AND GARDENS 



I JOS IN THE HOME 



led to the reader have been selected 

 i :h antiques and curios can be made 

 i use interior. Their relationship to 

 I may be seen at a glance, and forms 

 I aining and instructive volume on 

 s the author, has occasion to reflect 

 is not because possibly (but most 

 Ims at Christie's, but because they 

 t of those who once looked at and 

 i ran about the old tables and chairs, 

 i: I eyes at the quaint little men and 

 i a great treat were allowed to ring 

 9 ich, to their unbounded astonish- 

 (; . . . If only these old inanimate 

 a., what en- 

 s they could 

 9 could live 

 E vhose lives, 

 Hul, obscure 

 a ful or tem- 

 a vanished." 



I 



