Our Homes And How To Make The Best Of Them
Our Homes And How To Make The Best Of Them is available to read online for free. This full book can be viewed instantly using the embedded reader above.
If you're looking for a convenient way to read Our Homes And How To Make The Best Of Them without downloading, this page provides direct access to the complete text.
Explore thousands of free public domain books on How to eGuides .com, all available to read online with no registration required.
Description
Our Homes And How To Make The Best Of Them
Author: Eugene Clarence Gardner
Year: 1875
LETTER I. From the Architect. EVERY MAN SHOULD HAVE A HOME. My Dear John: Now that your "ship" is at last approaching the harbor, I am confident your first demonstration in honor of its arrival will be building yourself a house; exchanging your charmingly good-for-nothing air-castle for an actual flesh-and-blood, matter-of-fact dwelling-house, two-storied and French-roofed it may be, with all the modern improvements. In many respects, you will find the real house far less satisfactory and more perplexing than the creation of your fancy. Air-castles have some splendid qualities. There are no masons' and carpenters' contracts to be made, no plumbers' bills to be vexed over, the furnaces never smoke, and the water-pipes never freeze; they need no insurance, and you have no vain regrets over mistakes in your plans, for you may have alterations and additions whenever you please without making a small pandemonium and eating dust and ashes while they are in process. Nevertheless, I have no doubt you will plunge at once into the mysteries and miseries of building, and, knowing your inexperience, I cannot at such a juncture leave you wholly to your own devices. It is a solemn thing to build