|
 |
 |
|
 |
 |
 |
From Chapter 2: An amusing example of the bragging "tobacconist" is pictured for us in Ben Jonson's "Bobadil." Bobadil may perhaps be somewhat of an exaggerated caricature, but it is probable that the dramatist in drawing him simply exaggerated the characteristic traits of many smokers of the day. This hero, drawing tobacco from his pocket, declares that it is all that is left of seven pounds which he had bought only "yesterday was seven-night." A consumption of seven pounds of tobacco in eight days is a pretty "tall order"! Then he goes on to brag of its quality—your right Trinidado—and to assert that he had been in the Indies, where the herb grows, and where he himself and a dozen other gentlemen had for the space of one-and-twenty weeks known no other nutriment than the fume of tobacco. This again was tolerably "steep" even for this Falstaff-like braggart. He continues with more bombast in praise of the medicinal virtues of the herb—virtues which were then very firmly and widely believed in—and is replied to by Cob, the anti-tobacconist, who, with equal exaggeration on the other side, denounces tobacco, and declares that four people had died in one house from the use of it in the preceding week, and that one had "voided a bushel of soot"!
From Chapter 5: The French traveller, Sorbière, who visited London in 1663, declared that the English were naturally lazy and spent half their time in taking tobacco. They smoked after meals, he observed, and conversed for a long time. "There is scarce a day passes," he wrote, "but a Tradesman goes to the Ale-house or Tavern to smoke with some of his Friends, and therefore Public Houses are numerous here, and Business goes on but slowly in the Shops"; but, curiously enough, he makes no mention of coffee-houses. A little later they were too common and too much frequented to be overlooked. An English writer on thrift in 1676 said that it was customary for a "mechanic tradesman" to go to the coffee-house or ale-house in the morning to drink his morning's draught, and there he would spend twopence and consume an hour in smoking and talking, spending several hours of the evening in similar fashion.
|
 |
 |
 |
|
 |
The website,
www.q0h.net , is owned by
Black Hawk Tobacco, Inc.
For more information about our company or our products please call us:
1-877-448-6222
(Toll Free)
|
|
| |
Cigarette and Tobacco Information:
From Chapter 2: smoking was not confined to the auditors on the stage, who paid sixpence each for a stool. There was the "lords' room" over the stage, which seems to have corresponded with the modern stage boxes, the price of admission to which appears to have been a shilling, where the pipe was also in full blast. Dekker tells how a gallant at a new play would take a place in the "twelve penny room, next the stage, because the lords and you may seem to be hail fellow, well met"; and Jonson, in "Every Man out of his Humour," 1600, speaks of one who pretended familiarity with courtiers, that he talked of them as if he had " taken tobacco with them over the stage, in the lords' room."
From Chapter 7: The London clergy seem to have smoked at one time as a matter of course at their gatherings at Sion College, their headquarters. An entry in the records under date February 14, 1682, relating to a Court Meeting, runs: "Paid Maddocks [the Messenger] for Attendinge and Pipes 6d." How long pipes continued to be concomitants of the meetings of the College's General Court I cannot say; but smoking and the annual dinners were long associated. At the anniversary feast in 1743 there were two tables to provide for, the total number of guests being about thirty, and two "corses" to each. The cost of the food, as Canon Pearce tells us in his excellent and entertaining book on the College and its Library, was £19 15 s., or rather more than 13 s. a head. The bill for wines and tobacco amounted to five guineas, or about 3 s. 6 d. a head, and for this modest sum the thirty convives enjoyed eleven gallons of "Red Oporto," one of "White Lisbon," and three of "Mountain," to the accompaniment of two pounds of tobacco (at 3 s. 4 d. the pound) smoked in "half a groce of pipes" (at 1 s.).
|
|
 |
 |
| |
The website,
www.q0h.net , is owned by
Black Hawk Tobacco, Inc.
For more information about our company or our products please call us:
1-877-448-6222
(Toll Free)
|
|
 |
|
Tobacco History:
Cigarettes and Literature
From Chapter 4: There is a curious entry in Thomas Burton's diary of the proceedings of Cromwell's Parliament, which suggests that there may then have been the luxury of a members' smoking-room. Burton was a member of the Parliaments of Oliver and Richard Cromwell from 1656 to 1659, and made a practice—for which historical students have been and are much his debtors—of taking notes of the debates as he sat in the House. Members sometimes objected to and protested against this note-taking, but Burton quietly went on using his pencil, and though his summaries of speeches are often difficult to follow, argument and sense suffering by compression, he has preserved much very valuable matter. Referring to a debate on January 7, 1656-57, on an attempt to go behind the previously passed Act of Oblivion, the diarist records that "Sir John Reynolds had numbered the House, and said at rising there were 220 at the least, besides tobacconists." This can only mean that there were at least 220 members actually present in the House when it rose, not counting the "tobacconists" or smokers, who were enjoying their pipes, not in the Chamber itself, but in some conveniently adjoining place, which may have been a room for the purpose, or may simply have been the lobby referred to above in the extract from "Mercurius Pragmaticus."
From Chapter 5: His Majesty was pleased, however, in a letter to Cambridge University, officially to condemn smoking by parsons, as at the same time he condemned the practice of wig-wearing and of sermon-reading by the clergy. But the royal frown was without effect. Wigs soon covered nearly every clerical head from the bench of bishops downwards; and it is very doubtful indeed whether a single parson put his pipe out.
|
|
 |
 |
 |
www.q0h.net
.·:*¨°¨*:·. Cheap Cigarette Store .·:*¨°¨*:·.
Smoke Native Cigarettes: Seneca, Black Hawk, Buffalo, Skydancer, Texas Republic - Native Brands are made from All Natural Tobacco and cost a third of the price of commercial brands. Smoke Native Cigarettes and Save $$ money today.
Cigarette Store
Cigarette Smokers
Try a sample carton of some of the All Natural Native American Cigarette Brands that we carry.
Cigarette Depot
Order New Jersey Cigarettes
Taste the Difference ★ No Chemicals or Additives ★ A Price that Can't be Beat ★ Free Shipping Offer
♨ Smoke Affordably ♨
Tobacco by Brand
Taste the Difference ★ No Chemicals or Additives ★ A Price that Can't be Beat ★ Free Shipping Offer
All Natural and Affordable
Big Apple Smokes
For smokers who are serious about their addiction!
Smokers Incorporated
Best Online Tobacco Shops
At BlackHawkForum.com, you will find genuine customer questions, concerns, comments and reviews that will help you in selecting the right Native American cigarette brand to replace your current commercial brand. Save money and Smoke All Natural.
Tobacco Exchange
Annie Get Your Smokes
A typical smoker will take 10 puffs on a cigarette over a period of 5 minutes. How many do you take?
Quality Cigarettes
Discount Cigarettes
If you want quality, all natural cigarettes at an affordable price, we have them!
Discount Cigarettes
All Cigarette Brands
Tobacco News, Cigarette News, Get up to the minute news about tobacco and cigarette related topics important to you.
Red Apple Tobacco
Country Smokes
If it's Native American, contains no chemicals or additives, and fresh – We Carry It!!!
Cheapest Smokes
|
|
|