IV 



NEW AMSTERDAM HOUSEWIVES' 

 GARDENS 



IT was from a snug little land that they came, these 

 solid Dutchmen who followed Hudson and his 

 Half Moon some twenty years after the first voyage; 

 a land whose every square foot was precious, redeemed 

 from the waters as so much of it was by patient and 

 untiring effort — and retained by ceaseless vigilance. 

 So the habit of thrift in the use of land was strong 

 upon them; indeed I doubt they could be lavish with 

 it -if they tried. 



And then, too, they were dwellers in town. Feu- 

 dalism had never had the hold upon Holland that it. 

 had upon the rest of Europe; partly, no doubt, be- 

 cause the country's natural physical conditions were 

 distinctly against the development of feudal holdings,, 

 and partly because the temper of the race would have 

 none of it. In Friesland, the "cradle of the Anglo- 

 Saxons," it was never known; and elsewhere through- 

 out the Netherlands the independent town life had 



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