Kapat
0 Ürün
Alışveriş sepetinizde boş.
Kategoriler
    Filtreler
    Preferences
    Ara

    The History of The Hen Fever

    Yayınevi : Gece Kitaplığı
    ISBN :9786052884560
    Sayfa Sayısı :359
    Baskı Sayısı :1
    Ebatlar :13.5x21 cm
    Basım Yılı :2018
    236,00 ₺
    165,20 ₺
    Tahmini Kargoya Veriliş Zamanı: 2-4 iş günü içerisinde tedarik edilip kargoya verilecektir.

    In preparing the following pages, I have had the opportunity to inform myself pretty accurately regarding the ramifications of the subject upon which I have written herein; and I have endeavored to avoid setting down “aught in malice” in this “History of the Hen Fever” in the United States

    I have followed this extraordinary mania from its incipient stages to its final death, or its cure, as the reader may elect to term its conclusion. The first symptoms of the fever were exhibited in my own house at Roxbury, Mass., early in the summer of 1849. From that time down to the opening of 1855 (or rather to the winter of 1854), I have been rather intimately connected with the movement, if common report speaks correctly; and I believe I have seen as much of the tricks of this trade as one usually meets with in the course of a single natural life.

    Now that the most serious effects of this (for six years) alarming epidemic have passed away from among us, and when “the people” who have been called upon to pay the cost of its support, and for the burial of its victims, can look back upon the scenes that have in that period transpired with a disposition cooled by experience, I have thought that a volume like this might prove acceptable to the hundreds and thousands of those who once “took an interest in the hen trade,”—who may have been mortally wounded, or haply who have escaped with only a broken wing; and who will not object to learn how the thing has been done, and “who threw the bricks”!

    In preparing the following pages, I have had the opportunity to inform myself pretty accurately regarding the ramifications of the subject upon which I have written herein; and I have endeavored to avoid setting down “aught in malice” in this “History of the Hen Fever” in the United States

    I have followed this extraordinary mania from its incipient stages to its final death, or its cure, as the reader may elect to term its conclusion. The first symptoms of the fever were exhibited in my own house at Roxbury, Mass., early in the summer of 1849. From that time down to the opening of 1855 (or rather to the winter of 1854), I have been rather intimately connected with the movement, if common report speaks correctly; and I believe I have seen as much of the tricks of this trade as one usually meets with in the course of a single natural life.

    Now that the most serious effects of this (for six years) alarming epidemic have passed away from among us, and when “the people” who have been called upon to pay the cost of its support, and for the burial of its victims, can look back upon the scenes that have in that period transpired with a disposition cooled by experience, I have thought that a volume like this might prove acceptable to the hundreds and thousands of those who once “took an interest in the hen trade,”—who may have been mortally wounded, or haply who have escaped with only a broken wing; and who will not object to learn how the thing has been done, and “who threw the bricks”!

    >