Animal Rights History »» Mary Wollstonecraft



Mary Wollstonecraft

1788 | Original Stories

Mrs. Mason asked how she dared to kill any thing, unless it were to prevent its hurting her?…You have already heard that God created the world, and every inhabitant of it. HE is then called the Father of all creatures; and all are made to be happy, who a good and wise God has created. He made those snails you despise, and caterpillars, and spiders; and when he made them, did not leave them to perish, but placed them where the food that is most proper to nourish them is easily found. They do not live long, but He who is thier Father, as well as your's directs them to deposit thier eggs on the plants that are fit to support thier young, when they are not able to get food for themselves.—And when such a great and wise Being had taken cre to provide every thing necessary for the meanest creature, would you dare kill it, merely because it appears to you ugly? (Mary Wollstonecraft, Original Stories [1788], "The Treatment of Animals" )

Do you know the meaning of the word Goodness?… It is, first, to avoid hurting any thing; and then, to contrive to give as much pleaure as you can. If some insects are to be destroyed, to preserve my garden from desolation, I have it done in the quickest way. The domestic animals that I keep, I provide the best food for, and never suffer them to be tormented; and this caution arise from two motive:—I wish to make them happy; and, as I love my fellow-creatures still better than the brute creation, I would not allow those that I have any influence over to grow habitually thoughtless and cruel, till they were unable to relish the greatest pleasure life affords,—that of resembling God, by doing good. (Mary Wollstonecraft, Original Stories [1788], "The Treatment of Animals" )


1792 | A Vindication of the Rights of Women

To render the perfect person, physical and moral beauty ought to be attained at the same time; each lending and receiving force by the combination. Judgement must reside on the brow, affection and fancy beam in the eye, and humanity curve the cheek, or vain is the sparkling of the finest eyes or the elegantly turned finish of the fairest features: whilst in every motion that displays the active limbs and well-knit joints, grace and modesty should appear. But this fair assemblage is not to be brought together by chance; it is the reward of exertions calculated to support each other; for judgement can only be acquired by reflection, affection by the discharge of duties, and humanity by the exercise of compassion to every living creature. (Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights of Women [1792])

Humanity to animals should be particularly inculcated as a part of national education, for it is not at present one of our national virtues. Tenderness for their humble domestics, amongst the lower class, is oftener to be found in a savage than civilized state. For civilization prevents that intercourse which creates affection in the rude hut, or mud hovel, and leads uncultivated minds who are only depraved by the refinements which prevail in society, where they are trodden under foot by the rich, to domineer over them to revenge the insults that they are obliged to bear from their superiors. (Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights of Women [1792])

This habitual cruelty tis first caught at school, where it is one of the rare sports of the boys to torment the miserable brutes that fall in their way. The transition, as they grow up, from barbarity to brutes to domestic tyranny over wives, children, and servants is very easy. Justice, or even benevolence, will not be a powerful sprint of action unless it extend to the whole creation; nay, I believe that it may be delivered as as an axiom, that those who can see pain, unmoved, will soon learn to inflict it. (Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights of Women [1792])

[Mary Wollstonecraft's Vindication of the Rights of Women [1792], inspired the sarcastic, but important work by Thomas Taylor, A Vindication of the Rights of Beasts [1792]. ]



Links to the Primary Source
document the authenticity of quotations while providing more in-depth insight into the ideologies of humanity against cruelty to animals and additional historical perspective on the continuing struggle for animal rights, animal welfare and the protection of animals.

Source Documents1788 | Mary Wollstonecraft, Original Stories from Real Life with Conversations, calculated to Regulate the Affections, and Form the Mind to Truth and Goodness [First Edition: 1788] (London, 1796; Digitized by Google, 2007).

Source Documents1792| Mary Wollstonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights of Women [First Edition: London, 1792] (London, 1796; Digizied by Google, 2006).

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[     d-1793] John Oswald
[1759-1796] Robert Burns
[1759-1797] Mary Wollstonecraft
[1731-1800] William Cowper
[1745-1813] Benjamin Rush
[1749-1814] Samuel Pratt
[1755-1814] John Bidlake
[1762-1816] Rene Martin Pillet
[1744-1817] Ralph Beilby
[1738-1819] John Wolcot
[1738-1819] Peter Pindar
[1753-1828] Thomas Bewick
[1759-1822] Edward Barry
[1792-1822] Percy Shelley
[] Elizabeth Kent
[1750-1823] Lord Erskine
[1764-1823] Anne Radcliffe
[1788-1824] Lord Byron
[1824] Clergman of England
[1743-1825] Anna Barbould
[1745-1827] Charles Daubeny
[1757-1827] William Blake
[1772-1827] Legh Richmond
[1767-1831] Louis Simond
[1748-1832] Jerermey Bentham
[1754–1832] George Crabbe
[1766-1832] Herman Daggett
[1770-1832] James Plumptre
[1744-1833] Rowland Hill
[1754-1834] Richard Martin
[1772-1834] Samuel Coleridge
[1775-1834] Charles Lamb
[1758-1835] Thomas Taylor
[18th-19thc] Rev. C. Hoyle
[1772-1835] Thomas Young
[1756-1836] William Godwin
[1753-1839] John Lawrence
[1770-1850] William Wordsworth
[1770-1853] Joseph Cottle
[1776-1859] Sydney Owenson


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