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Notes and Queries, Number 40, August 3, 1850 by Various
page 46 of 69 (66%)
forbade the use of tobacco to the Sikhs; but found the habit so deeply
rooted in the Hindû that he made an exception in their favour. (Masson's
_Beloochistan_, vol. i. p. 42.) Should this be true, the Hindû must have
been in the habit of smoking long before the discovery of America, to
have acquired so inveterate a predilection for it.

If the prophecy attributed to Mahomet be not a fabrication of after
times, it is strongly corroborative, and goes to show that he was himself
acquainted with the practice of smoking, viz.

"To the latter day there shall be men who will bear the name of
Moslem, but will not be really such, and they shall smoke a
certain weed which shall be called tobacco."--See Sale's
_Koran_, ed. 8vo. p. 169.

Query. Is tobacco the word in the original? If so, it is a
stumbling-block.

Lieut. Burns, in his _Travels_, has the following curious statement:

"The city of Alore was the capital of a great empire extending
from Cachemere to the sea. This was conquered by the Mahomedans
in the seventh century, and in the decisive battle they are
reported to have brought fire, &c., in their pipes to frighten
the elephants."

Lieut. Burns conjectures that they must have smoked bang, &c., tobacco
being then unknown.

Buchanan's account of the cultivation and preparation of tobacco in
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