... enjoy a cup of tea with his family.2 The introduction of coffee, too, may be regarded as a step toward refinement and temperance. The coffee-houses provided places for the public to meet away from the taverns. As a contemporary expressed it : Whereas... The Lounger's Common-place Book - Página 82por Jeremiah Whitaker Newman - 1799Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Jeremiah Whitaker Newman - 1838 - 404 páginas
...this work, by a correspondent of the author, " that apprentices, clerks, and others, formerly used to take their morning draught, in ale, beer, or wine, which, by the dizziness they cause in the brain, make many unfit for business; but that now they may safely play... | |
| Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire - 1913 - 552 páginas
...caused a greater sobriety among the nations ; In whereas formerly apprentices and clerks with others use to take their morning draught in ale, beer or wine, which by the dizziness they cause in the brain make many unfit for businesse, they use now to play the good fellowes... | |
| James Edward Gillespie - 1920 - 396 páginas
...taverns. As a contemporary expressed it : Whereas formerly apprentices and clerks with others used to take their morning draught in ale, beer or wine, which by the dizziness they caused in the brain made many unfit for business, they use now to play the good-fellows... | |
| |