<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>AMONG THE TREES</h1>
<h3>AT</h3>
<h2>ELMRIDGE</h2>
<h4>BY</h4>
<h3>ELLA RODMAN CHURCH</h3>
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<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I." id="CHAPTER_I."></SPAN>CHAPTER I.</h2>
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<h3><i>A SPRING OPENING.</i></h3>
<p>On that bright spring afternoon when three happy, interested
children went off to the woods with their governess to take their
first lesson in the study of wild flowers, they saw also some other
things which made a fresh series of "Elmridge Talks," and these
things were found among the trees of the roadside and forest.</p>
<p>"What makes it look so <i>yellow</i> over there, Miss Harson?"
asked Clara, who was peering curiously at a clump of trees that
seemed to have been touched with gold or sunlight. "And just look
over here," she continued, "at these pink ones!"</p>
<p>Malcolm shouted at the idea:</p>
<p>"Yellow and pink trees! That sounds like a Japanese fan. Where
are they, I should like to know?"</p>
<p>"Here, you perverse boy!" said his governess as she laughingly
turned him around. "Are you looking up into the sky for them? There
is a clump of golden willows right before you, with some rosy
maples on one side. What other colors can you call them?"</p>
<p>Malcolm had to confess that "yellow and pink trees" were not so
wide of the mark, after all, and that they were very pretty. Little
Edith was particularly delighted with them, and wanted to "pick the
flowers" immediately.</p>
<p class="right"><ANTIMG src="Images/007.png" width-obs="40%" alt=""><br/>
<b>MALE CATKIN OF WILLOW</b></p>
<p>"They are too high for that, dear," was the reply, "and these
blossoms--for that is what they really are, although nothing more
than fringes and catkins--are much prettier massed on the trees
than they would be if gathered. The still-bare twigs and branches
seem, as you see, to be draped with golden and rose-colored veils,
but there will be no leaves until these queer flowers have dropped.
If we look closely at the twigs and branches, we shall see that
they are glossy and polished, as though they had been varnished and
then brightened with color by the painter's brush. It is the
flowing of the sap that does this. The swelling of the bark
occasioned by the flow of sap gives the whole mass a livelier hue;
hence the ashen green of the poplar, the golden green of the willow
and the dark crimson of the peach tree, the wild rose and the red
osier are perceptibly heightened by the first warm days of
spring."</p>
<p>"Miss Harson," asked Clara, with a perplexed face, "what are
catkins?"</p>
<p>"Here," said her governess, reaching from the top bar of the
road-fence for the lowest branch of a willow tree; "examine this
catkin for yourself, and I will tell you what my <i>Botany</i> says
of it: 'An ament, or catkin, is an assemblage of flowers composed
of scales and stamens or pistils arranged along a common
thread-like receptacle, as in the chestnut and willow. It is a kind
of calyx, by some classed as a mode of inflorescence (or
flowering), and each chaffy scale protects one or more of the
stamens or pistils, the whole forming one aggregate flower. The
ament is common to forest-trees, as the oak and chestnut, and is
also found upon the willow and poplar.'"</p>
<p>"It's funny-looking," said Malcolm, when he had made himself
thoroughly acquainted with the appearance of the catkin, "but it
doesn't look much like a flower: it looks more like a pussy's
tail."</p>
<p>"Yes, and that is the origin of its name. 'Catkin' is diminutive
for 'cat;' so this collection of flowers is called 'catkin,' or
'little cat.'"</p>
<p>"I think I'll call them 'pussy-tails,'" said Edith.</p>
<p>"There is a great deal to be learned about trees," said Miss
Harson, when all were comfortably seated in the pleasant
schoolroom; "and, besides the natural history of their species,
some old trees have wonderful stories connected with them, while
many in tropical countries are so wonderful in themselves that they
do not need stories to make them interesting. The common trees
around us will be our subjects at first; for I suppose that you can
scarcely tell a willow from a poplar, or a chestnut tree from
either, can you?"</p>
<p>"I can tell a chestnut tree," said Malcolm, confidently.</p>
<p>"When it is not the season for nuts?" asked his governess,
smiling.</p>
<p>There was not a very positive reply to this; and Miss Harson
continued:</p>
<p>"I do not think that any of us know as much as we ought to know
of the trees which we see every day, and of the uses to which many
of them are put, to say nothing of many familiar trees that we read
about, and even depend upon for some of the necessaries of
life."</p>
<p>"Like the cocoanut tree," suggested Clara.</p>
<p>"That is not exactly necessary to our comfort, dear," was the
reply, "for people can manage to live without cocoanuts, although
in many forms they are very agreeable to the taste, and it is only
the inhabitants of the countries where they grow who look upon
these trees as necessaries; but we will take them up in their turn.
And first let us find out what we can about the willow, because it
is the first tree, with us, to become green in the spring, and, of
that large class which is called <i>deciduous</i>, the last one to
lose its leaves."</p>
<p>"And why are they called <i>deciduous?</i>" asked Malcolm.</p>
<p>"Because they shed their leaves every autumn and are furnished
with a new set in the spring: 'deciduous' is Latin for 'falling
off.' And this is the case with nearly all our native trees and
plants. <i>Persistent</i>, or permanent, leaves remain on the stem
and branches all through the changes of season, like the leaves of
the pine and box, while <i>evergreens</i> look fresh through the
entire year and are generally cone-bearing and resinous trees.
'These change their leaves annually, but, the young leaves
appearing before the old ones decay, the tree is always
green.'"</p>
<p>"Miss Harson," said Clara, "when people talk about
<i>weeping</i> willows, what do they mean? Do the trees really cry?
I sometimes read about 'em in stories, and I never knew what they
did."</p>
<p>"They cry dreadfully," said Malcolm, "when it rains."</p>
<p>"But only as you do when you are out in it," replied his
governess--"by having the water drip from your clothes.--No, Clara,
the tree is called 'weeping' because it seems to 'assume the
attitude of a person in tears, who bends over and appears to
droop.' The sprays of this tree are particularly beautiful, and
'willowy' is often used for 'graceful,' as meaning the same thing.
Its language is 'sorrow,' and it is often seen in burial-grounds
and in mourning-pictures. 'We remember it in sacred history,
associating it with the rivers of Babylon, and with the tears of
the children of Israel, who sat down under the shade of this tree
and hung their harps upon its branches. It is distinguished by the
graceful beauty of its outlines, its light-green, delicate foliage,
its sorrowing attitude and its flowing drapery.'"</p>
<p>"Were those weeping willows that we saw to-day?" asked
Clara.</p>
<p>"No," replied her brother, quickly; "they just stuck up straight
and didn't weep a bit."</p>
<p>"They are called <i>water</i> willows," said Miss Harson,
"because they are never found in dry places. They are more common
than the weeping willow. The water willow has the same delicate
foliage and the same habit, under an April sky, of gleaming with a
drapery of golden verdure among the still-naked trees of the forest
or orchard. 'When Spring has closed her delicate flowers,' says a
bright writer, 'and the multitudes that crowd around the footsteps
of May have yielded their places to the brighter host of June, the
willow scatters the golden aments that adorned it, and appears in
the deeper garniture of its own green foliage.' A group of these
golden willows, seen in a rainstorm, will have so bright an
appearance as to make it seem as if the sun were actually
shining."</p>
<p class="ctr"><SPAN href="Images/013.png"><ANTIMG src="Images/013.png"
width="40%" alt=""></SPAN><br/>
<b>THE WHITE WILLOW (<i>Salix alba</i>)</b></p>
<p>"I wish we had them all around here, then," said Edith; "I like
to see the sun shining when it rains."</p>
<p>"But the sun is <i>not</i> shining, dear," replied her
governess: "it is only the reflection from the willows that makes
it look so; and we can make just such sunshine ourselves when it
rains, or when there is dullness of any sort, by being all the more
cheerful and striving to make others happy. Who loves to be called
'Little Sunshine'?"</p>
<p>"I do," said the child, caressing the hand that had patted her
rosy cheek.</p>
<p>"Let's all be golden willows," said Malcolm, in a comical way
that made them laugh.</p>
<p>Miss Harson told him that he could not make a better attempt
than to be one of those home-brighteners who bring the sunshine
with them, but she added that such people are always considerate
for others. Malcolm wondered a little if this meant that <i>he</i>
was not, but he soon forgot it in hearing the many things that were
to be said of the willow.</p>
<p>"The family-name of this tree is <i>Salix</i>, from a word that
means 'to spring,' because a willow-branch, if planted, will take
root and grow so quickly that it seems almost like magic. 'And they
shall <i>spring up</i> as among the grass, as willows by the
watercourses,' says the prophet Isaiah, speaking of the children of
the people of God. The flowers of the willow are of two kinds--one
bearing stamens, and the other pistils--and each grows upon a
separate plant. When the ovary, at the base of the pistil, is ripe,
it opens by two valves and lets out, as through a door, multitudes
of small seeds covered with a fine down, like the seeds of the
cotton-plant. This downy substance is greedily sought after by the
birds as a lining for their nests, and they may be seen carrying it
away in their bills. And in some parts of Germany people take the
trouble to collect it and use it as a wadding to their winter
dresses, and even manufacture it into a coarse kind of paper."</p>
<p>"What queer people!" exclaimed Clara. "And how funny they must
look in their wadded dresses!"</p>
<p>"They are not graceful people," was the reply, "but they live in
a cold climate and show their good sense by dressing as warmly as
possible. It was quite a surprise, though, to me to find that the
willow was of use in clothing people. The more we learn of the
works of God, the better we shall understand that last verse of the
first chapter of the Bible: 'And God saw everything that he had
made, and behold, it was very good.' The bees, too, are attracted
by the willow catkins, but they do not want the down. On mild days
whole swarms of them may be seen reveling in the sweets of the
fresh blossoms. 'Cold days will come long after the willow catkins
appear, and the bees will find but few flowers venturesome enough
to open their petals. They have, however, thoroughly enjoyed their
feast, and the short season of plenty will often be the means of
saving a hive from famine.'"</p>
<p>"Are willow baskets made of willow trees?" asked Malcolm.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Miss Harson. "Basket-making has been a great
industry in England from the earliest times; the ancient Britons
were particularly skillful in weaving the supple wands of the
willow. They even made of these slender stems little boats called
'coracles,' in which they could paddle down the small rivers, and
the boats could be carried on their shoulders when they were
walking on dry land."</p>
<p>"Just like our Indians' birch-bark canoes," said Malcolm, who
was reading about the North American Indians. "But isn't it
strange, Miss Harson, that the Indians and the Britons didn't get
drowned going out in such little light boats?"</p>
<p>"Their very lightness buoyed them up upon the waves," was the
reply; "but it does seem wonderful that they could bear the weight
of men. The willow, however, was also used by the Romans in making
their battle-shields, and even for the manufacture of ropes as well
as baskets. The rims of cart-wheels, too, used to be made of
willow, as now they are hooped with iron; so, you see, it is a
strong wood as well as a pliant one. The kind used for
basket-making is the <i>Salix viminalis</i>, and the rods of this
species are called 'osiers.' Let us see now what this English book
says of the process of basket-making:</p>
<p>"'The quick and vigorous growth of the willow renders it easy to
provide materials for this branch of industry. Osier-beds are
planted in every suitable place, and here the willow-cutter comes
as to an ample store. Autumn is the season for him to ply his
trade, and he cuts the willow rods down and ties them in bundles.
He then sets them up on end in standing water to the depth of a few
inches. Here they remain during the winter, until the shoots, in
the following spring, begin to sprout, when they are in a fit state
to be peeled. A machine is used in some places to compress the
greatest number of rods into a bundle.</p>
<p class="ctr"><SPAN href="Images/019.png"><ANTIMG src="Images/019.png"
width="40%" alt=""></SPAN><br/>
<b>THE POLLARD WILLOW IN WINTER.</b></p>
<p>"'Aged or infirm people and women and children can earn money by
peeling willows at so much per bundle. The operation is very
simple, and so is the necessary apparatus. Sometimes a wooden bench
with holes in it is used, the willow-twigs being drawn through the
holes. Another way is to draw the rod through two pieces of iron
joined together, and with one end thrust into the ground to make it
stand upright. The willow-peeler sits down before his instrument
and merely thrusts the rod between the two pieces of iron and draws
it out again. This proceeding scrapes the bark off one end, and
then he turns it and fits it in the other way; so that by a simple
process the whole rod is peeled. When the rods are quite prepared,
they are again tied up in bundles and sold to the
basket-makers.'"</p>
<p>"But how do they make the baskets?" asked Clara and Edith. "That
is the nicest part."</p>
<p>"There is little to tell about it, though," said their
governess, "because it is such easy work that any one can learn to
do it. You saw the Indian women making baskets when papa took us to
Maine last summer, and you noticed how very quickly they did it,
beginning with the flat bottom and working rapidly up. It is a
favorite occupation for the blind, and one of the things which are
taught them in asylums."</p>
<p>"I wonder," said Malcolm, "if there is anything else that can be
done with the willow?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes," replied Miss Harson; "we have not yet come to the end
of its resources. It makes the best quality of charcoal, and in
many parts of England the tree is raised for this express purpose.
'The abode of the charcoal-burner,' says an English writer, 'may be
known from a distance by the cloud of smoke that hovers over it,
and that must make it rather unhealthy. It is sometimes a small
dome-shaped hut made of green turf, and, except for the difference
of the material, might remind us of the hut of the Esquimaux.
Beside it stands a caravan like those which make their appearance
at fairs, and that contains the family goods and chattels. A string
of clothes hung out to dry, a water-tub and a rough, shaggy dog
usually complete the picture.'"</p>
<p>"But how can people live in the hut," asked Malcolm, "if the
charcoal is burned in it? Ugh! I should think they'd choke."</p>
<p>"They certainly would," said his governess; "for the
charcoal-smoke is death when inhaled for any length of time. But
the charcoal-burner knows this quite as well as does any one else,
and he makes his fire outside of the house, puts a rude fence
around it and lets it smoke away like a huge pipe. The hut is more
or less enveloped in smoke, but this is not so bad as letting it
rise from the inside would be. A great deal of willow charcoal is
made in Germany and other parts of Europe."</p>
<p>"But, Miss Harson," said Clara, in a puzzled tone, "I don't see
what they do with it all. It doesn't take much to clean people's
teeth."</p>
<p>"No, dear," was the smiling reply, "and I am afraid that the
people who make it are rather careless about their teeth.--You need
not laugh, Malcolm, because it is 'just like a girl,' for it is
quite as much like a boy not to know things which he has never been
taught, and you must remember that you have two years the start of
your sister in getting acquainted with the world. Perhaps you will
kindly tell us of some of the uses to which charcoal is
applied?"</p>
<p>"Well," said the young gentleman, after an awkward silence, "it
takes lots of it to kindle fires."</p>
<p>"I do not think that Kitty ever uses it in the kitchen," said
Miss Harson, "for she is supplied with kindling-wood for that
purpose. You will have to think of something else."</p>
<p>But Malcolm could not think, and his governess finally told him
that a great deal of charcoal is used for making gun-powder, and
still more for fuel in France and the South of Europe, where a
brass vessel supplies the place of a grate or stove. Quantities of
it are consumed in steel-and iron-works, in preserving meat and
other food, and in many similar ways. The children listened with
great interest, and Malcolm felt sure that the next time he was
asked about charcoal he would have a sensible answer.</p>
<p>"Our insect friends the aphides, or plant-lice, are very fond of
the willow," continued Miss Harson, "and in hot, dry weather great
masses of them gather on the leaves and drop a sugary juice, which
the country-people call 'honey-dew,' and in some remote places,
where knowledge is limited, it has been thought to come from the
clouds. But we, who have learned something about these
aphides<SPAN name="FNanchor1" id="FNanchor1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_1">[1]</SPAN>, know that it comes from their little green
bodies, and that the ants often carry the insects off to their
nests, where they feed and 'tend them for the sake of this very
juice. The aphis that infests the willow is the largest of the
tribe, and the branches and stems of the tree are often blackened
by the honey-dew that falls upon them."</p>
<blockquote><SPAN name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor1">[1]</SPAN> See <i>Flyers and Crawlers</i>, by the author.
Presbyterian Board of Publication.</blockquote>
<p>"Do willow trees grow everywhere?" asked Clara.</p>
<p>"They are certainly found in a great many different places," was
the reply, "and even in the warmest countries. In one of the
missionary settlements in Africa there is a solitary willow that
has a story attached to it. It was the only tree in the
settlement--think what a place that must have been!--except those
the missionary had planted in his own garden, and it would never
have existed but for the laziness of its owner. Nothing would have
induced any of the natives to take the trouble to plant a tree, and
therefore the willow had not been planted. But it happened, a
long-time ago, that a native had fetched a log of wood from a
distance, to make into a bowl when he should feel in the humor to
do so. He threw the log into a pool of water, and soon forgot all
about it. Weeks and months passed, and he never felt in the humor
to work. But the log of wood set to work of its own accord. It had
been cut from a willow, and it took root at the bottom of the pool
and began to grow. In the end it became a handsome and flourishing
tree."</p>
<p>This story was approved by the young audience, except that it
was too short; but their governess laughingly said that, as there
was nothing more to tell, it could not very well be any longer.</p>
<p class="ctr"><SPAN href="Images/026.png"><ANTIMG src="Images/026.png"
width="40%" alt=""></SPAN><br/>
<b>THE WEEPING WILLOW (<i>Salix Babylonica</i>).</b></p>
<p>"The weeping willow," continued Miss Harson, "was first planted
in England in not so lazy a way, but almost as accidentally. Many
years ago a basket of figs was sent from Turkey to the poet Pope,
and the basket was made of willow. Willows and their cousins the
poplars are natives of the East; you remember that the one hundred
and thirty-seventh psalm says of the captive Jews, 'By the rivers
of Babylon, there we sat down, yea, we wept, when we remembered
Zion. We hanged our harps upon the willows in the midst thereof.'
'The poet valued highly the small slender twigs, as associated with
so much that was interesting, and he untwisted the basket and
planted one of the branches in the ground. It had some tiny buds
upon it, and he hoped he might be able to rear it, as none of this
species of willow was known in England. Happily, the willow is very
quick to take root and grow. The little branch soon became a tree,
and drooped gracefully over the river in the same manner that its
race had done over the waters of Babylon. From that one branch all
the weeping willows in England are descended.'"</p>
<p>"And then they were brought over here," said Malcolm. "But what
odd leaves they have, Miss Harson!--so narrow and long. They don't
look like the leaves of other trees."</p>
<p>"The leaf is somewhat like that of the olive, only that of the
olive is broader. The willow is a native of Babylon, and the
weeping willow is called <i>Salix Babylonica</i>. It was considered
one of the handsomest trees of the East, and is particularly
mentioned among those which God commanded the Israelites to select
for branches to bear in their hands at the feast of tabernacles.
Read the verse, Malcolm--the fortieth of the twenty-third chapter
of Leviticus."</p>
<p class="left"><SPAN href="Images/028.png"><ANTIMG src="Images/028.png"
width="20%" alt=""></SPAN><br/>
<b>LEAF OF WEEPING WILLOW.</b></p>
<p>Malcolm read:</p>
<p>"'And ye shall take you on the first day the boughs of goodly
trees, branches of palm trees, and the boughs of thick trees, and
<i>willows of the brook;</i> and ye shall rejoice before the Lord
your God seven days.'"</p>
<p>"A place called the 'brook of the willows,'" added his
governess, "is mentioned in Isaiah xv. 7, and this brook, according
to travelers in Palestine, flows into the south-eastern extremity
of the Dead Sea. The willow has always been considered by the poets
as an emblem of woe and desertion, and this idea probably came from
the weeping of the captive Jews under the willows of Babylon. The
branches of the <i>Salix Babylonica</i> often droop so low as to
touch the ground, and because of this sweeping habit, and of its
association with watercourses in the Bible, it has been considered
a very suitable tree to plant beside ponds and fountains in
ornamental grounds, as well as in cemeteries as an emblem of
mourning."</p>
<p>"How much there is to remember about the willow!" said Clara,
thoughtfully. "I wonder if all the trees will be so
interesting?"</p>
<p>"They are not all <i>Bible</i> trees," replied Miss Harson. "But
the wise king of Israel found them interesting, for he 'spake of
trees, from the cedar tree that is in Lebanon even unto the hyssop
that springeth out of the wall.'"</p>
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