The Early English Tobacco TradeK. Paul, Trench, Trubner & Company, Limited, 1926 - 195 sider |
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Side 2
... became almost a universal custom among courtiers and men about town . In England , as elsewhere , tobacco , after its first rapid spread , encountered violent opposition , but , as in other countries , the opposition in England ...
... became almost a universal custom among courtiers and men about town . In England , as elsewhere , tobacco , after its first rapid spread , encountered violent opposition , but , as in other countries , the opposition in England ...
Side 3
... became prosperous . In spite of their hostility to it both James I. and Charles I : could not blind their eyes to the importance of this commodity in the colonial trade . After the time of Charles I. everything possible was done to ...
... became prosperous . In spite of their hostility to it both James I. and Charles I : could not blind their eyes to the importance of this commodity in the colonial trade . After the time of Charles I. everything possible was done to ...
Side 14
... became more general , it was still an indispensable feature of all ceremonial occasions , councils of war , feasts , and the like , as well as being used as a medicine . A letter written for Panhekoe , Sachem of the Mohegan Indians ...
... became more general , it was still an indispensable feature of all ceremonial occasions , councils of war , feasts , and the like , as well as being used as a medicine . A letter written for Panhekoe , Sachem of the Mohegan Indians ...
Side 29
... became a comparatively common commodity , for travellers and explorers of the last years of the sixteenth century frequently refer to it , but give no description either of its properties or manner of use , for its novelty had by then ...
... became a comparatively common commodity , for travellers and explorers of the last years of the sixteenth century frequently refer to it , but give no description either of its properties or manner of use , for its novelty had by then ...
Side 32
... became the mark of the gallant and the man about town , and before 1600 it had won its way into English literature . Spenser refers to it in The Faerie Queene.1 Bishop Joseph Hall makes at least two references to tobacco in his Satires ...
... became the mark of the gallant and the man about town , and before 1600 it had won its way into English literature . Spenser refers to it in The Faerie Queene.1 Bishop Joseph Hall makes at least two references to tobacco in his Satires ...
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Acts of Privy America Barbados Berwick-on-Tweed Bristol brought Channel Islands Charles Cheltenham colonial tobacco colonial trade commodities counties of Gloucester Cromwell crop cure Customs destroy tobacco Domestic Dutch duty English plantations English tobacco Gloucester City Gloucestershire Government grow tobacco Harleian Miscellany Harleian MSS Henbane herbe Hereford Ibid importation of tobacco impossible Indians Indies industry interests July June Justices King James King's land later letter London Lord Majesty Maryland Navigation Acts Nicotiana rustica Nicotiana tabacum officials ordered outports pamphlet Papers Parliament petition pipe plant tobacco planting of tobacco port Privy Council proclamation produced prohibited quantities of tobacco Report royal Russia Company seventeenth century Sheriff of Gloucester ships Sir John Wolstenholme smoking smuggling Somers Islands Spanish tobacco spite tobacco in England tobacco planting tobacco trade tobacco-planting trade in tobacco Treas troop of horse Virginia and Maryland Virginia Company Virginia merchants warrant Winchcombe Worcester writer
Populære avsnitt
Side 46 - And is it not a great vanity, that a man cannot heartily welcome his friend now, but straight they must be in hand with tobacco ? No, it is become in place of a cure, a point of good fellowship, and he that will refuse to take a pipe of tobacco...
Side 126 - THE TRUE ENGLISH INTEREST: or, An Account of the Chief National Improvements; in some Political Observations, Demonstrating an Infallible Advance of this Nation to Infinite Wealth and Greatness, Trade and Populacy, with Imployment, and Preferment of all Persons.
Side 30 - ... of too long continuance, in short time breaketh them ; whereby their bodies are notably preserved in health, and know not many grievous diseases wherewithall we in England are oftentimes affected.
Side 12 - ... of it, and then put it in one of the ends of the said Cornet or pipe, and laying a cole of fire upon it, at the other end...
Side 31 - ... and into the water: so a weare for fish being newly set up, they cast some therein and into the aire: also after an escape of danger, they cast some into the...
Side 30 - There is an herb which is sowed apart by itself, and is called by the inhabitants Uppowoc: In the West Indies it hath divers names, according to the several places and countries where it groweth, and is used: the Spaniards generally call it Tobacco. The leaves thereof being dried and brought into powder: they use to take the fume or smoke thereof, by sucking it through pipes made of clay, into their...
Side 9 - There is here great store of tobacco, which the salvages call apooke; howbeit yt is not of the best kynd, yt is but poore and weake, and of a byting tast, yt growes not fully a yard above ground, bearing a little yellowe flower, like to hennebane, the leaves are short and thick, somewhat round at the upper end...
Side 20 - XXXII, p. 49. very desirous of this parfume, although that the first use thereof is not without danger, before that one is accustomed thereto, for this smoke causeth sweates and weaknesse even to fall into ' syncope ' which I have tried in my selfe.
Side 28 - The Floridians when they travel have a kind of herb dried, who with a cane and an earthen cup in the end, with fire and the dried herbs put together, do suck through the cane the smoke thereof, which smoke satisfieth their hunger, and therewith they live four or five days without meat or drink. And this all the Frenchmen used for this purpose; yet do they hold opinion withal that it causeth water and phlegm to void from their stomachs.
Side 28 - In these daies the taking in of the smoke of the Indian herbe called ' Tabaco ' by an instrument formed like a little ladell, whereby it passeth from the mouth into the hed and stomach, is gretlie taken-up and used in England, against Rewmes and some other diseases ingendred in the longes and inward partes, and not without effect.