COMPASSED ABOUT WITH SO GREAT A CLOUD OF WITNESSES
Among the eminent men and women of
England whose names are not to be regarded as world
famous in the sense that applies to those dealt with
in the foregoing chapters, but who nevertheless in
their place and time were recognised by their contemporaries
and are still recognised by those now living as persons
of authority and ability, there can be cited a distinguished
array who consistently condemned vivisection as permitted
and as practised in this country as immoral.
Among religious leaders may be enumerated the following:
Archbishop McEvilly, of Tuam; Archbishop
Crozier, Primate of Ireland; Archbishop Bagshawe;
Bishop Westcott, of Durham; Bishop Moule, of Durham;
Bishop Harold Browne, of Winchester; Bishop Lord Arthur
Hervey, of Bath and Wells; Bishop Ryle, of Liverpool;
Bishop Walsham How, of Wakefield; Bishop Ridding,
of Southwell; Bishop Moorhouse, of Manchester; Bishop
Mackarness, of Oxford; Bishop Chinnery-Haldane, of
Argyll and the Isles; Bishop Barry, Primate of Australia;
Dean Kichten. Archdeacon Wilberforce; Father
Ignatius; General Booth, the founder of the Salvation
Army; Spurgeon; Hugh Price Hughes; Newman Hall; James
Martineau; Stopford Brooke.
Among prominent teachers and scholars
and philosophers and writers and artists and lawyers
I find the following:
Alfred Russel Wallace, Freeman, Froude, Leslie Stephen,
Richard Holt
Hutton, Sir Henry Taylor, Sir Lewis Morris, George
Macdonald, Blackmore,
Wilkie Collins, “Lewis Carroll,” Robert
Buchanan, Justin McCarthy, Sir
Arthur Arnold, Mrs. Somerville, Julia Wedgwood, Sir
Edward Burne-Jones,
Walter Crane, Sir Henry Irving, Lord Brampton (Mr.
Justice Hawkins), and
Lord Chief Baron Kelly.
I have made no research for great
names in foreign countries, but some of the most illustrious
stand prominently before the world representing the
three greatest continental races:
Victor Hugo, Wagner, Tolstoy, Voltaire,
Schopenhauer, Rousseau.