<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XX." id="CHAPTER_XX."></SPAN>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
<h3><i>MORE WINTER TREES: THE FIRS AND THE SPRUCES</i>.</h3>
<br/>
<p>There were some beautiful evergreens on the lawn at Elmridge,
and, although the foliage seemed dark in summer, it gave the place
a very cheerful look in winter, when other trees were quite bare,
while the birds flew in and out of them so constantly that spring
seemed to have come long before it really did arrive.</p>
<p class="right"><ANTIMG src="Images/359.png" width-obs="40%" alt=""><br/>
<b>AMERICAN WHITE SPRUCE.</b></p>
<p>"This balsam-fir," said Miss Harson as they stood near a tall,
beautiful tree that tapered to a point, "has, you see, a straight,
smooth trunk and tapers regularly and rapidly to the top. You will
notice, too, that the leaves, which are needle-shaped and nearly
flat, do not grow in clusters, but singly, and that their color is
peculiar. There are faint white lines on the upper part and a
silvery-blue tinge beneath, and this silvery look is produced by
many lines of small, shining resinous dots. The deep-green bark,
striped with gray, is full of balsam, or resin, known as balm of
Gilead or Canada balsam, and highly valued as a cure for diseases
of the lungs. The long cones are erect, or standing, and grow
thickly near the ends of the upper branches. They have round,
bluish-purple scales, and the soft color has a very pretty effect
on the tree. They ripen every year, and the lively little squirrel,
as he is called, feasts upon them, as the crossbill does on the
cones of the stone-pine. But the mischievous little animal also
barks the boughs and gnaws off the tops of the leading shoots, so
that many trees are injured and defaced by his depredations."</p>
<p>"He <i>is</i> a lively little squirrel," observed Malcolm. "How
he does race! But he doesn't gnaw our trees, does he?"</p>
<p>"No, I think not, for he prefers staying in the woods and
fields; but fir-woods are his especial delight. Our balsam-fir is
the American sister of the silver fir of Europe, both having
bluish-green foliage with a silvery under surface, in a single row
on either side of the branches, which curve gracefully upward at
the ends. The tree has a peculiarly light, airy appearance until it
is old, when there is little foliage except at the ends of the
branches. The silver fir is one of the tallest trees on the
continent of Europe, and it is remarkable for the beauty of its
form and foliage and the value of its timber."</p>
<p>"I know what this tree is," said Clara, turning to an evergreen
of stately form and graceful, drooping branches that almost touched
the ground: "it's Norway spruce. Papa told me this morning."</p>
<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="Images/361.png" width-obs="40%" alt=""><br/>
<b>THE NORWAY PINE.</b></p>
<p>"Yes," replied her governess, "and a beautiful tree it is, like
the fir in many respects, but the bark is rougher and the cones
droop. The branches, too, are lower and more sweeping. But the fir
and the spruce are more alike than many sisters and brothers. The
Scotch fir, about which there are many interesting things to be
learned, is more rugged-looking, and the Norway spruce, which will
bear studying too, is more grand and majestic."</p>
<p class="left"><ANTIMG src="Images/362.png" width-obs="45%" alt=""><br/>
<b>THE HEMLOCK SPRUCE.</b></p>
<p>"I know this one, Miss Harson," said little Edith as they came
to a sweeping hemlock near the bay-window of the dining-room.</p>
<p>"Yes, dear," was the reply; "Hemlock Lodge has made you feel
very well acquainted with the tree after which it is named. It is
one of the most beautiful of the evergreens, with its
widely-spreading branches and their delicate, fringe-like foliage;
but, although the branches are ornamental for church and house
decoration, they are very perishable, and drop their small needles
almost immediately when placed in a heated room. And now,"
continued the young lady, "we have come back to warm piazza-days
again, and can have our talk in the open air."</p>
<p>So on the piazza they speedily established themselves, with Miss
Harson in the low, comfortable chair and her audience on the
crimson cushions that had been piled up in a corner.</p>
<p>"We shall find a great deal about the fir tree," said Miss
Harson, "as it is very hardy and rugged, and as common in all
Northern regions as the white birch--quite as useful, too, as we
shall soon see. This rugged species--which is generally called the
Scotch fir--is not so smooth and handsome as our balsam-fir, but it
is a tree which the people who live near the great Northern forests
of Europe could not easily do without. It belongs to the great pine
family and is often called a pine, but in the countries of Great
Britain especially it is called the Scotch fir. Although well
shaped, it is not a particularly elegant-looking tree. The branches
are generally gnarled and broken, and the style of the tree is more
sturdy than graceful. The Scotch fir often grows to the height of a
hundred feet, and the bark is of a reddish tinge. 'It is one of the
most useful of the tribe, and, like the bountiful palm, confers the
greatest blessing on the inhabitants of the country where it grows.
It serves the peasants of the bleak, barren parts of Sweden and
Lapland for food: their scanty supply of meal often runs short, and
they go to the pine to eke it out. They choose the oldest and least
resinous of the branches and take out the inner bark. They first
grind it in a mill, and then mix it with their store of meal; after
this it is worked into dough and made into cakes like pancakes. The
bark-bread is a valuable addition to their slender resources, and
sometimes the young shoots are used as well as the bark. Indeed, so
largely is this store of food drawn upon that many trees have been
destroyed, and in some places the forest is actually thinned."</p>
<p>"They're as bad as the squirrels," said Malcolm. "But how I
should hate to eat such stuff!"</p>
<p>"It may not be so very bad," replied his governess. "Some people
think that only white bread is fit to eat, but I think that Kitty's
brown bread is rather liked in this family."</p>
<p>The children all laughed, for didn't papa declare--with
<i>such</i> a sober face!--that they were eating him out of house
and home in brown bread alone? Kitty, too, pretended to grumble
because the plump loaves disappeared so fast, but she said to
herself at the same time, "Bless their hearts! let 'em eat: it's
better than a doctor's bill."</p>
<p>"A great many other things besides pancakes are made from the
tree," continued Miss Harson, "and the fresh green tops furnish
very nice carpets."</p>
<p>There was a faint "<i>Oh!</i>" at this, but, after all, it was
not so surprising as the cakes had been.</p>
<p>"They are scattered on the floors of houses as rushes used to be
in old times in England, and thus they serve as carpet and prevent
the mud and dirt that stick to the shoes of the peasants from
staining the floor; and when trodden on, the leaves give out a most
agreeable aromatic perfume."</p>
<p>"I'd like that part," said Clara.</p>
<p class="left"><ANTIMG src="Images/366.png" width-obs="40%" alt=""><br/>
<b>THE BLUE SPRUCE.</b></p>
<p>"But you cannot have one part without taking it all; almost
everything, you see, has a pleasant side.-- 'The peasant finds no
limit to the use of the pine. Of its bark he makes the little canoe
which is to carry him along the river; it is simple in its
construction, and as light as possible. When he comes within safe
distance of one of those gushing, foaming cataracts that he meets
with in his course, he pushes his canoe to land and carries it on
his shoulders until the danger is past; then he launches it again,
and paddles merrily onward. Not a single nail is used in his canoe:
the planks are tightly secured together by a natural cordage made
of the roots of the pine. He splits them of the right thickness,
and with very little preparation they form exactly the material he
needs.'"</p>
<p>Malcolm evidently had some idea of making a canoe of this kind,
but he became discouraged when his governess reminded him that he
could not cut down trees, and that his father would prefer having
them left standing. It did not seem necessary to speak of any
difficulties in the way of putting the boat together.</p>
<p>"Another use for the fir is to light up the poor hut of the
peasant. 'He splits up the branches into laths and makes them into
torches. If he wants a light, he takes one of the laths and kindles
it at the fire; then he fixes it in a rude frame, which serves him
for a candlestick. The light is very brilliant while it lasts, but
is soon spent, and he is in darkness again. The same use is made of
the pine. It is no unusual circumstance, in the Scotch pine-woods,
to come upon a tree with the trunk scooped out from each side and
carried away: the cottager has been to fetch material for his
candles. But this somewhat rough usage does not hurt the tree, and
it continues green and healthy.' In our Southern States pine-fat
with resin is called lightwood, and is used for the same
purpose."</p>
<p>"That's an easy way of getting candles," said Clara.</p>
<p>"Easy, perhaps, compared with the trouble of moulding them,"
replied Miss Harson, "but I do not think we should fancy either way
of preparing them."</p>
<p>"Is there anything to tell about the spruce tree?" asked
Malcolm.</p>
<p>"It is too much like the fir," replied his governess, "to have
any very distinct character; but there are species here, known as
the white and black spruce, besides the hemlock."</p>
<p>But the children thought that hemlock was hemlock: how did it
come to be spruce?</p>
<p>"Because it has the family features--leaves solitary and very
short; cones pendulous, or hanging, with the scales thin at the
edge; and the fruit ripens in a single year. The hemlock-spruce, as
it is sometimes called, is, I think, the most beautiful of the
family. 'It is distinguished from all the other pines by the
softness and delicacy of its tufted foliage, from the spruce by its
slender, tapering branchlets and the smoothness of its limbs, and
from the balsam-fir by its small terminal cones, by the
irregularity of its branches and the gracefulness of its whole
appearance.' The delicate green of the young trees forms a rich
mass of verdure, and at this season each twig has on the end a tuft
of new leaves yellowish-green in color and making a beautiful
contrast to the darker hue of last year's foliage. The bark of the
trunk is reddish, and that of the smooth branches and small twigs
is light gray. The branchlets are very small, light and slender,
and are set irregularly on the sides of the small branches; so that
they form a flat surface. This arrangement renders them singularly
well adapted to the making of brooms--a use of the hemlock familiar
to housekeepers in the country towns throughout New England. The
leaves, which are extremely delicate and of a silvery whiteness on
the under side, are arranged in a row on each side of the
branchlets. The slender, thread-like stems on which they grow make
them move easily with the slightest breath of wind, and this, with
the silvery hue underneath, gives to the foliage a glittering look
that is very pretty. But I think you all can tell me when the
hemlock is prettiest?"</p>
<p>"After a snow-storm," said Clara. "Don't we all look, almost the
first thing, at the tree by the dining-room window?"</p>
<p>"Yes," replied Miss Harson; "it is a beautiful sight with the
snow lying on it in masses and the dark green of the leaves peeping
through. 'The branches put forth irregularly from all parts of the
trunk, and lie one above another, each bending over at its
extremities upon the surface of those below, like the feathers upon
the wings of a bird,' And soft, downy plumes they look, with the
snow resting on them and making them more feathery than ever."</p>
<p>"So they are like feathers?" said Malcolm, to whom this was a
new idea, "I'll look for 'em the next time it snows; yet--" He was
going to add that he wished it would snow to-morrow; but
remembering that it was only the beginning of June, and that Miss
Harson had shown them how each season has its pleasures, he stopped
just in time.</p>
<p>"The pretty little cones of the hemlock, which grow very thickly
on the tree, have a crimson tinge at first, and turn to a light
brown. They are found hanging on the ends of the small branches,
and they fall during the autumn and winter. This tree is a native
of the coldest parts of North America, where it is found in whole
forests, and it flourishes on granite rocks on the sides of hills
exposed to the most violent storms. The wood is firm and contains
very little resin; it is much used for building-purposes. A great
quantity of tannin is obtained from the bark; and when mixed with
that of the oak, it is valuable for preparing leather.</p>
<p>"We have taken the prettiest of the spruces first," continued
Miss Harson, "and now we must see what are the differences between
them. 'The two species of American spruce, the black and the
white--or, as they are more commonly called, the double and the
single--are distinguished from the fir and the hemlock in every
stage of growth by the roughness of the bark on their branches,
produced by little ridges running down from the base of each leaf,
and by the disposition of the leaves, which are arranged in spirals
equally on every side of the young shoots. The double is
distinguished from the single spruce by the darker color of the
foliage--whence its name of black spruce--by the greater thickness,
in proportion to the length, of the cones, and by the looseness of
its scales, which are jagged, or toothed, on the edge.' It is a
well-proportioned tree, but stiff-looking, and the dark foliage,
which never seems to change, gives it a gloomy aspect. The leaves
are closely arranged in spiral lines. The black spruce is never a
very large tree, but the wood is light, elastic and durable, and is
valuable in shipbuilding, for making ladders and for shingles. The
young shoots are much in demand for making spruce-beer. The white
spruce is more slender and tapering, and the bark and leaves are
lighter. The root is very tough, and the Canadian Indians make
threads from the fibres, with which they sew together the
birch-bark for their canoes. The wood is as valuable as that of the
black spruce."</p>
<p>"Does the Norway spruce come from Norway?" asked Clara.</p>
<p>"Yes; that is its native land, where it presents its most grand
and beautiful appearance. There it 'rivals the palm in stature, and
even attains the height of one hundred and eighty feet. Its
handsome branches spread out on every side and clothe the trunk to
its base, while the summit of the tree ends in an arrow-like point.
In very old trees the branches droop at the extremities, and not
only rest upon the ground, but actually take root in it and grow.
Thus a number of young trees are often seen clustering around the
trunk of an old one.'"</p>
<p>"Why, that's like the banyan tree," said Malcolm.</p>
<p>"Only there is a difference in the manner of growth, for the
branches of the banyan are some distance from the ground and send
forth rootlets without touching it. The Norway spruce is also the
great tree of the Alps, where it seems to match the majestic
scenery. The timber is valuable for building; and when sawed into
planks, it is called white deal, while that of the Scotch fir is
red deal.</p>
<p>"And now," said Miss Harson, "before we leave the firs, let us
see what is said about them in the Bible. They were used for
shipbuilding in the city of Tyre; for the prophet Ezekiel says,
'They have made all thy ship boards of fir trees of Senir<SPAN name=
"FNanchor21" id="FNanchor21"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_21">[21]</SPAN>,'
and it is written that 'David and all the house of Israel played
before the Lord on all manner of instruments made of
firwood<SPAN name="FNanchor22" id="FNanchor22"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_22">[22]</SPAN>.' The same wood was used then in building
houses, as you will find, Malcolm, by turning to the Song of
Solomon, seventh chapter, seventeenth verse."</p>
<blockquote><SPAN name="Footnote_21" id="Footnote_21"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor21">[21]</SPAN> Ezek. xxvii. 5.</blockquote>
<blockquote><SPAN name="Footnote_22" id="Footnote_22"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor22">[22]</SPAN> 2 Sam. vi. 5.</blockquote>
<p>"'The beams of our house are cedar, and our rafters of fir,'"
read Malcolm.</p>
<p>"In Kings it is said, 'So Hiram gave Solomon cedar trees and fir
trees, according to his desire<SPAN name="FNanchor23" id="FNanchor23"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_23">[23]</SPAN>,' and these trees
were to be used for the very house, or palace, of which the Jewish
king speaks in his Song. Evergreens are often mentioned in the
Bible, and in that beautiful Christmas chapter, the sixtieth of
Isaiah, you will find the fir tree again.--Read the thirteenth
verse, Clara."</p>
<blockquote><SPAN name="Footnote_23" id="Footnote_23"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor23">[23]</SPAN> I Kings v. 10.</blockquote>
<p>"'The glory of Lebanon shall come unto thee, the fir tree, the
pine tree, and the box together, to beautify the place of my
sanctuary; and I will make the place of my feet glorious.'--What is
'the glory of Lebanon,' Miss Harson?"</p>
<p>"The cedar of Lebanon, dear; and we will now turn our attention
to that and the other cedars."</p>
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