<h2>PLATE XXIII<br/> THE HOLLY</h2>
<br>“Below, a circling fence, its leaves are seen, wrinkled and keen.
<br>No grazing cattle through their prickly round can reach to wound;
<br>But as they grow where nothing is to fear,
<br>Smooth and unarmed the pointless leaves appear.”
<br>—Southey.
<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>
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<p class="ph1"><SPAN id="plate23"><span class="smcap">Plate XXIII</span></SPAN></p>
<p class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i_155.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<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>
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<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
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
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.
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>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.</p>
<p>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.</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’s
whips.</p>
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