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Animal Rights History Timeline » [1660-1785] Enlightenment » James Thomson

James Thomson

Seasons: Spring


[1728] James Thomson, Spring, in The Seasons [Winter, Spring, Summer & Autumn, First published separately (London, 1726-1730) with additions through 1746; Spring first edition, 1728;contents only in the 2nd edition of 1730; collected Seasons first published, (London, 1730)]; Critical Edition (London, 1908;Google Books: Online Library of Free eBooks).

The Contents…Herbs Produced; The Food of Man in the first Ages of the World. Then, the Golden Age. as described by the Poets. The Degeneracy of Mankind from that State. On This, the Deluge, and Effects thereof, particularly in shortening the Life of Man. Hence, A Vegetable Diet recommended. The Cruelty of feeding on Animals.…Birds…Against Confining them in Cages, and particularly the Nightingales; her Lamentation for her Young… (6) [

But who their Virtues can declare? who pierce
With holy Eye into these secret Stores
Of Life, and Health, and Joy? The Food of Man
While yet he liv'd in Innocence, and told
A Length of golden Years, unflesh'd in Blood,
A Stranger to the Savage Arts of Life,
Death, Rapine, Carnage, Surfeit, and Disease,
The Lord, and not the Tyrant of the World. (17)

But You, ye Flocks,
What have ye done? ye peaceful People, what,
To merit Death? You, who have given us Milk
In luscious Streams, and lent us your own Coat
Against the Winter's Cold: whose Usefulness
In living only lies. And the plain Ox,
That harmless, honest, guileless Animal,
In what has He offended? He, whose Toil
Patient, and ever-ready, cloaths the Fields
With all the Pomp of Harvest; shall He bleed,
And wrestling groan beneath the cruel Hands
Even of the Clowns he feeds? (23-4)

But let not on thy Hook the tortu'd Worm,
Convulsive, twist in agonizing Folds,
Which by rapacious Hunger swallow'd deep
Gives, as you tear it from the bleeding Breast
Of the week, helpless, uncomplaining Wretch,
Harsh Pain and Horror to the tender Hand. (24)

Mean-time the patient Dam assiduous sits,
Not to be tempted from her tender Task,
Or by sharp Hunger, or by smooth Delight,
Tho' the whole loosen'd Spring around her blows,
Her sympathizing Lover takes his Stand
High on th'opponent Bank, and ceaseless sings
The tedious Time away; or else supplies
Her Place a Moment, while she sudden flits
To pick the scanty Meal. Th'appointed Time
With pious Toil fulfill'd, the callow Young
Warm'd, and expanded into perfect Life,
Their brittle Bondage break, and come to Light,
A helpless Family, demanding Food
With constant Clamour. Oh what Passions then,
What melting Sentiments of kindly Care
Seize the new Parents' Hearts! Away they fly
Affectionate, and undesiring bear
The most delicious Morsel to their Young,
Which equally distributed, again
The Search begins. So pitiful, and poor,
A gentle Pair on Providential Heaven
Cast, as they weeping eye their clamant Train,
Check their own Appetites, and give them all. (34-5)

Nor is the Courage of the fearful Kind,
Nor is their Cunning less, should some rude Foot
Their Woody Haunts molest; stealthy aside
Into the Centre of a neighbring Bush
They drop, and whirring thence alarm'd, deceive
The rambling School-Boy. Hence around the Head
Of Traveller, the white-wing'd Plover wheels
Her sounding Flight, and then directly on
In long Excursion skims the level Lawn,
To tempt you from her Nest. The Wild-Duck hence
O'er the rough Moss, and o'er the trackless Waste
The Heath-Hen flutters, as if hurt, to lead
The hot, pursuing Spaniel far astray. (35-6)

Be not the Muse asham'd, here to bemoan
Her Brothers of the Grove, by Tyrant Man
Inhuman caught, and in the narrow Cage
From Liberty confin'd, and boundless Air.
Dull are the pretty Slaves, their Plumage dull,
Ragged, and all its brightning Lustre lost;
Nor is that luscious Wildness in their Notes
That warbles from the Beech. Oh then desist,
Ye Friends of Harmony ! this barbarous Art
Forbear, if Innocence and Music can
Win on your Hearts, or Piety perswade. (36-7)

But let not chief the Nightingale lament
Her ruin'd Care, to delicately fram'd
To brook the harsh Confinement of the Cage.
Oft when returning with her loaded Bill,
Th' astonish'd Mother finds a vacant Nest,
By the hard Hands of unrelenting Clowns
Rob'd, to the Ground the vain Provision falls;
Her Pinions ruffle, and low-drooping scarce
Can bear the Mourner to the Poplar Shade,
Where all-abandon'd to Despair she sings.
Her Sorrows thro' the Night; and, on the Bough
Sad-sitting, still at every dying Fall
Takes up again her lamentable Strain
Of winding Woe, till wide around the Woods
Sigh at her Song, and with her Wail resound. (36-7)

Animal Rights History Timeline: Enlightenment [1660-1785]

Restoration [1660-1689]
Augustan-Age of Pope [1689-1745]
Age of Sensibility [1745-1785]


Animal Rights History-Timeline

[1700-1748] James Thomson

[1726-46] The Seasons
Seasons: Winter
Seasons: Summer
Seasons: Spring
Seasons: Autumn



James Thomson



Animal Rights History Timeline: Enlightenment [1660-1785]

Restoration [1660-1689]
Augustan-Age of Pope [1689-1745]
Age of Sensibility [1745-1785]


[—Activists-Advocates-Authors
[—Early Pleas for Legislation]
[—Enlightenment Periodicals]


[Abstinence from Animal Food]
[Animal Rights Quotes]
[Animal Rights Law]
[Anti-Vivisection Quotes]
[Humane Education, Teaching Children Kindness to Animals]
[Hunting, Blood-Sports Cruelty]
[Poetry-Plays; Humane Poets]
[Religion-Religous Quotes
Sermons Against Animal Cruelty]
[Souls, Immortality, Future Life]
[Humanity-Justice-Kindness]
[Intelligence-Reason-Emotion]
[Make Compassion the Fashion;
Beauty-Feathers-Fur-Leather]
[Cruelty-Slavery of Animals]
[Strait from the Horse's Mouth:
Words from Animals Themselves]
[Vegetarians-Vegans; Cruelty of Slaughter, Abstinence-Animals]


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[BCE-c485] Antiquity
[c485-1450] Medieval Ages
[1450-1660] Reniassance
[1660-1785] Enlightenment
[1785-1837] Romantic Age
[1837-1901] Victorian Age
[1901-1945] 20thc-Modernism



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