<h2>PLATE I<br/> THE OAK</h2>
<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
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—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
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.</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
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
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>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" />
<p class="ph1"><SPAN id="plate2"><span class="smcap">Plate II</span></SPAN></p>
<p class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i_023.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<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>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>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.</p>
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