| Edward Potts Cheyney - 1908 - 830 pages
...a man cannot heartily welcome his friend now, but straight they must be in hand with tobacco ? Now it is become in place of a cure, a point of good fellowship,...and he that will refuse to take a pipe of tobacco among his fellows (though for his own election he would rather feel the savor of a sink) is accounted... | |
| Robert Maynard Leonard - 1912 - 788 pages
...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,...and he that will refuse to take a pipe of tobacco among his fellows (though by his own election he would rather feel the savour of a sink) is accounted... | |
| Sir Henry Craik - 1913 - 624 pages
...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,...and he that will refuse to take a pipe of tobacco among his fellows (though by his own election he would rather feel the savour of a sink) is accounted... | |
| James Edward Gillespie - 1920 - 396 pages
...great vanitie, that a man cannot heartily welcome his friend now, but straight they must bee in hand with Tobacco? No, it is become, in place of a cure,...and he that will refuse to take a pipe of Tobacco among his fellowes, (though by his own election he would rather feele the savour of a Sinke) is accounted... | |
| Robert Burns Morgan - 1923 - 696 pages
...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...and he that will refuse to take a pipe of tobacco among his fellows (though by his own election he would rather feel the savour of a sink), is accounted... | |
| Harry Morgan Ayres, Frederick Morgan Padelford - 1924 - 942 pages
...great vanity, that a man cannot heartily welcome his friend now, but straight they must be in hand of God on high ; Or Moses bade eternal warfare among his fellows (though by his own election he would rather feel the savour of a sink), is accounted... | |
| Thomas Middleton, Thomas Dekker - 1987 - 292 pages
...great vanitie, 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 hee that will refuse to take a pipe of Tobacco among his fellowes, (though by his owne election hee... | |
| Daniel Fischlin, Mark Fortier - 2002 - 556 pages
...great vanitie, that a man cannot heartily welcome his friend now, but straight they must bee in hand with Tobacco? No it is become in place of a cure,...and he that will refuse to take a pipe of Tobacco among his fellowes, (though by his owne election he would rather feele the sauour of a Sinke) is accounted... | |
| Jason Hughes - 2003 - 216 pages
...Tobacco, bears witness to the prevalence of offering tobacco as a gesture of goodwill; tobacco had become "a point of good fellowship, and he that will refuse to take a pipe of Tobacco among his fellowes (though by his own election he would rather feele the savour of a Sinke) is accounted... | |
| Ernest F. Henderson - 2004 - 468 pages
...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,...and he that will refuse to take a pipe of tobacco among his fellows (though for his own election he would rather feel the savor of a sink) is accounted... | |
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