THE LITTLE TEA BOOK Boswell and Johnson at the Mitre. THE LITTLE TEA BOOK COMPILED BY ARTHUR GRAY Compiler of Over the Black Coffee ILLUSTRATED BY GEORGE W. HOOD NEW YORK THE BAKER A TAYLOR COMPANY 33-3T EAST 17TH ST., UNION SQ. NORTH \ COPYBIGHT, 1903, BY THE BAKKB & TAYLOR CoMPAmr Published, October, 1903 Thou soft, thou sober, sage, and venerable liquid I Thou innocent pretence for bringing the wicked of both sexes together in the morning! Thou fe- male tongue-running, smile-soothing, heart-opening, wink-tipping cordial to whose glorious insipidity I owe the happiest moments of my life. —COLLET CIBBBB. 282474 INTRODUCING THE LITTLE TEA BOOK AFTER all, tea is the drink ! Do- mestically and socially it is the bev- erage of the world. There may be those who will come forward with their figures to prove that other fruits of the soil — agriculturally and commercially — are more important. Perhaps they are right w/hen quoting statistics. But what other product can compare with tea in the high re- gard in which it has always been held by writers whose standing in litera- ture, and recognized good taste in other walks, cannot be questioned ? A glance through this book will show that the spirit of the tea bever- vii INTRODUCTION age is one of peace, comfort, and re- finement As these qualities are all associated with the ways of women, it is to them, therefore — the real rulers of the world — that tea owes its prestige and vogue. Further peeps through these pages prove this to be true ; for nearly all the allusions and references to the beverage, by male writers, reveal the womanly influence that tea imparts. But this is not all. The side-lights of history, customs, manners, and modes of living which tea plays in the life of all nations will be found entertaining and instructive. Linked with the fine feminine atmosphere which pervades the drinking of the beverage everywhere, a leaf which can combine so much deserves, at least, a little human hearing for its Yiii INTRODUCTION long list of virtues ; for its peaceful walks, talks, tales, tattle, frills, and fancies which go to make up this tribute to "the cup that cheers but not inebriates/' ix THE LITTLE TEA BOOK THE ORIGIN OF TEA DAKMA, third son of Koyuwo, King of India, a religions high priest from Siaka (the anthor of that Eastern paganism about a thousand years before the Christian era), coming to China, to teach the way of happiness, lived a most austere life, passing his days in continual mortification, and retiring by night to solitudes, in which he fed only upon the leaves of trees and other vegetable productions. After several years passed in this manner, in fasting and watching, it happened 1 TMHE LITTLE TEA BOOK that, contrary to his vows, the pious Darma fell asleep ! When he awoke, he was so much enraged at himself, that, to prevent the offence to his vows for the future, he got rid of his eye- lids and placed them on the ground. On the following day, returning to his accustomed devotions, he beheld, with amazement, springing up from his eyelids, two small shrubs of an unusual appearance, such as he had never before seen, and of whose quali- ties he was, of course, entirely igno- rant. The saint, however, not being wholly devoid of curiosity — or, per- haps, being unusually hungry — was prompted to eat of the leaves, and immediately felt within him a won- derful elevation of mind, and a ve- hement desire of divine contempla- tion, with which he acquainted his THE LITTLE TEA BOOK disciples, who were eager to follow the example of their instructor, and they readily received into common use the fragrant plant which has been the theme of so many poetical «and literary pens in succeeding ages. •DB- JOHNSON'S CHAIR. ~ THE LITTLE TEA BOOK TEA BY FRANCIS SALTUS SALTUS From what enchanted Eden came thy leaves That hide such subtle spirits of perfume ? Did eyes preadamite first see the bloom, Luscious nepenthe of the soul that grieves ? By thee the tired and torpid mind conceives Fairer than roses brightening life's gloom, Thy protean charm can every form assume And turn December nights to April eves. Thy amber-tinted drops bring back to me Fantastic shapes of great Mongolian towers, Emblazoned banners, and the booming gong; I hear the sound of feast and revelry, And smell, far sweeter than the sweetest flowers, The kiosks of Pekin, fragrant of Oolong ! LITTLE CUPS OF CHINESE AND JAPANESE TEA A LTHOUGH the legend credits h\ the pious East Indian with the discovery of tea, there is no evidence extant that India is really the birthplace of the plant. Since India has no record of date, or facts, on stone or tablet, or ever handed down a single incident of song or story — apart from the legend — as to the origin of tea, one is loath to accept the claim — if claim they assert — of a people who are not above practising the " black art" at every turn of their fancy. Certain it is that China, first in many things, knew tea as soon as 5 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK any nation of the world. The early Chinese were not only more progres- sive than other peoples, but linked with their progress were important researches, and invaluable discover- ies, which the civilized world has long ago recognized. Then, why not add tea to the list? At any rate, it is easy to believe that the Chinese were first in the tea fields, and that undoubtedly the plant was a native of both China and Japan when it was slumbering on the slopes of India, unpicked, unsteeped, un- drunk, unhonored, and unsung. A celebrated Buddhist, St. Dengyo Daishai, is credited with having in- troduced tea into Japan from China as early as the fourth century. It is likely that he was the first to teach the Japanese the use of the herb, for 6 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK it had long been a favorite beverage in the mountains of the Celestial Kingdom. The plant, however, is found in so many parts of Japan that there can be little doubt but what it is indigenous there as well. The word TEA is of Chinese origin, being derived from the Amoy and Swatow reading, " Tay," of the same character, which expresses both the ancient name of tea, " T'su," and the more modern one, " Cha." Jap- anese tea, "Chiya" — pronounced Cha. Tea was not known in China be- fore the Tang dynasty, 618-906 A.D. An infusion of some kind of leaf, how- ever, was used as early as the Chow dynasty, 1122-255 B.C., as we learn from the Urh-ya, a glossary of terms used in ancient history and poetry. THE LITTLE TEA BOOK This work, which is classified by subjects, has been assigned as the be- ginning of the Chow dynasty, but belongs more properly to the era of Confucius, K'ung Kai, 551-479 B.C. Although known in Japan for more than a thousand years, tea only gradually became the national bev- erage as late as the fourteenth cen- tury. In the first half of the eighth cen- tury, 729 A.D., there was a record made of a religious festival, at which the forty-fifth Mikado — " Sublime Gate" — Shommei Tenno, entertained the Buddhist priests with tea, a hith- erto unknown beverage from Corea, which country was for many years the high-road of Chinese culture to Japan. After the ninth century, 823 A.D., 6 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK and for four centuries thereafter, tea fell into disuse, and almost oblivion, among the Japanese. The nobility, and Buddhist priests, however, con- tinued to drink it as a luxury. During the reign of the eighty- third Emperor, 1199-1210 A.D., the cultivation of tea was permanently established in Japan. In 1200, the bonze, Yei-Sei, brought tea seeds from China, which he planted on the mountains in one of the most northern provinces. Yei-Sei is also credited with introducing the Chi- nese custom of ceremonious tea- drinking. At any rate, he presented tea seeds to Mei-ki, the abbot of the monastery of To-gano (to whom the use of tea had been recommended for its stimulating properties), and in- structed him in the mystery of its 9 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK cultivation, treatment, and prepara- tion. Mei-ki, who laid out plantations near Uzi, was successful as a pupil, and even now the tea-growers of that neighborhood pay tribute to his memory by annually offering at his shrine the first gathered tea-leaves. After that period, the use of tea became more and more in fashion, the monks and their kindred having discovered its property of keeping them awake during long vigils and nocturnal prayers. From this time on the develop- ment and progress of the plant are interwoven with the histories and customs of these countries. 10 ON TEA The following short poem by Ed- mund Waller is believed to be the first one written in praise of the " cup that does not inebriate" : Venus her myrtle, Phoebus has her bays ; Tea both excels, which she vouchsafes to praise. The best of Queens, and best of herbs, we owe To that bold nation, which the way did show To the fair region where the sun doth rise, Whose rich productions we so justly prize. The Muse's friend, tea does our fancy aid, Repress those vapors which the head invade. And keep the palace of the soul serene, Fit on her birthday to salute the Queen. Waller was born in 1605, and died in 1687, aged eighty-two. 11 SOME ENGLISH TEA HIS- TORY TEA was brought into Europe by the DUTCH EAST I^DIA COMPANY, in 1610. It was at least forty, and perhaps forty-seven, years later that England woke up to the fascinations of the new drink. Dr. Johnson puts it at even a later date, for he claims that tea was first introduced into England by Lords Arlington and Ossory, in 1666, and really made its debut into society when the wives of these noblemen gave it its vogue. If Dr. Johnson's statement is in- tended to mean that nothing is any- thing until the red seal of the select 12 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK says, "Thus shall it be," he is right in the year he has selected. If, on the other hand, the Doctor had in mind society at large, he is " mixed in his dates," or leaves, for tea was drawn and drunk in London nine years before that date. Garway, the founder of Garra- way's coffee house, claimed the honor of being first to offer tea in leaf and drink for public sale, in 1657. It is pretty safe to fix the entrance of tea into Europe even a few years ahead of his announcement, for merchants in those days did not advertise their wares in advance. However, this date is about the beginning of TEA TIME, for in the Mercurius Politicius of September, 1658, appeared the following adver- tisement : 13 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK That excellent and by all Physitians approved China drink, called by the Chineans, Tcha, by other nations, Tay, or Tea, is sold at the Sultana's Head, a Copphee House, in Sweetings Rents, by the Royal Exchange, London. Like all new things, when they have fastened on to the public's fa- vor, tea was on everybody's lips and in everybody's mouth. It was lauded to the skies, and was supposed to be good for all the ills of the flesh. It would cure colds and consumption, clear the sight, remove lassitude, purify the liver, improve digestion, create appetite, strengthen the mem- ory, and cure fever and ague. One panegyrist says, while never putting the patient in mind of his disease, it cheers the heart, without disordering the head ; strengthens the feet of the old, and settles the heads of the young ; cools the brain 14 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK of the hard drinker, and warms that of the sober student ; relieves the sick, and makes the healthy better. Epicures drink it for want of an ap- petite ; ton vivants, to remove the ef- fects of a surfeit of wine ; gluttons, as a remedy for indigestion ; politicians, for the vertigo ; doctors, for drowsi- ness ; prudes, for the vapors ; wits, for the spleen ; and beaux to improve their complexions ; summing up, by declaring tea to be a treat for the frugal, a regale for the luxurious, a successful agent for the man of busi- ness, and a bracer for the idle. Poets and verse-makers joined the chorus in praise of tea, in Greek and Latin. One poet pictures Hebe pour- ing the delightful cup for the god- desses, who, finding it made their beauty brighter and their wit more 15 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK brilliant, drank so deeply as to dis- gust Jupiter, who had forgotten that he, himself, u Drank tea that happy morn, When wise Minerva of his brain was born." Laureant Tate, who wrote a poem on tea in two cantos, described a family jar among the fair deities, be- cause each desired to become the special patroness of the ethereal drink destined to triumph over wine. Another versifier exalts it at the ex- pense of its would-be rival, coifee : " In vain would coffee boast an equal good, The crystal stream transcends the flowing mud, Tea, even the ills from coffee spring repairs, Disclaims its vices and its virtues shares." Another despairing enthusiast ex- claims : 44 Hail, goddess of the vegetable, hail ! To sing thy worth, all words, all numbers, faH!" 16 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK The new beverage did not have the field all to itself, however, for, while it was generally admitted that Tea was fixed, and come to stay, It could not drive good meat and drink away. Lovers of the old and conservative customs of the table were not anx- ious to try the novelty. Others shied at it ; some flirted with it, in tiny teaspoonfuls ; others openly de- fied and attacked it. Among the latter were a number of robust versi- fiers and physicians. "'Twas better for each British virgin, When on roast beef, strong beer and sturgeon, Joyous to breakfast they sat round, Nor were ashamed to eat a pound." The fleshly school of doctors were only too happy to disagree with their brethren respecting the merits and demerits of the new-fangled drink ; 17 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK and it is hard to say which were most bitter, the friends or the foes of tea. Maria Theresa's physician, Count Belchigen, attributed the discovery of a number of new diseases to the debility born of daily tea-drinking. Dr. Paulli denied that it had either taste or fragrance, owing its reputa- tion entirely to the peculiar vessels and water used by the Chinese, so that it was folly to partake of it, un- less tea-drinkers could supply them- selves with pure water from the Vassie and the fragrant tea-pots of G-nihing. This sagacious sophist and dogmatizer also discovered that, among other evils, tea-drinking de- prived its devotees of the power of expectoration, and entailed sterility ; wherefore he hoped Europeans would thereafter keep to their natural bev- 18 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK erages — wine and ale — and reject coffee, chocolate, and tea, which were all equally bad for them. In spite of the array of old-fash- ioned doctors, wits, and lovers of the pipe and bottle, who opposed evil effects, sneered at the finely bred men of England being turned into women, and grumbled at the stingy custom of calling for dish-water after dinner, the custom of tea-drinking continued to grow. By 1689 the sale of the leaf had increased sufficiently to make it politic to reduce the duty on it from eight pence on the decoc- tion to five shillings a pound on the leaf. The value of tea at this time may be estimated from a custom- house report of the sale of a quantity of divers sorts and qualities, the worst being equal to that "used in 19 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK coffee-houses for making single tea/' which, being disposed of by " inch of candle/' fetched an average of twelve shillings a pound. During the next three years the consumption of tea was greatly in- creased ; but very little seems to have been known about it by those who drank it — if we may judge from the enlightenment received from a pamphlet, given gratis, "up one flight of stairs, at the sign of the Anodyne Necklace, without Temple Bar/' All it tells us about tea is that it is the leaf of a little shoot growing plenti- fully in the East Indies ; that Bohea —called by the French "Bean Tea"— is best of a morning with bread and butter, being of a more nourishing nature than the green which may be used when a meal is not wanted. 20 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK Three or four cups at a sitting are enough ; and a little milk or cream renders the beverage smoother and more powerful in blunting the acid humors of the stomach. The satirists believed that tea had a contrary effect upon the acid hu- mors of the mind, making the tea- table the arena for the display of the feminine capacity for backbiting and scandal. Listen to Swift describe a lady enjoying her evening cups of tea: " Surrounded with the noisy clans Of prudes, coquettes and harridans. Now voices over voices rise, While each to be the loudest vies ; They contradict, affirm, dispute, No single tongue one moment mute ; All mad to speak, and none to hearken, They set the very lapdog barking ; Their chattering makes a louder din Than fish-wives o'er a cup of gin ; Far less the rabble roar and rail When drunk with sour election ale." 21 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK Even gentle Gay associated soft tea with the temper of women when he pictures Doris and Melanthe abusing all their bosom friends, while — " Through all the room From flowery tea exhales a fragrant fume. " But not all the women were tea- drinkers in those days. There was Madam Drake, the proprietress of one of the three private carriages Manchester could boast. Few men were as courageous as she in declar- ing against the tea-table when they were but invited guests. Madam Drake did not hesitate to make it known when she paid an afternoon's visit that she expected to be offered her customary solace — a tankard of ale and a pipe of tobacco. Another female opponent of tea THE LITTLE TEA BOOK was the Female Spectator, which de- clared the use of the fluid to be not only expensive, but pernicious ; the utter destruction of all economy, the bane of good housewifery, and the source of all idleness. Tradesmen especially suffered from the habit. They could not serve their customers because their apprentices were ab- sent during the busiest hours of the day drumming up gossips for their mistresses' tea-tables. This same censor says that the most temperate find themselves obliged to drink wine freely after tea, or supplement their Bohea with rum and brandy, the bottle and glass becoming as necessary to the tea- table as the slop-basin. Although Jonas Hanway, the father of the umbrella, was success- 23 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK ful in keeping off water, he was not successful in keeping out tea. All he did accomplish in his essay on the subject was to call forth a reply from Dr. Johnson, who, strange to say, instead of vigorously defending his favorite tipple, rather excuses it as an amiable weakness ; confessing that tea is a barren superfluity, fit only to amuse the idle, relax the studious, and dilute the meals of those who cannot take exercise, and will not practise abstinence. His chief ar- gument in tea's favor is that it is drunk in no great quantity even by those who use it most, and as it neither exhilarates the heart nor stimulates the palate, is, after all, but a nominal entertainment, serving as a pretence for assembling people together, for interrupting business, 24 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK diversifying idleness ; admitting that, perhaps, while gratifying the taste, without nourishing the body, it is quite unsuited to the lower classes. It is a singular fact, too, that at that period there was no other really vigorous defender of the beverage. All the best of the other writers did was to praise its pleasing qualities, associations, and social attributes. Still, tea grew in popular favor, privately and publicly. The custom had now become so general that every wife looked upon the tea-pot, cups, and caddy to be as much her right by marriage as the wedding-ring itself. Fine ladies enjoyed the crowded public entertainments with tea below stairs and ventilators above. Citi- zens, fortunate enough to have leaden roofs to their houses, took their tea 25 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK and their ease thereon. On Sundays, finding the country lanes leading to Kensington, Hainpstead, Highgate, Islington, and Stepney, "to be much pleasanter than the paths of the gospel," the people flocked to those suburban resorts with their wives and children, to take tea under the trees. In one of Coleman's plays, a Spitalfield's dame defines the acme of elegance as : " Drinking tea on summer afternoons At Bagnigge Wells with china and gilt spoons.11* London was surrounded with tea- gardens, the most popular being Sadlier's Wells, Merlin's Cave, Crom- well Gardens, Jenny's Whim, Cnper Gardens, London Spa, and the White Conduit House, where they used to take in fifty pounds on a Sunday af- ternoon for sixpenny tea-tickets. THE LITTLE TEA BOOK One D'Archenholz was surprised by the elegance, beauty, and luxury of these resorts, where, Steele said, they swallowed gallons of the juice of tea, while their own dock leaves were trodden under foot. The ending of the East India Company's monopoly of the trade, coupled with the fact that the legis- lature recognized that tea had passed out of the catalogue of luxuries into that of necessities, began a new era for the queen of drinks destined to reign over all other beverages. 27 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK 0 TEA/ In the drama of the past Thou art featured in the cast ; (OTea!) And thou hast played thy part With never a change of heart, (O Tea !) For 'mid all the ding and dong Waits a welcome — soothing song, For fragrant Hyson and Oolong. A song of peace, through all the years, Of fireside fancies, devoid of fears, Of mothers' talks and mothers' lays, Of grandmothers' comforts— quiet ways. Of gossip, perhaps — still and yet — What of Johnson ? Would we forget The pictured cup ; those merry times, When round the board, with ready rhymes Waller, Dryden, and Addison— Young, Grave Pope to Gay, when Cowper sung? Sydney Smith, too ; gentle Lamb brew, Tennyson, Dickens, Doctor Holmes knew, The cup that cheered, those sober souls, And tiny tea-trays, samovars, and bowls. So here's a toast to the queen of plants, The queen of plants— Bohea ! Good wife, ring for your maiden aunts, We'll all have cups of tea. —ARTHUR GRIT. THE LITTLE TEA BOOK TEA TERM'S JAPANESE Ori-mono-chS, Folded Tea Giy-6ku-ro-cha Dew Drop Tea Usu-cha Light Tea Koi-cha Dark Tea To-bi-dashi-cha Sifted Tea Ban-cha Common Tea Yu-Shiyutsu-cha Export Tea Neri-cha Brick Tea Koku-cha Black Tea Kp-cha Tea Dust Broken Leaves Riyoku-cka Green Tea CHINESE Bohea u Happy Establishment " So called after two ranges of hills, Fu-Kien or Fo-Kien Congou Labor Named so. at Amoy from the labor in pre- paring it. Sou chong Small Kind Hyson Flourishing Spring Pe-koe White Hair So called because only the youngest leaves are gathered, which still have the delicate down — white hair — on the surface. Pou-chong Folded Tea So called at Canton after the manner of picking it. Brick Tea — prepared in Central China from the commonest sorts of tea, by soaking the tea 29 as £? THE LITTLE TEA BOOK refuse, such as broken leaves, twigs, and dust, in boiling water and then pressing them into moulds. Used in Siberia and Mongolia, where it also serves as a medium of exchange. The Mongols place the bricks, when testing the qual- ity, on the head, and try to pull downward over the eyes. They reject the brick as worthless if it breaks or bends. v - "> c*^ ft \ ci??>> TEA LEA VE8 By JOHK EK^EST 1 CCOKDING to Henry Thomas /V Buckle, the author of "The History of Civilization in England/' who was the master of eighteen languages, and had a library of 22,000 volumes, with an income of $75,000 a year, at the age of twenty-nine, in 1850 (he died in 1860, at the age of thirty-nine), tea making and drinking were, or are, what Wendell Phillips would call lost arts. He thought that, when it came to brewing tea, the Chinese philosophers were not living in his vicinity. He distinctly wrote that, 31 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK until he showed her how, no woman of his acquaintance could make a decent cup of tea. He insisted upon a warm cup, and even spoon, and saucer. Not that Mr. Buckle ever sipped tea from a saucer. Of course, he was right in insisting upon those above-mentioned things, for tea- things, like a tea-party, should be in sympathy with the tea, not antag- onistic to it. Still, not always ; for, on one memorable occasion, in the little town of Boston, the greatest tea-party in history was anything but sympathetic. But let that pass. Emperor Kien Lung wrote, 200 years or more ago, for the benefit of his children, just before he left the Flowery Kingdom for a flowerier : " Set a tea-pot over a slow fire ; fill it with cold water ; boil it long 32 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK enough to turn a lobster red ; pour it on the quantity of tea in a porce- lain vessel; allow it to remain on the leaves until the vapor evaporates, then sip it slowly, and all your sor- rows will follow the vapor. " He says nothing about milk or sugar. But, to me, tea without su- gar is poison, as it is with milk. I can drink one cup of tea, or coffee, with sugar, but without milk, and feel no ill effects ; but if I put milk in either tea or coffee, I am as sick as a defeated candidate for the Pres- idency. That little bit of fact is written as a hint to many who are ill without knowing why they are, after drinking tea, or coffee, with milk in it. I don't think that milk was ever intended for coffee or tea. Why should it be ? Who was the THE LITTLE TEA BOOK first to color tea and coffee with milk ? It may have been a mad prince, in the presence of his flatter- ers and imitators, to be odd ; or just to see if his flatterers would adopt the act. The Eussians sometimes put cham- pagne in their tea ; the Germans, beer ; the Irish, whiskey ; the New Yorker, ice cream ; the English, oys- ters, or clams, if in season ; the true Bostonian, rose leaves ; and the Ital- ian and Spaniard, onions and garlic. You all know one of the following lines, imperfectly. Scarcely one in one hundred quotes them correctly. / never have quoted them as written, off-hand — but lines run out of my head like schoolboys out of school, " When the lessons and tasks are all ended, And school for the day is dismissed." 34 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK Here are the lines : " Now stir the fire, and close the shutters fast ; Let fall the curtains ; wheel the sofa round ; And while the bubbling and loud-hissing urn Throws up a steamly column, and the cups That cheer, but not inebriate, wait on each, To let us welcome peaceful evening in." Isn't that a picture ? Not one superfluous word in it ! Who knows its author, or when it was written, or can quote the line before or after "the cups That cheer, but not inebriate " ? or in what poem the lines run down the ages ? I tell you ? Not I. I don't believe in encouraging laziness. If I tell you, you will let it slip from your memory, like a panic-stricken eel through the fingers of a panic- stricken schoolboy ; but if you hunt it up, it will be riveted to your mem- ory, like a bullet, and one never for- 35 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK gets when, where, how, why, and from whom, he receives that. What a pity that, in Shakespeare's time, there was no tea-table ! What a delightful comedy he could, and would, have written around it, plac- ing the scene in his native Stratford! What a charming hostess at a tea- table his mother, Mary Arden (love- liest of womanly names), would have made ! Any of the ladies of the de- lightful "Cranford" wouldn't be a circumstance to a tea-table scene in a Warwickshire comedy, with lovely Mary Arden Shakespeare as the pro- tagonist, if the comedy were from the pen of her delightful boy, Will. Had tea been known in Shakespeare's time, how much more closely he would have brought his sexes, under one roof, instead of sending the more 36 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK animal of the two off to The Boar's Head and The Mermaid, leaving the ladies to their own verbal de- vices. Shakespeare, being such a delicate, as well as virile, poet, would have taken to tea as naturally as a bee takes to a rose or honeysuckle ; for the very word " tea" suggests all that is fragrant, and clean, and spotless : linen, silver, china, toast, butter, a charming room with charming wom- en, charmingly gowned, and peach and plum and apple trees, with the scent of roses, just beyond the open, half -curtained windows, look- ing down upon, or over, orchard or garden, as the May or June morning breezes suggest eternal youth, as they fill the room with perfume, tender- ness, love, optimism, and hope in 37 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK immortality. Coffee suggests tav- erns, cafes, sailing vessels, yachts, boarding - houses - by - the - river- side, and pessimism. Tea suggests opti- mism. Coffee is a tonic ; tea, a com- fort. Coffee is prose ; tea is poetry. Whoever thinks of taking coffee into a sick-room ? Who doesn't think of taking in the comforting cup of tea ? Can the most vivid imagination pict- ure the angels (above the stars) drink- ing coffee ? No. Yet, if I were to show them to you over the tea- cups, you would not be surprised or shocked. Would you ? Not a bit of it. You would say : "That's a very pretty picture. Pray, what are they talking about, or of whom are they talking ? " Why, of their loved ones below, and of the days of their coming above 38 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK the stars. They know when to look for as, and while the time may seem long to us before the celestial reun- ion, to them it is short. They do not worry, as we do. We could not match their beautiful serenity if we tried, for they know the folly of wishing to break or change divine laws. What delightful scandals have been born at tea-tables — rose and lavender, and old point lace scan- dals : surely, no brutal scandals or treasons, as in the tavern. Tea-table gossip surely never seriously hurt a reputation. Well, name one. No ? Well, think of the shattered reputa- tions that have fallen around the bottle. Men are the worst gossips unhanged, not women. In 1652, tea sold for as high as THE LITTLE TEA BOOK £10 in the leaf. Pepys had his first cup of tea in September, 1660. (See his Diary.) The rare recipe for mak- ing tea in those days was known only to the elect, and here it is : " To a pint of tea, add the yolks of two fresh eggs ; then beat them up with as much fine sugar as is sufficient to sweeten the tea, and stir well together. The water must remain no longer upon the tea than while you can chant the Miserere psalm in a leisurely fashion. " But I am not indorsing recipes of 250 odd years ago. The above is from the knowledge box of a Chinese priest, or a priest from China, called P£re Couplet (don't print it Qua- train), in 1667. He gave it to the Earl of Clarendon, and I extend it to you, if you wish to try it. 40 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK John Milton knew the delights of tea. He drank coffee during the composition of " Paradise Lost," and tea during the building of " Paradise Regained." Like all good things, animate and inanimate, tea did not become popu- lar without a struggle. It, like the gradual oak, met with many kinds of opposition, from the timid, the prejudiced, and the selfish. All sorts of herbs were put upon the market to offset its popularity; such as onions, sage, marjoram, the Arctic bramble, the sloe, goat-weed, Mexi- can goosefoot, speedwell, wild gera- nium, veronica, wormwood, juniper, saffron, carduus benedictus, trefoil, wood-sorrel, pepper, mace, scurry grass, plantain, and betony. Sir Hans Sloane invented herb tea, 41 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK and Captain Cook's companion, Dr. Solander, invented another tea, but it was no use — tea had come to stay, and a blessing it has been to the world, when moderately used. You don't want to become a tea drunkard, like Dr. Johnson, nor a coffee fiend, like Balzac. Be moderate in all things, and you are bound to be happy and live long. Moderation in eating, drinking, loving, hating, smoking, talking, acting, fighting, sleeping, walking, lending, borrowing, reading newspapers — in expressing opinions — even in bathing and praying — means long life and happiness. THE LITTLE TEA BOOK WIT, WISDOM, AND HUMOR OF TEA HTEA tempers the spirits and harmonizes the mind, dispels lassitude and relieves fatigue, awakens thought and prevents drowsiness, light- ens or refreshes the body, and clears the percep- tive faculties.— CONFUCIUS. Thank God for tea ! What would the world do without tea ? — how did it exist? I ain glad I was not born before tea. — SYDNEY SMITH. "Sammy," whispered Mr. Weller, "if some o' these here people don't want tappin' to-mor- row mornin', I ain't your father, and that's wot it is. Why this here old lady next me is a drown- in' herself in tea." 44 Be quiet, can't you ? " murmured Sam. " Sam," wnispered Mr. Weller, a moment af- terward, in a tone of deep agitation, u mark my words, my boy ; if that 'ere secretary feller keeps on for five minutes more, he'll blow him- self up with toast and water." 44 Well, let him if he likes," replied Sam ; " it ain't no bis'ness of yourn." " If this here lasts much longer, Sammy," said Mr. Weller, in the same low voice, " I shall feel it my duty as a human bein' to rise and address the cheer. There's a young 'poman on the next form but two, as has drank nine break- fast cups and a half ; and she's a swellin' wisibly before my wery eyes." — Pickwick Papers. Books upon books have been published in re- lation to the evil effects of tea-drinking, but, for 43 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK all that, no statistics are at hand to show that their arguments have made teetotalers of tea- drinkers. One of the best things, however, said against tea-drinking is distinctly in its favor to a certain extent. It is from one Dr. Paulli, who laments that utea so dries the bodies of the Chinese that they can hardly spit." This will find few sympathizers among us. We sug- gest the quotation to some enterprising tea- dealer to be used in a street-car advertisement. Of all methods of making tea, that hit upon by Heine's Italian landlord was perhaps the most economical. Heine lodged in a house at Lucca, the first floor of which was occupied by an Eng- lish family. The latter complained of the cook- ery of Italy in general, and their landlord's in particular. Heine declared the landlord brewed the best tea he had ever tasted in the country, and to convince his doubtful English friends, in- vited them to take tea with him and his brother. The invitation was accepted. Tea-time came, but no tea. When the poet's patience was ex- hausted, his brother went to the kitchen to ex- pedite matters. There he found his landlord, who, in blissful ignorance of what company the Heines had invited, cried : " You can get no tea, for the family on the first floor have not taken tea this evening." The tea that had delighted Heine was made from the used leaves of the English party, who found and made their own tea, and thus afforded the landlord an opportunity of obtaining at once praise and profit by this Italian method of serv- ing a pot of tea. — Chambers^ Journal. 44 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK FATE Matrons who toss the cup, and see The grounds of Fate in grounds of tea. —Churchill. TEA MAKING AND TAKING IN JAPAN AND CHINA THE queen of teas in Japan is a fine straw-colored beverage, delicate and subtle in flavor, and as invigorating as a glass of champagne. It is real Japan tea, and seldom leaves its native heath for the reason that, while it is pecul- iarly adaptable to the Japanese con- stitution, it is too stimulating for the finely-tuned and over-sensitive Americans, who, by the way, are said to be the largest customers for Japan teas of other grades in the world. This particular tea, which looks as harmless as our own importations of the leaf, is a very insidious beverage, 46 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK as an American lady soon found out after taking some of it late at night. She declared, after drinking a small cup before retiring, she did not close her eyes in sleep for a week. We do not know the name of the brand of tea, and are glad of it ; for we live in a section where the women are especially curious. But the drink of the people at large in Japan is green tea, although powdered tea is also used, but re- served for special functions and cere- monial occasions. Tea, over there, is not made by infusing the leaves with boiling water, as is the case with us ; but the boiling water is first carefully cooled in another ves- sel to 176 degrees Fahrenheit. The leayes are also renewed for every in- fusion. It would be crime against 47 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK his August Majesty, the Palate, to use the same leaves more than once — in Japan. The preparation of good tea is regarded by the Japs as the height of social art, and for that rea- son it is an important element in the domestic, diplomatic, political, and general life of the country. Tea is the beverage — the master- piece— of every meal, even if it be nothing but boiled rice. Every arti- san and laborer, going to work, car- ries with him his rice-box of lacq- uered wood, a kettle, a tea-caddy, a tea-pot, a cup, and his chop-sticks. Milk and sugar are generally es- chewed. The Japs and the Chinese never indulge in either of these in- gredients in tea ; the use of which, they claim, spoils the delicate aroma. From the highest court circles THE LITTLE TEA BOOK down to the lowliest and poorest of the Emperor's subjects, it is the cus- tom in both Japan and China to offer tea to every visitor upon his arrival. Not to do this would be an unpardonable breach of national manners. Even in the shops, the customer is regaled with a soothing cup before the goods are displayed to him. This does not, however, impose any obligation on the pros- pective purchaser, but it is, never- theless, a good stimulant to part with his money. This appears to be a very ancient tradition in China and Japan — so ancient that it is contin- ued by the powers that be in Para- dise and Hades, according to a translation called "Strange Stories from My Small Library," a classical Chinese work published in 1679. 49 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK The old domestic etiquette of Ja- pan never intrusted to a servant the making of tea for a guest. It was made by the master of the house himself ; the custom probably grow- ing out of the innate politeness and courtesy of a people who believe that an honored visitor is entitled to the best entertainment possible to give him. As soon as a guest is seated upon his mat, a small tray is set before the master of the house. Upon this tray is a tiny tea-pot with a handle at right angles to the spout. Other parts of this outfit include a highly artistic tea-kettle filled with hot water, and a requisite number of small cups, set in metal or bamboo trays. These trays are used for handing the cups around, but the guest is not expected 50 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK to take one. The cups being with- out handles, and not easy to hold, the visitor must therefore be careful lest he let one slip through his un- tutored fingers. The tea-pot is drenched with hot water before the tea is put in ; then more hot water is poured over the leaves, and soon poured off into the cups. This is repeated several times, but the hot water is never allowed to stand on the grounds over a minute. The Japanese all adhere to the general household custom of the country in keeping the necessary tea apparatus in readiness. In the liv- ing-room of every house is contained a brazier with live coals, a kettle to boil water, a tray with tea-pot, cups, and a tea-caddy. Their neighbors, the Chinese, are 51 y THE LITTLE TEA BOOK just as alert ; for no matter what hour of the day it may be, they al- ways keep a kettle of boiling water over the hot coals, ready to make and serve the beverage at a moment's notice. No visitor is allowed to leave without being offered a cup of their tea, and they themselves are glad to share in their own hospitality. The Chinese use boiling water, and pour it upon the dry tea in each cup. Among the better social ele- ment is used a cup shaped like a small bowl, with a saucer a little less in diameter than the top of the bowl. This saucer also serves another pur- pose, and is often used for a cover when the tea is making. After the boiling water is poured upon the tea, it is covered for a couple of minutes, until the leaves have separated and 52 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK fallen to the bottom of the cup. This process renders the tea clear, delight- fully fragrant, and appetizing. A variety of other cups are also used ; the most prominent being without handles, one or two sizes larger than the Japanese. They are made of the finest china, set in sil- ver trays beautifully wrought, or- nate in treatment and design. A complete tea outfit is a part of the outfitting of every Ju-lako — "picnic-box" — with which every Jap is provided when on a journey, making an excursion, or attending a picnic. The Japanese are very much given to these out-of-door affairs, which they call Hanami — "Looking at the flowers." No wonder they are fond of these pleasures, for it is a land of lovely landscapes and heaven- 53 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK sent airs, completely in harmony with the poetic and artistic natures of this splendid people. Tea-houses — Chd ya — which take the place of our cafes and bar rooms, but which, nevertheless, serve a far higher social purpose, are everywhere in evidence, on the high-roads and by-roads, tucked away in templed groves and public resorts of every nature. Among the Japanese are a num- ber of ceremonial, social, and literary tea-parties which reflect their courtly and chivalrous spirit, and keep alive the traditions of the people more, perhaps, than any other of their functions. The most important of these tea- , parties are exclusively for gentlemen, and their forms and ceremonies rank 54 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK among the most refined usages of po- lite society. The customs of these gatherings are so peculiarly charac- teristic of the Japanese that few for- eign observers have an opportunity of attending them. These are the tea-parties of a semi-literary or aes- thetic character, and the ceremoni- ous Chd-no-yu. In the first prevails the easy and unaffected tone of the well-bred gentleman. In the other are observed the strictest rules of eti- quette both in speech and behavior. But the former entertainment is by far the most interesting. The Japan- ese love and taste for fine scenery is shown in the settings and sur- roundings. To this picturesque out- look, recitals of romance and im- promptu poetry add intellectual charm to the tea-party. 55 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK For these occasions the host se- lects a tea-house located in well-laid- out grounds and commanding a fine view. In this he lays mats equal to the number of guests. By sliding the partition and removing the front wall the place is transformed into an open hall overlooking the landscape. The room is filled with choice flowers, and the art treasures of the host, which at other times are stored away in the fire-proof vault — " go down " — of his private residence, contribute artistic beauty and decoration to the scene. Folding screens and hanging pictures painted by celebrated artists, costly lacquer- ware, bronze, china, and other heirlooms are tastefully distributed about the room. Stories told at these tea-parties are called by the Japanese names of Chd- 56 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK lanashi, meaning tea-stories, or Hiti- Kucha — " one mouth stories," short stories told at one sitting. At times professional story-tellers are em- ployed. Of these there are two kinds : Story- Tellers and " Cross-Road Tra- dition Narrators/' both of whom since olden times have been the faith- ful custodians and disseminators of native folk -lore and tales. These professionals are divided into a number of classes, the most important being the Hanashi-Ka, members of a celebrated company under a well-known manager, who unites them into troops of never less than five or more than seven in number. Such companies are often advertised weeks before their arrival in a place by hoisting flags or stream- ers with the names of the performers 57 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK thereon. Their programme consists of war-stories, traditions, and recitals with musical accompaniment. Dur- ing the intermission, feats of legerde- main or wrestling fill in the time and give variety to the entertainment. These are the leading professional performers. The other classes, while not held in as high regard by the select, nevertheless have a definite place in Japanese amusement circles. One of the latter is the Tsuji-lcd- sJidku-ji. This word-swallower does not belong to any company, but is a " free-lance " entertainer. A sort of "has been," he does not, however, rest on his past laurels, but contin- ues to perform whenever he can ob- tain an audience — on the highways, to passers-by, in public resorts and thoroughfares. 58 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK Although the Chinese are not so neat in their public habits as the Japs, still their tea-houses and simi- lar resorts are just as numerous and popular as they are in the neigh- boring country. Perhaps the most interesting caterers in China, how- ever, are the coolies, who sell hoi>- water in the rural districts. These itinerants have an ingenious way of announcing their coming by a whis- tling kettle. This vessel contains a compartment for fire with a funnel going through the top. A coin with a hole is placed so that when the water is boiling a regular steam- whistle is heard. Plentiful as tea is in China, how- ever, the poor people there do not consume as good a quality of the leaf as the same class in our own country. 59 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK Especially is this the case in the northern part of China, where most of the inhabitants just live, and that is all. There they are obliged to use the last pickings of tea, com- monly known as " brick tea," which is very poor and coarse in quality. It is pressed into bricks about eight by twelve inches in size, and whenever a quantity of it is needed a piece is knocked off and pulverized in a ket- tle of boiling water. Other ingre- dients, consisting of salt, milk, but- ter, a little pepper, and vinegar, are added, and this combination consti- tutes the entire meal of the family. Tea in China and Japan is the stand-by of every meal — the never- failing and ever-ready refreshment. Besides being the courteous offering to the visitor, it serves a high pur- 60 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK pose in the home life of these peo- ples ; uniting the family and friends in their domestic life and pleasures at all times and seasons. At home round the brazier and the lamp in winter evenings, at picnic parties and excursions to the shady glen during the fine season, tea is the social connecting medium, the intellectual stimulant and the universal drink of these far. and -a way peoples. TEA-DRINKING IN OTHER LANDS WHILE tea-drinking outside of Japan and China is not attended with any "high- days and holidays," still there are countries where it is just as impor- tant element of the daily life of its people as it is in the Land of the Eising Sun. Among the Burmese a newly-mar- ried couple, to insure a happy life, exchange a mixture of tea-leaves steeped in oil. In Bokhara, every man carries a small bag of tea about with him. When he is thirsty he hands a certain quantity over to the booth-keeper, 62 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK who makes the beverage for him. The Bokhariot, who is a confirmed tea-slave, finds it just as hard to pass a tea-booth without indulging in the herb as our own inebriates do to go by a corner cafe. His breakfast bev- erage is Schitschaj — tea in which bread is soaked and flavored with milk, cream, or mutton fat. During the daytime he drinks green tea with cakes of flour and mutton suet. It is considered a gross breach of man- ners to cool the hot tea by blowing the breath. This is overcome by supporting the right elbow in the left hand and giving an easy, grace- ful, circular movement to the cup. The time it takes for each kind of tea to draw is calculated to a second. When the can is emptied it is passed around among the company for each 63 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK tea-drinker to take up as many leaves as can be held between the thumb and finger ; the leaves being consid- ered a special dainty. An English traveller once jour- neying through Asiatic Eussia was obliged to claim the hospitality of a family of Buratsky Arabs. At meal- time the mistress of the tent placed a large kettle on the fire, wiped it carefully with a horse's tail, filled it with water, threw in some coarse tea and a little salt. When this was nearly boiled she stirred the mixture with a brass ladle until the liquor be- came very brown, when she poured it into another vessel. Cleaning the ket- tle as before, the woman set it again on the fire to fry a paste of meal and fresh butter. IJpon this she poured the tea and some thick cream, stirred 64 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK it, and after a time the whole was taken off the fire and set aside to cool. Half-pint mugs were handed around and the tea ladled into them: the result, a pasty tea forming meat and drink, satisfying both hunger and thirst. M. Vambery says : " The picture of a newly encamped caravan in the summer months, on the steppes of Central Asia, is a truly interesting one. While the camels in the dis- tance, but still in sight, graze greed- ily, or crush the juicy thistles, the travellers, even to the poorest among them, sit with their tea-cups in their hands and eagerly sip the costly bev- erage. It is nothing more than a greenish warm water, innocent of sugar, and often decidedly turbid ; still, human art has discovered no 65 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK food, invented no nectar, which is so grateful, so refreshing, in the desert as this unpretending drink. I have still a vivid recollection of its won- derful effects. As I sipped the first drops, a soft fire filled my veins, a fire which enlivened without intoxi- cating. The later draughts affected both heart and head ; the eye became peculiarly bright and began to glow. In such moments I felt an indescrib- able rapture and sense of comfort. My companions sunk in sleep ; I could keep myself awake and dream with open eyes ! " Tea is the national drink of Eussia, and as indispensable an ingredient of the table there as bread or meat. It is taken at all hours of the day and night, and in all the griefs of the Eussian he flies to tea and vodka for 66 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK mental refuge and consolation. Tea is drunk out of tumblers in Eussia. In the homes of the wealthy these tumblers are held in silver holders like the sockets that hold our soda- water glasses. These holders are decorated, of course, with the Eus- sian idea of art. In every Kussian town tea-houses flourish. In these public resorts a large glass of tea with plenty of sugar in it is served at what would cost, in our money, about two cents. Tea with lemon is so general that milk with the drink, over there, is considered a fad. The Eussians seem to like bever- ages that bite — set the teeth on edge, as it were. The poor in Eussia take a lump of sugar in their mouths and let the 67 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK tea trickle through it. Travelling tea-peddlers, equipped with kettles wrapped up in towels to preserve the heat, and a row of glasses in leather pockets, furnish a glass of hot tea at any hour of the day or night. The Russian samovar — from the Greek "to boil itself" — is a graceful dome-topped brass urn with a cylin- der two or three inches in diameter passing through it from top to bot- tom. The cylinder is filled with live coals, and keeps the water boiling hot. The Eussian tea-pots are porce- lain or earthen. Hot water to heat the pot is first put in and then poured out ; dry tea is then put in, boiling water poured over it ; after which the pot is placed on top of the samovar. We all know about tea-drinking in England. It is not a very pictu- THE LITTLE TEA BOOK resque or interesting occasion, at best. To the traditional Englishman's mind it means simply a qniet evening at home, attended by the papers, and serious conversations in which the head of the house deals out politi- cal and domestic wisdom until ten o'clock. During the day, tea-taking begins with breakfast and rounds up on the fashionable thoroughfares in the afternoon. Here one may see the Britishers at their best and worst. These places are called " tea-shops/' and in them one may acquire the latest hand-shake, the freshest tea and gossip, see the newest modes and millinery, meet and greet the whirl of the world. An interesting study of types, in contrasts and conditions of society, worth the price of a whole chest of choice tea. 69 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK We are pretty prosaic tea-drinkers in America. Is it because there is not enough " touch and go" about the drink, or that we are too busy to settle down to the quiet, comfort, and thoughtful tea- ways of our con- temporaries ? Wait until a few things are settled ; when our kitchen queens do not leave us in the "gray of the morning," and all of our daughters have obtained diplomas in the art and science of gastronomy. However made or taken, tea at best or worst is a glorious drink. As a stimulant for the tired traveller and weary worker it is unique in its restful, retiring, soothing, and ca- ressing qualities. 70 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK THE TEA-'IABLE Tho' all unknown to Greek and Roman song, The paler hyson and the dark souchong, Tho' black nor green the warbled praises share Of knightly troubadour or gay trouvere, Yet deem not thou, an alien quite to numbers, That friend to prattle and that foe to slumbers, Which Kian-Long, imperial poet, praised So high that, cent per cent, its price was raised; Which Pope himself would sometimes conde- scend To place commodious at a couplet's end ; Which the sweet Bard of Olriey did not spurn, Who loved the music of the " hissing urn." ##**«•# For the dear comforts of domestic tea Are sung too well to stand in need of me By Cowper and the Bard of Rimini ; Besides, I hold it as a special grace When such a theme is old and commonplace. The cheering lustre of the new-stirr'd fire, The mother's summons to the dozing sire, The whispers audible that oft intrude On the forced silence of the younger brood, The seniors' converse, seldom over new, Where quiet dwells and strange events are few, The blooming daughter's ever-ready smile, So full of meaning and so void of guile, And all the little mighty things that cheer The closing day from quiet year to year, I leave to those whom benignant fate Or merit destines to the wedded state. 71 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK "Tis woman still that makes or mars the man. And so it is, the creature can beguile The fairest faces of the readiest smile. The third who comes the hyson to inhale, If not a man, at least appears a male. Last of the rout, and dogg'd with public cares, The politician stumbles up the stairs ; Whose dusky soul nor beauty can illume, Nor wine dispel his patriotic gloom. In restless ire from guest to guest he goes, And names us all among our country's foes ; Swears 'tis a shame that we should drink our tea, 'Till wrongs are righted and the nation free, That priests and poets are a venal race, Who preach for patronage and rhyme for place ; Declares that boys and girls should not be coo- ing, When England's hope is bankruptcy and ruin ; That wiser 'twere the coming wrath to fly, And that old women should make haste to die. Condensed from a poem published in Fraser^s Magazine, January, 1857, and ascribed to Hart- ley Coleridge. LADIES, LITERATURE, AND TEA IN" spite of the fact that coffee is just as important a beverage as tea, tea has been sipped more in literature. Tea is certainly as much of a so- cial drink as coffee, and more of a domestic, for the reason that the tea- cup hours are the family hours. As these are the hours when the sexes are thrown together, and as most of the poetry and philosophy of tea- drinking teem with female virtues, vanities, and whimsicalities, the in- ference is that, without women, tea would be nothing, and without tea, women would be stale, flat, and un- 73 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK interesting. With them it is a polite, purring, soft, gentle, kind, sympa- thetic, delicious beverage. In support of this theory, notice what Pope, Gay, Crabbe, Cowper, Dryden, and others have written on the subject. " The tea-cup times of hood and hoop, And when the patch was worn " — wrote Tennyson of the early half of the seventeenth century. What a suggestive couplet, full of the foibles and follies of the times ! A picture a la mode of the period when fair dames made their red cheeks cute with eccentric patches. Ornamented with high coiffures, powdered hair, robed in satin petti- coats and square-cut bodices, they blossomed, according to the old en- gravings, into most fetching figures. 74 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK Even the beaux of the day affected feminine frills in their many-colored, bell-skirted waistcoats, lace ruffles, patches, and powdered queues. Dryden must have succumbed to the charms of women through tea, when he wrote : "And thou, great Anna, whom three realms obey, Dost sometimes take counsel, and sometimes tay." From the great vogue which tea started grew a taste for china ; the more peculiar and striking the de- sign, the more valuable the tea-set. Pope in one of his satirical com- positions praises the composure of a woman who is " Mistress of herself though china fall." Even that fine old bachelor, phi- losopher, and humorist, Charles 75 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK Lamb, thought that the subject de- served an essay. In speaking of the ornaments on the tea-cup he says, in " Old China" : " I like to see my old friends, whom distance cannot diminish, figuring up in the air (so they appear to our optics), yet on terra firma still, for so we must in courtesy interpret that speck of deeper blue which the decorous artist, to prevent absurdity, has made to spring up be- neath their sandals. I love the men with wom- en's faces and the women, if possible, with still more womanish expressions. " Here is a young and courtly Mandarin, hand- ing tea to a lady from a salver — two miles off. See how distance seems to set off respect ! And here the same lady, or another — for likeness is identity on tea-cups — is stepping into a little fairy boat, moored on the hither side of this calm garden river, with a dainty, mincing foot, which is in a right angle of incidence (as angles go in our world) that must infallibly land her in the midst of a flowery mead — a furlong off on the other side of the same strange stream ! " The Spectator and the Tatler were also susceptible to the female influ- ence that tea inspired. In both of 76 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK these journals there are frequent al- lusions to tea-parties and china. At these gatherings, poets and dilletante literary gentlemen read their verses and essays to the ladies, who criticised their merits. These " literary teas " became so contagious that a burning desire for authorship took possession of the ladies, for among those who made their debut as authors about this time were Fanny Burney, Mrs. Alphra Behn, Mrs. Manley, the Countess of Winchelsea, and a host of others. One of the readers of the Spectator wrote as follows : " Mr. Spectator : Your paper is a part of my tea-equipage, and my ser- vant knows my humor so well that, calling for my breakfast this morn- ing (it being past my usual hour), 77 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK she answered, the Spectator was not come in, but that the tea-kettle boiled, and she expected it every minute." Crabbe, too, was a devotee of ladies, literature, and tea, for he wrote : *' The gentle fair on nervous tea relies, Whilst gay good-nature sparkles in her eyes ; And inoffensive scandal fluttering round, Too rough to tickle and too light to wound." What better proof do we want, therefore, that to women's influence is due the cultivation and retention of the tea habit ? Without tea, what would become of women, and with- out women and tea, what would be- come of our domestic literary men and matinee idols ? They would not sit at home or in salons and write and act things. There would be no homes to sit in, no salons or theatres 78 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK to act in, and dramatic art would re- ceive a blow from which it could not recover in a century, at least. 79 IN the year 1700, J. Roberts, a London publisher, issued a pamphlet of about fifty pages which was made up as follows : Poem upon Tea in Two Cantos 34 pages Dedication of the poem 6 Preface to the poem 2 Poem upon the poem 1 Introduction to the poem 4 To the author upon the poem 1 Postscript 3 Tea-Table 2 The poem — piece de resistance — which is by one Nahum Tate, who figures on the title-page as " Servant to His Majesty," is an allegory ; and although good in spots is too long and too dry to reproduce here. "The poem upon the poem/' " The Intro- duction," and the " Tea-Table " verses will be found interesting and entertaining. 80 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK ON OUR ENGLISH POETRY AND THIS POEM UPON TEA See Spanish Curderon in Strength outdone : And see the Prize of Wit from Tasso won : See Corneil's Skill and Decency Refin'd ; See Rapin's Art, and Holier' s Fire Outshin'd ; See Dry den's Lamp to our admiring View, Brought from the Tomb to shine and Blaze The British Laurel by old Chaucer worn, Still Fresh and Gay, did Dryden's Brow Adorn ; And that its Lustre may not fade on Thine, Wit, Fancy, Judgment, Taste, in thee combine. Thy pow'rful Genius thus, from Censure's Frown And Envy's Blast, in Flourishing Renown, Supports our British Muses Verdant Crown. Nor only takes a Trusty Laureat's Care, Lest Thou the Muses Garland might'st impair ; But, more Enrich'd, the Chaplet to Bequeath, With Eastern Tea join'd to the Laurel-Wreath. — R. B. 81 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK TO THE A UTHOR ON HIS POEM UPON TEA Let Unstick Satyr, now no more Abuse, In rude Unskilful Strains, thy Tuneful Muse ; No more let Envy lash thy true-bred Steed, Nor cross thy easy, just, and prudent Speed : Who dext'rously doth bear or loose the Rein, To climb each lofty Hill, or scour the Plain : With proper Weight and Force thy Courses run ; Where still thy Pegasus has Wonders done, Come home with Strength, and thus the Prize has Won. But now takes Wing, and to the Skies aspires ; While Vanquish'd Envy the bold Flight ad- mires, And baffled Satyr to his Den retires.— T. W. THE LITTLE TEA BOOK THE INTRODUCTION' Fame Sound thy Trump, all Ranks of Mortals Call, To share a Prize that will enrich 'em All. You that with Sacred Oracles converse, And clearly wpu'd Mysterious Truths rehearse ; On soaring Wings of Contemplation rise, And fetch Discov'ries from above the Skies ; Ethereal TEA your Notions will resine, Till you yourselves become almost Divine. You statesmen, who in Storms the Publick Helm Wou'd Guide with Skill, and Save a sinking Realm, TEA, your Minerva, shall suggest such Sense, Such safe and sudden Turns of Thought dis- pense, That you, like her Ulysses, may Advise, And start Designs that shall the World sur- prise. You Pleaders, who for Conquest at the Bar Contend as Fierce and Loud as Chiefs in War ; Would you Amaze and Charm the list'ning Court? First to this Spring of Eloquence resort : Then boldly launch on Tully's flowing Seas, And grasp the Thunder of Demosthenes. You Artists of the ^Esculapian Tribe, Wou'd you, like ^Esculapius's Self, Prescribe, 83 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK Cure Maladies, and Maladies prevent ? Receive this Plant, from your own Phcebus sent; Whence Life's nice Lamp in Temper is main- tain'd, When Dim, Recruited, when too fierce, re- strained. You Curious Souls, who all our Thoughts apply, The hidden Works of Nature to descry ; Why veering Winds with Vari'd Motion blow, Why Seas in settled Courses Ebb and Flow ; Wou'd you these Secrets of her Empire know ? Treat the Coy Nymph with this Celestial Dew, Like Ariadne she'll impart the Clue ; Shall through her Winding Labyrinths convey, And Causes, eculking in their Cells, display. You that to Isis's Bark or Cam retreat, Wou'd you prove worthy Sons of either Seat, And All in Learning's Commonwealth be Great? Infuse this Leaf, and your own Streams shall bring More Science than the fam'd Castalian Spring. Wou'd you, O Musick's Sons, your art Com- pleat, And all its ancient Miracles repeat, Rouse Rev'ling Monarchs into Martial Rage, And, when Inflam'd, with Softer Notes As- The tedious Hours of absent Love beguile, Charm Care asleep, and make Affliction smile ? Carouse in TEA, that will your Souls inspire ; Drink Phcebus's liquor and command his Lyre. 84 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK Sons of Appelles, wou'd you draw the Face Arid Shape of Venus, and with equal Grace In some Blysian Field the Figure place ? Your Fancy, warm'd by TEA, with wish'd suc- cess, Shall Beauty's Queen in all her Charms express ; With Nature's Rural Pride your Landscape fill The Shady Grotto, and the Sunny Hill, The Laughing Meadow, and the Talking Rill. Sons of the Muses, would you Charm the Plains With Chearful Lays, or Sweet Condoling Strains; Or with a Sonnet make the Tallies ring, To Welcome home the Goddess of the Spring ? Or wou'd you in sublimer Themes engage, And sing of Worthies who adorn the Age ? Or, with Promethean Boldness, wou'd aspire To Catch a Spark of the Celestial Fire That Crowned the Royal Conquest, and could raise Juverne's Boyn above Scamander's Praise ? Drink, drink Inspiring TEA, and boldly draw A Hercules, a Mars, or a NASSAU. 85 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK THE TEA-TABLE Hail, Queen of Plants, Pride of Elysian Bow- 'rs ! How shall we speak thy complicated Pow'rs ? Thou Won'drous Panacea to ass wage The Calentures of Youths' fermenting rage, And Animate the freezing Veins of age. To Bacchus when our Griefs repair for Ease, The Remedy proves worse than the Disease. Where Reason we must lose to keep the Round, And drinking others Health's, our own con- found : Whilst TEA, our Sorrows to beguile, Sobriety and Mirth does reconcile : For to this Nectar we the Blessing owe, To grow more Wise, as we more Cheerful grow. Whilst fancy does her brightest beams dispense, And decent Wit diverts without Offense. Then in Discourse of Nature's mystick Pow'rs And Noblest Themes, we pass the well spent Hours. Whilst all around the Virtues' Sacred Band, Andlist'ning Graces, pleas' d Attendants, stand Thus our Tea-Conversation we employ, Where with Delight, Instruction we enjoy ; Quaffing, without the waste of Time or Wealth, The Sov'reign Drink of Pleasure and of Health. 80 DR. JOHNSON'S AFFINITY D R. SAMUEL JOHNSON drew his own portrait thus : u A hardened and shameless tea-drinker, who for twenty years diluted his meals with the in- fusion of this fascinating plant ; whose kettle had scarcely time to cool ; who with tea amused the evening, with tea solaced the midnight, and with tea welcomed the morning." 87 EARLIEST MENTION OF TEA ACCOEDIJSTG to a magazinist, the first mention of tea by an Englishman is to be found in a letter from Mr. Wickham, an agent of the East India Company, written from Japan, on the 27th of June, 1615, to Mr. Eaton, another officer of the company, a resident of Macao, asking him to send " a pot of the best chaw." In Mr. Eaton's ac- counts of expenditure occurs this item : " Three silver porringiys to drink chaw in." 88 AUSTRALIAN TEA IN the interior of Australia all the men drink tea. They drink it all day long, and in quantities and at a strength that would seem to be poisonous. On Sunday morning the tea-maker starts with a clean pot and a clean record. The pot is hung over the fire with a sufficiency of water in it for the day's brew, and when this has boiled he pours into it enough of the fragrant herb to produce a deep, coffee-colored liquid. On Monday, without removing yes- terday's tea-leaves, he repeats the process ; on Tuesday da capo and on Wednesday da capo, and so on through the week. Toward the close THE LITTLE TEA BOOK of it the great pot is filled with an acrid mash of tea-leaves, out of which the liquor is squeezed by the pressure of a tin cup. By this time the tea is of the color of rusty iron, incredibly bitter and disagreeable to the uneducated pal- ate. The native calls it "real good old post and rails," the simile being obviously drawn from a stiff and dangerous jump, and regards it as having been brought to perfection. 90 FIVE-O'CLOCK TEA THERE is a fallacy among cer- tain tea-fanciers that the ori- gin of five-o* clock tea was due to hygienic demand. These students of the stomach contend that as a tonic and gentle stimulant, when not taken with meat, it is not to be equalled. With meat or any but light food it is considered harmful. Taken between luncheon and dinner it drives away fatigue and acts as a tonic. This is good if true, but it is only a theory, after all. Our theory is that five o'clock in the afternoon is the ladies' leisure hour, and that the taking of tea at that time is an escape from ennui. 91 TEA IN LADIES' NOVELS WHAT would women novel- ists do without tea in their books ? The novelists of the rougher sex write of " over the coffee and cigars " ; or, "around the gay and festive board " ; or, " over a bottle of old port"; or/ 'another bottle of dry and sparkling champagne was cracked"; or, "and the succulent welsh rarebits were washed down with royal mugs of musty ale"; or, " as the storm grew fiercer, the captain ordered all hands to splice the main brace," i. e., to take a drink of rum ; or, " as he gulped down the last drink of fiery whiskey, he reeled through the tav- ern door, and his swaying form drif t- 92 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK ed into the bleak, black night, as a roar of laughter drowned his repent- ant sobs." But the ladies of the novel confine themselves almost ex- clusively to tea — rarely allowing their heroes and heroines to indulge in even coffee, though they sometimes treat their heroes to wine ; but their heroines rarely get anything from them but Oolong. SYDNEY SMITH ONE evening when Sidney Smith was drinking tea with Mrs. Austin the servant en- tered the crowded room with a boil- ing tea-kettle in his hand. It seemed doubtful, nay, impossible, he should make his way among the numerous gossips — but on the first approach of the steaming kettle the crowd receded on all sides, Mr. Smith among the rest, though carefully watching the progress of the lad to the table. "I declare," said he, addressing 94 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK Mrs. Austin,, " a man who wishes to make his way in life could do no bet- ter than go through the world with a boiling tea-kettle in his hand." — Life of Rev. Sydney Smith. 95 DR. JOHNSON AGAIN THE good doctor evidently lived up to his reputation as a tea- drinker at all times and places. Cumberland, the dramatist, in his memoirs gives a story illustra- tive of the doctor's tea-drinking pow- ers : "I remember when Sir Joshua Reynolds, at my home, reminded Dr. Johnson that he had drunk eleven cups of tea. < Sir/ he replied, < I did not count your glasses of wine ; why should you number my cups of tea?'" ' At another time a certain Lady Macleod, after pouring out sixteen cups for him, ventured mildly to ask 96 THE LITTLE TEA BOOK whether a basin would not save him trouble and be more convenient. " I wonder, madam," he replied, rough- ly, "why all ladies ask such ques- tions?" "It is to save yourself trouble, not me," was the tactful an- swer of his hostess. 97 A CUP OF TEA From St. Nicholas, December, 1899. Now Grietje from her window sees the leafless poplars lean Against a windy sunset sky with streaks of golden green ; The still canal is touched with light from that wild, wintry sky, And, dark and gaunt, the windmill flings its bony arms on high. " It 's growing late ; it 's growing cold ; I 'm all alone," says she ; " I '11 put the little kettle on, to make a cup of tea ! » Mild radiance from the porcelain stove reflects on shining tiles ; The kettle beams, so red and bright that Grietje thinks it smiles ; The kettle sings — so soft and low it seems as in a dream — The song that 's like a lullaby, the pleasant song of steam : '* The summer 's gone ; the storks are flown ; I 'm always here, you see, To sing and sing, and shine, and shine, and make a cup of tea ! " THE LITTLE TEA BOOK The blue delft plates and dishes gleam, all ranged upon the shelf ; The tall Dutch clock tick-ticks away, just talk- ing to itself ; The brindled pussy cuddles down, and basks and blinks and purrs ; And rosy, sleepy Grietje droops that snow- white cap of hers. " I do like winter after all ; I 'm very glad," says she, '*! put — my — little — kettle — on — to make — a cup— of— tea ! "—HELEN GIUT CONE. T> UNIVERSITY OF CAi.il ORNIA LIBRARY BERKELEY Return to desk from which borrowed. This bot&f^s DUE on the last date stamped below. ; 17May52Ll FEB2319660: LC "T ti6 -8 A|ec 2 8 1983 . DEC 2 3 1966 15 BEC.CIR. DEC 8' 0BD19-66 YB 47459 THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY