Among the reasons Clubb gives for a vegetarian lifestyle are that he is "an optimist" and that "eating a lamb does not make a man lamb-like in his character any more than eating a missionary converts a savage into a Christian," which contributors to
Unity found "interesting." Though not stated in
Thirty-nine Reasons Why I Am a Vegetarian, Clubb has been quoted as saying meat-eating "tends to excite anger, to bring out the brutal, and weaken the gentle and kindly traits." Clubb quotes
William Axon in the section "Historical" citing part of a hymn: Bright creatures of the air and earth We seek not to destroy, But share with them the gifts of life, Of duty and of joy. Additionally, he mentions other contemporaries, such as Wesley, Swedenborg, Linneas, Graham, Alcott, Trail, and Kellogg. He also writes of the importance of the entrepreneurship of health food advocates like
Ferdinand Schumacher, a vegetarian who had recently merged with three "manufactories" to form
Quaker Oats Company. Clubb lived to the age of 95, which has been attributed to his vegetarian diet. ==References==