Difference between revisions of ".ODQ.MTgzNA"
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− | Those who heard Henry Beston at the Garden Club meeting last month will be interested in the review appearing in the New York Herald Tribune Books which reads: "One need not be an herb gardening enthusiast to find in this small volume a pleasure and a sense of peace too seldom discovered in books of horticultural intent. A few pages and one settles deeper into one's chair, shifts the light to a more convenient angle, for here is a rare blend of fancy, fact, of philosophy and clear humanness that cannot be escaped. Let one short quotation serve as the key; for the rest, you should be your own discoverer: A plant of | + | Those who heard Henry Beston at the Garden Club meeting last month will be interested in the review appearing in the New York Herald Tribune Books which reads: "One need not be an herb gardening enthusiast to find in this small volume a pleasure and a sense of peace too seldom discovered in books of horticultural intent. A few pages and one settles deeper into one's chair, shifts the light to a more convenient angle, for here is a rare blend of fancy, fact, of philosophy and clear humanness that cannot be escaped. Let one short quotation serve as the key; for the rest, you should be your own discoverer: A plant of Balm, lifted from the June earth with its beard of delicate roots, a bush of Thyme in flower in the hot sun. |
Revision as of 19:20, 12 March 2017
Those who heard Henry Beston at the Garden Club meeting last month will be interested in the review appearing in the New York Herald Tribune Books which reads: "One need not be an herb gardening enthusiast to find in this small volume a pleasure and a sense of peace too seldom discovered in books of horticultural intent. A few pages and one settles deeper into one's chair, shifts the light to a more convenient angle, for here is a rare blend of fancy, fact, of philosophy and clear humanness that cannot be escaped. Let one short quotation serve as the key; for the rest, you should be your own discoverer: A plant of Balm, lifted from the June earth with its beard of delicate roots, a bush of Thyme in flower in the hot sun.