|
 |
 |
|
 |
|
 |
From Chapter 3: It is uncertain when licences were first issued for the sale of tobacco. Probably they were issued in London some time before it was considered necessary to license dealers in other parts of the country. Among the Municipal Records of Exeter is the following note: "358. Whitehall, 31 August 1633. The Lords of the Council to the Chamber. 'Whereas his Ma^tie to prevent the excesse of the use of tobacco, and to set an order to those that regrate and sell or utter it by retayle, who observe noe reasonable rates or prizes [prices], nor take care that it be wholsome for men's bodyes that shall use it,' has caused letters to be sent to the chief Officers of Citties and towns requiring them to certify 'in what places it might be fitt to suffer ye retayleing of tobacco and how many be licenced in each of those places to use trade'; and the City of Exeter having made a return the Lords sent a list of those which are to be licensed, and order that no others be permitted to sell."
From Chapter 7: In Townley's well-known two-act farce "High Life Below Stairs," 1759, the servants take their masters' and mistresses' titles and ape their ways. The menservants—the Dukes and Sir Harrys—offer one another snuff. "Taste this snuff, Sir Harry," says the "Duke." "'Tis good rappee," replies "Sir Harry." "Right Strasburgh, I assure you, and of my own importing," says the knowing ducal valet. "The city people adulterate it so confoundedly," he continues, "that I always import my own snuff;" and in similar vein he goes on in imitation of his master, the genuine Duke. These servants copy the talk and style (with a difference) of their employers; but smoking is never mentioned. The real Dukes and Sir Harrys took snuff with a grace, but they did not do anything so low as to smoke, and their menservants faithfully aped their preferences and their aversions.
|
 |
 |
 |
|
 |
The website,
s0j.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 3: A converse view of smoking may be seen in Izaak Walton's "Life" of Sir Henry Wotton, who died in 1639. Walton says that Wotton obtained relief to some extent from asthma by leaving off smoking which he had practised "somewhat immoderately"—" as many thoughtful men do." The italics are mine. Tobacco, as has been said, was praised as well as abused extravagantly. Much absurdity was written in glorification of the medicinal and therapeutic properties of tobacco, but a more sensible note was struck by some lauders of the weed. Marston wrote in 1607:
From Chapter 7: Warton and another Oxford smoker of some distinction—the Rev. William Crowe, who was Public Orator from 1784 to 1829—are both said to have been, like Prior, rather fond of frequenting the company of persons of humble rank and little education, with whom they would drink their ale and smoke their pipes. Mr. A.D. Godley, in his "Oxford in the Eighteenth Century," gives an excellent English version of the Latin original of one of the Christ Church "Carmina Quadragesmalia," which affords much the same picture of the daily life of an Oxford Fellow in the days when George I was king. This good man lives strictly by rule, and each returning day— Ne'er swerves a hairbreadth from the same old way. Always within the memory of men He's risen at eight and gone to bed at ten: The same old cat his College room partakes, The same old scout his bed each morning makes: On mutton roast he daily dines in state (Whole flocks have perished to supply his plate), Takes just one turn to catch the westering sun, Then reads the paper, as he's always done; Soon cracks in Common-room the same old jokes, Drinking three glasses ere three pipes he smokes:— And what he did while Charles our throne did fill 'Neath George's heir you'll find him doing still.
|
|
 |
 |
| |
The website,
s0j.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 2: Perhaps the most noteworthy thing about smoking at this period, from the social point of view, was its fashionableness. One of the marked characteristics of the gallant—the beau or dandy or "swell" of the time—was his devotion to tobacco. Earle says that a gallant was one that was born and shaped for his clothes—but clothes were only a part of his equipment. Bishop Hall, satirizing the young man of fashion in 1597, describes the delicacies with which he was accustomed to indulge his appetite, and adds that, having eaten, he "Quaffs a whole tunnel of tobacco smoke"; and old Robert Burton, in satirically enumerating the accomplishments of "a complete, a well-qualified gentleman," names to "take tobacco with a grace," with hawking, riding, hunting, card-playing, dicing and the like. The qualifications for a gallant were described by another writer in 1603 as "to make good faces, to take Tobacco well, to spit well, to laugh like a waiting gentlewoman, to lie well, to blush for nothing, to looke big upon little fellowes, to scoffe with a grace ... and, for a neede, to ride prettie and well."
From Chapter 5: These seventeenth-century pipes were largely made in Holland of pipe-clay imported from England—to the disgust and loss of English pipe-makers. In 1663 the Company of tobacco-Pipe Makers petitioned Parliament "to forbid the export of tobacco pipe clay, since by the manufacture of pipes in Holland their trade is much damaged." Further, they asked for "the confirmation of their charter of government so as to empower them to regulate abuses, as many persons engage in the trade without licence." The Company's request was granted; but in the next year they again found it necessary to come to Parliament, showing "the great improvement in their trade since their incorporation, 17 James I, and their threatened ruin because cooks, bakers, and ale-house keepers and others make pipes, but so unskilfully that they are brought into disesteem; they request to be comprehended in the Statute of Labourers of 5 Elizabeth, so that none may follow the trade who have not been apprentices seven years."
|
|
 |
 |
 |
s0j.net
Cheap Cigarettes - Buy Discount Domestic and Duty Free Cigarettes.
Cheap Cigarettes - Buy Discount Domestic and Duty Free Cigarettes.
blackhawktobacoshop.com
Cigarette Smokers
Try a sample carton of some of the All Natural Native American Cigarette Brands that we carry.
Cigarette Depot
Cheap TOBACCO 5000 - Buy CHEAP CIGARETTES, discount specialty tobacco
Tobbaco 5000 - Tobacco products in the 31st Century, Buy Native American Discount Cigarettes
Native Tobacco 5000
Cigarette Taxes Suck
We could report many true anecdotes to illustrate how cigarettes bring people together.One such story was related by a middle-aged lady: "A long time ago, on a steamer, there was a boy I was quite eager to meet...but there was no one to introduce us....Th
Cigarette Taxes Suck
Import Cigarettes
We care about our customers. We deliver cheap, all natural cigarette brands to your doorstep!
Cigarette Site
123 Smokin'
Find the cigarette brand made to suit your specific needs. We only carry non-chemical and non-additive cigarettes!
123 Smokin
Cigarette Stores Online - Native Made Tobacco is high quality, premium tobacco.
Smokin Channel - Watch Women Smoking Live Online - The Smoking WebCAM - Girls Smoking
The Everything Cigar Store
New Mexico Tobacco Shop Online
Native brand cigarettes are made from all natural tobacco and cost a third of the price of commercial brands.
Affordable Smokes
Cheapest Smokes
We carry High-Quality, Native American Cigarette Brands and deliver them fresh to your doorstep!
Cigarettes
AM Smokes
We carry Native American Cigarettes of excellent quality. We deliver them fresh to your doorstep.
Cigarettes
|
|
|