The Pipe Book by Alfred Dunhill - 1969
Foreword to revised edition
For over forty years The Pipe Book seems to have appealed to both pipe smokers and the general reader interested in smoking as an aspect of social history. As a study of the pipe from earliest times, I believe it still has no rival. I am therefore glad to introduce a revised edition with new illustrations based mainly on pipes in the Dunhill collection. Apart from minor changes the text is as my father wrote it in 1924. ALFRED H. DUNHILL
Foreword
Critics, disarm! And ye, Antiquarians, Archaeologists, Ethno-graphers, Ethnologists, et hoc genus omne, hold back in their leashes your quivering Fountain-pens! For this is no learned Treatise, but a simple Book, and written thus. Glancing idly one day along the stout row of his Hobby-horses, which were munching quietly in their stalls, the Author spied a Newcomer, stabled there seemingly by Chance the night before. And casting his leg across it, he rode his new Hobby afar into the countryside and into Lands unknown. There did he learn and see many Things, which afterwards he wrote and drew in this Book. To the many, learned and simple, who, as he rode, told the Author this and that about his Hobby that he knew not before, he hereby tenders his most grateful thanks. “Give a man a pipe he can smoke, Give a man a book he can read, And his home is bright with a calm delight, Though the room be poor indeed.” ALFRED DUNHILL 1924
The MacMillan Company
Revised Edition: First Printing
1969
207 Pages
Foreword to revised edition
For over forty years The Pipe Book seems to have appealed to both pipe smokers and the general reader interested in smoking as an aspect of social history. As a study of the pipe from earliest times, I believe it still has no rival. I am therefore glad to introduce a revised edition with new illustrations based mainly on pipes in the Dunhill collection. Apart from minor changes the text is as my father wrote it in 1924. ALFRED H. DUNHILL
Foreword
Critics, disarm! And ye, Antiquarians, Archaeologists, Ethno-graphers, Ethnologists, et hoc genus omne, hold back in their leashes your quivering Fountain-pens! For this is no learned Treatise, but a simple Book, and written thus. Glancing idly one day along the stout row of his Hobby-horses, which were munching quietly in their stalls, the Author spied a Newcomer, stabled there seemingly by Chance the night before. And casting his leg across it, he rode his new Hobby afar into the countryside and into Lands unknown. There did he learn and see many Things, which afterwards he wrote and drew in this Book. To the many, learned and simple, who, as he rode, told the Author this and that about his Hobby that he knew not before, he hereby tenders his most grateful thanks. “Give a man a pipe he can smoke, Give a man a book he can read, And his home is bright with a calm delight, Though the room be poor indeed.” ALFRED DUNHILL 1924
The MacMillan Company
Revised Edition: First Printing
1969
207 Pages
Foreword to revised edition
For over forty years The Pipe Book seems to have appealed to both pipe smokers and the general reader interested in smoking as an aspect of social history. As a study of the pipe from earliest times, I believe it still has no rival. I am therefore glad to introduce a revised edition with new illustrations based mainly on pipes in the Dunhill collection. Apart from minor changes the text is as my father wrote it in 1924. ALFRED H. DUNHILL
Foreword
Critics, disarm! And ye, Antiquarians, Archaeologists, Ethno-graphers, Ethnologists, et hoc genus omne, hold back in their leashes your quivering Fountain-pens! For this is no learned Treatise, but a simple Book, and written thus. Glancing idly one day along the stout row of his Hobby-horses, which were munching quietly in their stalls, the Author spied a Newcomer, stabled there seemingly by Chance the night before. And casting his leg across it, he rode his new Hobby afar into the countryside and into Lands unknown. There did he learn and see many Things, which afterwards he wrote and drew in this Book. To the many, learned and simple, who, as he rode, told the Author this and that about his Hobby that he knew not before, he hereby tenders his most grateful thanks. “Give a man a pipe he can smoke, Give a man a book he can read, And his home is bright with a calm delight, Though the room be poor indeed.” ALFRED DUNHILL 1924
The MacMillan Company
Revised Edition: First Printing
1969
207 Pages