<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII." id="CHAPTER_VII."></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<h3><i>THE USEFUL BIRCH</i>.</h3>
<br/>
<p>"Oh, Miss Harson!" called out Clara, in great excitement, as she
caught up with her governess on a run; "hasn't Edie poisoned
herself? She has been eating this twig."</p>
<p>Edith, of course, at once began to cry.</p>
<p>"You are not poisoned, dear," said Miss Harson, very quickly,
after trying the twig herself; "for this is birch-wood, and it
cannot possibly hurt you. But remember, Edie, that this must not
happen again; <i>never</i> put anything to your mouth unless you
know it to be harmless. The birds and squirrels and other animals
that are obliged to pick up their own living as soon as they are
able to use their limbs have the faculty given them of knowing what
is good for them to eat, but little girls are not intended to live
in the woods, and they cannot tell whether or not the things they
find there are fit to eat."</p>
<p>"I took only a little bit," sobbed Edith; "Clara snatched it
away as soon as it tasted good."</p>
<p>Malcolm laughingly tossed his little sister into a sort of
evergreen cradle where the branches grew low--for they were
enjoying an afternoon in the woods--and held her there securely,
while their governess replied,</p>
<p>"'A little bit' is too much of a thing that might be harmful.
You must remember to 'touch not, taste not, handle not,' until you
have asked permission. But I am going to let you all chew as many
birch-shoots as you want, and I too shall chew some; for when I was
a little girl, I used to think they were 'puffickly
d'licious.'"</p>
<p>The children were much amazed to think that Miss Harson had ever
talked like Edith--indeed, the two older ones could scarcely
believe that they once did so themselves; but all soon had their
hands full of birch-twigs, and they began gnawing like so many
squirrels. All approved of the "birchskin," as Edith called it, and
Malcolm declared that "it would be grand fun to live in the woods
all the time."</p>
<p>"Couldn't we have a tent, Miss Harson," asked Clara, "and try
it?"</p>
<p>"I have no doubt," was the reply, "that your indulgent papa
would have a tent put up here for you if he thought it would make
you happier, but I have my doubts as to whether it would do so. In
the first place, I should object very much to living in the tent
with you, and how could you possibly live there alone?"</p>
<p>Clara and Edith were quite sure that they could not get along
without their friend and governess, but Malcolm thought he would
like to try being a hermit or an Indian, he was not quite ready to
say which.</p>
<p>"While you are deciding," said Miss Harson, with a smile, "it
may be as well for us to go on as usual; but I think that a little
tent could be put up here somewhere, which we might enjoy for an
hour or so on pleasant days. I will see about it."</p>
<p>The little girls were delighted, and Malcolm finally
condescended to be pleased with the idea.</p>
<p>"This is a very young birch," continued their governess, "and
you see how slender and graceful it is; also that the bark, or
'skin,' is very dark. For this reason it is called the black, or
cherry, birch, and also because the tree is very much like the
black cherry. It is also called sweet birch and mahogany birch; the
<i>sweet</i> part you can probably understand, and it gets its
other name from the color of the wood, which often resembles
mahogany and at one time was much used for furniture. There are
larger trees of the same kind all around us, and I should like to
know if anything else has been noticed besides the twigs of this
little one."</p>
<p>"<i>I</i> see something," replied Malcolm: "there are
flowers--purple and yellow."</p>
<p>"And what is the particular name for these tree-blossoms?" asked
Miss Harson.</p>
<p>"Isn't it <i>catkins</i>?" inquired Clara, timidly.</p>
<p>"Yes, catkins, or aments. They hang, as you see, like long
tassels of purple and gold, and are as fragrant as the bark.
Bryant's line,</p>
<blockquote>"'The fragrant birch above him hung her tassels in the
sky,'<br/></blockquote>
<p>"was written of this same black birch. Some of these trees are
sixty or seventy feet high, and all are very graceful, this species
being considered the most beautiful of the numerous birch family.
The leaves, which are just coming out, are two or three inches long
and about half as wide; they taper to a point and have serrate, or
sawlike, edges. The wood is firm and durable, and is much used for
cattle-yokes as well as for bedsteads and chairs. The large trees
yield a great quantity of sweetish sap, which makes a pleasant
drink. The trees are tapped just as the sugar-maples are, and in
some parts of the country gathering this sap, which is sometimes
used to make vinegar, is quite an important event."</p>
<p>"Oh! oh! <i>oh</i>!" screamed Edith, and began to run.</p>
<p>"Oh! oh! oh!" echoed Clara; and Malcolm declared that she was
just like "Jill," who "came tumbling after."</p>
<br/>
<p>"What is the matter, children?" asked their governess, in
dismay; but she stood perfectly still.</p>
<p>"Only a poor little garter-snake," said Malcolm, "putting his
head out to see if it's warm enough for him yet. But he has gone
back into his hole frightened to death at such dreadful noises.
Hello! what's the matter with Edie now?"</p>
<p>The little sister had fallen, tripped up by some rough roots,
and, expecting the poor startled garter-snake to come and make a
meal off her, she was calling loudly for help.</p>
<p>Miss Harson had her in her arms in a moment, and it was soon
found that one foot had quite a bad bruise.</p>
<p>"If only you had not run away!" said her governess. "He was such
an innocent little snake to make all this fuss about, and very
pretty too, if you had stopped to look at him."</p>
<p>"Are snakes ever pretty?" asked Edith, in great surprise.</p>
<p>"Certainly they are, dear, and this one had lovely stripes. I
wish you could have seen him."</p>
<p>The little girl began to wish so too, it was so funny to think
of a snake being pretty, and she felt quite ashamed that she had
scampered away in such a silly fashion.</p>
<p>"What a goose I was!" said Clara, doing her thinking aloud. "But
I thought it must be something dreadful, when Edie screamed
so."</p>
<p>"How much better it would have been to have found out before you
screamed!" replied Miss Harson.--"But come, Edith; see what a nice
cane Malcolm has just cut to help your lame foot with. He is
offering you his arm, too, on the other side, and between the two I
think you will get along finely."</p>
<p>Edith thought the same thing, and enjoyed being helped home in
this fashion. Her foot was quite painful, though, and considerably
swollen; and Clara bathed it with arnica when the little girl had
been comfortably established on the schoolroom sofa.</p>
<p>"Perhaps," said Miss Harson, "our little invalid will not care
to hear about trees this evening?"</p>
<p class="right"><ANTIMG src="Images/131.png" width-obs="40%" alt=""><br/>
<b>THE CUT-LEAVED WHITE BIRCH.</b></p>
<p>But the little invalid did care, and it was decided to take a
further ramble among the birches.</p>
<p>"I want to hear about birch-bark," said Malcolm--"not the kind
we've been eating, but the kind that canoes and things are made
of."</p>
<p>"You have already heard about the black birch," replied his
governess, "and, besides this, we have the white, or gray, birch,
the bark of which is white, chalky and dotted with black; the red
birch, with bark of a reddish or chocolate color; the yellow birch,
bark yellowish, with a silvery lustre; and the canoe birch, which
has a white bark with a pearly lustre. There is also a dwarf, or
shrub, birch. The list, you see, is quite a long one."</p>
<p>"What kind grow in <i>our</i> woods?" asked Clara.</p>
<p>"You certainly know of one kind," was the reply--"the black, or
sweet, birch, which we have all tried and like so well. Besides
this, there is the white, or little gray, birch, which is seldom
over twenty-five or thirty feet high. It is, however, a graceful
and beautiful object, enjoying to an eminent decree the lightness
and airiness of the birch family, and spreading out its glistening
leaves on the ends of a very slender and often pensile spray with
an indescribable softness. An English poet has called this tree
the</p>
<blockquote>
"'most beautiful<br/>
Of forest-trees, the lady of the woods.'"<br/></blockquote>
<p>The children laughed at the idea of calling a tree a
<i>lady</i>, it seemed so comical; but Miss Harson said that she
thought this was a very good description of a slender, graceful
tree.</p>
<p class="right"><ANTIMG src="Images/133.png" width-obs="40%" alt=""><br/>
<b>WHITE-BIRCH LEAF.</b></p>
<p>"Four or five inches," she continued, "will span its waist, or
trunk, and this seems a very good reason for calling it
<i>little</i>. Another name for this tree is poplar birch, because
the triangular-shaped leaves, which taper to a very long, slender
point, have a habit of trembling like those of the poplars. The
branches are of a dark chocolate color which contrasts very
prettily with the grayish-white trunk, and their extreme
slenderness causes them to droop somewhat like those of the willow.
The white birch will spring up in the poorest kind of soil, and it
is found in the highest latitude in which any tree can live. Its
leaf is 'deltoid' in shape and indented at the edge. The bark of
this species is said to be more durable than any other vegetable
substance, and a piece of birch-wood was once found changed into
stone, while the outer bark, white and shining, remained in its
natural state,"</p>
<p>"I don't see how it could," said Malcolm. "What kept it from
turning into stone too?"</p>
<p>"Its peculiar nature," was the reply, "which is a thing that we
cannot explain, and we shall have to take the story just as it is.
We certainly know that the wood has been proved to be very strong,
and it is much used for timber."</p>
<p>"Is the red birch really red, Miss Harson?" asked Clara, who
thought that this promised to be the prettiest member of the
family.</p>
<p>"The bark has a reddish tinge, and it is so loose and
ragged-looking that it has been said to roll up its bark in coarse
ringlets, which are whitish with a stain of crimson. The red birch,
which is more rare than any of the other kinds, is a much larger
tree than the white birch, but, like all its relations, it is very
graceful. The wood is white and hard and makes very good fuel,
while the twigs are made into brooms for sweeping streets and
courtyards."</p>
<p>"But there isn't very much red about it, after all," said
Malcolm.</p>
<p>"It wasn't red," murmured Edith; "it was green;" and the next
moment "the baby" was fast asleep, but Miss Harson was afraid that
she had taken the snake with her to the land of Nod, so restless
was her sleep.</p>
<p>"I hope the yellow birch is yellow," said Clara again.</p>
<p>"We will see what is said of its color," replied her governess,
"and here it is: 'Distinguished by its yellowish bark, of a soft
silken texture and silvery or pearly lustre,' It is a large tree,
and has been named <i>excelsa</i>--'lofty'--because of its height.
The slender, flowing branches are very graceful, and the tree is
often as symmetrical as a fine elm, but droops less. The roots of
the yellow birch seem to enjoy getting above the ground and
twisting themselves in a very fantastic manner, and, taken
altogether, it is a strikingly handsome and ornamental tree. The
wood was at one time much liked for fuel, and many of the logs were
of immense size."</p>
<p>"Now," said Malcolm, gleefully, "the canoe birch has <i>got</i>
to come next, because there isn't anything else to come."</p>
<p>"That is an excellent reason," replied Miss Harson, "and the
canoe birch it shall be. There is more to be said of it than of any
of the others, and it also grows in greater quantities. Thick woods
of it are found in Maine and New Hampshire--for it loves a cold
climate--and in other Northern portions of the country. The tall
trunks of the trees resemble pillars of polished marble supporting
a canopy of bright-green foliage. The leaves are something of a
heart-shape, and their vivid summer green turns to golden tints in
autumn. The bark of the canoe birch is almost snowy white on the
outside, and very prettily marked with fine brown stripes two or
three inches long, which go around the trunk. This bark is very
smooth and soft, and it is easily separated into very thin sheets.
For this reason the tree is often called the paper birch, and the
smooth, thin layers of bark make very good writing-paper when none
other can be had."</p>
<p>"Oh, Miss Harson!" exclaimed Clara; "did you ever see any that
was written on?"</p>
<p>"Yes," was the reply; "I once wrote a letter on some
myself."</p>
<p>"Did you <i>really</i>?" cried two eager voices. "How
<i>could</i> you? Oh, do tell us about it!"</p>
<p>"I was making a visit at a village in Maine," said their
governess, "where the beautiful trees are to be seen in all their
perfection, and I thought it would be appropriate to write a letter
from there on birch bark. So I split my bark very thin and got a
respectable sheet of it ready; then I cut another piece, to form an
envelope, and gummed it together. I had quite a struggle to write
on it decently with a steel pen, because the pen would go through
the paper; but I persevered, and finally I accomplished my letter.
It seemed odd to put a postage-stamp on birch bark, and I smiled to
think how surprised the home-people would be to get such a letter.
They <i>were</i> surprised, and they told me afterward that the
postman laughed when he delivered it."</p>
<p>The children thought this very interesting, and they wished that
there were canoe-birch trees growing at Elmridge, that they might
be enabled to try the experiment for themselves.</p>
<p>"Now," continued Miss Harson, "I am going to read you an account
of canoe-making, and of some other uses to which the bark is
put:</p>
<p>"'In Canada and in the district of Maine the country-people
place large pieces of the bark immediately below the shingles of
the roof, to form a more impenetrable covering for their houses.
Baskets, boxes and portfolios are made of it, which are sometimes
embroidered with silk of different colors. Divided into very thin
sheets, it forms a substitute for paper, and placed between the
soles of the shoes and in the crown of the hat it is a defence
against dampness. But the most important purpose to which it is
applied, and one in which it is replaced by the bark of no other
tree, is in the construction of canoes. To procure proper pieces,
the largest and smoothest trunks are selected. In the spring two
circular incisions are made, several feet apart, and two
longitudinal ones on opposite sides of the tree; after which, by
introducing a wooden wedge, the bark is easily detached. These
plates are usually ten or twelve feet long and two feet nine inches
broad. To form the canoe, they are stitched together with fibrous
roots of the white spruce about the size of a quill, which are
deprived of the bark, split and suppled in water. The seams are
coated with resin of the balm of Gilead.</p>
<p>"'Great use is made of these canoes by the savages and by the
French Canadians in their long journeys into the interior of the
country; they are very light, and are easily transported on the
shoulders from one lake or river to another, which is called the
<i>portage</i>. A canoe calculated for four persons, with their
baggage, weighs from forty to fifty pounds; some of them are made
to carry fifteen passengers.'</p>
<p>"And now let me show you a picture of the Kentucky pioneer in a
birch-bark canoe."</p>
<p>"Why, Miss Harson, the Indians are trying to kill him!"
exclaimed Malcolm.</p>
<p>"Yes," she replied; "when you read the history of the United
States, you will find that not only Daniel Boone, but the most of
the early settlers of these Western lands, had trouble with the
Indians. Nor is this strange. These pioneers were often rough men,
and were looked upon by the natives as invaders of their country
and treated as enemies. But to come back to the uses of the bark of
the birch:</p>
<p>"'In the settlements of the Hudson Bay Company tents are made of
the bark of this tree, which for that purpose is cut into pieces
twelve feet long and four feet wide. These are sewed together by
threads made of the white-spruce roots; and so rapidly is a tent
put up that a circular one twenty feet in diameter and ten feet
high does not occupy more than half an hour in pitching. Every
traveler and hunter in Canada enjoys these "rind-tents," as they
are called, which are used only during the hot summer months, when
they are found particularly comfortable.'"</p>
<p class="ctr"><SPAN href="Images/141.png"><ANTIMG src="Images/141.png"
width="40%" alt=""></SPAN><br/>
<b>IN THE BIRCH-BARK CANOE.</b></p>
<p>"Well, that's the funniest thing yet!" exclaimed Malcolm.
"'Rind-tents'! I wish I could see one. Did they have any in Maine
where you were, Miss Harson?"</p>
<p>"No," was the reply, "I did not even hear of such a thing there,
and to see it you would probably have to go far to the north. The
English birch, which is found also in many parts of Europe, is put
to a great many uses; the leaves produce a yellow dye, and the
wood, when mixed with copperas, will color red, black and brown. An
old birch tree that is supposed to be giving an account of itself
says,</p>
<p>"'How many are the uses of my bark! Thrifty men who sit beside
the blazing hearth when my branches throw up a clear bright flame,
and follow the example of their fathers in making their own shoes
and those of their families, tan the hides with my bark.
Kamschadales construct from it both hats and vessels for holding
milk, and the Swedish fisherman his shoes. The Norwegian covers
with it his low-roofed hut and spreads upon the surface layers of
moss at least three or four inches thick, and, having twisted long
strips together, he obtains excellent torches with which to cheer
the darkness of his long nights. Fishermen, in like manner, make
great use of them in alluring their finny prey. For this purpose
they fit a portion of blazing birch in a cleft stick and spear the
fish when attracted by its flickering light.'"</p>
<p>The children exclaimed at this queer way of fishing, but Malcolm
was very much taken with the idea of doing it by night with blazing
torches, and he thought that he would like to be a Norwegian
fisherman even better than a hermit or an Indian.</p>
<p>"The old tree goes on to say," continued Miss Harson, "that
'Finland mothers form of the dried leaves soft, elastic beds for
their children, and from me is prepared the <i>mona</i>, their sole
medicine in all diseases. My buds in spring exhale a delicious
fragrance after showers, and the bark, when burnt, seems to purify
the air in confined dwellings.'</p>
<p>"In Lapland the twigs of the birch, covered with reindeer-skins,
are used for beds, but they cannot be so comfortable, I should
think, as the leaves. The fragrant wood of the tree makes the fires
which have to be kept up inside the huts even in summer to drive
away the mosquitoes, and the people of those Northern regions would
find it hard to get along without the useful birch."</p>
<p>"I like to hear about it," said Clara. "Can you tell us
something more that is done with it, Miss Harson?"</p>
<p>"There is just one thing more," replied her governess, with a
smile, "which I will read out of an old book; and I desire you all
to pay particular attention to it."</p>
<p>Little Edith was wide awake again by this time, and her great
blue eyes looked as if she were ready to devour every word.</p>
<p>"Birch rods," continued Miss Harson, "are quite different from
birch <i>twigs</i>, and the uses to which they were put were not
altogether agreeable to the boys who ran away from school or did
not get their lessons. 'My branches,' says the birch, 'gently
waving in the wind, awakened in those days no feelings of dread
with truant urchins--for <i>all</i> might be truants then, if so it
pleased them--but at length a scribe arose who thus wrote
concerning my ductile twigs: "The civil uses whereunto the birch
serveth are many, as for the punishment of children both at home
and abroad; for it hath an admirable influence upon them to quiet
them when they wax unruly, and therefore some call the tree
<i>make-peace</i>"'" Malcolm and Clara both laughed, and asked
their young governess when the birch rods were coming; but Edith
did not feel quite so easy, and, with her bruised foot and all, it
took a great deal of petting that night to get her comfortably to
bed.</p>
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