A garden rosary . A GARDEN ROSARY April 14 ! till planting — delightful toil!With soil-blackened hands I pause, and sit a moment incontemplation — my trowel in my one never fulfills his destiny ofmirroring the image of the Creator moretruly than in the spring. For — remem-ber — the Lord first made the Gardenof Eden and then created man, givinghim, as his prime obligation, — if webelieve the Scripture, — to dress it andto keep it. Ah, blessed season, when we,even in this hurrying twentieth century,may enter into the labors and rewards ofthe first man, in the childhood of theworld!. A
A garden rosary . A GARDEN ROSARY April 14 ! till planting — delightful toil!With soil-blackened hands I pause, and sit a moment incontemplation — my trowel in my one never fulfills his destiny ofmirroring the image of the Creator moretruly than in the spring. For — remem-ber — the Lord first made the Gardenof Eden and then created man, givinghim, as his prime obligation, — if webelieve the Scripture, — to dress it andto keep it. Ah, blessed season, when we,even in this hurrying twentieth century,may enter into the labors and rewards ofthe first man, in the childhood of theworld!. A GARDEN ROSARY April 17 ust like old ladies untwistingtheir curl-papers in fidgetyhaste to get off to a church socia-ble, so the hyacinths — as soon as springis fairly started — shake out their cork-screw curls and hasten to appear uponthe scene, spilling, in their agitation, awhole bottle of strong perfume down thefront of their dresses. Stiff, for all theirfus sines s, they dote on being in society:they are always among the first they lack the social gift. Who cangracefully introduce the hyacinth into aspring bouquet?
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublishe, booksubjectflowers