<h2>CHAPTER XIX<br/> <span class="small">ON FRUITS</span></h2>
<p class="hanging">Bright colours of fruits—Unripe fruits and their effects—An intemperate
Fungus—Oranges—Prickly pear and the monkey—Strong seeds—Bill-of-fare
of certain birds—A wood-pigeon and beans—Ants and
seeds—Bats, rats, bears, and baboons—The rise in weight of a Big
Gooseberry—Mr. Gideon and the Wealthy Apple—Crossing fruits—Breadfruit
and banana—Dates—Figs—Olives—Pineapples by the
acre—Apples and pears—Home and Canadian orchards.</p>
<p><span class="dropcap">A</span>T Christmas time and during late autumn, there is
but little colour in the country. Most green grasses
have become a dull greyish-green, and the leafless
brown and grey branches of the trees are not, at first sight,
particularly interesting.</p>
<p>But amongst this monotony of sober colouring, points of
bright red or flaming scarlet may be noticed here and there.
Sometimes it is a spray of Hips (the fruit of the Rose), or it
may be a cluster of Hawthorn berries. At Christmas the Holly
is positively gaudy with its bright scarlet fruit set off by the
shining dark green leaves.</p>
<p>Most fruits are some shade of red, but every fruit is conspicuous
and easily seen.</p>
<div><SPAN name="pineapples_as_a_field_crop" id="pineapples_as_a_field_crop"></SPAN></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="mw" src="images/i_240.jpg" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="left"><i>Queensland Government Photo</i></p> <p class="smcap">Pineapples as a Field Crop</p>
<p>This is one of the important harvests in some parts of Queensland.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>There is the most extraordinary range in colour. The
Snowberry and Dwarf Cornel are pure white. The Mistletoe
is a yellowish green. Pure yellow fruits are not common, but
some of the Cucumber orders and Lemons are lemon or
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">241</SPAN></span>
orange-yellow. The bluish-black of the Blaeberry or Bilberry,
of the Bramble, and of many Plums and Prunes, goes
along with a rather peculiar shade of green in the leaves which
sets them off. The black Elder berries, on the other hand,
have bright red or pink stalks which contrast prettily with
them. The colours of apples vary: many of them have been
rendered a gorgeous, glossy red through cultivation. One
of the most beautiful colour contrasts in Nature is found
in the rich black of the Olive, with its background of
shining white twigs and silver-green leaves. Another very
curious harmony is that of the Spindle tree fruit, which has a
hard dull red case that opens to display the seeds: these are
enclosed in a bright orange fleshy cup.</p>
<p>Changes often occur. The Lily of the Valley fruit is at
first green, then becomes flecked with red, and finally is a
rich scarlet. Juniper berries change from green to purple.</p>
<p>Now there is always some meaning in Nature for any series
of facts such as these. Why are these fruits so brightly
coloured and so conspicuous?</p>
<p>Birds and other animals are intended to scatter the fruits
and seeds, and so the fruits must be easily distinguished at a
distance. The seeds are taken to some other place, where
they germinate and form a new plant. This furnishes the
clue and guide to many other peculiarities in fruits and seeds.</p>
<p>The pleasant smell of ripe apples, plums, strawberries, and
other fruits, also attracts birds and other animals. But the
sugary juice and delicious flesh is developed entirely for the
purpose of making it worth a bird's while to eat it. The
amount of sugary matter is enormous, and the seeds seem
very small and inconspicuous compared with this luscious
mass. The sugar is produced very rapidly towards the end
of the ripening period.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">242</SPAN></span>
A Cucurbita fruit, for instance, may increase in weight at
the rate of·0032 ounce per minute. All who have gathered
strawberries know how quickly they ripen.</p>
<p>The way in which the sugar is formed is not understood,
but unripe fruits contain bitter, unwholesome acids and
essences which may produce colic or very unpleasant effects
if the fruits are eaten green. Thus the colour is a guide to
the animal, who is not supposed to eat the fruit until it is
ripe; if eaten green, the seeds inside the fruit are quite destroyed
and cannot germinate. Yet animals are so greedy
that young birds, young animals of all sorts (even girls and
boys) will and do eat green or half-ripe fruit. In this
present year there is no doubt that many children have
suffered for having done this. Yet if we come to think of
it, throughout all the millions of years during which fruits
have ripened, Nature has every year clearly told young pterodactyls
and other lizards, young birds, young monkeys, and
young people to wait till the fruit is ripe. None of them
have learnt to do so.</p>
<p>When investigating by experiment, on the vile body, the
properties of plums, strawberries, and other fruits, you are
sure to find here and there one that has decayed and become
rotten. In most cases this is because a bird has pecked a
hole in it, or because the outside skin has been broken by a
wasp. The sugar has then begun to ferment. Why does it
do so?</p>
<p>If you gather a few fruits, put them into a jar of sugar-water,
and leave it after closing the mouth with a bunch of
cotton wool, then in a day or two fermentation begins and
alcohol is produced. That is because, on the outside of the
fruit, there were hundreds of an objectionable little fungus.
It lives upon sugar and turns the latter into alcohol. This
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">243</SPAN></span>
yeast fungus is really a living distillery. It lives in the
midst of alcohol all its life, dying eventually (like the
Duke of Clarence in his butt of Malmsey wine) by alcoholic
poisoning, which it has brought about by its own work.
This little yeast fungus can only be seen with a microscope.
From a rotten fruit it drops on to the ground, where it
remains all winter. Next spring certain small insects (green-fly
and the like) carry some of these yeasts from the earth to
next year's fruits. But the skin of the plum or apple, or the
hairs on a gooseberry, or the delicate, waxy bloom on a
grape, will prevent these insects or wasps from laying open
the sugar inside the fruit to the attacks of yeasts and other
fermenting fungi.</p>
<p>Some fruits appear to have "favourites"; they seem to
prefer that large animals should eat them. If you look carefully
at a piece of orange peel, and cut a small piece across,
you will see distinctly small resin pits full of a curious essence
which gives the characteristic taste to marmalade. This
bitter stuff will prevent wasps from touching the sugar. It
is, however, a valuable material, and some kinds of lemons, etc.,
are grown chiefly for this oil, which is obtained by scraping
the peel with a little saucer which is studded with short pins.</p>
<p>A still more extraordinary fruit is the prickly pear; this
is very delicious though very difficult to eat. Indeed, only
monkeys and man seem able to enjoy it. The sugary part
and the seeds form a little round mass in the inside. The
outside part, though also fleshy, contains hundreds of minute
mineral needles, which stick in the tongue and lips and cause
most painful inflammation. The monkey eats the prickly pear
with very great caution, getting his fingers into the top and
scooping out the sugary part. Man requires a teaspoon to
do this satisfactorily.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">244</SPAN></span>
Another very curious point about these fleshy fruits (and
also ordinary ones) is the strength of the seed inside. It does
not look very strong.</p>
<p>But an orange seed, for instance, will not be in the least
injured if you put it between two glass plates and gradually
press upon the upper one up to even a pressure of some thirty
pounds. Even hemp seed, which seems quite weak, will endure
a weight of four pounds. It is impossible to break a
prune stone, or to injure a date stone, by standing with your
whole weight upon it.</p>
<p>Such strength is necessary because many of these seeds are
eaten by birds and ground up in their crops with bits of
china, stones, shells, and the like, which the birds pick up just
to help them in crushing their food.</p>
<p>Fruits and seeds would seem to be exposed to some danger
when they are lying on the ground. Horses or other heavy
animals might tread on them. But the strength of seeds
and their shape is such that no harm is likely to accrue.
For instance, I arranged a thin layer of garden earth (a
quarter of an inch thick) on a glass plate; upon the earth
I placed four hemp seeds; then I put a 58-lb. weight on
the top of the seeds. They were not in the least injured,
although the seed of the hemp is not a particularly tough one.
Under such conditions the seed simply slips into the earth.</p>
<p>This is made easy for it on account of its shape, which is
generally rounded above and below. A transverse section of
a seed would be in shape like the arch of a bridge and its
shadow in the water, at least in many cases. There are also
usually wonderfully thickened cells in the shell or coat of a
seed, which makes it tough and strong.</p>
<p>The following are a few cases of strong seeds or fruits:—Cotton
seed bears a weight of 19 to 20 lb.; the hard fruits
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">245</SPAN></span>
of the Dogrose, 33 lb.; Castor-oil seed, 17 lb.; Hornbeam
nuts, 27 lb.; Pine seed (various sorts), from 11 to 22 lb.;
Yew seeds, 16 lb.; Peas, 50 to 56 lb. In every case they
are not at all hurt by these pressures.</p>
<p>As regards the animals for whom fruit or seeds are of
great importance, birds are of course the commonest. The
following is part of the bill-of-fare of a few of our common
birds:—Thrushes eat blaeberries (bilberries), brambles and
mulberries. Missel-thrush (or mavis) is especially fond of the
mistletoe.</p>
<p>Now the berry of the mistletoe is exceedingly sticky and
glutinous, and in the course of the bird's meal these sticky
strings get on to the bill and feathers, so that the mavis
wipes its bill on the branch of a tree. When it does so the
seed becomes attached to the branch, and is drawn close to
the latter when the viscous matter dries up, and so takes
root on the branch.</p>
<p>Nightingales and robins eat strawberries and elderberries;
blackbirds are very fond of strawberries, gooseberries, and
raspberries. Wood-pigeons eat beechmast, acorns, and, according
to Pliny, mistletoe-berries also, but this latter author
has not been confirmed by later observers. Some of the wild
African pigeons are exceedingly fond of castor-oil seeds.
When travelling through the Central African bush, it is
often necessary to shoot your dinner (if you are to have any
at all), and castor-oil bushes can be relied upon to produce
pigeons, if you are content with and are able to shoot them.</p>
<p>There is a widely-spread belief in the country that a great
quantity of berries means that a very severe winter is
going to follow. But as a matter of fact the winter of 1904
was not a severe one, and yet there were enormous quantities
of berries.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">246</SPAN></span>
We are still ignorant of many details about birds and
berries. It is not quite clear how the seeds are not destroyed,
though experiments have shown that they are not injured, by
passing through the body of a bird. Kerner von Marilaun,
for instance, tried the fruits and seeds of 250 different plants
which were offered to seventeen birds, as well as to marmots,
horses, cattle, and pigs. He found that from seventy-five to
eighty-eight per cent. of the seeds germinated afterwards so
far as regards the blackbird, song-thrush, rock-thrush, and
robin. Quail also bring seeds from Greece and the Ionian
Islands to Sicily.</p>
<p>Mr. Clement Reid says: "Some years ago I found ...
in an old chalk-pit the remains of a wood-pigeon which
had met with some accident. Its crop was full of broad-beans,
all of which were growing well, though under ordinary
circumstances they would have been digested and destroyed."<SPAN name="FNanchor_111" id="FNanchor_111" href="#Footnote_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</SPAN>
Such accidents are common.</p>
<p>But it is not only birds which eat fleshy fruits and seeds.
Even the tiny, industrious ant drags about seeds of certain
plants. Sometimes they gather up corn or grasses, such as
ant-rice, and store them for use in winter. They even bite
off the growing root to prevent the seeds germinating and
spoiling. Occasionally they seem to carry the seeds by
accident, as, for example, those of the cow-wheat and a few
others which resemble their cocoons in size, colour, and form.
In other cases there is a little fleshy excrescence on the seed
which they are fond of eating. Cyclamen, snowdrop, violet,
and periwinkle seeds are supposed to be carried in this way.
Many animals occasionally or regularly eat fruits. There
are, for instance, the flying-foxes or fruit-eating bats of
Madagascar and tropical countries, which may be seen hanging
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247">247</SPAN></span>
from the upper branches of trees by their toes, with their
heads tucked away under their wings. When disturbed a
little fox-like head appears, and after much chattering,
scolding, and expostulation, the creature unhooks itself and
flies away with a strong flight not unlike that of a crow.
Horses are occasionally fed on peaches in Chile. Rats eat
the coffee cherry, and do a great deal of harm in coffee
plantations.</p>
<p>In Cashmir the mulberry and other fruit trees are sometimes
visited by sportsmen, who often find bears feeding on
the fruits. Pigs, of course, eat all sorts of fruit, and several
other mammals do the same, but it is especially monkeys
that live chiefly on fruit. They plunder the banana plantations,
and in South Africa melon-patches require to be most
carefully watched to prevent baboons from destroying them.</p>
<p>It is said that the baboons watch the plantations from a
distance, and will only come down if they think no one is
there: so five people walk to the patch, and while four go
away again, one of them remains in hiding to shoot the
baboons, who cannot tell the difference between four and
five.</p>
<p>Man himself is, and has always been, a great eater of fruit.
Not only so, but he has enormously improved and altered
wild fruits until they are modified into monsters of the most
extraordinary kind. The ordinary wild gooseberry weighs
about 5 dwt. But even in the year 1786 some of the
cultivated forms weighed double this amount (10 dwt.),
and in 1852 gooseberries which weighed more than 37
dwt. were in existence. What size the largest big
gooseberry may be this year is not very easy to say, because
the public Press is at slack times too energetic about the
question. The most usual way of improving fruits is by
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248">248</SPAN></span>
selecting the finest specimens for reproduction. It is by this
means that the original wild banana, which is a rather small
fruit with very large seeds and very little flesh, has been
altered into something like 150 varieties, of which the
immense majority have no seed at all. This is a very extraordinary
fact, because the seed is the reason for the existence
of the fruit. Of course, all such varieties must be reproduced
by suckers (like the banana) or by grafts, or in some
such non-sexual manner. Seedless varieties exist of the
Cucumber, Fig, German Medlar, Diospyros, and Orange.</p>
<p>In the case of seedless varieties of the Vine, it has been found
that it is necessary to carry pollen to the flowers to fertilize
them, and the seedless fruit is also very much smaller in this
case, not more than a quarter of the size of one that has
seeds.</p>
<p>The following instance is typical of the manner in which
many well-known kinds of fruit have been developed, though
the perseverance shown by Mr. Gideon is certainly not common.
About the year 1855 this gentleman began planting
apple trees of about thirty named varieties. For nine years
he continued his experiments. He not only planted trees,
but also sowed apple seed sufficient to produce a thousand
trees every year. Yet the cold winters were so severe that
at the end of ten years one small seedling crab apple was
the solitary survivor. One seedling of this turned out to be
hardy enough for the climate of Minnesota, and this, the
"wealthy" apple, has been of great importance to the
Northern Mississippi growers. It is to be hoped that the
name has been justified in Mr. Gideon's case.</p>
<div><SPAN name="banana_carriers_in_jamaica" id="banana_carriers_in_jamaica"></SPAN></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="mw" src="images/i_248.jpg" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="small"><i>Stereo Copyright, Underwood & Underwood</i><span class="j2"><i>London and New York</i></span></p> <p class="smcap">Banana Carriers in Jamaica</p>
<p>A West Indian negro thinks nothing of walking twenty miles with loads such as these.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Many other cases could be mentioned of a chance variety
produced as a wild plant, and then propagated non-sexually
for long periods, e.g. the New Rochelle Bramble, which was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249">249</SPAN></span>
found by the roadside, and which turned out to be exceedingly
valuable. It is by crossing or hybridizing that the most
extraordinary results have been obtained. Sometimes with
plums, the hybrids of the first generation are nearly double
the size of their parents. Some of the crosses are between
different plants. The Loganberry, for instance, is said to
be a cross between a Raspberry and a Bramble. It ripens
in July, and is said to be far in advance of either of its
parents as regards juiciness and acidity.</p>
<p>In most cases, however, the crosses are between well-established
varieties or races of the same species, and both
hybridizing and selection are employed to get the desired
result.</p>
<p>There are several tropical fruits which, with the possible
exception of wheat and oats, are more important to mankind
than anything else. The Breadfruit (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Artocarpus incisus</i>),
which is very common in the South Sea Islands, has a large
fruit the size of a melon. When baked in an oven heated by
hot stones, it forms a satisfying meal: it is rather like new
bread, but has very little flavour. Coarse cloth is made of
its bark, and the wood is used as timber. The tree also has
a milky juice containing indiarubber, and is employed for
caulking the canoes. The most interesting point for
botanists about this plant is that the fruit is made up of
thousands of little flowers, and the fleshy part is really the
stalk. Fossil trees of this genus (of the chalk period) are
found in some parts of Europe.</p>
<p>Still more important to mankind is the Banana (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Musa
paradisiaca</i>). It is wheat, corn, and potatoes all in one, in
tropical and sub-tropical countries. It is found all over the
world wherever there is a hot, moist climate and shelter from
wind. It is a most generous plant as regards the amount
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250">250</SPAN></span>
which it will produce. It will yield about 19-1/2 tons of dry
fruit on a single acre, which is about forty-four times the
amount given by potatoes and 133 times that of wheat.
Moreover, it differs from almost every other fruit in being
both "rice and prunes," that is, it is nutritious and wholesome,
and yet at the same time succulent. There are still
people who declare that the taste is that of "cotton wool
and Windsor soap," but that is a frivolous and unjust
remark. It is very difficult to prepare it exactly in the
right way for export to Great Britain, and the slightest
change in temperature or period of gathering has the most
distressing results.</p>
<p>As with many other tropical fruits, the countries where it
is most carefully produced and where the trade is most important
are just on the borders of the tropics. There
Europeans can keep enough vigour and vitality to supervise
and watch over the labour of natives. It is in the Canary
Islands, Queensland,<SPAN name="FNanchor_112" id="FNanchor_112" href="#Footnote_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</SPAN> and Jamaica that the cultivation is
most carefully looked after. The yield may be from five
hundred to a thousand bunches per acre, and the value of
the trade is enormous. A plantation is not very beautiful,
because the huge leaves break up into irregular, ragged
pieces which look untidy. The flowers are visited by the
beautiful little honey-sucking sunbirds and humming-birds.
Monkeys also are very fond of the fruit.</p>
<p>In the tropics it grows everywhere, and with extremely
little trouble. It is a doubtful blessing to the negroes, for
they get their food so easily that they tend to become
incorrigibly lazy. Jam, champagne, brandy, and meal can
be made from the banana. When this meal can be prepared
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251">251</SPAN></span>
satisfactorily, it may partly replace wheat in temperate
countries. Besides this, the leaves are used for thatching,
and the stalks which make the stem contain a valuable
fibre which is used for string and rope.</p>
<p>In Egypt and all along the great deserts of Sahara and
Asia the graceful stately Date palm gives the favourite food
of the people (see Chap. <span class="smcap">X.</span>).</p>
<p>The Arabs grind up the stones to make food for camels,
and sometimes ferment the sap to make toddy. The trees
are either male or female. The Arabs knew that it was
necessary to pollinate the female flowers with male pollen
long before the meaning of the process was realized in
Europe.</p>
<p>The Fig, a native of the Persian Gulf, is cultivated all
along the Mediterranean and in India, Australia, and California.
It is sometimes fifteen to thirty feet high, and reaches
a very great age. There is one at Finisterre said to be
several centuries old. It yields fruit worth about £14 an
acre. The most interesting point about the Fig is the way
in which the Fig-wasp carries the pollen (see Chap. <span class="smcap">V.</span>).</p>
<p>Olives are also one of the most important and characteristic
Mediterranean trees. The crop in both Spain and
Italy is worth about £8,000,000 to £9,000,000 annually.
In California it is also successfully cultivated, and pays
very well. The peculiar taste of the dessert olive is obtained
by soaking it in lime or potash, and then in vinegar
or salt.</p>
<p>The Pineapple is one of the most delicious fruits, and is
interesting in every way. The little sharp spines on the
edges of the leaves keep animals off, and also make it a little
difficult to harvest. The workmen must wear leather
trousers to prevent their being cut and torn by the leaves.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252">252</SPAN></span>
In Queensland the pineapple is grown in big fields, and
about ten thousand fruits (worth about one penny each)
can be got from a single acre. It is also grown in the
West Indies, in India, and in other tropical countries. If
you examine the horny outside skin of the fruit with a sharp
penknife, you will find that each little piece of the mosaic is
a flower in itself; with a little care the bracts, three sepals,
three petals, and six stamens can be distinguished. The
whole stem and all its flowers unite to make a compound
fruit. Most varieties have no seeds. It is a native of South
America.</p>
<p>It is, however, our home fruits, Apples, Pears, Gooseberries,
Strawberries, Raspberries, and Currants, that are
most important to us in Britain. The Wild Crab Apple is
found from Drontheim, in Norway, to the Caucasus, and
grows over the whole of Europe. Apples were known to
the Greeks and Romans.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, in our own climate there are great dangers
in the orchard. A touch of frost when the flowers are ripe
will very likely kill the tender, green, baby apple. It is
perhaps in Canada and North America that the growing of
apples and pears is most carefully looked after. Our beautiful
old orchards in Devonshire and other places, with comfortable
grass below the trees, and moss-covered, picturesque,
ancient trunks, are not found in the New World. The
regular lines of young trees in bare, carefully-kept earth,
with every stem whitewashed and treated with the most
scientific monotony, produce a most valuable return. But
in this country those who are careful and scientific sometimes
obtain extraordinary results. It is on record that a
man with a holding of twenty-nine acres near Birmingham
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253">253</SPAN></span>
made £600 a year from this small plot and paid £250 for
labour on it.<SPAN name="FNanchor_113" id="FNanchor_113" href="#Footnote_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</SPAN></p>
<p>Mr. Gladstone also said that the future of British farmers
depended upon jam. Yet it must be remembered that
the trees take a long time to come into bearing, and the
crop is most uncertain.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254">254</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />