<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXI." id="CHAPTER_XXI."></SPAN>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
<h3><i>THE CEDARS</i>.</h3>
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<p>"The cypress tribe," said Miss Harson, "differ from the pines,
or Coniferae, by not having their fruit in a true cone, but in a
roundish head which consists of a small number of scales, sometimes
forming a sort of berry. One of the most common of this family is
the arbor vitae, or tree of life--a tree so small as to look like a
pointed shrub, and more used for fences than for ornament. An
arbor-vitae hedge, you know, divides our flower garden from the
kitchen-garden and goes all the way down to the brook."</p>
<p>"I like the smell of it," said Clara. "Don't you, Miss
Harson?"</p>
<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="Images/377.png" width-obs="40%" alt=""><br/>
<b>SIBERIAN ARBOR VITAE.</b></p>
<p>"Yes," was the reply, "there is something very fresh and
pleasant about it; and when well kept, as John is sure to keep
ours, it makes a beautiful hedge. As a tree it has been known to
reach forty or fifty feet in height, with a trunk ten feet in
circumference. The leaves are arranged in four rows, in alternately
opposite pairs, and seem to make up the fan-like branchlets. These
branchlets look like parts of a large compound, flat leaf. The bark
is slightly furrowed, smooth to the touch, and very white when the
tree stands exposed. The wood is reddish, somewhat odorous, very
light, soft and fine-grained. In the northern part of the United
States and in Canada it holds the first place for durability."</p>
<p>"I thought the cypress was a flower," said Malcolm.</p>
<p>"So one kind of cypress is," replied his governess--"the blossom
of an airy-looking and beautiful creeper; but the name also belongs
to a family of trees. The white cedar, or cypress, is a very
graceful tree which generally grows in swamps. 'It is entirely free
from the stiffness of the pines, and to the spiry top of the poplar
it unites the airy lightness of the hemlock. The trunk is straight
and tall, tapering very gradually, and toward the top there are
short irregular branches, forming a small but beautiful head, above
which the leading shoot waves like a slender plume.' The leaves are
very small and scale-like, with sharp points, and grow in four rows
on the ends of the branchlets, giving them the appearance of large
compound leaves. The wood is very durable, and is used for many
building-purposes. It is generally of a faint rose-color, and
always keeps its aromatic odor."</p>
<p class="right"><ANTIMG src="Images/379.png" width-obs="30%" alt=""><br/>
<b>IRISH JUNIPER.</b></p>
<p>"Is that what our cedar-chests are made of to keep the moths
from our winter clothes?" asked Clara.</p>
<p>"Yes," replied Miss Harson, "but the name 'cedar' is; not
correct, though it is one commonly given to this tree. The wood of
the European cypress is also used for many purposes where strength
and durability are required, for it really seems never to wear out.
This tree is described as tapering and cone-like, with upright
branches growing close to the trunk, and in its general appearance
a little resembling a poplar. Its frond-like branches are closely
covered with very small sharp-pointed leaves of a yellow-green
color, smooth and shining, and they remain on the tree five or six
years. The cypress is often seen in burying-grounds in Europe, and
in Turkey it often stands at each end of a grave. The oldest tree
in Europe is thought to be an Italian cypress said to have been
planted in the year of our Saviour's birth; it is an object of
great reverence in the neighborhood. This ancient tree is a hundred
and twenty feet high and twenty-three feet around the trunk.</p>
<p>"The juniper--or red cedar, as it is improperly called--is not a
handsome tree, but it is a very useful one. It has a scraggy,
stunted look, and the foliage is apt to be rusty; but it will grow
in rocky, sandy places where no other tree would even try to hold
up its head, and the wood, when made into timber, lasts for a great
many years. Posts for fences are made of the juniper or red cedar,
and the shipbuilder, boatbuilder, carpenter, cabinet-maker and
turner are all steady customers for it. The 'cedar-apples' found on
this tree are one phase of the life of a very curious fungus. They
are covered with a reddish-brown bark; and when fresh, they are
tough and fleshy, somewhat like an unripe apple. When dry they
become of a woody nature."</p>
<p>"They pucker up your mouth awfully," said Malcolm, who had made
several attempts to eat them; but, do what he would, he could not
even "make believe" they were nice.</p>
<p>"I have no doubt of it," was the reply, "remembering the
dreadful faces I have seen on some of our rambles. But the birds
like them, as they do everything of the kind that is not
poisonous."</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>"Isn't it beautiful?" exclaimed the children, in delight. They
were admiring a magnificent cedar of Lebanon in one of the pictures
which Miss Harson had collected for their benefit, and it seemed no
wonder that the grand spreading tree should be called "the glory of
Lebanon."</p>
<p>"It is indeed beautiful," replied their governess; "and think of
seeing a whole mountain covered with such trees! A traveler speaks
of them as the most solemnly impressive trees in the world, and
says that their massive trunks, clothed with a scaly texture almost
like the skin of living animals and contorted with all the
irregularities of age, may well have suggested those ideas of
royal, almost divine, strength and solidity which the sacred
writers ascribe to them.--Turn to the ninety-second psalm, Clara,
and read the twelfth verse."</p>
<p>"'The righteous shall flourish like the palm tree; he shall grow
like a cedar in Lebanon.'"</p>
<p>"In the thirty-first chapter of Ezekiel," continued Miss Harson,
"it is written, 'Behold, the Assyrian was a cedar in Lebanon with
fair branches, and with a shadowing shroud, and of an high stature;
and his top was among the thick boughs. The waters made him great,
the deep set him up on high with her rivers running round about his
plants, and sent out her little rivers unto all the trees of the
field. Therefore his height was exalted above all the trees of the
field and his boughs were multiplied, and his branches became long
because of the multitude of waters, when he shot forth. All the
fowls of heaven made their nests in his boughs, and under his
branches did all the beasts of the field bring forth their young,
and under his shadow dwelt all great nations.'"</p>
<p class="ctr"><ANTIMG src="Images/383.png" width-obs="50%" alt=""><br/>
<b>CEDAR OF LEBANON.</b></p>
<p>"Are the leaves like those of our cedar trees?" asked Malcolm,
who was studying the picture quite intently. "The tree doesn't look
like 'em."</p>
<p>"They are somewhat like them," replied his governess, "being
slender and straight and about an inch long. They grow in tufts,
and in the centre of some of the tufts there is a small cone which
is very pretty and often brought to this country by travelers for
their friends at home. In <i>The Land and the Book</i> there is a
picture of small branches with cones, and the author says of the
cedar: 'There is a striking peculiarity in the shape of this tree
which I have not seen any notice of in books of travel. The
branches are thrown out horizontally from the parent trunk. These
again part into limbs, which preserve the same horizontal
direction, and so on down to the minutest twigs; and even the
arrangement of the clustered leaves has the same general tendency.
Climb into one, and you are delighted with a succession of verdant
floors spread around the trunk and gradually narrowing as you
ascend. The beautiful cones seem to stand upon or rise out of this
green flooring.' The same writer says that by examining the
different growths of wood inside the trunk of one of the trees
these ancient cedars of Lebanon have been proved to be three
thousand five hundred years old."</p>
<p>"Oh, Miss Harson!" exclaimed her audience; "could any tree be as
old as that?"</p>
<p>"It is possible. The circle of growing wood which is made each
year is a pretty good method of telling the age of a tree, and
these cedars of Lebanon are considered the oldest trees in the
world. Travelers have always spoken of the beauty and symmetry of
these trees, with their widespreading branches and cone-like tops.
All through the Middle Ages a visit to the cedars of Lebanon was
regarded by many persons in the light of a pilgrimage. Some of the
trees were thought to have been planted by King Solomon himself,
and were looked upon as sacred relics. Indeed, the visitors took
away so many pieces from the bark that it was feared the trees
would be destroyed. The cedars stand in a valley a considerable way
up the mountain, where the snow renders it inaccessible for part of
the year."</p>
<p>"Are the trees just in one particular place, then?" asked
Malcolm. "I thought they grew all over that country?"</p>
<p>"The principal and best-known grove of very large and ancient
cedars of Lebanon is found in one place," replied his governess,
"but there are other groves now known to exist. The famous grove
was fast disappearing, until there were but few of them left. The
pilgrims who went to visit them in such numbers in olden times were
accompanied by monks from a monastery about four miles below, who
would beseech them not to injure a single leaf. But the greatest
care could not preserve the trees. Some of them have been struck
down by lightning, some broken by enormous loads of snow, and
others torn to fragments by tempests. Some have even been cut down
with axes like any common tree. But better care is now taken of
them; so that we may hope that the grove will live and
increase."</p>
<p>"But why weren't they saved," asked Clara, "when people thought
so much of them?"</p>
<p>"It seems to be a part of the general desolation of the land of
God's chosen but rebellious people. In the third chapter of the
prophet Isaiah, verses eleven and twelve, it is said, 'For the day
of the Lord of hosts shall be upon every one that is proud and
lofty, and upon every one that is lifted up; and he shall be
brought low; and upon all the cedars of Lebanon, that are high and
lifted up, and upon all the oaks of Bashan.' The same prophet says,
in the tenth chapter and nineteenth verse, 'And the rest of the
trees of his forest shall be few, that a child may write them.'
These words have been particularly applied to the stately cedars of
Lebanon, for 'the once magnificent grove is but a speck on the
mountain-side. Many persons have taken it in the distance for a
wood of fir trees, but on approaching nearer and taking a closer
view the cedars resume somewhat of their ancient majesty. The space
they cover is not more than half a mile, but, once amidst them, the
beautiful fan-like branches overhead, the exquisite green of the
younger trees and the colossal size of the older ones fill the mind
with interest and admiration. Within the grove all is hushed as in
a land of the past. Where once the Tyrian workman plied his axe and
the sound of many voices came upon the ear, there are now the
silence and solitude of desertion and decay.'--Malcolm," added his
governess, "you may read us what is written in the sixth verse of
the fourteenth chapter of Hosea."</p>
<p>"'His branches,'" read Malcolm, "'shall spread, and his beauty
shall be as the olive tree, and his smell as Lebanon.' What does
that mean, Miss Harson?"</p>
<p>"It means the fragrant resin which exudes from both the trunk
and the cones of the beautiful cedar. It is soft, and its fragrance
is like that of the balsam of Mecca. 'Everything about this tree
has a strong balsamic odor, and hence the whole grove is so
pleasant and fragrant that it is delightful to walk in it. The wood
is peculiarly adapted for building, because it is not subject to
decay, nor is it eaten of worms. It was much used for rafters and
for boards with which to cover houses and form the floors and
ceilings of rooms. It was of a red color, beautiful, solid and free
from knots. The palace of Persepolis, the temple of Jerusalem and
Solomon's palace were all in this way built with cedar, and the
house of the forest of Lebanon was perhaps so called from the
quantity of this wood used in its construction.' We are told in
First Kings that Solomon 'built also the house of the forest of
Lebanon<SPAN name="FNanchor24" id="FNanchor24"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_24">[24]</SPAN>,' and that 'he made three hundred shields
of beaten gold' and 'put them in the house of the forest of
Lebanon<SPAN name="FNanchor25" id="FNanchor25"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_25">[25]</SPAN>.' All the drinking-vessels, too, of this
wonderful palace, which is always spoken of as 'the house of the
forest of Lebanon,' were of pure gold, and its magnificence shows
how highly the beautiful cedar-wood was valued."</p>
<blockquote><SPAN name="Footnote_24" id="Footnote_24"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor24">[24]</SPAN> I Kings vii. 2.</blockquote>
<blockquote><SPAN name="Footnote_25" id="Footnote_25"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor25">[25]</SPAN> I Kings x. 17.</blockquote>
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