        item: #1 of 5
          id: 19392
      author: None
       title: The Little Tea Book
        date: None
       words: 12466
      flesch: 73
     summary: _INTRODUCING THE LITTLE TEA BOOK_ After all, tea is _the_ drink! But what other product can compare with tea in the high regard in which it has always been held by writers whose standing in literature, and recognized good taste in other walks, cannot be questioned?
    keywords: beverage; boiling; china; chinese; châ; coffee; cup; cups; drink; drinking; fire; good; japan; japanese; kettle; leaves; life; milk; poem; pot; table; tea; thy; time; water; women; years
       cache: 19392.txt
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        item: #2 of 5
          id: 28549
      author: Smith, Hugh
       title: A Treatise on Foreign Teas Abstracted From An Ingenious Work, Lately Published, Entitled An Essay On the Nerves
        date: None
       words: 22688
      flesch: 57
     summary: Nor has there been a controversy in which the health of the community has been so materially concerned, that has afforded so little direction of moment to those who would wish to ascertain the truth of such teas being either beneficial, injurious, or innocent in their effects. Some falsely suppose that this species of management is only to soften such of the leaves as are grown too dry, and are therefore liable to break in the curling; but this will evidently appear not the cause, when it is considered that the greater part of the teas must dry in such a hot climate while they are gathering: and as they are particularly anxious to send them in as curious a curled state as possible, such teas must be thus moistened again, in order to curl them afterwards in that perfect manner which is performed on the iron plates of the furnace.
    keywords: body; case; complaints; effects; english; health; india tea; nature; proprietor; qualities; sanative; servant; sir; solander; spirits; state; stomach; tea; teas; time; use; virtues
       cache: 28549.txt
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        item: #3 of 5
          id: 46158
      author: Reade, Arthur
       title: Tea and Tea Drinking
        date: None
       words: 31763
      flesch: 69
     summary: The teetotalers and tea--Extravagance of ladies--Joseph Livesey--Reformed drunkards as water-carriers--One thousand two hundred persons at one tea-party--How they brewed their tea--How the Anti-Corn-Law League reached the people--Singing the praises of tea--Tea-drinking contests--Tea-fights--Hints on tea-meeting fare--Tea as a revolutionary agent. Tea and dry bread _versus_ porter and beefsteak--Tea for soldiers--Opinion of Professor Parkes--Tea _versus_ spirits--Tea and Tel-el-Kebir--Lord Wolseley's testimony--Pegs and teapots--Temperance in the navy--Drinking the health of her Majesty in a bowl of tea--Cycling and tea-drinking--Mountain-climbing--Tea in the harvest-field--Cold tea as a summer drink.
    keywords: beer; beverage; china; chinese; coffee; cup; day; drank; drinking; duty; england; good; health; house; leaves; life; london; man; men; milk; people; persons; plant; present; society; stimulant; sugar; table; tea; teapot; temperance; time; use; water; women; work; year
       cache: 46158.txt
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        item: #4 of 5
          id: 46775
      author: Roth, Rodris
       title: Tea Drinking in 18th-Century America: Its Etiquette and Equipage United States National Museum Bulletin 225, Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology Paper 14, pages 61-91, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, 1961
        date: None
       words: 14577
      flesch: 74
     summary: An English Family at Tea_ (frontispiece), it was perfectly acceptable to serve tea on a plain-top table without a cloth. At one time this set probably included containers for cream or milk and sugar, as did the adult tea table setts complete.
    keywords: american; boston; bowl; century; cit; cups; drinking; english; family; fig; figure; footnote; illustration; letter; new; saucers; silver; sugar; table; tea; tea table; teapot; vol; york
       cache: 46775.txt
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        item: #5 of 5
          id: 769
      author: Okakura, Kakuzo
       title: The Book of Tea
        date: None
       words: 18279
      flesch: 71
     summary: Jonas Hanway (Essay on Tea, 1756) said that men seemed to lose their stature and comeliness, women their beauty through the use of tea. The Philosophy of Tea is not mere aestheticism in the ordinary acceptance of the term, for it expresses conjointly with ethics and religion our whole point of view about man and nature.
    keywords: art; beauty; century; ceremony; china; cup; day; flowers; garden; japanese; laotse; leaves; life; man; masters; nature; present; rikiu; room; spirit; sung; taoism; tea; teaism; things; time; water; world; zen
       cache: 769.txt
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