The Profitable Arte of Gardening
The Profitable Arte of Gardening was the first book about gardening published in England, being first published in 1563 under the title A Most Briefe and Pleasaunte Treatise, Teaching How to Dresse, Sowe, and Set a Garden. It was written by Thomas Hill, who went on to write the even more successful work, The Gardener's Labyrinth.[1]
Contents
To protect against hail, the book advised hanging the skin of a crocodile, hyena or seal.[2]
gollark: ```haskellprimes = filterPrime [2..] where filterPrime (p:xs) = p : filterPrime [x | x <- xs, x `mod` p /= 0]```So elegant. So concise. So incomprehensible.
gollark: Obviously, Haskell has the best syntax.
gollark: And the objects' types are objects too.
gollark: Regardless, in Python everything is *actually* objects.
gollark: I disagree.
References
- Julie Coleman (May 2001), The Gardener's Labyrinth, University of Glasgow
- Barbara Tufty (1987-09-01), 1001 questions answered about hurricanes, tornadoes, and other natural air disasters, p. 160, ISBN 978-0-486-25455-5
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