The Pleasures and Pains of Coffee (1830)

(lib.umich.edu)

44 points | by jxmorris12 3 days ago

6 comments

  • ivansavz 19 minutes ago
    I really like this essay and I managed to track down the original in French, for anyone who reads French:

    https://fr.wikisource.org/wiki/Trait%C3%A9_des_excitants_mod...

    The part about coffee is halfway down the page under the heading §III — du café.

  • somat 1 hour ago
    I have a theory that the renaissance and perhaps more critically the industrial revolution that followed was in a large part driven by coffee.

    Middle ages, things are a bit sleepy, dopey. Everybody is drinking beer all the time. progress runs at a slow pace.

    Then there is this popular new tea sweeping the scene and boy howdy does it get you up and going. Now people are waking up and doing things.

    Caffeine, It's a hell of a drug.

    • bairymr 57 minutes ago
    • scubadude 42 minutes ago
      I had wondered about the same for nicotine, being a neurostimulant.
      • onionisafruit 17 minutes ago
        Turns out Otis Redding was singing about the renaissance in Cigarettes and Coffee
    • edg5000 40 minutes ago
      Yes, I've been thinking this as well. Although, earlier civilisations probably also consumed lots of stimulants; mayas, incas, probably countless more.
    • medi8r 29 minutes ago
      It gets you up and going until you build resistance then it becomes a need.
    • allovertheworld 1 hour ago
      nah coffee really didn’t do much for me, i started drinking daily at 30
  • nobodyandproud 54 minutes ago
    Worth a read (5-10 minutes). I found myself agreeing more than disagreeing.

    That aside, some gems:

    “…Among certain weak natures, coffee produces only a kind of harmless congestion of the mind; instead of feeling animated, these people feel drowsy, and they say that coffee makes them sleep. Such individuals may have the legs of serfs and the stomachs of os- triches, but they are badly equipped for the work of thought.”

    “If the experience of the English is typical, heavy tea-drinking will produce English moral philosophy, a tendency toward a pale complexion, hypocrisy and backbiting.”

    • scubadude 43 minutes ago
      > instead of feeling animated, these people feel drowsy, and they say that coffee makes them sleep

      Sounds like ADHD to me

      • dakolli 19 minutes ago
        This is such a BS lie sold by pharmaceutical companies, "stimulants are safe for your child, amphetamines will actually calm them down". There's a thing called fast caffeine metabolizers, and 50% of people have this genetic variation and perfectly explains why some people can nap after having caffeine, also tolerance.

        I digress, but you will never convince me otherwise, that the wide spread promotion of amphetamines in children/young adults is anything but an experiment of Empire. I attribute the somewhat significant economic edge US society has over the rest of the world is due to its addiction to amphetamines, and the ruling classes project to push them onto working class people to make them more effective workers.

        Its no different than how the Nazi's used amphetamines to simulate their population or how imperialist Japan did the same. Lets stop spreading this BS lie that stimulants calm people with ADHD down.

    • edg5000 39 minutes ago
      It's really hilariously written
  • halper 58 minutes ago
    Wonderfully written. If I have had too much caffeine I also look forward to the time when it burns off: "finally the tension on the harp strings eases, and one returns to the relaxed, meandering, simple-minded and cryptogamous life of the retired bourgeoisie."
  • edg5000 42 minutes ago
    I love this, very fun writing