REVIEWS AND EXCHANGES 
2i) 
;iiul their perfumes. Mr. Haggard’s is, however, like his “ Farmer's Year,” 
nothing if not practical. He is proud and fond of the consideralrle garden 
domain which has been his for some four-and-twenty years ; hut he never lo.ses 
sight of his main purpose, which is to inform his brother and sister gardeners 
of the details of his experiences during 1903. No gardener is ever likely to 
achieve much without observation, and the novelist, who must, at least to some 
extent, be a practical observer of human nature, is, perhaps, therefore, likely 
to be successful if he betakes himself to the calling of Adam ; but, whether he be, 
or be not, satisfied with his own results, Mr. Ifaggard is sure to have many 
careful students. Nor is it only the owners of large gardens who may profit 
Marum Grass ai Kbssinoiand. 
(from “A Gardener’s Year.’ 15 y permission of Messrs. Longman.) 
