قراءة كتاب The Children's Book of Gardening
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THE CHILDREN’S BOOK OF
GARDENING
GARDENING
UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME
By Miss Conway and Sir Martin Conway
THE CHILDREN’S BOOK OF ART
By Elizabeth W. Grierson
THE CHILDREN’S BOOK OF CELTIC STORIES
By Elizabeth W. Grierson
CHILDREN’S TALES FROM SCOTTISH BALLADS
By Elizabeth W. Grierson
THE CHILDREN’S BOOK OF EDINBURGH
By Elizabeth W. Grierson
CHILDREN’S TALES OF ENGLISH MINSTERS
By G. E. Mitton
THE CHILDREN’S BOOK OF LONDON
By G. E. Mitton
THE CHILDREN’S BOOK OF STARS
By G. E. Mitton
THE BOOK OF THE RAILWAY
A. AND C. BLACK · SOHO SQUARE · LONDON, W.
AGENTS
America | The Macmillan Company 64 & 66 Fifth Avenue, New York |
Australasia | Oxford University Press 205 Flinders Lane, Melbourne |
Canada | The Macmillan Company of Canada, Ltd. 27 Richmond Street West, Toronto |
India | Macmillan & Company, Ltd. Macmillan Building, Bombay 309 Bow Bazaar Street, Calcutta |
CHILDREN’S BOOK
OF
GARDENING
AND
WITH
TWELVE FULL-PAGE ILLUSTRATIONS IN COLOUR FROM
DRAWINGS BY MRS. CAYLEY-ROBINSON
LONDON
ADAM AND CHARLES BLACK
1909
‘It is the Spirit of Paradise
That prompts such work, a Spirit strong,
That gives to all the self-same bent
Where life is wise and innocent.’
Wordsworth.
DEDICATED
TO
BETTY, BARBARA, AND CYRIL
PREFACE
This book was suggested by the questions of a boy of twelve who lived in Germany and sent for an English book that would teach him the elements of gardening. One of the authors asked the editor of a well-known gardening journal to recommend her a suitable book, and found that he knew of none written from a child’s point of view, and supplying the instruction a child could understand and use. Yet in these days, when so many children have a garden, such a book must be needed. The aim in this one has been to tell the juvenile reader how to make his garden grow, and the authors have not allowed themselves to wander in the pleasant byways of description, reflection, or amusement. They wished to help the budding gardener rather than to entertain the child, and they have tried to keep within the limits of what a child can do.
But as children vary in age and strength as well as in circumstances, they will not all be able to follow the whole of the advice here given. Cyril, for instance, could dig his own little plot of ground, but Betty could not for many a year to come; and though Cyril may not have the patience to sow his sweet peas in the best of all possible ways, Betty will read in this book how it should be done, and then get one of her father’s gardeners to do it for her. As for Barbara, she is a traveller, and can have no garden of her own; but she sets daffodils in her friends’ gardens, and is content to see them, with her inward eye, dancing in the breeze for their delight. So all children, according to their strength and means, may love a garden, whether it is contained in a few flower-pots on a city window-sill, or encouraged to expand and grow in the wide spaces of the country.
Gardening, like other bents, will find a way; but it will run more smoothly if it has a little help at the beginning.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER | PAGE | |
I. | THE SITUATION AND SOIL | 1 |
II. | ANNUALS | 16 |
III. | HARDY PERENNIALS | 43 |
IV. | BULBS, CORMS, AND TUBERS | 70 |
V. | BIENNIALS | public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@47616@[email protected]#Page_91" class="pginternal" |