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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #66670 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66670)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Trees, by Janet Harvey Kelman
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Trees
- Shown to the Children
-
-Author: C. E. Smith
-
-Editor: Louey Chisholm
-
-Illustrator: Janet Harvey Kelman
-
-Release Date: November 4, 2021 [eBook #66670]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
- produced from images made available by the HathiTrust
- Digital Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TREES ***
-
-
-
-
-
- THE “SHOWN TO THE CHILDREN” SERIES
-
- EDITED BY LOUEY CHISHOLM
-
- TREES
-
-
-
-
-The “Shown to the Children” Series
-
-
- 1. BEASTS
-
- With 48 Coloured Plates by PERCY J. BILLINGHURST.
- Letterpress by LENA DALKEITH.
-
- 2. FLOWERS
-
- With 48 Coloured Plates showing 150 flowers, by
- JANET HARVEY KELMAN. Letterpress by C. E.
- SMITH.
-
- 3. BIRDS
-
- With 48 Coloured Plates by M. K. C. SCOTT.
- Letterpress by J. A. HENDERSON.
-
- 4. THE SEA-SHORE
-
- With 48 Coloured Plates by JANET HARVEY
- KELMAN. Letterpress by REV. THEODORE WOOD.
-
- 5. THE FARM
-
- With 48 Coloured Plates by F. M. B. and A. H.
- BLAIKIE. Letterpress by FOSTER MEADOW.
-
- 6. TREES
-
- With 32 Coloured Plates by JANET HARVEY
- KELMAN. Letterpress by C. E. SMITH.
-
- 7. NESTS AND EGGS
-
- With 48 Coloured Plates by A. H. BLAIKIE.
- Letterpress by J. A. HENDERSON.
-
- 8. BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS
-
- With 48 Coloured Plates by JANET HARVEY
- KELMAN. Letterpress by Rev. THEODORE WOOD.
-
- 9. STARS
-
- By ELLISON HAWKS.
-
- 10. GARDENS
-
- With 32 Coloured Plates by J. H. KELMAN.
- Letterpress by J. A. HENDERSON.
-
- 11. BEES
-
- By ELLISON HAWKS. Illustrated in Colour and
- Black and White.
-
- 12. ARCHITECTURE
-
- By GLADYS WYNNE. Profusely Illustrated.
-
- 13. THE EARTH
-
- By ELLISON HAWKS. Profusely Illustrated.
-
- 14. THE NAVY
-
- By PERCIVAL A. HISLAM. 48 Two-colour Plates.
-
- 15. THE ARMY
-
- By A. H. ATTERIDGE. 16 Colour and 32 Black Plates.
-
-
-[Illustration: PLATE I
-
-THE OAK
-
- 1. Oak Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Spray with Flower Catkins
- 4. Stamen Catkin
- 5. Seed Catkin
- 6. Fruit]
-
-
-
-
- TREES
- SHOWN TO THE CHILDREN
-
- BY
- JANET HARVEY KELMAN
-
- DESCRIBED BY
- C. E. SMITH
-
- [Illustration]
-
- THIRTY-TWO COLOURED PICTURES
-
- LONDON: T. C. & E. C. JACK, Ltd.
- 35 PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C.
- AND EDINBURGH
-
-
-
-
- To
- THOMAS FORBES SACKVILLE WILSON
-
-
-
-
-Dear children,--In this little book I have written about some of the
-trees which you are likely to find growing wild in this country, and
-Miss Kelman has painted for you pictures of these trees, with drawings
-of the leaves and flowers and fruit, so that it will be easy for you to
-tell the name of each tree. But I think there is one question which you
-are sure to ask after reading this small book, and that is, “How do the
-trees grow?”
-
-The tree grows very much as we do, by taking food and by breathing. The
-food of the tree is obtained from two sources: from the earth and from
-the air. Deep down in the earth lie the tree roots, and these roots
-suck up water from the soil in which they are embedded. This water, in
-which there is much nourishment, rises through many tiny cells in the
-woody stem till it reaches the leaf, twigs, and green leaves. As it
-rises the growing cells keep what they need of the water. The rest is
-given off as vapour by the leaves through many tiny pores, which you
-will not be able to see without a microscope.
-
-While it is day the green leaves select from the air a gas called
-carbonic acid gas. This they separate into two parts called oxygen
-and carbon. The plant does not need the oxygen as food, so the leaves
-return it to the air, but they keep the carbon. This carbon becomes
-mixed in some strange way with the water food drawn from the soil by
-the roots. Forming a liquid, it finds its way through many small cells
-and channels to feed the growing leaves and twigs and branches.
-
-But, like ourselves, a tree if it is to live and thrive must breathe as
-well as take food. By night as well as by day the tree requires air for
-breathing. Scattered over the surface of the leaves, and indeed over
-the skin of the tree, are many tiny mouths or openings called stomata.
-It is by these that the tree breathes. It now takes from the air some
-oxygen, which, you will remember, is the gas that the leaves do not
-need in making their share of the tree food. Now you can see why it
-is that a tree cannot thrive if it is planted in a dusty, sooty town.
-The tiny mouths with which it breathes get filled up, and the tree
-is half-choked for lack of air. Also the pores of the leaves become
-clogged, so that the water which is not needed cannot easily escape
-from them. A heavy shower of rain is a welcome friend to our dusty town
-trees.
-
-As a rule tree flowers are not so noticeable as those which grow in
-the woods and meadows. Often the ring of gaily-coloured petals which
-form the corolla is awanting, so are the green or coloured sepals of
-the calyx, and the flower may consist, as in the Ash tree, of a small
-seed-vessel standing between two stamens, which have plenty of pollen
-dust in their fat heads.
-
-It is very interesting to notice the various ways in which the tree
-flowers grow. In some trees the stamens and seed-vessels will be found
-close together, as in the Ash tree and Elm. Or they may grow on the
-same branch of a tree; but all the stamens will be grouped together on
-one stalk and all the seed-vessels close beside it on another stalk,
-as in the Oak tree. Or the stamen flowers may all be found on one tree
-without any seed flowers, and on another tree, sometimes a considerable
-distance away, there will be found nothing but seed flowers. This
-occurs in the White Poplar or Abele tree.
-
-You must never forget that both kinds of flowers are required if the
-tree is to produce new seed, and many books have been written to point
-out the wonderful ways in which the wind and the birds and the bees
-carry the stamen dust to the seed-vessels, which are waiting to receive
-it.
-
-Each summer the tree adds a layer of new wood in a circle round the
-tree trunk; a broad circle when there has been sunshine and the tree
-has thriven well, and a narrow circle when the season has been wet and
-sunless. This new layer of wood is always found just under the bark or
-coarse, outer skin of the tree. The bark protects the soft young wood,
-and if it is eaten by cattle, or cut off by mischievous boys, then the
-layer of young wood is exposed, and the tree will die.
-
-When winter approaches and the trees get ready for their long sleep,
-the cells in this layer of new wood slowly dry, and it becomes a ring
-of hard wood. If you look at a tree which has just been cut down, you
-will be able to tell how many years old the tree is by counting the
-circles of wood in the tree trunk. When a tree grows very slowly these
-rings are close and firm, and the wood of the tree is hard and valuable.
-
-Many, many years ago, when a rich Scotch landlord lay dying, he said to
-his only son, “Jock, when you have nothing else to do, be sticking in a
-tree; it will aye be growing when you are sleeping.” He was a clever,
-far-seeing old man, Jock’s father, for he knew that in course of time
-trees grow to be worth money, and that to plant a tree was a sure and
-easy way of adding a little more to the wealth he loved so dearly.
-
-But a tree has another and a greater value to us and to the world than
-the price which a wood merchant will give for it as timber. Think
-what a dear familiar friend the tree has been in the life of man! How
-different many of our best-loved tales would be without the trees that
-played so large a part in the lives of our favourite heroes. Where
-could Robin Hood and his merry men have lived and hunted but under the
-greenwood tree? Without the forest of Arden what refuge would have
-sheltered the mischief-loving Rosalind and her banished father? How
-often do we think of the stately Oak and Linden trees into which good
-old Baucis and Philemon were changed by the kindly gods.
-
-And do you remember what secrets the trees told us as we lay under
-their shady branches on the hot midsummer days, while the leaves danced
-and flickered against the blue, blue sky? Can you tell what was the
-charm that held us like a dream in the falling dusk as we watched their
-heavy masses grow dark and gloomy against the silvery twilight sky?
-
-In a corner of a Cumberland farmyard there grew a noble tree whose
-roots struck deep into the soil, and whose heavy branches shadowed
-much of the ground. “Why do you not cut it down?” asked a stranger;
-“it seems so much in the way.” “Cut it down!” the farmer answered
-passionately. “I would sooner fall on my knees and worship it.” To him
-the tree had spoken of a secret unguessed by Jock’s father and by many
-other people who look at the trees with eyes that cannot see. He had
-learned that the mystery of tree life is one with the mystery that
-underlies our own; that we share this mystery with the sea, and the
-sun, and the stars, and that by this mystery of life the whole world is
-“bound with gold chains” of love “about the feet of God.”
-
- C. E. SMITH.
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF PLATES
-
-
- PLATE I
-
- The Oak
-
-
- PLATE II
-
- The Beech
-
-
- PLATE III
-
- The Birch
-
-
- PLATE IV
-
- The Alder
-
-
- PLATE V
-
- The Hornbeam
-
-
- PLATE VI
-
- The Hazel
-
-
- PLATE VII
-
- The Lime or Linden
-
-
- PLATE VIII
-
- The Common Elm and Wych or Broad-Leaved Elm
-
-
- PLATE IX
-
- The Ash
-
-
- PLATE X
-
- The Field Maple
-
-
- PLATE XI
-
- The Sycamore, or Great Maple, or Mock Plane
-
-
- PLATE XII
-
- The Oriental Plane
-
-
- PLATE XIII
-
- The White Poplar or Abele Tree
-
-
- PLATE XIV
-
- The Aspen
-
-
- PLATE XV
-
- The White Willow
-
-
- PLATE XVI
-
- The Goat Willow or Sallow
-
-
- PLATE XVII
-
- The Scotch Pine or Scotch Fir
-
-
- PLATE XVIII
-
- The Yew
-
-
- PLATE XIX
-
- The Juniper
-
-
- PLATE XX
-
- The Larch
-
-
- PLATE XXI
-
- The Spruce Fir
-
-
- PLATE XXII
-
- The Silver Fir
-
-
- PLATE XXIII
-
- The Holly
-
-
- PLATE XXIV
-
- The Wild Cherry or Gean
-
-
- PLATE XXV
-
- The Whitebeam
-
-
- PLATE XXVI
-
- The Rowan or Mountain Ash
-
-
- PLATE XXVII
-
- The Hawthorn
-
-
- PLATE XXVIII
-
- The Box
-
-
- PLATE XXIX
-
- The Walnut
-
-
- PLATE XXX
-
- The Sweet Chestnut or Spanish Chestnut
-
-
- PLATE XXXI
-
- The Horse Chestnut
-
-
- PLATE XXXII
-
- The Cedar of Lebanon
-
-
-
-
-TREES
-
-
-
-
-PLATE I
-
-THE OAK
-
-
-Of all our forest trees the Oak is undoubtedly the king. It is our
-most important tree, the monarch of our woods, full of noble dignity
-and grandeur in the summer sunshine, strong to endure the buffeting
-of the wintry gales. It lives to the great age of seven hundred years
-or more, and is a true father of the forest. We read of the Oak tree
-in the story books of long ago. There are many Oak trees mentioned in
-the Bible. In Greece the Oak was believed to be the first tree that
-God created, and there grew a grove of sacred Oaks which were said to
-utter prophecies. The wood used for the building of the good ship Argo
-was cut from this grove, and in times of danger the planks of the ship
-spoke in warning voices to the sailors.
-
-In Rome a crown of Oak leaves was given to him who should save the life
-of a citizen, and in this country, in the days of the Druids, there
-were many strange customs connected with the Oak and its beautiful
-guest the mistletoe. The burning of the Yule log of Oak is an ancient
-custom which we trace to Druid times. It was lit by the priests from
-the sacred altar, then the fires in all the houses were put out, and
-the people relit them with torches kindled at the sacred log. Even now
-in remote parts of Yorkshire and Devonshire the Yule log is brought in
-at Christmas-time and half burned, then it is taken off the fire and
-carefully laid aside till the following year.
-
-We know that in Saxon times this country was covered with dense
-forests, many of which were of Oak trees. Huge herds of swine fed on
-the acorns which lay in abundance under the trees; and a man, when he
-wished to sell his piece of forest, did not tell the buyer how much
-money the wood in it was worth, but how many pigs it could fatten. In
-times of famine the acorns used to be ground, and bread was made of the
-meal. There have been many famous Oak trees in England: one of these we
-have all heard of--the huge Oak at Boscobel in which King Charles II.
-hid with a great many of his men after he was defeated at the battle of
-Worcester.
-
-I think you will have no difficulty in recognising an Oak tree (1) at
-any time of the year. Look at its trunk in winter: how dark and rough
-it is; how wide and spreading at the bottom to give its many roots a
-broad grip of the earth into which they pierce deeply. Then as the
-stem rises it becomes narrower, as if the tree had a waist, for it
-broadens again as it reaches a height where the branches divide from
-the main trunk. And what huge branches these are--great rough, dark
-arms with many crooked knots or elbows, which shipbuilders prize for
-their trade. These Oak-tree arms are so large and heavy that the tree
-would need to be well rooted in the ground to stand firm when the gale
-is tossing its branches as if they were willow rods.
-
-The Oak tree does not grow to a great height. It is a broad, sturdy
-tree, and it grows very slowly, so slowly that after it is grown up it
-rarely increases more than an inch in a year, and sometimes not even
-that. But just because the Oak tree lives so leisurely, it outlasts all
-its companions in the forest except, perhaps, the yew tree, and its
-beautiful hard, close-grained wood is the most prized of all our timber.
-
-In the end of April or early in May, the Oak leaves (2) appear;
-very soft and tender they are too at first, and of a pale reddish
-green colour. But soon they darken in the sunshine and become a
-dark glossy green. Each leaf is feather-shaped and has a stalk. The
-margin is deeply waved into blunt lobes or fingers, and there is a
-strongly-marked vein up the centre of the leaf, with slender veins
-running from it to the edge.
-
-In autumn these leaves change colour: they become a pale brown, and
-will hang for weeks rustling in the branches till the young buds which
-are to appear next year begin to form and so push the old leaves off.
-If a shrivelling frost or a blighting insect destroys all the young Oak
-leaves, as sometimes happens, then the sturdy tree will reclothe itself
-in a new dress of leaves, which neither the Beech, nor the Chestnut,
-nor the Maple, could do. It shows what a great deal of life there is in
-the stout tree.
-
-The flowers of the Oak arrive about the same time as the leaves, and
-they grow in catkins which are of two kinds. You will find a slender
-hanging catkin (3) on which grow small bunches of yellow-headed stamens
-(4). Among the stamens you can see six or eight narrow sepals, but
-these stamens have no scales to protect them as the Hazel and Birch
-catkins have. On the same branch grows a stouter, upright catkin,
-and on it are one or maybe two or three tiny cups (5), made of soft
-green leaves called bracts, and in the centre of this cup sits the
-seed-vessel, crowned with three blunt points. As the summer advances
-this seed-vessel grows larger and fatter and becomes a fruit (6) called
-an acorn, which is a pale yellow colour at first, and later is a dark
-olive brown. The soft leafy cup hardens till it is firm as wood, and in
-it the acorn sits fast till it is ripe. It then falls from the cup and
-is greedily eaten by the squirrels and dormice, as it was in the olden
-times by the pigs. From those acorns that are left lying on the ground
-all winter, under the withered leaves, will grow the tiny shoots of a
-new tree when the spring sunshine comes again.
-
-The Oak tree is the most hospitable of trees: it is said that eleven
-hundred insects make their home in its kindly shelter. There are five
-kinds of houses, which are called galls, built by insects, and you
-can easily recognise these, and must look for them on the Oak tree.
-Sometimes on the hanging stamen catkins you will find little balls like
-currants with the catkin stem running through the centre. These are the
-homes of a tiny grub which is living inside the currant ball, and which
-will eat its way out as soon as it is ready to unfold its wings and fly.
-
-Often at the end of an Oak twig you find a soft, spongy ball which is
-called an Oak apple. It is pinkish brown on the outside and is not very
-regular in shape. This ball is divided inside into several cells, and
-in each cell there lives a grub which will also become a fly before
-summer is over.
-
-Sometimes if you look at the back of an Oak leaf you will see it
-covered with small red spangles which are fringed and hairy. These
-spangles each contain a small insect, and they cling to their spangled
-homes long after the leaves have fallen to the ground.
-
-Another insect home or gall grows in the leaves, and this one is much
-larger, sometimes as big as a marble. It too is made by an insect which
-is living inside, and this is called a leaf gall.
-
-There is still another insect which attacks the leaf buds and causes
-them to grow in a curious way. Instead of opening as usual, the bud
-proceeds to make layers of narrow-pointed green leaves which it lays
-tightly one above the other, like the leaves of an artichoke or the
-scales of a fir cone. If you cut one of these Oak cones in half you
-will find many small insects inside, which have caused the bud to grow
-in this strange way.
-
-And there is one other oak gall you must note. When the leaves have
-all fallen and the twigs are brown and bare, you see clusters of hard
-brown balls growing on some of them. They are smooth and glossy and
-the colour of dried walnuts. These also have been made by an insect.
-Sometimes you see the tiny hole in the ball by which the grub has bored
-its way out. This kind of gall does great harm to the tree, as it uses
-up the sap that should nourish the young twigs.
-
-The wood of the Oak is very valuable. Sometimes a fine old tree will
-be sold for four hundred pounds, and every part of it can be used. The
-bark is valuable because it contains large quantities of an acid which
-is used in making ink; also in dyeing leather. Oak that has been lying
-for years in a peat bog, where there is much iron in the water, is
-perfectly black when dug out, black as ink, because the acid and the
-iron together have made the inky colour.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE II
-
-THE BEECH
-
- 1. Beech Tree in Autumn
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Bud
- 4. Buds in Winter
- 5. Seed Flower
- 6. Stamen Flower
- 7. Fruit
- 8. Fruit when Ripe]
-
-The wood of an Oak tree lasts very long: there are Oak beams in
-houses which are known to be seven hundred years old, and which are as
-good as the day they were cut. For centuries our ships were built of
-Oak, the wooden walls of old England, hearts of Oak, as they have often
-been called, because Oak wood does not readily splinter when struck
-by a cannon ball. And Oak wood will not quickly rot: we know of piles
-which have been driven into river beds centuries ago and are still
-sound and strong. In pulling down an old building lately in London,
-which was built six hundred and fifty years ago, the workmen found many
-oak piles in the foundations, and these were still quite sound.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE II
-
-THE BEECH
-
-
-In the south of England there lived a holy hermit named St. Leonard
-whose hut was surrounded by a glade of noble Beech trees. The saint
-loved the beautiful trees, but by day he could not sit under their
-shady branches because of the vipers which swarmed about the roots,
-and by night the songs of many nightingales disturbed his rest. So he
-prayed that both the serpents and the birds might be taken away, and
-from that day no viper has stung and no nightingale has warbled in
-the Hampshire forests. So we read in the old story books. There are
-many such legends connected with the Beech tree. It has grown in this
-country as far back as we have any history, and it is often called the
-mother of the forest, because its thickly covered branches give shelter
-and protection to younger trees which are struggling to live.
-
-The Beech is a cousin of the Oak. It is a large, handsome tree, with
-a noble trunk and widely spreading branches which sweep downward to
-the ground, and in summer every branch and twig is densely covered
-with leaves. No other tree gives such shade as the Beech, and in a hot
-summer day how tempting it is to lie underneath the branches and watch
-the squirrels glancing in and out among the rustling leaves and tearing
-the young bark.
-
-In early spring you will recognise the Beech tree (1) by its smooth
-olive-grey trunk. Only the Beech tree has such a smooth trunk when it
-is fully grown, and in consequence, every boy with a new knife tries to
-cut his name on its bark. In summer the young bud (3) of next year’s
-leaf is formed where each leaf joins the stem. All winter time you can
-see slender-pointed buds (4) growing at the end of every twig, and when
-April comes each of these pointed buds has become a loose bunch of
-silky brown scales. Inside these protecting scales is hidden the young
-leaf bud, and soon the winter coverings unclose. For a short time they
-hang like a fringe round the base of the leaf stalk, but they quickly
-fall off and strew the ground beneath. The young leaves inside are
-folded like a fan, and they have soft silky hairs along the edges. How
-lovely they are when open! Each leaf (2) is oval, with a blunted point
-at the end, and the edges are slightly waved.
-
-At first the leaf colour is a clear pale green, through which the light
-seems to shine; and there is nothing more lovely than a Beech tree
-wood in early May when the young leaves are glistening against the
-clear blue sky. But as summer comes nearer the leaf colour darkens, and
-by July it is a deep, glossy green. You can then see very distinctly
-the veins which run from the centre to the edge of every leaf. These
-leaves grow so thickly that no stems or branches can be seen when
-the tree is in full foliage; and they are beautiful at all seasons.
-When autumn comes, bringing cold winds and a touch of frost, then the
-Beech tree leaves change colour: they seem to give us back again all
-the sunshine they have been storing up during summer, for they blaze
-like the sunset sky in myriad shades of gold, and red, and orange. In
-windy open places, these beautiful leaves soon strew the ground with a
-thick carpet that whirls and rustles in every breeze. But in sheltered
-glades, and especially in hedges, the leaves will hang all winter till
-they are pushed off by the new spring buds, and they glow russet red in
-the December sunshine, like the breast of the robin that is singing on
-the twig.
-
-At every stage the Beech tree is a thing of beauty, and it is one of
-England’s most precious possessions.
-
-The young flowers appear about the same time as the leaves, and, like
-many other trees, the Beech has two kinds of flowers. The stamen flower
-(6) has a long, drooping stalk, from the end of which hangs a loose
-covering of fine brown scales, with pointed ends. Beyond this scaly
-covering hangs a tassel of purplish brown stamens, eight or twelve, or
-more, each with a yellow head.
-
-On the same twig, not very far distant, you find the seed flower (5).
-This grows upright on a short stout stalk which bears at the end a
-bristly oval ball (7). At the top of this bristly ball you see six
-slender threads waving in the air. These rise from two seeds which are
-enclosed in the bristly covering. By and by the ball opens at the top
-and forms a cup with four prickly brown sides, each lined with silky
-green down. Inside the cup are two triangular green nuts which are the
-fruit (8). These nuts become dark brown when they ripen, and on windy
-days they are blown in thousands from their coverings and fall to the
-ground, where they lie hidden among the rustling brown leaves.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE III
-
-THE BIRCH
-
- 1. Birch Tree in Autumn
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Seed Catkin
- 4. Stamen Catkin
- 5. Winged Seed enlarged
- 5A. Winged Seed natural size]
-
-In old times people called these Beech nuts Beech-mast or food, and
-herds of pigs were taken to the Beech woods to feed on the nuts, which
-are said to contain oil. But pigs prefer to eat acorns, and nowadays
-the Beech nuts are left to fatten the squirrels and dormice, and the
-thrushes and deer, except those which children gather to string into
-necklaces.
-
-No grass or plant will grow below the Beech tree branches: the leaves
-are too close together to let the sunshine reach the ground; also the
-roots are greedy, and are said to use up all the nourishment.
-
-About a hundred years ago a Beech tree was found in Germany whose young
-leaves were dark purple red, and never became green. Young plants from
-this strange tree were much sought after, and now in many parts of the
-country you see red or copper beeches, as we usually call them.
-
-Beech wood is used in various ways. In France the peasants make it into
-shoes--wooden shoes called sabots, which keep out the damp better than
-those made of any other wood. It is also used in ship-building and for
-making cheap furniture; but Beech wood is not nearly so valuable as
-that of the Oak, or Ash, or Elm.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE III
-
-THE BIRCH
-
- “Sweet bird of the meadow, soft be thy nest,
- Thy mother will wake thee at morn from thy rest:
- She has made a soft nest, little redbreast, for thee,
- Of the leaves of the birch, and the moss of the tree.”
-
- --Leyden.
-
-
-The Birch tree is the daintiest and most fairy-like of all our forest
-trees, and, strange to say, it is one of the hardiest. Who would
-believe that the delicate tracery of purple twigs and branches, which
-looks like fairy fretwork against the grey wintry sky, could thrive in
-places where the sturdy Oak tree dies?
-
-In the far, far north, in Lapland, where the ground is snow-covered all
-the year, the Birch tree flourishes, and many are the uses to which it
-is put in that dreary land.
-
-Look at the Birch tree (1) early in the year before the sun has
-awakened the trees, and flowers, and seeds from their long winter
-sleep. It is easy to recognise, because no other tree has such delicate
-twigs and branches, and the colour of the trunk is peculiarly its own.
-Most tree trunks are grey, or grey-green, or brown, but the trunk of
-the Birch is covered with a silvery white bark that glistens like
-satin. In many places this bark is marked with dark bands which crack
-across the tree trunk on the silvery surface.
-
-This silver bark is a wonderful thing. It peels off readily in large
-flakes which resemble tissue paper, and which look very easy to
-destroy, but are wonderfully tough and lasting. It burns readily,
-but in almost no other way can it be destroyed. If a Birch tree is
-blown down and left lying on the damp ground for many years, all the
-wood inside the silvery bark will decay, but the outside of the trunk
-remains unchanged. Stand on it, and you find that what you took to be
-a solid tree is nothing but a hollow tube of bark.
-
-In North America the Indians cover their canoes with Birch bark, and
-in some snow-covered countries the people use it for tiles with which
-to roof their houses. Some time ago, when men were digging in the
-peat-bogs of Lancashire, they found the remains of Birch trees which
-must have been there for a thousand years. The wood had turned into
-stone, but the bark was still the same as when it grew on the tree.
-
-In April the young leaves (2) cover the tree like a green mist. They
-are very tiny, the smallest and most fairy-like of all our tree leaves.
-Each leaf is oval in shape, with a glossy surface, and has a double
-row of teeth, first a large tooth, then a smaller one, cut unequally
-all round the edge. The leaf stalk is very slender and wiry, and the
-twig to which it is attached is very little stouter, so that the leaves
-dance and rustle in the slightest breath of wind. Sometimes the back of
-a Birch leaf is covered with fine yellow powder. This powder is really
-a tiny plant which has made its home on the Birch tree leaf and feeds
-on it, just as the ivy and mistletoe do on larger trees. In autumn
-these leaves turn pale yellow, and the moss and heather are strewn with
-their flakes of gold.
-
-There is another stranger makes its home on some of the Birch trees.
-In spring, before the leaves come, you may often notice curious bunches
-of twigs that look like crows’ nests high up among the branches. These
-are caused by a tiny insect which has come to stay on the Birch tree,
-and, in some way which we do not understand, it makes all the twigs
-crowd together in that curious manner. “Witches’ Knots” they are called
-in Scotland.
-
-In May the Birch tree is in flower. You know that tree flowers are not
-so easy to see as meadow flowers: they require to be sought for and
-looked at carefully if you wish to know about them. The Birch tree has
-two kinds of flowers, and both are needed if the seed from which new
-trees may grow is to be made ready. It takes the tree a whole year to
-prepare one kind of flower. During summer look at the foot of a leaf
-stalk, where it joins the twig, and you will find two tiny green stamen
-catkins (4) with all their soft scales tightly closed together. In
-autumn these little catkins become dark purple, and they hang on the
-tree all winter. Early in the following spring they change entirely.
-The scales unclose and the catkins grow longer till they look like a
-pair of caterpillars loosely shaking in the wind. Behind the scales in
-these reddy-brown caterpillars you find a mass of flowers, each made up
-of one tiny sepal, also two slender stamens with small yellow heads.
-
-Now look at the other kind of flower, the seed catkin (3). These also
-are small and green, but they grow singly and are fatter and rounder
-than the stamen catkins. Their scales never open very wide, but if you
-look closely you will see behind each scale three little pear-shaped
-seed-vessels with two slender horns standing up from the top of each.
-
-When the seeds in this catkin are ripe they resemble tiny nuts with
-wings on each side (5): and on windy days you can see clouds of these
-little winged seeds (5_a_) fluttering to the ground like small flies.
-Birds are very fond of Birch tree seeds, and one kind of finch, the
-siskin, is usually found hovering among the Birch trees.
-
-The Birch tree lives till it is about a hundred years old. It is not
-grown up till it is twenty-five, so you will find no seeds on the young
-birches. It is a tree with many useful qualities. The bark is sometimes
-twisted into torches, as it contains a good deal of oil, and it is also
-used in tanning leather. The delicious scent of Russian leather is due
-to Birch bark oil. And there is sugar in the sap which may be made into
-wine. Furniture is largely made from the prettily grained Birch wood.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE IV
-
-THE ALDER
-
-
-The Alder tree (1) is a cousin of the Birch and the Hazel, and like
-them its flowers and seeds are borne in catkins. It is usually to be
-found growing by the side of a slow-running stream, over which its
-slender branches bend gracefully, while its spreading roots cling to
-the boggy soil at the water’s edge. For the Alder does not thrive in
-dry ground: it is a water-loving tree, and its many tiny roots attract
-moisture, and suck it up greedily; so that the ground where the Alder
-grows is often a marshy swamp.
-
-Sometimes you will find an Alder which has grown into a lofty tree with
-a rough brown-black bark, and with many large branches; but it is much
-more frequently found as a low-growing and rather gloomy bush, about
-the same size as the Hazel.
-
-The wood of the Alder is much sought after for buildings which stand
-in water. In Venice one of the most famous bridges, the Rialto, is
-built on piles, or great posts of Alder driven deep into the bed of the
-canal: and one reads in old history books that boats were first made of
-the trunks of the Alder tree. But it is of no use for fences or gate
-posts, as it decays quickly in dry soil.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE IV
-
-THE ALDER
-
- 1. Alder Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Stamen Catkins
- 4. Seed Catkins
- 5. Last Year’s Seed Catkins
- 6. Next Year’s Seed Catkins]
-
-If you watch a woodman cutting down an Alder tree you will notice that
-the chips which fall under his axe are very white; but soon they change
-colour and become a reddish pink. The hard wood knots which are found
-in the tree trunk are beautifully streaked and veined and are much
-prized by furniture makers.
-
-In early spring you should walk to the banks of a stream and look for
-an Alder tree. Like the Hazel, you will easily know it by its winter
-catkins, though these are very different from Hazel catkins. Clinging
-to the boughs you see groups of small brown oval cones, which are
-quite hard and woody and which snap off easily. These woody cones are
-the withered seed catkins (5) of last year. As well as these you find
-bunches of long drooping caterpillars with tightly-shut purple-green
-scales, which will not unclose till the spring days come. These are the
-young stamen catkins, and they have taken six months to grow so far. By
-these you will always know the Alder tree; and it is most interesting
-to watch day by day how its catkins grow and change.
-
-In spring the tree produces many groups of tiny seed catkins (4),
-which are hard and oval and covered with closely-shut green scales. As
-the days get warmer these cones grow larger and larger, and one day
-you will find the scales opening as a fir cone does when it is ripe.
-Underneath each scale are hidden two seeds, and from the top of each
-seed rise two slender horns. There are no wings to the seed, as in the
-Birch tree. These seed cones grow fatter and larger all summer, and by
-autumn their scales, instead of remaining green and soft, have become
-a dark reddish brown colour and are hard and woody. In October or
-November the seed is quite ripe, and is shaken on to the boggy ground
-below. Then the empty seed catkins become dry and shrivelled, and they
-remain in groups clinging to the twigs all winter.
-
-But the drooping caterpillars have been growing and changing too. Soon
-after the seed catkins have unclosed their hard oval balls, so that the
-sun and light may reach their tiny seeds, these drooping stamen catkins
-(3) unclose, and their scales take on a deeper shade of reddish purple.
-Each scale is edged with three points, and each point covers four tiny
-stamens and four tiny petals. When the fine powder in the yellow stamen
-heads is ripe, the wind blows it from the dangling tails on to the seed
-cones which are waiting for it, as without the stamen powder the seeds
-would never ripen: and soon after this happens the dangling tails fall
-to the ground.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE V
-
-THE HORNBEAM
-
- 1. Hornbeam
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Stamen Catkin
- 4. Seed Catkin
- 5. Fruit]
-
-If you look at an Alder tree in late autumn you will find three kinds
-of catkins. First, the empty seed catkins with dry woody scales;
-second, the dangling stamen catkins with the fine stamen dust all
-blown away; and third, there are tiny little caterpillar catkins
-with their scales still tightly closed together--these are next year’s
-stamen catkins (6) just begun to form.
-
-The leaves (2) of the Alder are heavy and leathery. They are usually
-rounded at the tips, but sometimes they are square, as if a piece had
-been cut off. Each leaf is prettily toothed all round the edge, and
-the veins, which run from the centre rib to the margin, are very much
-raised. When the leaves are newly opened, the under-side is covered
-with tufts of soft down, and they are slightly sticky. Sometimes they
-are tinged with dull purple. These leaves are placed alternately on the
-stem, and while still in bud each leaf is enclosed in a pair of oval
-sheaths like small yellow ears. These ears do not fall off when the
-leaf unfolds, as do the leaf coverings of the Birch and the Beech; you
-will often find them at the bottom of the leaf stalk when the leaf is
-fully grown.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE V
-
-THE HORNBEAM
-
-
-This is a tree that many people tell you they have never noticed; even
-people who know the names of most of our forest trees look surprised if
-you ask them which is the Hornbeam (1); they have never heard of it.
-And yet it grows freely in England in the woods and hedgerows, and
-like the Beech it is invaluable for sheltering with its close bushy
-branches younger trees that are struggling to live. If left to grow in
-good soil the Hornbeam will become a tall tree over seventy feet high,
-but it is not usual to find such well-grown Hornbeams, because the tree
-is generally planted to form hedges, and as these require thickness and
-bushiness rather than height, the top of the tree is often cut off, so
-that all its strength may go to producing side-branches.
-
-Last century it was the fashion to have curious puzzle-paths made in
-gardens. You entered at a gap in a leafy hedge and walked on and on,
-and in and out between growing hedges till you came to an open space in
-the centre. Then the puzzle was to find your way out again, and this
-was sometimes very difficult. This kind of puzzle-path was called a
-maze, and the hedges of these mazes were frequently made of Hornbeam,
-because this tree will allow itself to be clipped and cut into any
-shape, and if its tall spreading branches are taken away, it at once
-puts out many small side-shoots which form a thick hedge.
-
-The Hornbeam branches have a curious habit of growing together where
-they cross each other. You may find two good-sized branches which are
-separate on the lower part of the tree, but higher up they cross and
-touch each other, and frequently they join together and become one
-branch.
-
-In the town of Ghent in Belgium there is a winding walk arched with
-Hornbeam: the trees have been planted so close that they meet overhead,
-and they have then been clipped and cut till they form a green tunnel
-under which you can walk for three hundred yards.
-
-The trunk of the Hornbeam is a dull grey colour, and it is marked with
-white spots. It is not round, as are most tree trunks, but looks as if
-it had been slightly flattened, and so made oval when it was young. The
-leaves are not unlike those of the Elm and the young Beech, and when
-the tree is young it is sometimes mistaken for one or other of these.
-But you will notice some differences if you look carefully.
-
-The Hornbeam leaf (2) is oval and tapers to a sharp point. It has
-strongly-marked veins running from the centre to the edge of the leaf,
-and these veins stand up like cord on the under-side of the leaf. You
-remember that the Beech leaf was smooth and glossy, and that the Elm
-leaf was rough and hairy? The Hornbeam comes just between the two: it
-is too rough to be a Beech leaf, and is also too pointed, and it is too
-smooth to be an Elm leaf. Besides, the two sides of the Hornbeam leaf
-meet exactly opposite each other on the leaf stalk, and in the Elm the
-one side of the leaf very often joins the stalk farther down than the
-other: the leaf is lopsided.
-
-The Hornbeam leaves have two rows of teeth round the edge, and in
-autumn they turn yellow, and this yellow colour changes into red-brown
-as the winter draws near. In sheltered places the leaves will hang on
-the branches all winter, till in spring they are pushed off by the
-young leaf buds.
-
-The Hornbeam has two kinds of flowers, which grow in catkins, and both
-are found on the same tree. The stamen catkins (3) come with the young
-leaves early in April, and they grow on those twigs which were produced
-last year. It is not possible to mistake the Hornbeam for either the
-Beech or the Elm if you see the flowers, for neither of these has
-hanging catkins like the Hornbeam. Each catkin is made up of many green
-scales covering the catkin loosely. These scales are broad and oval,
-and they end in a sharp point. Hidden at the foot of each scale lies
-a thick bunch of yellow-headed stamens with no petals and no sepals
-around them. These yellow stamen heads end in tufts of fine hairs, and
-they are filled with pollen dust. As soon as this dust is ripe the
-yellow heads burst and scatter it over the seed flowers which have been
-making ready to receive it. After this the stamen catkins shrivel, and
-they soon fall from the tree.
-
-But there are other Hornbeam flowers, also growing in catkins (4) which
-appear at the end of this year’s young twigs. Each catkin is covered
-with soft, silky spear leaves, and behind every three of these narrow
-leaves there nestles a tiny seed with two little horns standing up at
-the top. These silky leaves soon fall off and are replaced by others
-which are very different. These are called bracts, and they look like
-a small hand with one long finger and two much shorter fingers. They
-are covered with a network of fine veins, and inside the hand sits the
-fruit (5), a small three-sided nut. When you see a bushy, drooping
-cluster of these green leafy bracts, each with its nut at the foot, you
-wonder how any one could mistake the Hornbeam for either the Beech or
-the Elm.
-
-You will often see a dainty little bird called the hawfinch sitting on
-the Hornbeam branches and eating the nuts.
-
-The wood of this tree is said to be very hard. Joiners do not care to
-work on Hornbeam, as it quickly blunts their tools; and some people
-tell you that the name is really Hard-beam, and that we have got into
-a careless habit of calling the tree by a wrong name. But there is
-another tale which may be the true one. Long ago, when ploughing was
-done by bullocks in this country, as it is to-day in many lands, each
-pair of bullocks was fastened together with a wooden collar called a
-yoke. This yoke was made of Hornbeam because of its strength, and the
-tree might get its name because from it was made the beam of wood that
-goes over the horns.
-
-Nowadays the wood is little used except for making small things, such
-as handles of knives, and spoons, and cog-wheels.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE VI
-
-THE HAZEL
-
-
-There are few of us who think of the Hazel as one of our forest trees.
-We know it as a large, straggling bush, with a thicket of leaves and
-branches, among which are hidden delicious nuts. But in some places
-the Hazel has quite outgrown the bush stage: in Middlesex there is a
-Hazel tree sixty feet high, with a straight thick trunk and many large
-branches covered luxuriantly with leaves.
-
-The Hazel (1) has been known in history for many centuries. The Romans
-wrote that its spreading roots did harm to the young vines, but they
-found its supple twigs invaluable for tying up the straggling vine
-shoots.
-
-Scotland is said to have been called Caledonia from Cal Dun, which
-means the hill of Hazel. And in Surrey we have the name Haslemere,
-which tells its own story.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE VI
-
-THE HAZEL
-
- 1. Hazel Bush
- 2. Leaf Spray with Nuts
- 3. Stamen Catkin
- 4. Seed Catkins
- 5. Hazel Nuts]
-
-In damp places beside streams, or on light soil close to quarries, or
-among broken rocky ground, the Hazel thrives, and many are the happy
-afternoons spent by children of all ages gathering nuts in the Hazel
-coppice. This is the only tree we have which produces food good to eat
-in its wild state.
-
-You will not find the Hazel difficult to recognise at any time of year.
-Before the month of January is over you will notice a pair of long
-brown caterpillars dangling in the wind from many of the Hazel twigs:
-lamb’s tails, the country children call them, but their correct name is
-Hazel catkins; and like those of the Birch tree, they have been hanging
-on the tree all winter, but were so small that you did not notice them.
-
-In summer, if you look carefully, you find many tiny green stamen
-catkins growing between the foot of the leaf stalk and the branch.
-These green cones grow very, very slowly all autumn and winter, and
-when January is nearly over they change into these dangling tails or
-hanging catkins (3), and their tightly-folded scales begin to unclose.
-Behind these scales lie eight stamens, each of which has a bright
-yellow head. These yellow heads are filled with fine powder, and when
-ripe they burst, and the fine powder is shaken out by the wind. Soon
-after, the catkin turns brown and shrivelled, and before very long it
-falls off; its work for the year is over.
-
-When the snowdrops bloom, in the end of January, the other Hazel
-flowers or seed catkins are ready. They are not easily seen, so you
-must look for them carefully. On each side of the stalk you will find
-a small scale-covered bud (4), and at the tip of this bud rises a tuft
-of crimson threads. Inside this scale-covered bud are the seeds, and
-from the top of each seed rise two crimson threads. On windy days the
-fine powder from the yellow stamen heads is shaken over these crimson
-threads, which carry it to the young seeds hidden beneath the scaly
-covering. As spring advances this crimson tuft disappears and the bud
-busies itself making the seed, which must be ready by autumn. The
-covering of the seed hardens like a nut: at first this nut is pale
-green, but in winter it becomes a glossy russet brown.
-
-Inside this nut (5) lies the kernel of the seed, and it is this sweet
-kernel which is the fruit we eat. Meantime the scaly leaves, which
-formed the covering of the young bud, have grown much larger: they have
-become tough and leathery, and their ends are deeply divided, as if
-they were torn. In the Filbert Hazel, which is a cousin of the common
-Hazel and very like it, these leathery coverings conceal the nut. But
-in the common or Cobnut Hazel they form a cup in which the nut sits in
-the same way as the acorn does in its cup.
-
-The leaves (2) of the Hazel appear in early spring. They are rounded
-leaves, sometimes slightly heart-shaped, and they have two rows of
-teeth cut round the edge. Each leaf is rough and hairy, and is covered
-with a network of veins which seems to pucker the leaf. At first the
-young leaf stalk and branches are covered with fine down, but this soon
-wears off. Notice how many long, straight shoots rise from the ground
-beside the Hazel roots. On these Hazel shoots the leaves are placed in
-two rows on each side of the shoot, with the leaves not opposite each
-other, but alternate. The shoots make good baskets, and hoops, and
-hurdles, because they can be so easily bent into many shapes without
-breaking. The branches of the Hazel bush have the same good qualities,
-and they are valuable for fishing rods and walking-sticks, and such
-purposes, where toughness and elasticity are needed.
-
-The Hazel leaves hang longer on the tree than most other leaves. The
-frost changes their colour from a dull grey-green to a pale yellow, but
-still they cling to their stalks till the winter wind strips them from
-the branches.
-
-It is said that Hazel shoots or twigs have the power of showing where
-water is concealed. In places where there are no lakes, or rivers, or
-streams near at hand, water is got by digging wells deep down into the
-ground, and so allowing the stores which are hidden there to rise to
-the surface. But it is not everywhere that these hidden supplies will
-be found, and as digging a well costs a great deal of money, people are
-unwilling to begin the work unless they are likely to succeed. So they
-send for a man who is called a diviner, because he divines or guesses
-where water will be found. He walks across the fields carrying a Hazel
-rod in his hand, and when he reaches a spot where water lies beneath,
-the Hazel rod changes position in his hand and the well is sunk at the
-spot which the diviner points out. So the story goes.
-
-For many generations it was a custom in this country to burn Hazel
-nuts on the night of October 31, All-Hallow Eve. Friends would meet
-together late in the evening, and each person would place two nuts as
-near together as possible in a clear red fire. The nuts were supposed
-to represent the two friends, and if they burned quietly and evenly,
-then the future was sure to be happy; but if they flared angrily or
-sputtered hissingly, especially if they burst with a loud report, then
-misfortune was supposed to follow the friends.
-
-Hazel nuts are eagerly devoured by squirrels and dormice, and there is
-one bird, the Nuthatch, that is very busy and grows sleek and fat when
-the Hazel fruit is ripe. This bird breaks off a nut branch and flies
-away with it to an old oak tree. There he strips off the covering of
-leaves and cleverly places the bare nut in a crevice of the rough oak
-trunk. Then with his strong bill he hammers at the shell till it breaks
-and he can get at the nut inside. On still October days in the quiet
-woods you will hear his bill tap-tapping from the trunk of the oak tree.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE VII
-
-THE LIME
-
- 1. Lime Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray with Flowers
- 3. Pink Buds
- 4. Flower Cluster
- 5. Fruit with Bract]
-
-
-
-
-PLATE VII
-
-THE LIME OR LINDEN
-
- “The Lime, a summer home of murmurous wings.”
-
- --Tennyson.
-
-
-The Lime or Linden (1) is one of the most familiar trees in our large
-towns. It is very hardy, and you find it planted by the side of our
-smoky streets, where it seems to thrive in spite of the clouds of sooty
-dust that cover its delicate leaves.
-
-But if you wish to know what a Lime tree really looks like at its
-best, then you must find one growing in some country park where there
-is space, and fresh air, and plenty of sunshine; then you will see
-how beautiful a tree it can be. The Lime is a tall, stately tree. It
-has many slender branches closely covered with leaves, which have
-each a long stalk. In old trees the branches often bend down close to
-the ground, but the sunshine always succeeds in finding its way under
-the Lime tree branches, and it flickers on the grass as it never does
-beneath the Beech tree boughs.
-
-In winter the Lime tree is difficult to recognise, although there is
-one feature you may notice: its bare stems and twigs are very black
-against the sky, and many of the branches hang so awkwardly that they
-look as if they were dead. But go to the park in spring, and at once
-you will know which is the Lime tree. Every little twig is coloured a
-delicate shade of olive green tinged with crimson, and bears many small
-oval buds (3) which are red like rubies. In May these ruby buds burst
-open, and their crimson coverings fall to the ground, disclosing the
-pale emerald-green leaf that is tightly folded within. The leaves (2)
-soon open in the sunshine, and you see that each is shaped like a large
-pointed heart, and that the two sides of the heart are uneven.
-
-The edge of the leaf is cut into sharp teeth, and all over it a network
-of fine veins is spread. When the leaf is still young you find tufts
-of soft, downy hairs on the under-side, and at first each leaf hangs
-straight down from its stalk as if it had not strength to rise and face
-the sunlight. But they soon raise themselves, and gradually their pale
-green colour darkens, though the Lime tree leaf never becomes so dark,
-nor is it as glossy, as the leaf of the Beech tree.
-
-In September the Lime tree leaves turn pale yellow: rather a colourless
-yellow, very different from the rich gold and red-brown of the Beech,
-and they fall with the first touch of frost.
-
-You may sometimes find leaves which are marked with large black,
-sooty-looking spots. These spots are caused by a tiny insect which has
-made its home on the leaf.
-
-If you sit beneath the branches of the Lime on a warm summer day you
-will hear the constant hum of myriads of bees which are buzzing round
-the tree. They are gathering honey from the Lime tree flowers, whose
-delicious perfume is scenting the air.
-
-From the spot where next year’s leaf bud will grow there hangs a long
-stalk; at the end of this stalk there droops a cluster of flowers
-(4), and at the base of each flower cluster stands a long slender
-leaf called a bract. This bract looks like a pale yellow wing, and is
-covered all over with a network of fine veins.
-
-The flowers have five greeny white petals and five pale green sepals.
-In the centre is a small seed-vessel like a tiny pea, and from it there
-rises a slender green pillar which ends in five sticky points. Closely
-surrounding this seed-vessel is a ring of many stamens. Each stamen has
-a white stalk with an orange-coloured head, and among these stamens lie
-the drops of sweet juice which attract the bees.
-
-The stamen dust is ripe before the sticky points of the seed-vessel
-on the same plant are ready for it; but the bees, when they bend down
-to suck the honey juice, brush against the ripe stamen heads, and
-their backs become covered with the fine powder. Away they fly to the
-flowers on another Lime tree, and the powder will probably be rubbed
-off on one where the seed-vessel is ready to receive it.
-
-When the seed is ripe you see many little downy fruit-balls (5), each
-hanging from a slender stalk. In warm countries this seed ripens into a
-small nut which is ground down and made into a kind of chocolate. But
-it never ripens in England.
-
-In some countries there are large forests of Lime trees, and the air is
-filled with the busy hum of the bees. The peasants make large holes in
-the tree trunks, and these holes the bees fill with honeycomb, which
-the peasants easily remove and sell. This Lime tree honey is much
-prized for its fine flavour.
-
-The wood of the Lime tree is not hard enough for building purposes, but
-it is greatly in demand for carving. It is light and soft, and much of
-the beautiful wood decoration in our churches is carved from Lime tree
-wood. It does not easily become worm-eaten as do so many of our harder
-woods.
-
-We read that in old days the soldiers’ shields were made of Lime tree
-wood, as the blow of a weapon was deadened when striking it.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE VIII
-
-THE ELM
-
- 1. Elm Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Ready Buds
- 4. Flower Spray
- 5. Stamen Flower enlarged
- 6. Seed Flower enlarged
- 7. Fruit Clusters and Wing]
-
-The inner bark of the tree has always been valuable. From it are made
-those mats of light brown grass which gardeners use to protect their
-delicate plants during winter; and these tails of dried-looking
-grass with which they tie bunches of flowers instead of using string,
-are also made from the Lime tree bark. This inner bark is called “bass”
-or “bast,” and is chiefly made in Russia and Sweden.
-
-It is from this bass or string that the tree gets its name, which
-is not really Lime, but Line or Linden, and is so called in other
-countries. We in Britain have got into the bad habit of mispronouncing
-the word. The true Lime tree is a cousin of the Orange and Lemon
-trees, and bears a yellow fruit called Limes. But the Linden tree is
-no relation of this Lime tree, and is so called because it is the tree
-from which we get gardener’s dried string or line, and we must remember
-that our popular name is a wrong one, and not the true name of the tree.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE VIII
-
-THE COMMON ELM AND WYCH OR BROAD-LEAVED ELM
-
-
-There are two kinds of Elm which grow abundantly in this country, and
-both are lofty, noble trees. The Common Elm (1) you will recognise
-easily, because its rough black trunk is clothed right down to the
-ground with a dense mass of brushwood. This brushwood is really a
-forest of small branches, and shoots, and twigs which spring from the
-Elm tree root; and if you separate some of these young shoots and plant
-them alone they will grow into young Elm tree saplings.
-
-In winter you will always know the Common Elm by its brushwood
-clothing, and in early spring, in March, after there have been a few
-sunny days, you will see tiny green leaf buds opening in this brushwood
-sheaf before the large upper branches show any signs of life.
-
-The Common Elm is one of our tallest trees. It has a thick rough trunk,
-on which are many large gnarled bosses or knobs. The bark of the tree
-is very rugged and is covered with many deep furrows.
-
-The branches of this Elm do not grow gracefully in sweeping curves like
-those of the Ash tree; they have a dwarf, zig-zag appearance, and often
-they are twisted and knotted.
-
-The young twigs that grow on these branches are short and tiny, a
-network of little bushy sprays growing close to the branch, and their
-bark is downy and corky when it is young, but becomes hard as the
-season advances.
-
-In early spring these tiny twigs bear many small scaly buds (3) like
-beads. These beads open very early, before the end of April, and from
-each there bursts a bunch of flowers (4). What you notice first in this
-flower tuft is the crowd of reddish stamens with large purple heads.
-But if you gently pull to pieces one of these flower bunches, you will
-find that the stamens are not growing loose, but that they are held
-together in groups of five or more, in a dark green or purplish vase
-(5). This vase is funnel-shaped, and widens out round the mouth into
-four scallops. The oval seed-vessel (6) is at the bottom, hidden from
-sight. Do not forget to notice that in the Elm tree the stamens and
-seed-vessel grow close together in one flower.
-
-The stamens soon shrivel and fall off, and their place is taken by
-bunches of flat green wings (7), each with a tiny knob in the centre,
-which is the fruit. These green shields, or wings, serve the same
-purpose as the keys or wings of the Ash tree. They are thin and light
-like paper, and in the Common Elm each shield is deeply notched at one
-end, almost to the centre seed.
-
-When the seed is ripe the wind blows these bunches of papery shields
-away from the twigs, and they are carried long distances.
-
-The Elm tree seed is almost ripe before the leaves (2) begin to sprout.
-The leaf buds are pink and downy, and the young leaves are folded
-fan-ways inside. Each leaf has a short stalk, and is small and narrow,
-with two rows of unequally-sized teeth round the edge. These leaves
-are rough and harsh above, with many hairs along the centre rib, hairs
-like those on the Nettle, which is a member of the same family as the
-Elm, but these hairs, though they irritate, do not actually sting. In
-October the leaves turn yellow, and after a touch of frost they fall in
-showers.
-
-Sometimes you will notice large black spots disfiguring the leaves.
-These spots are caused by a minute plant which makes its home on the
-leaf and in the end destroys it. After the leaves have fallen, they lie
-on the ground till spring comes again, then this black plant increases
-rapidly, and soon covers all the leaf, which quickly decays.
-
-Cattle love the Elm tree leaves when they are green and young, and in
-some places they are stripped from the trees in sackfuls to feed the
-cows.
-
-Many insects make their home on the Elm tree. The caterpillar of the
-large tortoise-shell butterfly feeds on the leaves, and there is an
-insect beetle that burrows little tunnels in the wood and loosens the
-bark from the tree. If you pick up some pieces of Elm tree wood where a
-woodman has been sawing, you will see curious markings like the veins
-of a skeleton leaf, tunnelled in the wood. These are made by a tiny
-beetle, and are very injurious to the tree.
-
-But the beetle has an enemy that comes to the tree’s rescue. Sometimes
-on a still day if you are sitting quietly in the woods, you will hear
-a gentle tap-tapping close beside you. This is the woodpecker, a bird
-which is perched on the rough bark of the Elm tree, and with his bill
-he pecks at the tree in search of insects which form his favourite meal.
-
-Birds love the Elm trees, as their shade is not too dense to shut
-out the sunshine, and you will often find rooks’ nests in the upper
-branches, tossed and swayed by the gales.
-
-The Elm tree is useful for many purposes. Farmers plant it in their
-hedgerows, as grass will grow freely above its roots.
-
-In Italy the Elms are trained to carry the Vines. The young trees have
-all their lower branches cut off, leaving the bare stem like a living
-pole; round this pole the slender vine is twined, and its graceful
-trails hang in festoons from the crown of Elm branches which are left
-at the top of the pole to give shade. In poetry you read of the Vine
-tree wedded to the common Elm, which it clasps with its clinging arms.
-
-Elm tree wood is very valuable as timber. These rough bosses which grow
-on the trunk are prized by cabinet-makers, who find the wood curiously
-veined and streaked.
-
-The inner lining of the bark is very tough, and is made into ropes and
-garden string or bast, as in the Lime tree. And the wood is sought for
-all purposes where durability is needed; it lasts well in water, and is
-much in demand for ship-building.
-
-The Wych Elm or Broad-leaved Elm resembles the Common Elm in many ways,
-but there are several small differences you must note. There is no
-brushwood sheaf clothing the base of the Wych Elm trunk; it is bare and
-rough right down to the ground. The leaves are larger and much broader,
-resembling those of the Hazel, and the branches of the Wych Elm are
-long and spreading and much more graceful than the twisted boughs of
-its sister Elm.
-
-If you look carefully at the green wings that surround the tiny seed of
-the Wych Elm and compare it with those of the Common Elm, you will find
-that the seed lies nearly in the centre of the wing, and that the notch
-which is cut at the end of the wing is smaller than the deep notch of
-the Common Elm.
-
-The Wych Elm is far the more graceful of the two trees, and it grows
-much more quickly than its rugged sister.
-
-The name Wych is supposed to be Scotch. Small pieces of the wood were
-said to be effective as charms against witches, and country dairy-maids
-used to place a tiny bit of this Elm wood in the churn so that the
-witches could not prevent the milk from becoming butter!
-
-[Illustration: PLATE IX
-
-THE ASH
-
- 1. Ash Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. “Keys” or “Spinners” Ash Fruit
- 4. Black Buds
- 5. Leaf Scars
- 6. Stamen enlarged
- 7. Seed enlarged
- 8. Ash Flowers]
-
-
-
-
-PLATE IX
-
-THE ASH
-
- “If the oak before the ash,
- Then you’ll only have a splash;
- If the ash before the oak,
- Then you’re sure to have a soak.”
-
- --Old Saying.
-
-
-If the Oak is well named the King of the woods, to the Ash belongs the
-honour of being called Queen, the wood’s fairest. She is a queen with
-an ancient history. In the dim long ago there must have been Ash trees,
-for we read that the great spear of Achilles was an “ashen spear”;
-also, that the gods held council under the boughs of a great Ash tree:
-on its highest branches sat an eagle; round its root a serpent lay
-coiled; and a tiny squirrel ran up and down the branches carrying
-messages from one to the other.
-
-In much later times the Ash tree was held to have magic powers of
-healing. Sick babies were said to be cured if they passed through a
-cleft made in its trunk; and there are many tales of men and animals
-who recovered from illness on touching an Ash twig gathered from a tree
-in which a shrew mouse had been buried.
-
-Nowadays we have grown so wise that we think differently about these
-things, and we love the Ash tree because of its beauty, and are
-grateful for the many ways in which the wood is useful to us.
-
-You should try to find an Ash tree (1) in early spring. It is one of
-the easiest trees to recognise before it is clothed in leaves.
-
-The trunk is very straight, and has none of the knobs and bosses which
-grow on the Oak and Elm tree trunks. When the Ash tree is still young
-the bark is a pale grey colour--ash-colour, we call it--and it is very
-smooth. But as the tree grows older the bark cracks into many irregular
-upright ridges, which remind you of the rimples left by the waves on a
-sandy sea-shore.
-
-At first the lower branches grow straight out from the trunk, but soon
-they curve gracefully downwards; then they rise again, and the tips
-point upward toward the sky.
-
-Notice the tips of these branches--they are quite different from all
-other tree tips. In an Ash tree you will not see a network of delicate
-branching twigs outlined against the sky. Each branch ends in a stout
-pale grey twig, which is slightly flattened at the tip, as if it had
-been pinched between two fingers when still soft. Beyond this flattened
-tip you see two fat black buds (4), and there are smaller black buds at
-the sides of the twig. It is these curious black buds at the tips and
-on the sides of the twig which will make it easy for you to distinguish
-the Ash tree from every other.
-
-Long after the other trees have put on their young green leaves the
-Ash tree stands bare and leafless, waiting till the frost and cold
-winds are gone before its black buds will unfold. Then out it comes,
-flowers first. The sooty buds at the sides of the twig open, and you
-see that they have dark brown linings, and that in the middle of each
-bud there lies a thick bunch of purple stamen heads (6), crowded
-together like grains of purple corn; these are the Ash tree flowers (8).
-
-Ash tree flowers have no petals and no sepals; they have only a green,
-bottle-shaped seed-vessel (7), which stands between two stamens with
-pale green stalks and fat purple-coloured heads. Sometimes there is not
-even a seed-vessel; you may find nothing but a crowded bunch of purply
-stamens. This latter kind of Ash tree cannot produce any fruit.
-
-In a few weeks these stamens shrivel and the purple heads fall off.
-The seed-vessels, too, become very different. They change into long
-flat green wings, which hang each from its own stalk in a cluster at
-the end or from the side of the branch. These silky green wings are
-called “keys” (3), or in some places, “spinners”; at one end they are
-notched, and at the other, close to the stalk, lies the fruit. Long
-after the Ash tree leaves are withered and fallen you can see these
-bunches of “keys,” grown brown and shrivelled, still clinging to the
-branches. When wintry weather comes they are torn off by the wind, and
-the winged seed, spinning round and round in the air, is carried a long
-distance.
-
-You will see Ash trees growing high up on rocky precipices, where only
-the birds or the wind could have left the seed.
-
-By the month of May, when the keys of the Ash are fully formed, the
-green leaves (2) begin to appear. They are beautiful feathery leaves,
-full of lightness, and grace, and strength. Each leaf is made up of
-from four to eleven pairs of leaflets, shaped like a lance, with
-toothed edges, and these are placed opposite each other on a central
-stalk: there is nearly always a single leaflet at the end. The leaves
-are pale green, and when they first open you see a soft browny down on
-the leaf ribs, but this soon wears off. They droop gracefully from the
-twigs, which you can now see require to be stout and strong to carry
-such large wind-tossed feathers.
-
-But the Ash tree leaves are among the first to fall. Whenever the cold
-winds come they wither, and a single night of frost will strew them in
-hundreds on the ground. Where the leaf stalk joined the twig you will
-see a curious scar (5) shaped like a horse-shoe, and next year a black
-bud will appear inside this scar. The Ash tree will live for several
-hundred years. It is not fully grown up till it is forty or fifty years
-old, and till then you will not find any bunches of keys, with their
-seeds, growing on the tree.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE X
-
-THE FIELD MAPLE
-
- 1. Field Maple in Autumn
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Flower Spike
- 4. Fruit]
-
-Notice that the ground beneath the branches of the Ash tree is usually
-bare. Many of its roots spread out to a great distance close below the
-surface, and they are so greedy, and require so much nourishment for
-the tree, that there is none left for other plants. Some farmers think
-that the raindrops which drip from the feathery Ash leaves are hurtful
-to other plants, so they are unwilling to plant Ash trees in their
-fields and hedgerows.
-
-The wood of the Ash is very valuable, and will bring as much money as
-that of the Oak or Elm. It is used for all kinds of work--for furniture
-and for ship-building, and for making wheels and poles, and it lasts
-well and does not readily split.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE X
-
-THE FIELD MAPLE
-
-
-There are many mistakes made in naming the Maple and Plane trees.
-The Sycamore or False Plane tree, the Oriental Plane, and the Field
-Maple are often called wrongly by each other’s names. So you must
-note carefully the differences between them. The Sycamore and the
-Field Maple are cousins, but the Oriental Plane is not even a distant
-relation of these, and only resembles them in the shape of its leaves.
-It is not really difficult to distinguish one from the other.
-
-The Field Maple (1) is nearly always a small tree which you find
-growing in the hedgerows, where it is more like a large bush than a
-tree. You rarely find it standing alone in a wide park, bearing great
-branches heavily clothed with leaves, as you find the Sycamore or Great
-Maple. In England it is a common hedgerow tree, but it is not native to
-Scotland and is seldom found there.
-
-Early in spring you find the long slender shoots covered with buds,
-from which burst small leaves of a beautiful bright crimson colour.
-These leaves (2) are toothed round the edges and are shaped like a hand
-with five short fingers; in the Field Maple the fingers are blunt at
-the points, not sharp as are those of the Sycamore and of the Oriental
-Plane.
-
-As the spring advances those pretty crimson leaves become dark green
-above and a light green on the under-side, and they lose the soft down
-which covered them, but even when fully out they are never so large
-as those of the Sycamore. When autumn draws near, with its cold winds
-and frosty nights, the Field Maple leaves change colour once more and
-become brilliant yellow; you will see them shining in the hedgerows
-like a bush of gold.
-
-Many of the leaves are disfigured by small red spots, and if you look
-at one of these spots with a magnifying-glass you will see that is
-caused by a tiny insect which has made this little red nest in which to
-lay its eggs.
-
-The leaves of the Field Maple, like those of the Sycamore, are placed
-opposite each other on the twig; in the Oriental Plane they grow
-alternately, one a little way above the other on opposite sides of
-the spray. There is a great deal of sugary juice in Maple leaves, and
-cattle love to eat them. In some countries they are stripped from the
-trees and kept for winter fodder for the cows.
-
-The bark of the Field Maple is noted for its strange corky nature and
-its curious growth. It grows in upright ridges, deeply furrowed, which
-look as if they could easily be broken off. In the Oriental Plane the
-bark is quite smooth, and it peels off in large flakes, leaving patches
-of different colours on the tree trunk.
-
-In April, when the leaves are still unfolding, the Field Maple brings
-out its spikes of flowers (3). You will at once notice that these
-flower clusters stand erect, and do not droop in pointed tassels like
-those of the Sycamore. Now, look at the flowers in an Oriental Plane,
-and you will discover that they bear no resemblance either to those of
-the Sycamore or of the Field Maple, with which it is often confused.
-They do not even grow in clusters, but in round, prickly balls which
-are threaded on a slender green chain.
-
-The flowers of the Field Maple are what botanists call “perfect
-flowers,” which means that each flower has all its parts complete
-within itself. In every bloom you will find five narrow green sepals
-and five narrow green petals; within the ring of petals stand eight
-yellow-headed stamens, and seated in the centre of the flower is a
-seed-vessel with a small wing at each side and with two curly horns
-standing up at the top. There is plenty of honey juice hidden among
-these stamens, and the bees buzz all day long around the Maple blossoms.
-
-As the season advances, the petals and sepals and stamens fall off,
-but the seed-vessel grows larger and larger, till you find bunches of
-winged seeds (4) standing erect where the flowers once grew.
-
-Notice that in this tree the seeds are close together beside the stalk,
-and that the wings stand straight out from the seeds and are not bent
-into the shape of the letter U, as they are in the Sycamore. These
-bunches of winged seeds are frequently tinged with bright crimson, and
-are very attractive among the glossy green leaves.
-
-In autumn the strong winds strip them from their stalks and the wings
-bear the seed far from the parent tree. Some botanists tell us that
-these seeds require to lie in the ground for more than a year before
-they begin to grow.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XI
-
-THE SYCAMORE
-
- 1. Sycamore Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Fat Bud
- 4. Flower Spike
- 5. Winged Fruit]
-
-The Field Maple is full of sugary sap, but nothing is made of it in
-this country, as the trees do not yield enough to make it worth while.
-But in Canada the sap is drawn from the trees and made into sugar.
-I am sure you must have seen the brown blocks of Maple sugar in the
-confectioners’ windows.
-
-The wood of the Field Maple is too small to be of much use, but it is
-strangely and beautifully marked and veined with spots and stripes like
-the skin of a tiger or panther, and is eagerly bought for decorative
-purposes. The knots that grow on the roots were said to be worth their
-weight in gold, and in old history books you read that the thrones of
-great kings were made of Maple. Nowadays the wood is largely used for
-making small articles such as plates, and cups, and trays, and it can
-be cut so thin without breaking that the light may be seen through it.
-
-In France the long slender Maple shoots are used for coachmen’s whips.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XI
-
-THE SYCAMORE, OR GREAT MAPLE, OR MOCK PLANE
-
-
-There is a good deal of confusion in people’s minds as to the right
-name for this familiar tree. Sycamore is not an English word, but is
-made from a Greek word meaning fig or mulberry. The tree has been so
-called because many years ago people believed that it was a relation of
-the fig tree which grows so abundantly by the roadside in Palestine.
-The leaves are a little alike, but there is no real resemblance between
-our English Great Maple and the Eastern Sycamore: the name has been
-given by mistake.
-
-Another mistaken name given to this tree is Plane tree. The Great
-Maple is only a mock Plane tree or false Plane tree; it is not even a
-relation of the real Plane any more than it is a relation of the Fig or
-Sycamore. But mistakes even in names are very difficult to correct, and
-in many places, particularly in Scotland, you will find that Sycamore
-(1) or Plane tree is the name usually given to the Great Maple.
-
-It is a large heavy tree, with a great central trunk covered with a
-gnarled bark which peels off in flakes, leaving patches of different
-shades. From every side of this central trunk there grow stout branches
-covered with masses of thick foliage, the thickest and heaviest foliage
-of any British tree.
-
-If you look at the Sycamore tree as it stands in an open field, or in a
-hedgerow, with grass growing close to its very trunk, I think what will
-strike you most is how evenly it has grown all round. There are so many
-trees that grow all to one side if they are much exposed to a cold
-wind. Look at the Beech, or the Hawthorn, or the Elm on the crest of a
-ridge, and you will at once know from which direction the wind blows
-strongest and coldest, by seeing how the tree puts out all its best
-branches on the sheltered side. But the Sycamore tree is indifferent to
-cold, or even to the salt sea winds; it sends out its branches equally
-on every side, and there is always a thick roof of leaves at the top.
-
-The Sycamore tree prefers a dry soil, in which it grows very quickly;
-and it will not die if transplanted.
-
-In early spring the twigs bear many large fat buds (3), which are
-covered with soft downy pink scales. The Horse Chestnut is the only
-other tree which bears such large buds, but they are dark and very
-sticky.
-
-In country places the children call the largest buds at the end of
-the Sycamore twig “cocks,” and the smaller buds which grow along the
-sides they call “hens.” When these buds open early in May you see how
-beautifully the leaves are folded fan-ways inside. Each leaf (2) is
-shaped like a large hand with five bluntly-pointed fingers; the edges
-are coarsely toothed, and the leaf is dark green above and a paler
-green underneath. They grow on long stalks, which are a reddish pink
-colour so long as the leaves are young, and each stalk is scooped into
-a hollow at the end, so that it may fit closely to the twig.
-
-These leaves are not placed alternately on opposite sides of the
-branch, as in the Beech or Elm: they grow in clumps, or bouquets, and
-each pair of leaves is placed cross-ways to the pair above. Those that
-come out first have long stalks and are the largest; then the second
-pair is smaller, and the third pair smaller still, till the bouquet is
-finished with two tiny leaves in the centre.
-
-Notice that the leaves of the Sycamore are often marked with sticky
-drops. By old writers these drops are called honey-dew. It is believed
-that the sap of the Sycamore is sugary, and some of this sugary juice
-escapes through the leaf pores to the surface. These handsome leaves
-are often spotted with small black dots, which are caused by a tiny
-plant. This plant makes its home on the Sycamore leaf, and unknowingly
-disfigures its kind host.
-
-Before the leaves are quite out the flowers appear. They grow in
-drooping spikes (4), or large tassels of a pale yellowish green colour.
-Each tassel is made up of many separate flowers, and most of these
-flowers have a calyx with five to twelve narrow strap-shaped sepals,
-and a corolla of the same number of yellow-green petals. There is
-also a ring of slender stamens standing round a flat green cushion or
-disc. In the centre sits the seed-vessel, which has two curved horns
-at the top. But in the flower tassel you may also find flowers in
-which some of the parts are awanting: one flower will have stamens,
-but no seed-vessel, and its neighbour will have a seed-vessel and no
-stamens, while in a third the petals may be awanting. You must examine
-each flower till you find one which is perfect. These Sycamore flowers
-contain much honey, nearly as much as those of the Lime tree; and the
-bees are glad to hover round the tree flowers, which blossom long
-before those in the meadow are open.
-
-After the flowers are withered the seed (5) develops wings like the
-Ash and the Elm. But these wings are very different from those of any
-other tree. They are shaped like the letter U, with the two seeds at
-the bottom of the letter where it joins the stalk. Each seed is like a
-small pea, and is snugly packed in a horny case lined with the softest
-and silkiest down. When it is ripe the wind blows the winged seeds from
-the tree and carries them a long way. They fall into the ground, where
-the horny case prevents the young seed from rotting during the cold
-winter months before it is time for it to begin to sprout. Then when
-spring comes the baby seed bursts its covering and sends up two tiny
-green ribbon leaves which are the beginning of a new Sycamore tree. The
-wings of the Sycamore seed are beautifully tinged with pink.
-
-The wood of the Sycamore or Great Maple is white and very soft, but
-it is closely grained. Sometimes you see big knobs on the tree trunk
-where a branch has died or been broken off, and cabinet-makers prize
-these knobs, as the wood is very curiously marked with beautiful veins
-and streaks. Maple wood will polish as smooth as satin, and the backs
-of violins are often made of it. In old books we read of table-tops
-that were made of curiously marked pieces of Maple, and it is told that
-more than eight hundred pounds was given for one of these Maple tables.
-
-In Scotland the Sycamore tree was often called the dool tree, or tree
-of mourning, because the nobles used to hang disobedient servants or
-vanquished foes on its strong branches; and at Cassilis, in Ayrshire,
-there is a Sycamore tree which is well known to have been used for this
-cruel purpose.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XII
-
-THE ORIENTAL PLANE
-
-
-There are two kinds of Plane tree which have come to us as strangers
-from foreign lands and have taken kindly to our cold climate and biting
-winds. These are the Oriental or Eastern Plane and the Occidental or
-Western Plane. The differences between them are not great, and the one
-which you will most easily remember is, that in the Oriental Plane the
-leaf stalk is green, whereas in the Occidental Plane tree it is
-purply red. We owe a special debt of gratitude to these Plane trees
-because they add beauty to so many of the dingy streets and squares in
-our big cities.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XII
-
-THE ORIENTAL PLANE TREE
-
- 1. Oriental Plane Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Stamen Flower Balls
- 4. Seed Flower Balls
- 5. Fruit]
-
-The trunk of the Oriental Plane (1) is very smooth, and is usually
-ash-grey in colour; sometimes it is a very dark green. The outer layer
-of this trunk peels off in flakes, leaving large patches of greenish
-yellow, and these give the tree a curious speckled appearance. It is a
-tall, handsome tree, and if you look at it from a distance you see that
-the broad leaves group themselves into large masses with a wide space
-between each mass. This you can only see in a full-grown tree, and such
-trees are rarely met with in our dusty towns.
-
-On account of its leaves the Oriental Plane tree is frequently confused
-with the Sycamore, so you must notice carefully wherein they differ.
-The leaves (2) of the Oriental Plane are shaped like a hand with five
-sharply-pointed fingers, and each finger is cut all round into sharp
-teeth. The leaves are very smooth, and light, and fine, and are as thin
-as paper. They will lie quite flat if you lay them on a table. Each
-leaf is placed alternately with its neighbour on the twig, the second
-leaf growing on the opposite side of the twig, but a little further up
-than the first leaf. In the Sycamore you remember that the leaves grow
-in pairs placed exactly opposite each other, and that the second pair
-is always placed cross-ways to the first pair? These Oriental Plane
-leaves are so smooth that the rain easily washes all dust and soot from
-them, and this is why this tree manages to live in a city better than
-those which have crinkled, or hairy, or sticky leaves, which catch and
-keep the choking dust.
-
-In most trees the leaf buds are to be found growing between the base of
-the leaf stem and the twig which supports it. You will find no trace
-of such buds in the Oriental Plane; they are carefully hidden, and are
-tenderly protected in a marvellous way.
-
-You see that the base of the leaf stalk is considerably swollen, and
-that round it there is a line? If you gently pull the leaf, it will
-come apart from the twig at this line, and then you will discover that
-the swollen part of the leaf stalk is hollow, and is fitted like a cap
-over the tiny leaf bud, which is cosily sheltered within. This baby
-leaf bud is very sensitive to cold, and has many wrappings as well as
-the leaf cap. Its outer case is lined with sticky gum, which keeps out
-any damp; then come many small scales covered with soft fur, and inside
-these lie the tiny leaves, wrapped in a quilt of soft, silky down. This
-silky down is golden-brown in colour, and it remains on the young leaf
-till it is quite grown up. Sometimes the young buds are tempted by
-bright sunshine to throw off their winter coverings too soon. Then if
-biting frost comes they all die, and the tree will bear no more buds
-that year. The Plane tree gets its name from a Greek word which means a
-shield, and this name was given because its broad, flat leaves cast a
-very welcome shade in hot Eastern lands.
-
-In winter it is easy to recognize the Oriental Plane by its curious
-seeds. Hanging on the bare branches are strings of round bristly
-fruit-balls (5), three or four, or even five, threaded like large beads
-on a long slender chain. There are no seed balls such as these on the
-Sycamore tree, nor on its cousin the Field Maple.
-
-These seed balls are very interesting. Early in spring you see them
-dangling in the air, and you must pluck one of the green chains and
-examine its round beads. In one ball are grouped together bunches of
-purple stamens (3), which have a few pointed, dry scales at the base
-of each group. As soon as these stamens are ripe and their pollen
-dust has been blown away, these balls shrivel and fall off. But close
-beside them, on a similar green chain, are dangling the seed balls (4).
-Inside these balls there is a soft green cushion, and all over this
-cushion are stuck small green seeds shaped like pears, each with a tiny
-point like a stalk standing up at the top. After the stamen dust has
-fallen on these seeds they enlarge into a small hard nut, and a tuft
-of bristly down grows up from the base of each seed. The ball becomes
-a dark brown colour, and it dangles all winter on the tree; then in
-spring, when the leaves are ready to burst their coverings, these brown
-balls fall to the ground and the dry seeds are blown away, each seed
-floating in the air by the aid of its bristly down.
-
-In America these Eastern and Western Plane trees are called Button
-trees, because the seed balls resemble old-fashioned buttons.
-
-The wood of the Oriental Plane is used by piano-makers, coach-builders,
-and cabinet-makers. It is a light brown colour, and is said to be very
-tough.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XIII
-
-THE WHITE POPLAR OR ABELE TREE
-
-
-In the old Greek legends we read that Hercules won a victory over
-Kakos on Mount Aventine. On the mountain grew a thick grove of Poplar
-trees, and Hercules, overjoyed with his triumph, bound a branch of the
-graceful leaves around his brow as a sign of victory. Soon afterwards
-he went down into the infernal regions, the place of tears and gloom,
-and when he came back to earth it was seen that the upper side of
-his leafy garland was darkened with the smoke of Hades, but that the
-under-side of the leaves had been washed silver white with the sweat
-which streamed from his brow. Ever since that day the leaves of the
-Aventine Poplar grow white on the under-side, and in course of time its
-seeds were brought by travellers to Britain, and the tree has taken
-kindly to our less sunny land. So the tale runs.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XIII
-
-THE WHITE POPLAR
-
- 1. White Poplar or Abele Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Seed Catkin
- 4. Stamen Catkin]
-
-It is by these dark green leaves with their thick white lining that
-you will always know the White Poplar or Abele tree (1), and when you
-learn how many relations it has, and how closely they resemble each
-other, you will be glad to have this marked distinction by which you
-may easily know this member of the family.
-
-The Poplar, like the Willows, prefers to grow in damp places. The most
-perfect trees are found in meadows close to a river. In France the
-people plant them along the river banks, and from far away you can
-trace the windings of the water by the tall Poplar spires which edge
-its banks.
-
-The Poplars are very fast-growing trees; they will shoot up to a great
-height in the life-time of a man, and for this reason they are often
-planted where a screen is quickly required. The lower part of the trunk
-is dark and is deeply furrowed, but the upper is a dingy yellow colour,
-and on it there are many black streaks.
-
-Early in March the White Poplar begins to flower. It is one of the
-catkin-bearing trees, and high on the upper branches there dance and
-dangle long slender woolly tails of a purplish red colour. These are
-the stamen catkins (4), and you must pick one to pieces and see how
-beautifully it is made.
-
-The stamens are grouped together in little bunches of from eight to
-thirty on a round disc, and at the foot of this disc, on one side,
-rises a scale which is green on the lower half and reddish brown on
-the upper half. This scale is deeply and irregularly toothed all round
-the edge, and is surrounded with fine silk which stands up like a fan.
-These bunches of stamens are placed all round the catkin tail, with the
-scales nearly covering the purple stamen heads. As soon as the pollen
-dust in the stamen heads is ripe and the wind has shaken it out of
-their dust-bags, the catkin shrivels and falls to the ground. You will
-find the ground strewn with them in early spring.
-
-But the White Poplar has another catkin flower which bears the seeds,
-and this flower grows on a separate tree. These seed catkins (3) are
-stouter and shorter, and are not nearly so noticeable as the long
-stamen catkins. The green seed-vessel sits in a tiny cup, and on the
-top of the seed you see a cross of four yellow rays. On one side of
-the cup rises a scale which is brown at the upper edge and is fringed
-with down as in the stamen catkin. The wind brings the stamen dust to
-the four yellow rays on the top of the little seed-vessel, but if there
-should be no stamen-bearing trees growing near, then the White Poplar
-can produce no new seeds; it remains barren.
-
-The leaves (2) of the White Poplar are triangular in shape and are
-deeply jagged all round. When in bud the sides of the leaf are rolled
-towards the centre, so that the under-side of the leaf, with its thick
-white lining, is turned outward. The young branches and buds are also
-thickly covered with fine white down.
-
-The Poplar leaves never seem to be still; they dance and sparkle in
-the sunshine, and even on quiet days you will see them fluttering. In
-autumn these leaves turn golden yellow before they fall.
-
-The wood of the White Poplar is too quickly grown to be very durable.
-It is largely used for making children’s toys, because it does not
-readily split when nails are driven into it. It will not burn easily,
-and for this reason it makes good floors for dwelling-houses.
-
-Besides the White Poplar or Abele tree there are two other Poplars
-which are fairly common in this country. One is the Lombardy Poplar,
-which grows tall and slender like a church spire; its branches rise
-upward like the flame of a torch, and the tree trunk is clothed to the
-very ground with withered branches, which never spread outwards, but
-grow close to the main stem. There is no difficulty in recognising the
-Lombardy Poplar.
-
-The Black Poplar is also common in many parts of Britain. Its leaves
-are not lined with white; they are heart-shaped, with no jagged edges,
-but with dainty little teeth cut evenly all round. The heads of the
-stamens, which grow in groups on the catkin tail, are very dark purple,
-and they hang from the end of twigs, which are rough with the scars of
-last year’s leaves.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XIV
-
-THE ASPEN
-
- “Variable as the shade
- By the light, quivering aspen made.”
-
- --Scott.
-
-
-The Aspen (1) is a member of the Poplar family, and in many ways it
-resembles its cousins. But you will always know an Aspen tree by its
-leaves (2). These are never still unless when a storm is brooding and
-the air is perfectly calm; at all other times they shake and quiver
-incessantly, and you can hear the gentle rustle they make as each leaf
-rubs against its neighbour. In the Scottish Highlands the country
-people tell you that the Aspen trembles because at the Crucifixion the
-cross of Christ was made of Aspen, and the tree must always shudder at
-the recollection of the cruel purpose it served.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XIV
-
-THE ASPEN
-
- 1. Aspen Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Stamen Catkins
- 4. Seed Catkin]
-
-The Aspen is usually found growing in copses, or in meadow lands,
-where it flourishes best in a damp soil; but it is also found on
-mountain ground, and is very common in the north of Scotland. It is
-not a long-lived tree: the heart of it begins to decay after fifty or
-sixty years, just at the age when many of our most familiar trees are
-at their finest. The wood is very soft, and is of little use either for
-building or for manufacturing purposes; but it is beautifully white,
-and sculptors use it for decorative carving; also many of the wooden
-blocks required by engravers for printing are made of Aspen wood.
-
-The Aspen is one of our catkin-bearing trees. Early in spring you will
-see dangling on the branches long fluffy tails, which you must pluck
-and examine carefully. There are two kinds of flowering catkins on the
-Aspen, and both kinds may be found growing on the same tree. Sometimes
-you find them close beside each other on the same branch.
-
-In the stamen catkin (3) you see many bunches of tiny stamens with
-bluey-purple heads: these bunches are dotted all over the catkin tail,
-and each stamen bunch is nearly hidden by a large scale which rises at
-one side. This scale is green in the lower half and pale brown in the
-upper half, and its edges are cut into deep jagged points. This jagged
-scale lies above the stamen bunch, so that you can just see their heads
-appearing under the torn edge of the scale. Each stamen is surrounded
-by a mass of soft grey woolly down, which makes all the catkin look
-fluffy and silky.
-
-The seed catkin (4) of the Aspen looks much the same as the stamen
-catkin; it is a long, dangling fat tail, covered with fluffy grey down;
-but it has no stamens. This catkin bears the seed-vessels, and each
-seed-vessel resembles a small green pea sitting in a tiny green cup.
-This pea splits open at the top, and you see four pale pink points
-rising from the opening. These points are waiting for the stamen dust
-to reach them, and as soon as that happens they shrivel and disappear;
-then the seed busies itself in preparing the new plant. Above each
-green seed-vessel there stands a scale with the edge cut into large
-torn-looking points. These scales nearly cover the seed-vessel, and
-they look like brown splashes on the bed of soft fluffy down.
-
-When the seeds are ripe the catkins fall from the tree; the seeds
-separate from the tail, and the wind blows them a long distance by the
-aid of the fluffy down which surrounds each seed.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XV
-
-THE WHITE WILLOW
-
- 1. White Willow Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Pussy Buds
- 4. Stamen Catkin
- 5. Seed Catkin]
-
-The Aspen leaves (2) are very dainty and pretty. Each leaf grows at the
-end of a long slender stalk which is flattened like a ribbon, and is
-placed edge-ways to the twig. The stalk is not strong enough to hold
-the leaf upright, so it droops, unless when the breeze lifts it in the
-air, and then you hear a constant rustle-rustle, as if the leaves
-were whispering to each other. These Aspen leaves are nearly round,
-and they have evenly-cut teeth on the edges. They are rather small and
-are dark in colour, and there is no white lining underneath except the
-soft down which you often find on very young leaves, and which soon
-disappears.
-
-Through the grass beside its root the Aspen sends up a great many young
-shoots which are called suckers. The leaves on these young suckers are
-heart-shaped, and the edges are quite smooth, without any teeth.
-
-Cattle are very fond of these young leaves, so are deer, and goats, and
-even the beaver. In some places people strip the Aspen leaves from the
-trees and give them to the cattle, which eat them greedily.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XV
-
-THE WHITE WILLOW
-
-
-To distinguish different members of the Willow family is very
-difficult. It contains many brothers and sisters who are so much alike
-that you would require to study nothing but willows for many a day if
-you wished to know each from the other.
-
-In this book are described three different Willows. The first is a
-lofty tree with a thick trunk and spreading branches; the second is
-usually a bushy mass of slender twigs bending over the river bed; and
-the third is a small creeping shrub which twines itself among the roots
-of the heather, and carpets the ground with masses of silky down. And I
-think if you know well these three kinds of Willow, you should be able
-to group the other members of the family around them.
-
-The White Willow (1) is the name given to the largest Willow tree, and
-very beautiful it is in early spring when the leaves unfold. It has a
-thick trunk covered with rough, rugged bark, and it sends out large
-branches, from which grow many smooth, slender twigs. The leaves (2)
-appear about the middle of May, long narrow leaves which taper to a
-point, and from a distance you would think that the edges were quite
-smooth. But when you pick a leaf you find that there are dainty little
-teeth cut all round the edge. These narrow leaves are covered on both
-sides with a silky grey down; this gives them a pale, silvery-grey
-colour, and from a distance you can easily recognise a White Willow
-tree by the glistening of this beautiful grey foliage, so different
-from the vivid young green of the Larch and the yellow-green of the
-Limes and Sycamores.
-
-The White Willow produces two kinds of flowers, and these grow in
-catkins on different trees. The stamen catkins are the prettiest, and
-they appear about the same time as the young leaves. At first these
-stamen catkins are small egg-shaped buds, closely covered with silky
-grey down--pussy buds (3) the children call them; but they open very
-quickly, and in a few days you will see, dropping from the branches,
-small green catkins which curl slightly like caterpillars. Each catkin
-is covered with closely-shut scales, and by the time the leaves are out
-the scales of these stamen catkins unclose (4). Behind each scale there
-rises a pair of stamens on long slender stalks. These stamen stalks
-are hairy on the lower half, and so are the catkin scales. The heads
-of the stamens are sometimes tinged with red, and between each pair
-of stamens there lies a honey bag. Notice how constantly the bees are
-heard buzzing among the Willow branches. When the stamen heads are ripe
-they burst open, and the fine dust inside is carried by the wind to a
-Willow tree, on which the seed catkins grow.
-
-These seed catkins (5) are covered with greenish scales, which are
-tightly pressed together at first. But in the warm spring sunshine the
-scales unclose, and from the foot of each scale rises a small green
-pear-shaped seed-vessel which has two tiny straps standing up at the
-top. The wind wafts the stamen dust to the tree, and some of it falls
-on these two small straps, which act as messengers and carry the dust
-down to the inside of the seed-vessel, where the plant makes ready the
-new seed. Unless you have a seed-bearing tree and a stamen-bearing
-tree growing within reach of each other, you cannot have any new seeds;
-but it is possible to increase the number of Willow trees by cutting
-off branches and planting them in a particular way in the ground, when
-they will send out roots and grow.
-
-There are two other kinds of White Willow which are found nearly as
-frequently as the one I have just described, and neither is difficult
-to recognise. The Golden Willow is the name usually given to one,
-on account of its twigs, which are a bright shade of yellow-green,
-and these golden twigs are very noticeable in winter beside the dark
-branches of the Elms and Beeches. In this Willow the stamens and scales
-of the dust-producing catkins are the colour of a canary’s feathers,
-and in the spring sunshine they glisten like gold. This is the
-loveliest of all the Willow trees.
-
-The third White Willow is known as the Crack Willow, because the
-branches are very easily broken; a knock will snap them from the tree
-trunk. If ever you try to gather a twig from other Willow trees, you
-will find how difficult it is to separate it from the branch. The thin
-green peel, with the leaves clinging to it, comes away in your hand,
-leaving the bare white twig still clinging to the branch, and without
-a knife you will scarcely force them apart. But the twigs of the Crack
-Willow may be snapped across easily, and the large branches are
-readily broken on a windy night.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XVI
-
-THE GOAT WILLOW
-
- 1. Goat Willow or Sallow Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Pussy Buds
- 4. Stamen Catkins
- 5. Seed Catkins]
-
-The wood of the White and of the Golden Willow is valuable, and is much
-used by builders for floors and rafters. Coopers say it makes excellent
-casks, and many of our best cricket bats are made from Willow wood.
-When straw is scarce people are said to make hats from Willow sprays.
-They gather the small branches and split them into long, thin strips,
-and these are woven into fine plaits, which are then joined together.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XVI
-
-THE GOAT WILLOW OR SALLOW
-
- “In Rome upon Palm Sunday
- They bear true palms,
- The cardinals bow reverently
- And sing old psalms.
-
- Elsewhere these psalms are sung
- Beneath the olive branches,
- The holly-bush supplies their place
- Amid the avalanches.”
-
-
-The second Willow or group of Willows you should learn about is the
-most difficult of all. In it there are many different varieties, and
-you would require to plant one of each kind in your garden, as a
-gentleman in England has done, and study them carefully for many years
-to discover the points wherein each Willow differs from the other.
-
-Though the Goat Willow or Sallow (1) sometimes grows into a tall tree,
-it is more often seen as a bush--a bush with a short, rough stem, which
-does not rise far above the ground, and which sends up many tall,
-slender branches, covered with smooth, purplish brown peel or skin.
-Early in March, before the snowdrops have withered, you will find the
-Goat Willow in every hedge and coppice bursting into scaly brown buds.
-It is one of our earliest trees, and after a few days of warm sunshine
-the brown scales unclose and the branches are dotted with the softest
-and silkiest little pussy buds (3), shaped like tiny eggs and covered
-with grey down.
-
-These buds grow alternately on the smooth stem with a small space
-between each bud. In a few days the baby buds have changed, and you may
-find two Willow bushes growing quite near each other on which the buds
-are very different. For those woolly buds are the flower catkins, and
-the Goat Willow bears two kinds of flowers, which do not grow on the
-same tree.
-
-The bees have found out that the Willow is in flower; you can hear a
-swarm of them buzzing in the leafless branches, and you wonder where
-there is any honey to be found. On one tree the soft grey downy buds
-have grown larger, and they are now golden yellow catkins (4). The
-whole bud is covered with dainty yellow-headed stamens, nestling in
-pairs among oval scales edged with silky down, and it is at the base of
-these yellow-headed stamens that the bee finds the sweet drops of honey
-juice.
-
-For many hundreds of years branches of the Goat Willow or Sallow have
-been carried in this country to church on Palm Sunday in remembrance
-of the branches of palm which the people strewed in front of Christ
-when He entered Jerusalem. Troops of boys and girls go into the country
-lanes and coppices to gather Willow-palms, which they sometimes pluck
-so roughly and carelessly that the tree remains broken and ruined for
-the rest of the year. These silky stamen catkins of the Goat Willow are
-one of the most welcome signs of the return of spring.
-
-But there are other Willow flowers to be looked at: flowers which may
-not be so attractive, but which bear the seeds and make ready the new
-plants. These flowers are silky too, and underneath the soft down is an
-egg-shaped catkin (5), covered with small pear-shaped green seeds. Each
-seed has a thick yellow point at the top, and at the base there rises
-a scale which is pointed like a cat’s ear and is covered with long,
-silky hairs. When the stamen flowers are ripe their yellow heads burst,
-and the fine dust which fills them falls on the backs of the bees who
-are sipping the honey juice. Then they fly away to find another honey
-flower, and they often alight on a seed catkin, where the pollen dust
-is shaken off among the little yellow points which are waiting for it
-to help in the making of the new seeds. Each flower catkin sits upright
-on a tuft of small pale green leaves.
-
-The leaves (2) of the Goat Willow are very different from those of the
-other Willows; they are broad and oval, with edges which are crinkled
-or waved all round and with a network of fine veins covering the leaf.
-These leaves, when they first come out, are covered with white down,
-but by the time they are full grown they are dark and shiny on the
-upper side, and are only downy beneath.
-
-There is another bushy Willow which perhaps you might mistake for the
-Goat Willow or Sallow: this is the Purple Osier. It grows in boggy
-marshes, by the banks of slow-running streams, and it too has silky
-grey catkins. But you will easily recognise the Purple Osier by two
-things. It has long, slender stems like whips, rising straight from the
-tree trunk. These slender stems are covered with a fine purple skin or
-peel, and if you try to pick an Osier stem the peel comes away in your
-hand, leaving the white Willow stem still growing. These Osier stems
-are valuable for making baskets, and are grown in great quantities for
-this purpose.
-
-The second point in which the Purple Osier differs from the Goat
-Willow is this: if you gather a yellow catkin and look at the
-yellow-headed stamens which cover it, you will see that the slender
-stalks of the stamens are joined together, making one stalk with two
-yellow heads, whereas in the Goat Willow or Sallow each yellow stamen
-head sways at the end of its own stalk.
-
-There is one other Willow tree I should like to tell you about, because
-it is so curious. It is a tree which creeps close to the ground, and
-which is found growing in great quantities in the Highlands among the
-grass and heather. It is called the Dwarf Willow, and it too has silky
-catkins which grow on the tough wiry branches.
-
-You might not notice these stamen catkins, but you could not help
-noticing the seed catkins. These cover the ground with tufts of white
-cotton wool like thistle-down, and when you lift one of these tufts
-you find that the pear-shaped green seed-vessels have split down the
-centre to allow many tiny seeds to escape, and each seed is winged with
-a tuft of silky down. After all the seeds have flown away on the wind,
-the withered seed-vessels still remain on the catkin, no longer green,
-but a rusty red-brown colour, which is very noticeable among the small
-glossy green leaves.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XVII
-
-THE SCOTCH PINE OR SCOTCH FIR
-
-
-The Scotch Pine (1), or, as it is often called by mistake, the Scotch
-Fir, is one of our noblest trees; it is tall, and rugged, and sturdy,
-with a beauty which lies in its strength and dignity rather than in its
-grace. In bygone days large tracts of Scotland were clothed with vast
-forests of Scotch Pine, under whose gloomy branches many wolves roamed
-and the wild deer wandered in herds. But the owners of these noble
-forests cut down the trees to get money for the timber, and the wolves
-have disappeared. There is now only a scanty remnant of the great army
-of Pine trees which once clothed the northern lands of Britain.
-
-Those vast forests were not planted by man. The young trees sprang from
-seeds which had fallen from the woody fruit cones, and were carried by
-rooks or other birds to places where human beings rarely trod. There
-the young seeds grew and sent out their greedy roots. If the soil was
-good and plentiful they produced a strong carrot-shaped root, which
-bored deep into the ground and gave the tree such a firm hold that no
-storm could tear it up. But if the ground had only a little earth on
-the surface and there were hard rocks beneath, then the roots crept
-like serpents near the surface of the soil, clasping the rocks with a
-tight grip to steady the tree.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XVII
-
-THE SCOTCH PINE
-
- 1. Scotch Pine Tree
- 2. Leaf Needles
- 3. Stamen Flower
- 4. Seed Flower (pink cones)
- 5. Green Cones
- 6. Grey Cone
- 7. Seed with Wing]
-
-How the wind roars in the Pine branches on the high mountain lands! It
-is like the sound of the sea. If the Pine tree had broad leaves, such
-as the Sycamore or the Lime tree, it would soon be blown down; but the
-storm gusts pass through its fine needle-leaves, and no harm is done.
-
-The trunk of the Scotch Pine is very rough, and it is covered with
-rugged pieces of reddish bark, separated from each other by deep
-furrows. It rises to a great height, throwing out many large branches
-on each side, and there is always a bushy rounded tree-top looking up
-to the sky. In a Pine forest the lower part of the tree is usually
-bare. This is because the trees are planted so close together there is
-little air except near the top of the tree, and the lower branches are
-stifled.
-
-Beneath the branches the ground is always carpeted with fallen Pine
-leaves, and very curious these Pine leaves (2) are. They look like
-green needles with soft blunt points, and the edges of each needle are
-rolled back so that the leaf appears round above and is boat-shaped
-below. The under-side of the needle is much lighter in colour than the
-dark green surface.
-
-These needle-leaves usually grow in pairs, though you may find a bunch
-containing three or even four needles; they are held together by a thin
-grey sheath, which looks like paper and clasps the end of the bunch.
-These needle-bunches are placed all round the twig, close together,
-so as to form a dense brush. They remain on the tree for two or three
-years, then they fall; but their work is not done. Very often the Pine
-tree seed has been carried to some sandy sea-shore upon which nothing
-is willing to grow. There it takes root and flourishes, and in course
-of time it throws down handfuls of withered needle-leaves on the loose
-sandy ground. These needles decay and form a bed of soil which binds
-the sand together, and when the wind and the birds bring other seeds,
-they find a place in which they can take root and grow. In France great
-tracts of waste land have become valuable in this way through the
-planting of Pine trees.
-
-The Pine tree has its flowers in catkins and its fruit in cones. The
-catkins are of two kinds, and they grow on the same tree, sometimes on
-the same branch. The stamen flowers (3) are found in dense spikes at
-the end of last year’s bushy twig. They look like a cluster of bunches
-of small yellow grains from which a tuft of fine green spears rises
-in the centre. These grains are the stamen heads, and in May and June
-they send out clouds of fine yellow powder, which floats in the air and
-settles on the leaves and on the grass and on the margins of lakes and
-rivers, where you can see little patches of it lying. Country peasants
-sometimes tell you that this yellow powder is sulphur which has fallen
-from the sky during a thunder-storm!
-
-The seed flowers (4) of the Pine tree are very different. They grow
-either singly or in pairs at the end of this year’s new twig, and at
-first they are tiny pale pink cones. These cones are egg-shaped, and
-are made up of scales tightly pressed together, with little hard dots
-showing at the tip of each scale. The seeds are behind the scales,
-but you will not see them for a long time, as the cone takes eighteen
-months to grow up. At the end of the first summer you find that the
-pink cone has become a rich green colour (5) and is still soft, but
-when the second summer comes round, the cone is ash-grey in colour (6)
-and is hard and woody.
-
-When the seeds are ripe the tightly-pressed scales unclose and curl
-up, showing thick wooden lips; at the base of each scale lie two white
-seeds, and each seed (7) has a thin filmy wing. When the seeds fall
-from the cone they are blown long distances, floating on the air by
-their filmy wings.
-
-There is a bird called the crossbill which is very fond of Pine seeds,
-and very clever at picking them out of the half-opened cones.
-
-You will occasionally find a tree, very similar to the Scotch Pine, in
-which the cones grow in groups of three or four together at the end of
-the twigs. This tree is called the Cluster Pine, and you will notice
-that its bunches of leaves are different in colour: they are a bluey
-green, and the tips of the needles are yellowish, as if they had begun
-to wither.
-
-The wood of the Pine tree is very valuable. Thousands of pounds were
-paid for the trees in the old Scotch forests, and many stout ships were
-built from their sturdy trunks. Besides the good timber, the Pine tree
-gives us turpentine and resin from its juice. If you cut a hole in a
-Pine tree stem a thick juice will soon be seen oozing from this hole,
-and it quickly hardens into a clear gum.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XVIII
-
-THE YEW
-
-
-Once upon a time a discontented Yew tree grew in a country graveyard.
-Other trees, it thought, had larger and more beautiful leaves which
-fluttered in the breeze and became red and brown and yellow in the
-sunshine, and the Yew tree pined because the fairies had given it such
-an unattractive dress. One morning the sunshine disclosed that all its
-green leaves had changed into leaves made of gold, and the heart of
-the Yew tree danced with happiness. But some robbers, as they stole
-through the forest, were attracted by the glitter, and they stripped
-off every golden leaf. Again the tree bemoaned its fate, and next day
-the sun shone on leaves of purest crystal. “How beautiful!” thought
-the tree; “see how I sparkle!” But a hailstorm burst from the clouds,
-and the sparkling leaves lay shivered on the grass. Once more the good
-fairies tried to comfort the unhappy tree. Smooth broad leaves covered
-its branches, and the Yew tree flaunted these gay banners in the wind.
-But, alas, a flock of goats came by and ate of the fresh young leaves
-“a million and ten.” “Give me back again my old dress,” sobbed the
-Yew, “for I see that it was best.” And ever since its leaves remain
-unchanging, and it wears the sombre dress which covered its boughs in
-the days when King William landed from Normandy on our shores, and the
-swineherd tended his pigs in the great forests which covered so much of
-Merry England.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XVIII
-
-THE YEW
-
- 1. Yew Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Stamen Flower
- 4. Seed Flower
- 5. Spray with Fruit]
-
-In history books we read how important the Yew tree once was. Long
-before the invention of guns and gunpowder, many of our soldiers
-carried bows made of Yew tree wood, and from these they shot deadly
-arrows with tremendous force. Three of England’s Kings--Harold, William
-Rufus, and Richard Cœur de Lion--were slain by such arrows, and it was
-from a Yew tree bow that Tell sent the arrow that halved the apple
-placed on his son’s head.
-
-The Yew tree (1) grows very, very slowly; it never becomes a tall tree,
-not even when it has lived hundreds and hundreds of years, because,
-instead of sending up one thick trunk, it has the strange habit of
-dividing into a cluster of trunks, three or four or more of equal
-thickness, which rise from one root. These trunks are covered with
-browny red bark and are very smooth; the red bark peels off in thin
-flakes, and you can see that the wood beneath it is a deep orange red.
-
-From the clustered trunks many branches stretch out to form a densely
-bushy tree; these branches are closely covered with small twigs, on
-which grow short narrow leaves (2), ending in blunt points, and with
-the edges slightly curved backwards. These leaves grow alternately
-all round the twig, and they are dark and glossy above but much paler
-beneath. They do not fall from the tree in winter, as the Yew, like
-the Holly, is one of our evergreen trees. Yew tree leaves are very
-poisonous, and many tales are told of cattle and horses which have died
-from eating them.
-
-Some people believe that the Yew tree is planted in churchyards because
-it is poisonous and is associated with death; while others think just
-the opposite, and say that it is placed among the tombstones to remind
-us that the soul is undying, like the Yew tree leaves.
-
-In February or March if you strike a Yew tree bough with a stick you
-will see clouds of fine yellow powder rising from the tree. This powder
-is the stamen dust, and if you pull a spray of leaves and examine it
-you will discover clusters of small oval yellow flowers (3) nestling
-close to the main stem where the leaf joins it. The Yew tree belongs to
-the great family of trees whose fruit is a cone and which bear their
-flowers in catkins. Take a magnifying-glass, and it will show you that
-each catkin is composed of a bunch of stamens rising from a slender
-pillar at the foot of which are a few dry, papery scales. Each stamen
-has six dust-bags at the end, and when the stamen powder is ripe these
-dust-bags open, and the fine yellow powder is blown like meal over the
-leaves and seeds.
-
-The Yew tree has seed flowers (4) as well as those which bear the
-stamens. Usually they grow on a different tree, but occasionally you
-will find them on the same Yew, but on a separate branch. It is a
-curious thing about the Yew tree and its relations that these seeds are
-not covered in any way, but lie naked to the sun and rain. They always
-grow on the under-side of the stem, and at first they look like tiny
-acorns. You notice a small disc surrounded by a few scales, and on this
-disc sits the little green acorn with its olive green skin. This acorn
-is waiting for the stamen dust to reach it. As soon as the wind has
-blown the yellow powder over it a beautiful cup of pale pink wax grows
-round the green seed. There is no hard, woody cone on the Yew tree;
-the fruit (5) is this pale pink waxen berry, shaped like a fairy cup
-and filled with sticky juice. The walls of the pink cup are soft and
-fleshy, and you can just see the tip of the green seed standing up in
-the centre. They are very lovely, these waxy pink berries on the dark
-green spray, but they are said to be poisonous.
-
-Sometimes at the end of a Yew spray there grows a curious-looking cone
-like a small artichoke, made of soft green leaves. This is caused by a
-tiny gnat which lays its eggs in a Yew tree bud, and in some strange
-way that we do not understand causes it to develop this tuft of strange
-leaves. You will remember that in the Oak a similar growth is found.
-
-The wood of the Yew tree is very hard and durable, as are all woods
-which grow slowly. “A Yew tree post will outlast a post of iron” is
-a saying often repeated by farmers; but the Yew wood is not much in
-demand for manufacturing purposes.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XIX
-
-THE JUNIPER
-
-
-In the Bible we read that when Elijah fled from the cruel persecution
-of King Ahab and the wicked Queen Jezebel, he sat down under a Juniper
-tree to rest. When we look at the Juniper as it grows in this country,
-we wonder how the prophet could have found rest beside such a prickly
-tree, or shade beneath such a small one. But in other lands the
-Juniper grows much taller; and as all books about trees give it a place
-beside its relations the Yew and the Scotch Pine, it must be included
-among the common trees you should learn to know.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XIX
-
-THE JUNIPER
-
- 1. Juniper Bushes
- 2. Leaf Spray with Flowers
- 3. Stamen Flower (much enlarged)
- 4. Seed Flower (much enlarged)
- 5. Spray with Fruit]
-
-In Britain the Juniper (1) is found on heathy commons or high on the
-upland plains, where it flourishes as a large, thick, bushy shrub, and
-occasionally shoots up into a small tree. It is rather a gloomy-looking
-tree: in spring time, when most of our trees look fresh and bright in
-their young green leaves, the Juniper shows little change. Its leaves
-are evergreen, and the new leaves grow in small tufts at the tips of
-the branches, so that you scarcely notice them.
-
-The Juniper bark is dark reddish brown, and it flakes off in small
-pieces in the same way as the Yew tree bark. The branches are small and
-thin, and they clothe the trunk close to the very ground; it would be
-difficult to sit comfortably under a Juniper tree in this country. Like
-the Yew, it is a very slow-growing tree.
-
-Juniper leaves (2) are not in the least like ordinary leaves: they are
-more like thorns than leaves, and they are not easy to gather. But if
-you examine a spray carefully you will find that each leaf is like a
-narrow flat spear with a sharp point at the end. Each leaf has a slight
-groove cut from end to end in the upper side, which is dark green, very
-smooth and glossy. Notice how curiously the leaves are grouped on the
-spray. They are placed in incomplete circles of three, and there is
-always a short space between each of the circles.
-
-Juniper flowers are of two kinds, and they usually grow on separate
-trees, though sometimes you may find both kinds on separate branches of
-the same tree. The stamen flowers (3) are in full bloom in May, and you
-will find them growing in small scaly catkins close to the foot of the
-leaf where it joins the stem. The heads of the stamens stand like a row
-of small yellow beads along the edge of each scale, and when they are
-ripe the beads burst and the leaves around are covered with their fine
-yellow powder.
-
-The seed flowers (4) also grow at the foot of the leaves, and at first
-you might mistake them for young buds. They have thicker and more
-fleshy scales than those of the stamen catkins, and after the yellow
-stamen dust is blown by the wind on to their seed-vessels the upper
-scales grow into a green berry (5). These green berries remain in the
-tree all through the winter, and the following summer they change into
-a deep purplish black. Each berry has a soft grey bloom all over it,
-like the bloom on a grape.
-
-These berries are very bitter to taste, but are not poisonous; in some
-illnesses country people use them successfully as a medicine.
-
-Many are the uses of the Juniper, and in olden days it was highly
-valued.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XX
-
-THE LARCH
-
- 1. Larch Tree
- 2. Leaf Tufts
- 3. Stamen Catkins
- 4. Seed Catkins
- 5. Young Cone
- 6. Ripe Cone]
-
-In Sweden the berries are eaten to breakfast; sometimes they are
-roasted and ground into coffee.
-
-The wood and its berries may be burnt in sick-rooms to purify the air
-and refresh the patient. Country people believed that burning sprays
-of Juniper kept away witches, and the smoke was supposed to drive away
-serpents, as well as to destroy any germs of plague or other infectious
-disease.
-
-In Scotland the smoke from a Juniper fire is used for curing hams.
-
-In Lapland the peasants make ropes from the Juniper bark, and they tell
-you that if a bit of Juniper wood is lighted and then carefully covered
-with ashes it will keep alight for a whole year.
-
-The trunk of the Juniper tree is too small and slight to be very useful
-as timber; but good walking-sticks are often made from the branches and
-young stems.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XX
-
-THE LARCH
-
- “When rosy plumelets tuft the larch.”
-
- --Tennyson.
-
-
-The Larch (1) was brought to Britain in the seventeenth century from
-its home on the high mountains of Germany, Austria, and Italy. It has
-taken kindly to our cheerless climate, and now covers acres of what was
-once barren moorland.
-
-A few years after Larches are planted the long flexible branches of
-the young trees meet and form a thicket into which little light or air
-can enter, and the weeds and heather growing round the tree roots are
-stifled. Each winter the Larch sheds on the bare ground millions of its
-tiny needle-leaves, which enrich the soil.
-
-After the young trees have grown to a certain height the forester thins
-the plantation; he cuts down a number of the young trees, so that
-those which remain may have more room to grow, and he removes all the
-withered branches near the ground. This allows the sunshine to reach
-the soil, and soon after a crop of soft, fine grass is seen carpeting
-the ground. Sheep and cattle can now be pastured where a short time
-before there grew nothing but heather and weeds.
-
-Look at a Larch plantation in winter time, and you will think that
-all the trees are dead. The Pines and the Firs are resting, and the
-Oaks and Beeches seem asleep, but their branches do not have the dead,
-withered look of the Larch trees. Come again early in spring, and you
-will see a wonderful change. These dead twigs are now a pale glossy
-brown, so glossy that they might have been varnished. Try to pull one,
-and you will find how tough and sound it is; only where the twig joins
-the branch can you separate it from the tree; and what a delightful
-smell of turpentine remains on your fingers after gathering the Larch
-twigs!
-
-In the trunk of this tree there are stores of turpentine, tiny lakes of
-it, which are of considerable value. In Italy, where the Larch trees
-grow to great size, small holes are bored through the trunk to the very
-heart of the tree, and a thin pipe is put in. Then a can is hung on the
-end of the pipe, and the pure turpentine juice drops steadily into the
-can. It is then strained, and is sold just as it comes from the tree.
-
-Early in April the Larch tree begins to get ready for summer; it is
-always one of the first trees to awaken at the call of spring. On each
-flexible twig there appear little brown scaly knobs like small beads,
-placed either singly or in pairs with a short space between each bead.
-In a few days these scaly beads burst open, and a tuft of vivid green
-leaves (2), like the fringes round the mouth of a sea-anemone, peeps
-out. These leaves are soft and flat and slender, very different from
-the hard needles of the Pine and the harsh swords of the Fir trees, and
-they grow in tufts, thirty or forty together, rising from the centre of
-the scaly brown bead. Each tuft is of the brightest green. So the Larch
-tree is a very vision of spring in the dark Fir plantations, while the
-leaf buds of many other trees are only awakening from their winter
-sleep.
-
-In the hedgerows the Hawthorns are in full leaf, the stamen flowers
-cluster on the boughs of the Elm, and the Hazel and Willow catkins
-dangle their tails in the wind; but the forest trees remain sombre and
-gloomy, and the young Larch seems gay as the sunlight among them. As
-the season advances the Larch tree leaves become darker, and they fall
-early in winter. We have only one other cone-bearing tree which is not
-evergreen, and that is the Cypress.
-
-After the leafy tufts appear you will notice that some of the scaly
-brown beads have not produced any leaves; instead they have become tiny
-oval catkins (3), which are made up of a crowd of small yellow grains.
-These catkins are the stamen flowers, and in the yellow grains, which
-are the heads of the stamens, is prepared the dust powder which the
-seed flowers require to assist them in getting ready the new seed.
-
-On the same twig, and not far from the stamen catkins, you see a
-beautiful deep rose-red seed catkin (4). This tiny rose-red catkin
-is very lovely among the brilliant green tufts of leaves; no other
-cone-bearing tree has anything so attractive to show us. At first
-the catkin scales are soft and fleshy; they overlap each other very
-loosely, and from the base of each scale there rises a bright green
-point like a single needle-leaf.
-
-In a few weeks the catkin has become a young cone (5), which looks like
-a small rosy egg sitting erect on a bent footstalk, then the rose-pink
-colour fades from the cone, and the scales become hard and woody.
-Behind each scale lie two tiny white seeds with wings, and there is a
-coating of sticky resin over these seeds to keep them dry. The ripe
-cones (6) remain on the tree for years, long after the seeds have been
-blown away on their transparent wings by the wind.
-
-The crossbill often builds his nest in a Larch tree. He is particularly
-fond of Larch tree seeds, and is very clever at picking them out of the
-ripe cones.
-
-The trunk of a full-grown Larch is reddish brown in colour, and it is
-covered with a rough, scaly bark, which is often hung with hoary tufts
-of pale grey lichen.
-
-Larch wood is very valuable, and is used for many purposes. It is very
-tough, and does not rot in water. Joiners tell us there are fewer knots
-in planks of Larch than in those of either Silver Fir or Spruce. Wood
-knots are scars which occur where a dead branch has fallen from the
-tree, and builders complain that when the tree is sawn into planks, the
-knots shrink and fall out, leaving a round hole. This reduces the value
-of the wood; but in the Larch planks the knots are said not to come
-away from the surrounding wood.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XXI
-
-THE SPRUCE FIR
-
-
-Although the Scotch Pine is sometimes called the Scotch Fir, the latter
-name is generally admitted to be a mistake. It was given long ago by
-people who had not seen the real Fir trees, and who did not know how
-different they are from the Pines. It is several hundred years since
-the Spruce Fir was brought to this country, but it is not one of our
-native trees, like the Scotch Pine, the Yew, and the Juniper.
-
-The Spruce (1) is one of our tallest trees; it loves to grow on ground
-many thousand feet above the level of the sea; and in Switzerland and
-Norway there are great forests of these slender, soldier-like trees,
-clothing the sides of the giant snow mountains. With us it does not
-grow so abundantly, but you will find many Spruce Firs mingling with
-the Scotch Pine in the large woods of our Scotch Highlands.
-
-The Spruce Fir has a very straggling root which does not penetrate
-far into the ground; it creeps along close under the surface, and
-intertwines itself with any other tree roots in the neighbourhood. This
-does not give it a very firm hold, and after great gales you sometimes
-find a broad path opened in the Fir woods, which has been made by the
-Spruce trees falling in the track of the storm.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XXI
-
-THE SPRUCE FIR
-
- 1. Spruce Fir Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Stamen Flowers
- 4. Seed Flower
- 5. Cone
- 6. Seed Scale
- 7. Growth caused by an Insect]
-
-It is a very straight tree, with a smooth scaly bark of a reddish brown
-colour; from each side of the trunk slender branches grow straight
-out like the spokes of a wheel; but each branch rises a little way
-above the last as the steps rise in a ladder. These branches are very
-slender, and at first they sweep downwards in graceful curves; but at
-the tips they all turn upward, so that the points look toward the sky.
-
-The branches get smaller and smaller as the tree grows higher, which
-gives it the appearance of a pyramid, and at the very top there stands
-a single upright branch like a spear. This spear-like tip is one of the
-distinctive features of the Spruce Fir.
-
-The leaves (2) are short and flat and hard, and they are rather prickly
-to touch. They do not grow in pairs or bundles, as in the Scotch Pine
-or the Larch; they are placed singly and very close together all round
-the twig. The twigs grow almost opposite each other on the young
-sprays, and each spray hangs straight down from the main branch, which
-looks as if a parting had been made along its centre and the sprays
-combed evenly to either side. From a distance the Spruce tree branches
-resemble drooping feathers which curve skyward at the tips.
-
-The Spruce Fir has two kinds of flowers. In May or June, if you look at
-the tips of the drooping sprays which grew last year, you will see two
-or three little oval catkins of a pretty yellowish pink colour nestling
-among the hard, flat leaves. These are the stamen flowers (3), and when
-ripe they will burst open and scatter a great deal of yellow pollen
-dust.
-
-The seed flowers (4) grow in cones, and are found at the end of this
-year’s shoots. It is by these cones you will most readily recognise the
-Spruce Fir. You remember that in the Scotch Pine the full-grown cones
-were grey and woody, with tightly-pressed lips, and that these lips
-were very thick and curled upwards when the cone opened?
-
-In the Fir trees the scales of the ripe cones (5) are like thin glossy
-brown paper. Each scale ends in two sharp little teeth, and the scales
-are not tightly pressed together, but overlap each other loosely, so
-that you could put the blade of a knife under each. The woody cones are
-always found in Pine trees, and the papery cones are characteristic of
-the Firs.
-
-In the Spruce Fir these cones are about six inches long, with blunt
-tips, and when full grown they hang from the sprays. Do not forget
-to notice this, as in some Fir trees the full-grown cones are seated
-upright on the branches. Under each scale there lie two little seeds
-(6), with large pale brown wings; these seeds require over a year to
-ripen, then the wind blows them from the loosened cone scales to many a
-strange resting-place, where they take root, and a new tree begins to
-grow.
-
-Sometimes you may see strange leafy-looking bunches (7) like soft,
-badly-made cones on the young sprays. These are caused by an insect
-which lays its eggs in the young leaf bud and destroys its graceful
-shape.
-
-The Spruce Fir has two enemies that do it great harm. These are the
-crossbill and the squirrel. They break off the young shoots close to
-the end, and so stop the growth of the branches. You will often find
-the ground strewn with these fresh green twigs; but you require to sit
-very still for a long time if you wish to see the enemies at work.
-
-The wood of the Spruce Fir is valuable for many purposes. The tall,
-smooth tree trunks are used for the masts of ships, for scaffolding
-poles, and telegraph posts; and many boat-loads of Fir planks are
-brought from Norway and from the shores of the Baltic Sea, to be
-manufactured into flooring boards for our houses. In some places the
-fibre of the Spruce Fir is reduced to pulp, and from this a common kind
-of paper is produced which is used for newspapers or cheap magazines.
-
-From the sap we get resin and turpentine, and the bark is used in the
-tanning of leather.
-
-Some people say that the name Fir wood is just a mistake for fire-wood,
-because in the old days torches were made of the young fir branches,
-whose gummy twigs burnt easily with a clear, strong light.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XXII
-
-THE SILVER FIR
-
-
-Many people find it difficult to distinguish between the Spruce Fir and
-the Silver Fir, and they are often called by each other’s names; yet
-they are unlike in many points, and a little trouble would prevent such
-mistakes.
-
-The Silver Fir (1) is not one of our native trees; it was brought from
-Central or Southern Europe to this country in 1603, and has taken
-kindly to our moist climate. It does not grow on such lofty mountains
-as the Spruce, but it will thrive at a level of six thousand feet above
-the sea, higher than the highest mountain in Great Britain.
-
-It is a tall, stately tree, but it is bushier and less regular than
-the Spruce Fir. The trunk is covered with greyish brown bark, which
-is smooth when the tree is young; but as the tree grows old--and the
-Silver Fir will live for four hundred years--this bark cracks into
-many rugged fissures. You remember that the Spruce tree has a sharp
-spear-like point rising from the very top of the trunk. In the Silver
-Fir the tree is only pointed when very young, and by the time it is
-full grown the top is bushy, with many small unequal branches standing
-out from the main stem.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XXII
-
-THE SILVER FIR
-
- 1. Silver Fir Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Stamen Flowers
- 4. Cone Flower
- 5. Ripe Cone
- 6. Seed Scale]
-
-These branches do not grow in whorls or circles, like the spokes of
-a wheel; they are often irregular, and there may be gaps in the tree
-where a branch has fallen off, and only a scar is left to show where
-the branch should have been. The Silver Fir is a firmly-rooted tree; it
-sends a long tap-shaped root, ending in two forks, deep into the soil,
-so that there is little danger of the wind uprooting it during the
-wintry gales.
-
-Now look at the leaves (2) which grow on the Silver Fir. Like those of
-the Spruce, and unlike those of the Pine, they grow singly, each little
-leaf standing by itself on the rough twig. Although they are placed all
-round this twig, these leaves have a tendency to grow to right or left
-of the twig, and look as if they had been parted down the centre and
-carefully combed to each side.
-
-Each leaf is flat and slender, and on the upper side it is a dark
-glossy green; the edges are rolled back on to the under-side of the
-leaf, which is much paler in colour. The centre rib of the leaf is much
-raised, and looks like a slender cord, and on each side of this cord,
-between it and the curled-back leaf edge, there runs a silvery white
-line; it is from this silvery line that the tree gets its name.
-
-Notice that the leaf twigs of the Silver Fir do not droop in the
-feathery way they do in the Spruce; they are much stiffer, and stand
-out all round the branch; also, there is not nearly such a marked
-upward curve at the tip of the branch as you find in the Spruce Fir.
-The leaves of the Silver Fir remain on the tree eight or nine years,
-but each year the tree lengthens its sprays, and the young leaves are
-a beautiful pale yellowish green colour, almost as pale as the young
-leaves of the primrose.
-
-The stamen flowers (3) grow at the ends of the young sprays. They
-consist of a few overlapping scales with a cluster of stamens inside.
-The seed flowers or cones (4) grow on the same tree, sometimes on the
-same branch, and they become cones in the same way as the seed flowers
-of the Pine and the Spruce. But you will at once notice a difference.
-The cones of the Silver Fir grow upright; they sit on the branches with
-their tops looking up to the sky, whereas the cones of the Spruce and
-the Scotch Pine when full grown hang down from the ends of the spray
-with their tips pointing to the ground. If there are any cones visible
-you will never mistake the Silver Fir for the Spruce.
-
-The ripe cones (5) are made up of many thin, soft scales which overlap
-each other closely, and each scale ends in a sharp point which turns
-backward; this gives the cone a hairy appearance. At first the cones
-are green, like those of the Scotch Pine, but soon they turn purple,
-and when quite ripe they are a rich red-brown.
-
-If the tree is old enough--that means if it is forty years of age--you
-will find small angular seeds (6), with a long filmy wing attached,
-nestling behind each scale. But if the tree is still young, the cones
-are seedless. It takes eighteen months for the cone to ripen, and when
-the seeds are ready and they and the red-brown scales fall from the
-cone, a bare brown stick is left standing upright on the branch.
-
-The wood of the Silver Fir is very valuable, and it is used for many
-purposes; doors and window-frames and floors are constantly made of it,
-and for ship-building it is in great demand. In Switzerland there are
-great forests of Silver Fir, but they grow high on the mountain sides,
-where there are no roads and no means of getting the trees brought down
-after they are felled.
-
-But at Lucerne, a town on the shores of a large lake, with great
-forests on the mountains above, the people invented an excellent way of
-overcoming this difficulty.
-
-A narrow avenue was cut in the forest among the trees, and this was
-floored with trunks of Fir and Spruce. Snow and water were poured down
-this avenue, which the cold air quickly froze, and the avenue became a
-gigantic ice-slide eight miles long. The Fir trees were felled, and all
-their branches lopped off, the bare trunks were placed on this slide,
-and in six minutes they shot into the waters of the lake eight miles
-below. There they floated till the wood merchant was ready for them.
-
-The Silver Fir tree is rich in gummy juice, which is made into
-turpentine and resin. Have you ever seen necklaces of pale cloudy
-beads, and of clear dark brown made of amber? People tell us this amber
-is found on the shores of the Baltic Sea, and that it is just the
-gummy juice which dropped long ago from some kind of Fir tree and has
-hardened in a mysterious way of which we know nothing.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XXIII
-
-THE HOLLY
-
- “Below, a circling fence, its leaves are seen, wrinkled and keen.
- No grazing cattle through their prickly round can reach to wound;
- But as they grow where nothing is to fear,
- Smooth and unarmed the pointless leaves appear.”
-
- --Southey.
-
-
-The Holly (1) is our most important evergreen, and is so well known
-that it scarcely needs any description. It has flourished in this
-country as long as the Oak, and is often found growing under tall trees
-in the crowded forests, as well as in the open glades, where lawns of
-fine grass are to be found.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XXIII
-
-THE HOLLY
-
- 1. Holly Tree
- 2. Blunt Leaf
- 3. Prickly Leaf
- 4. Flower Cluster
- 5. Fruit]
-
-People say that the Holly, or Holm tree, as it is often called, is
-the greenwood tree spoken of by Shakespeare, and that under its bushy
-shelter Robin Hood and his merry men held their meetings in the
-open glades of Sherwood Forest. Sometimes it is called the Holy tree,
-because from the oldest time of which we have any record its boughs
-have been used to deck our shrines and churches, and in some parts of
-England the country people in December speak of gathering Christmas,
-which is the name they give to the Holly, or Holy tree. It is this
-evergreen which we oftenest use at Christmas-tide to decorate our
-churches, and very lovely the dark green sprays, with their coral
-berries, look when twined round the grey stone pillars.
-
-The Holly is looked upon as a second-rate forest tree. It is never very
-large, and it usually appears as a thick, tall bush, with many branches
-reaching almost to the ground. Sometimes you find it with a slender,
-bare trunk, clothed with pale grey bark, and if you look closely at
-this bark you will see that it is covered with curious black markings,
-as if some strange writing had been traced on it with a heavy black pen.
-
-This writing is the work of a tiny plant which makes its home on the
-Holly stem and spreads in this strange way.
-
-The bark of the young Holly shoots and boughs is pale green and quite
-smooth.
-
-The tree requires little sunshine, and it seems to keep all it gets,
-as every leaf is highly polished and reflects the light like a mirror.
-These leaves grow closely on every branch; they are placed alternately
-on each side of the twigs, and are oval, with the edges so much waved
-that the leaves will not lie flat, but curl on each side of the centre
-rib.
-
-The prickly leaves (3) which grow low down on the tree have sharp
-spines along the waved edges, and a very sharp spine always grows at
-the point of the leaf. But the upper branches are clothed with blunt
-leaves (2) which have no spines along the edges; instead there is a
-pale yellow line round each leaf, and there is a single blunt spine at
-the point.
-
-Sheep and deer are very fond of eating the tough, leathery leaves of
-the Holly, and it is believed that the tree clothes its lower branches
-in prickly leaves to protect itself from these greedy enemies.
-
-Country people tell you that if branches of smooth Holly are the first
-to be brought into the house at Christmas-time, then the wife will be
-head of the house all the next year, but if the prickly boughs enter
-first, then the husband will be ruler.
-
-The Holly leaves hang on the tree several years, and after they fall
-they lie a long time on the ground before the damp soaks through
-their leathery skin and makes them decay. You will find Holly leaves
-from which all the green part of the leaf has disappeared, leaving a
-beautiful skeleton leaf of grey fibre, which is still perfect in every
-vein and rib.
-
-The flowers (4) of the Holly bloom in May. They appear in small
-crowded clusters between the leaf stalk and the twig, and each flower
-is a delicate pale pink on the outside, but is pure white within.
-There is a calyx cup edged with four green points, and inside this cup
-stands a long white tube, with four white petals at the top. There are
-four yellow-headed stamens, and a tiny seed-vessel is hidden inside
-the flower tube. Sometimes all these parts will be found complete in a
-single flower; sometimes there will be flowers on the same branch which
-have stamens and no seed-vessel, and others which have seed-vessels and
-no stamens. Perhaps you will find a whole tree on which not a single
-seed flower grows. This tree may be laden with lovely white flowers
-in spring, but it will bear no berries in winter. You must have both
-stamen flowers and seed flowers if the tree is to produce any fruit.
-
-As summer passes, the seed-vessels, which have had stamen dust
-scattered over them, become small green berries (5), and these berries
-turn yellow and then change into a deep red, the colour of coral or
-sealing-wax. The berries cluster round the green stalk, and most
-beautiful they are among the glossy dark leaves. Inside each berry
-there are four little fruit stones containing seeds, and the birds love
-to eat these red berries, which are full of mealy pulp; but remember
-that children must never eat the Holly berries, as they are poisonous
-except for the birds.
-
-You will find that if the Holly tree has a good crop of berries this
-winter there will not be many the following year; the tree seems to
-require a year’s rest before it can produce a second large crop.
-
-There are some Holly trees with leaves which are shaded with pale
-yellow or white--variegated Hollies, we call them. These are
-greatly prized for planting in gardens, where the bushes with
-different-coloured leaves lend much beauty when all the trees are bare
-in winter.
-
-The wood of the Holly is too small to be of much use. It is white and
-very hard, and when stained black it is largely used instead of ebony,
-which is scarce and expensive. The black handles of many of our silver
-teapots are made of stained Holly wood. A sticky lime, which is used
-for snaring birds, is made from the young green shoots and twigs, and
-the slender branches are good for making walking-sticks and coachmen’s
-whips.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XXIV
-
-THE WILD CHERRY OR GEAN
-
-
-There are now more than forty varieties of Cherry in Britain, and they
-all are descended from the Gean or Wild Cherry tree. This favourite
-tree belongs to the great Rose family, and is related to the Apple,
-and Pear, and Plum. It grows freely all over Britain except in the very
-north of Scotland; and we read that six hundred years ago the county of
-Kent was famous for its Cherry orchards.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XXIV
-
-THE WILD CHERRY
-
- 1. Wild Cherry or Gean in Autumn
- 2. Flower Cluster with Leaves
- 3. Fruit]
-
-In Germany the Cherry is planted for many miles by the roadsides, so
-that all passers-by may eat the fruit and enjoy the shade cast by the
-tall trees. And if there should be any particular tree whose fruit the
-owner does not wish taken, he ties a wisp of straw round that tree, and
-the people understand the sign and do not touch these Cherries.
-
-In France the Wild Cherry fruit, along with a little bread and butter,
-is often the only food of the poor charcoal-burners and wood-cutters,
-who stay in the forest during the cold winter months.
-
-Song birds, especially the blackbirds, love to eat cherries, and as we
-are very grateful to the birds for eating the many grubs and insects
-which destroy our fruit and corn, we must not grudge them a feast from
-our Cherry trees. It is probably the birds who have carried the seeds
-to the many different places where we find Cherry trees springing up.
-
-The Wild Cherry (1) is a tall tree with wide-spreading branches. It has
-a smooth grey bark, from which you will often see oozing large drops
-of clear gum. This gum is very sticky, it will not melt in cold water,
-and it is very difficult to remove from your fingers. The Wild Cherry
-leaves (2) appear in spring, long oval leaves ending in a point, and
-with sharp teeth along the edge. These leaves are very soft, and they
-droop from the twigs. At first the leaf is folded lengthways, with the
-two edges meeting, and it is a dull brown colour; but this colour soon
-changes in the sunshine to a soft green, and when autumn comes you find
-leaves of every shade of pink and red and crimson.
-
-The large white Cherry blossoms (2) come almost at the same time as the
-leaves, and they grow in loose clusters, in which the flowers hang from
-the end of long, drooping stalks. There are always many small leaf-like
-scales where these flower stalks join the twig. Each blossom has a
-pear-shaped calyx at the end of the flower stalk, and this calyx is
-edged with five green points. These points fold back against the stalk
-after the flower is withered.
-
-There are five large snowy petals which make the flower clusters look
-very lovely in the spring sunshine, but the petals fall very quickly
-and strew the ground with their snowy flakes.
-
-Within the petal circle there are many slender stamens, and you can
-see a long red-tipped point rising from the seed-vessel, which lies
-concealed in the pear-shaped calyx which stands beneath the petals and
-sepals.
-
-The Wild Cherry fruit (3) is black, and sometimes dark red. It is
-rather sour, and the cherries we buy in the shops are usually cherries
-which have been cultivated in an orchard, and have been grown in a
-warmer country.
-
-In Cambridgeshire there is a festival called Cherry Sunday, when every
-one goes to the Cherry orchard, and on paying sixpence may eat as many
-cherries as he pleases.
-
-For some unknown reason the cuckoo has always been associated with the
-Cherry tree. There is an old proverb which says, “The cuckoo never
-sings till he has thrice eaten his fill of cherries”; and country
-children play a delightful game in which he has a part. They join hands
-and dance round a Cherry tree, singing--
-
- “Cuckoo, Cherry tree,
- Come down and tell to me,
- How many years I have to live.”
-
-Then each child shakes one of the Cherry tree branches, and the number
-of cherries that fall tell him how many years he will live. If five
-cherries fall he has five years to live, and if twelve cherries fall he
-will live twelve years, and so on.
-
-There is a cunning little bird called the woodpecker which very often
-visits the Cherry tree. He eats the insects that live on its bark; and
-you can hear his bill peck, pecking at the trunk as he picks up his
-food.
-
-The wood of the Cherry tree is hard, yet easily worked. It is much
-in demand by furniture makers, and is a rich red colour which can be
-highly polished.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XXV
-
-THE WHITEBEAM
-
-
-In the old Saxon language, which was once the language spoken by most
-of the people in England, the word beam means a tree, so we must be
-careful not to speak of the Whitebeam tree, as that would be just the
-same as to say the White tree tree.
-
-The Whitebeam (1) is not nearly so common as the Oak, or the Ash or
-Beech, and yet it has been known in this country for many hundred
-years. It is found growing stiff and tall on bleak chalky pastures as
-well as in beautiful parks and plantations. The trunk is covered with
-a rough brown bark, and there are great deep roots which spread widely
-and keep the tree firmly attached to the soil.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XXV
-
-THE WHITEBEAM
-
- 1. Whitebeam
- 2. Flower Cluster with Leaves
- 3. Fruit Cluster with Leaves]
-
-It is easy to see why this tree is called the Whitebeam. Look at the
-fat buds which have been on the tree all winter, making you think that
-spring was close at hand. In April these buds burst open, and you
-see that the young leaves inside are covered with a thick coating of
-woolly down. They are the woolliest buds which grow in this country,
-and the leaves (2), when they first come out, are as white as if
-they had been sprinkled with flour. They are pretty leaves, broad and
-oval, with large teeth cut all round the edge and with clearly-marked
-veins. At first each leaf is white above as well as below, but as it
-gets older the woolly down disappears from the upper side, and the leaf
-becomes a dark, glossy green. But watch the tree some day when the
-wind is stirring, and at every gust the dark green leaves blow upwards
-and sideways, and you will see that the back of each leaf is silvery
-white--the woolly lining has remained. You remember that the white
-Poplar or Abele tree had leaves which were white-lined too.
-
-The flowers of the Whitebeam (2) resemble those of the Rowan, but they
-are larger and are not so closely clustered together on their short
-stalks. Each flower has five pointed green sepals standing out like
-the rays of a star beneath the circle of five white petals. There is a
-ring of delicate stamens with yellow heads within the petal circle, and
-the seeds are concealed in the pear-shaped swelling which supports the
-flower at the end of the flower stalk. There are often dark spots on
-the main flower stem from which all the smaller ones branch.
-
-After the white petals and the stamens have fallen off, the swollen
-flower stalk enlarges and becomes an oval berry (3), considerably
-larger than that of the Rowan. At first the berries are covered with
-white down, but soon that wears off, and you see that the berries are
-smooth and are a rich red colour. They are not good to eat, these
-attractive-looking berries, though people say they are pleasant when
-over-ripe and ready to decay. But the birds love them, and so do
-hedgehogs and squirrels.
-
-In France the people plant a great many Whitebeams. This is because
-the small birds require the berries for food in the winter, when there
-are no longer grubs and insects to be found. These grubs and insects
-destroy the vines and corn when they are young and tender in early
-spring, and the small birds are needed because they eat these pests,
-and so save the young plants.
-
-The wood of the Whitebeam is not much used, though small objects, such
-as wooden spoons, knife handles, and combs, are made of it. It is very
-hard, and will take a high polish.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XXVI
-
-THE ROWAN OR MOUNTAIN ASH
-
- “Their spells were vain, the boy returned
- To the Queen in sorrowful mood,
- Crying that witches have no power
- Where there is Roan tree wood.”
-
- --Old Song.
-
-
-The Rowan tree is closely related to the roses, and is a cousin of the
-Hawthorn, the Apple, and the Pear. It is not related in any way to
-the Ash, but the leaves have some resemblance, because, like the Ash
-tree leaves, they are made up of many pairs of small leaflets growing
-opposite each other on each side of a centre stalk, and with an odd
-leaflet at the end. But the leaflets of the Ash tree have each a stalk;
-those in the Rowan have none, and in the Ash tree each large feathery
-leaf is planted exactly opposite its neighbour, while in the Rowan the
-leaves grow alternately. The name Mountain Ash is a mistake.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XXVI
-
-THE ROWAN
-
- 1. Rowan Tree in Autumn
- 2. Flower Cluster
- 3. Leaves and Fruit]
-
-The Rowan tree (1) is seen at its best among the wild glens and
-mountains of the north and west of Scotland. It requires air and light,
-and will flourish in almost any kind of soil, and many are the tales
-which are woven round the life of this beautiful tree. It is called the
-Roan, or whispering tree, because it has secrets to tell to those who
-will listen. No witches or evil spirits can cross a door over which a
-branch of Rowan is nailed, and no harm will happen to him who has a
-sprig of Rowan pinned to his coat. In every churchyard in Wales a Rowan
-tree is planted to scare away demons who might disturb the sleep of the
-dead; and on lonely farms high up on the mountain sides, the Witchin,
-or Wiggin tree, as it used to be called, is placed close beside the
-dwelling-house.
-
-The Rowan is not a large tree; it grows easily and requires no pruning,
-as its branches rarely die, and the tree never loses its graceful
-shape. The branches are wiry and slender, and they all point upward.
-The bark is a dark purple colour and is glossy and smooth; across it
-there are many curious deep gashes, as if the tree had been scored with
-a knife.
-
-The Rowan is often planted in new coppices to shield the young trees,
-but as soon as these grow up and throw out many branches, they stifle
-their kind nurse, which cannot grow without plenty of light and air.
-
-Early in spring the Rowan buds appear, fat woolly buds covered with
-grey cottony down. The young leaves (3) are carefully packed inside
-among plenty of cotton wool, and very downy they look when they first
-come out. Each leaflet is toothed round the edge, and is dark glossy
-green above and much paler green underneath. These leaves remain on the
-tree till late in autumn, then when the frost touches them with its icy
-fingers they change to wonderful shades of gold and scarlet and pink,
-and they fall with the October winds.
-
-The Rowan tree flowers (2) blossom in May, and they grow in dense
-dusters, each flower at the end of a small stalk. There are many
-small stalks, all about the same height, and they branch again and
-again from the main stem, forming a thick cluster. The flowers are
-very delightful, though they lack the snowy beauty and have none of
-the delicate scent of the Hawthorn. Each Rowan flower has five green
-sepals and five creamy white petals. These are placed round the end of
-the flower stalk, which is slightly swollen, and inside this swelling
-lies hidden the seed-vessel; you can see three sticky threads rising
-from it in the centre of the ring of petals. There is a circle of
-yellow-headed stamens within the petal ring.
-
-By the end of June the Rowan flowers have faded and the creamy petals
-strew the ground. But the tree does not only depend for its beauty on
-the creamy flowers or on the changing leaves.
-
-The swollen flower stalks have been growing all summer, and now the end
-of each stalk has become a small round berry (3), and a dense cluster
-of these berries hangs in a bunch from the main stem. In autumn these
-berries turn a rich yellow red, and very brilliant they look among the
-dark green leaves. Song birds love these Rowan berries, and so long as
-any remain on the tree the blackbird and thrush will be its constant
-visitors.
-
-When corn was scarce in the hard winters of long ago these Rowan
-berries were dried and made into flour. Many people to-day make them
-into jelly, which is a rich golden colour, but has rather a bitter
-taste.
-
-The wood of the Rowan tree is very tough, and is principally used for
-making poles.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XXVII
-
-THE HAWTHORN
-
- “Mark the fair blooming of the Hawthorn tree,
- Who, finely clothed in a robe of white,
- Fills full the wanton eye with May’s delight.”
-
- --Chaucer.
-
-
-We cannot think of the Hawthorn as one of our noble forest trees, like
-the Oak and the Beech; it is dear to us as a village tree, a friendly,
-bushy tree which has grown in our garden, or in the fields and meadows
-close to our country cottages. We remember the long sunny May days
-when we gathered armfuls of its lovely blossoms, and the frosty autumn
-mornings when its berries shone like rubies on the bare, wind-stripped
-branches. It has always been in close touch with our lives, and it has
-left many pictures graven deep in our memory.
-
-The Hawthorn (1), or May, or White-thorn, as it is often called from
-the colour of its flowers, has been known to us since very long ago.
-When the hero Ulysses came home from his weary wanderings, he found
-his old father alone; all the servants had gone to the woods to get
-young Hawthorn trees to make a hedge, and the old man was busy digging
-trenches in which to plant them.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XXVII
-
-THE HAWTHORN
-
- 1. Hawthorn Tree in Early Summer
- 2. Leaves and Blossoms
- 3. Fruit]
-
-Even in that far-off time people had discovered that nothing makes
-so good a hedge as young thorn trees. They grow very quickly and
-send out many side-shoots and small branches. Each branch bears sharp
-thorns, and so closely do these thorny branches grow together that it
-is impossible to push your hand through the hedge without being badly
-scratched. Young cattle and horses love to feed on the Hawthorn leaves,
-and one wonders how they can eat them without getting many scratches.
-
-Long after the time of Ulysses we find that bunches of flowering
-Hawthorn were carried in wedding processions as an emblem of hope, and
-torches made of its wood were burned. There is a strange old legend
-which tells how Joseph of Arimathea landed on the island of Avalon at
-Christmas-tide. He was very weary, and lay down to rest, but first he
-planted his staff of Hawthorn firmly in the ground beside him. And in
-the morning he found that the staff had put out roots and was covered
-with Hawthorn blossoms. By this he knew it was meant that he should
-stay in Avalon, and he built a monastery for himself and his brethren
-and remained there till he died.
-
-Until not so long ago the country people in England used to hold gay
-sports in the village in the month of May. A tall mast, or Maypole,
-was planted in the ground, and the men and maidens decorated it with
-wreaths of Hawthorn blossoms. Then they danced, and sang, and held
-merry games around the Maypole in honour of summer’s return.
-
-In early spring the Hawthorn tree, if you find one growing singly in
-a field or meadow, is most easily recognised by its bushy appearance.
-The tree trunk is dark grey and very rough; often it is twisted like
-a rope, but it is rarely a thick trunk, as you seldom find a large
-Hawthorn. Even when very old-about two hundred and fifty years some are
-said to live--the Hawthorn is always a small tree.
-
-In April the young leaf buds appear; pale green knobs, or little
-bundles, bursting from every branch. Each leaf (2) is cut up into blunt
-fingers, and soon it loses its paleness and becomes dark green and
-glossy. In autumn these leaves change to gold and dark red and brown;
-but the frosty nights and cold winds soon strip them from the branches.
-
-May is the month when the flowers (2) begin to bloom--clusters of tiny
-snow-white balls, each at the end of a slender green stalk. In England
-it was the custom to give a basin of cream for breakfast to the person
-who first brought home a branch of Hawthorn in blossom on the first of
-May.
-
-When the flower balls or buds unclose, you find that they have five
-snow-white petals, which are set in the throat of the calyx cup. Within
-this ring of petals, round the mouth of the cup, grow many slender
-stamens, each with a bright pink head. And if you look at the back of
-the flower, you will see five green points which stand out like the
-rays of a star behind the white petals. These are the sepals.
-
-Below this green star the stalk looks slightly swollen: this swelling
-contains the seed, and by the time autumn comes it will have grown into
-a small green berry. After the white petals and the pink-headed stamens
-have fallen, you will find clusters of these berries, which are called
-haws, each with the withered remains of the sepals clinging to the top,
-as you find them in the Rose and in the Apple. The berries (3) become
-crimson when the frost comes, and birds eat them greedily.
-
-We have few trees which flower so beautifully as the Hawthorn. In May
-and June the hedgerows are laden with its masses of snowy blossoms.
-Sometimes you will find Hawthorns on which the flowers are a vivid
-crimson, and these are so transparently beautiful they look as if the
-light shone through them. And in autumn no tree is more attractive than
-the Hawthorn, with its gleaming berries and many-coloured leaves.
-
-The wood of the Hawthorn is not very serviceable. It is hard and may
-be highly polished, but the trees are too small for the timber to be
-useful.
-
-The branches, like those of the Ash and the Whin, burn readily, even
-when green, and in Scotland the bark was used in olden days to dye wool
-black.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XXVIII
-
-THE BOX
-
-
-Many of us only know Box as the name given to the small bushy plant
-which is placed along the edges of our garden borders to keep the earth
-from falling out on the gravel path. And we are surprised to learn that
-this plant is only the Dwarf Box, and that the true Box is a tree,
-a fair-sized tree, which may be seen any day in Oxford growing to a
-height of over twenty feet. We must learn to recognise the Box tree,
-for in the South of England there are still many districts where it
-grows freely.
-
-It has been known in this country for hundreds of years, but its fame
-has come down to us in a curious way. In old books we read that the Box
-was chiefly prized as the tree which would stand more clipping than
-any other. People in those days had a strange fancy for cutting trees
-and bushes into quaint shapes. They had Box trees which looked like
-peacocks, and Box trees shaped like beehives. There were arm-chairs,
-and tubs, and even statues made of growing Box, cut and trimmed by the
-gardener’s clever shears.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XXVIII
-
-THE BOX
-
- 1. Box Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray with Flowers
- 3. Single Flower
- 4. Fruit]
-
-The best gardener then was the one who clipped best, and a very
-difficult art it was, to clip the tree into a certain shape and yet not
-to kill it. Nowadays these quaint Box tree curiosities are scarcely
-ever made, but a Box tree hedge is often planted, and its masses of
-closely-crowded evergreen leaves afford good protection to young plants
-in a windy garden.
-
-The Box tree (1) has a dark grey-green bark, and the young shoots are
-four-sided. It grows very slowly--only a few inches each year--and
-because of this the wood is very hard and fine, as fine as ebony.
-
-The leaves (2) are placed opposite each other, and are small and
-egg-shaped, with smooth edges. Above they are dark green and very
-glossy, but underneath the colour is paler. They are very poisonous
-these Box leaves, and fowls are known to have died from eating them.
-
-The poet Wordsworth tells us that at country funerals it was usual to
-have a basin filled with sprays of Box standing at the door, and every
-friend who came to the funeral took a spray, which he carried to the
-churchyard and laid on the new grave. Rosemary or Yew sprays were often
-used in the same way.
-
-The flowers are very tiny; you will scarcely be able to see how they
-are shaped without a magnifying-glass. They grow in crowded yellow
-clusters at the foot of the leaves, where they join the stem. In each
-cluster there is usually one seed flower (3) with a tiny green pea in
-the centre, from which rise three curved horns. All the other flowers
-will be stamen flowers, which shed plenty of pollen dust over this
-single green pea. The fruit (4) is a green berry, enclosing a tiny
-black seed, which you cannot see.
-
-Box-wood is very valuable and is scarce in this country. Most of what
-we use comes from other lands. In France there is a large Box-wood
-forest near the village of St. Claude, and all the people in that
-village spend their days making the Box-wood into small articles, such
-as forks and spoons, and rosaries and snuff-boxes, for which they get
-a good deal of money. The wood is pale yellow, and may be cut into the
-finest pattern without breaking. For many years Box-wood has been used
-by engravers for making the blocks from which pictures and patterns are
-printed; the wood is so hard that these blocks can be used many, many
-times without the edges becoming worn.
-
-Near London there grew a famous wood called Boxhill, and when the trees
-in that wood were cut down they were sold for ten thousand pounds.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XXIX
-
-THE WALNUT
-
-
-The Walnut tree (1) comes to us from sunny Italy and France, where it
-has grown for many centuries and is greatly prized. Its Latin name,
-_Juglans_, means the nut of Jove, and the Romans called it so
-because they thought the fruit was worthy to be set before their chief
-god Jove. It was brought to this country about five hundred years ago,
-and seems to have been grown in many districts until the beginning of
-last century, when there came a great demand for its wood. As much as
-six hundred pounds was given for a single Walnut tree, and at once
-all the people who had Walnut trees cut them down and sold them. This
-greatly reduced the number.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XXIX
-
-THE WALNUT
-
- 1. Walnut Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Bud
- 4. Scar
- 5. Stamen Flower
- 6. Seed Flowers
- 7. Fruit]
-
-It is a large, handsome tree, which grows to a considerable height, and
-has a very thick trunk covered with grey bark. This trunk is smooth
-when the tree is young, but turns rugged as it grows older. The Walnut
-branches are large and spreading; they are sometimes twisted, but the
-tips of each branch always turn to the sky. For long it was thought to
-be dangerous to sleep beneath the shade of a Walnut tree, but for what
-reason I have not been able to discover.
-
-The leaves (2) are very handsome; each leaf is made up of several
-pairs of leaflets placed opposite each other on a central stalk, with
-a single leaflet at the end. When they first come out these leaflets
-are dull red, but the colour soon changes to a pale olive green, and
-each leaf is smooth and soft and has a delicious scent if crushed ever
-so slightly. The twigs which carry these leaves are very stout, even
-to the tips, but they break easily, and you will find many lying on
-the ground after a windy night. The bark on these young twigs is very
-smooth and glossy.
-
-The Walnut tree produces two kinds of flowers, which are both found on
-the same tree, and one kind, the stamen flowers (5), requires a whole
-year to ripen. If you look at the twigs which support the leaves you
-will see several tiny cone-shaped buds (3) dotted here and there on
-either side, close to the scars (4) left by last year’s leaf stalk.
-These are the beginnings of next year’s stamen flowers, and they remain
-like that all summer and all winter until the following spring. Then
-the bud lengthens and becomes a slender, drooping catkin (5). This
-catkin is covered with small flowers, each made up of five green sepals
-enclosing many stamens. These stamen catkins drop from the tree when
-the pollen dust is scattered.
-
-The Walnut seed flowers (6) are so small that they require to be looked
-for carefully. They grow among the leaves at the end of the twig, and
-their small seed-vessels, each with a closely-fitting calyx covering,
-are ready before the leaves come out. Very soon the small seeds develop
-into smooth green fruits, which continue to grow all summer, and in
-July they are the size of a small plum. This fruit is a nut (7), the
-famous Walnut, and at first you will not see in it any likeness to the
-Walnut which we eat at dessert after cracking the pale brown shell.
-But look more closely. The green fruit is a soft juicy envelope which
-conceals a large nut. This green envelope turns brown when it is ripe
-and splits open, showing the nut inside, a nut with a crinkled skin,
-which is soft and green at first, but which becomes a hard, pale brown
-shell when the fruit dries. It is the kernel of this nut which we eat
-with salt as a dessert fruit.
-
-The Walnuts usually ripen in October, but often they are gathered in
-July before the juicy green covering has turned brown, and they are
-preserved in vinegar and used as a pickle. Ripe Walnuts contain a great
-deal of oil, and the oil is much valued by artists, who mix it with
-their paints. It is the most liquid of all the oils, and it dries very
-quickly.
-
-If you look at your fingers after gathering Walnuts you will find that
-they are stained a dark brown. The Walnut tree contains a juice which
-leaves a dark stain. It is said that with this juice the gipsies dye
-their skin brown; and it is also used to stain floors.
-
-Walnut wood is very valuable. It is light in weight and dark in colour,
-with beautiful veins and streaks throughout. Much fine furniture is
-made of Walnut wood, and it can be polished till it shines like satin.
-To-day it is largely used in the manufacture of guns and rifles.
-
-You will now understand what an important tree the Walnut is, as it
-yields fruit and oil and wood, which are all valuable.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XXX
-
-THE SWEET CHESTNUT OR SPANISH CHESTNUT
-
-
-The Sweet Chestnut is a cousin of the Oak, and belongs with it to the
-great family of cup-bearing trees, or those that bear their fruit
-sitting in a cup. Like the Oak, it is a tree with a great and ancient
-history, although nowadays we are apt to take little notice of this
-tree, which was once well known and grew abundantly in many parts of
-England.
-
-The largest Chestnut in the world grows in Sicily, in the great forest
-which covers the slopes of Mount Etna. It is said that a Spanish Queen
-was once overtaken in this forest by a tremendous storm, and that she
-and a hundred soldiers and horses were all able to find shelter beneath
-the wide-spreading branches of this one tree.
-
-In this country we have a famous big Chestnut tree in Gloucestershire
-which is believed to be a thousand years old; it is written about in
-old books, which tell us that this tree belonged to a certain house in
-the time of King Stephen.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XXX
-
-THE SWEET CHESTNUT
-
- 1. Sweet Chestnut Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray with Flowers
- 3. Stamen Flowers
- 4. Seed Flowers
- 5. Fruit in Case]
-
-The Sweet Chestnut (1) is a large bushy tree with beautiful leaves,
-which painters love to put in the background of their pictures. The
-branches are heavy and spreading, and they sweep downwards. Each branch
-is thickly covered with long green leaves (2), which are so thick and
-glossy that you expect them to be evergreen. Each leaf is sharply
-oval, and has a stout rib running up the centre, from which straight
-veins branch to the very edge of the leaf, where they each end in a
-point. These points make the edge of the leaf look as if toothed.
-Insects do not destroy these Chestnut leaves, and they hang on the
-twigs till late in autumn, when they turn pale yellow; this yellow
-deepens to gold and brown, and when winter comes they cover the ground
-with a thick carpet of rustling leaves. These leaves are often gathered
-to make winter bedding for the poor people, who call them “talking
-beds” because they rustle and crackle so when lain on.
-
-Those leaves that are left on the ground greatly enrich the soil.
-
-The trunk of the Chestnut tree is scored up and down with many deep
-ridges, and these ridges seem to bend round the tree strangely, as if
-they had been twisted, like the strands of a rope, when the tree was
-young and tender.
-
-The Chestnut flowers appear on this year’s shoots early in May or June,
-and they are of two kinds, both of which grow on the same tree. The
-stamen flowers (3) are in long catkin spikes, which rise stiffly among
-the leaves. The centre stem of the catkin is very stout, and seated
-round it are tufts of yellow-headed stamens, each enclosed in a green
-calyx. These stamen heads are filled with yellow dust, which they shed
-in the same way as the Pine tree stamens, in such quantities that it
-lies like sulphur on any still lake or pond that may be near.
-
-On the same catkin spike, near the foot, grow the seed flowers (4).
-These look like short, fat paint brushes with a stout green handle.
-There is a cup made up of many slender green leaf-like points, and
-inside this cup sit the seeds; you can see a bunch of their points
-standing up like the bristles of the paint brush. When plenty of the
-stamen dust has fallen on these bristles, the seed sets about getting
-ready its fruit, and the stamen part of the catkin spike shrivels and
-falls off; its work is done.
-
-But the seed grows bigger and bigger, till it looks like a round green
-ball (5) covered all over with bristles. The seeds are ripening inside
-this ball, two or three, sometimes five, seeds closely packed side by
-side. In October the green covering splits into four pieces and the
-seeds fall to the ground. Notice how beautifully this bristly covering
-is lined with soft, silky down to protect the smooth skin of the nut.
-
-Each nut is slightly flattened at the sides where it was tightly
-pressed against its neighbour, and it comes to a point at the top,
-where the withered remains of the seed bristles show in a dry brown
-tuft. The skin on the Chestnut is dark brown, and there is a large scar
-at the foot of the nut where it was fastened to the green cup.
-
-In Italy, where there are miles and miles of Chestnut forests, the nuts
-are gathered in sackfuls when October comes. They are then spread out
-on a brick floor in a thick layer, and a fire, made of dry leaves and
-sticks, is lit beneath. This fire is kept burning for ten days, and the
-nuts are frequently turned with a wooden shovel. Whenever the skins
-crack off quite easily the nuts are ready; the hard, cracked brown
-skins are removed, and the nuts are ground into flour from which many
-delicious foods are prepared.
-
-The fruit of the Chestnut is one of the most important tree fruits we
-know. In France and Italy the people use Chestnuts as much as we do
-potatoes, and many are the clever ways in which they prepare and cook
-them, but the commonest way is to boil and eat the chestnuts with a
-little salt. When the cook is preparing the nuts, he makes a slit in
-the skin of every Chestnut except one, and when that one bursts and
-cracks with a loud noise, he knows that the others are ready.
-
-The Chestnut fruit ripens in the South of England, but it is never so
-large, nor is it so plentiful, as in the sunny South.
-
-The wood of the Chestnut tree is valuable. For many years people
-believed that the great beams in some of our old historic buildings
-were Chestnut wood, and this made them think that the trees must have
-grown much larger then than they do to-day. But it is now decided
-that these old beams must be made of Oak. Old Oak beams are very like
-Chestnut beams, but clever people tell us that Chestnut wood is best
-when it is young, as the old wood is apt to break off in little pieces,
-and it would not really be a suitable wood to use in buildings where
-strength was needed.
-
-Chestnut wood makes excellent fences and is also used for wine casks;
-the hoops which go round these wine casks should be made of it, as it
-does not rot in a damp cellar. Chestnut wood burns badly; it sends up a
-great many sparks, and it smoulders, but will not burn brightly.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XXXI
-
-THE HORSE CHESTNUT
-
-
-The Horse Chestnut is not related in any way to the Sweet Chestnut;
-there is no resemblance between them except the appearance of their
-nuts, and even in these there are many points of difference. It is
-said that the name Horse Chestnut was given because the nuts of this
-tree were only fit for horses to eat, whereas the Sweet Chestnuts are
-valuable as a food for human beings. Even horses will not eat the nuts
-of the Horse Chestnut tree. You must not forget that if the Chestnut
-is spoken of without an adjective, it is the sweet Spanish Chestnut
-that has the right to the name, and is by far the more valuable tree.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XXXI
-
-THE HORSE CHESTNUT
-
- 1. Horse Chestnut Tree in Autumn
- 2. Young Leaf
- 3. Full-grown Leaf
- 4. Sticky Bud in Leaf Scar
- 5. Flower Spike
- 6. Single Flower
- 7. Fruit in Case]
-
-The Horse Chestnut (1) was brought to this country five hundred years
-ago, and we prize it greatly for its beautiful flowers and leaves. It
-has a large, stout trunk, covered with a rough, scaly bark, on which
-you will frequently notice many green patches caused by a tiny plant
-which makes its home there.
-
-The branches are large and spreading, and they sweep downwards to the
-ground, then rise again towards the tips, forming graceful curves. The
-shoots bearing the buds always point towards the sky, and in spring
-these shoots grow very fast for about a month, then they do not become
-any larger, but the shoot thickens and is soon tough and woody.
-
-All winter the Horse Chestnut buds can be seen on the tree--large,
-dark, purply brown buds (4) covered with a thick coating of sticky gum.
-In April these buds begin to swell and the gummy covering melts. It
-held together twelve dark brown scales, and these fall to the ground,
-showing an under layer of paler scales. The growing bud inside soon
-pushes itself through these scales, and the young leaf appears, a
-delicate, pale green bud, with its leaves closely folded like a fan.
-They open very quickly in the warm sunshine, but for some days after
-they have shaken themselves loose from the scaly coverings each leaf
-(2) hangs on its stalk like a half-opened parasol, with all its tips
-pointing to the ground. But soon the leaf tips rise, and the parasol is
-fully opened and a beautiful leafy screen it is.
-
-The leaf (3) is cut up into seven leaflets, and every leaflet is shaped
-like a pear, with the broad part pointing outwards and the narrow end
-joining the leaf stalk. These pear-shaped leaflets are not all the same
-size; there are two which are quite small and two a little larger, and
-the other three are larger still. The leaflets have small teeth round
-their edges, and there is a raised rib running up the centre, from
-which branches a network of fine veins all over the leaflet.
-
-The Horse Chestnut leaves grow opposite each other in pairs, and each
-pair is placed cross-ways to the pair farther down on the branch, in
-the same way as those of the Sycamore. In July the leaves begin to
-change colour; they turn red and brown, and they fall very early in
-autumn. Look closely at the twigs and you will see on them many curious
-marks shaped like horse-shoes; these are the scars (4) where a leaf
-stalk joined the twig, and above each of these scars you can see next
-year’s leaf bud already distinctly formed.
-
-In May the Horse Chestnut is in flower (5), and a wonderful sight it
-is; the tree is laden with snowy spikes, which look like great candles
-set on a bushy Christmas tree. A giant’s nosegay, it is sometimes
-called by the country people, this great tree, with its wealth of
-fan-shaped leaves and these stiff snow-white spikes rising from every
-branch.
-
-The lowest flowers (6) in each spike open first, and they are called by
-botanists perfect flowers, because each one has all its parts complete.
-They have a green bell-shaped calyx with five divisions round the
-mouth. Within this calyx are five separate white petals, one of which
-is much larger than the others, and these petals have many hairs on
-them and are splashed with crimson and yellow stains.
-
-In the throat of this flower there are seven stamens with curved stalks
-and pale salmon-coloured heads, and among these you can see a slender
-curved green thread rising from the seed-vessel, which lies hidden in
-the centre of the flower.
-
-The upper flowers on the spike have no seed-vessel, and they fall off
-as soon as their stamen dust is scattered. The spike may bear thirty or
-forty flowers, yet only a few will remain to produce seeds after the
-beautiful petals are withered.
-
-When this has happened the seed-vessel grows larger and larger till it
-becomes a rough, horny green ball (7) studded with short spines. It is
-not bristly all over like the Sweet Chestnut fruit ball, but is hard
-and smooth, and its spines are thick and clumsy, with a wide space
-between each. If you open one of these balls before the fruit is ripe,
-you will find a nut inside, which is white and polished like a piece of
-ivory and which fits the covering closely. But if you leave the fruit
-to ripen on the tree, then the green ball splits into three pieces, and
-you see that the nut (7) inside has shrunk a little and has become a
-rich, dark brown. It is so glossy that it looks as if it had just been
-oiled, and it is almost round.
-
-There is a white scar at the foot of the nut, where it was fastened to
-the inside of the green ball.
-
-In the Sweet Chestnut, you remember, there were always two or three
-nuts inside each bristly ball, and these nuts were dull, and not glossy
-like those of the Horse Chestnut.
-
-Although horses will not eat this fruit, deer and cattle and sheep all
-like it. In this country the nuts are usually left to rot on the ground
-where they fall. After they decay these nuts may be pounded and made
-into a kind of soap; they contain a juice which is said to be good for
-cleansing.
-
-The Horse Chestnut is a very fast-growing tree. In fourteen years a
-tree grown from a nut will be large enough to sit under, and the wood,
-on this account, is less hard and lasting than woods that have taken
-longer to grow. It is used for cabinet-making and for flooring.
-
-[Illustration: PLATE XXXII
-
-THE CEDAR
-
- 1. Cedar Tree
- 2. Leaf Spray
- 3. Stamen Flower
- 4. Seed Flower
- 5. Closed Cone and Open Cone]
-
-The tree does not produce any fruit till it is twenty years old, but
-after that it will bear nuts yearly till it is two hundred.
-
-There is a variety of Horse Chestnut with pink flowers, which has not
-been so long known as the white-flowered tree.
-
-
-
-
-PLATE XXXII
-
-THE CEDAR OF LEBANON
-
-
-In the Old Testament we read that when Solomon was building the temple
-he sent to Hiram, King of Tyre, for stores of goodly Cedar wood from
-the forests of Lebanon. And Hiram sent the wood by sea in floats, or
-rafts, as much Cedar and timber of Fir as King Solomon wanted. This was
-used to cover the stonework of the temple, within and without.
-
-There is a delightful fragrance in these planks of Cedar wood which is
-said to come from the sap or resin with which the tree abounds. Cedar
-oil is made from this resin, and it was long in use as a safeguard
-against the attacks of insects, which dislike the smell.
-
-The Cedar (1), as we see it in this country, rarely rises to the
-dignity of a large tree; it is most familiar to us as a stunted, bushy
-tree with a thick, short trunk divided into more than one main stem.
-Short branches rise from these stems, and at first these point upwards
-to the sky, but after the branch has grown some length it bends
-backward and stands straight out from the tree. From a distance the
-tree looks as if the branches grew in layers, or shelves, with a clear
-space between each shelf. You will always recognise a Cedar by these
-layers of branches densely covered with gloomy green leaves. It is
-said that in countries where much snow falls the Cedar branches always
-remain upright, because the tree knows that it could not carry the
-great weight of snow that would gather on its leafy shelves if they
-grew flat as in warmer lands.
-
-The Cedar is frequently found growing in churchyards, beside the Yew
-tree, and a dark, gloomy tree it is. The trunk is covered with a thick
-rough bark of a pale greenish brown colour, but on the branches this
-bark is thin and flaky. The Cedar grows very slowly. The tree may be a
-hundred years old before it produces any seeds, though you sometimes
-find seedless cones on Cedars that are twenty-five to thirty years old.
-
-The leaves (2) are evergreen, and usually remain on the twigs for
-four or five years. They grow in tufts, like those of the Larch, on
-the upper side of the twig; but each leaf is needle-shaped, as in the
-Scotch Pine, and is much harder than the soft Larch leaves. In colour
-they are a dark bluey green.
-
-The Cedar has two kinds of flowers. Those that bear the stamens (3)
-appear at the end of short, stunted little twigs which have taken many
-years to grow. The stamens are in slender catkins, about two inches
-long, and are a pale reddish yellow colour.
-
-The seed flowers (4) grow in cones, and the Cedar of Lebanon has very
-curious cones. They grow in pairs, and are like fat green eggs, sitting
-upright on the branch, with the blunt end uppermost. These cones look
-quite solid, because the scales are so tightly pressed together. You
-can scarcely see where one begins and the other ends. It takes two
-or three years before these scales unclose, and during that time the
-cones (5) become a rich, dark purple. When the scales unclose, the
-three-cornered seeds are blown out by the wind, and each seed is
-furnished with a wing to float it away on the air. The Cedar cones
-remain on the tree several years after all their seeds have fallen.
-
-The timber of the Cedars grown in this country is of little value; the
-tree is usually planted for ornament. But in warmer lands, where there
-are large forests of mighty Cedar trees, the wood is sold for a great
-deal of money.
-
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Trees, by Janet Harvey Kelman</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Trees</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>Shown to the Children</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: C. E. Smith</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Editor: Louey Chisholm</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: Janet Harvey Kelman</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: November 4, 2021 [eBook #66670]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TREES ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="40%" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="blockquot2">
-
-<p><span class="large"><b>THE &#8220;SHOWN TO THE CHILDREN&#8221; SERIES</b><br />
-
-<span class="smcap">Edited by Louey Chisholm</span></span></p>
-</div>
-<h1>TREES</h1>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="bbox">
-<p class="ph1"><span class="large">The<br />
-&#8220;Shown to the Children&#8221; Series</span></p>
-
-
-<p><b>1. BEASTS</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>With 48 Coloured Plates by <span class="smcap">Percy J. Billinghurst</span>.
-Letterpress by <span class="smcap">Lena Dalkeith</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>2. FLOWERS</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>With 48 Coloured Plates showing 150 flowers, by
-<span class="smcap">Janet Harvey Kelman</span>. Letterpress by <span class="smcap">C. E.<br />
-Smith</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>3. BIRDS</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>With 48 Coloured Plates by <span class="smcap">M. K. C. Scott</span>.
-Letterpress by <span class="smcap">J. A. Henderson</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>4. THE SEA-SHORE</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>With 48 Coloured Plates by <span class="smcap">Janet Harvey
-Kelman</span>. Letterpress by <span class="smcap">Rev. Theodore Wood</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>5. THE FARM</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>With 48 Coloured Plates by F. M. B. and <span class="smcap">A. H.
-Blaikie</span>. Letterpress by <span class="smcap">Foster Meadow</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>6. TREES</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>With 32 Coloured Plates by <span class="smcap">Janet Harvey
-Kelman</span>. Letterpress by <span class="smcap">C. E. Smith</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>7. NESTS AND EGGS</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>With 48 Coloured Plates by <span class="smcap">A. H. Blaikie</span>.
-Letterpress by <span class="smcap">J. A. Henderson</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>8. BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>With 48 Coloured Plates by <span class="smcap">Janet Harvey
-Kelman</span>. Letterpress by Rev. <span class="smcap">Theodore Wood</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>9. STARS</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>By <span class="smcap">Ellison Hawks</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>10. GARDENS</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>With 32 Coloured Plates by <span class="smcap">J. H. Kelman</span>.
-Letterpress by <span class="smcap">J. A. Henderson</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>11. BEES</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>By <span class="smcap">Ellison Hawks</span>. Illustrated in Colour and
-Black and White.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>12. ARCHITECTURE</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>By <span class="smcap">Gladys Wynne</span>. Profusely Illustrated.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>13. THE EARTH</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>By <span class="smcap">Ellison Hawks</span>. Profusely Illustrated.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>14. THE NAVY</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>By <span class="smcap">Percival A. Hislam</span>. 48 Two-colour Plates.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><b>15. THE ARMY</b></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>By <span class="smcap">A. H. Atteridge</span>. 16 Colour and 32 Black Plates.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div></div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate1"><span class="smcap">Plate I</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_004.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE OAK<br />
-
-1. Oak Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Spray with Flower Catkins</span><br />
-4. Stamen Catkin<span class="gap">5. Seed Catkin</span><span class="gap">6. Fruit</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<p><span class="xxxlarge">TREES</span><br />
-<span class="xxlarge">SHOWN TO THE CHILDREN</span></p>
-
-<p>BY<br />
-<span class="xlarge">JANET HARVEY KELMAN</span></p>
-
-<p>DESCRIBED BY<br />
-<span class="xlarge">C. E. SMITH</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_005.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>THIRTY-TWO COLOURED PICTURES</p>
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">LONDON: T. C. &amp; E. C. JACK, Ltd.</span><br />
-<span class="large">35 PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C.<br />
-AND EDINBURGH</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">To<br />
-THOMAS FORBES SACKVILLE WILSON</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[vii]</span>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">DEAR CHILDREN,&mdash;In this little book I have
-written about some of the trees which you
-are likely to find growing wild in this country,
-and Miss Kelman has painted for you pictures
-of these trees, with drawings of the leaves and
-flowers and fruit, so that it will be easy for you
-to tell the name of each tree. But I think there
-is one question which you are sure to ask after
-reading this small book, and that is, &#8220;How do
-the trees grow?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The tree grows very much as we do, by taking
-food and by breathing. The food of the tree is
-obtained from two sources: from the earth and
-from the air. Deep down in the earth lie the
-tree roots, and these roots suck up water from
-the soil in which they are embedded. This water,
-in which there is much nourishment, rises through
-many tiny cells in the woody stem till it reaches
-the leaf, twigs, and green leaves. As it rises the
-growing cells keep what they need of the water.
-The rest is given off as vapour by the leaves
-through many tiny pores, which you will not be
-able to see without a microscope.</p>
-
-<p>While it is day the green leaves select from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[viii]</span>
-the air a gas called carbonic acid gas. This
-they separate into two parts called oxygen and
-carbon. The plant does not need the oxygen as
-food, so the leaves return it to the air, but they
-keep the carbon. This carbon becomes mixed
-in some strange way with the water food drawn
-from the soil by the roots. Forming a liquid, it
-finds its way through many small cells and
-channels to feed the growing leaves and twigs
-and branches.</p>
-
-<p>But, like ourselves, a tree if it is to live and
-thrive must breathe as well as take food. By
-night as well as by day the tree requires air for
-breathing. Scattered over the surface of the
-leaves, and indeed over the skin of the tree, are
-many tiny mouths or openings called stomata.
-It is by these that the tree breathes. It now
-takes from the air some oxygen, which, you will
-remember, is the gas that the leaves do not
-need in making their share of the tree food.
-Now you can see why it is that a tree cannot
-thrive if it is planted in a dusty, sooty town. The
-tiny mouths with which it breathes get filled up,
-and the tree is half-choked for lack of air. Also
-the pores of the leaves become clogged, so that
-the water which is not needed cannot easily
-escape from them. A heavy shower of rain is a
-welcome friend to our dusty town trees.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule tree flowers are not so noticeable as
-those which grow in the woods and meadows.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[ix]</span>
-Often the ring of gaily-coloured petals which
-form the corolla is awanting, so are the green
-or coloured sepals of the calyx, and the flower
-may consist, as in the Ash tree, of a small seed-vessel
-standing between two stamens, which have
-plenty of pollen dust in their fat heads.</p>
-
-<p>It is very interesting to notice the various ways
-in which the tree flowers grow. In some trees
-the stamens and seed-vessels will be found close
-together, as in the Ash tree and Elm. Or they
-may grow on the same branch of a tree; but all
-the stamens will be grouped together on one
-stalk and all the seed-vessels close beside it on
-another stalk, as in the Oak tree. Or the stamen
-flowers may all be found on one tree without
-any seed flowers, and on another tree, sometimes
-a considerable distance away, there will
-be found nothing but seed flowers. This occurs
-in the White Poplar or Abele tree.</p>
-
-<p>You must never forget that both kinds of
-flowers are required if the tree is to produce
-new seed, and many books have been written to
-point out the wonderful ways in which the wind
-and the birds and the bees carry the stamen
-dust to the seed-vessels, which are waiting to
-receive it.</p>
-
-<p>Each summer the tree adds a layer of new
-wood in a circle round the tree trunk; a broad
-circle when there has been sunshine and the
-tree has thriven well, and a narrow circle when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">[x]</span>
-the season has been wet and sunless. This new
-layer of wood is always found just under the
-bark or coarse, outer skin of the tree. The bark
-protects the soft young wood, and if it is eaten
-by cattle, or cut off by mischievous boys, then
-the layer of young wood is exposed, and the tree
-will die.</p>
-
-<p>When winter approaches and the trees get
-ready for their long sleep, the cells in this layer
-of new wood slowly dry, and it becomes a ring
-of hard wood. If you look at a tree which has
-just been cut down, you will be able to tell how
-many years old the tree is by counting the circles
-of wood in the tree trunk. When a tree grows
-very slowly these rings are close and firm, and
-the wood of the tree is hard and valuable.</p>
-
-<p>Many, many years ago, when a rich Scotch
-landlord lay dying, he said to his only son, &#8220;Jock,
-when you have nothing else to do, be sticking
-in a tree; it will aye be growing when you are
-sleeping.&#8221; He was a clever, far-seeing old man,
-Jock&#8217;s father, for he knew that in course of time
-trees grow to be worth money, and that to plant
-a tree was a sure and easy way of adding a
-little more to the wealth he loved so dearly.</p>
-
-<p>But a tree has another and a greater value
-to us and to the world than the price which a
-wood merchant will give for it as timber. Think
-what a dear familiar friend the tree has been
-in the life of man! How different many of our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">[xi]</span>
-best-loved tales would be without the trees
-that played so large a part in the lives of our
-favourite heroes. Where could Robin Hood and
-his merry men have lived and hunted but under
-the greenwood tree? Without the forest of Arden
-what refuge would have sheltered the mischief-loving
-Rosalind and her banished father? How
-often do we think of the stately Oak and Linden
-trees into which good old Baucis and Philemon
-were changed by the kindly gods.</p>
-
-<p>And do you remember what secrets the trees
-told us as we lay under their shady branches on
-the hot midsummer days, while the leaves danced
-and flickered against the blue, blue sky? Can
-you tell what was the charm that held us like
-a dream in the falling dusk as we watched their
-heavy masses grow dark and gloomy against
-the silvery twilight sky?</p>
-
-<p>In a corner of a Cumberland farmyard there
-grew a noble tree whose roots struck deep into
-the soil, and whose heavy branches shadowed
-much of the ground. &#8220;Why do you not cut it
-down?&#8221; asked a stranger; &#8220;it seems so much in
-the way.&#8221; &#8220;Cut it down!&#8221; the farmer answered
-passionately. &#8220;I would sooner fall on my knees
-and worship it.&#8221; To him the tree had spoken
-of a secret unguessed by Jock&#8217;s father and by
-many other people who look at the trees with
-eyes that cannot see. He had learned that the
-mystery of tree life is one with the mystery<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xii">[xii]</span>
-that underlies our own; that we share this
-mystery with the sea, and the sun, and the
-stars, and that by this mystery of life the whole
-world is &#8220;bound with gold chains&#8221; of love &#8220;about
-the feet of God.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p class="right">C. E. SMITH.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">LIST OF PLATES</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate1">PLATE I</a></p>
-
-<p>The Oak</p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate2">PLATE II</a></p>
-
-<p>The Beech</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate3">PLATE III</a></p>
-
-<p>The Birch</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate4">PLATE IV</a></p>
-
-<p>The Alder</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate5">PLATE V</a></p>
-
-<p>The Hornbeam</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate6">PLATE VI</a></p>
-
-<p>The Hazel</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate7">PLATE VII</a></p>
-
-<p>The Lime or Linden</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate8">PLATE VIII</a></p>
-
-<p>The Common Elm and Wych
-or Broad-Leaved Elm</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate9">PLATE IX</a></p>
-
-<p>The Ash</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate10">PLATE X</a></p>
-
-<p>The Field Maple</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate11">PLATE XI</a></p>
-
-<p>The Sycamore, or Great Maple,
-or Mock Plane</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate12">PLATE XII</a></p>
-
-<p>The Oriental Plane</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate13">PLATE XIII</a></p>
-
-<p>The White Poplar or Abele</p>
-Tree
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate14">PLATE XIV</a></p>
-
-<p>The Aspen</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate15">PLATE XV</a></p>
-
-<p>The White Willow</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate16">PLATE XVI</a></p>
-
-<p>The Goat Willow or Sallow</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate17">PLATE XVII</a></p>
-
-<p>The Scotch Pine or Scotch Fir</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate18">PLATE XVIII</a></p>
-
-<p>The Yew</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiv">[xiv]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate19">PLATE XIX</a></p>
-
-<p>The Juniper</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate20">PLATE XX</a></p>
-
-<p>The Larch</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate21">PLATE XXI</a></p>
-
-<p>The Spruce Fir</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate22">PLATE XXII</a></p>
-
-<p>The Silver Fir</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate23">PLATE XXIII</a></p>
-
-<p>The Holly</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate24">PLATE XXIV</a></p>
-
-<p>The Wild Cherry or Gean</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate25">PLATE XXV</a></p>
-
-<p>The Whitebeam</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate26">PLATE XXVI</a></p>
-
-<p>The Rowan or Mountain Ash</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate27">PLATE XXVII</a></p>
-
-<p>The Hawthorn</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate28">PLATE XXVIII</a></p>
-
-<p>The Box</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate29">PLATE XXIX</a></p>
-
-<p>The Walnut</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate30">PLATE XXX</a></p>
-
-<p>The Sweet Chestnut or Spanish
-Chestnut</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate31">PLATE XXXI</a></p>
-
-<p>The Horse Chestnut</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><a href="#plate32">PLATE XXXII</a></p>
-
-<p>The Cedar of Lebanon</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span>
-
-<p class="ph2">TREES</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE I<br />
-
-
-THE OAK</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap">OF all our forest trees the Oak is undoubtedly
-the king. It is our most important tree, the
-monarch of our woods, full of noble dignity and
-grandeur in the summer sunshine, strong to endure
-the buffeting of the wintry gales. It lives
-to the great age of seven hundred years or more,
-and is a true father of the forest. We read of the
-Oak tree in the story books of long ago. There
-are many Oak trees mentioned in the Bible. In
-Greece the Oak was believed to be the first tree
-that God created, and there grew a grove of
-sacred Oaks which were said to utter prophecies.
-The wood used for the building of the good ship
-Argo was cut from this grove, and in times of
-danger the planks of the ship spoke in warning
-voices to the sailors.</p>
-
-<p>In Rome a crown of Oak leaves was given to him
-who should save the life of a citizen, and in this
-country, in the days of the Druids, there were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>
-many strange customs connected with the Oak
-and its beautiful guest the mistletoe. The burning
-of the Yule log of Oak is an ancient custom which
-we trace to Druid times. It was lit by the priests
-from the sacred altar, then the fires in all the
-houses were put out, and the people relit them
-with torches kindled at the sacred log. Even
-now in remote parts of Yorkshire and Devonshire
-the Yule log is brought in at Christmas-time
-and half burned, then it is taken off the fire and
-carefully laid aside till the following year.</p>
-
-<p>We know that in Saxon times this country
-was covered with dense forests, many of which
-were of Oak trees. Huge herds of swine fed
-on the acorns which lay in abundance under the
-trees; and a man, when he wished to sell his piece
-of forest, did not tell the buyer how much money
-the wood in it was worth, but how many pigs
-it could fatten. In times of famine the acorns
-used to be ground, and bread was made of the
-meal. There have been many famous Oak trees
-in England: one of these we have all heard of&mdash;the
-huge Oak at Boscobel in which King Charles
-II. hid with a great many of his men after he
-was defeated at the battle of Worcester.</p>
-
-<p>I think you will have no difficulty in recognising
-an Oak tree (1) at any time of the year. Look at
-its trunk in winter: how dark and rough it is;
-how wide and spreading at the bottom to give
-its many roots a broad grip of the earth into which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-they pierce deeply. Then as the stem rises it
-becomes narrower, as if the tree had a waist, for
-it broadens again as it reaches a height where the
-branches divide from the main trunk. And what
-huge branches these are&mdash;great rough, dark arms
-with many crooked knots or elbows, which shipbuilders
-prize for their trade. These Oak-tree
-arms are so large and heavy that the tree would
-need to be well rooted in the ground to stand firm
-when the gale is tossing its branches as if they
-were willow rods.</p>
-
-<p>The Oak tree does not grow to a great height.
-It is a broad, sturdy tree, and it grows very slowly,
-so slowly that after it is grown up it rarely increases
-more than an inch in a year, and sometimes
-not even that. But just because the Oak
-tree lives so leisurely, it outlasts all its companions
-in the forest except, perhaps, the yew tree, and its
-beautiful hard, close-grained wood is the most
-prized of all our timber.</p>
-
-<p>In the end of April or early in May, the Oak
-leaves (2) appear; very soft and tender they are
-too at first, and of a pale reddish green colour.
-But soon they darken in the sunshine and become
-a dark glossy green. Each leaf is feather-shaped
-and has a stalk. The margin is deeply waved
-into blunt lobes or fingers, and there is a strongly-marked
-vein up the centre of the leaf, with slender
-veins running from it to the edge.</p>
-
-<p>In autumn these leaves change colour: they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-become a pale brown, and will hang for weeks
-rustling in the branches till the young buds which
-are to appear next year begin to form and so push
-the old leaves off. If a shrivelling frost or a
-blighting insect destroys all the young Oak leaves,
-as sometimes happens, then the sturdy tree will
-reclothe itself in a new dress of leaves, which
-neither the Beech, nor the Chestnut, nor the
-Maple, could do. It shows what a great deal of
-life there is in the stout tree.</p>
-
-<p>The flowers of the Oak arrive about the same
-time as the leaves, and they grow in catkins
-which are of two kinds. You will find a slender
-hanging catkin (3) on which grow small bunches of
-yellow-headed stamens (4). Among the stamens
-you can see six or eight narrow sepals, but these
-stamens have no scales to protect them as the
-Hazel and Birch catkins have. On the same
-branch grows a stouter, upright catkin, and on it
-are one or maybe two or three tiny cups (5), made
-of soft green leaves called bracts, and in the centre
-of this cup sits the seed-vessel, crowned with
-three blunt points. As the summer advances this
-seed-vessel grows larger and fatter and becomes
-a fruit (6) called an acorn, which is a pale yellow
-colour at first, and later is a dark olive brown.
-The soft leafy cup hardens till it is firm as wood,
-and in it the acorn sits fast till it is ripe. It
-then falls from the cup and is greedily eaten by
-the squirrels and dormice, as it was in the olden
-times by the pigs. From those acorns that are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-left lying on the ground all winter, under the
-withered leaves, will grow the tiny shoots of a
-new tree when the spring sunshine comes again.</p>
-
-<p>The Oak tree is the most hospitable of trees:
-it is said that eleven hundred insects make their
-home in its kindly shelter. There are five kinds
-of houses, which are called galls, built by insects,
-and you can easily recognise these, and must look
-for them on the Oak tree. Sometimes on the
-hanging stamen catkins you will find little balls
-like currants with the catkin stem running
-through the centre. These are the homes of a
-tiny grub which is living inside the currant ball,
-and which will eat its way out as soon as it is
-ready to unfold its wings and fly.</p>
-
-<p>Often at the end of an Oak twig you find a soft,
-spongy ball which is called an Oak apple. It is
-pinkish brown on the outside and is not very
-regular in shape. This ball is divided inside into
-several cells, and in each cell there lives a grub
-which will also become a fly before summer is over.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes if you look at the back of an Oak
-leaf you will see it covered with small red spangles
-which are fringed and hairy. These spangles each
-contain a small insect, and they cling to their
-spangled homes long after the leaves have fallen
-to the ground.</p>
-
-<p>Another insect home or gall grows in the leaves,
-and this one is much larger, sometimes as big as
-a marble. It too is made by an insect which is
-living inside, and this is called a leaf gall.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>There is still another insect which attacks the
-leaf buds and causes them to grow in a curious
-way. Instead of opening as usual, the bud proceeds
-to make layers of narrow-pointed green
-leaves which it lays tightly one above the other,
-like the leaves of an artichoke or the scales of
-a fir cone. If you cut one of these Oak cones in
-half you will find many small insects inside, which
-have caused the bud to grow in this strange way.</p>
-
-<p>And there is one other oak gall you must note.
-When the leaves have all fallen and the twigs
-are brown and bare, you see clusters of hard
-brown balls growing on some of them. They
-are smooth and glossy and the colour of dried
-walnuts. These also have been made by an insect.
-Sometimes you see the tiny hole in the ball by
-which the grub has bored its way out. This kind
-of gall does great harm to the tree, as it uses up
-the sap that should nourish the young twigs.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Oak is very valuable. Sometimes
-a fine old tree will be sold for four hundred
-pounds, and every part of it can be used.
-The bark is valuable because it contains large
-quantities of an acid which is used in making
-ink; also in dyeing leather. Oak that has been
-lying for years in a peat bog, where there is much
-iron in the water, is perfectly black when dug out,
-black as ink, because the acid and the iron together
-have made the inky colour.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate2"><span class="smcap">Plate II</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_023.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">THE BEECH<br />
-
-
-1. Beech Tree in Autumn<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Bud</span><br />
-4. Buds in Winter<span class="gap">5. Seed Flower</span><span class="gap">6. Stamen Flower</span><br />
-7. Fruit<span class="gap">8. Fruit when Ripe</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The wood of an Oak tree lasts very long: there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-are Oak beams in houses which are known to be
-seven hundred years old, and which are as good
-as the day they were cut. For centuries our
-ships were built of Oak, the wooden walls of old
-England, hearts of Oak, as they have often been
-called, because Oak wood does not readily splinter
-when struck by a cannon ball. And Oak wood
-will not quickly rot: we know of piles which
-have been driven into river beds centuries ago
-and are still sound and strong. In pulling down
-an old building lately in London, which was built
-six hundred and fifty years ago, the workmen
-found many oak piles in the foundations, and
-these were still quite sound.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE II<br />
-
-
-THE BEECH</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the south of England there lived a holy hermit
-named St. Leonard whose hut was surrounded by
-a glade of noble Beech trees. The saint loved the
-beautiful trees, but by day he could not sit under
-their shady branches because of the vipers which
-swarmed about the roots, and by night the songs
-of many nightingales disturbed his rest. So he
-prayed that both the serpents and the birds might
-be taken away, and from that day no viper has
-stung and no nightingale has warbled in the
-Hampshire forests. So we read in the old story<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-books. There are many such legends connected
-with the Beech tree. It has grown in this country
-as far back as we have any history, and it is often
-called the mother of the forest, because its thickly
-covered branches give shelter and protection to
-younger trees which are struggling to live.</p>
-
-<p>The Beech is a cousin of the Oak. It is a large,
-handsome tree, with a noble trunk and widely
-spreading branches which sweep downward to the
-ground, and in summer every branch and twig is
-densely covered with leaves. No other tree gives
-such shade as the Beech, and in a hot summer day
-how tempting it is to lie underneath the branches
-and watch the squirrels glancing in and out among
-the rustling leaves and tearing the young bark.</p>
-
-<p>In early spring you will recognise the Beech
-tree (1) by its smooth olive-grey trunk. Only the
-Beech tree has such a smooth trunk when it is
-fully grown, and in consequence, every boy with
-a new knife tries to cut his name on its bark.
-In summer the young bud (3) of next year&#8217;s leaf
-is formed where each leaf joins the stem. All
-winter time you can see slender-pointed buds (4)
-growing at the end of every twig, and when April
-comes each of these pointed buds has become a
-loose bunch of silky brown scales. Inside these
-protecting scales is hidden the young leaf bud, and
-soon the winter coverings unclose. For a short
-time they hang like a fringe round the base of
-the leaf stalk, but they quickly fall off and strew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-the ground beneath. The young leaves inside are
-folded like a fan, and they have soft silky hairs
-along the edges. How lovely they are when
-open! Each leaf (2) is oval, with a blunted point
-at the end, and the edges are slightly waved.</p>
-
-<p>At first the leaf colour is a clear pale green,
-through which the light seems to shine; and
-there is nothing more lovely than a Beech tree
-wood in early May when the young leaves are
-glistening against the clear blue sky. But as
-summer comes nearer the leaf colour darkens, and
-by July it is a deep, glossy green. You can then
-see very distinctly the veins which run from the
-centre to the edge of every leaf. These leaves
-grow so thickly that no stems or branches can be
-seen when the tree is in full foliage; and they are
-beautiful at all seasons. When autumn comes,
-bringing cold winds and a touch of frost, then the
-Beech tree leaves change colour: they seem to
-give us back again all the sunshine they have
-been storing up during summer, for they blaze
-like the sunset sky in myriad shades of gold, and
-red, and orange. In windy open places, these
-beautiful leaves soon strew the ground with a
-thick carpet that whirls and rustles in every
-breeze. But in sheltered glades, and especially in
-hedges, the leaves will hang all winter till they
-are pushed off by the new spring buds, and they
-glow russet red in the December sunshine, like
-the breast of the robin that is singing on the twig.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>At every stage the Beech tree is a thing of
-beauty, and it is one of England&#8217;s most precious
-possessions.</p>
-
-<p>The young flowers appear about the same time
-as the leaves, and, like many other trees, the Beech
-has two kinds of flowers. The stamen flower (6)
-has a long, drooping stalk, from the end of which
-hangs a loose covering of fine brown scales,
-with pointed ends. Beyond this scaly covering
-hangs a tassel of purplish brown stamens, eight
-or twelve, or more, each with a yellow head.</p>
-
-<p>On the same twig, not very far distant, you find
-the seed flower (5). This grows upright on a short
-stout stalk which bears at the end a bristly oval
-ball (7). At the top of this bristly ball you see six
-slender threads waving in the air. These rise from
-two seeds which are enclosed in the bristly covering.
-By and by the ball opens at the top and
-forms a cup with four prickly brown sides, each
-lined with silky green down. Inside the cup are
-two triangular green nuts which are the fruit (8).
-These nuts become dark brown when they ripen,
-and on windy days they are blown in thousands
-from their coverings and fall to the ground, where
-they lie hidden among the rustling brown leaves.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate3"><span class="smcap">Plate III</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_029.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE BIRCH<br />
-
-
-1. Birch Tree in Autumn<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Seed Catkin</span><br />
-4. Stamen Catkin<span class="gap">5. Winged Seed enlarged</span><span class="gap">5<span class="allsmcap">A</span>. Winged Seed natural size</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In old times people called these Beech nuts
-Beech-mast or food, and herds of pigs were taken
-to the Beech woods to feed on the nuts, which are
-said to contain oil. But pigs prefer to eat acorns,
-and nowadays the Beech nuts are left to fatten
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>the squirrels and dormice, and the thrushes and
-deer, except those which children gather to
-string into necklaces.</p>
-
-<p>No grass or plant will grow below the Beech
-tree branches: the leaves are too close together
-to let the sunshine reach the ground; also the
-roots are greedy, and are said to use up all the
-nourishment.</p>
-
-<p>About a hundred years ago a Beech tree was
-found in Germany whose young leaves were dark
-purple red, and never became green. Young plants
-from this strange tree were much sought after,
-and now in many parts of the country you see red
-or copper beeches, as we usually call them.</p>
-
-<p>Beech wood is used in various ways. In France
-the peasants make it into shoes&mdash;wooden shoes
-called sabots, which keep out the damp better than
-those made of any other wood. It is also used in
-ship-building and for making cheap furniture; but
-Beech wood is not nearly so valuable as that of the
-Oak, or Ash, or Elm.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE III<br />
-
-
-THE BIRCH</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">&#8220;Sweet bird of the meadow, soft be thy nest,</div>
-<div class="verse">Thy mother will wake thee at morn from thy rest:</div>
-<div class="verse">She has made a soft nest, little redbreast, for thee,</div>
-<div class="verse">Of the leaves of the birch, and the moss of the tree.&#8221;</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright">&mdash;Leyden.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p>The Birch tree is the daintiest and most fairy-like
-of all our forest trees, and, strange to say,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-it is one of the hardiest. Who would believe that
-the delicate tracery of purple twigs and branches,
-which looks like fairy fretwork against the grey
-wintry sky, could thrive in places where the sturdy
-Oak tree dies?</p>
-
-<p>In the far, far north, in Lapland, where the
-ground is snow-covered all the year, the Birch
-tree flourishes, and many are the uses to which
-it is put in that dreary land.</p>
-
-<p>Look at the Birch tree (1) early in the year
-before the sun has awakened the trees, and
-flowers, and seeds from their long winter sleep.
-It is easy to recognise, because no other tree
-has such delicate twigs and branches, and the
-colour of the trunk is peculiarly its own. Most
-tree trunks are grey, or grey-green, or brown,
-but the trunk of the Birch is covered with
-a silvery white bark that glistens like satin.
-In many places this bark is marked with dark
-bands which crack across the tree trunk on the
-silvery surface.</p>
-
-<p>This silver bark is a wonderful thing. It peels
-off readily in large flakes which resemble tissue
-paper, and which look very easy to destroy, but
-are wonderfully tough and lasting. It burns
-readily, but in almost no other way can it be
-destroyed. If a Birch tree is blown down and
-left lying on the damp ground for many years,
-all the wood inside the silvery bark will decay,
-but the outside of the trunk remains unchanged.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-Stand on it, and you find that what you took to
-be a solid tree is nothing but a hollow tube of
-bark.</p>
-
-<p>In North America the Indians cover their canoes
-with Birch bark, and in some snow-covered countries
-the people use it for tiles with which to
-roof their houses. Some time ago, when men
-were digging in the peat-bogs of Lancashire, they
-found the remains of Birch trees which must
-have been there for a thousand years. The wood
-had turned into stone, but the bark was still the
-same as when it grew on the tree.</p>
-
-<p>In April the young leaves (2) cover the tree like
-a green mist. They are very tiny, the smallest
-and most fairy-like of all our tree leaves. Each
-leaf is oval in shape, with a glossy surface, and
-has a double row of teeth, first a large tooth,
-then a smaller one, cut unequally all round the
-edge. The leaf stalk is very slender and wiry,
-and the twig to which it is attached is very little
-stouter, so that the leaves dance and rustle in
-the slightest breath of wind. Sometimes the back
-of a Birch leaf is covered with fine yellow powder.
-This powder is really a tiny plant which has
-made its home on the Birch tree leaf and feeds
-on it, just as the ivy and mistletoe do on larger
-trees. In autumn these leaves turn pale yellow,
-and the moss and heather are strewn with their
-flakes of gold.</p>
-
-<p>There is another stranger makes its home on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-some of the Birch trees. In spring, before the
-leaves come, you may often notice curious bunches
-of twigs that look like crows&#8217; nests high up
-among the branches. These are caused by a
-tiny insect which has come to stay on the Birch
-tree, and, in some way which we do not understand,
-it makes all the twigs crowd together in
-that curious manner. &#8220;Witches&#8217; Knots&#8221; they
-are called in Scotland.</p>
-
-<p>In May the Birch tree is in flower. You know
-that tree flowers are not so easy to see as meadow
-flowers: they require to be sought for and looked
-at carefully if you wish to know about them.
-The Birch tree has two kinds of flowers, and
-both are needed if the seed from which new trees
-may grow is to be made ready. It takes the
-tree a whole year to prepare one kind of flower.
-During summer look at the foot of a leaf stalk,
-where it joins the twig, and you will find two tiny
-green stamen catkins (4) with all their soft scales
-tightly closed together. In autumn these little
-catkins become dark purple, and they hang on
-the tree all winter. Early in the following spring
-they change entirely. The scales unclose and
-the catkins grow longer till they look like a pair
-of caterpillars loosely shaking in the wind.
-Behind the scales in these reddy-brown caterpillars
-you find a mass of flowers, each made up
-of one tiny sepal, also two slender stamens with
-small yellow heads.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>Now look at the other kind of flower, the seed
-catkin (3). These also are small and green, but
-they grow singly and are fatter and rounder than
-the stamen catkins. Their scales never open very
-wide, but if you look closely you will see behind
-each scale three little pear-shaped seed-vessels
-with two slender horns standing up from the top
-of each.</p>
-
-<p>When the seeds in this catkin are ripe they
-resemble tiny nuts with wings on each side (5):
-and on windy days you can see clouds of these
-little winged seeds (5<i>a</i>) fluttering to the ground
-like small flies. Birds are very fond of Birch tree
-seeds, and one kind of finch, the siskin, is usually
-found hovering among the Birch trees.</p>
-
-<p>The Birch tree lives till it is about a hundred
-years old. It is not grown up till it is twenty-five,
-so you will find no seeds on the young
-birches. It is a tree with many useful qualities.
-The bark is sometimes twisted into torches, as
-it contains a good deal of oil, and it is also used
-in tanning leather. The delicious scent of Russian
-leather is due to Birch bark oil. And there is
-sugar in the sap which may be made into wine.
-Furniture is largely made from the prettily grained
-Birch wood.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE IV<br />
-
-THE ALDER</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Alder tree (1) is a cousin of the Birch and
-the Hazel, and like them its flowers and seeds
-are borne in catkins. It is usually to be found
-growing by the side of a slow-running stream,
-over which its slender branches bend gracefully,
-while its spreading roots cling to the boggy soil
-at the water&#8217;s edge. For the Alder does not
-thrive in dry ground: it is a water-loving tree, and
-its many tiny roots attract moisture, and suck it
-up greedily; so that the ground where the Alder
-grows is often a marshy swamp.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes you will find an Alder which has
-grown into a lofty tree with a rough brown-black
-bark, and with many large branches; but it is
-much more frequently found as a low-growing
-and rather gloomy bush, about the same size as
-the Hazel.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Alder is much sought after for
-buildings which stand in water. In Venice one of
-the most famous bridges, the Rialto, is built on
-piles, or great posts of Alder driven deep into the
-bed of the canal: and one reads in old history
-books that boats were first made of the trunks of
-the Alder tree. But it is of no use for fences or
-gate posts, as it decays quickly in dry soil.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate4"><span class="smcap">Plate IV</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_037.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE ALDER<br />
-
-1. Alder Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Catkins</span><br />
-4. Seed Catkins<span class="gap">5. Last Year&#8217;s Seed Catkins</span><span class="gap">6. Next Year&#8217;s Seed Catkins</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>If you watch a woodman cutting down an Alder
-tree you will notice that the chips which fall under
-his axe are very white; but soon they change
-colour and become a reddish pink. The hard
-wood knots which are found in the tree trunk are
-beautifully streaked and veined and are much
-prized by furniture makers.</p>
-
-<p>In early spring you should walk to the banks of
-a stream and look for an Alder tree. Like the
-Hazel, you will easily know it by its winter
-catkins, though these are very different from
-Hazel catkins. Clinging to the boughs you see
-groups of small brown oval cones, which are
-quite hard and woody and which snap off easily.
-These woody cones are the withered seed catkins
-(5) of last year. As well as these you find bunches
-of long drooping caterpillars with tightly-shut
-purple-green scales, which will not unclose till
-the spring days come. These are the young
-stamen catkins, and they have taken six months
-to grow so far. By these you will always
-know the Alder tree; and it is most interesting
-to watch day by day how its catkins grow
-and change.</p>
-
-<p>In spring the tree produces many groups of
-tiny seed catkins (4), which are hard and oval and
-covered with closely-shut green scales. As the
-days get warmer these cones grow larger and
-larger, and one day you will find the scales opening
-as a fir cone does when it is ripe. Underneath
-each scale are hidden two seeds, and from the top<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-of each seed rise two slender horns. There are
-no wings to the seed, as in the Birch tree. These
-seed cones grow fatter and larger all summer,
-and by autumn their scales, instead of remaining
-green and soft, have become a dark reddish brown
-colour and are hard and woody. In
-October or November the seed is quite ripe,
-and is shaken on to the boggy ground below.
-Then the empty seed catkins become dry and
-shrivelled, and they remain in groups clinging to
-the twigs all winter.</p>
-
-<p>But the drooping caterpillars have been growing
-and changing too. Soon after the seed catkins
-have unclosed their hard oval balls, so that the sun
-and light may reach their tiny seeds, these drooping
-stamen catkins (3) unclose, and their scales
-take on a deeper shade of reddish purple. Each
-scale is edged with three points, and each point
-covers four tiny stamens and four tiny petals.
-When the fine powder in the yellow stamen heads
-is ripe, the wind blows it from the dangling tails
-on to the seed cones which are waiting for it, as
-without the stamen powder the seeds would never
-ripen: and soon after this happens the dangling
-tails fall to the ground.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate5"><span class="smcap">Plate V</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_041.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE HORNBEAM<br />
-
-
-1. Hornbeam<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Catkin</span><br />
-4. Seed Catkin<span class="gap">5. Fruit</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If you look at an Alder tree in late autumn you
-will find three kinds of catkins. First, the empty
-seed catkins with dry woody scales; second, the
-dangling stamen catkins with the fine stamen
-dust all blown away; and third, there are tiny<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-little caterpillar catkins with their scales still
-tightly closed together&mdash;these are next year&#8217;s
-stamen catkins (6) just begun to form.</p>
-
-<p>The leaves (2) of the Alder are heavy and leathery.
-They are usually rounded at the tips, but sometimes
-they are square, as if a piece had been cut off.
-Each leaf is prettily toothed all round the edge,
-and the veins, which run from the centre rib to the
-margin, are very much raised. When the leaves
-are newly opened, the under-side is covered with
-tufts of soft down, and they are slightly sticky.
-Sometimes they are tinged with dull purple.
-These leaves are placed alternately on the stem,
-and while still in bud each leaf is enclosed in a
-pair of oval sheaths like small yellow ears. These
-ears do not fall off when the leaf unfolds, as do the
-leaf coverings of the Birch and the Beech; you
-will often find them at the bottom of the leaf stalk
-when the leaf is fully grown.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE V<br />
-
-
-THE HORNBEAM</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>This is a tree that many people tell you they
-have never noticed; even people who know the
-names of most of our forest trees look surprised
-if you ask them which is the Hornbeam (1); they
-have never heard of it. And yet it grows freely
-in England in the woods and hedgerows, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-like the Beech it is invaluable for sheltering with
-its close bushy branches younger trees that are
-struggling to live. If left to grow in good soil
-the Hornbeam will become a tall tree over seventy
-feet high, but it is not usual to find such well-grown
-Hornbeams, because the tree is generally
-planted to form hedges, and as these require
-thickness and bushiness rather than height, the
-top of the tree is often cut off, so that all its
-strength may go to producing side-branches.</p>
-
-<p>Last century it was the fashion to have curious
-puzzle-paths made in gardens. You entered at
-a gap in a leafy hedge and walked on and on,
-and in and out between growing hedges till you
-came to an open space in the centre. Then the
-puzzle was to find your way out again, and this
-was sometimes very difficult. This kind of puzzle-path
-was called a maze, and the hedges of these
-mazes were frequently made of Hornbeam, because
-this tree will allow itself to be clipped and cut
-into any shape, and if its tall spreading branches
-are taken away, it at once puts out many small
-side-shoots which form a thick hedge.</p>
-
-<p>The Hornbeam branches have a curious habit of
-growing together where they cross each other.
-You may find two good-sized branches which
-are separate on the lower part of the tree, but
-higher up they cross and touch each other, and
-frequently they join together and become one
-branch.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>In the town of Ghent in Belgium there is a
-winding walk arched with Hornbeam: the trees
-have been planted so close that they meet overhead,
-and they have then been clipped and cut till
-they form a green tunnel under which you can
-walk for three hundred yards.</p>
-
-<p>The trunk of the Hornbeam is a dull grey
-colour, and it is marked with white spots. It
-is not round, as are most tree trunks, but looks
-as if it had been slightly flattened, and so made
-oval when it was young. The leaves are not
-unlike those of the Elm and the young Beech, and
-when the tree is young it is sometimes mistaken
-for one or other of these. But you will notice
-some differences if you look carefully.</p>
-
-<p>The Hornbeam leaf (2) is oval and tapers to
-a sharp point. It has strongly-marked veins
-running from the centre to the edge of the leaf,
-and these veins stand up like cord on the under-side
-of the leaf. You remember that the Beech
-leaf was smooth and glossy, and that the Elm
-leaf was rough and hairy? The Hornbeam comes
-just between the two: it is too rough to be a
-Beech leaf, and is also too pointed, and it is too
-smooth to be an Elm leaf. Besides, the two
-sides of the Hornbeam leaf meet exactly opposite
-each other on the leaf stalk, and in the Elm the
-one side of the leaf very often joins the stalk
-farther down than the other: the leaf is lopsided.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>The Hornbeam leaves have two rows of teeth
-round the edge, and in autumn they turn yellow,
-and this yellow colour changes into red-brown as
-the winter draws near. In sheltered places the
-leaves will hang on the branches all winter, till
-in spring they are pushed off by the young
-leaf buds.</p>
-
-<p>The Hornbeam has two kinds of flowers, which
-grow in catkins, and both are found on the same
-tree. The stamen catkins (3) come with the young
-leaves early in April, and they grow on those twigs
-which were produced last year. It is not possible
-to mistake the Hornbeam for either the Beech
-or the Elm if you see the flowers, for neither of
-these has hanging catkins like the Hornbeam.
-Each catkin is made up of many green scales
-covering the catkin loosely. These scales are
-broad and oval, and they end in a sharp point.
-Hidden at the foot of each scale lies a thick
-bunch of yellow-headed stamens with no petals
-and no sepals around them. These yellow stamen
-heads end in tufts of fine hairs, and they are
-filled with pollen dust. As soon as this dust
-is ripe the yellow heads burst and scatter it
-over the seed flowers which have been making
-ready to receive it. After this the stamen
-catkins shrivel, and they soon fall from the
-tree.</p>
-
-<p>But there are other Hornbeam flowers, also
-growing in catkins (4) which appear at the end of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-this year&#8217;s young twigs. Each catkin is covered
-with soft, silky spear leaves, and behind every three
-of these narrow leaves there nestles a tiny seed
-with two little horns standing up at the top.
-These silky leaves soon fall off and are replaced
-by others which are very different. These are
-called bracts, and they look like a small hand
-with one long finger and two much shorter fingers.
-They are covered with a network of fine veins,
-and inside the hand sits the fruit (5), a small
-three-sided nut. When you see a bushy, drooping
-cluster of these green leafy bracts, each with
-its nut at the foot, you wonder how any one
-could mistake the Hornbeam for either the Beech
-or the Elm.</p>
-
-<p>You will often see a dainty little bird called
-the hawfinch sitting on the Hornbeam branches
-and eating the nuts.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of this tree is said to be very hard.
-Joiners do not care to work on Hornbeam, as it
-quickly blunts their tools; and some people tell you
-that the name is really Hard-beam, and that we
-have got into a careless habit of calling the tree
-by a wrong name. But there is another tale which
-may be the true one. Long ago, when ploughing
-was done by bullocks in this country, as it is
-to-day in many lands, each pair of bullocks was
-fastened together with a wooden collar called a
-yoke. This yoke was made of Hornbeam because
-of its strength, and the tree might get its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-name because from it was made the beam of wood
-that goes over the horns.</p>
-
-<p>Nowadays the wood is little used except for
-making small things, such as handles of knives,
-and spoons, and cog-wheels.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE VI<br />
-
-
-THE HAZEL</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>There are few of us who think of the Hazel
-as one of our forest trees. We know it as a
-large, straggling bush, with a thicket of leaves
-and branches, among which are hidden delicious
-nuts. But in some places the Hazel has quite
-outgrown the bush stage: in Middlesex there is
-a Hazel tree sixty feet high, with a straight thick
-trunk and many large branches covered luxuriantly
-with leaves.</p>
-
-<p>The Hazel (1) has been known in history for
-many centuries. The Romans wrote that its
-spreading roots did harm to the young vines,
-but they found its supple twigs invaluable for
-tying up the straggling vine shoots.</p>
-
-<p>Scotland is said to have been called Caledonia
-from Cal Dun, which means the hill of Hazel.
-And in Surrey we have the name Haslemere, which
-tells its own story.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate6"><span class="smcap">Plate VI</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_049.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE HAZEL<br />
-
-
-1. Hazel Bush<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray with Nuts</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Catkin</span><br />
-4. Seed Catkins<span class="gap">5. Hazel Nuts</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In damp places beside streams, or on light
-soil close to quarries, or among broken rocky<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-ground, the Hazel thrives, and many are the
-happy afternoons spent by children of all ages
-gathering nuts in the Hazel coppice. This is
-the only tree we have which produces food good
-to eat in its wild state.</p>
-
-<p>You will not find the Hazel difficult to recognise
-at any time of year. Before the month of January
-is over you will notice a pair of long brown caterpillars
-dangling in the wind from many of the Hazel
-twigs: lamb&#8217;s tails, the country children call them,
-but their correct name is Hazel catkins; and like
-those of the Birch tree, they have been hanging on
-the tree all winter, but were so small that you did
-not notice them.</p>
-
-<p>In summer, if you look carefully, you find many
-tiny green stamen catkins growing between the
-foot of the leaf stalk and the branch. These
-green cones grow very, very slowly all autumn
-and winter, and when January is nearly over
-they change into these dangling tails or hanging
-catkins (3), and their tightly-folded scales
-begin to unclose. Behind these scales lie eight
-stamens, each of which has a bright yellow head.
-These yellow heads are filled with fine powder,
-and when ripe they burst, and the fine powder is
-shaken out by the wind. Soon after, the catkin
-turns brown and shrivelled, and before very long
-it falls off; its work for the year is over.</p>
-
-<p>When the snowdrops bloom, in the end of
-January, the other Hazel flowers or seed catkins<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-are ready. They are not easily seen, so you must
-look for them carefully. On each side of the stalk
-you will find a small scale-covered bud (4), and at
-the tip of this bud rises a tuft of crimson threads.
-Inside this scale-covered bud are the seeds, and
-from the top of each seed rise two crimson threads.
-On windy days the fine powder from the yellow
-stamen heads is shaken over these crimson
-threads, which carry it to the young seeds hidden
-beneath the scaly covering. As spring advances
-this crimson tuft disappears and the bud busies
-itself making the seed, which must be ready
-by autumn. The covering of the seed hardens
-like a nut: at first this nut is pale green, but
-in winter it becomes a glossy russet brown.</p>
-
-<p>Inside this nut (5) lies the kernel of the seed,
-and it is this sweet kernel which is the fruit we
-eat. Meantime the scaly leaves, which formed
-the covering of the young bud, have grown much
-larger: they have become tough and leathery, and
-their ends are deeply divided, as if they were torn.
-In the Filbert Hazel, which is a cousin of the
-common Hazel and very like it, these leathery
-coverings conceal the nut. But in the common or
-Cobnut Hazel they form a cup in which the nut
-sits in the same way as the acorn does in its cup.</p>
-
-<p>The leaves (2) of the Hazel appear in early
-spring. They are rounded leaves, sometimes
-slightly heart-shaped, and they have two rows of
-teeth cut round the edge. Each leaf is rough and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
-hairy, and is covered with a network of veins
-which seems to pucker the leaf. At first the
-young leaf stalk and branches are covered with
-fine down, but this soon wears off. Notice how
-many long, straight shoots rise from the ground
-beside the Hazel roots. On these Hazel shoots
-the leaves are placed in two rows on each side of
-the shoot, with the leaves not opposite each other,
-but alternate. The shoots make good baskets,
-and hoops, and hurdles, because they can be so
-easily bent into many shapes without breaking.
-The branches of the Hazel bush have the same
-good qualities, and they are valuable for fishing
-rods and walking-sticks, and such purposes,
-where toughness and elasticity are needed.</p>
-
-<p>The Hazel leaves hang longer on the tree than
-most other leaves. The frost changes their colour
-from a dull grey-green to a pale yellow, but still
-they cling to their stalks till the winter wind strips
-them from the branches.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that Hazel shoots or twigs have the
-power of showing where water is concealed. In
-places where there are no lakes, or rivers, or
-streams near at hand, water is got by digging
-wells deep down into the ground, and so allowing
-the stores which are hidden there to rise to the
-surface. But it is not everywhere that these
-hidden supplies will be found, and as digging a
-well costs a great deal of money, people are unwilling
-to begin the work unless they are likely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-to succeed. So they send for a man who is called
-a diviner, because he divines or guesses where
-water will be found. He walks across the fields
-carrying a Hazel rod in his hand, and when he
-reaches a spot where water lies beneath, the
-Hazel rod changes position in his hand and the
-well is sunk at the spot which the diviner points
-out. So the story goes.</p>
-
-<p>For many generations it was a custom in this
-country to burn Hazel nuts on the night of
-October 31, All-Hallow Eve. Friends would meet
-together late in the evening, and each person
-would place two nuts as near together as possible
-in a clear red fire. The nuts were supposed
-to represent the two friends, and if they burned
-quietly and evenly, then the future was sure to
-be happy; but if they flared angrily or sputtered
-hissingly, especially if they burst with a loud
-report, then misfortune was supposed to follow
-the friends.</p>
-
-<p>Hazel nuts are eagerly devoured by squirrels
-and dormice, and there is one bird, the Nuthatch,
-that is very busy and grows sleek and
-fat when the Hazel fruit is ripe. This bird breaks
-off a nut branch and flies away with it to an old
-oak tree. There he strips off the covering of
-leaves and cleverly places the bare nut in a crevice
-of the rough oak trunk. Then with his strong
-bill he hammers at the shell till it breaks and he
-can get at the nut inside. On still October days<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-in the quiet woods you will hear his bill tap-tapping
-from the trunk of the oak tree.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate7"><span class="smcap">Plate VII</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_055.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE LIME<br />
-
-
-1. Lime Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray with Flowers</span><span class="gap">3. Pink Buds</span><br />
-4. Flower Cluster<span class="gap">5. Fruit with Bract</span></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE VII<br />
-
-THE LIME OR LINDEN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">&#8220;The Lime, a summer home of murmurous wings.&#8221;</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright">&mdash;Tennyson.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p>The Lime or Linden (1) is one of the most
-familiar trees in our large towns. It is very
-hardy, and you find it planted by the side of our
-smoky streets, where it seems to thrive in spite
-of the clouds of sooty dust that cover its delicate
-leaves.</p>
-
-<p>But if you wish to know what a Lime tree
-really looks like at its best, then you must find
-one growing in some country park where there
-is space, and fresh air, and plenty of sunshine;
-then you will see how beautiful a tree it can be.
-The Lime is a tall, stately tree. It has many
-slender branches closely covered with leaves, which
-have each a long stalk. In old trees the branches
-often bend down close to the ground, but the
-sunshine always succeeds in finding its way under
-the Lime tree branches, and it flickers on the
-grass as it never does beneath the Beech tree
-boughs.</p>
-
-<p>In winter the Lime tree is difficult to recognise,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-although there is one feature you may notice: its
-bare stems and twigs are very black against the
-sky, and many of the branches hang so awkwardly
-that they look as if they were dead. But go to the
-park in spring, and at once you will know which
-is the Lime tree. Every little twig is coloured a
-delicate shade of olive green tinged with crimson,
-and bears many small oval buds (3) which are red
-like rubies. In May these ruby buds burst open,
-and their crimson coverings fall to the ground,
-disclosing the pale emerald-green leaf that is
-tightly folded within. The leaves (2) soon open in
-the sunshine, and you see that each is shaped like
-a large pointed heart, and that the two sides of
-the heart are uneven.</p>
-
-<p>The edge of the leaf is cut into sharp teeth,
-and all over it a network of fine veins is spread.
-When the leaf is still young you find tufts of soft,
-downy hairs on the under-side, and at first each
-leaf hangs straight down from its stalk as if it
-had not strength to rise and face the sunlight.
-But they soon raise themselves, and gradually
-their pale green colour darkens, though the Lime
-tree leaf never becomes so dark, nor is it as
-glossy, as the leaf of the Beech tree.</p>
-
-<p>In September the Lime tree leaves turn pale
-yellow: rather a colourless yellow, very different
-from the rich gold and red-brown of the Beech,
-and they fall with the first touch of frost.</p>
-
-<p>You may sometimes find leaves which are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-marked with large black, sooty-looking spots.
-These spots are caused by a tiny insect which
-has made its home on the leaf.</p>
-
-<p>If you sit beneath the branches of the Lime
-on a warm summer day you will hear the constant
-hum of myriads of bees which are buzzing round
-the tree. They are gathering honey from the
-Lime tree flowers, whose delicious perfume is
-scenting the air.</p>
-
-<p>From the spot where next year&#8217;s leaf bud will
-grow there hangs a long stalk; at the end of
-this stalk there droops a cluster of flowers (4), and
-at the base of each flower cluster stands a long
-slender leaf called a bract. This bract looks
-like a pale yellow wing, and is covered all over
-with a network of fine veins.</p>
-
-<p>The flowers have five greeny white petals and
-five pale green sepals. In the centre is a small
-seed-vessel like a tiny pea, and from it there rises
-a slender green pillar which ends in five sticky
-points. Closely surrounding this seed-vessel is
-a ring of many stamens. Each stamen has a
-white stalk with an orange-coloured head, and
-among these stamens lie the drops of sweet juice
-which attract the bees.</p>
-
-<p>The stamen dust is ripe before the sticky
-points of the seed-vessel on the same plant are
-ready for it; but the bees, when they bend down
-to suck the honey juice, brush against the ripe
-stamen heads, and their backs become covered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-with the fine powder. Away they fly to the
-flowers on another Lime tree, and the powder
-will probably be rubbed off on one where the
-seed-vessel is ready to receive it.</p>
-
-<p>When the seed is ripe you see many little downy
-fruit-balls (5), each hanging from a slender stalk.
-In warm countries this seed ripens into a small
-nut which is ground down and made into a kind of
-chocolate. But it never ripens in England.</p>
-
-<p>In some countries there are large forests of
-Lime trees, and the air is filled with the busy
-hum of the bees. The peasants make large holes
-in the tree trunks, and these holes the bees fill
-with honeycomb, which the peasants easily remove
-and sell. This Lime tree honey is much
-prized for its fine flavour.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Lime tree is not hard enough
-for building purposes, but it is greatly in demand
-for carving. It is light and soft, and much of
-the beautiful wood decoration in our churches is
-carved from Lime tree wood. It does not easily
-become worm-eaten as do so many of our harder
-woods.</p>
-
-<p>We read that in old days the soldiers&#8217; shields
-were made of Lime tree wood, as the blow of a
-weapon was deadened when striking it.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate8"><span class="smcap">Plate VIII</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_061.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">THE ELM<br />
-
-
-1. Elm Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Ready Buds</span><span class="gap">4. Flower Spray</span><br />
-5. Stamen Flower enlarged<span class="gap">6. Seed Flower enlarged</span><span class="gap">7. Fruit Clusters and Wing</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The inner bark of the tree has always been
-valuable. From it are made those mats of light
-brown grass which gardeners use to protect
-their delicate plants during winter; and these tails<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-of dried-looking grass with which they tie bunches
-of flowers instead of using string, are also made
-from the Lime tree bark. This inner bark is
-called &#8220;bass&#8221; or &#8220;bast,&#8221; and is chiefly made
-in Russia and Sweden.</p>
-
-<p>It is from this bass or string that the tree gets
-its name, which is not really Lime, but Line or
-Linden, and is so called in other countries. We
-in Britain have got into the bad habit of mispronouncing
-the word. The true Lime tree is a
-cousin of the Orange and Lemon trees, and bears
-a yellow fruit called Limes. But the Linden
-tree is no relation of this Lime tree, and is so
-called because it is the tree from which we get
-gardener&#8217;s dried string or line, and we must remember
-that our popular name is a wrong one,
-and not the true name of the tree.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE VIII<br />
-
-
-THE COMMON ELM AND WYCH OR
-BROAD-LEAVED ELM</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>There are two kinds of Elm which grow
-abundantly in this country, and both are lofty,
-noble trees. The Common Elm (1) you will
-recognise easily, because its rough black trunk
-is clothed right down to the ground with a dense
-mass of brushwood. This brushwood is really<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-a forest of small branches, and shoots, and twigs
-which spring from the Elm tree root; and if you
-separate some of these young shoots and plant
-them alone they will grow into young Elm tree
-saplings.</p>
-
-<p>In winter you will always know the Common
-Elm by its brushwood clothing, and in early
-spring, in March, after there have been a few
-sunny days, you will see tiny green leaf buds
-opening in this brushwood sheaf before the large
-upper branches show any signs of life.</p>
-
-<p>The Common Elm is one of our tallest trees.
-It has a thick rough trunk, on which are many
-large gnarled bosses or knobs. The bark of the
-tree is very rugged and is covered with many
-deep furrows.</p>
-
-<p>The branches of this Elm do not grow gracefully
-in sweeping curves like those of the Ash
-tree; they have a dwarf, zig-zag appearance, and
-often they are twisted and knotted.</p>
-
-<p>The young twigs that grow on these branches
-are short and tiny, a network of little bushy
-sprays growing close to the branch, and their
-bark is downy and corky when it is young, but
-becomes hard as the season advances.</p>
-
-<p>In early spring these tiny twigs bear many
-small scaly buds (3) like beads. These beads
-open very early, before the end of April, and
-from each there bursts a bunch of flowers (4).
-What you notice first in this flower tuft is the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-crowd of reddish stamens with large purple
-heads. But if you gently pull to pieces one
-of these flower bunches, you will find that the
-stamens are not growing loose, but that they
-are held together in groups of five or more, in
-a dark green or purplish vase (5). This vase is
-funnel-shaped, and widens out round the mouth
-into four scallops. The oval seed-vessel (6) is
-at the bottom, hidden from sight. Do not forget
-to notice that in the Elm tree the stamens and
-seed-vessel grow close together in one flower.</p>
-
-<p>The stamens soon shrivel and fall off, and their
-place is taken by bunches of flat green wings (7),
-each with a tiny knob in the centre, which is the
-fruit. These green shields, or wings, serve the
-same purpose as the keys or wings of the Ash
-tree. They are thin and light like paper, and in
-the Common Elm each shield is deeply notched at
-one end, almost to the centre seed.</p>
-
-<p>When the seed is ripe the wind blows these
-bunches of papery shields away from the twigs,
-and they are carried long distances.</p>
-
-<p>The Elm tree seed is almost ripe before the
-leaves (2) begin to sprout. The leaf buds are pink
-and downy, and the young leaves are folded fan-ways
-inside. Each leaf has a short stalk, and is
-small and narrow, with two rows of unequally-sized
-teeth round the edge. These leaves are
-rough and harsh above, with many hairs along
-the centre rib, hairs like those on the Nettle,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
-which is a member of the same family as the
-Elm, but these hairs, though they irritate, do not
-actually sting. In October the leaves turn yellow,
-and after a touch of frost they fall in showers.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes you will notice large black spots
-disfiguring the leaves. These spots are caused
-by a minute plant which makes its home on the
-leaf and in the end destroys it. After the leaves
-have fallen, they lie on the ground till spring
-comes again, then this black plant increases
-rapidly, and soon covers all the leaf, which quickly
-decays.</p>
-
-<p>Cattle love the Elm tree leaves when they are
-green and young, and in some places they are
-stripped from the trees in sackfuls to feed the
-cows.</p>
-
-<p>Many insects make their home on the Elm tree.
-The caterpillar of the large tortoise-shell butterfly
-feeds on the leaves, and there is an insect beetle
-that burrows little tunnels in the wood and loosens
-the bark from the tree. If you pick up some
-pieces of Elm tree wood where a woodman has
-been sawing, you will see curious markings like
-the veins of a skeleton leaf, tunnelled in the wood.
-These are made by a tiny beetle, and are very
-injurious to the tree.</p>
-
-<p>But the beetle has an enemy that comes to the
-tree&#8217;s rescue. Sometimes on a still day if you are
-sitting quietly in the woods, you will hear a gentle
-tap-tapping close beside you. This is the woodpecker,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-a bird which is perched on the rough
-bark of the Elm tree, and with his bill he pecks
-at the tree in search of insects which form his
-favourite meal.</p>
-
-<p>Birds love the Elm trees, as their shade is not
-too dense to shut out the sunshine, and you will
-often find rooks&#8217; nests in the upper branches,
-tossed and swayed by the gales.</p>
-
-<p>The Elm tree is useful for many purposes.
-Farmers plant it in their hedgerows, as grass
-will grow freely above its roots.</p>
-
-<p>In Italy the Elms are trained to carry the
-Vines. The young trees have all their lower
-branches cut off, leaving the bare stem like a
-living pole; round this pole the slender vine is
-twined, and its graceful trails hang in festoons
-from the crown of Elm branches which are left at
-the top of the pole to give shade. In poetry you
-read of the Vine tree wedded to the common
-Elm, which it clasps with its clinging arms.</p>
-
-<p>Elm tree wood is very valuable as timber.
-These rough bosses which grow on the trunk are
-prized by cabinet-makers, who find the wood
-curiously veined and streaked.</p>
-
-<p>The inner lining of the bark is very tough, and
-is made into ropes and garden string or bast, as
-in the Lime tree. And the wood is sought for
-all purposes where durability is needed; it lasts
-well in water, and is much in demand for ship-building.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>The Wych Elm or Broad-leaved Elm resembles
-the Common Elm in many ways, but there are
-several small differences you must note. There is
-no brushwood sheaf clothing the base of the
-Wych Elm trunk; it is bare and rough right
-down to the ground. The leaves are larger and
-much broader, resembling those of the Hazel, and
-the branches of the Wych Elm are long and
-spreading and much more graceful than the
-twisted boughs of its sister Elm.</p>
-
-<p>If you look carefully at the green wings that
-surround the tiny seed of the Wych Elm and
-compare it with those of the Common Elm, you
-will find that the seed lies nearly in the centre of
-the wing, and that the notch which is cut at the
-end of the wing is smaller than the deep notch of
-the Common Elm.</p>
-
-<p>The Wych Elm is far the more graceful of the
-two trees, and it grows much more quickly than
-its rugged sister.</p>
-
-<p>The name Wych is supposed to be Scotch.
-Small pieces of the wood were said to be effective
-as charms against witches, and country dairy-maids
-used to place a tiny bit of this Elm wood
-in the churn so that the witches could not
-prevent the milk from becoming butter!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate9"><span class="smcap">Plate IX</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_069.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">THE ASH<br />
-
-
-1. Ash Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. &#8220;Keys&#8221; or &#8220;Spinners&#8221; Ash Fruit</span><br />
-4. Black Buds<span class="gap">5. Leaf Scars</span><span class="gap">6. Stamen enlarged</span><br />
-7. Seed enlarged<span class="gap">8. Ash Flowers</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE IX<br />
-
-
-THE ASH</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">&#8220;If the oak before the ash,</div>
-<div class="verse">Then you&#8217;ll only have a splash;</div>
-<div class="verse">If the ash before the oak,</div>
-<div class="verse">Then you&#8217;re sure to have a soak.&#8221;</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright">&mdash;Old Saying.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p>If the Oak is well named the King of the woods,
-to the Ash belongs the honour of being called
-Queen, the wood&#8217;s fairest. She is a queen with
-an ancient history. In the dim long ago there
-must have been Ash trees, for we read that the
-great spear of Achilles was an &#8220;ashen spear&#8221;;
-also, that the gods held council under the boughs
-of a great Ash tree: on its highest branches sat
-an eagle; round its root a serpent lay coiled; and
-a tiny squirrel ran up and down the branches
-carrying messages from one to the other.</p>
-
-<p>In much later times the Ash tree was held to
-have magic powers of healing. Sick babies were
-said to be cured if they passed through a cleft
-made in its trunk; and there are many tales of
-men and animals who recovered from illness on
-touching an Ash twig gathered from a tree in
-which a shrew mouse had been buried.</p>
-
-<p>Nowadays we have grown so wise that we
-think differently about these things, and we love
-the Ash tree because of its beauty, and are grateful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-for the many ways in which the wood is useful
-to us.</p>
-
-<p>You should try to find an Ash tree (1) in early
-spring. It is one of the easiest trees to recognise
-before it is clothed in leaves.</p>
-
-<p>The trunk is very straight, and has none of the
-knobs and bosses which grow on the Oak and
-Elm tree trunks. When the Ash tree is still
-young the bark is a pale grey colour&mdash;ash-colour,
-we call it&mdash;and it is very smooth. But as the tree
-grows older the bark cracks into many irregular
-upright ridges, which remind you of the rimples
-left by the waves on a sandy sea-shore.</p>
-
-<p>At first the lower branches grow straight out
-from the trunk, but soon they curve gracefully
-downwards; then they rise again, and the tips
-point upward toward the sky.</p>
-
-<p>Notice the tips of these branches&mdash;they are quite
-different from all other tree tips. In an Ash tree
-you will not see a network of delicate branching
-twigs outlined against the sky. Each branch
-ends in a stout pale grey twig, which is slightly
-flattened at the tip, as if it had been pinched
-between two fingers when still soft. Beyond this
-flattened tip you see two fat black buds (4), and
-there are smaller black buds at the sides of the twig.
-It is these curious black buds at the tips and on
-the sides of the twig which will make it easy for
-you to distinguish the Ash tree from every other.</p>
-
-<p>Long after the other trees have put on their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
-young green leaves the Ash tree stands bare and
-leafless, waiting till the frost and cold winds are
-gone before its black buds will unfold. Then out
-it comes, flowers first. The sooty buds at the
-sides of the twig open, and you see that they
-have dark brown linings, and that in the middle
-of each bud there lies a thick bunch of purple
-stamen heads (6), crowded together like grains
-of purple corn; these are the Ash tree flowers (8).</p>
-
-<p>Ash tree flowers have no petals and no sepals;
-they have only a green, bottle-shaped seed-vessel
-(7), which stands between two stamens with pale
-green stalks and fat purple-coloured heads. Sometimes
-there is not even a seed-vessel; you may
-find nothing but a crowded bunch of purply
-stamens. This latter kind of Ash tree cannot
-produce any fruit.</p>
-
-<p>In a few weeks these stamens shrivel and the
-purple heads fall off. The seed-vessels, too, become
-very different. They change into long flat
-green wings, which hang each from its own stalk
-in a cluster at the end or from the side of the
-branch. These silky green wings are called
-&#8220;keys&#8221; (3), or in some places, &#8220;spinners&#8221;; at one
-end they are notched, and at the other, close to
-the stalk, lies the fruit. Long after the Ash tree
-leaves are withered and fallen you can see these
-bunches of &#8220;keys,&#8221; grown brown and shrivelled,
-still clinging to the branches. When wintry
-weather comes they are torn off by the wind, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-the winged seed, spinning round and round in the
-air, is carried a long distance.</p>
-
-<p>You will see Ash trees growing high up on
-rocky precipices, where only the birds or the
-wind could have left the seed.</p>
-
-<p>By the month of May, when the keys of the Ash
-are fully formed, the green leaves (2) begin to
-appear. They are beautiful feathery leaves, full of
-lightness, and grace, and strength. Each leaf is
-made up of from four to eleven pairs of leaflets,
-shaped like a lance, with toothed edges, and these
-are placed opposite each other on a central stalk:
-there is nearly always a single leaflet at the end.
-The leaves are pale green, and when they first
-open you see a soft browny down on the leaf ribs,
-but this soon wears off. They droop gracefully
-from the twigs, which you can now see require
-to be stout and strong to carry such large wind-tossed
-feathers.</p>
-
-<p>But the Ash tree leaves are among the first to
-fall. Whenever the cold winds come they wither,
-and a single night of frost will strew them in
-hundreds on the ground. Where the leaf stalk
-joined the twig you will see a curious scar (5)
-shaped like a horse-shoe, and next year a black
-bud will appear inside this scar. The Ash tree
-will live for several hundred years. It is not
-fully grown up till it is forty or fifty years old, and
-till then you will not find any bunches of keys,
-with their seeds, growing on the tree.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate10"><span class="smcap">Plate X</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_075.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE FIELD MAPLE<br />
-
-
-1. Field Maple in Autumn<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><br />
-3. Flower Spike<span class="gap">4. Fruit</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>Notice that the ground beneath the branches
-of the Ash tree is usually bare. Many of its roots
-spread out to a great distance close below the
-surface, and they are so greedy, and require so
-much nourishment for the tree, that there is none
-left for other plants. Some farmers think that
-the raindrops which drip from the feathery Ash
-leaves are hurtful to other plants, so they are
-unwilling to plant Ash trees in their fields and
-hedgerows.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Ash is very valuable, and will
-bring as much money as that of the Oak or Elm.
-It is used for all kinds of work&mdash;for furniture and
-for ship-building, and for making wheels and poles,
-and it lasts well and does not readily split.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE X<br />
-
-
-THE FIELD MAPLE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>There are many mistakes made in naming the
-Maple and Plane trees. The Sycamore or False
-Plane tree, the Oriental Plane, and the Field
-Maple are often called wrongly by each other&#8217;s
-names. So you must note carefully the differences
-between them. The Sycamore and the
-Field Maple are cousins, but the Oriental Plane
-is not even a distant relation of these, and only
-resembles them in the shape of its leaves. It is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-not really difficult to distinguish one from the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>The Field Maple (1) is nearly always a small
-tree which you find growing in the hedgerows,
-where it is more like a large bush than a tree.
-You rarely find it standing alone in a wide park,
-bearing great branches heavily clothed with leaves,
-as you find the Sycamore or Great Maple. In
-England it is a common hedgerow tree, but it is
-not native to Scotland and is seldom found there.</p>
-
-<p>Early in spring you find the long slender shoots
-covered with buds, from which burst small leaves
-of a beautiful bright crimson colour. These leaves
-(2) are toothed round the edges and are shaped
-like a hand with five short fingers; in the
-Field Maple the fingers are blunt at the points,
-not sharp as are those of the Sycamore and of
-the Oriental Plane.</p>
-
-<p>As the spring advances those pretty crimson
-leaves become dark green above and a light
-green on the under-side, and they lose the soft
-down which covered them, but even when
-fully out they are never so large as those of the
-Sycamore. When autumn draws near, with its
-cold winds and frosty nights, the Field Maple
-leaves change colour once more and become
-brilliant yellow; you will see them shining in the
-hedgerows like a bush of gold.</p>
-
-<p>Many of the leaves are disfigured by small red
-spots, and if you look at one of these spots with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-a magnifying-glass you will see that is caused
-by a tiny insect which has made this little red
-nest in which to lay its eggs.</p>
-
-<p>The leaves of the Field Maple, like those of
-the Sycamore, are placed opposite each other on
-the twig; in the Oriental Plane they grow alternately,
-one a little way above the other on opposite
-sides of the spray. There is a great deal of
-sugary juice in Maple leaves, and cattle love to
-eat them. In some countries they are stripped
-from the trees and kept for winter fodder for
-the cows.</p>
-
-<p>The bark of the Field Maple is noted for its
-strange corky nature and its curious growth. It
-grows in upright ridges, deeply furrowed, which
-look as if they could easily be broken off. In the
-Oriental Plane the bark is quite smooth, and it
-peels off in large flakes, leaving patches of different
-colours on the tree trunk.</p>
-
-<p>In April, when the leaves are still unfolding,
-the Field Maple brings out its spikes of flowers
-(3). You will at once notice that these flower
-clusters stand erect, and do not droop in pointed
-tassels like those of the Sycamore. Now, look
-at the flowers in an Oriental Plane, and you will
-discover that they bear no resemblance either to
-those of the Sycamore or of the Field Maple,
-with which it is often confused. They do not
-even grow in clusters, but in round, prickly balls
-which are threaded on a slender green chain.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>The flowers of the Field Maple are what
-botanists call &#8220;perfect flowers,&#8221; which means
-that each flower has all its parts complete within
-itself. In every bloom you will find five narrow
-green sepals and five narrow green petals; within
-the ring of petals stand eight yellow-headed
-stamens, and seated in the centre of the flower
-is a seed-vessel with a small wing at each side
-and with two curly horns standing up at the top.
-There is plenty of honey juice hidden among these
-stamens, and the bees buzz all day long around
-the Maple blossoms.</p>
-
-<p>As the season advances, the petals and sepals
-and stamens fall off, but the seed-vessel grows
-larger and larger, till you find bunches of winged
-seeds (4) standing erect where the flowers once
-grew.</p>
-
-<p>Notice that in this tree the seeds are close
-together beside the stalk, and that the wings
-stand straight out from the seeds and are not
-bent into the shape of the letter U, as they are
-in the Sycamore. These bunches of winged seeds
-are frequently tinged with bright crimson, and
-are very attractive among the glossy green leaves.</p>
-
-<p>In autumn the strong winds strip them from
-their stalks and the wings bear the seed far
-from the parent tree. Some botanists tell us
-that these seeds require to lie in the ground for
-more than a year before they begin to grow.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate11"><span class="smcap">Plate XI</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_081.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE SYCAMORE<br />
-
-1. Sycamore Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Fat Bud</span><br />
-4. Flower Spike<span class="gap">5. Winged Fruit</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Field Maple is full of sugary sap, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-nothing is made of it in this country, as the trees
-do not yield enough to make it worth while. But
-in Canada the sap is drawn from the trees and
-made into sugar. I am sure you must have seen
-the brown blocks of Maple sugar in the confectioners&#8217;
-windows.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Field Maple is too small to
-be of much use, but it is strangely and beautifully
-marked and veined with spots and stripes like
-the skin of a tiger or panther, and is eagerly
-bought for decorative purposes. The knots that
-grow on the roots were said to be worth their
-weight in gold, and in old history books you
-read that the thrones of great kings were made
-of Maple. Nowadays the wood is largely used
-for making small articles such as plates, and
-cups, and trays, and it can be cut so thin without
-breaking that the light may be seen through it.</p>
-
-<p>In France the long slender Maple shoots are
-used for coachmen&#8217;s whips.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XI<br />
-
-
-THE SYCAMORE, OR GREAT MAPLE,
-OR MOCK PLANE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>There is a good deal of confusion in people&#8217;s
-minds as to the right name for this familiar tree.
-Sycamore is not an English word, but is made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-from a Greek word meaning fig or mulberry. The
-tree has been so called because many years ago
-people believed that it was a relation of the fig
-tree which grows so abundantly by the roadside in
-Palestine. The leaves are a little alike, but there
-is no real resemblance between our English
-Great Maple and the Eastern Sycamore: the
-name has been given by mistake.</p>
-
-<p>Another mistaken name given to this tree is
-Plane tree. The Great Maple is only a mock
-Plane tree or false Plane tree; it is not even a
-relation of the real Plane any more than it is a
-relation of the Fig or Sycamore. But mistakes
-even in names are very difficult to correct, and
-in many places, particularly in Scotland, you will
-find that Sycamore (1) or Plane tree is the name
-usually given to the Great Maple.</p>
-
-<p>It is a large heavy tree, with a great central
-trunk covered with a gnarled bark which peels
-off in flakes, leaving patches of different shades.
-From every side of this central trunk there grow
-stout branches covered with masses of thick
-foliage, the thickest and heaviest foliage of any
-British tree.</p>
-
-<p>If you look at the Sycamore tree as it stands
-in an open field, or in a hedgerow, with grass
-growing close to its very trunk, I think what
-will strike you most is how evenly it has grown
-all round. There are so many trees that grow
-all to one side if they are much exposed to a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-cold wind. Look at the Beech, or the Hawthorn,
-or the Elm on the crest of a ridge, and you
-will at once know from which direction the
-wind blows strongest and coldest, by seeing how
-the tree puts out all its best branches on the
-sheltered side. But the Sycamore tree is indifferent
-to cold, or even to the salt sea winds; it
-sends out its branches equally on every side, and
-there is always a thick roof of leaves at the top.</p>
-
-<p>The Sycamore tree prefers a dry soil, in which
-it grows very quickly; and it will not die if transplanted.</p>
-
-<p>In early spring the twigs bear many large fat
-buds (3), which are covered with soft downy pink
-scales. The Horse Chestnut is the only other
-tree which bears such large buds, but they are
-dark and very sticky.</p>
-
-<p>In country places the children call the largest
-buds at the end of the Sycamore twig &#8220;cocks,&#8221;
-and the smaller buds which grow along the sides
-they call &#8220;hens.&#8221; When these buds open early
-in May you see how beautifully the leaves are
-folded fan-ways inside. Each leaf (2) is shaped
-like a large hand with five bluntly-pointed fingers;
-the edges are coarsely toothed, and the leaf is
-dark green above and a paler green underneath.
-They grow on long stalks, which are a reddish
-pink colour so long as the leaves are young,
-and each stalk is scooped into a hollow at the
-end, so that it may fit closely to the twig.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>These leaves are not placed alternately on
-opposite sides of the branch, as in the Beech or
-Elm: they grow in clumps, or bouquets, and
-each pair of leaves is placed cross-ways to the
-pair above. Those that come out first have long
-stalks and are the largest; then the second pair
-is smaller, and the third pair smaller still, till
-the bouquet is finished with two tiny leaves in
-the centre.</p>
-
-<p>Notice that the leaves of the Sycamore are
-often marked with sticky drops. By old writers
-these drops are called honey-dew. It is believed
-that the sap of the Sycamore is sugary, and some
-of this sugary juice escapes through the leaf
-pores to the surface. These handsome leaves
-are often spotted with small black dots, which
-are caused by a tiny plant. This plant makes
-its home on the Sycamore leaf, and unknowingly
-disfigures its kind host.</p>
-
-<p>Before the leaves are quite out the flowers
-appear. They grow in drooping spikes (4), or
-large tassels of a pale yellowish green colour.
-Each tassel is made up of many separate flowers,
-and most of these flowers have a calyx with five to
-twelve narrow strap-shaped sepals, and a corolla
-of the same number of yellow-green petals.
-There is also a ring of slender stamens standing
-round a flat green cushion or disc. In the centre
-sits the seed-vessel, which has two curved horns at
-the top. But in the flower tassel you may also<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-find flowers in which some of the parts are awanting:
-one flower will have stamens, but no seed-vessel,
-and its neighbour will have a seed-vessel
-and no stamens, while in a third the petals may be
-awanting. You must examine each flower till you
-find one which is perfect. These Sycamore flowers
-contain much honey, nearly as much as those of
-the Lime tree; and the bees are glad to hover
-round the tree flowers, which blossom long before
-those in the meadow are open.</p>
-
-<p>After the flowers are withered the seed (5)
-develops wings like the Ash and the Elm. But
-these wings are very different from those of any
-other tree. They are shaped like the letter U,
-with the two seeds at the bottom of the letter
-where it joins the stalk. Each seed is like a
-small pea, and is snugly packed in a horny case
-lined with the softest and silkiest down. When it
-is ripe the wind blows the winged seeds from the
-tree and carries them a long way. They fall into
-the ground, where the horny case prevents the
-young seed from rotting during the cold winter
-months before it is time for it to begin to sprout.
-Then when spring comes the baby seed bursts its
-covering and sends up two tiny green ribbon
-leaves which are the beginning of a new Sycamore
-tree. The wings of the Sycamore seed
-are beautifully tinged with pink.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Sycamore or Great Maple is
-white and very soft, but it is closely grained.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-Sometimes you see big knobs on the tree trunk
-where a branch has died or been broken off, and
-cabinet-makers prize these knobs, as the wood is
-very curiously marked with beautiful veins and
-streaks. Maple wood will polish as smooth as
-satin, and the backs of violins are often made of
-it. In old books we read of table-tops that were
-made of curiously marked pieces of Maple, and
-it is told that more than eight hundred pounds
-was given for one of these Maple tables.</p>
-
-<p>In Scotland the Sycamore tree was often called
-the dool tree, or tree of mourning, because the
-nobles used to hang disobedient servants or
-vanquished foes on its strong branches; and at
-Cassilis, in Ayrshire, there is a Sycamore tree
-which is well known to have been used for this
-cruel purpose.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XII<br />
-
-
-THE ORIENTAL PLANE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>There are two kinds of Plane tree which have
-come to us as strangers from foreign lands and
-have taken kindly to our cold climate and biting
-winds. These are the Oriental or Eastern Plane
-and the Occidental or Western Plane. The differences
-between them are not great, and the one
-which you will most easily remember is, that in
-the Oriental Plane the leaf stalk is green, whereas<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-in the Occidental Plane tree it is purply red. We
-owe a special debt of gratitude to these Plane
-trees because they add beauty to so many of the
-dingy streets and squares in our big cities.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate12"><span class="smcap">Plate XII</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_089.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE ORIENTAL PLANE TREE<br />
-
-1. Oriental Plane Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Flower Balls</span><br />
-4. Seed Flower Balls<span class="gap">5. Fruit</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The trunk of the Oriental Plane (1) is very
-smooth, and is usually ash-grey in colour; sometimes
-it is a very dark green. The outer layer
-of this trunk peels off in flakes, leaving large
-patches of greenish yellow, and these give the tree
-a curious speckled appearance. It is a tall, handsome
-tree, and if you look at it from a distance
-you see that the broad leaves group themselves
-into large masses with a wide space between each
-mass. This you can only see in a full-grown tree,
-and such trees are rarely met with in our dusty
-towns.</p>
-
-<p>On account of its leaves the Oriental Plane tree
-is frequently confused with the Sycamore, so
-you must notice carefully wherein they differ.
-The leaves (2) of the Oriental Plane are shaped
-like a hand with five sharply-pointed fingers, and
-each finger is cut all round into sharp teeth. The
-leaves are very smooth, and light, and fine, and
-are as thin as paper. They will lie quite flat
-if you lay them on a table. Each leaf is placed
-alternately with its neighbour on the twig, the
-second leaf growing on the opposite side of
-the twig, but a little further up than the first
-leaf. In the Sycamore you remember that the
-leaves grow in pairs placed exactly opposite each<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-other, and that the second pair is always placed
-cross-ways to the first pair? These Oriental
-Plane leaves are so smooth that the rain easily
-washes all dust and soot from them, and this is
-why this tree manages to live in a city better
-than those which have crinkled, or hairy, or
-sticky leaves, which catch and keep the choking
-dust.</p>
-
-<p>In most trees the leaf buds are to be found
-growing between the base of the leaf stem and
-the twig which supports it. You will find no
-trace of such buds in the Oriental Plane; they
-are carefully hidden, and are tenderly protected
-in a marvellous way.</p>
-
-<p>You see that the base of the leaf stalk is considerably
-swollen, and that round it there is a
-line? If you gently pull the leaf, it will come apart
-from the twig at this line, and then you will discover
-that the swollen part of the leaf stalk is
-hollow, and is fitted like a cap over the tiny leaf
-bud, which is cosily sheltered within. This baby
-leaf bud is very sensitive to cold, and has many
-wrappings as well as the leaf cap. Its outer case
-is lined with sticky gum, which keeps out any
-damp; then come many small scales covered with
-soft fur, and inside these lie the tiny leaves,
-wrapped in a quilt of soft, silky down. This silky
-down is golden-brown in colour, and it remains
-on the young leaf till it is quite grown up. Sometimes
-the young buds are tempted by bright<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-sunshine to throw off their winter coverings too
-soon. Then if biting frost comes they all die, and
-the tree will bear no more buds that year. The
-Plane tree gets its name from a Greek word
-which means a shield, and this name was given
-because its broad, flat leaves cast a very welcome
-shade in hot Eastern lands.</p>
-
-<p>In winter it is easy to recognize the Oriental
-Plane by its curious seeds. Hanging on the bare
-branches are strings of round bristly fruit-balls (5),
-three or four, or even five, threaded like large
-beads on a long slender chain. There are no
-seed balls such as these on the Sycamore tree,
-nor on its cousin the Field Maple.</p>
-
-<p>These seed balls are very interesting. Early
-in spring you see them dangling in the air, and
-you must pluck one of the green chains and
-examine its round beads. In one ball are grouped
-together bunches of purple stamens (3), which
-have a few pointed, dry scales at the base of
-each group. As soon as these stamens are ripe
-and their pollen dust has been blown away, these
-balls shrivel and fall off. But close beside them,
-on a similar green chain, are dangling the seed
-balls (4). Inside these balls there is a soft green
-cushion, and all over this cushion are stuck small
-green seeds shaped like pears, each with a tiny
-point like a stalk standing up at the top. After
-the stamen dust has fallen on these seeds they
-enlarge into a small hard nut, and a tuft of bristly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-down grows up from the base of each seed. The
-ball becomes a dark brown colour, and it dangles
-all winter on the tree; then in spring, when the
-leaves are ready to burst their coverings, these
-brown balls fall to the ground and the dry seeds
-are blown away, each seed floating in the air
-by the aid of its bristly down.</p>
-
-<p>In America these Eastern and Western Plane
-trees are called Button trees, because the seed
-balls resemble old-fashioned buttons.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Oriental Plane is used by
-piano-makers, coach-builders, and cabinet-makers.
-It is a light brown colour, and is said to be very
-tough.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XIII<br />
-
-
-THE WHITE POPLAR OR ABELE TREE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the old Greek legends we read that Hercules
-won a victory over Kakos on Mount Aventine.
-On the mountain grew a thick grove of Poplar
-trees, and Hercules, overjoyed with his triumph,
-bound a branch of the graceful leaves around
-his brow as a sign of victory. Soon afterwards
-he went down into the infernal regions, the place
-of tears and gloom, and when he came back to
-earth it was seen that the upper side of his leafy
-garland was darkened with the smoke of Hades,
-but that the under-side of the leaves had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
-washed silver white with the sweat which streamed
-from his brow. Ever since that day the leaves
-of the Aventine Poplar grow white on the under-side,
-and in course of time its seeds were brought
-by travellers to Britain, and the tree has taken
-kindly to our less sunny land. So the tale runs.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"> <a id="plate13"><span class="smcap">Plate XIII</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_095.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE WHITE POPLAR<br />
-
-1. White Poplar or Abele Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><br />
-3. Seed Catkin<span class="gap">4. Stamen Catkin</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is by these dark green leaves with their thick
-white lining that you will always know the White
-Poplar or Abele tree (1), and when you learn how
-many relations it has, and how closely they resemble
-each other, you will be glad to have this
-marked distinction by which you may easily know
-this member of the family.</p>
-
-<p>The Poplar, like the Willows, prefers to grow
-in damp places. The most perfect trees are found
-in meadows close to a river. In France the
-people plant them along the river banks, and
-from far away you can trace the windings of the
-water by the tall Poplar spires which edge its
-banks.</p>
-
-<p>The Poplars are very fast-growing trees; they
-will shoot up to a great height in the life-time of
-a man, and for this reason they are often planted
-where a screen is quickly required. The lower
-part of the trunk is dark and is deeply furrowed,
-but the upper is a dingy yellow colour, and on it
-there are many black streaks.</p>
-
-<p>Early in March the White Poplar begins to
-flower. It is one of the catkin-bearing trees, and
-high on the upper branches there dance and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-dangle long slender woolly tails of a purplish red
-colour. These are the stamen catkins (4), and
-you must pick one to pieces and see how beautifully
-it is made.</p>
-
-<p>The stamens are grouped together in little
-bunches of from eight to thirty on a round disc,
-and at the foot of this disc, on one side, rises a
-scale which is green on the lower half and reddish
-brown on the upper half. This scale is deeply
-and irregularly toothed all round the edge, and
-is surrounded with fine silk which stands up
-like a fan. These bunches of stamens are placed
-all round the catkin tail, with the scales nearly
-covering the purple stamen heads. As soon as
-the pollen dust in the stamen heads is ripe and
-the wind has shaken it out of their dust-bags, the
-catkin shrivels and falls to the ground. You will
-find the ground strewn with them in early spring.</p>
-
-<p>But the White Poplar has another catkin
-flower which bears the seeds, and this flower
-grows on a separate tree. These seed catkins (3)
-are stouter and shorter, and are not nearly so
-noticeable as the long stamen catkins. The
-green seed-vessel sits in a tiny cup, and on the
-top of the seed you see a cross of four yellow rays.
-On one side of the cup rises a scale which is
-brown at the upper edge and is fringed with down
-as in the stamen catkin. The wind brings the
-stamen dust to the four yellow rays on the top
-of the little seed-vessel, but if there should be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-no stamen-bearing trees growing near, then the
-White Poplar can produce no new seeds; it
-remains barren.</p>
-
-<p>The leaves (2) of the White Poplar are triangular
-in shape and are deeply jagged all round. When
-in bud the sides of the leaf are rolled towards the
-centre, so that the under-side of the leaf, with its
-thick white lining, is turned outward. The young
-branches and buds are also thickly covered with
-fine white down.</p>
-
-<p>The Poplar leaves never seem to be still; they
-dance and sparkle in the sunshine, and even on
-quiet days you will see them fluttering. In
-autumn these leaves turn golden yellow before
-they fall.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the White Poplar is too quickly
-grown to be very durable. It is largely used for
-making children&#8217;s toys, because it does not readily
-split when nails are driven into it. It will not
-burn easily, and for this reason it makes good
-floors for dwelling-houses.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the White Poplar or Abele tree there
-are two other Poplars which are fairly common in
-this country. One is the Lombardy Poplar, which
-grows tall and slender like a church spire; its
-branches rise upward like the flame of a torch, and
-the tree trunk is clothed to the very ground with
-withered branches, which never spread outwards,
-but grow close to the main stem. There is no
-difficulty in recognising the Lombardy Poplar.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>The Black Poplar is also common in many parts
-of Britain. Its leaves are not lined with white;
-they are heart-shaped, with no jagged edges, but
-with dainty little teeth cut evenly all round. The
-heads of the stamens, which grow in groups on
-the catkin tail, are very dark purple, and they hang
-from the end of twigs, which are rough with the
-scars of last year&#8217;s leaves.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XIV<br />
-
-
-THE ASPEN</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="indent">&#8220;Variable as the shade</div>
-<div class="verse">By the light, quivering aspen made.&#8221;</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright">&mdash;Scott.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p>The Aspen (1) is a member of the Poplar
-family, and in many ways it resembles its cousins.
-But you will always know an Aspen tree by
-its leaves (2). These are never still unless when
-a storm is brooding and the air is perfectly
-calm; at all other times they shake and quiver
-incessantly, and you can hear the gentle rustle
-they make as each leaf rubs against its neighbour.
-In the Scottish Highlands the country
-people tell you that the Aspen trembles because
-at the Crucifixion the cross of Christ was made
-of Aspen, and the tree must always shudder at
-the recollection of the cruel purpose it served.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate14"><span class="smcap">Plate XIV</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_101.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE ASPEN<br />
-
-
-1. Aspen Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><br />
-3. Stamen Catkins<span class="gap">4. Seed Catkin</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Aspen is usually found growing in copses,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-or in meadow lands, where it flourishes best in
-a damp soil; but it is also found on mountain
-ground, and is very common in the north of
-Scotland. It is not a long-lived tree: the heart
-of it begins to decay after fifty or sixty years,
-just at the age when many of our most familiar
-trees are at their finest. The wood is very soft,
-and is of little use either for building or for
-manufacturing purposes; but it is beautifully
-white, and sculptors use it for decorative carving;
-also many of the wooden blocks required by
-engravers for printing are made of Aspen wood.</p>
-
-<p>The Aspen is one of our catkin-bearing trees.
-Early in spring you will see dangling on the
-branches long fluffy tails, which you must pluck
-and examine carefully. There are two kinds of
-flowering catkins on the Aspen, and both kinds
-may be found growing on the same tree. Sometimes
-you find them close beside each other on
-the same branch.</p>
-
-<p>In the stamen catkin (3) you see many bunches
-of tiny stamens with bluey-purple heads: these
-bunches are dotted all over the catkin tail, and
-each stamen bunch is nearly hidden by a large
-scale which rises at one side. This scale is green
-in the lower half and pale brown in the upper half,
-and its edges are cut into deep jagged points.
-This jagged scale lies above the stamen bunch,
-so that you can just see their heads appearing
-under the torn edge of the scale. Each stamen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-is surrounded by a mass of soft grey woolly
-down, which makes all the catkin look fluffy
-and silky.</p>
-
-<p>The seed catkin (4) of the Aspen looks much
-the same as the stamen catkin; it is a long, dangling
-fat tail, covered with fluffy grey down; but it
-has no stamens. This catkin bears the seed-vessels,
-and each seed-vessel resembles a small
-green pea sitting in a tiny green cup. This pea
-splits open at the top, and you see four pale pink
-points rising from the opening. These points are
-waiting for the stamen dust to reach them, and as
-soon as that happens they shrivel and disappear;
-then the seed busies itself in preparing the new
-plant. Above each green seed-vessel there stands
-a scale with the edge cut into large torn-looking
-points. These scales nearly cover the seed-vessel,
-and they look like brown splashes on
-the bed of soft fluffy down.</p>
-
-<p>When the seeds are ripe the catkins fall from
-the tree; the seeds separate from the tail, and
-the wind blows them a long distance by the aid
-of the fluffy down which surrounds each seed.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate15"><span class="smcap">Plate XV</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_105.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE WHITE WILLOW<br />
-
-1. White Willow Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Pussy Buds</span><br />
-4. Stamen Catkin<span class="gap">5. Seed Catkin</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Aspen leaves (2) are very dainty and pretty.
-Each leaf grows at the end of a long slender
-stalk which is flattened like a ribbon, and is
-placed edge-ways to the twig. The stalk is
-not strong enough to hold the leaf upright, so
-it droops, unless when the breeze lifts it in the
-air, and then you hear a constant rustle-rustle,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-as if the leaves were whispering to each other.
-These Aspen leaves are nearly round, and they
-have evenly-cut teeth on the edges. They are
-rather small and are dark in colour, and there
-is no white lining underneath except the soft
-down which you often find on very young leaves,
-and which soon disappears.</p>
-
-<p>Through the grass beside its root the Aspen
-sends up a great many young shoots which are
-called suckers. The leaves on these young
-suckers are heart-shaped, and the edges are quite
-smooth, without any teeth.</p>
-
-<p>Cattle are very fond of these young leaves, so
-are deer, and goats, and even the beaver. In
-some places people strip the Aspen leaves from
-the trees and give them to the cattle, which eat
-them greedily.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XV<br />
-
-
-THE WHITE WILLOW</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>To distinguish different members of the Willow
-family is very difficult. It contains many brothers
-and sisters who are so much alike that you would
-require to study nothing but willows for many a
-day if you wished to know each from the other.</p>
-
-<p>In this book are described three different
-Willows. The first is a lofty tree with a thick
-trunk and spreading branches; the second is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
-usually a bushy mass of slender twigs bending
-over the river bed; and the third is a small
-creeping shrub which twines itself among the
-roots of the heather, and carpets the ground with
-masses of silky down. And I think if you know
-well these three kinds of Willow, you should be
-able to group the other members of the family
-around them.</p>
-
-<p>The White Willow (1) is the name given to the
-largest Willow tree, and very beautiful it is in
-early spring when the leaves unfold. It has a
-thick trunk covered with rough, rugged bark, and
-it sends out large branches, from which grow many
-smooth, slender twigs. The leaves (2) appear
-about the middle of May, long narrow leaves
-which taper to a point, and from a distance you
-would think that the edges were quite smooth.
-But when you pick a leaf you find that there are
-dainty little teeth cut all round the edge. These
-narrow leaves are covered on both sides with a
-silky grey down; this gives them a pale, silvery-grey
-colour, and from a distance you can easily
-recognise a White Willow tree by the glistening
-of this beautiful grey foliage, so different from the
-vivid young green of the Larch and the yellow-green
-of the Limes and Sycamores.</p>
-
-<p>The White Willow produces two kinds of
-flowers, and these grow in catkins on different
-trees. The stamen catkins are the prettiest,
-and they appear about the same time as the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-young leaves. At first these stamen catkins are
-small egg-shaped buds, closely covered with silky
-grey down&mdash;pussy buds (3) the children call them;
-but they open very quickly, and in a few days you
-will see, dropping from the branches, small green
-catkins which curl slightly like caterpillars. Each
-catkin is covered with closely-shut scales, and by
-the time the leaves are out the scales of these
-stamen catkins unclose (4). Behind each scale
-there rises a pair of stamens on long slender stalks.
-These stamen stalks are hairy on the lower half,
-and so are the catkin scales. The heads of the
-stamens are sometimes tinged with red, and between
-each pair of stamens there lies a honey bag.
-Notice how constantly the bees are heard buzzing
-among the Willow branches. When the stamen
-heads are ripe they burst open, and the fine dust
-inside is carried by the wind to a Willow tree, on
-which the seed catkins grow.</p>
-
-<p>These seed catkins (5) are covered with greenish
-scales, which are tightly pressed together at first.
-But in the warm spring sunshine the scales unclose,
-and from the foot of each scale rises a
-small green pear-shaped seed-vessel which has two
-tiny straps standing up at the top. The wind
-wafts the stamen dust to the tree, and some of
-it falls on these two small straps, which act as
-messengers and carry the dust down to the inside
-of the seed-vessel, where the plant makes ready
-the new seed. Unless you have a seed-bearing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
-tree and a stamen-bearing tree growing within
-reach of each other, you cannot have any new
-seeds; but it is possible to increase the number of
-Willow trees by cutting off branches and planting
-them in a particular way in the ground, when they
-will send out roots and grow.</p>
-
-<p>There are two other kinds of White Willow
-which are found nearly as frequently as the one
-I have just described, and neither is difficult to
-recognise. The Golden Willow is the name
-usually given to one, on account of its twigs, which
-are a bright shade of yellow-green, and these
-golden twigs are very noticeable in winter beside
-the dark branches of the Elms and Beeches. In
-this Willow the stamens and scales of the dust-producing
-catkins are the colour of a canary&#8217;s
-feathers, and in the spring sunshine they glisten
-like gold. This is the loveliest of all the Willow
-trees.</p>
-
-<p>The third White Willow is known as the Crack
-Willow, because the branches are very easily
-broken; a knock will snap them from the tree
-trunk. If ever you try to gather a twig from
-other Willow trees, you will find how difficult it
-is to separate it from the branch. The thin green
-peel, with the leaves clinging to it, comes away
-in your hand, leaving the bare white twig still
-clinging to the branch, and without a knife you
-will scarcely force them apart. But the twigs
-of the Crack Willow may be snapped across<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-easily, and the large branches are readily broken
-on a windy night.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate16"><span class="smcap">Plate XVI</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_111.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE GOAT WILLOW<br />
-
-
-1. Goat Willow or Sallow Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Pussy Buds</span><br />
-4. Stamen Catkins<span class="gap">5. Seed Catkins</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The wood of the White and of the Golden
-Willow is valuable, and is much used by builders
-for floors and rafters. Coopers say it makes
-excellent casks, and many of our best cricket bats
-are made from Willow wood. When straw is
-scarce people are said to make hats from Willow
-sprays. They gather the small branches and
-split them into long, thin strips, and these are
-woven into fine plaits, which are then joined
-together.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XVI<br />
-
-
-THE GOAT WILLOW OR SALLOW</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">&#8220;In Rome upon Palm Sunday</div>
-<div class="indent1">They bear true palms,</div>
-<div class="verse">The cardinals bow reverently</div>
-<div class="indent1">And sing old psalms.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Elsewhere these psalms are sung</div>
-<div class="indent1">Beneath the olive branches,</div>
-<div class="verse">The holly-bush supplies their place</div>
-<div class="indent1">Amid the avalanches.&#8221;</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p>The second Willow or group of Willows you
-should learn about is the most difficult of all.
-In it there are many different varieties, and you
-would require to plant one of each kind in your
-garden, as a gentleman in England has done,
-and study them carefully for many years to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-discover the points wherein each Willow differs
-from the other.</p>
-
-<p>Though the Goat Willow or Sallow (1) sometimes
-grows into a tall tree, it is more often seen
-as a bush&mdash;a bush with a short, rough stem, which
-does not rise far above the ground, and which
-sends up many tall, slender branches, covered
-with smooth, purplish brown peel or skin. Early
-in March, before the snowdrops have withered,
-you will find the Goat Willow in every hedge
-and coppice bursting into scaly brown buds. It
-is one of our earliest trees, and after a few days
-of warm sunshine the brown scales unclose and
-the branches are dotted with the softest and
-silkiest little pussy buds (3), shaped like tiny eggs
-and covered with grey down.</p>
-
-<p>These buds grow alternately on the smooth
-stem with a small space between each bud. In
-a few days the baby buds have changed, and you
-may find two Willow bushes growing quite near
-each other on which the buds are very different.
-For those woolly buds are the flower catkins, and
-the Goat Willow bears two kinds of flowers, which
-do not grow on the same tree.</p>
-
-<p>The bees have found out that the Willow is in
-flower; you can hear a swarm of them buzzing
-in the leafless branches, and you wonder where
-there is any honey to be found. On one tree the
-soft grey downy buds have grown larger, and they
-are now golden yellow catkins (4). The whole bud<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-is covered with dainty yellow-headed stamens,
-nestling in pairs among oval scales edged with
-silky down, and it is at the base of these yellow-headed
-stamens that the bee finds the sweet
-drops of honey juice.</p>
-
-<p>For many hundreds of years branches of the
-Goat Willow or Sallow have been carried in
-this country to church on Palm Sunday in remembrance
-of the branches of palm which the
-people strewed in front of Christ when He
-entered Jerusalem. Troops of boys and girls
-go into the country lanes and coppices to gather
-Willow-palms, which they sometimes pluck so
-roughly and carelessly that the tree remains
-broken and ruined for the rest of the year. These
-silky stamen catkins of the Goat Willow are one
-of the most welcome signs of the return of spring.</p>
-
-<p>But there are other Willow flowers to be looked
-at: flowers which may not be so attractive, but
-which bear the seeds and make ready the new
-plants. These flowers are silky too, and underneath
-the soft down is an egg-shaped catkin
-(5), covered with small pear-shaped green seeds.
-Each seed has a thick yellow point at the top,
-and at the base there rises a scale which
-is pointed like a cat&#8217;s ear and is covered with
-long, silky hairs. When the stamen flowers are
-ripe their yellow heads burst, and the fine dust
-which fills them falls on the backs of the bees
-who are sipping the honey juice. Then they fly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-away to find another honey flower, and they
-often alight on a seed catkin, where the pollen
-dust is shaken off among the little yellow points
-which are waiting for it to help in the making of
-the new seeds. Each flower catkin sits upright
-on a tuft of small pale green leaves.</p>
-
-<p>The leaves (2) of the Goat Willow are very
-different from those of the other Willows; they
-are broad and oval, with edges which are crinkled
-or waved all round and with a network of fine
-veins covering the leaf. These leaves, when they
-first come out, are covered with white down,
-but by the time they are full grown they are
-dark and shiny on the upper side, and are only
-downy beneath.</p>
-
-<p>There is another bushy Willow which perhaps
-you might mistake for the Goat Willow or Sallow:
-this is the Purple Osier. It grows in boggy
-marshes, by the banks of slow-running streams,
-and it too has silky grey catkins. But you will
-easily recognise the Purple Osier by two things.
-It has long, slender stems like whips, rising
-straight from the tree trunk. These slender
-stems are covered with a fine purple skin or peel,
-and if you try to pick an Osier stem the peel comes
-away in your hand, leaving the white Willow stem
-still growing. These Osier stems are valuable for
-making baskets, and are grown in great quantities
-for this purpose.</p>
-
-<p>The second point in which the Purple Osier<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-differs from the Goat Willow is this: if you
-gather a yellow catkin and look at the yellow-headed
-stamens which cover it, you will see that
-the slender stalks of the stamens are joined
-together, making one stalk with two yellow heads,
-whereas in the Goat Willow or Sallow each
-yellow stamen head sways at the end of its own
-stalk.</p>
-
-<p>There is one other Willow tree I should like to
-tell you about, because it is so curious. It is a
-tree which creeps close to the ground, and which
-is found growing in great quantities in the
-Highlands among the grass and heather. It
-is called the Dwarf Willow, and it too has
-silky catkins which grow on the tough wiry
-branches.</p>
-
-<p>You might not notice these stamen catkins, but
-you could not help noticing the seed catkins.
-These cover the ground with tufts of white cotton
-wool like thistle-down, and when you lift one of
-these tufts you find that the pear-shaped green
-seed-vessels have split down the centre to allow
-many tiny seeds to escape, and each seed is winged
-with a tuft of silky down. After all the seeds
-have flown away on the wind, the withered seed-vessels
-still remain on the catkin, no longer green,
-but a rusty red-brown colour, which is very
-noticeable among the small glossy green leaves.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XVII<br />
-
-
-THE SCOTCH PINE OR SCOTCH FIR</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Scotch Pine (1), or, as it is often called by
-mistake, the Scotch Fir, is one of our noblest
-trees; it is tall, and rugged, and sturdy, with a
-beauty which lies in its strength and dignity rather
-than in its grace. In bygone days large tracts
-of Scotland were clothed with vast forests of
-Scotch Pine, under whose gloomy branches many
-wolves roamed and the wild deer wandered in
-herds. But the owners of these noble forests cut
-down the trees to get money for the timber, and
-the wolves have disappeared. There is now only
-a scanty remnant of the great army of Pine trees
-which once clothed the northern lands of Britain.</p>
-
-<p>Those vast forests were not planted by man.
-The young trees sprang from seeds which had
-fallen from the woody fruit cones, and were
-carried by rooks or other birds to places where
-human beings rarely trod. There the young
-seeds grew and sent out their greedy roots. If
-the soil was good and plentiful they produced a
-strong carrot-shaped root, which bored deep into
-the ground and gave the tree such a firm hold
-that no storm could tear it up. But if the ground
-had only a little earth on the surface and there
-were hard rocks beneath, then the roots crept
-like serpents near the surface of the soil, clasping
-the rocks with a tight grip to steady the tree.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate17"><span class="smcap">Plate XVII</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_119.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE SCOTCH PINE<br />
-
-
-1. Scotch Pine Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Needles</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Flower</span><span class="gap">4. Seed Flower (pink cones)</span><br />
-5. Green Cones<span class="gap">6. Grey Cone</span><span class="gap">7. Seed with Wing</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>How the wind roars in the Pine branches on
-the high mountain lands! It is like the sound
-of the sea. If the Pine tree had broad leaves,
-such as the Sycamore or the Lime tree, it would
-soon be blown down; but the storm gusts pass
-through its fine needle-leaves, and no harm is
-done.</p>
-
-<p>The trunk of the Scotch Pine is very rough,
-and it is covered with rugged pieces of reddish
-bark, separated from each other by deep furrows.
-It rises to a great height, throwing out many
-large branches on each side, and there is always
-a bushy rounded tree-top looking up to the sky.
-In a Pine forest the lower part of the tree is
-usually bare. This is because the trees are
-planted so close together there is little air except
-near the top of the tree, and the lower branches
-are stifled.</p>
-
-<p>Beneath the branches the ground is always
-carpeted with fallen Pine leaves, and very curious
-these Pine leaves (2) are. They look like green
-needles with soft blunt points, and the edges of
-each needle are rolled back so that the leaf appears
-round above and is boat-shaped below.
-The under-side of the needle is much lighter in
-colour than the dark green surface.</p>
-
-<p>These needle-leaves usually grow in pairs,
-though you may find a bunch containing three or
-even four needles; they are held together by a
-thin grey sheath, which looks like paper and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
-clasps the end of the bunch. These needle-bunches
-are placed all round the twig, close together,
-so as to form a dense brush. They remain
-on the tree for two or three years, then they fall;
-but their work is not done. Very often the Pine
-tree seed has been carried to some sandy sea-shore
-upon which nothing is willing to grow. There it
-takes root and flourishes, and in course of time it
-throws down handfuls of withered needle-leaves on
-the loose sandy ground. These needles decay and
-form a bed of soil which binds the sand together,
-and when the wind and the birds bring other
-seeds, they find a place in which they can take
-root and grow. In France great tracts of waste
-land have become valuable in this way through
-the planting of Pine trees.</p>
-
-<p>The Pine tree has its flowers in catkins and
-its fruit in cones. The catkins are of two kinds,
-and they grow on the same tree, sometimes on
-the same branch. The stamen flowers (3) are
-found in dense spikes at the end of last year&#8217;s
-bushy twig. They look like a cluster of bunches
-of small yellow grains from which a tuft of fine
-green spears rises in the centre. These grains
-are the stamen heads, and in May and June they
-send out clouds of fine yellow powder, which floats
-in the air and settles on the leaves and on the
-grass and on the margins of lakes and rivers,
-where you can see little patches of it lying.
-Country peasants sometimes tell you that this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-yellow powder is sulphur which has fallen from
-the sky during a thunder-storm!</p>
-
-<p>The seed flowers (4) of the Pine tree are very
-different. They grow either singly or in pairs at
-the end of this year&#8217;s new twig, and at first they
-are tiny pale pink cones. These cones are egg-shaped,
-and are made up of scales tightly pressed
-together, with little hard dots showing at the tip
-of each scale. The seeds are behind the scales,
-but you will not see them for a long time, as the
-cone takes eighteen months to grow up. At the
-end of the first summer you find that the pink
-cone has become a rich green colour (5) and is
-still soft, but when the second summer comes
-round, the cone is ash-grey in colour (6) and is
-hard and woody.</p>
-
-<p>When the seeds are ripe the tightly-pressed
-scales unclose and curl up, showing thick wooden
-lips; at the base of each scale lie two white seeds,
-and each seed (7) has a thin filmy wing. When
-the seeds fall from the cone they are blown long
-distances, floating on the air by their filmy wings.</p>
-
-<p>There is a bird called the crossbill which is
-very fond of Pine seeds, and very clever at picking
-them out of the half-opened cones.</p>
-
-<p>You will occasionally find a tree, very similar to
-the Scotch Pine, in which the cones grow in
-groups of three or four together at the end of the
-twigs. This tree is called the Cluster Pine, and
-you will notice that its bunches of leaves are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-different in colour: they are a bluey green, and
-the tips of the needles are yellowish, as if they
-had begun to wither.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Pine tree is very valuable.
-Thousands of pounds were paid for the trees in
-the old Scotch forests, and many stout ships were
-built from their sturdy trunks. Besides the good
-timber, the Pine tree gives us turpentine and
-resin from its juice. If you cut a hole in a Pine
-tree stem a thick juice will soon be seen oozing
-from this hole, and it quickly hardens into a clear
-gum.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XVIII<br />
-
-
-THE YEW</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Once upon a time a discontented Yew tree grew
-in a country graveyard. Other trees, it thought,
-had larger and more beautiful leaves which
-fluttered in the breeze and became red and
-brown and yellow in the sunshine, and the Yew
-tree pined because the fairies had given it such
-an unattractive dress. One morning the sunshine
-disclosed that all its green leaves had changed
-into leaves made of gold, and the heart of the
-Yew tree danced with happiness. But some
-robbers, as they stole through the forest, were
-attracted by the glitter, and they stripped off every
-golden leaf. Again the tree bemoaned its fate,
-and next day the sun shone on leaves of purest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-crystal. &#8220;How beautiful!&#8221; thought the tree; &#8220;see
-how I sparkle!&#8221; But a hailstorm burst from the
-clouds, and the sparkling leaves lay shivered on
-the grass. Once more the good fairies tried to
-comfort the unhappy tree. Smooth broad leaves
-covered its branches, and the Yew tree flaunted
-these gay banners in the wind. But, alas, a flock
-of goats came by and ate of the fresh young
-leaves &#8220;a million and ten.&#8221; &#8220;Give me back again
-my old dress,&#8221; sobbed the Yew, &#8220;for I see that it
-was best.&#8221; And ever since its leaves remain
-unchanging, and it wears the sombre dress which
-covered its boughs in the days when King William
-landed from Normandy on our shores, and the
-swineherd tended his pigs in the great forests
-which covered so much of Merry England.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate18"><span class="smcap">Plate XVIII</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_125.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE YEW<br />
-
-
-1. Yew Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Flower</span><br />
-4. Seed Flower<span class="gap">5. Spray with Fruit</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In history books we read how important the
-Yew tree once was. Long before the invention
-of guns and gunpowder, many of our soldiers
-carried bows made of Yew tree wood, and from
-these they shot deadly arrows with tremendous
-force. Three of England&#8217;s Kings&mdash;Harold, William
-Rufus, and Richard C&#339;ur de Lion&mdash;were slain
-by such arrows, and it was from a Yew tree bow
-that Tell sent the arrow that halved the apple
-placed on his son&#8217;s head.</p>
-
-<p>The Yew tree (1) grows very, very slowly; it
-never becomes a tall tree, not even when it has
-lived hundreds and hundreds of years, because,
-instead of sending up one thick trunk, it has the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
-strange habit of dividing into a cluster of trunks,
-three or four or more of equal thickness, which
-rise from one root. These trunks are covered
-with browny red bark and are very smooth; the
-red bark peels off in thin flakes, and you can see
-that the wood beneath it is a deep orange red.</p>
-
-<p>From the clustered trunks many branches
-stretch out to form a densely bushy tree; these
-branches are closely covered with small twigs, on
-which grow short narrow leaves (2), ending in
-blunt points, and with the edges slightly curved
-backwards. These leaves grow alternately all
-round the twig, and they are dark and glossy
-above but much paler beneath. They do not fall
-from the tree in winter, as the Yew, like the
-Holly, is one of our evergreen trees. Yew tree
-leaves are very poisonous, and many tales are
-told of cattle and horses which have died from
-eating them.</p>
-
-<p>Some people believe that the Yew tree is planted
-in churchyards because it is poisonous and is
-associated with death; while others think just
-the opposite, and say that it is placed among the
-tombstones to remind us that the soul is undying,
-like the Yew tree leaves.</p>
-
-<p>In February or March if you strike a Yew tree
-bough with a stick you will see clouds of fine
-yellow powder rising from the tree. This powder
-is the stamen dust, and if you pull a spray of
-leaves and examine it you will discover clusters<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-of small oval yellow flowers (3) nestling close
-to the main stem where the leaf joins it.
-The Yew tree belongs to the great family of
-trees whose fruit is a cone and which bear
-their flowers in catkins. Take a magnifying-glass,
-and it will show you that each catkin
-is composed of a bunch of stamens rising from
-a slender pillar at the foot of which are a few
-dry, papery scales. Each stamen has six dust-bags
-at the end, and when the stamen powder
-is ripe these dust-bags open, and the fine yellow
-powder is blown like meal over the leaves and
-seeds.</p>
-
-<p>The Yew tree has seed flowers (4) as well as
-those which bear the stamens. Usually they
-grow on a different tree, but occasionally you
-will find them on the same Yew, but on a
-separate branch. It is a curious thing about
-the Yew tree and its relations that these seeds
-are not covered in any way, but lie naked to
-the sun and rain. They always grow on the
-under-side of the stem, and at first they look
-like tiny acorns. You notice a small disc surrounded
-by a few scales, and on this disc sits
-the little green acorn with its olive green skin.
-This acorn is waiting for the stamen dust to reach
-it. As soon as the wind has blown the yellow
-powder over it a beautiful cup of pale pink wax
-grows round the green seed. There is no hard,
-woody cone on the Yew tree; the fruit (5) is this pale<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-pink waxen berry, shaped like a fairy cup and
-filled with sticky juice. The walls of the pink cup
-are soft and fleshy, and you can just see the tip of
-the green seed standing up in the centre. They
-are very lovely, these waxy pink berries on the dark
-green spray, but they are said to be poisonous.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes at the end of a Yew spray there
-grows a curious-looking cone like a small artichoke,
-made of soft green leaves. This is caused
-by a tiny gnat which lays its eggs in a Yew tree
-bud, and in some strange way that we do not
-understand causes it to develop this tuft of
-strange leaves. You will remember that in the
-Oak a similar growth is found.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Yew tree is very hard and
-durable, as are all woods which grow slowly.
-&#8220;A Yew tree post will outlast a post of iron&#8221; is a
-saying often repeated by farmers; but the Yew
-wood is not much in demand for manufacturing
-purposes.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XIX<br />
-
-
-THE JUNIPER</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the Bible we read that when Elijah fled from
-the cruel persecution of King Ahab and the wicked
-Queen Jezebel, he sat down under a Juniper tree
-to rest. When we look at the Juniper as it grows
-in this country, we wonder how the prophet could
-have found rest beside such a prickly tree, or shade<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-beneath such a small one. But in other lands the
-Juniper grows much taller; and as all books about
-trees give it a place beside its relations the Yew
-and the Scotch Pine, it must be included among
-the common trees you should learn to know.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate19"><span class="smcap">Plate XIX</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_131.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE JUNIPER<br />
-
-
-1. Juniper Bushes<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray with Flowers</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Flower (much enlarged)</span><br />
-4. Seed Flower (much enlarged)<span class="gap">5. Spray with Fruit</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In Britain the Juniper (1) is found on heathy
-commons or high on the upland plains, where it
-flourishes as a large, thick, bushy shrub, and
-occasionally shoots up into a small tree. It is
-rather a gloomy-looking tree: in spring time,
-when most of our trees look fresh and bright in
-their young green leaves, the Juniper shows little
-change. Its leaves are evergreen, and the new
-leaves grow in small tufts at the tips of the
-branches, so that you scarcely notice them.</p>
-
-<p>The Juniper bark is dark reddish brown, and
-it flakes off in small pieces in the same way as
-the Yew tree bark. The branches are small and
-thin, and they clothe the trunk close to the very
-ground; it would be difficult to sit comfortably
-under a Juniper tree in this country. Like the
-Yew, it is a very slow-growing tree.</p>
-
-<p>Juniper leaves (2) are not in the least like
-ordinary leaves: they are more like thorns than
-leaves, and they are not easy to gather. But if
-you examine a spray carefully you will find that
-each leaf is like a narrow flat spear with a sharp
-point at the end. Each leaf has a slight groove
-cut from end to end in the upper side, which is
-dark green, very smooth and glossy. Notice how<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-curiously the leaves are grouped on the spray. They
-are placed in incomplete circles of three, and there
-is always a short space between each of the circles.</p>
-
-<p>Juniper flowers are of two kinds, and they
-usually grow on separate trees, though sometimes
-you may find both kinds on separate branches of
-the same tree. The stamen flowers (3) are in full
-bloom in May, and you will find them growing in
-small scaly catkins close to the foot of the leaf
-where it joins the stem. The heads of the
-stamens stand like a row of small yellow beads
-along the edge of each scale, and when they are
-ripe the beads burst and the leaves around are
-covered with their fine yellow powder.</p>
-
-<p>The seed flowers (4) also grow at the foot of the
-leaves, and at first you might mistake them for young
-buds. They have thicker and more fleshy scales
-than those of the stamen catkins, and after the
-yellow stamen dust is blown by the wind on to their
-seed-vessels the upper scales grow into a green
-berry (5). These green berries remain in the tree
-all through the winter, and the following summer
-they change into a deep purplish black. Each
-berry has a soft grey bloom all over it, like the
-bloom on a grape.</p>
-
-<p>These berries are very bitter to taste, but are not
-poisonous; in some illnesses country people use
-them successfully as a medicine.</p>
-
-<p>Many are the uses of the Juniper, and in olden
-days it was highly valued.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate20"><span class="smcap">Plate XX</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_135.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE LARCH<br />
-
-
-1. Larch Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Tufts</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Catkins</span><br />
-4. Seed Catkins<span class="gap">5. Young Cone</span><span class="gap">6. Ripe Cone</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>In Sweden the berries are eaten to breakfast;
-sometimes they are roasted and ground into
-coffee.</p>
-
-<p>The wood and its berries may be burnt in sick-rooms
-to purify the air and refresh the patient.
-Country people believed that burning sprays of
-Juniper kept away witches, and the smoke was
-supposed to drive away serpents, as well as to
-destroy any germs of plague or other infectious
-disease.</p>
-
-<p>In Scotland the smoke from a Juniper fire is
-used for curing hams.</p>
-
-<p>In Lapland the peasants make ropes from the
-Juniper bark, and they tell you that if a bit of
-Juniper wood is lighted and then carefully covered
-with ashes it will keep alight for a whole year.</p>
-
-<p>The trunk of the Juniper tree is too small and
-slight to be very useful as timber; but good
-walking-sticks are often made from the branches
-and young stems.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XX<br />
-
-
-THE LARCH</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">&#8220;When rosy plumelets tuft the larch.&#8221;</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright">&mdash;Tennyson.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p>The Larch (1) was brought to Britain in the
-seventeenth century from its home on the high
-mountains of Germany, Austria, and Italy. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-has taken kindly to our cheerless climate, and now
-covers acres of what was once barren moorland.</p>
-
-<p>A few years after Larches are planted the long
-flexible branches of the young trees meet and
-form a thicket into which little light or air can
-enter, and the weeds and heather growing round
-the tree roots are stifled. Each winter the Larch
-sheds on the bare ground millions of its tiny
-needle-leaves, which enrich the soil.</p>
-
-<p>After the young trees have grown to a certain
-height the forester thins the plantation; he cuts
-down a number of the young trees, so that those
-which remain may have more room to grow, and
-he removes all the withered branches near the
-ground. This allows the sunshine to reach the
-soil, and soon after a crop of soft, fine grass is
-seen carpeting the ground. Sheep and cattle
-can now be pastured where a short time before
-there grew nothing but heather and weeds.</p>
-
-<p>Look at a Larch plantation in winter time, and
-you will think that all the trees are dead. The
-Pines and the Firs are resting, and the Oaks
-and Beeches seem asleep, but their branches do
-not have the dead, withered look of the Larch
-trees. Come again early in spring, and you will
-see a wonderful change. These dead twigs are
-now a pale glossy brown, so glossy that they
-might have been varnished. Try to pull one, and
-you will find how tough and sound it is; only
-where the twig joins the branch can you separate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
-it from the tree; and what a delightful smell of
-turpentine remains on your fingers after gathering
-the Larch twigs!</p>
-
-<p>In the trunk of this tree there are stores of
-turpentine, tiny lakes of it, which are of considerable
-value. In Italy, where the Larch trees
-grow to great size, small holes are bored through
-the trunk to the very heart of the tree, and a thin
-pipe is put in. Then a can is hung on the end
-of the pipe, and the pure turpentine juice drops
-steadily into the can. It is then strained, and is
-sold just as it comes from the tree.</p>
-
-<p>Early in April the Larch tree begins to get
-ready for summer; it is always one of the first
-trees to awaken at the call of spring. On each
-flexible twig there appear little brown scaly knobs
-like small beads, placed either singly or in pairs
-with a short space between each bead. In a few
-days these scaly beads burst open, and a tuft of
-vivid green leaves (2), like the fringes round the
-mouth of a sea-anemone, peeps out. These leaves
-are soft and flat and slender, very different from
-the hard needles of the Pine and the harsh
-swords of the Fir trees, and they grow in tufts,
-thirty or forty together, rising from the centre
-of the scaly brown bead. Each tuft is of the
-brightest green. So the Larch tree is a very
-vision of spring in the dark Fir plantations, while
-the leaf buds of many other trees are only awakening
-from their winter sleep.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>In the hedgerows the Hawthorns are in full
-leaf, the stamen flowers cluster on the boughs
-of the Elm, and the Hazel and Willow catkins
-dangle their tails in the wind; but the forest
-trees remain sombre and gloomy, and the young
-Larch seems gay as the sunlight among them.
-As the season advances the Larch tree leaves
-become darker, and they fall early in winter.
-We have only one other cone-bearing tree which
-is not evergreen, and that is the Cypress.</p>
-
-<p>After the leafy tufts appear you will notice that
-some of the scaly brown beads have not produced
-any leaves; instead they have become tiny oval
-catkins (3), which are made up of a crowd of small
-yellow grains. These catkins are the stamen
-flowers, and in the yellow grains, which are the
-heads of the stamens, is prepared the dust powder
-which the seed flowers require to assist them in
-getting ready the new seed.</p>
-
-<p>On the same twig, and not far from the stamen
-catkins, you see a beautiful deep rose-red seed
-catkin (4). This tiny rose-red catkin is very lovely
-among the brilliant green tufts of leaves; no other
-cone-bearing tree has anything so attractive to
-show us. At first the catkin scales are soft and
-fleshy; they overlap each other very loosely, and
-from the base of each scale there rises a bright
-green point like a single needle-leaf.</p>
-
-<p>In a few weeks the catkin has become a young
-cone (5), which looks like a small rosy egg sitting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
-erect on a bent footstalk, then the rose-pink colour
-fades from the cone, and the scales become hard
-and woody. Behind each scale lie two tiny white
-seeds with wings, and there is a coating of sticky
-resin over these seeds to keep them dry. The
-ripe cones (6) remain on the tree for years, long
-after the seeds have been blown away on their
-transparent wings by the wind.</p>
-
-<p>The crossbill often builds his nest in a Larch
-tree. He is particularly fond of Larch tree seeds,
-and is very clever at picking them out of the ripe
-cones.</p>
-
-<p>The trunk of a full-grown Larch is reddish
-brown in colour, and it is covered with a rough,
-scaly bark, which is often hung with hoary tufts
-of pale grey lichen.</p>
-
-<p>Larch wood is very valuable, and is used for
-many purposes. It is very tough, and does not
-rot in water. Joiners tell us there are fewer knots
-in planks of Larch than in those of either Silver
-Fir or Spruce. Wood knots are scars which
-occur where a dead branch has fallen from the
-tree, and builders complain that when the tree
-is sawn into planks, the knots shrink and fall out,
-leaving a round hole. This reduces the value of
-the wood; but in the Larch planks the knots are
-said not to come away from the surrounding
-wood.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XXI<br />
-
-
-THE SPRUCE FIR</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Although the Scotch Pine is sometimes called
-the Scotch Fir, the latter name is generally
-admitted to be a mistake. It was given long ago
-by people who had not seen the real Fir trees,
-and who did not know how different they are from
-the Pines. It is several hundred years since the
-Spruce Fir was brought to this country, but it
-is not one of our native trees, like the Scotch
-Pine, the Yew, and the Juniper.</p>
-
-<p>The Spruce (1) is one of our tallest trees; it
-loves to grow on ground many thousand feet
-above the level of the sea; and in Switzerland and
-Norway there are great forests of these slender,
-soldier-like trees, clothing the sides of the giant
-snow mountains. With us it does not grow so
-abundantly, but you will find many Spruce Firs
-mingling with the Scotch Pine in the large woods
-of our Scotch Highlands.</p>
-
-<p>The Spruce Fir has a very straggling root
-which does not penetrate far into the ground;
-it creeps along close under the surface, and intertwines
-itself with any other tree roots in the
-neighbourhood. This does not give it a very firm
-hold, and after great gales you sometimes find
-a broad path opened in the Fir woods, which has
-been made by the Spruce trees falling in the track
-of the storm.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate21"><span class="smcap">Plate XXI</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_143.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE SPRUCE FIR<br />
-
-1. Spruce Fir Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Flowers</span><br />
-4. Seed Flower<span class="gap">5. Cone</span><span class="gap">6. Seed Scale</span><span class="gap">7. Growth caused by an Insect</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>It is a very straight tree, with a smooth scaly
-bark of a reddish brown colour; from each side
-of the trunk slender branches grow straight out
-like the spokes of a wheel; but each branch rises
-a little way above the last as the steps rise in a
-ladder. These branches are very slender, and at
-first they sweep downwards in graceful curves;
-but at the tips they all turn upward, so that the
-points look toward the sky.</p>
-
-<p>The branches get smaller and smaller as the
-tree grows higher, which gives it the appearance
-of a pyramid, and at the very top there stands a
-single upright branch like a spear. This spear-like
-tip is one of the distinctive features of the
-Spruce Fir.</p>
-
-<p>The leaves (2) are short and flat and hard, and
-they are rather prickly to touch. They do not
-grow in pairs or bundles, as in the Scotch Pine or
-the Larch; they are placed singly and very close
-together all round the twig. The twigs grow
-almost opposite each other on the young sprays,
-and each spray hangs straight down from the
-main branch, which looks as if a parting had been
-made along its centre and the sprays combed
-evenly to either side. From a distance the Spruce
-tree branches resemble drooping feathers which
-curve skyward at the tips.</p>
-
-<p>The Spruce Fir has two kinds of flowers. In
-May or June, if you look at the tips of the drooping
-sprays which grew last year, you will see two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-or three little oval catkins of a pretty yellowish
-pink colour nestling among the hard, flat leaves.
-These are the stamen flowers (3), and when ripe
-they will burst open and scatter a great deal of
-yellow pollen dust.</p>
-
-<p>The seed flowers (4) grow in cones, and are
-found at the end of this year&#8217;s shoots. It is by
-these cones you will most readily recognise the
-Spruce Fir. You remember that in the Scotch
-Pine the full-grown cones were grey and woody,
-with tightly-pressed lips, and that these lips were
-very thick and curled upwards when the cone
-opened?</p>
-
-<p>In the Fir trees the scales of the ripe cones (5)
-are like thin glossy brown paper. Each scale
-ends in two sharp little teeth, and the scales are
-not tightly pressed together, but overlap each
-other loosely, so that you could put the blade of
-a knife under each. The woody cones are always
-found in Pine trees, and the papery cones are
-characteristic of the Firs.</p>
-
-<p>In the Spruce Fir these cones are about six
-inches long, with blunt tips, and when full grown
-they hang from the sprays. Do not forget to
-notice this, as in some Fir trees the full-grown
-cones are seated upright on the branches. Under
-each scale there lie two little seeds (6), with large
-pale brown wings; these seeds require over a year
-to ripen, then the wind blows them from the
-loosened cone scales to many a strange resting-place,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-where they take root, and a new tree begins
-to grow.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes you may see strange leafy-looking
-bunches (7) like soft, badly-made cones on the
-young sprays. These are caused by an insect
-which lays its eggs in the young leaf bud and
-destroys its graceful shape.</p>
-
-<p>The Spruce Fir has two enemies that do it
-great harm. These are the crossbill and the
-squirrel. They break off the young shoots close
-to the end, and so stop the growth of the branches.
-You will often find the ground strewn with these
-fresh green twigs; but you require to sit very still
-for a long time if you wish to see the enemies
-at work.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Spruce Fir is valuable for
-many purposes. The tall, smooth tree trunks are
-used for the masts of ships, for scaffolding poles,
-and telegraph posts; and many boat-loads of Fir
-planks are brought from Norway and from the
-shores of the Baltic Sea, to be manufactured into
-flooring boards for our houses. In some places
-the fibre of the Spruce Fir is reduced to pulp,
-and from this a common kind of paper is produced
-which is used for newspapers or cheap
-magazines.</p>
-
-<p>From the sap we get resin and turpentine, and
-the bark is used in the tanning of leather.</p>
-
-<p>Some people say that the name Fir wood is just
-a mistake for fire-wood, because in the old days<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
-torches were made of the young fir branches,
-whose gummy twigs burnt easily with a clear,
-strong light.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XXII<br />
-
-
-THE SILVER FIR</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Many people find it difficult to distinguish between
-the Spruce Fir and the Silver Fir, and
-they are often called by each other&#8217;s names; yet
-they are unlike in many points, and a little trouble
-would prevent such mistakes.</p>
-
-<p>The Silver Fir (1) is not one of our native trees;
-it was brought from Central or Southern Europe
-to this country in 1603, and has taken kindly to
-our moist climate. It does not grow on such
-lofty mountains as the Spruce, but it will thrive
-at a level of six thousand feet above the sea,
-higher than the highest mountain in Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p>It is a tall, stately tree, but it is bushier and
-less regular than the Spruce Fir. The trunk is
-covered with greyish brown bark, which is smooth
-when the tree is young; but as the tree grows
-old&mdash;and the Silver Fir will live for four hundred
-years&mdash;this bark cracks into many rugged fissures.
-You remember that the Spruce tree has a sharp
-spear-like point rising from the very top of
-the trunk. In the Silver Fir the tree is only
-pointed when very young, and by the time it is full
-grown the top is bushy, with many small unequal
-branches standing out from the main stem.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate22"><span class="smcap">Plate XXII</span></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_149.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE SILVER FIR<br />
-
-1. Silver Fir Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Flowers</span><br />
-4. Cone Flower<span class="gap">5. Ripe Cone</span><span class="gap">6. Seed Scale</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>These branches do not grow in whorls or circles,
-like the spokes of a wheel; they are often irregular,
-and there may be gaps in the tree where
-a branch has fallen off, and only a scar is left to
-show where the branch should have been. The
-Silver Fir is a firmly-rooted tree; it sends a long
-tap-shaped root, ending in two forks, deep into
-the soil, so that there is little danger of the wind
-uprooting it during the wintry gales.</p>
-
-<p>Now look at the leaves (2) which grow on the
-Silver Fir. Like those of the Spruce, and unlike
-those of the Pine, they grow singly, each little
-leaf standing by itself on the rough twig. Although
-they are placed all round this twig, these
-leaves have a tendency to grow to right or left
-of the twig, and look as if they had been parted
-down the centre and carefully combed to each
-side.</p>
-
-<p>Each leaf is flat and slender, and on the upper
-side it is a dark glossy green; the edges are
-rolled back on to the under-side of the leaf, which
-is much paler in colour. The centre rib of the
-leaf is much raised, and looks like a slender cord,
-and on each side of this cord, between it and the
-curled-back leaf edge, there runs a silvery white
-line; it is from this silvery line that the tree gets
-its name.</p>
-
-<p>Notice that the leaf twigs of the Silver Fir
-do not droop in the feathery way they do in the
-Spruce; they are much stiffer, and stand out all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
-round the branch; also, there is not nearly such
-a marked upward curve at the tip of the branch
-as you find in the Spruce Fir. The leaves of the
-Silver Fir remain on the tree eight or nine years,
-but each year the tree lengthens its sprays, and
-the young leaves are a beautiful pale yellowish
-green colour, almost as pale as the young leaves
-of the primrose.</p>
-
-<p>The stamen flowers (3) grow at the ends of the
-young sprays. They consist of a few overlapping
-scales with a cluster of stamens inside. The seed
-flowers or cones (4) grow on the same tree, sometimes
-on the same branch, and they become cones
-in the same way as the seed flowers of the Pine
-and the Spruce. But you will at once notice a
-difference. The cones of the Silver Fir grow upright;
-they sit on the branches with their tops
-looking up to the sky, whereas the cones of the
-Spruce and the Scotch Pine when full grown
-hang down from the ends of the spray with their
-tips pointing to the ground. If there are any
-cones visible you will never mistake the Silver
-Fir for the Spruce.</p>
-
-<p>The ripe cones (5) are made up of many thin, soft
-scales which overlap each other closely, and each
-scale ends in a sharp point which turns backward;
-this gives the cone a hairy appearance.
-At first the cones are green, like those of the
-Scotch Pine, but soon they turn purple, and when
-quite ripe they are a rich red-brown.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>If the tree is old enough&mdash;that means if it is forty
-years of age&mdash;you will find small angular seeds (6),
-with a long filmy wing attached, nestling behind
-each scale. But if the tree is still young, the
-cones are seedless. It takes eighteen months
-for the cone to ripen, and when the seeds are
-ready and they and the red-brown scales fall from
-the cone, a bare brown stick is left standing upright
-on the branch.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Silver Fir is very valuable, and
-it is used for many purposes; doors and window-frames
-and floors are constantly made of it, and
-for ship-building it is in great demand. In Switzerland
-there are great forests of Silver Fir, but they
-grow high on the mountain sides, where there are
-no roads and no means of getting the trees brought
-down after they are felled.</p>
-
-<p>But at Lucerne, a town on the shores of a large
-lake, with great forests on the mountains above,
-the people invented an excellent way of overcoming
-this difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>A narrow avenue was cut in the forest among the
-trees, and this was floored with trunks of Fir and
-Spruce. Snow and water were poured down this
-avenue, which the cold air quickly froze, and the
-avenue became a gigantic ice-slide eight miles
-long. The Fir trees were felled, and all their
-branches lopped off, the bare trunks were placed
-on this slide, and in six minutes they shot into
-the waters of the lake eight miles below. There<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
-they floated till the wood merchant was ready for
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The Silver Fir tree is rich in gummy juice, which
-is made into turpentine and resin. Have you ever
-seen necklaces of pale cloudy beads, and of clear
-dark brown made of amber? People tell us this
-amber is found on the shores of the Baltic Sea, and
-that it is just the gummy juice which dropped long
-ago from some kind of Fir tree and has hardened
-in a mysterious way of which we know nothing.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XXIII<br />
-
-
-THE HOLLY</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">&#8220;Below, a circling fence, its leaves are seen, wrinkled and keen.</div>
-<div class="verse">No grazing cattle through their prickly round can reach to wound;</div>
-<div class="verse">But as they grow where nothing is to fear,</div>
-<div class="verse">Smooth and unarmed the pointless leaves appear.&#8221;</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright">&mdash;Southey.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p>The Holly (1) is our most important evergreen,
-and is so well known that it scarcely needs any
-description. It has flourished in this country as
-long as the Oak, and is often found growing under
-tall trees in the crowded forests, as well as in the
-open glades, where lawns of fine grass are to
-be found.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate23"><span class="smcap">Plate XXIII</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_155.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE HOLLY<br />
-
-
-1. Holly Tree<span class="gap">2. Blunt Leaf</span><span class="gap">3. Prickly Leaf</span><br />
-4. Flower Cluster<span class="gap">5. Fruit</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>People say that the Holly, or Holm tree, as it is
-often called, is the greenwood tree spoken of by
-Shakespeare, and that under its bushy shelter
-Robin Hood and his merry men held their meetings<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
-in the open glades of Sherwood Forest. Sometimes
-it is called the Holy tree, because from the
-oldest time of which we have any record its
-boughs have been used to deck our shrines and
-churches, and in some parts of England the
-country people in December speak of gathering
-Christmas, which is the name they give to the
-Holly, or Holy tree. It is this evergreen which
-we oftenest use at Christmas-tide to decorate
-our churches, and very lovely the dark green
-sprays, with their coral berries, look when twined
-round the grey stone pillars.</p>
-
-<p>The Holly is looked upon as a second-rate forest
-tree. It is never very large, and it usually appears
-as a thick, tall bush, with many branches reaching
-almost to the ground. Sometimes you find it with
-a slender, bare trunk, clothed with pale grey bark,
-and if you look closely at this bark you will see
-that it is covered with curious black markings, as
-if some strange writing had been traced on it with
-a heavy black pen.</p>
-
-<p>This writing is the work of a tiny plant which
-makes its home on the Holly stem and spreads in
-this strange way.</p>
-
-<p>The bark of the young Holly shoots and boughs
-is pale green and quite smooth.</p>
-
-<p>The tree requires little sunshine, and it seems
-to keep all it gets, as every leaf is highly polished
-and reflects the light like a mirror. These leaves
-grow closely on every branch; they are placed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-alternately on each side of the twigs, and are
-oval, with the edges so much waved that the
-leaves will not lie flat, but curl on each side of
-the centre rib.</p>
-
-<p>The prickly leaves (3) which grow low down
-on the tree have sharp spines along the waved
-edges, and a very sharp spine always grows at
-the point of the leaf. But the upper branches
-are clothed with blunt leaves (2) which have no
-spines along the edges; instead there is a pale
-yellow line round each leaf, and there is a single
-blunt spine at the point.</p>
-
-<p>Sheep and deer are very fond of eating the tough,
-leathery leaves of the Holly, and it is believed that
-the tree clothes its lower branches in prickly leaves
-to protect itself from these greedy enemies.</p>
-
-<p>Country people tell you that if branches of
-smooth Holly are the first to be brought into the
-house at Christmas-time, then the wife will be head
-of the house all the next year, but if the prickly
-boughs enter first, then the husband will be ruler.</p>
-
-<p>The Holly leaves hang on the tree several years,
-and after they fall they lie a long time on the
-ground before the damp soaks through their
-leathery skin and makes them decay. You will
-find Holly leaves from which all the green part
-of the leaf has disappeared, leaving a beautiful
-skeleton leaf of grey fibre, which is still perfect
-in every vein and rib.</p>
-
-<p>The flowers (4) of the Holly bloom in May.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-They appear in small crowded clusters between
-the leaf stalk and the twig, and each flower is a
-delicate pale pink on the outside, but is pure white
-within. There is a calyx cup edged with four
-green points, and inside this cup stands a long
-white tube, with four white petals at the top.
-There are four yellow-headed stamens, and a tiny
-seed-vessel is hidden inside the flower tube.
-Sometimes all these parts will be found complete
-in a single flower; sometimes there will be flowers
-on the same branch which have stamens and no
-seed-vessel, and others which have seed-vessels
-and no stamens. Perhaps you will find a whole
-tree on which not a single seed flower grows.
-This tree may be laden with lovely white flowers
-in spring, but it will bear no berries in winter.
-You must have both stamen flowers and seed
-flowers if the tree is to produce any fruit.</p>
-
-<p>As summer passes, the seed-vessels, which have
-had stamen dust scattered over them, become
-small green berries (5), and these berries turn
-yellow and then change into a deep red, the
-colour of coral or sealing-wax. The berries
-cluster round the green stalk, and most beautiful
-they are among the glossy dark leaves. Inside
-each berry there are four little fruit stones
-containing seeds, and the birds love to eat these
-red berries, which are full of mealy pulp; but
-remember that children must never eat the Holly
-berries, as they are poisonous except for the birds.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>You will find that if the Holly tree has a good
-crop of berries this winter there will not be many
-the following year; the tree seems to require a
-year&#8217;s rest before it can produce a second large
-crop.</p>
-
-<p>There are some Holly trees with leaves which
-are shaded with pale yellow or white&mdash;variegated
-Hollies, we call them. These are greatly prized
-for planting in gardens, where the bushes with
-different-coloured leaves lend much beauty when
-all the trees are bare in winter.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Holly is too small to be of
-much use. It is white and very hard, and when
-stained black it is largely used instead of ebony,
-which is scarce and expensive. The black
-handles of many of our silver teapots are made of
-stained Holly wood. A sticky lime, which is used
-for snaring birds, is made from the young green
-shoots and twigs, and the slender branches are
-good for making walking-sticks and coachmen&#8217;s
-whips.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XXIV<br />
-
-
-THE WILD CHERRY OR GEAN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>There are now more than forty varieties of
-Cherry in Britain, and they all are descended from
-the Gean or Wild Cherry tree. This favourite
-tree belongs to the great Rose family, and is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-related to the Apple, and Pear, and Plum. It
-grows freely all over Britain except in the very
-north of Scotland; and we read that six hundred
-years ago the county of Kent was famous for its
-Cherry orchards.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate24"><span class="smcap">Plate XXIV</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_161.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE WILD CHERRY<br />
-
-1. Wild Cherry or Gean in Autumn<span class="gap">2. Flower Cluster with Leaves</span><span class="gap">3. Fruit</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>In Germany the Cherry is planted for many
-miles by the roadsides, so that all passers-by may
-eat the fruit and enjoy the shade cast by the tall
-trees. And if there should be any particular
-tree whose fruit the owner does not wish taken,
-he ties a wisp of straw round that tree, and the
-people understand the sign and do not touch
-these Cherries.</p>
-
-<p>In France the Wild Cherry fruit, along with a
-little bread and butter, is often the only food of
-the poor charcoal-burners and wood-cutters, who
-stay in the forest during the cold winter months.</p>
-
-<p>Song birds, especially the blackbirds, love to
-eat cherries, and as we are very grateful to the
-birds for eating the many grubs and insects which
-destroy our fruit and corn, we must not grudge
-them a feast from our Cherry trees. It is probably
-the birds who have carried the seeds to the many
-different places where we find Cherry trees springing
-up.</p>
-
-<p>The Wild Cherry (1) is a tall tree with wide-spreading
-branches. It has a smooth grey bark,
-from which you will often see oozing large drops
-of clear gum. This gum is very sticky, it will not
-melt in cold water, and it is very difficult to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-remove from your fingers. The Wild Cherry
-leaves (2) appear in spring, long oval leaves ending
-in a point, and with sharp teeth along the edge.
-These leaves are very soft, and they droop from
-the twigs. At first the leaf is folded lengthways,
-with the two edges meeting, and it is a dull brown
-colour; but this colour soon changes in the sunshine
-to a soft green, and when autumn comes
-you find leaves of every shade of pink and red
-and crimson.</p>
-
-<p>The large white Cherry blossoms (2) come
-almost at the same time as the leaves, and they
-grow in loose clusters, in which the flowers hang
-from the end of long, drooping stalks. There are
-always many small leaf-like scales where these
-flower stalks join the twig. Each blossom has
-a pear-shaped calyx at the end of the flower stalk,
-and this calyx is edged with five green points.
-These points fold back against the stalk after
-the flower is withered.</p>
-
-<p>There are five large snowy petals which make
-the flower clusters look very lovely in the spring
-sunshine, but the petals fall very quickly and
-strew the ground with their snowy flakes.</p>
-
-<p>Within the petal circle there are many slender
-stamens, and you can see a long red-tipped point
-rising from the seed-vessel, which lies concealed
-in the pear-shaped calyx which stands beneath
-the petals and sepals.</p>
-
-<p>The Wild Cherry fruit (3) is black, and sometimes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-dark red. It is rather sour, and the cherries we
-buy in the shops are usually cherries which have
-been cultivated in an orchard, and have been grown
-in a warmer country.</p>
-
-<p>In Cambridgeshire there is a festival called
-Cherry Sunday, when every one goes to the Cherry
-orchard, and on paying sixpence may eat as many
-cherries as he pleases.</p>
-
-<p>For some unknown reason the cuckoo has
-always been associated with the Cherry tree.
-There is an old proverb which says, &#8220;The cuckoo
-never sings till he has thrice eaten his fill of
-cherries&#8221;; and country children play a delightful
-game in which he has a part. They join hands
-and dance round a Cherry tree, singing&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-
-<div class="first">&#8220;Cuckoo, Cherry tree,</div>
-<div class="verse">Come down and tell to me,</div>
-<div class="verse">How many years I have to live.&#8221;</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Then each child shakes one of the Cherry tree
-branches, and the number of cherries that fall tell
-him how many years he will live. If five cherries
-fall he has five years to live, and if twelve cherries
-fall he will live twelve years, and so on.</p>
-
-<p>There is a cunning little bird called the woodpecker
-which very often visits the Cherry tree. He
-eats the insects that live on its bark; and you can
-hear his bill peck, pecking at the trunk as he
-picks up his food.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Cherry tree is hard, yet easily<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-worked. It is much in demand by furniture makers,
-and is a rich red colour which can be highly
-polished.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XXV<br />
-
-
-THE WHITEBEAM</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the old Saxon language, which was once the
-language spoken by most of the people in England,
-the word beam means a tree, so we must be
-careful not to speak of the Whitebeam tree, as
-that would be just the same as to say the White
-tree tree.</p>
-
-<p>The Whitebeam (1) is not nearly so common as
-the Oak, or the Ash or Beech, and yet it has been
-known in this country for many hundred years.
-It is found growing stiff and tall on bleak chalky
-pastures as well as in beautiful parks and plantations.
-The trunk is covered with a rough
-brown bark, and there are great deep roots which
-spread widely and keep the tree firmly attached
-to the soil.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate25"><span class="smcap">Plate XXV</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_167.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE WHITEBEAM<br />
-
-
-1. Whitebeam<span class="gap">2. Flower Cluster with Leaves</span><span class="gap">3. Fruit Cluster with Leaves</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is easy to see why this tree is called the
-Whitebeam. Look at the fat buds which have
-been on the tree all winter, making you think that
-spring was close at hand. In April these buds
-burst open, and you see that the young leaves
-inside are covered with a thick coating of woolly
-down. They are the woolliest buds which grow
-in this country, and the leaves (2), when they first<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-come out, are as white as if they had been
-sprinkled with flour. They are pretty leaves,
-broad and oval, with large teeth cut all round the
-edge and with clearly-marked veins. At first
-each leaf is white above as well as below, but as
-it gets older the woolly down disappears from the
-upper side, and the leaf becomes a dark, glossy
-green. But watch the tree some day when the
-wind is stirring, and at every gust the dark green
-leaves blow upwards and sideways, and you will
-see that the back of each leaf is silvery white&mdash;the
-woolly lining has remained. You remember
-that the white Poplar or Abele tree had leaves
-which were white-lined too.</p>
-
-<p>The flowers of the Whitebeam (2) resemble
-those of the Rowan, but they are larger and are
-not so closely clustered together on their short
-stalks. Each flower has five pointed green sepals
-standing out like the rays of a star beneath the
-circle of five white petals. There is a ring of
-delicate stamens with yellow heads within the
-petal circle, and the seeds are concealed in the
-pear-shaped swelling which supports the flower
-at the end of the flower stalk. There are often
-dark spots on the main flower stem from which
-all the smaller ones branch.</p>
-
-<p>After the white petals and the stamens have
-fallen off, the swollen flower stalk enlarges and
-becomes an oval berry (3), considerably larger
-than that of the Rowan. At first the berries are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
-covered with white down, but soon that wears off,
-and you see that the berries are smooth and are a
-rich red colour. They are not good to eat, these
-attractive-looking berries, though people say they
-are pleasant when over-ripe and ready to decay.
-But the birds love them, and so do hedgehogs
-and squirrels.</p>
-
-<p>In France the people plant a great many Whitebeams.
-This is because the small birds require
-the berries for food in the winter, when there are
-no longer grubs and insects to be found. These
-grubs and insects destroy the vines and corn
-when they are young and tender in early spring,
-and the small birds are needed because they eat
-these pests, and so save the young plants.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Whitebeam is not much used,
-though small objects, such as wooden spoons,
-knife handles, and combs, are made of it. It is
-very hard, and will take a high polish.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XXVI<br />
-
-
-THE ROWAN OR MOUNTAIN ASH</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">&#8220;Their spells were vain, the boy returned</div>
-<div class="indent1">To the Queen in sorrowful mood,</div>
-<div class="verse">Crying that witches have no power</div>
-<div class="indent1">Where there is Roan tree wood.&#8221;</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright">&mdash;Old Song.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p>The Rowan tree is closely related to the roses,
-and is a cousin of the Hawthorn, the Apple, and
-the Pear. It is not related in any way to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-Ash, but the leaves have some resemblance, because,
-like the Ash tree leaves, they are made up
-of many pairs of small leaflets growing opposite
-each other on each side of a centre stalk, and
-with an odd leaflet at the end. But the leaflets
-of the Ash tree have each a stalk; those in the
-Rowan have none, and in the Ash tree each large
-feathery leaf is planted exactly opposite its neighbour,
-while in the Rowan the leaves grow alternately.
-The name Mountain Ash is a mistake.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate26"><span class="smcap">Plate XXVI</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_171.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE ROWAN<br />
-
-
-1. Rowan Tree in Autumn<span class="gap">2. Flower Cluster</span><span class="gap">3. Leaves and Fruit</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Rowan tree (1) is seen at its best among
-the wild glens and mountains of the north and
-west of Scotland. It requires air and light, and
-will flourish in almost any kind of soil, and many
-are the tales which are woven round the life of
-this beautiful tree. It is called the Roan, or
-whispering tree, because it has secrets to tell to
-those who will listen. No witches or evil spirits
-can cross a door over which a branch of Rowan
-is nailed, and no harm will happen to him who
-has a sprig of Rowan pinned to his coat. In
-every churchyard in Wales a Rowan tree is
-planted to scare away demons who might disturb
-the sleep of the dead; and on lonely farms
-high up on the mountain sides, the Witchin, or
-Wiggin tree, as it used to be called, is placed
-close beside the dwelling-house.</p>
-
-<p>The Rowan is not a large tree; it grows easily
-and requires no pruning, as its branches rarely
-die, and the tree never loses its graceful shape.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
-The branches are wiry and slender, and they all
-point upward. The bark is a dark purple colour
-and is glossy and smooth; across it there are
-many curious deep gashes, as if the tree had been
-scored with a knife.</p>
-
-<p>The Rowan is often planted in new coppices
-to shield the young trees, but as soon as these
-grow up and throw out many branches, they
-stifle their kind nurse, which cannot grow without
-plenty of light and air.</p>
-
-<p>Early in spring the Rowan buds appear, fat
-woolly buds covered with grey cottony down.
-The young leaves (3) are carefully packed inside
-among plenty of cotton wool, and very downy
-they look when they first come out. Each leaflet
-is toothed round the edge, and is dark glossy green
-above and much paler green underneath. These
-leaves remain on the tree till late in autumn,
-then when the frost touches them with its icy
-fingers they change to wonderful shades of gold
-and scarlet and pink, and they fall with the
-October winds.</p>
-
-<p>The Rowan tree flowers (2) blossom in May, and
-they grow in dense dusters, each flower at the
-end of a small stalk. There are many small stalks,
-all about the same height, and they branch again
-and again from the main stem, forming a thick
-cluster. The flowers are very delightful, though
-they lack the snowy beauty and have none of the
-delicate scent of the Hawthorn. Each Rowan<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-flower has five green sepals and five creamy white
-petals. These are placed round the end of the
-flower stalk, which is slightly swollen, and inside
-this swelling lies hidden the seed-vessel; you can
-see three sticky threads rising from it in the
-centre of the ring of petals. There is a circle of
-yellow-headed stamens within the petal ring.</p>
-
-<p>By the end of June the Rowan flowers have faded
-and the creamy petals strew the ground. But the
-tree does not only depend for its beauty on the
-creamy flowers or on the changing leaves.</p>
-
-<p>The swollen flower stalks have been growing
-all summer, and now the end of each stalk has
-become a small round berry (3), and a dense
-cluster of these berries hangs in a bunch from the
-main stem. In autumn these berries turn a rich
-yellow red, and very brilliant they look among the
-dark green leaves. Song birds love these Rowan
-berries, and so long as any remain on the tree the
-blackbird and thrush will be its constant visitors.</p>
-
-<p>When corn was scarce in the hard winters of
-long ago these Rowan berries were dried and
-made into flour. Many people to-day make them
-into jelly, which is a rich golden colour, but has
-rather a bitter taste.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Rowan tree is very tough, and
-is principally used for making poles.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XXVII<br />
-
-
-THE HAWTHORN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">&#8220;Mark the fair blooming of the Hawthorn tree,</div>
-<div class="verse">Who, finely clothed in a robe of white,</div>
-<div class="verse">Fills full the wanton eye with May&#8217;s delight.&#8221;</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright">&mdash;Chaucer.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<p>We cannot think of the Hawthorn as one of our
-noble forest trees, like the Oak and the Beech;
-it is dear to us as a village tree, a friendly, bushy
-tree which has grown in our garden, or in the
-fields and meadows close to our country cottages.
-We remember the long sunny May days when we
-gathered armfuls of its lovely blossoms, and the
-frosty autumn mornings when its berries shone
-like rubies on the bare, wind-stripped branches.
-It has always been in close touch with our lives,
-and it has left many pictures graven deep in our
-memory.</p>
-
-<p>The Hawthorn (1), or May, or White-thorn, as
-it is often called from the colour of its flowers,
-has been known to us since very long ago.
-When the hero Ulysses came home from his
-weary wanderings, he found his old father
-alone; all the servants had gone to the woods
-to get young Hawthorn trees to make a hedge,
-and the old man was busy digging trenches in
-which to plant them.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate27"><span class="smcap">Plate XXVII</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_177.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE HAWTHORN<br />
-
-
-1. Hawthorn Tree in Early Summer<span class="gap">2. Leaves and Blossoms</span><span class="gap">3. Fruit</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Even in that far-off time people had discovered
-that nothing makes so good a hedge as young<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
-thorn trees. They grow very quickly and send
-out many side-shoots and small branches. Each
-branch bears sharp thorns, and so closely do
-these thorny branches grow together that it is
-impossible to push your hand through the hedge
-without being badly scratched. Young cattle
-and horses love to feed on the Hawthorn leaves,
-and one wonders how they can eat them without
-getting many scratches.</p>
-
-<p>Long after the time of Ulysses we find that
-bunches of flowering Hawthorn were carried in
-wedding processions as an emblem of hope, and
-torches made of its wood were burned. There is
-a strange old legend which tells how Joseph of
-Arimathea landed on the island of Avalon at
-Christmas-tide. He was very weary, and lay
-down to rest, but first he planted his staff of
-Hawthorn firmly in the ground beside him. And
-in the morning he found that the staff had put
-out roots and was covered with Hawthorn
-blossoms. By this he knew it was meant that
-he should stay in Avalon, and he built a monastery
-for himself and his brethren and remained there
-till he died.</p>
-
-<p>Until not so long ago the country people in
-England used to hold gay sports in the village
-in the month of May. A tall mast, or Maypole,
-was planted in the ground, and the men and
-maidens decorated it with wreaths of Hawthorn
-blossoms. Then they danced, and sang, and held<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-merry games around the Maypole in honour of
-summer&#8217;s return.</p>
-
-<p>In early spring the Hawthorn tree, if you find
-one growing singly in a field or meadow, is most
-easily recognised by its bushy appearance. The
-tree trunk is dark grey and very rough; often it
-is twisted like a rope, but it is rarely a thick
-trunk, as you seldom find a large Hawthorn.
-Even when very old-about two hundred and fifty
-years some are said to live&mdash;the Hawthorn is
-always a small tree.</p>
-
-<p>In April the young leaf buds appear; pale green
-knobs, or little bundles, bursting from every
-branch. Each leaf (2) is cut up into blunt fingers,
-and soon it loses its paleness and becomes dark
-green and glossy. In autumn these leaves change
-to gold and dark red and brown; but the frosty
-nights and cold winds soon strip them from the
-branches.</p>
-
-<p>May is the month when the flowers (2) begin to
-bloom&mdash;clusters of tiny snow-white balls, each at
-the end of a slender green stalk. In England it
-was the custom to give a basin of cream for
-breakfast to the person who first brought home
-a branch of Hawthorn in blossom on the first of
-May.</p>
-
-<p>When the flower balls or buds unclose, you find
-that they have five snow-white petals, which are
-set in the throat of the calyx cup. Within this
-ring of petals, round the mouth of the cup, grow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
-many slender stamens, each with a bright pink
-head. And if you look at the back of the flower,
-you will see five green points which stand out like
-the rays of a star behind the white petals. These
-are the sepals.</p>
-
-<p>Below this green star the stalk looks slightly
-swollen: this swelling contains the seed, and by
-the time autumn comes it will have grown into
-a small green berry. After the white petals and
-the pink-headed stamens have fallen, you will find
-clusters of these berries, which are called haws,
-each with the withered remains of the sepals
-clinging to the top, as you find them in the Rose
-and in the Apple. The berries (3) become crimson
-when the frost comes, and birds eat them greedily.</p>
-
-<p>We have few trees which flower so beautifully
-as the Hawthorn. In May and June the hedgerows
-are laden with its masses of snowy blossoms.
-Sometimes you will find Hawthorns on which the
-flowers are a vivid crimson, and these are so
-transparently beautiful they look as if the light
-shone through them. And in autumn no tree is
-more attractive than the Hawthorn, with its gleaming
-berries and many-coloured leaves.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Hawthorn is not very serviceable.
-It is hard and may be highly polished, but
-the trees are too small for the timber to be useful.</p>
-
-<p>The branches, like those of the Ash and the Whin,
-burn readily, even when green, and in Scotland
-the bark was used in olden days to dye wool black.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XXVIII<br />
-
-
-THE BOX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Many of us only know Box as the name given
-to the small bushy plant which is placed along
-the edges of our garden borders to keep the
-earth from falling out on the gravel path. And
-we are surprised to learn that this plant is only
-the Dwarf Box, and that the true Box is a tree,
-a fair-sized tree, which may be seen any day in
-Oxford growing to a height of over twenty feet.
-We must learn to recognise the Box tree, for in
-the South of England there are still many districts
-where it grows freely.</p>
-
-<p>It has been known in this country for hundreds
-of years, but its fame has come down to us in a
-curious way. In old books we read that the Box
-was chiefly prized as the tree which would stand
-more clipping than any other. People in those
-days had a strange fancy for cutting trees and
-bushes into quaint shapes. They had Box trees
-which looked like peacocks, and Box trees shaped
-like beehives. There were arm-chairs, and tubs,
-and even statues made of growing Box, cut and
-trimmed by the gardener&#8217;s clever shears.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate28"><span class="smcap">Plate XXVIII</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_183.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE BOX<br />
-
-
-1. Box Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray with Flowers</span><span class="gap">3. Single Flower</span><span class="gap">4. Fruit</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The best gardener then was the one who clipped
-best, and a very difficult art it was, to clip the
-tree into a certain shape and yet not to kill it.
-Nowadays these quaint Box tree curiosities are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
-scarcely ever made, but a Box tree hedge is
-often planted, and its masses of closely-crowded
-evergreen leaves afford good protection to young
-plants in a windy garden.</p>
-
-<p>The Box tree (1) has a dark grey-green bark,
-and the young shoots are four-sided. It grows
-very slowly&mdash;only a few inches each year&mdash;and because
-of this the wood is very hard and fine, as
-fine as ebony.</p>
-
-<p>The leaves (2) are placed opposite each other,
-and are small and egg-shaped, with smooth edges.
-Above they are dark green and very glossy, but
-underneath the colour is paler. They are very
-poisonous these Box leaves, and fowls are known
-to have died from eating them.</p>
-
-<p>The poet Wordsworth tells us that at country
-funerals it was usual to have a basin filled with
-sprays of Box standing at the door, and every
-friend who came to the funeral took a spray, which
-he carried to the churchyard and laid on the new
-grave. Rosemary or Yew sprays were often used
-in the same way.</p>
-
-<p>The flowers are very tiny; you will scarcely be
-able to see how they are shaped without a magnifying-glass.
-They grow in crowded yellow
-clusters at the foot of the leaves, where they join
-the stem. In each cluster there is usually one
-seed flower (3) with a tiny green pea in the centre,
-from which rise three curved horns. All the
-other flowers will be stamen flowers, which shed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
-plenty of pollen dust over this single green pea.
-The fruit (4) is a green berry, enclosing a tiny
-black seed, which you cannot see.</p>
-
-<p>Box-wood is very valuable and is scarce in
-this country. Most of what we use comes from
-other lands. In France there is a large Box-wood
-forest near the village of St. Claude, and
-all the people in that village spend their days
-making the Box-wood into small articles, such as
-forks and spoons, and rosaries and snuff-boxes,
-for which they get a good deal of money. The
-wood is pale yellow, and may be cut into the
-finest pattern without breaking. For many years
-Box-wood has been used by engravers for making
-the blocks from which pictures and patterns are
-printed; the wood is so hard that these blocks
-can be used many, many times without the edges
-becoming worn.</p>
-
-<p>Near London there grew a famous wood called
-Boxhill, and when the trees in that wood were
-cut down they were sold for ten thousand pounds.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XXIX<br />
-
-
-THE WALNUT</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Walnut tree (1) comes to us from sunny Italy
-and France, where it has grown for many centuries
-and is greatly prized. Its Latin name, <i>Juglans</i>,
-means the nut of Jove, and the Romans called it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-so because they thought the fruit was worthy to
-be set before their chief god Jove. It was brought
-to this country about five hundred years ago, and
-seems to have been grown in many districts until
-the beginning of last century, when there came
-a great demand for its wood. As much as six
-hundred pounds was given for a single Walnut
-tree, and at once all the people who had Walnut
-trees cut them down and sold them. This greatly
-reduced the number.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate29"><span class="smcap">Plate XXIX</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_187.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE WALNUT<br />
-
-
-1. Walnut Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Bud</span><span class="gap">4. Scar</span><br />
-5. Stamen Flower<span class="gap">6. Seed Flowers</span><span class="gap">7. Fruit</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It is a large, handsome tree, which grows to a
-considerable height, and has a very thick trunk
-covered with grey bark. This trunk is smooth
-when the tree is young, but turns rugged as it
-grows older. The Walnut branches are large
-and spreading; they are sometimes twisted, but
-the tips of each branch always turn to the sky.
-For long it was thought to be dangerous to sleep
-beneath the shade of a Walnut tree, but for what
-reason I have not been able to discover.</p>
-
-<p>The leaves (2) are very handsome; each leaf is
-made up of several pairs of leaflets placed opposite
-each other on a central stalk, with a single leaflet
-at the end. When they first come out these
-leaflets are dull red, but the colour soon changes
-to a pale olive green, and each leaf is smooth and
-soft and has a delicious scent if crushed ever so
-slightly. The twigs which carry these leaves are
-very stout, even to the tips, but they break easily,
-and you will find many lying on the ground after<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-a windy night. The bark on these young twigs
-is very smooth and glossy.</p>
-
-<p>The Walnut tree produces two kinds of flowers,
-which are both found on the same tree, and one
-kind, the stamen flowers (5), requires a whole year
-to ripen. If you look at the twigs which support
-the leaves you will see several tiny cone-shaped
-buds (3) dotted here and there on either side, close
-to the scars (4) left by last year&#8217;s leaf stalk. These
-are the beginnings of next year&#8217;s stamen flowers,
-and they remain like that all summer and all
-winter until the following spring. Then the bud
-lengthens and becomes a slender, drooping catkin
-(5). This catkin is covered with small flowers,
-each made up of five green sepals enclosing
-many stamens. These stamen catkins drop from
-the tree when the pollen dust is scattered.</p>
-
-<p>The Walnut seed flowers (6) are so small that
-they require to be looked for carefully. They
-grow among the leaves at the end of the twig, and
-their small seed-vessels, each with a closely-fitting
-calyx covering, are ready before the leaves
-come out. Very soon the small seeds develop into
-smooth green fruits, which continue to grow all
-summer, and in July they are the size of a small
-plum. This fruit is a nut (7), the famous Walnut,
-and at first you will not see in it any likeness to
-the Walnut which we eat at dessert after cracking
-the pale brown shell. But look more closely.
-The green fruit is a soft juicy envelope which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>
-conceals a large nut. This green envelope turns
-brown when it is ripe and splits open, showing the
-nut inside, a nut with a crinkled skin, which is soft
-and green at first, but which becomes a hard, pale
-brown shell when the fruit dries. It is the kernel
-of this nut which we eat with salt as a dessert
-fruit.</p>
-
-<p>The Walnuts usually ripen in October, but often
-they are gathered in July before the juicy green
-covering has turned brown, and they are preserved
-in vinegar and used as a pickle. Ripe Walnuts
-contain a great deal of oil, and the oil is much
-valued by artists, who mix it with their paints. It
-is the most liquid of all the oils, and it dries very
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p>If you look at your fingers after gathering
-Walnuts you will find that they are stained a dark
-brown. The Walnut tree contains a juice which
-leaves a dark stain. It is said that with this juice
-the gipsies dye their skin brown; and it is also
-used to stain floors.</p>
-
-<p>Walnut wood is very valuable. It is light in
-weight and dark in colour, with beautiful veins
-and streaks throughout. Much fine furniture is
-made of Walnut wood, and it can be polished till
-it shines like satin. To-day it is largely used in
-the manufacture of guns and rifles.</p>
-
-<p>You will now understand what an important
-tree the Walnut is, as it yields fruit and oil and
-wood, which are all valuable.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XXX<br />
-
-
-THE SWEET CHESTNUT OR SPANISH
-CHESTNUT</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Sweet Chestnut is a cousin of the Oak, and
-belongs with it to the great family of cup-bearing
-trees, or those that bear their fruit sitting in a
-cup. Like the Oak, it is a tree with a great and
-ancient history, although nowadays we are apt to
-take little notice of this tree, which was once
-well known and grew abundantly in many parts
-of England.</p>
-
-<p>The largest Chestnut in the world grows in
-Sicily, in the great forest which covers the slopes
-of Mount Etna. It is said that a Spanish Queen
-was once overtaken in this forest by a tremendous
-storm, and that she and a hundred soldiers and
-horses were all able to find shelter beneath the
-wide-spreading branches of this one tree.</p>
-
-<p>In this country we have a famous big Chestnut
-tree in Gloucestershire which is believed to be a
-thousand years old; it is written about in old
-books, which tell us that this tree belonged to a
-certain house in the time of King Stephen.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate30"><span class="smcap">Plate XXX</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_193.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE SWEET CHESTNUT<br />
-
-
-1. Sweet Chestnut Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray with Flowers</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Flowers</span><br />
-4. Seed Flowers<span class="gap">5. Fruit in Case</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Sweet Chestnut (1) is a large bushy tree
-with beautiful leaves, which painters love to put
-in the background of their pictures. The branches
-are heavy and spreading, and they sweep downwards.
-Each branch is thickly covered with long
-green leaves (2), which are so thick and glossy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
-that you expect them to be evergreen. Each leaf
-is sharply oval, and has a stout rib running up
-the centre, from which straight veins branch to
-the very edge of the leaf, where they each end in a
-point. These points make the edge of the leaf look
-as if toothed. Insects do not destroy these Chestnut
-leaves, and they hang on the twigs till late in
-autumn, when they turn pale yellow; this yellow
-deepens to gold and brown, and when winter
-comes they cover the ground with a thick carpet
-of rustling leaves. These leaves are often gathered
-to make winter bedding for the poor people, who
-call them &#8220;talking beds&#8221; because they rustle and
-crackle so when lain on.</p>
-
-<p>Those leaves that are left on the ground greatly
-enrich the soil.</p>
-
-<p>The trunk of the Chestnut tree is scored up and
-down with many deep ridges, and these ridges
-seem to bend round the tree strangely, as if they
-had been twisted, like the strands of a rope, when
-the tree was young and tender.</p>
-
-<p>The Chestnut flowers appear on this year&#8217;s
-shoots early in May or June, and they are of two
-kinds, both of which grow on the same tree.
-The stamen flowers (3) are in long catkin spikes,
-which rise stiffly among the leaves. The centre
-stem of the catkin is very stout, and seated round
-it are tufts of yellow-headed stamens, each enclosed
-in a green calyx. These stamen heads are filled
-with yellow dust, which they shed in the same way<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-as the Pine tree stamens, in such quantities that
-it lies like sulphur on any still lake or pond that
-may be near.</p>
-
-<p>On the same catkin spike, near the foot, grow
-the seed flowers (4). These look like short, fat
-paint brushes with a stout green handle. There
-is a cup made up of many slender green leaf-like
-points, and inside this cup sit the seeds; you can
-see a bunch of their points standing up like the
-bristles of the paint brush. When plenty of the
-stamen dust has fallen on these bristles, the seed
-sets about getting ready its fruit, and the stamen
-part of the catkin spike shrivels and falls off; its
-work is done.</p>
-
-<p>But the seed grows bigger and bigger, till it
-looks like a round green ball (5) covered all over
-with bristles. The seeds are ripening inside this
-ball, two or three, sometimes five, seeds closely
-packed side by side. In October the green covering
-splits into four pieces and the seeds fall to the
-ground. Notice how beautifully this bristly covering
-is lined with soft, silky down to protect the
-smooth skin of the nut.</p>
-
-<p>Each nut is slightly flattened at the sides where
-it was tightly pressed against its neighbour, and
-it comes to a point at the top, where the withered
-remains of the seed bristles show in a dry brown
-tuft. The skin on the Chestnut is dark brown,
-and there is a large scar at the foot of the nut
-where it was fastened to the green cup.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>In Italy, where there are miles and miles of
-Chestnut forests, the nuts are gathered in sackfuls
-when October comes. They are then spread out
-on a brick floor in a thick layer, and a fire, made
-of dry leaves and sticks, is lit beneath. This fire
-is kept burning for ten days, and the nuts are
-frequently turned with a wooden shovel. Whenever
-the skins crack off quite easily the nuts are
-ready; the hard, cracked brown skins are removed,
-and the nuts are ground into flour from which
-many delicious foods are prepared.</p>
-
-<p>The fruit of the Chestnut is one of the most
-important tree fruits we know. In France and
-Italy the people use Chestnuts as much as we
-do potatoes, and many are the clever ways in
-which they prepare and cook them, but the
-commonest way is to boil and eat the chestnuts
-with a little salt. When the cook is preparing
-the nuts, he makes a slit in the skin of every
-Chestnut except one, and when that one bursts
-and cracks with a loud noise, he knows that the
-others are ready.</p>
-
-<p>The Chestnut fruit ripens in the South of
-England, but it is never so large, nor is it so
-plentiful, as in the sunny South.</p>
-
-<p>The wood of the Chestnut tree is valuable. For
-many years people believed that the great beams
-in some of our old historic buildings were Chestnut
-wood, and this made them think that the
-trees must have grown much larger then than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
-they do to-day. But it is now decided that these
-old beams must be made of Oak. Old Oak beams
-are very like Chestnut beams, but clever people
-tell us that Chestnut wood is best when it is
-young, as the old wood is apt to break off in
-little pieces, and it would not really be a suitable
-wood to use in buildings where strength was
-needed.</p>
-
-<p>Chestnut wood makes excellent fences and
-is also used for wine casks; the hoops which
-go round these wine casks should be made of
-it, as it does not rot in a damp cellar. Chestnut
-wood burns badly; it sends up a great many
-sparks, and it smoulders, but will not burn
-brightly.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XXXI<br />
-
-
-THE HORSE CHESTNUT</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Horse Chestnut is not related in any way
-to the Sweet Chestnut; there is no resemblance
-between them except the appearance of their nuts,
-and even in these there are many points of difference.
-It is said that the name Horse Chestnut
-was given because the nuts of this tree were
-only fit for horses to eat, whereas the Sweet
-Chestnuts are valuable as a food for human beings.
-Even horses will not eat the nuts of the Horse
-Chestnut tree. You must not forget that if the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-Chestnut is spoken of without an adjective, it is
-the sweet Spanish Chestnut that has the right
-to the name, and is by far the more valuable
-tree.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate31"><span class="smcap">Plate XXXI</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_199.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE HORSE CHESTNUT<br />
-
-
-1. Horse Chestnut Tree in Autumn<span class="gap">2. Young Leaf</span><span class="gap">3. Full-grown Leaf</span><br />
-4. Sticky Bud in Leaf Scar<span class="gap">5. Flower Spike</span><span class="gap">6. Single Flower</span><span class="gap">7. Fruit in Case</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Horse Chestnut (1) was brought to this
-country five hundred years ago, and we prize it
-greatly for its beautiful flowers and leaves. It
-has a large, stout trunk, covered with a rough,
-scaly bark, on which you will frequently notice
-many green patches caused by a tiny plant which
-makes its home there.</p>
-
-<p>The branches are large and spreading, and they
-sweep downwards to the ground, then rise again
-towards the tips, forming graceful curves. The
-shoots bearing the buds always point towards the
-sky, and in spring these shoots grow very fast
-for about a month, then they do not become any
-larger, but the shoot thickens and is soon tough
-and woody.</p>
-
-<p>All winter the Horse Chestnut buds can be
-seen on the tree&mdash;large, dark, purply brown buds
-(4) covered with a thick coating of sticky gum.
-In April these buds begin to swell and the gummy
-covering melts. It held together twelve dark
-brown scales, and these fall to the ground, showing
-an under layer of paler scales. The growing
-bud inside soon pushes itself through these scales,
-and the young leaf appears, a delicate, pale green
-bud, with its leaves closely folded like a fan. They
-open very quickly in the warm sunshine, but for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>
-some days after they have shaken themselves
-loose from the scaly coverings each leaf (2)
-hangs on its stalk like a half-opened parasol,
-with all its tips pointing to the ground. But
-soon the leaf tips rise, and the parasol is fully
-opened and a beautiful leafy screen it is.</p>
-
-<p>The leaf (3) is cut up into seven leaflets, and
-every leaflet is shaped like a pear, with the broad
-part pointing outwards and the narrow end joining
-the leaf stalk. These pear-shaped leaflets are not
-all the same size; there are two which are quite
-small and two a little larger, and the other three
-are larger still. The leaflets have small teeth
-round their edges, and there is a raised rib running
-up the centre, from which branches a network of
-fine veins all over the leaflet.</p>
-
-<p>The Horse Chestnut leaves grow opposite each
-other in pairs, and each pair is placed cross-ways
-to the pair farther down on the branch, in the
-same way as those of the Sycamore. In July the
-leaves begin to change colour; they turn red and
-brown, and they fall very early in autumn. Look
-closely at the twigs and you will see on them
-many curious marks shaped like horse-shoes;
-these are the scars (4) where a leaf stalk joined
-the twig, and above each of these scars you can
-see next year&#8217;s leaf bud already distinctly formed.</p>
-
-<p>In May the Horse Chestnut is in flower (5), and a
-wonderful sight it is; the tree is laden with snowy
-spikes, which look like great candles set on a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-bushy Christmas tree. A giant&#8217;s nosegay, it is
-sometimes called by the country people, this great
-tree, with its wealth of fan-shaped leaves and these
-stiff snow-white spikes rising from every branch.</p>
-
-<p>The lowest flowers (6) in each spike open first,
-and they are called by botanists perfect flowers,
-because each one has all its parts complete. They
-have a green bell-shaped calyx with five divisions
-round the mouth. Within this calyx are five
-separate white petals, one of which is much larger
-than the others, and these petals have many hairs
-on them and are splashed with crimson and yellow
-stains.</p>
-
-<p>In the throat of this flower there are seven
-stamens with curved stalks and pale salmon-coloured
-heads, and among these you can see a
-slender curved green thread rising from the seed-vessel,
-which lies hidden in the centre of the
-flower.</p>
-
-<p>The upper flowers on the spike have no seed-vessel,
-and they fall off as soon as their stamen
-dust is scattered. The spike may bear thirty or
-forty flowers, yet only a few will remain to produce
-seeds after the beautiful petals are withered.</p>
-
-<p>When this has happened the seed-vessel grows
-larger and larger till it becomes a rough, horny
-green ball (7) studded with short spines. It is not
-bristly all over like the Sweet Chestnut fruit ball,
-but is hard and smooth, and its spines are thick
-and clumsy, with a wide space between each. If<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
-you open one of these balls before the fruit is ripe,
-you will find a nut inside, which is white and
-polished like a piece of ivory and which fits the
-covering closely. But if you leave the fruit to
-ripen on the tree, then the green ball splits into
-three pieces, and you see that the nut (7) inside
-has shrunk a little and has become a rich, dark
-brown. It is so glossy that it looks as if it had
-just been oiled, and it is almost round.</p>
-
-<p>There is a white scar at the foot of the nut,
-where it was fastened to the inside of the green
-ball.</p>
-
-<p>In the Sweet Chestnut, you remember, there
-were always two or three nuts inside each bristly
-ball, and these nuts were dull, and not glossy like
-those of the Horse Chestnut.</p>
-
-<p>Although horses will not eat this fruit, deer and
-cattle and sheep all like it. In this country the
-nuts are usually left to rot on the ground where
-they fall. After they decay these nuts may be
-pounded and made into a kind of soap; they
-contain a juice which is said to be good for
-cleansing.</p>
-
-<p>The Horse Chestnut is a very fast-growing tree.
-In fourteen years a tree grown from a nut will be
-large enough to sit under, and the wood, on this
-account, is less hard and lasting than woods that
-have taken longer to grow. It is used for cabinet-making
-and for flooring.</p>
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1"><a id="plate32"><span class="smcap">Plate XXXII</span></a></p>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_205.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE CEDAR<br />
-
-
-1. Cedar Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Stamen Flower</span><br />
-4. Seed Flower<span class="gap">5. Closed Cone and Open Cone</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The tree does not produce any fruit till it is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-twenty years old, but after that it will bear nuts
-yearly till it is two hundred.</p>
-
-<p>There is a variety of Horse Chestnut with pink
-flowers, which has not been so long known as the
-white-flowered tree.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PLATE XXXII<br />
-
-
-THE CEDAR OF LEBANON</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the Old Testament we read that when Solomon
-was building the temple he sent to Hiram,
-King of Tyre, for stores of goodly Cedar wood from
-the forests of Lebanon. And Hiram sent the
-wood by sea in floats, or rafts, as much Cedar and
-timber of Fir as King Solomon wanted. This
-was used to cover the stonework of the temple,
-within and without.</p>
-
-<p>There is a delightful fragrance in these planks
-of Cedar wood which is said to come from the sap
-or resin with which the tree abounds. Cedar oil
-is made from this resin, and it was long in use as
-a safeguard against the attacks of insects, which
-dislike the smell.</p>
-
-<p>The Cedar (1), as we see it in this country, rarely
-rises to the dignity of a large tree; it is most
-familiar to us as a stunted, bushy tree with a
-thick, short trunk divided into more than one
-main stem. Short branches rise from these stems,
-and at first these point upwards to the sky, but
-after the branch has grown some length it bends<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-backward and stands straight out from the tree.
-From a distance the tree looks as if the branches
-grew in layers, or shelves, with a clear space
-between each shelf. You will always recognise
-a Cedar by these layers of branches densely
-covered with gloomy green leaves. It is said that
-in countries where much snow falls the Cedar
-branches always remain upright, because the tree
-knows that it could not carry the great weight of
-snow that would gather on its leafy shelves if
-they grew flat as in warmer lands.</p>
-
-<p>The Cedar is frequently found growing in
-churchyards, beside the Yew tree, and a dark,
-gloomy tree it is. The trunk is covered with a
-thick rough bark of a pale greenish brown colour,
-but on the branches this bark is thin and flaky.
-The Cedar grows very slowly. The tree may be
-a hundred years old before it produces any seeds,
-though you sometimes find seedless cones on
-Cedars that are twenty-five to thirty years old.</p>
-
-<p>The leaves (2) are evergreen, and usually remain
-on the twigs for four or five years. They grow in
-tufts, like those of the Larch, on the upper side
-of the twig; but each leaf is needle-shaped, as in
-the Scotch Pine, and is much harder than the
-soft Larch leaves. In colour they are a dark
-bluey green.</p>
-
-<p>The Cedar has two kinds of flowers. Those
-that bear the stamens (3) appear at the end of
-short, stunted little twigs which have taken many<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-years to grow. The stamens are in slender
-catkins, about two inches long, and are a pale
-reddish yellow colour.</p>
-
-<p>The seed flowers (4) grow in cones, and the
-Cedar of Lebanon has very curious cones. They
-grow in pairs, and are like fat green eggs, sitting
-upright on the branch, with the blunt end uppermost.
-These cones look quite solid, because the
-scales are so tightly pressed together. You can
-scarcely see where one begins and the other ends.
-It takes two or three years before these scales
-unclose, and during that time the cones (5)
-become a rich, dark purple. When the scales
-unclose, the three-cornered seeds are blown out
-by the wind, and each seed is furnished with a
-wing to float it away on the air. The Cedar cones
-remain on the tree several years after all their
-seeds have fallen.</p>
-
-<p>The timber of the Cedars grown in this country
-is of little value; the tree is usually planted for
-ornament. But in warmer lands, where there are
-large forests of mighty Cedar trees, the wood is
-sold for a great deal of money.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-</div></div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TREES ***</div>
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