A garden where rose bushes are planted.
1If only he had been able to find that bullet in the rosery!
2This brought him back to his investigations in the rosery.
3This is the shape for a rosery-nothinglike a circle set in a square.
4But he entered the rosery buoyantly between his offspring.
5On the other side it flanked the rosery.
6The massive oaken door stood opposite the window overlooking the rosery-thewindow through which Horace Trevert had entered.
7She takes refuge in the rosery.
8They were passing under a young oak tree, where the path wound round to the rosery and summer-house.
9From here he carefully surveyed the upright again, then, returning to the rosery, began a careful scrutiny of the gravel paths and the beds.
10Then Robin told him of the experiment in the library, of the open window and of the bullet mark he had discovered in the rosery.
11Here, as they all knew, Parrish was accustomed to sit when working, his back to the door, his face to the window overlooking the rosery.
12About eleven o'clock I saw Lorna Bolivick leave the house and make her way towards a rosery which had been made some little distance away.
13And at once, a little to her surprise, Nancy and Gerald answer simultaneously, "Oh, let us have tea on the lawn, not-notin the rosery!"
14That is to say, "roseries," "violeteries," and the like-whatwe call florists' shops, you know.
15It is one of the oldest of English roseries, planned by some Elizabethan dame who loved solitude rather than the sun.
16If only he had been able to find that bullet in the rosery!