What A Difference A Day Makes
Autumn 1997
Why I am a Vegetarian
Those of us born in Britain in 1939 have a dietary
advantage over succeeding generations. We were fed, unless living on a farm,
with only wartime rations, which by today's standards might be thought
unhealthily meagre. On Saturdays, when we stocked up for the week, my mother
blended the butter, the margarine and the top of the milk into a spreading
paste which only lasted till Thursday. Then it was dry bread until the
following weekend. Similarly with meat. We managed a roast on Saturday
lunch; which was served cold on Sunday after morning church, then ran out in
a shepherd's pie on Mondays.
Perhaps that's why, post-war, I never developed a taste
for steaks, chops or fish. Or was it rather a distaste for the slaughter of
baa-lambs, Moo-cows, bunny-rabbits, quack-ducks and chuckey hens? Dead flesh
only ever seemed really appetising when it was disguised by mincing or
hidden by pastry or batter. I preferred corned beef, sardines or salmon
scraped out of their cans and mashed into sandwiches with no signs of their
living shape left.
Then came the day that made the crucial difference. I
looked down from my terrace hanging over the Thames one morning. It was low
tide and there, stranded on the pebbles, was a four-legged corpse -
hairless, white and bloated. Was it a calf or a sheep or a goat or a dog? I
stared at it until the tide rose and washed it away. For 24 hours I was off
my food. When I started eating again, I couldn't face meat - fresh or
tinned.
Overnight I was vegetarian and I have been for 15 years
or more. I've seen the pictures of factory farming and followed the politics
of mad cow disease and felt effortlessly superior. Yet it's not reason or
conscience that keeps me off meat and fowl (and these days fish, too) -just
a memory of that unidentifiable, decomposing body on the beach.
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