Citations:treehouse


 * 1907 &mdash; It must have taken us all of a month, working intermittently, to make our tree-house; and then, when it was completed, we never used it again. &mdash; Jack London, Before Adam, Chapter 10
 * 1910 &mdash; He had come upon a collection of the curious tree-houses, sixty or seventy feet from the ground, which some of the islanders inhabit. ... Though he flew to and fro for some time in the vicinity of the tree-houses, he discovered no other break in the forest; and the impossibility of knowing what was going on beneath that vast screen of foliage began to affect him with hopelessness of success. &mdash; Herbert Strang, Round the World in Seven Days, Chapter 13
 * 1918 &mdash; When the wind blows and the rain comes down, it's jolly sitting up aloft in the snug tree-house, especially when old Bill is in good form and gives us "The Salt Junk Sarah", with all hands joining in the chorus. &mdash; Norman Lindsay, The Magic Pudding
 * 1922 &mdash; But the thing that fascinated me most of all was a tiny little tree-house, high up in the top branches of a great elm, with a long rope ladder leading to it. &mdash; Hugh Lofting, Voyages of Doctor Dolittle, Chapter 9
 * 1923 &mdash; Ja conducted us along the maze-like trail to his strange village, where he gave over one of the tree-houses for our exclusive use. &mdash; Edgar Rice Burroughs, Pellucidar, Chapter 4