<h2>PLATE XXIX<br/> THE WALNUT</h2>
<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
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>
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<p class="ph1"><SPAN id="plate29"><span class="smcap">Plate XXIX</span></SPAN></p>
<p class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i_187.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<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>
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<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
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’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.</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
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>
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