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The Round Table
The Keeper of the Flame - a question on the Origins of Pipes
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<blockquote data-quote="Al in Canada" data-source="post: 61242" data-attributes="member: 683"><p>the book is: "<u>The Pipe Book</u>":A guide to nearly every pipe created by the premiername in pipe-making Alfred Dunhill, with a foreword by Richard Dunhill, Gammercy Press(Random House); NY, 2000. [the first edition without the R. Dunhill foreward dates from 1924]. </p><p>The part of the text you want is Chapter 2 "Makeshift pipes and tobacco".</p><p></p><p>Now how do you suppose the "fire guardian" moved from blowing on the fire, to get it going, to sucking in the smoke. ["Blow, Ug, blow. Suck is just an expression." :lol!: :lol!: :lol!: ]</p><p></p><p>Lots of different things thrown on the fire for the invigorating effects of the smoke, in addition to tobacco: sweet grass, hemp, etc. wouldn't have wanted to be the guy that tried smoking poison ivy.:affraid: </p><p></p><p>Al (in Canada)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Al in Canada, post: 61242, member: 683"] the book is: "[u]The Pipe Book[/u]":A guide to nearly every pipe created by the premiername in pipe-making Alfred Dunhill, with a foreword by Richard Dunhill, Gammercy Press(Random House); NY, 2000. [the first edition without the R. Dunhill foreward dates from 1924]. The part of the text you want is Chapter 2 "Makeshift pipes and tobacco". Now how do you suppose the "fire guardian" moved from blowing on the fire, to get it going, to sucking in the smoke. ["Blow, Ug, blow. Suck is just an expression." :lol!: :lol!: :lol!: ] Lots of different things thrown on the fire for the invigorating effects of the smoke, in addition to tobacco: sweet grass, hemp, etc. wouldn't have wanted to be the guy that tried smoking poison ivy.:affraid: Al (in Canada) [/QUOTE]
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The Keeper of the Flame - a question on the Origins of Pipes
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