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346 HOUSE BUILDING.
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Ii. When Mode Of We Building Last Put Ho...
may serve re as quire a si , tt thoug ingvroom h an underground nursery as room the needs would of t be he useless family
house is for therefore such . This a purpose prac greater tical . l power y A larger Sing of le- adaptation than floored a twelve house frequentl -roomed of twelve y permi ordinary rooms ts a
numb family to remain altere in d i the ts habi same ts , house and moreover after it has anot increased her suite its of rooms in the same building-, though in reality a separate house ,
may daugh be ter , taken who mi for ght the be accommoda anxious to t remain ion of near a married their parents son or . The two floors of a single-floor building ht to contain
several houses upper much smaller than those below oug and we need hardly stop to point out the advantages which , this power of
adding to the size of the house offers to the heads of a family , sep anxious erhaps arate onl to lod keep ging child , or would son a daug near otherwise hter them who have while with to liv they her e several husband allow s him tree and t s
away p , perhaps y even two or three milesif her husband ' s income obliged him to rent a house in a , more suburban district .
" And your daughter is married and lives at Hackney ? " we said to the mother of an only child . u Yes , and I hardly t see
w her hol a t all the now day / ' was to go the there reply , " for come it back takes ; me if she nearl lived y he in the countI should and sta week at a time with her
ry go ay , t but own that so hardl I seldom y seems see necessary her . " W while e con w tras e bo ted th t his ive f amil the sam with e y
t hree residing , te in house a larg holds e country for the -house arents which one married was divided dauh into ter and a separa son , while another married p daughter , occupied the g next
gardens door house . , Lest and op any ened gentleman a gate of should communica take tion alarm between at the the prospect of living near his mother-in-law , we may assure Mm
that the arrangement seemed to give perfect satisfaction to the h that usbands we have of bo it th on the the daug testimony hters , as of one l mother as to the that paren her ts sons , and - in-law had all lived under her roof for the first of their
marriageand were invariably most affectionate towards year herself . gained Tn fact two , she sons said . " , " So ins we tead of losin they g eit must her dau hav ghter e found I h her ave
proximity endurable . presume coul If in secure the case thei of r h a ouse married close son to or i daug ein hter the , same the young build coup inas le g
woul their d parents be content , we believe with a far one more good , modes . resul ., t t would establishmen be that tthan they
, than they what now are was : they reall would needful want for -no their more comfort outlay in and their would rooms let
their respectability in y the eyes of the world be , supported by
346 House Building.
346 HOUSE BUILDING .
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Citation
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English Woman’s Journal (1858-1864), Jan. 1, 1864, page 346, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/ewj/issues/ewj_01011864/page/58/
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