by dissection of stags), animals were surgically
explored while still alive. Joseph Addison
relates what he calls a 'barbarous' test of
animal love: 'A person who was well skilled
in dissection opened a bitch, and as she lay
in most exquisite tortures offered her one
of her young puppies, which she immediately
fell a-licking; and for the time seemed insensible
to her own pain; on the removal she kept her
eye fixed on it and began a wailing sort of
cry which seemed to proceed rather from the
loss of her young one than the sense of her
own torment.' [14]
Bull-baiting, writes Moira Ferguson, 'had
long existed due to an ancient law that required
baiting before a bull's slaughter; it was
probably the first cruelty to be tackled [by
activists] because premeditation was easy
to prove [.] [and] it was simpler to tackle
bulls than horses, with which the aristocracy
were much more involved.' [15]
The process was described by a contemporary
witness: 'They tie a Rope to the Root of the
Horns of the Ox or Bull, [.] Several Butchers,
or other Gentlemen, [.] let loose one of the
Dogs: [.] [the dog] runs round [the bull],
and tries to get beneath his Belly, in order
to seize him by the Muzzle, or Dewlap, or
the Pendant Glands [.] In the End [.] either
the Dog tears out the Piece he has laid Hold
on, and falls, or else remains fix'd to him,
with an Obstinacy that would never end, if
they did not pull him off.' Bull-baiting was
equally dangerous for the dog, as this observer
indicates: '[The bull's] chief Aim is not
to gore the Dog with the Point of his Horn,
but to slide one of them under the Dog's Belly,
(who creeps close to the Ground to hinder
it) and to throw him so high in the Air that
he may break his neck in the Fall. This often
happens.' [16]
Those who attempted to intercede on behalf
of abused animals usually met with, at the
very least, incredulous remarks such as that
reported by equestrian and humanitarian John
Lawrence, author of A Philosophical and
Practical Treatise on Horses (1796):
'I once attempted to reason with a fellow
(and he was of the rich vulgar) who was cruelly
beating an innocent horse, till the blood
spun from its nostrils [.] the reply I obtained
was, "G-- D-- my eyes, Jack, you are talking
as though the horse was a Christian.' [17]
Unified
or consistent animal-rights movements did
not exist until the early nineteenth century;
rather, a sprinkling of eighteenth-century
pamphleteers, writers, philosophers, and isolated
activists approached the question of cruelty
to animals from a variety of social and moral
perspectives, labouring to establish the awareness
of cruelty to animals and broaden the sentimental
mindset under which such cruelty could be
officially stigmatised. Vegetarianism and
anti-slavery were among the causes linked
explicitly to the status of animals and to
existing political power structures in need
of reform. However, such ideas were not generally
overtly proclaimed or widespread during the
eighteenth century, despite the efforts of
isolated activists like Susannah Watts (1768-1842),
who 'alongside a circle of activist-abolitionist
friends, committed herself to helping diverse,
undervalued communities that included animals,
birds, insects, slaves, old men and women,
and distressed Irishwomen.' [18]
Lord Thomas Erskine, abolitionist and proponent
of the 1809 Parlimentary anti-cruelty bill,
was known for his bizarre menagerie of pets,
including a dog rescued from boys who had
been tormenting it, a goose which followed
him around his estate, a macaw, and even a
pair of leeches by which he had been blooded
(he kept them in a glass of water and named
them 'Home' and 'Cline' after famous surgeons
of the day). [19]
As one might suspect, in eighteenth-century
society in general such activists were often
regarded as eccentric at best. E. S. Turner
notes that:
The lone humanitarian was
liable to be suspected of every aberration
from old-fashioned Puritanism to new-fangled
Rousseauism or Methodism. He was dismissed
as one suffering from the scourge of 'sensibility,'
that often morbid obsession with the sufferings
of others; and his seeming unmanly hysteria,
his claim to kinship even with creatures
that crawled, roused only derision in hardier
breasts. [20]
Such isolated humanitarians,
however, did effect some change, albeit limited.
Outrage over the Parliamentary defeat of an
anti-bull-baiting bill prompted the founding
of the first SPCA (Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals) in Liverpool on 22
October 1809. [21]
Elizabeth Heyrick, a Quaker who had been among
those campaigning for the passage of the bill,
'secretly purchased' a bull intended for the
annual bull-baiting events at Bonsall, a town
in Derbyshire, after her attempt to stop protests
against the events proved ineffective. [22]
Fox-hunting and the abuse of cart and carriage
horses were also targets of activists' inquiry.
Unfortunately, despite such efforts, glaring
abuses persisted: 'one patriotic journalist
regretfully concluded in 1825 that "attached
as we are to our native land [.] we are bound
to confess that the proverb is but too true,
'that England is the hell of dumb animals' " '.
[23]
For Rational Dissenters and other religious
activists, the sentiment expressed in this
'proverb' would have stood in ironic contradiction
to Proverbs 12:10: 'a righteous man regardeth
the life of his beast, but the tender mercies
of the wicked are cruel'. [24]
The
overtly educational or moral aims of pro-animal
writers and activists were often supported
not only by Christian values of mercy but
also by the language of sensibility. Augustan
thinkers, following Locke, began to question
the notion, relied upon by both serious scientists
and amateur vivisectors, that animals were
machines incapable of feeling genuine pain.
Addressing this issue in Introduction to
the Principles of Morals and Legislation (printed
1780, published 1789), Jeremy Bentham argued
that '[t]he question is not, Can they reason? nor,
Can they talk? but, Can they Suffer?'
[25]
In the Spectator No. 120 (1711),
Addison scolded 'the innumerable retainers
of physic' who experimented upon live animals.
[26]
Essayist Soames Jenyns, in 'On Cruelty to
Inferior Animals' (1782), asked the florid
yet pointed question, 'How will man, that
sanguinary tyrant, be able to excuse himself
from the charge of those innumerable cruelties
inflicted on his unoffending subjects committed
to his care, formed for his benefit, and placed
under his authority by their common Father?'
[27]
Even the great satirical artist William Hogarth
was not immune to the tactics of sentimental
and moral appeal; he described his motivation
for making his well-known print series The
Four Stages of Cruelty, which depicts
a progression from torturing dogs in the 'first
stage' to murder in the third and, fittingly,
medical dissection of the torturer and murderer
in the fourth, in terms that foreshadow nineteenth-century
concerns with the rights of animals and reflect
eighteenth-century ideals of sensibility:

The four stages of cruelty,
were done in hopes of preventing in some
degree that cruel treatment of poor Animals
which makes the streets of London more disagreeable
to the human mind, than any thing whatever,
the very describing of which gives pain.
[.] but it could not be done in too strong
a manner as the most stony heart(s) were
meant to be effected [sic] by them.
[28]
Perhaps the most well-known
expression of pro-animal sentiment in the
eighteenth century was Lemuel Gulliver's exaggerated
(and misanthropic) preference for horses over
humanity following his visit to the Houyhnhnms
in Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels (1726),
which Christine Kenyon-Jones, in describing
a similar tendency in Byron, calls 'theriophily'.
[29]
Children's
books in particular, new as an eighteenth-century
genre, 'quickly [recognised animals] as promising
didactic instruments, and works of both juvenile
natural history and moral fiction were loaded
with uplifting messages about the need to
treat them kindly', writes Harriet Ritvo.
[30]
Sarah Trimmer's popular Fabulous Histories:
Designed for the Instruction of Children respecting
their Treatment of Animals (1786) instructs
children in social and moral practices through
the example of a 'family of robins nested
in the orchard of a benevolent household,
the Bensons, whose children, Frederick and
Harriet, with the help of Joe the gardener,
tend the birds.' [31]
Trimmer's story teaches that animals are to
be subordinated to humans whenever possible-the
Bensons are no vegetarians, for instance-but
that as God created humans and animals alike,
humans, as the stronger and more reasonable
lords of creation, have a duty to treat their
inferiors kindly, since 'even men and women
might expect to be annihilated, by
the power of the great Creator' as animals
are too frequently crushed by callous humans.
[32]
Mary Wollstonecraft's Original Stories
(1788), laden with injunctions to be kind
to animals, features the strict and moral
governess Mrs Mason, who, to the astonishment
of her chastised charges, steps off a path
into wet grass to spare a passing snail. In
Maria Edgeworth's story 'The Little Dog Trusty'
(1801), a boy frightened of punishment blames
the milk he has just spilt on his long-suffering
dog, who becomes the property of the boy's
kind brother once their parents discover the
deception. Eleanor Frere Fenn (1743-1813),
author of (under the pseudonym 'Mrs Lovechild')
of The Rational Dame; or, Hints towards
supplying Prattle for Children (1790?)
justified the pedagogical use of animals by
claiming that 'nothing could more effectually
tend to infuse benevolence than the teaching
of little ones early to consider every part
of nature as endued with feeling.' [33]
In an echo of Rational Dissenting beliefs
about the interconnectedness of personal attitudes
towards one part of creation with actions
toward another, one children's book editor
noted:
Every one must have noticed
in most children, a tyrannical, sometimes
a cruel, propensity to torment animals within
their power, such as -- persecuting flies,
torturing birds, cats, dogs, &c [.]
[Children need] lessons of compassion for
the dumb creation, as a fellow feeling
for their own species [.] because an early
neglect of the duties of humanity, in regard
to the first, leads but too naturally
to an omission of those duties as to the
last. [34]
Alexander
Pope echoed this sentiment:
One of the first pleasures
we allow [children] is the licence of inflicting
pain upon poor animals; almost as soon as
we are sensible what life is ourselves we
make it our sport to take it from other
creatures. I cannot but believe a very good
use might be made of the fancy which children
have for birds and insects. [35]
Teaching children to have
sensitivity to the feelings of animals develops
their capacity for empathy with other people
as well, making the individual child aware
that he or she is part of the mutually responsible
and responsive network of interlinked, divinely
created beings-human and animal-that makes
up the moral universe of Christianity in general
and Rational Dissent in particular. A child
who has thoroughly internalised and developed
his or her own compassion for animals, and
by extension other human beings, will grow
up to become, morally and intellectually,
a true Christian and a true citizen of the
world, as able to feel moral indignation about
slavery or the carnages of the Napoleonic
Wars as to be outraged at the abuse of a cart-horse
in the street outside his or her own front
door.
A
whimsical plea for release from a mouse Priestley
has imprisoned for scientific experiments,
'The Mouse's Petition' (composed c.1769,
published 1792) lends itself easily to political
readings, as well as to commentary on animal
experimentation and vivisection. However,
like Barbauld's poem 'An Inventory of the
Furniture in Dr. Priestley's Study', its use
of particular physical detail (in this case,
the details of the mouse's imprisonment) points
at an animating moral order that, although
it does have obvious political implications,
is not limited to politics. The poem humorously
yet pointedly expresses a belief in interconnectedness
between humans and animals, the small and
the large, and the concrete and the abstract-all
as part of the ordered Christian universe.
The emphasis on the unity of spirit and 'mind'
throughout time and 'matter's varying forms',
animated by the same breath of life although
the 'forms' of that life may vary, have been
linked through James Thomson's poem 'Liberty'
(1735-36) to the theories of Pythagoras, with
which Barbauld (and almost certainly Priestley)
may have been familiar in their unmediated
form. 'Liberty' runs, in part, '[Pythagoras]
taught that Life's indissoluble Flame, / From
Brute to Man, and Man to Brute again, / For
ever shifting, runs th' eternal round.' [36]
In 'The Mouse's Petition', in keeping with
Rational Dissenting ideology, all spheres
of rational and spiritual inquiry, including
political theory, classical education, and
contemporary literature are brought to bear
upon one another, united to a common purpose-the
promotion of rational personal judgment in
questions of social morality.
The poem begins with a plea
from the caged mouse to any available listener
to 'hear a pensive prisoner's prayer, / For
liberty that sighs; / And never let thine
heart be shut / Against the wretch's cries'
(ll. 1-4). [37]
The mouse casts its imprisonment in contemporary
political terms, pleading that
If e'er thy breast with
freedom glow'd,
And spurn'd a tyrant's chain,
Let not thy strong oppressive force,
A free-born mouse detain. (ll. 9-12)
Arguing its case logically,
the mouse reasons that even if its jailer
denies it the 'scatter'd gleanings of a feast',
the theft of which has been its only offense,
it surely cannot be denied 'the chearful light'
and 'the vital air', which 'are blessings
widely given' and not subject to individual
control, as food from another's table may
be (ll. 17, 21-22). The jailer should 'let
nature's commoners enjoy / The common gifts
of heaven', since, as Rational Dissenters
believe,
The well taught philosophic
mind
To all compassion gives;
Casts round the world an equal eye,
And feels for all that lives. (ll. 25-28)
In a resonant philosophical
plea, the mouse warns of the moral implications
of its execution: to kill it is to do injury
to creation as a whole, since all of creation
is connected:
If mind, as ancient sages
taught,
A never dying flame,
Still shifts thro' matter's varying forms,
In every form the same,
Beware, lest in the worm
you crush
A brother's soul you find;
And tremble lest thy luckless hand
Dislodge a kindred mind. (ll. 29-36)
Acknowledging contemporary
theological doubt as to the exact amount of
respect animals deserve as fellow creatures-they
may or may not have 'souls' in the human sense,
and hence their deaths may not have quite
the moral weight of the deaths of human beings-Barbauld
nevertheless reinforces Rational Dissenting
ideals of mercy in dealing with fellow creatures:
Or, if this transient gleam
of day
Be all of life we share,
Let pity plead within thy breast
That little all to spare. (ll. 37-40)
Showing mercy to a fellow
creature may mean that a person-similarly
powerless in comparison to the will of God-will
likewise receive mercy in the future:
So, when destruction lurks
unseen,
Which men, like mice, may share,
May some kind angel clear thy path,
And break the hidden snare. (ll. 45-48)
The Dissenting connection
of intellect and spirit is employed in 'The
Mouse's Petition' to challenge the politically
powerful to recognise that they are, like
the powerless, creations of God and subject
to the laws of mercy and accident. Barbauld's
use of the petition form itself is bound up
with this type of connection across social
and political spheres, as Marlon Ross writes:
From Barbauld's dissenting
perspective, petitioning, rather than tearing
apart the political from the moral fabric,
is transformed into a weaving gesture that
binds the aggressive act of a political
demand to the submissive act of prayerful
blessing. By ending with petition as both
demand and prayer, Barbauld points the reader
away from the hypothetical, figurative scene
of the poem and toward the consequential
circumstance of life which no poem can refigure.
[38]
Reinforcing this aim of moral
and social connection, the quotation from
the Aeneid which stands as epigraph
to the poem can be translated as 'To spare
the humble, and tame in war the proud'. [39]
As Barbauld's poem 'The Caterpillar', also
makes clear, such instances of confrontation
with animals or with the natural world can
become opportunities for self-examination
and moral awareness, followed by the impulse
to extend this awareness to the rest of humanity.
The
overt moral aim of the poem is reinforced
by a deliberate indeterminacy as to the origins
of the mouse's 'petition'; by forcing the
reader to consider the circumstances of its
(fictional) composition, the 'petition' directly
implicates the reader in the mouse's imprisonment,
reinforcing Rational Dissenting ideals of
moral connection and responsibility among
all living creatures. The original footnote
to the poem reads: 'Found in the trap, where
he had been confined all night by Dr. Priestley,
for the sake of making experiments with different
kinds of air.' [40]
Deliberately ambiguous, the note not only
recalls Barbauld's practice of leaving poems
in physical circumstances that convey additional
meaning (supposedly, the poem was brought
to Priestley twisted among the bars of the
mouse's cage), [41]
but also raises several questions about the
fate of the mouse and the meaning of its imprisonment.
Has the writer of the poem 'found' the mouse
in the trap, set it free, and composed the
poem after the fact as a cautionary lesson?
Has the writer 'found' only the 'petition'
itself lying on the floor of the cage, left
as a sort of message-in-a-bottle by the mouse
itself before its execution, and acted as
amanuensis? The mouse invites not only the
reader's moral but intellectual and political
involvement, prompting him or her to consider
both the emotional pathos of the imprisoned
animal and the arbitrary, random intervention
of power and tyranny in the life of a powerless
subject-an intervention that leaves its victim,
ironically freed from 'dumb beast' status,
no recourse but words.
Contemporary
critics of 'The Mouse's Petition' were apparently
more tempted to engage with its pathos than
with its politics. One reviewer used the poem
as a springboard for a proto-PETA jeremiad:
'We heartily condemn the lady's humanity for
endeavouring to extricate the little wretch
from misery, and gladly take this opportunity
to testify our abhorrence of the cruelty practised
by experimental philosophers, who seem to
think the brute creation void of sensibility,
or created only for them to torment.' [42]
Rushing to her friend Priestley's defense,
Barbauld noted in the third edition of her
Poems that
what was intended as the
petition of mercy against justice, has been
construed as the plea of humanity against
cruelty. She is certain that cruelty could
never be apprehended from the Gentleman
to whom this is addressed [Priestley]; and
the poor animal would have suffered more
as the victim of domestic economy, than
of philosophical curiosity. [43]
The note, when combined with
the indeterminacy of the 'petition''s origins,
encourages the reader's personal involvement
in moral judgments of the mouse and its jailers,
a moral involvement which is, as we have seen,
directly in keeping with the spirit of Rational
Dissent.
'The
Caterpillar' (composed c.1816, published
1825), like 'The Mouse's Petition', engages
its reader in a moral issue through the use
of nature, ultimately reinforcing the ethics
of Rational Dissent in a plea for humane,
rational approaches to public issues. The
speaker of the poem has been conscripted into
a struggle with nature in the form of a mass
slaughter of garden-destroying caterpillars,
yet looking at an individual caterpillar
as it crawls over her arm drives her to reassert
the Christian ideals of virtue, mercy, and
sympathy present in 'The Mouse's Petition'.
Barbauld's tale of bloody agricultural war
and its insect survivor (which 'stretche[s]
out' its neck like an aristocrat on the guillotine)
deliberately echoes the conflicted British
(and particularly Nonconformist) reaction
to the 'carnage' and refugees of the Napoleonic
Wars, with which Mary Wollstonecraft was also
deeply-and notoriously-concerned. Like Wollstonecraft,
Barbauld, confronted with the questioning
gaze of the innocent caterpillar, must gaze
back-and in that gaze is found the moral and
aesthetic courage to protest the carnage which
has dispossessed the insect.
A
sudden focus on the particular physical details
of the caterpillar's body and the moral details
of its own 'little life'-linked, as 'The Mouse's
Petition' implies, with her own-prompts the
speaker to assert the liberal ethics of Rational
Dissent and the sentimental ethics of humanity
to animals. As in 'The Mouse's Petition',
the direct implication of the speaker in the
caterpillar's survival-here, seen as a direct
physical contact-brings a re-evaluation of
the caterpillar's worth as a fellow creature.
No, helpless thing, I cannot
harm thee now;
Depart in peace, thy little life is safe,
For I have scanned thy form with curious
eye,
Noted the silver line that streaks thy back,
The azure and the orange that divide
Thy velvet sides; thee, houseless wanderer,
My garment has enfolded, and my arm
Felt the light pressure of thy hairy feet;
Thou hast curled round my finger; from its
tip,
Precipitous descent! with stretched out
neck,
Bending thy head in airy vacancy,
This way and that, inquiring, thou hast
seemed
To ask protection; now, I cannot kill thee.
(ll. 1-13)
From this moment of moral
realisation, the speaker is recalled to her
socially imposed 'duty' and struggles to reconcile
moral and agricultural imperatives, the reality
of conscience with economic reality. She 'cannot
harm' the tiny caterpillar through a despotic
use of human strength, yet she realises the
need to protect her own species against the
anonymous mass of caterpillars that will destroy
the food supply. Her tone implies that she
recognises the apparent contradiction of saving
the one after having killed the many:
Yet I have sworn perdition
to thy race,
And recent from the slaughter am I come
Of tribes and embryo nations: I have sought
With sharpened eye and persecuting zeal,
Where, folded in their silken webs they
lay
Thriving and happy; swept them from the
tree
And crushed whole families beneath my foot;
Or, sudden, poured on their devoted heads
The vials of destruction. (ll. 14-22)
Gazing
upon the individual caterpillar makes the
speaker realise that it is a part of social
and familial structures like her own, a member
of 'tribes and embryo nations' which she has
helped to destroy without pity. Anne Mellor
points out that women Romantic writers often
draw instinctive parallels between familial
and political structures, both of which are
torn by tyrannous acts. [44]
'The Caterpillar' extends this point further:
the reproduction of political tyranny in the
individual family can also occur in individual
relationships to nature, as humans are tempted
to 'tyrannise' over animals, thus recreating
human-to-human political conflicts in human-to-animal
conflicts. As in 'The Mouse's Petition', confronting
an individual member of a heretofore demonised
group of 'others' makes the speaker realise
the Pythagorean connection of its life with
her own, extending her own domestic sentiments
and ties to nature as a whole:
This [killing of other
caterpillars] I've done,
Nor felt the touch of pity: but when thou,-
A single wretch, escaped the general doom,
Making me feel and clearly recognize
Thine individual existence, life,
And fellowship of sense with all that breathes,-
Present'st thyself before me, I relent,
And cannot hurt thy weakness. (ll. 22-29)
The 'war' at the domestic
level, the killing of the caterpillars, is
a deliberately employed testing ground for
the possibilities of moral action in other,
larger 'wars'. Just as the speaker, confronting
an individual caterpillar, has realised the
necessity of sparing her enemy, so would soldiers
at the national and international levels be
moved by individual pleas for mercy if they
allowed themselves to be:
--So the storm
Of horrid war, o'erwhelming cities, fields,
And peaceful villages, rolls dreadful on:
The victor shouts trimphant; he enjoys
The roar of cannon and the clang of arms,
And urges, by no soft relentings stopped,
The work of death and carnage. Yet should
one,
A single sufferer from the field escaped,
Panting and pale, and bleeding at his feet,
Lift his imploring eyes,-the hero weeps;
He is grown human, and capricious Pity,
Which would not stir for thousands, melts
for one
With sympathy spontaneous:-'Tis not Virtue,
Yet 'tis the weakness of a virtuous mind.
(ll. 29-42)
The caterpillar, part of
a network of 'tribes and embryo nations',
has made the speaker realise that killing
it means disrupting the emotional order of
an insect community just as human communities
would be disrupted by the loss of one of their
members. Similarly, the caterpillar's plea
for mercy has prompted her to reconsider the
larger social connection between the human
and the animal worlds; if she, as an individual
member of one invading 'army', can grant clemency
to another in this domestic 'war', why cannot
a similar pardon take place at the international
levels of war? If such widespread clemency
were practiced on the battlefields of Europe,
existing political orders would be reconfigured
according to the 'domestic' (and Rational
Dissenting) virtues of mercy and love.
Like
'The Mouse's Petition', 'The Caterpillar',
in its treatment of the individual effects
of war, raises a course of moral action that
disrupts domestic order on several levels,
seeking to reconfigure existing political
values in favor of explicitly Christian values
of compassion and moral responsibility. Calling
a halt to 'the storm / [o]f horrid war' on
a national and international level, granting
mercy to the enemy as the speaker has granted
mercy to the caterpillar, would disrupt existing
moral orders on a grand scale, radically reconfiguring
them according to the Dissenting virtues of
mercy and pacifism, with an animal, so frequently
subject to human 'enemies' in real life, as
the agent of change. To this end, the poem
invites readers, through the plea of the Caterpillar,
to substitute secular definitions of 'strength',
which include glorying in violence, outward
displays of power, and pride in one's ability
to kill, for a Christian definition of 'strength',
demonstrated in self-control, accordance with
moral imperatives, and humble responsibility
to a higher ethical code. A deeply ironic
human tendency, indicative of the gulf between
these value systems, is established by 'The
Caterpillar': we may be able to justify the
slaughter of thousands, but when confronted
with a 'single sufferer from the field escaped',
even the 'capricious Pity' of a hero, 'which
would not stir for thousands, melts for one
/ With sympathy spontaneous' (ll. 36, 39-41).
Barbauld's
insistent and pointed focus on the human (or
caterpillian) costs of war resembles Mary
Wollstonecraft's description of fire-ruined
Copenhagen in Letters from Norway (1796).
While some travellers may be able to look
upon the ruins and pass onward without giving
the scene more than a passing thought, or
to consider the ruins an artefact of picturesque
tourism, the truly 'benevolent heart', in
Wollstonecraft's words, cannot look at such
devastation without suffering along with the
dead or the survivors. Such physical scenes,
Wollstonecraft writes, are necessarily animated
by the anguish of those 'who are no more':
Entering soon after, I
passed amongst the dust and rubbish it had
left, affrighted by viewing the extent of
the devastation; for at least a quarter
of the city had been destroyed. There was
little in the appearance of fallen bricks
and stacks of chimneys to allure the imagination
into soothing melancholy reveries; nothing
to attract the eye of taste, but much to
afflict the benevolent heart. The depredations
of time have always something in them to
employ the fancy, or lead to musing on subjects
which, withdrawing the mind from objects
of sense, seem to give it new dignity: but
here I was treading on live ashes. The sufferers
were still under the pressure of the misery
occasioned by this dreadful conflagration.
I could not take refuge in the thought;
they suffered-but they are no more!
a reflection I frequently summon to calm
my mind, when sympathy rises to anguish.
[45]
Like Wollstonecraft, Barbauld
protested the human tendency to consider war
and its depredations as something remote from,
and therefore not affecting, our own lives.
In her pamphlet Sins of Government, Sins
of the Nation, or a Discourse for the Fast,
appointed on April 19, 1793, published
just after the declaration of war with France,
Barbauld declares:
Of late years indeed, we
have known none of the calamities of war
in our own country, but the wasteful expense
of it; and sitting aloof from those circumstances
of personal provocation, which in some measure
might excuse its fury, we have calmly voted
slaughter and merchandized destruction [.]
We devote a certain number of men to perish
on land and sea, and the rest of us sleep
sound, and protected in our usual occupations,
talk of the events of war as what diversifies
the flat uniformity of life.
We should, therefore, do well
to translate this world war into language
more intelligible to us. When we pay our army
and our navy estimates, let us set down-so
much for killing, so much for maiming, so
much for making widows and orphans, so much
for bringing famine upon a district. [46]
True
to Rational Dissenting ideals, Barbauld insists
that human action, particularly human tragedy
such as war, cannot exist in isolation; misery
and suffering in one corner of the world should
be the concern of people everywhere. Wollstonecraft
and Barbauld imply that while the public,
confronting natural disasters or war, tends
to focus on aesthetically pleasing ruins (in
the eighteenth-century convention of picturesque
tourism) or fine points of political debate,
the properly moral heart and 'philosophic
mind' must feel for the individual victims
of humanity's war against other humans. A
mind that can feel thus, in Rational Dissenting
religious and educational rhetoric, is usually
a mind that has been taught to feel compassion
for not only those equal to itself in the
human world but for those inferior to itself-those
of the animal world. Drawing on contemporary
questions of man's inhumanity to man, and
to animals, 'The Caterpillar' and 'The Mouse's
Petition' ask readers to consider that accepting
the Rational Dissenting imperative to activism
and social change prompted by moral change
can begin with the simple yet vital act of
accepting the viewpoint of another living
being-human or animal.