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Last year's Vivisection.

A COMMENT.-BY ERNEST BELL, M.A.

HE annual Parliamentary Return of Experiments on Living Animals has again been issued, and is not, unfortunately, any more reassuring than usual. We are told, for instance, as matter for congratulation, that

I. "The licenses and certificates have been granted only upon the recommendation of persons of high scientific standing."

Quite so, but it was just the persons of high scientific standing whose cruel actions the Act was intended to restrain.

II. That" the licensees are persons who, by their training and education, are fitted to undertake experimental work and to profit by it."

Quite so, again. It is well known that they do profit by it themselves in many ways, but the doubtful point has always been whether the public or the animals ever profit by it.

III. That "all experimental work has been conducted in suitable places." Certainly, but suitable for what purposes? The horrors of the Inquisition were also carried on in very suitable places, and no one ever doubted that the laboratories were "well equipped," as the Inspector has before told us, and excellently adapted for their purpose, viz. the wholesale martyrdom of animals.

These assertions, intended apparently to be reassuring, merely state the case anew, and serve only to show how hopeless it is to expect the scientific mind to grasp even the fact that there are two sides to the question.

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It is not surprising, after this opening, to find that all the old comfortable generalities are repeated, and that none of the information that we really have a right to demand is given. We learn, for instance, that all the licensees have," as usual,' been loyal to the spirit of the Act-except, indeed, two naughty ones. One of these was so utterly depraved as to give an anasthetic to an animal when his certificate allowed him to make the experiment without; and the other one, in trying to give ringworm to four mice ("scientific research" is reduced to this nowadays), actually made "a few bloodless scratches without using an anesthetic. We trust Dr. Poore, the inspector, gave them both a good scolding for giving way to such wicked propensities, and we are quite

satisfied they will never do it again. After this scientific straining at gnats, we are not surprised to find that the proverbial sequel is amply fulfilled.

Thus the number of vivisectors has again increased from the 213 of the previous year to 236, and the grand total of experiments made during twelve months has now reached the large number of 7,500, being an increase of 2,821 on the preceding year. We are also plainly told that "the large increase been noticeable for the last few years, is likely to continue."

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The excuse for this increase is that so many animals have this year been inoculated with rabic virus and various matters to see whether they would contract rabies or other diseases. Of course some did contract the diseases, but here again we are kept in the dark; no mention is made of the numbers, and all the experiments are put down as "painless."

We remember the well-known vivisector who drew up the Report of our Hydrophobia Commission in 1887 made a good many cruel experiments in a similar way. In his Report he said, that, while the virus was being squirted into their brains the animals were rendered insensible with chloroform or ether, and he adds the naïve little footnote that "all the experiments performed in this inquiry were thus made. painless." When challenged with this at a public debate, he tried to evade the issue by saying that the animals contracted paralytic rabies, which was not painful, and when gently reminded that by his own showing an equal number contracted "the ordinary furious form of rabies," he did the only thing possible to him (short of apologizing), and said that he did not consider that that was painful either. This little incident is very instructive as showing how little reliance can be placed on the assertions in these official Reports that this or that operation is painless.

Of the after effects of the 5,984 inoculations here recorded, and characterized as "the prick of a needle," we hear nothing. Did none of them have any effect at all, or did the poor victims die after days or weeks of pain and misery from rabies, meningitis, "crater-like ulcers" in their eyes, and the other sports of the physiologists?

Inoculations, we are told, are largely used for the diagnosis of disease, and "to decide whether valuable herds of animals shall be sacrificed or preserved." Judging by the recent results of the physiologist's "decision" to preserve the valuable herds in South Africa, the farmers must be beginning to think that the less they have to do with them and their inoculations the better.

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Anæsthetics, of course, are mentioned, and we are told that all the operations, after which the animals are allowed to live, "are done with as much care as similar operations upon the human subject, and the wounds being dressed antiseptically, no pain results during the healing process. Such an assertion, is doubly misleading. What human beings, for instance, have their kidneys dissected out and lifted from the body, while their nerves are plied with electricity, or when do they have great pieces sliced and burnt out of their brains, or their hearts exposed and needles thrust into them?

Or what human being ever undergoes any severe operation under morphia and curare? The latter drug, while it paralyses motion so completely that the breathing has to be kept up artificially through a cut made in the windpipe, does not deaden but, on the contrary, increases the sensitiveness to pain. For this reason it is not allowed under the Act to be used as an anæsthetic, but the vivisectors are permitted to use it in conjunction with an anesthetic. The result of this is, that while the poor creature is lying as rigid as a corpse under the influence of the curare, there is no possible way of telling-what is always rather a critical matter-whether or not the anaesthetic is having the desired effect. Are human beings ever treated like this? and if not, why does the Inspector imply that the animals are no worse off than they are ?

Of the beneficent results generally supposed to come from vivisection, the Report is always very reticent. We certainly find a long list of diseases, including consumption, diphtheria, plague-cholera, anthrax, cattle plague, pleuro-pneumonia, and smallpox, of which we are told vaguely that "the knowledge has been increased by inoculation experiments," but as they all keep on their deadly course with unabated virulence, apparently a little stimulated if anything by the physiologists' unclean and unwholesome methods, we cannot feel very grateful for the "increased knowledge' said to have been acquired.

It is noticeable that rabies is not mentioned in the list of diseases studied. Can

it be that the researchers have at length come to the conclusion that they have learnt about it all they ever will by their methods, namely, nothing; and, after the torment of " innumerable" animals, have given it up in despair. It is interesting, too, to see that smallpox has been studied. This must mean one of two things, either that Jenner's vaccinations are not now held to be the satisfactory protection frequently asserted, or else that the vivisectors carry on their experiments in these diseases merely for the sake of experiment, and with no reference to the practical utility to mankind.

The one redeeming feature of the Return is the apologetic tone in which it is written, the obvious effort of all being to make out that they are not so bad as they seem. It shows a great advance on the tone of twenty years ago, when a vivisector (licensed again last year we see) could boast that he had "no regard at all" for the sufferings of his victims; and another could claim that if he bought an animal he had a right to do as he liked with it. They no longer venture to talk like this. When the Prince of Wales, before opening the new wing of a hospital, feels constrained to announce publicly that he has been told that there are no wicked vivisections carried on there, we may take heart. The vivisector, specially licensed to live down to a lower standard of humanity than his countrymen, is no longer a leader of public opinion. He now comes before us as an apologist. He has practically admitted our contention that it is not justifiable to inflict severe pain on animals for his own ends, and the only means by which he dares to carry on his cruel practices is by misrepresenting their real nature. The same spirit of increasing humanity which. has been working for the last twenty years will, we can be sure, continue to develop, and the vivisectors and their cruel work will become, more and more, objects of mistrust, dislike, and contempt.

A Royal Lover of Animals.

The King of Siam has been seeing the sights of Vienna. At the Museum of Natural History Le showed more interest than the director has ever observed on the part of any crowned head. When shown the collection of stuffed animals which once belonged to the Crown Prince, he asked, says the Daily News correspondent, the custodian whether the Prince killed them all himself. The Austrian taking him to be a keen sportsman, assured him with pride that not an animal was there that Prince Rudolph had not killed. The King said pensively, "I love animals dearly, but I do not kill them. I keep them."

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COLONEL BENSON

Late Colonel Commanding 17th Lancers).

be done for the animals you are sure to find the Colonel and his charming wife unostentatiously assisting; indeed they are indefatigable in their efforts. On the

ance, whilst, in addition, Mrs. Benson is connected with the Humanitarian League, the Pioneer Anti-Vivisection Society, and, we believe, has for many years assisted

the admirable work of the R.S.P.C.A. It goes without saying that such splendid workers are always in demand, and are never known to withhold any help it is in their power to render. The Colonel's geniality and hospitality and his lady's amiability are irresistible, and the value of their constant aid to the many philanthropic organizations they support cannot be estimated.

Colonel Sterling Meux Benson is the son of the late General Henry Roxby Benson, C.B., of Fairy Hill, Reynoldstone, near Swansea, and Tyrlland wr, Swansea. His mother was a daughter of the well-known and much respected Judge, Sir William Wightman, of the Queen's Bench. Born on the 20th July, 1846, Colonel Benson became a Cornet in the 17th Lancers [one of the crack cavalry regiments of the British army, and known as the "Death or Glory Boys"], in 1865; was promoted to Captain in 1870, was given his majority in 1881, became Colonel in 1886, subsequently succeeding to the command of his regiment (a position which in former years had also been filled by his father), and retired in 1890 with the honorary rank of Major-General. During his term of command the 17th maintained at high water mark its reputation as one of the smartest of our cavalry regiments. Deservedly popular wherever he is known, it is the simple truth to say that the old British designation of a military man— "an officer and a gentleman "— has never been more honourably or more worthily borne. Colonel and Mrs. Benson have only one child-a son, now holding a commission in the Coldstream Guards. For the information of our Colonial and Foreign readers, the ladies particularly, we may mention that the uniform of the gallant 17th is blue, with white facings and plume.

The photograph of the Colonel is by Johnson & Hoffmann, of Simla, India, and that of Mrs. Benson by Alice Hughes, 52, Gower Street, London, specially taken for the Animals' Friend. It is said that the majority of

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MRS. BENSON

able companions of the Colonel and his wife. "Watch," it may be added, has the reputation of being a good guard.

The Whit-Monday Fete of the Paris S.P.C.A.

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A NOTEWORTHY SPEECH BY M. MENTION.

[FROM OUR PARIS CORRESPONDENT.]

(Special and Exclusive to "The Animals' Friend.")

N Whit-Monday, the Cirque d' Hiver was again filled with its usual audience, composed of rich and poor, nobles, and people, an object lesson on the French motto, Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité," a family gathering of animals' friends.

After an overture from the band of the 31st Regiment, Monsieur Uhrich, President of the S.P. des A., delivered the opening speech, which was a résumé of the part which the society has taken during the last four years in the bullfight struggle, explaining how the Government, having forbidden the bull-fights, they still continue, and saying that the means used against us are turning to our advantage. A new law is in project, which will extend the punishment for cruelty, and specify the kinds of cruelty forbidden.

MONSIEUR MENTION, Examiner at the Military School of St. Cyr, and delegate from the Minister of Public Instruction, then spoke as follows:

I was asked the other day by what right the Minister of Public Instruction sent a delegate to this fete, seeing he has not-up to now at least the animal world in his department. The observation would perhaps be well founded if your society had never thought of occupying itself with the rearing and amelioration of races. But I apprehend that you have a juster and higher ideal of your mission. With all the moralists, and nearly all the philosophers you hold that we have duties towards animals, or rather, that our duties towards animals are duties towards ourselves. To honour the outline of our frail humanity, in beings, inferior no doubt, but having feelings like ourselves, capable of intelligence and of affection; devoted, faithful like ourselves, and sometimes more so-these are questions which extend further than the horizon of agricultural shows, and which, in the highest degree, are questions of national education. Never inspire children (wrote Bernardin de St. Pierre), "with the taste for cruel experiments. When they are barbarous towards animals, it will not be long before they are so to men."

Well, gentlemen, by the voice of her hundred thousand schoolmasters, the University will teach French youth to respect suffering in all that breathes; and these lessons, inscribed on our programmes, vulgarized by all the treatises on morality-will they remain shut up within the school-walls, without having their prolongation outside? without having their reflex action upon our schoolmasters, our laws, and *Author of Paul and Virginia.

our morals? Shall our educators work to awaken in these young minds the first emotions of pity, and shall children be taken by the hand from the school doors, and conducted to the arena, to gorge their frightened sight with the blood of animals flowing in the ring, mingled with the blood of men ? Would not these children be shocked at the brutal contrast between social life and public education? Would they not be right if they turned and said:"What means this falsehood, and who is deceiving us here? Is it the schoolmaster who has taught us to hate the sight of blood uselessly shed? Is it society that tolerates or encourages these cruel and barbarous games?

I know that to excuse or acclimatize these imported pleasures some people invoke the example of classic antiquity; and the spectators drawn together by these exercises are not a little flattered to be called by the poets of the south the true sons of ancient Rome. But, gentlemen, when the question is one concerning the tenderest sentiments of the human soul, of kindness, gentleness, and pity for beings, especially for the humblest, one must mistrust these classic souvenirs. In the heathen lyre there has always been one cord wanting-the cord of pity. Let us not look too closely at these pagans, or let us look at them in order, not to resemble them! If we wish to imitate the Romans let us take their virtues for models, and not the roughness of their character, or the vulgarity of their pleasures! Let us not forget, above all, that the most flourishing epoch of the games of the amphitheatre is also the epoch of their decadence. When the degenerate sons of the Roman aristocracy prided themselves in going into the arena, they no more thought of being enrolled in the Roman legions; and they left barbarous nations to guard their frontiers, or to invade them.

Under what pretext will these spectacles be a school of courage and endurance? Can you really believe in the efficacy of such lessons upon the spectators who are sheltered from the combat? Is it necessary to be cruel to animals to learn to maintain with dignity one's rôle as a man? Is it not rather that the habit of hardening oneself with respect to animals is (to use the energetic expression of Lamartine) to "brutalize and render ferocious the noblest instincts of the heart?" If there rests any doubt on the matter, ask those whom we are going presently to recompense, these guardians of the peace, these firemen, and all these brave soldiers (who have at the same time kind hearts) if they needed a training of this description to enable them to do their duty in the hour of peril, and of sacrifices! These have no doubt never read the law to which General de Grammont gave his name. They

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