JULY 



Celia Thaxter's Garden. 



'Why is a garden made ? " Primarily, it would seem to grat- 

 ify man's craving for beauty. Behind fine gardening is 

 fine desire. It is a plain fact that men do not make 

 beautiful things merely for the sake of something to do, 

 but rather because their souls compel them. Any beauti- 

 ful work of art is a feat, an essay, of human soul, Some- 

 one has said that "noble dreams are great realities" — ■ 

 this in praise of imrealized dreams; but here, in the fine 

 garden, is the noble dream and the great reality. 



— John D. Sedding. 



