“In the tallest tree of all they built a marvellous treehouse. All the birds, especially the big ones, the crows and rooks and magpies, made their nests around the treehouses so that nobody could see it from the ground.”
The Twits, by Roald Dahl
“In the tallest tree of all they built a marvellous treehouse. All the birds, especially the big ones, the crows and rooks and magpies, made their nests around the treehouses so that nobody could see it from the ground.”
The Twits, by Roald Dahl
A treehouses.
A free house.
A secret you and me house.
A happy up in the leafy branches.
A happy as can be house.
A street house
A neat house.
A be sure to wipe your feet houses,
Is not the kind of house for me.
Let’s go and live in a treehouses.
Treehouse by Shel Silverstein
It seems that almost everyone likes treehouses. Smiles of recognition turn into grins of enthusiasm as more people discover them and dream about making their own private retreats of family play spaces. And it’s nice to remind ourselves that treehouses are built into the oldest and most forgiving, living things on the earth. Also, history records treehouses as being built as deliberate follies, as challenges for arboreal designers, for merrymaking, and for keeping the spirit of fairy tales alive. But treehouses can also be social places. We have built many that were built to entertain, to hang out with friends and as guest houses.
