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CHAPTER VII - FOOD AND COMFORT

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2010

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Summary

THIS subject is necessarily a very large one, and I shall, in consequence, be obliged to compress it, though it might well make a separate work by itself. For Food represents the very existence of Man, considered as one of the animal world; and Comfort represents the progress of civilisation, by which man leaves day by day his savage and solitary nature behind him, and becomes social, moral, and elevated.

Putting aside the instinct which forces the parent to feed the young without external assistance, we come to those cases where the parent has to seek food which the offspring could not have found for itself, and often to prepare it for the use of the offspring.

In the greater part of the world, the milk of various animals is the staple of food, not only for children, but adults; and the “milk diet,” as it is called, is strongly urged by many physicians of the present day.

The Kafir tribes, for example, a wonderfully powerful race of men, live almost wholly on sour milk, mixed with maize flour, never eating such valuable animals as kine except on great occasions. Yet the natives of the Tonga Islands think that nothing can be more disgusting than for a human being to drink the milk of a cow.

How the operation of milking is conducted we need not say, whether it be performed on the cow as with most nations, or the ass in case of need with ourselves, or the mare as with the Tartars, or the goat and sheep in various parts of the world.

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Chapter
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Nature's Teachings
Human Invention Anticipated by Nature
, pp. 390 - 399
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009
First published in: 1877

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