| 1854 - 652 pagina’s
...Kclution. They serve to make it appear peculiarly one's own, converting it into a kind of sanctum. A place that has neither of these qualities, might...is a luxury to walk, sit, or recline at ease, on a summor's day, and drink in the sights, and sounds, and perfumes, peculiar to a garden, without fear... | |
| 1854 - 676 pagina’s
...kind of sanctum. A place that has neither of these qualities, might almost as well be public properly. Those who love their garden, often want to walk. work,...the various changes and developments of Nature, in i: ; and to do so unobserved. All that attaches us lo u garden, and rendéis it a delightful and chriished... | |
| Edward Kemp - 1911 - 386 pagina’s
...seclusion. They serve to make it appear peculiarly one's own, converting it into a kind of sanctum. A place that has neither of these qualities might...renders it a delightful and cherished object, seems marred if it has no privacy. It is a luxury to walk, sit, or recline at ease, on a summer's day, and... | |
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