CHAPTER V 

 THE MAGIC OF ARCHITECTURE 



A VEGETABLE garden demands its hours of healthy 

 labor. In return it yields a goodly satisfaction. If it be 

 beautiful it will offer its hours of rest also. A formal 

 garden need not be a place for formality; we should run in any 

 time for work or play, roll up our sleeves and be content. 



But if it is to have so pleasant an air of homliness, we will 

 want it to be a bit secluded. Some of us may even be in a mood 

 for the garden wall of romance. 



Often, however, a wall will prove too costly or be otherwise 

 impractical. Yet there is no need to deny ourselves the privacy 



LNTHANCE TO A, 



VIOITADLL GAUDIN 



Fig. 10 



