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Tea, its history and mystery

Chapter 2: PREFATORY.
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About This Book

The book surveys the origins and early folklore surrounding tea, follows its geographic spread and botanical characteristics, and explains methods of cultivation, harvesting, and preparation. It provides a classification and descriptive guide to varieties, examines common adulterations and techniques for detection, and offers practical instruction on testing, blending, and serving. The author summarizes chemical, medical, and dietary considerations, presents information on world production and consumption, and assesses the feasibility of cultivating tea in new regions. The approach is practical and instructional, intended to inform dealers, experts, and general readers about the commodity’s uses and trade.

PREFATORY.


Utility, not originality, has been aimed at in the compilation of this work. The obstacles and difficulties its author had met with in his endeavors to learn something of the article he was commissioned to sell when he first entered the Tea trade, the almost total lack of knowledge displayed by the average dealer in the commodity, allied to the numerous inquiries for a work containing “all about tea,” first prompted the undertaking.

The material was collated at intervals, in a fragmentary manner, covering a period of over twenty years, and arranged amid the many interruptions incident to an active business life, subjected to constant revisions, repeated prunings and innumerable corrections, due mainly to the varying statements and conflicting opinions of admitted authorities in every branch of the subject. Still, as careful and judicious an arrangement of the data has been given as possible, a faithful effort being made to omit nothing that may prove useful, instructive or profitable to the expert, the dealer or general reader.

Aware that many facts have been omitted, and many errors committed in its preparation, he still trusts that the pains he has taken to avoid both have not been in vain, that the former may be few, and the latter of no great importance. The work was compiled under impulse, not under inducement, a single line not being intended originally for the market, and is now being published solely for the benefit of those “whom it may concern.”

Philadelphia, December, 1892.