Treatise Letter To Friend Concerning Tea
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-letter-to-friend-concerning-tea-001 |
| Words | 355 |
4. July was two years I began to observe that abundance
of the people of London, with whom I conversed, laboured
under the same, and many other, paralytic disorders, and
that in a much higher degree; insomuch that some of their
nerves were quite unstrung; their bodily strength quite
decayed, and they could not go through their daily labour. I inquired, “Are you not a hard drinker?” and was
answered by one and another, and another, “No, indeed,
Sir, not I; I drink scarce anything but a little tea, morning
and night.” I immediately remembered my own case; and,
after weighing the matter throughly, easily gathered from
many concurring circumstances, that it was the same case
with them. 5. I considered, “What an advantage would it be to these
poor enfeebled people, if they would leave off what so
manifestly impairs their health, and thereby hurts their
business also ! Is there nothing equally cheap which they
could use? Yes, surely; and cheaper too. If they used
English herbs in its stead, (which would cost either nothing,
or what is next to nothing,) with the same bread, butter, and
milk, they would save just the price of the tea. And hereby
they might not only lessen their pain, but in some degree
their poverty too; for they would be able to work (as well as
to save) considerably more than they can do now. And by
this means, if they are in debt, they might be more just,
paying away what they either earned or saved. If they are
not in debt, they might be more merciful, giving it away to
them that want.”
6. I considered farther: “What an advantage might this
be, particularly in such a body of men as those are who are
united together in these societies, who are both so numerous
and so poor ! How much might be saved in so numerous a
body, even in this single article of expense ! And how greatly
is all that can possibly be saved, in every article, wanted daily
by those who have not even food convenient for them l”
7.