Dunhill/fr: Difference between revisions

Created page with "<center>'''The Gentle Art of Smoking (le Noble Art de Fumer)– Introduction'''</center>"
(Created page with "Le livre “ The Gentle Art of Smoking” (le noble art de fumer) apparaît comme une histoire du tabac (culture, préparation etc..) et aborde ensuite les pipes et les cigares.")
(Created page with "<center>'''The Gentle Art of Smoking (le Noble Art de Fumer)– Introduction'''</center>")
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Le livre “ The Gentle Art of Smoking” (le noble art de fumer) apparaît comme une histoire du tabac (culture, préparation etc..) et aborde ensuite les pipes et les cigares.  
Le livre “ The Gentle Art of Smoking” (le noble art de fumer) apparaît comme une histoire du tabac (culture, préparation etc..) et aborde ensuite les pipes et les cigares.  


<center>'''The Gentle Art of Smoking - Introduction.'''</center>
<center>'''The Gentle Art of Smoking (le Noble Art de Fumer)– Introduction'''</center>


<blockquote><q>It is not necessary to be a member of the Tobacco Trade to realize that the world-wide practice of smoking is rapidly becoming, except for a small minority, a lost art and a limited pleasure. Indeed, many smokers in the furious tempo of modern life have freely admitted that it is only an essential narcotic for frayed nerves. For them choice Havana cigars, hand-made cigarettes and lustrous meerschaum pipes, which graced the smoking-rooms of fifty years ago, must seem almost as remote as the elaborate smoking paraphernalia which brought such excitement to Elizabethan England. Today the ubiquitous cigarette has robbed most of us of these former glories and gripped us by the throat. Smoking has become habit, and habit, proverbially, blunts the edge of pleasure.<br>
<blockquote><q>It is not necessary to be a member of the Tobacco Trade to realize that the world-wide practice of smoking is rapidly becoming, except for a small minority, a lost art and a limited pleasure. Indeed, many smokers in the furious tempo of modern life have freely admitted that it is only an essential narcotic for frayed nerves. For them choice Havana cigars, hand-made cigarettes and lustrous meerschaum pipes, which graced the smoking-rooms of fifty years ago, must seem almost as remote as the elaborate smoking paraphernalia which brought such excitement to Elizabethan England. Today the ubiquitous cigarette has robbed most of us of these former glories and gripped us by the throat. Smoking has become habit, and habit, proverbially, blunts the edge of pleasure.<br>