Extracts and Recollections of Two Lectures on the Evil Effects Arising from the Use of Tabacco in Its Various Forms: Given in the Manchester Mechanics' InstitutionEllerby and Cheetham, 1842 - 24 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 6
Página 4
... called it petun ; and the islanders called it yoli . * Tobacco has engaged the attention of Kings , Legislators , Philosophers , Poets , Moralists , and Physicians . It has been lauded with the most lavish encomiums ; it has been ...
... called it petun ; and the islanders called it yoli . * Tobacco has engaged the attention of Kings , Legislators , Philosophers , Poets , Moralists , and Physicians . It has been lauded with the most lavish encomiums ; it has been ...
Página 5
... called the " Pied Bull , " in which the distinguished knight lived , which is said to have been the scene of a whimsical mistake . Sir Walter was enjoying , in his room , a quiet pipe ; his servant entering , saw volumes of smoke ...
... called the " Pied Bull , " in which the distinguished knight lived , which is said to have been the scene of a whimsical mistake . Sir Walter was enjoying , in his room , a quiet pipe ; his servant entering , saw volumes of smoke ...
Página 12
... called to children , writhing in horrid convulsions , from having had the decoction of tobacco applied for the itch and scald head , and I have always experienced great difficulty in restoring them ; three instances in my own ...
... called to children , writhing in horrid convulsions , from having had the decoction of tobacco applied for the itch and scald head , and I have always experienced great difficulty in restoring them ; three instances in my own ...
Página 17
... ! Only fancy two , called gentlemen , smoking one pound's worth of cigars in two days , to the injury of their constitutions , and deprivation of family comforts . C the breath , blackening the teeth , wasting the saliva 17.
... ! Only fancy two , called gentlemen , smoking one pound's worth of cigars in two days , to the injury of their constitutions , and deprivation of family comforts . C the breath , blackening the teeth , wasting the saliva 17.
Página 22
... called fashionable . They are expensive habits , A very common smoker will expend £ 2 or £ 3 . per annum . An average of three or four cigars a day , amounts to £ 10 or £ 12 . per annum . And all this goes for smoke and spittle . Men ...
... called fashionable . They are expensive habits , A very common smoker will expend £ 2 or £ 3 . per annum . An average of three or four cigars a day , amounts to £ 10 or £ 12 . per annum . And all this goes for smoke and spittle . Men ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Extracts and Recollections of Two Lectures on the Evil Effects Arising from ... Charles Clay Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
Términos y frases comunes
adulteration amongst animals apoplexy applied attended bad habit celebrated chewers of tobacco cigar cold sweat common constitution consume consumption convulsions cultivated cure deadly nightshade deadly poison death derived digestion dirty disease disgusting drachm dyspepsia effects of tobacco ELLERBY AND CHEETHAM England Epilepsy excessive excites expences extent filthy flavour fumes give HARVARD COLLEGE head henbane herb impregnated increase its weight indigestion indulge infusion of tobacco insensible instances intoxicating juice King of Denmark leaves Lectures luxury Manchester manufactured medicine ments minutes mouth narcotic nausea Nicotiana Nicotiana Rustica nightshade nose nostrils noxious object OLDHAM STREET opium pain pernicious pinch pipe powers producing quantity Ralph Lane recollection reflecting person ridiculous says shew Sir Walter Raleigh skin smell smokers and chewers smoking and chewing snuff taker snuff-taker snuffer society species stomach supposed symptoms taste tells thing thirst tobacco plant tobacco smoke urine vertigo violent vomiting whilst yourselves
Pasajes populares
Página 6 - It is a custom loathsome to the eye, hateful to the nose, harmful to the brain, dangerous to the lungs, and, in the black stinking fume thereof, nearest resembling the horrible Stygian smoke of the pit that is bottomless...
Página 7 - Have you not reason then to be ashamed, and to forbear this filthy novelty, so basely grounded, so foolishly received and so grossly mistaken in the right use thereof?
Página 20 - Yet snuff-taking is an odd custom. If we came suddenly upon it in a foreign country, it would make us split our sides with laughter. A grave gentleman takes a little casket out of his pocket, puts a finger and thumb in, brings away a pinch of a sort of powder, and then with the most serious air possible, as if he was doing one of the most important actions of his life (for even with the most indifferent snuff-takers there is a certain look of importance) , proceeds to thrust, and keep thrusting it,...
Página 11 - I have been a Professor in this University twenty-three years, and can say, as a physician, that I never observed so many pallid faces, and so many marks of declining health ; nor ever knew so many hectical habits and consumptive affections...
Página 19 - Every professed, inveterate, and incurable snuff-taker," says his lordship, "at a moderate computation, takes one pinch in ten minutes. Every pinch, with the agreeable ceremony of blowing and wiping the nose and other incidental circumstances, consumes one minute and a half.
Página 6 - That tobacco was the lively image and pattern of hell; for that it had, by allusion, in it all the parts and vices of the world whereby hell may be gained; to wit: First, It was a smoke; so are the vanities of this world.
Página 4 - ... thriven very well in our English soil ; a great quantity of it grows yearly in several gardens about Westminster, and in other parts of Middlesex. It is planted in great plenty in Gloucester, Devonshire, and some other western countries; his Majesty sending every year, a troop of horse to destroy it, lest the trade of our American plantations should be incommoded thereby.
Página 7 - ... novelty, so basely grounded, so foolishly received and so grossly mistaken in the right use thereof? In your abuse thereof sinning against God, harming yourselves both in...
Página 11 - When tobacco is taken into the stomach for the first time, it creates nausea and extreme disgust. If swallowed, it excites violent convulsions of the stomach and of the bowels, to' eject the poison either upward or downward. If it be not very speedily and entirely ejected, it produces great anxiety, vertigo, faintness, and • > prostration of all the senses ; and, in some instances, death has followed.
Página 6 - He that taketh tobacco saith he cannot leave it, it doth bewitch him: even so the pleasures of the world make men loath to leave them, they are for the most part so enchanted with them.