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  1. THE GARDEN PARTY (1921) And after all the weather was ideal. They could not have had a more perfect day for a garden-party if they had ordered it. Windless, warm, the sky without a cloud. Only the blue was veiled with a haze of light gold, as it is sometim gardener had been up since dawn, mowing the lawns and sweeping them, until the grass and ...

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  2. The Garden Party" is a 1922 short story by Katherine Mansfield. It was first published (as "The Garden-Party") in three parts in the Saturday Westminster Gazette on 4 and 11 February 1922, and the Weekly Westminster Gazette on 18 February 1922. It later appeared in The Garden Party and Other Stories.

  3. THE GARDEN PARTY (full text) Lyrics. And after all the weather was ideal. They could not have had a more perfect day for a garden-party if they had ordered it. Windless, warm, the sky...

  4. At first glance, Katherine Mansfield’s 1922 short story “The Garden Party” tells a fairly straightforward story of a young girl who gains greater understanding about life and death. Set in Mansfield’s own childhood hometown of Wellington, New Zealand, the story is not the coming-of-age narrative that one might expect.

  5. 20 de jan. de 2016 · A short story by the modernist writer Katherine Mansfield, ‘The Garden Party’ centres on a young woman who attends a garden party with her family and experiences a moment of epiphany when she sees a dead man in the mirror. The story explores themes of class, identity, and death in a stark and poetic style.

  6. 10 de jul. de 1998 · She stands beside the cage, a shrivelled ageless Italian, clasping and unclasping her dark claws. Her face, a treasure of delicate carving, is tied in a green-and-gold scarf. And inside their prison the love-birds flutter towards the papers in the seed-tray. “You have great strength of character.

  7. The Garden Party, short story by Katherine Mansfield, published as the title story in The Garden Party, and Other Stories (1922). The story centres on Laura Sheridan’s response to the accidental death of a neighbourhood workman; Laura suggests that, out of respect for the man’s family, Laura’s.