The moss garden

The moss garden is a forest room where everything stands still and quiet. The high canopies of the deciduous trees form a roof over the hemlocks and moss. A spruce trellis forms walls and corners. Here, Peter Korn has planted twinflower and a variety of mosses, foxgloves, wood aster, Solomon’s seal and saxifrage, mixed with lady-fern and hart’s-tongue fern.

The melancholy garden

Melancholy is an emotion that is closely associated with both the sadness and beauty of life. In Astrid Lindgren’s stories, these feelings are given a lot of space, sometimes so much they carry the whole story; in ‘Mio My Son’, the dream of a father and belonging being the very foundation of the narrative. Melancholy is also present as very quiet feeling, a haunting melody about the fragility of life. In the form of a garden, melancholy is manifest as a somewhat constricted space, muted yet soft and with streaks of light.

“I think Britta and Anna fell asleep long before me. I lay awake for ages and heard a rustling in the forest, only a slight rustling. And there were little waves coming and hitting the beach so slowly, so slowly. It was so strange – I didn’t know whether I was sad or happy. I lay there and tried to feel whether I was sad or happy, but I couldn’t. Maybe sleeping in the forest makes you a little mad.”

From ‘Nothing but fun in Noisy Village’ by Astrid Lindgren

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