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February 5
 


The Opium Dens of the Victorian Era

Dens in San Francisco and New York, 1800's. By the 1940's they were a thing of the past.

In the 19th Century, opium dens were a dangerously exotic place in which to escape reality, or to lose inhibitions and experience vividly inspiring dreams, frequented by such revered writers as Mark Twain, Rudyard Kipling, Edgar Allan Poe, Charles Baudelaire, Oscar Wilde and many others.

Writers, poets and free thinkers of the Victorian era would recline in the dimly lit rooms where the sweet scent of opium hung heavily in the smoke-filled, humid air. Black 'pills' of 'ah-pen-yen' were placed in an opium pipe and held over a flame until it bubbled, ready for the long, deep draw that would inhale the entire vaporized contents of the bowl.

 

Opium dens were common in the 1800's in the Chinatowns of cities like London, San Francisco and New York. The dens often became tourist attractions for the curiosity seekers from small towns.

Prior to its introduction to the West by Chinese immigrants, and before Western influence in China, 'chasing the dragon' was an accepted and largely moderate practice in Chinese society as a way of easing the pain of the incurably ill and in certain ceremonial rituals.

Ironically, when opium use became taboo in the West, heroin and morphine were used for some time as a "helpful" substitute for opium addiction
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