shredder -shredder wrote:It's interesting how smoking seems to be one of those rare binary issues. 5 packs of Gauloises a day or nothing?
It is certainly true that, for some people smoking means nearly constantly doing it or something close to it. This is where a pipe or cigar can have great advantages as they do not have to be lit and just having the materials to hand is enough. Churchill's cigars were not always lit and he, effectively, chewed them - making paper covers 'bellybandos' (as he called them) for the cigars to prevent them getting soggy. Some people,if they smoke cigarettes just have to chain smoke them but they are often people who can, alternatively, just go without them altogether or even give up smoking without a struggle. Fewer are they who can smoke just a couple of modern cigarettes a day but an elderly couple of Italians here have just started smoking (he is 72 and she is 69) because they are convinced that two cigarettes a day each is good for their brains. Apparently, their children would be outraged at the notion of their parents smoking - so it is a Big Secret. I have come across people who used to smoke a couple of the big, strong Turkish, Turkish-Balkan or Egyptian cigarettes a day until, as John Osborne the playwright (who was one of them), said - the EU dashed the tobacco from their lips. That was a Big Pity. It is also an act outside the liberal traditions of any civilization for any government to presume to impose protection for people against themselves. That is beyond inelegance - that is brutality. After all their history and contribution to civilization, the European nations in the EU really should know better. At least they have given up trying to regulate the shapes of fruit that may be sold. They need to learn even more abstemiousness in interference.
couch - I am not sure that we are that far apart, except, maybe, that I regard our (whimsically determined) leases of life here as having less importance than you do. Emily Bronte puts my feeling at its best and far better than I could put it; maybe even as well as it could be put:
Riches I hold in light esteem,
And Love I laugh to scorn;
And lust of fame was but a dream
That vanish'd with the morn:
And if I pray, the only prayer
That moves my lips for me
Is, 'Leave the heart that now I bear,
And give me liberty!'
Yea, as my swift days near their goal,
'Tis all that I implore:
In life and death a chainless soul,
With courage to endure.
and several of Edward FitGerald's verses from Omar Khayyam, especially this one:
Ah, my Beloved, fill the cup that clears
TO-DAY of past Regrets and future Fears -
Tomorrow? - Why Tomorrow I may be
Myself with Yesterday's Sev'n Thousand Years.
NJS