* —_ ee os _ ee ( pa ry an { y Rie ts: ‘as bride 4) nt SYLVA FLORIFERA : Sbhrubberp HISTORICALLY AND BOTANICALLY TREATED ; WITH OBSERVATIONS ON THE FORMATION OF ORNAMENTAL PLANTATIONS, AND PICTURESQUE SCENERY. By HENRY PHILLIPS, F.H.S. AUTHOR OF POMARIUM BRITANNICUM, AND HISTORY OF CULTIVATED VEGETABLES. Sylva nemus non alta facit: tegit arbutus herbam: * Rosmaris et lauri, nigraque myrtus olent. Nec densz foliis buxi, fragilesque myrice, Nec tenues cytisi, cultaque pinus abest. Ovi. Ars Am. IN TWO VOLUMES. VOL. r: ; LONDON: PRINTED FOR LONGMAN, HURST, REES, ORME, AND BROWN, PATERNOSTER-ROW. 1823. — oRLIF 0 RNY) z, LIBRARY SEtny of soe ‘Lonvon : Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode, ; New-Street-Square, Botany JG 4353 ads y/ TO Mrs. HENRY PHILLIPS. Tue dedication of a work is the highest mark of respect that an author has the power of bestowing on an individual. He, therefore, naturally turns towards those, where his reverence, esteem, and affections are fixed. — And as it is now about a quarter of acentury, since we have journeyed together over roads, sometimes sprinkled with flowers, and often strewed with thorns, the latter of which you have so invariably passed with fortitude and cheerfulness, as to set me an example of patience and perseverance: Hence, I flatter myself, you will receive with pleasure my labours in the Sylva Florifera; as it will prove my endeavours to dissipate the grief A 2 1V DEDICATION. that has so heavily befallen us since the com- mencement of this work, which was intended for your amiable and accomplished pupil ; the loss of whom has fixed the cypress too firmly in our bosoms ever to be entirely eradicated : but as the study of vegetable nature is one of the best cordials for sorrow, accept, dear madam, the nectar its flowers offer, which has proved so great a balm to Your devoted and affectionate Husband, HENRY PHILLIPS Bedford Square, Brighton. PREFACE. Tue Planter of the Shrubbery has endea- voured to dispose his trees and form his groves in a manner that may render his walks agreeable to every age and class, that may be disposed to seek information or amusement among the various plants of the Sylva Florifera. Should his efforts fail of success, he will at least enjoy the con- sciousness of having attempted to please all the admirers of Nature’s works, by studying to render every common an interesting pleasure ground, and every hedge a pleasing plantation, by the information he has endeavoured to collect respecting the plants that flourish in them. The author has also tried to make his book an agreeable companion to the traveller, who, as he passes through woods and lanes, may never feel himself solitary, but have his VI - PREFACE. way enlivened by vegetable history and bota- nical beauties. These by their connection with anecdote, and their poetical celebrity, may agreeably beguile his time as he jour- neys by the humble bushes of the road, or the proud natives of the forest. To those who tread the flowery paths of ornamental gardens, the writer would wish the secrets of each blossom to be fully expanded, that the wisdom of the Creator may always shine conspicuous in their walks. Thus also, the plants themselves may invite the youth and the fair to the study of botany, by exhibit- ing the beauty and simplicity of that science, ~ For the information of those who are form- ing landscape plantations, the author has as- signed to each tree and shrub its proper sta- tion, and noticed the tints of its natural robe, with observations intended to assist the plan- ter in effecting a harmony of colouring and an undulating appearance in the grove. ——— Non Chaonis abfuit arbos, Non nemus Heliadum, non frondibus esculus altis, Nec tilia molles, nec fagus, et innuba laurus, Et coryli fragiles, et fraxinus utilis hastis, Enodisque abies, curvataque glandibus ilex, Et Platanus genialis, acerque coloribus impar, Amunicoleque simul salices, et aquatica lotos, Perpetuoque virens buxus, tenuesque myrice, Et bicolor myrtus, et baccis cerula tinus ; Vos quoque flexipedes hedere venistis, et una Rampinee vites, et amicte vitibus ulmi: Ornique, et pice, pomoque onerata rubentz Arbutus, et lente victoris preemia palme : Et succincta comas, hirsutaque vertice pinus Grata Detim matri Ovip. Metamorph. “ Much can we praise the trees so straight and hy, The sayling pine ; the cedar proud and tall ; The vine-propt elme ; the poplar never dry ; The builder oake, sole king of forrests all ; The aspine, good for staves ; the cypresse funeral ; The laurell, meed of mightie conquerours And poets sage ; the firre that weepeth still ; The eugh, obedient to the bender’s will ; The birch for shaftes ; the sallow for the mill ; The mirrhe sweete-bleeding in the bitter wound ; The warlike beech ; the ash for nothing ill ; The fruitful olive ; and the platane sound ; The carver holme ; the maple, seldom inward sound.” SPENCER’s Faerie Queene, Book I, Canto 1. «i x ut Rep : ya 4 ox pus a al lite tie ae grit as ener fol ' ee pute pa iit * wate = Sabes PAS HCE ssid Ott 1 a ‘ a aa ee . aut ¥ ! ‘ 4 ) . j ; i. ft aa TF OF Gel F € - 39 ’ : ‘f “NE to sf “, ae 7 2 Hyde cna Leah i . ; ~t iM eee om i. vant, rs vf INTRODUCTION. « And let us to our fresh employments rise Among the groves, the fountains, and the flowers, That open now their choicest bosomed smells, Reserved from night and kept for thee in store.” MILTON. ‘Tue shrubbery is a style of pleasure-garden which seems to owe its creation to the idea that our sublime poet formed of Eden. It originated in England, and is as peculiar to the British nation as _ landscape-planting. Whilst other arts have been derived from ancient or borrowed from modern inventions, this has indisputably sprung from the genius of our soil, and is perhaps one of the most de- lightful, as well as most beneficial, of all that claim the name of elegant. Ornamental plantations are now so univer- sally spread over the face of this country, that our island may be compared to a vase VOL. I. B 2 * INTRODUCTION. emerging from the ocean, into which the Sylvans of every region have set their fa- vourite plants, and the Flora of every climate poured her choicest gifts, for the embellish- ment of the spot round which Neptune throws his fostering arms. Our ambition leads us to hope that we may add pleasure to the pleasure-ground, by pointing out the beauties of the shrubbery, which must render vegetation an object of admiration and -vene- ration to all classes. We wish to attract atten- tion to the peculiar pleasing properties of each plant by the remarks of the ingenious, the anecdotes of the ancients, the harmony of the poets, the observations of the physicians, and the reflections of the moralists of all ages. Morality, however, of a gloomy cast will be avoided; for our wish is to give the work, like the subject, a smiling aspect. Though flowering shrubs seem to contri- bute nothing to pottage, and but little to medicine in its present refined state, yet they add greatly to our pleasure, and con- siderably to our health. They win us to good humour by their fragrance and cheerful appearance, and produce a serenity of mind by the calm reflections they present to it ; thus assisting to relieve the maladies of the INTRODUCTION, 3 soul, as drugs mitigate the grosser and more perceptible sufferings of the body. *« ‘The spleen is seldom felt where Flora reigns, ‘The low’ring eye, the petulance, the frown, And sullen sadness, that o’ershade, distort, And mar the face of beauty, when no cause For such immeasurable woe appears : These Vlora banishes, and gives the fair Sweet smiles-and bloom less transient than her own.” CowPeER. We shall notice the allegorical allusions which the eastern nations are accustomed to make by means of flowers, and the fables of the ancient poets and mythologists respecting plants. Thus, pleasing ideas may be con- nected with pleasing objects, and agreeable images convey lively but moral sentiments to the mind, adding to the charms of the country without recourse to romance and _ useless fic- tion. These accustom the mind to such violent sensations, that at last it is obliged to resort to an excess of feeling, either of mirth or grief, to prevent that dreaded fashionable lethargy of spirit— ennui. Such a habit in the end injures health and con- sequently shortens life, as much as a calm but cheerful state of mind assists in the pro- Jongation and enjoyment of both : + ** Come, then, ye blissful scenes, ye soft retreats, — Where life flows pure, the heart more calmly beats.” DELILLE. B 2 4 INTRODUCTION. It would seem, that the more terrible a sight, and the more violent an impression, the more agreeable to the greater portion of mankind, who run with avidity after objects of horror, whilst they pass unnoticed those which produce gentle and agreeable sensa- tions, and would to all appearance rather tremble at the awful thunderbolt of Jupiter, than calmly admire the bounteous horn of plenty. It has been observed, that the volcano near Naples attracts more travellers to the city than the delicious gardens which adorn the shores of that region. The plains of Greece, overspread with ruins, would entice many to undertake a voyage to a distant country, who would feel but little inclined to travel over their native soil to view its richly cultivated lawns; and there is no doubt, but that formerly, where one person went to Egypt to be a witness of Nature’s bounty to that nation, five hundred became travellers to behold the Pyramids. A temple after it’s fall excites more eager curiosity than it did during its construction ; and many who will not cross their thresholds to look ata beautiful .calm in Nature, will rush to get a sight of a storm and shipwreck in a play- house. This love of the terrific is not, as has been asserted by foreigners, peculiar to the INTRODUCTION. 5 English nation: it is prevalent every where, The author observed an instance of it when in Paris, in the summer of 1822. Wishing to visit the celebrated garden of M. Bourseau, which is unequalled for the beauty of it’s plants by any city-garden in Europe, he re- ceived in anwer to all enquiries for direction to the spot, the usual careless but short and decisive, Je ne le connois pas, Monsieur ; but on asking the way to La Mort, every turn and alley were readily pointed out with all the bustle and officiousness of French politeness. In this history of flowering trees and shrubs, there is nothing terrible to present to the reader; but every endeavour has been used to ‘“¢ Shew Nature’s form in smiling beauty drest, And call mankind to view her and be blest.” DELILLE. It seems hardly possible for any mind to be so debased as to be insensible to the » effects of Nature, whose vegetable charms become more endeared to us as our age and reflection increase. A more delightful cabinet of natural history can scarcely be formed, than the shrubbery affords, even when unadorned by exotic beauties. It of- fers matter for contemplation of the most agreeable kind, which varies still as seasons BS 6 INTRODUCTION. revolve; and as every tree and shrub has it’s peculiar inhabitants, we have at the same time a collection of animal and vegetable wonders, that are sufficient to occupy all the leisure which our economical duties allow us. As years increase, a taste for most pleasures in general diminishes. Those of the court be- come fatiguing; the charms of the table appear to lessen; and as passion subsides and love languishes, the gay ball and splen- did opera lose their delights; but the fond- ness for a garden increases, and is almost the - only pleasure that does increase. Let us not, then, neglect to cultivate a taste for what will form the delight and amusement of the latter period of lite. Every tree we plant adds to the entertainment we prepare for future years, for ourselves, our friends, and suc- cessors. Should particular times and circumstances require a retrenchment to be made in domes- tic expenses, it should not begin with the garden. ‘This once neglected or laid aside, cannot soon or with small cost be re-es- tablished. ‘There are other more expensive and less profitable indulgences, which may be lessened without injury ; nay, perhaps, with benefit to an establishment. By giving one entertainment less each season in London, INTRODUCTION. 7 more might be saved than by ruming a whole pleasure-ground,— the only means of subsistence to a few poor labourers, whose consequent discharge exposes them to want, and all the evils that accompany it. | The introduction of a useful or ornamental plant into our island is justly considered as one of the most important services that a person can render his country ; for it is: im- possible to calculate on the benefits that may be derived through his means, when the qualities of the vegetable are ascertained and it’s virtues known.. Even what is introduced. and planted merely from curiosity or orna- ment seems to unite us to the nations from whence it comes. It bestows on us a share of the blessings of other climates, and affords us a portion of the smiles of a more genial sun. When, therefore, we dwell on the beauty of exotic trees. and shrubs, we wish to be understood as expressing our gratitude to those who have enriched our land with additional charms, and more fully dis- played Nature to our eyes, and not as disre- garding the plants that are indigenous to our soil. We are aware that many an Englishman has sighed under the shade of the banana, for a sight of his native banks, where the prim- rose sparkles through the hazel-hedge, and B 4 § INTRODUCTION. the violet peeps so modestly. The plants of our country recall the idea of it in the most forcible manner, wherever we meet them. They are often the first objects that attract the attention of those who have been long absent from their native fields, and who on their re- turn pour out the genuine effusions of joy on beholding the village-elm, the well-known oak, or the unchanged yew, whose antiquity is equal to that of the church it shades. We are told of a young Indian, (Pontaveri from Otaheite,) who, in the midst of the splendor of Paris, regretting the simple beauty of his native island, sprang forward at the unex- pected sight of a banana tree in the Jardin des Plantes, embraced it, while his eyes were bathed in tears, and exclaiming with a voice of joy, “ Ah! tree of my country !” seemed, by a delightful illusion of sensibility, to imagine himself for a moment transported to the land which gave him birth. We seem as it were for an instant to go back to the delights of infancy, when, on each succeeding spring, we visit the meadows co- vered with cowslips, which afforded us so many happy hours in childhood, as we formed balls of their blossoms. ‘Then the playful girl, be- decked with wreaths and necklaces of daisies, led her little swain in chains formed of the INTRODUCTION. 9 milky flower-stalks of the dandelion; but who at the sight of a butterfly burst the brittle bonds and scampered away, to return, perhaps, a few years after, sighing and entangled in fetters not so visible, but more binding. There is no part of Nature’s works more interesting than flowers. They seem intended for the embellishment of our fair, and for the ornament of the spot where they tread. Their sweet perfumes have such influence over all our sensations, that in the midst of flowering shrubs the most acute grief generally gives way to the sweetest melancholy. When our home and domestic companions are encom- passed by the shrubbery, our situation then approaches nearest to a terrestrial paradise. Is it not, then, | “‘ Strange, there should be found, Who, self-imprisoned in their proud saloons, Renounce the odours of the open field, For the unscented fictions of the loom ; Who, satisfied with only pencilled scenes, Prefer, to the performance of a God, Th’ inferior wonders of an artist’s hand ? Lovely, indeed, the mimic works of art; But Nature’s works far lovelier. ” CowPER. The shrubbery is to a rational mind a source of inexhaustible delight and instruction, where each season brings new joy, and every morn- ing a fresh harvest of delightful sweets. Sub- 10 INTRODUCTION. jects for new thoughts and contemplations pre- sent themselves to our view, and even the most dreary months still supply causes of admiration, and discover a world full of wonders; for “¢ ’en Winter oft has seer’ it gay, With fretted frost-work spangled o’er, While pendants drooped from every spray, And crimson budlets told, once more >) b Chat Spring would all its charms restore.’ 5 Fen) > ‘It is not to old age alone, that the garden offers its placid delights. Every stage of life, from the cradle to the grave, is attracted by it’s charms. The infant is ready to spring from it’s nurse’s arms, allured by the gay colours which flowers exhibit. They form the most innocent toy of childhood, and the cultivation of them is generally it’s first labour, whilst their presentation often ex- plains the passion of youth. ‘he happy belle loves to entwine them in her locks, and the fond parents delight to see their child mimic their beauties with the pencil : « The flowers which grace their native beds, Awhile put forth their blushing heads ; But, e’er the close of parting day, They wither, shrink, and die away ; But these, which mimic skill hath made, Nor scorched by suns, nor killed by shade, Shall blush with less inconstant hue, Which art at pleasure can renew.” Lioyp. INTRODUCTION. li The representation of flowers is the proper style of drawing for the softer sex. In this attempt they will succeed, and by this study will afford us a delight which they cannot do, when, “ o’erstepping the modesty of na- ture,” and the limits of their proper employ- . ments, they present us with specimens of their proficiency in the science of anatomy. A pursuit like this is often too bold, and the subjects sometimes too masculine, to suit the feelings of those who can never be admired for acting and feeling like men. But flowers are the peculiar province of the fair, and the nearer their imitation approaches to nature, the more it delight us; which paintings of mur- ders, massacres, deaths, and agony, certainly cannot. ‘The beauty and grace that may be dis- played. in grouping flowers, united with the gaiety of their colours and the harmony of their tints, are objects well worthy the atten- tion of those who were born to render life delightful. The neatness, nicety, and patience required in finishing flower-pieces, seem to demand the delicate hand of a female artist. “ Oui, beaux arts, oui, la femme, employant vos secrets, Méme sans ¢étre vue, ajoute 4 vos attraits. - Des fleurs par Valayer sur la toile jetées, On est prét a cueillir les tiges imitées.” LeGouve. 14 INTRODUCTION. We have seen many delightful pieces of fruit and flower sketches by ladies, but do not recollect instances where they have completely succeeded in the delineation of the human figure; and have known many becomedisgusted by a vain attempt, when they might have fully succeeded, and been well amused, had they . commenced that branch of the graphic art which so peculiarly suits them. We are aware that our opinion may be objected to by the generality of drawing masters ; but we write as a parent for parents, and can feel for those whose time has been vainly wasted in endea- vouring to follow, with unequal steps, some of the boldest designs of man. ‘¢ But softer tasks divide Florella’s hours ; To watch the buds just opening on the day ; With welcome shade to screen the languid flowers That sicken in the Summer’s parching ray. Oft will she stop amidst her evening walk, With tender hand each bruised plant to rear, To bind the drooping lily’s broken stalk, And nurse the blossoms of the infant year.” BaRBAULD. The description, by Moses, of the garden of Eden, the first abode of first created man, formed the outlines which Milton has so splendidly enriched with all the imagery of poetry. rom this have been copied the plantation, the park, and shrubbery, so justly the pride of the nation, and so properly the INTRODUCTION. | 13 abode of it’s beauty. The Greeks devoted their terrestrial groves, as well as celestial gar- dens, to the gods; but the Mahometans re- serve their flowery lawns and umbrageous bowers for scenes of future bliss to mortal believers. We, however, more prudent, should wish to collect all such blessings, which boun- teous Nature has scattered over the globe, and in this present life form a modern garden, worthy of the Hesperides, and deserving of, though not requiring, a dragon to guard it. Ae Set Much [I love To see the fair one bind the straggling pink, Cheer the sweet rose, the lupin, and the stock, And lend a staff to the still gadding pea. Ye fair, it well becomes you. Better thus Cheat time away than at the crowded rout, Rustling in silk, in a small room close pent, And heated e’en to fusion; made to breathe A rank, contagious air, and fret at whist, Or sit aside to sneer and whisper scandal.” : Village Curate. Some of the pleasure gardens of antiquity were created for, and devoted to, the pleasure of the softer sex. Solomon has celebrated those of Jerusalem in song, and the extraor- dinary gardens of Babylon appear to have been formed by Nebuchadnezzar for his Median queen, who, we are told, could not become reconciled to the flat and naked ap- pearance of the province of Babylon; but 4 INTRODUCTION. frequently regretted each rising hill and scat- tered forest which she had formerly delighted in, with all the charms they had presented to. her youthful imagination. The king, to gra- tify his consort, within the precincts of the city raised terraces and planted woods, in imi- tation of those that diversified the face of his queen’s native country. ‘Thus originated those gardens, which, for their singularity and comparative extent, were considered one of the wonders of the world. Their base covered four acres of land, and the height of them was so considerable, that they resembled a pyramidical mountain covered by a forest. The upper area, which was about thirty feet square, was about three hundred feet distant from the river Euphrates, that washed the base of the stupendous superstructure. This towering pleasure-ground overlooked the whole city and surrounding country, as tar as the eye could reach. Each terrace was covered with earth and planted with trees, so as to form a series of ascending groves ; and every platform supported rural seats, foun- tains, and sumptuous hanquetting rooms, on which ali the splendor and luxury of eastern magnificence were lavished. This edifice was constructed by immense stone beams laid on pillars of stone, the first INTRODUCTION. 15 flat being a square of about four hundred feet each way; these flats or stories lessening in surface as they increased in height. The stones were first covered with reeds cemented together by bitumen. On this covering was Jaid a double row of bricks united by cement, which were then covered also by sheets of lead, in order to prevent the moisture from penetrating downwards; and _ these sheets lastly sustained a depth of earth sufficient for the plantation of trees and shrubs. We are told that this elevated shrubbery was watered by fountains, the water of which we pre- sume to have been conveyed into it by manual labour, as skill in hydraulics appears to be an acquirement of later times; and perhaps the ancient Egyptians, from their peculiar situa- tion and circumstances, were the only people who attended at that period to the science. We have noticed these gardens of Babylon, to show that pleasure-grounds have existed from the earliest ages in civilized countries. As the arts have Aoueishea or been neglected, so have gardens flourished or decayed. The Romans would naturally attach to their villas in this country a similar style of garden to that which they had been decublotied to in Italy. But this would be lost in baronial times, when nothing was secure outside the 16 INTRODUCTION. castle walls. However, gardens of consi- derable extent were joined to the convents and monasteries of England ; and we find that the cultivation of flowers and shrubs was at- tended to by most of the religious recluses of those establishments, as well as that of fruits, pot-herbs, and medicinal plants. The citizens of London had gardens to their villas as early as the time of Henry IL, which Fitz-Stephen tells us were “ large, beautiful, and planted with trees. ”’ In Cerceau’s Architecture, which appeared in the reign of Henry III., every ground-plot was laid out with plans of labyrinths and _par- terres. The royal gardens of Nonsuch in Surrey, were formed in the time of Henry VIII. The privy gardens of that palace were planted with flowering shrubs and _ fruit- trees, and ornamented with basins of marble, fountains, and pyramids. The gardens of Hampton-Court were also planted about the same period, by Cardinal Wolsey ; and from that time to the present, the taste for orna- mental trees and shrubs has continued to increase. Charles II. returned from the Continent with a taste completely French ; and Evelyn also, from his travels through France and INTRODUCTION. 17 Italy, during the Commonwealth, imbibed similar ideas. Thus our plantations at that time consisted entirely of long, dull avenues, and our pleasure-gardens of clipped hedges, walks laid out upon geometrical principles, and ever-green trees shorn into fanciful and ridiculous figures. Le Notre, who planned the celebrated gardens of Versailles, came over at this time to England, by desire of Charles, to plant the parks of Greenwich and St. James’s. Karly in the eighteenth century, the formal and heavy style of gardening which had for some time prevailed, was changed by the united efforts of the English poets and painters of the day. By their pure taste and united efforts, they gave birth to that classical style of planting which has since been so much admired and imitated throughout the most refined parts of Europe. Whilst Addison was forming a rural garden at his retirement at Bilton near Rugby, Pope was employed in laying out a picturesque plantation at Twickenham. At the same time, with their pens they engaged in open war against the right angles and disfiguring shears of the gardeners of their day, against whom they levelled some of the keenest VOL. I. c 18 INTRODUCTION. shafts of their ridicule. These geniuses were seconded by Kent, who, as a painter and architect, was admirably adapted to embody their imaginations. In his capacity of land scape planter, he laid out the grounds of Claremont and Esher, about the year 1730; and as he painted the hall at Stowe, it is pro- bable that he assisted Lord Cobham im the grouping of his plantations also, which had been commenced on the modern plan about the time that Pope was occupied in forming his gardens at ‘Twickenham. Kent was fol- lowed in succession by Wright, Brown, Hol- land, and Repton, who brings us down to the: present day. As this work will include the history of the trees that grace the park, as well as the shrubs that ornament the lawn, we shall pro-— ceed to make some brief remarks as to the antiquity of these enclosures. The Persians of old had parks, called by the Greeks para- deisot, which contained animals for the chase; and the Romans had similar enclosures, ha- bitationes ferarum, or habitations for beasts of the chase. It is generally supposed, that the park of Blenheim is the site of grounds: that were once used by the Romans for hunting. It is also conjectured ta be the INTRODUCTION. 19 same spot which formed the park of Henry L., who, we are told by H. Huntingdon, had a park at Woodstock. * The word “ park” is originally Celtic, and like the French word parc, signifies an en- closed spot for the confinement of animals. ‘* No man can now,” says Wood, “ erect a “ park, without a licence under the broad “seal; for the common law does not en- “ courage matters of pleasure, which bring “no profit to the Commonwealth. But there “ may be a park in reputation, erected with- “ out lawful warrant; and the owner of such “ park may bring his action against persons “killing his deer.” It is considered in law to be no longer a park when all the deer are destroyed, for a park must consist of vert, venison, and enclosure; and to pull down park-walls or pales, subjects the offender to the same punishment as killing deer. It will be necessary now to make some ob- servations on the formation and planting of * Chaucer, the father of English poets, thus notices a park in the time of Edward III.:— ‘** | found a little weie Toward a parke, enclosed with a wall, In compace rounde: and by a gate small, Who so that would he frelie mighten gone Into this parke, ywalled with grene stone.” og 20 INTRODUCTION. shrubberies, though under each article we shall state what trees assimilate best in neighbourhood. The style of this kind of garden must depend so much on the extent, situation, and character of the ground, that it would be absurd to offer more than general remarks. | The plantation should be carefully made to suit the building it is to surround. As the villa and ornamented cottage form the largest portion at present of edifices that claim a pleasure-garden, we shall confine our observ- ations to the grounds attached to these dwellings. As such houses are generally built on situations too flat to admit of much natural variety, the first study should be to find where and how we can break the level by throwing up elevations, so as to answer the double purpose of obscuring private walks, and screening other parts from the wind. But it requires considerable ingenuity to hinder these elevations from having the ap- pearance of artificial ones, which would make them as ridiculous as a circular lake on a lawn. As the removal of earth is attended by the expense of labour only, this is one of the most advantageous manners of laying out money in the formation of a shrubbery, since five feet lowered in one part and raised above INTRODUCTION. 21 will give a slope or bank about double that height. A considerable effect will thus be obtained ; for in a flat country a small ele- vation gives a great command of prospect, and adds itself considerably to the beauty of a landscape, especially when planted with lofty growing trees, as larches and pines. An undulating appearance may be given to level ground, by judiciously planting the trees and shrubs. The too general error of planting close to the dwelling-house should be avoided; for although such a plantation may have a pretty appearance in the infant state, a few years’ erowth will cause it to cast a gloom over the apartments, and keep off a free circulation of air. Besides, as plants give out noxious air in the evening, it should be more par- ticularly guarded against in this moist atmo- sphere. The training of trees to the walls of houses is also objectionable, as they cause damps, harbour insects, and collect leaves and other substances that become offensive by their pu- trefaction, whilst the view of the plants them- selves cannot be enjoyed from the windows. However, all offices, out-houses, and un- sightly buildings, may be covered with vines and ornamental climbers. 2 co 29 INTRODUCTION. However small the plantation be, those abrupt terminations which mark the limits must not be permitted. The shrubbery should harmonize with the surrounding scenery, and appear to blend with it into one. The plants which stand nearest the dwell- ing must be of the dwarf kind, and of the most beautiful sorts. The trees, also, should be selected so as to correspond with the style of building. The villa shows best when sur- rounded by light ornamental trees, such as the birch, the acacia, the sumach, the labur- num, and cypress; and a clump of poplars may sometimes be introduced, so as to break the line with good effect. The cottage may have more rustic trees; while to the castle belong the oak, the ash, and the pme. The mansion admits of all at their proper distance, and in suitable situations. | One of the most important things in plant- ing is to attend particularly to the shades of green, especially where the view from the house or lawn catches the trees. Flowers, which Pliny calls the joys of the trees, con- tinue but fora short period, in comparison to the duration of foliage ; therefore, the picture should be formed by judiciously contrasting the greens. liven the effect of perspective INTRODUCTION. 23 may be considerably increased by the proper arrangement of hues. ‘Trees whose leaves are of a grey or bluish tint, when seen over or between shrubs of a yellow or bright green seem thrown into the distance. ‘Trees with small and tremulous leaves should wave over or before those of broad or fixed foliage. The light and elegant acacia has.a more beautiful effect when it’s branches float over the firm and dark holly or bay-tree. In some situa- tions the bare trunk of trees may be shown ; in some, it should be concealed by ever- greens and creepers. Vines, also, may be suffered to embrace it, and form natural festoons where the extent of ground will allow.of wilderness scenery. In all situations, nature may be assisted, but should never be deformed by clipping ; for ingenuity ought to be employed to disguise art, not to ex- pose it. The beauty of plants cannot be displayed when they are too much crowded, as they are then drawn up into unnatural shapes. There- fore, the oftener open spaces can be admitted, the more will the shrubs exhibit themselves to advantage, and the more cheertul will be the walk; for it becomes insipid and gloomy when confined for any distance. ‘The winds also claim our attention. Care must be taken cna 24 INTRODUCTION. so to arrange the position of the trees, that only those gales which are most congenial to the growth of particular plants should be al- lowed access to them. ‘The undulating appearance of a plantation will be considerably assisted by a gradual pro- gression from the lowest shrub to the highest tree, and again, from the highest to the lowest. But, as some shrubs will not flourish under certain trees, their respective situations demand consideration. These shrubs may indeed exist under such unfavourable circum- stances, but their unhealthy appearance will never be pleasing. Where the shade of any tree is too powerful for laurel or privet to thrive, ivy may be planted with advantage, if it be desirable to cover the ground with evergreen. In proportion as the shrubbery or planta- tion recedes from the dwelling, it should become more rural in it’s character, more especially if the house be in the cottage style. Here climbers, and such plants as require the support of others, are to be in- troduced. The most delightful groups in a pleasure-ground are generally those where nature, freeing herself from the shackles of art, depends only on her own assistance for support. Her beauty is chiefly to be seen INTRODUCTION. 25 there where her various creations combine spontaneously, and without restraint. The means by which these plants raise themselves up, so as to offer their flowers to the sun, are as various as they are curious, and they seldom blossom whilst trailing on the ground. The ivy and bignonia ascend by the help of little fibres, which fix them- selves to the bark of trees or crevices in walls so tightly, as to render their disengagement a difficult thing to be accomplished without injury to the trunk or building they are attached to. The honey-suckle, like the hop, twines itself spirally around the trunk or branches of trees, and often clasps them so closely, as to make an impression on the hardest timber. Others, as the vine and passion-flower, rear themselves by means of corkscrew tendrils, which hold so fast, that the strongest winds seldom disunite them from their support. Some plants climb by means of a hook in their leaf-stalk, or have a kind of vegetable hand given them, by which they are assisted in mounting, as the pea and several others. To return from this digression. — The sombre, gloomy walk of yew, cypress, or holly, should lead to the spot from which there is the most beautiful prospect, or to the gay 26 INTRODUCTION. parterre where Flora has diffused her flowery beauties ; as the contrast, particularly if sud- den, adds greatly to the cheerfulness of the terminating view. Bad taste is seldom more conspicuous than when we see trees or plants marshalled in regular order and at equal distances, like beaux and belles standing up for a quadrille or country dance. Where the situation will permit, four or six lilacs should be grouped in one place, and as many laburnums in another, so as to give effect in various parts by a mass of colour. The guelder rose should appear as if escap- ing from the dark bosom of evergreens, and not a plant should be set in the grqund with- out adding to the harmony of the whole. A shrubbery should be planted, as a court or stage dress is ornamented, for general effect, ak not for particular and partial inspection. Boldness of design, which seems to be more the offspring of nature and chance than of art and study, should be attempted; but though boldness is what the planter should aspire to, all harshness, or too great abrupt- ness, must be avoided, by a judicious mixture of plants whose colours will blend easily into one another. The most beautiful shrubs should occupy INTRODUCTION. Qo7 the most conspicuous and prominent places. For instance, a projecting part of the planta- tion should be reserved for the purple rho- dodendron, the flaming azalea, and other bog plants. Here, it must be observed, that unless proper soil be provided for these _ American plants, the cost of the shrubs will be lost, as they will soon decay when not placed in earth congenial to their nature. With these shrubs may be planted the hardy kinds of heath, as the same soil suits both species. With respect to evergreens, con- siderable judgment is required, in order to relieve their uniform appearance ‘during winter. This may be done, by skilfully arranging different kinds, and those with variegated leaves, or such as retain their brilliant berries during the cold months. However, a well planted shrubbery depends not so much for its beauty on the expense or rarity of the plants it contains, as on the se- lection of trees and shrubs which succeed each other in blossoming throughout the year, or whose various-coloured fruits grace them for the longest duration of time. We shall, therefore, not dwell upon those plants alone that are the ornaments of the summer season ; but also point out some that will contribute to the gaiety of the morning and evening of the 28 INTRODUCTION. year; so that the gloom may be banished at all times as much as possible from the grove, and nature’s repose shortened between the plaintive good-night of autumn, and the cheerful good-morrow of spring. The hazel and filbert are amongst the num- ber of those trees that blossom the first ; and although their crimson female flowers, which appear about the middle of January, make but little show, yet they should have a place in the shrubbery to display their catkins, that . hang with such peculiar grace from the branches, at a season when scarcely any other plant or shrub offers a flower, excepting the rosemary. ‘¢ Sweet-scented flower ! who art wont to bloom On January’s frost severe ; And o’er the wintry desert drear To watt thy waste perfume !” The furze bush, also, is one of the greatest enliveners of the shrubbery at this season, particularly when allowed to exhibit it’s golden blossoms at the foot of some dark- foliaged evergreen. Among the trees of the back-ground, the wych elm, the alder, the willow, and the osier, Hower in March. At the same period, the leafless branches of the almond are covered with blushing petals; whilst the sloe and plum are most con- INTRODUCTION. 29 spicuously beautiful with snowy blossoms, which are enhanced by contrast, if made to rise from the midst of dwarf evergreens, and shaded by others of taller growth. In a Jater season, the fruit is no less acceptable, and scarcely less ornamental, when it ** Hangs purpling, or displays an amber hue,” In the early months, also, the mezereon, the dwarf almond, and the pyrus japonica, give life to the fore-ground, when planted in little groups of three or four of each together. At this season of the year, too, much of the beauty of the shrubbery depends on covering the banks, and feet of trees and shrubs, with considerable patches of the earliest flowers. In February, — «© The snowdrop, winter’s timid child, Awakes to life, bedew’d with tears, And flings around its fragrance mild ; And where no rival flow’rets bloom Amidst the bare and chilling gloom, A beauteous gem appears.” This beautiful flower has for its contem- porary the crocus, which is also very orna- mental, when planted in such quantity as to cover a large space. When scattered singly, or arranged in formal bodies, its effect is 30 INTRODUCTION. entirely lost; and, like a single candle in a cathedral, it seems but to cast an additional gloom over the scene. The banks should, therefore, be made to glow with the flaming petals of the yellow crocus, whilst other spots should shine with the silvery tints of the purple variety. Clumps of the winter helle- bore, or aconite, should also be formed on a large scale, as their yellow cups, set, as it were, In green saucers, have a fine effect in February. The anemone hepatica is also as | beautiful as hardy ; and as there are varieties with red, blue, and white flowers, it is a plant that should be cultivated to a greater extent than is usual, as an embellishment to this season. The wild wood anemone, whose white and yellow flowers so enliven the earth at the same time, may be planted under the trees; and the primrose, that so sweetly “ peeps beneath the thorn,” when sprinkled abundantly between the shrubs and _ trees, gives an additional pleasure to the eye. The story of Proserpine may be recalled to our minds, by the view of gay plantations of early daffodils, that shake their golden heads to the winds of February. Whilst occupied in this gay assortment, let us not forget that — INTRODUCTION. 31 6¢ There is a flower, a little flower, With silver crest and golden eye, That welcomes every changing hour, And weathers every sky ; « ?'Tis Flora’s page: in every place, In every season, fresh and fair, It opens with perennial grace, And blossoms every where. *¢ On waste and woodland, rock and plain, It?s humble buds unheeded rise; The rose has but a summer reign, The daisy never dies.” MontTGoMEry. Large patches of the common field daisy are very ornamental, when planted amongst shrubs ; and the double crimson, white, and variegated kinds, deserve a conspicuous situa- tion for their beauty, as well as for their early flowering. As the lawn forms a principal feature in every pleasure-ground, this should also have an undulating surface, where the extent of ground will admit of it; and it must be a small space indeed that will not allow of a bank being thrown up. The form of this part should neither be too regular, nor of a studied irregularity. It should appear in different places to retire into the plantation, so as to give the idea of greater extent, espe- cially when viewed from the windows of the villa. 32 INTRODUCTION. Where the coach-road is carried through the lawn, (which, however, if possible, should be avoided,) it should be occasionally ob- scured by irregular clumps of shrubs, such as roses mixt with dwarf evergreens. The private walks must always be of breadth sufficient to admit three persons abreast, however small the grounds may be ; for plants are sure to be injured where the walks are narrow. In extensive shrubberies, each walk should lead to some particular object ; to the orchard, kitchen-garden, botanical borders, green-house, dairy, ice-house, mushroom-hut, aviary, poultry-yard, or stables. The inten- tion of the plantation should seem to be, to conduct the walker in the most agreeable manner to each outlet and building of utility or pleasure. Where a lawn is of sufficient extent for de- tached trees, the apple may be admitted with great effect, the blossom being amongst the most beautiful that open in spring. Such as produce a red fruit in autumn are more ornamental than most other trees. To those who are so devoted to fashion, as not to venture to “ treat their lungs with air” unmixed with smoke, till the crowds that swarmed at court have fixed their departure for rural scenes and a pure atmosphere, like INTRODUCTION. 33 swallows and other birds of passage ; to such, the gaiety of the autumnal shrubbery is of most importance. It now remains to say, how the last expiring glow of beauty may be thrown over the pleasure-ground. In addition to the trees and shrubs, which will be noticed in this work as flowering the latest, aid should be borrowed from such autumnal flowers as continue gay until the approach of winter. ‘The towering hollyhock, when half concealed and half seen through the shrubs and evergreens, is one of the boldest enliveners of the plantation at this season. This plant yields to none in beauty of form, majesty of carriage, or gaiety of colour; its hues proceed through all the tints of crimson, from the palest rose to the deepest purple; and from the purest white through all the shades of yellow, orange, and iron-brown. ‘The tall sunflower should also figure in the back-ground ; and the middle space may be allotted to the richly-varied dalea of the western world. The foreground is to be rendered splendid by large plots of the asters of China, the general tints of which, inclining to blue or purple, contrast well with the more gaudy colours of the African marigold, or the nasturtium of Peru, which latter should be suffered to climb the VOL. I. D 34 INTRODUCTION. holly or other trees, exhibiting its flaming petals to enliven the closing year. In young plantations, where the evergreens have not spread sufficiently to cover the sur- face, clumps of wall-flowers are exceedingly ornamental, and their green, which is of the most agreeable tint, lasts through the winter. They often flower both late in the autumn and early in summer. The periwinkle is also an excellent running plant to cover the slopes and banks of the shrubbery, as its blue flowers are to be seen amidst its evergreen leaves, from March to the middle of No- vember. It must not be forgotten that England possesses advantages over every other part of the globe for ornamental gardening ; first, in the fineness and beauty of its turf, which re- tains its verdure throughout the year without much labour or expense; whilst, on the continent, this is obtained only by the assistance or partially-concealed means of irrigation. ‘The few lawns that are kept in any tolerably decent order abroad, are ge- nerally under the care of Scotch or English gardeners. The gravel of this country is also so superior to that of any other part of Europe for the formation of walks, that the royal gardens of Naples have their paths INTRODUCTION. 35 covered with gravel, brought from the distance of Kensington. Perhaps, there is no one spot. where the plants of the north and south thrive so well together as in the English shrubbery. Added to these advantages, the absence of ravenous beasts and venemous reptiles, are blessings that owght to make us. ** Vain of our beauteous isle, and justly vain, For freedom here, and health, and plenty reign.” The advantages to be derived from planting timber trees. will be noticed im their proper place under their respective heads. Our observations here will therefore be confined to the recommending that great. attention be paid to the nature of the soil before the plantation is formed ; so that the young trees may have the Baht of a soul congenial to their future growth. As it is the skilful distribution, of trees over the grounds, more than thein peculiar character, which adds dignity to the landscape, so; it forms one of the most important parts of the planter’s study, to discover where to place the rising grove in such a situation as to improve the view. In a flat country, the first care should be to give an additional appearance: of height te spots already elevated, by planting be tn p 2 36: INTRODUCTION. them the tallest trees that the soil will suit. In parks and paddocks, the belt or long plantation, should generally be avoided, as well as that of the crescent shape, because they prevent a free circulation of air, and render the enclosed atmosphere unwholesome, Oblong, or circular plantations, on the con- trary, afford the trees an opportunity of be- nefiting by the air; admitting, at the same time, a view of the landscapes which they partially intercept. ‘¢ The fountain’s fall, the river’s flow, The woody vallies, warm and low ; The windy summit, wild and high, Roughly rushing on the sky ! The pleasant seat, the ruin’d tower, The naked rock, the shady bower, The town and village, dome and farm | Each give to each a double charm, As pearls upon an Ethiop’s arm. — Dyer. The principal feature of the park should be grandeur, and the boldest points of the surrounding country should be made sub- servient to the scenery by that arrangement of the plantation which will give such pros- pects the greatest advantage. Yet should the park exhibit some signs of refinement, by the softening down of particular parts by means of varying tints, so as to give greater contrast to the natural scenery. INTRODUCTION. 37 ** Here groves arranged in various order rise, And bend their quiv’ring summits in the skies. The regal oak, high o’er the circling shade, Exalts the hoary honours of his head. The spreading ash a differing green displays, And the smooth asp in soothing whispers plays, The fir that blooms in spring’s eternal prime, The spiry poplar, and the stately lime.” oben ei SR se a Tutt yi cents ey ‘igs i SYLVA FLORIFERA. ACACIA. — ROBINIA PSEUDACACIA. Natural order, Papilionacee, or Leguminose. A genus of the Diadelphia Decandria class. “ Light-leaved acacias, and the shady plain, And spreading cedar, grace the woodland reign.” BaRBAULD. Axrnovex we are far from being amongst the number, *¢ Whose proud disgust and scorn Detest those treasures whicli at home are born; Who feel no joy, though spreading to the air His pompous trees their verdant branches tear, Unless from Afric’s soil their rise they boast, From India’s deserts, or Columbia’s coast. * * * ‘ * % But if some foreign tree, of noble size, With boughs majestic should adorn the skies, Our.forest natives with attention meet, And hospitable care the stranger greet ; Pleas’d ’mongst themselves his future dwelling make, Not for his scarceness, but his beauty’s sake : If haply profit too should join with grace, To civic honours they admit his race.” | DELILLE. p 4 40 SYLVA FLORIFERA. Of all the exotic trees with which we have adorned our native groves, this North Ameri- can stands first. We have no tree that dis- plays more elegant foliage than is formed by it’s pinnated leaves, which appear so judiciously scattered over the branches that not one obscures it’s fellow, and their feathery light- ness is only surpassed by the pleasing emerald tints with which they are coloured; nor are it’s bunches of pendant papilionaceous blos- soms less acceptable for succeeding the more gaudy laburnum, and thus lengthening the charms of spring. The sweet perfume with which they scent the surrounding air only makes us regret their short duration; but to these succeed pods of so rich an umber brown, that autumn seems to peep through the veil of spring, and repay us for the loss of it’s orange- flower odour; whilst the nightingale loves to confide her nest to this new inhabitant of our climate, whose long and strong thorns seem to insure her family a protection, and she descends to the lower branches to ravish our ears with her sweet melody. ‘¢ Nor rural sights alone, but rural sounds Exhilarate the spirits, and restore The tone of languid nature.” CowPeEr. We cannot with indifference behold this tree which the uncivilized natives of America have ACACIA. 4] consecrated to the genius of chaste love. These proud children of the desert are not less susceptible of the pangs which Cupid occa- sions, than the more polished inhabitants of Europe; nor are they less delicate in expres- sing their sentiments, which, instead of flatter- ing words, are told by a branch of acacia in blossom. It is natural to suppose that this seducing language is as well understood by the young savage of the forest as by the tutored coquette of the city. The introduction of American plants into Kurope made a change in the system of bo- tany absolutely necessary ; for that which had been arranged by Tournefort and others, was found impossible to be applied to the plants of the new world. This tree, when first in- troduced, was supposed to be a species of the acacia known in the ancient world, be- cause its thorny branches and winged leaves bore resemblance to the Egyptian thorn, or binding bean-tree, which the Greeks called Anaxie, Of axa¢w, to sharpen, from whence the Latin acacia. But by the system of Lin- neus we discover that it cannot be ranged. in the same class or order as the true acacia. It is therefore commonly called the false acacia, while, in America, it is named the 42 SYLVA FLORIFERA. locust-tree. * We have now collected thir- teen different species of this tree, all of which bear the generic name of Robinia. Europe owes this vegetable beauty to Mon- sieur Jean Robin, nurseryman to the king of France, and author of a “ History of Plants,” who first brought the seeds from Canada ; and, in gratitude for the gift, botanists have given it the name of Robinia. + Soon after it’s introduction into France, the English gardeners received seeds from Virginia, from which many trees were raised. Parkinson observes in his Theatre of Plants, which was published in 1640, that “it was grown of an exceeding height, by Mr. Tradescant;” and Evelyn recommends it to the nation in his Sylva, which was presented to the Royal Society in 1662. In this work, he says, “ The acacia deserves a place among our avenue trees, adorning our walks with their exotic leaves and sweet flowers; very hardy agaitst the pinching winter ; but not so proof against it’s blustering winds.” This great man, who so eminently displayed his desire to embel- * A name which most probably was given to it by some of the early missionaries, who would wish to create a belief that it was the same tree the fruit of which supported_St. John when in the wilderness. + Gerard réceived the nasturtium seéd from M. J. Robin. ACACIA. 43 lish and enrich his native country, by planta- tions, adds, * I would encourage all imaginable industry in such as travel foreign countries, and especially gentlemen who have concerns in our American plantations, to promote the culture of such plants and trees, especially timber, as may yet add to those we find already agreeable to our climate.” These observations appear to have met - with little attention, as the tree seems to have been rare in 1720, when Bradley notices it as growing in the court before Russel House, Bloomsbury, and in the Old Palace-yard, West- minster. In both of these situations their roots have given place to flag-stones, brick and mor- tar; their trunks to lamp-posts, and their waving branches to clouds of coal smoke. Mortimer says, “a great number of them were formerly planted in St. James’s Park, and that in consequence of some of their branches being broken by the wind, they were all cut down.” This graceful tree is to be found in every well-planted shrubbery, yet it meets the eye less frequently than could be wished by the admirers of beautiful scenery, while in France it not only ornaments the gardens, and shades the public promenades, but it’s winged leaves shine through their woods and forests, so as 44 SYLVA FLORIFERA. to give an idea of it’s being a native of the soil. There it adds utility to luxury, and profit to beauty, for the turner finds the wood both hard and firm, while the joiner uses it for durability, and the cabinet-maker for the beauty of it’s yellow and brown veins; nor must we forget a singular quality in this tree, which is, that it burns well even on the day that it is felled; a property of no small import- ance to a country where wood continues to be the only fuel. This tree grows from fifty to seventy feet in height, and so rapidly when young, that it is not uncommon to see shoots of this tree six or eight feet long in one summer. In New England, we are told of a Robinia tree, of forty years old, that was in 1782 sixty feet high and four feet ten inches in girth, at three feet from the ground. This timber has been employed with success in Virginia for ship-building, and found to be far superior to American oak, elm, or ash, for that purpose ; it is even said to be as durable as the best white oak, and esteemed preferable for axletrees of carriages, trenails for ships, &c. Most of the houses which were built at Boston in New England, on the first settling of the English, were constructed of this tim- ber. The native Americans make their bows ACACIA. 45 of this wood, and point their arrows with one of it’s thorns. It’s tap-root, when cleared of the bark, has an agreeable perfume. We are told, in Martin’s edition of Miller, that Sir George Saville had, in 1807, planted many thousands of these trees at Rufford ; and we feel confident that they will ultimately benefit his estate, notwithstanding the cha- racter given them by most English writers, that their branches are subject to be broken by the winds in summer. We have sen them so shattered in situations injudiciously chosen, while on the banks of the Thames, and in other sheltered spots, we have remarked them of more considerable age and magnitude than even in France. The Acacia Robinia seems _ particularly adapted to ornament the modern villa; it’s light and loose foliage, that pleasingly admits the light, seems to harmonize better with the trellis work of the viranda than any other flowering tree, while the grace of it’s bend, and the gaiety of it’s head, correspond with the nicety and cheerfulness of this style of building, which has of late years so greatly embellished our country. Nothing, perhaps, displays more conspicuously than this the liberty of the peo- ple, and the equity of the laws that protect the lone cottage, more securely thanany ramparts 46 SYLVA FLORIFERA. or moats could have protected our forefathers, who found no security but in their castles, or the walled towns, where their reliance was on theirnumbers. These towns werecalled Ville*, and from whence we have derived the name of villa for detached country dwellings ; and as long as our liberties and laws remain un- impaired, so long will the acacia wave it’s banners in security over our peaceable villas. In placing this tree. in the shrubbery or plantation, a sheltered situation should be chosen. It is a beautiful tree, either to look through, or tolook down upon, and it is equally ornamental when it feathers to the ground, or carries it’s plumage above evergreen shrubs, which it’s shade injures less than that of other trees, and it is certainly less hurtful by it’s drip than any tree we know of. This may be accounted for from a singularity in the nature of it’s pinnated leaves: they fold over and join their upper surfaces in bad weather, leaving the tree, as it were, stripped of half it’s toliage, while the rain is conducted by * The Latin word Civitas, properly, is referred to the people and inhabitants who live under one, not only one Jaw, but also under one and the selfsame magistrate and government. Urbs, Villa, and Oppidum, signify the place wherein those citizens live and assemble themselves. Tate on the Antiquity, &c. of Cities, Boroughs, and Towns, 1598. ACACIA. 47 the branches to the trunk, and from the trunk conveyed to the root. These winged leaves expand themselves again in fine weather to exhale oxygen gas, but at the approach of night they again close their leaves, as if to sleep, and are thought to give out carbonic acid from their under surface. An infant, who had observed this natural phenomenon from it’s nursery window, observed, “it was not bedtime, for the acacia tree had not begun its prayers ;” «© Thus every object of creation, Can furnish hints to contemplation ; And from the most minute and mean, A virtuous mind can morals glean,” Gay. The Robinia or, false acacia, is not deli- cate as to soil, for it will grow in earth of every kind, but prospers best in such as is light and sandy. ‘The finest trees are those raised from seed, which should be sown in light earth, about the end of March, and in about six weeks the young plants will appear; they may be transplanted the following year, for all trees that have a tap-root: it is advisa- ble to transplant young. ‘This tree is also propagated by suckers and cuttings ; but these seldom prove so handsome as those raised from seed. | 4S SYLVA FLORIFERA. We do not learn that this tree has in any shape added to the catalogue of medicines. The Acacia of the shops was formerly made of the unripe pods of the true acacia tree ; but of later years, the Acacia Germanica, which is made from unripe sloes, is preferred as an astringent medicine to the true acacia, ee ee ROSE ACACIA, — ROBINIA HISPIDA, Tus beautiful flowering shrub, which is deemed the emblem of elegance, did not cross the Atlantic until more than a century after Jean Robin had transplanted its relative into European soil. It is a native of Carolina, from whence it was brought in 1743, to em- bellish our shrubberies that have now «© ‘The world’s extremes within their branches join’d, To either hemisphere convey thy mind ; Each plant you see presents a country new, And every thought affords a voyage too; Through them, thy thought, that wanders from its home, * ‘To distant climates shall in safety roam.” DELILE. ROSE ACACIA, 49 _ This offspring of the New World has been named rose acacia, from the colour, and not from the form of its flowers, which, like those of the common acacia, are formed like the blossoms of the pea. “These botanists deno- minate papilionace: from papilio, a butterfly, whose shape they are thought to resemble. In its native soil, the rose acacia grows to the height of twenty feet, but with us it seldom exceeds from six to ten feet; and as its wood is exceedingly brittle, if it has not some support, the branches are often broken or slipped off by the wind ere it reaches that height. | ‘¢ Few self-supported flow’rs endure the wind Uninjur’d, but expect th’ upholding aid Of the smooth shaven prop, and, neatly tied, Are wedded thus, like beauty to old age, For int’rest sake, the living to the dead.” CowPER. This plant should always be found in the fore ground of the shrubbery,. where its brilliant foliage, suspended on branches that are clothed with hairs of a reddish brown, cannot fail to excite our admiration; and although it seldom, if ever, matures its seed in this country, it is by no means shy of flowering, which it does in the early part of June; and often treats us with a second dis- VOL. I. E 50 SYLVA FLORIFERA. play of its drooping blossoms in August and September, as if conscious that it had not performed its part to nature, which has or- dained, that plants should “ bring forth seed after their kind.” It is well known, that most plants will continue to give out blossoms, if their flowers are cut off before seed is formed ; which seems like the instinct of fowls, that continue to lay eggs in the nest that is plundered. The rose acacia is propagated by grafting it on the common acacia; therefore it thrives in any soil like the parent stock. Care should be taken to rub off all shoots that appear below the graft. 51 ARBOR VITA.— THUJA. Natural order, Conifere. A genus of the Monecia Monadelphia class. Tue generic name of this tree is a corrup- tion from Ove of Theophrastus, or thya of Pliny, which were derived from the verb thyd, I perfume; as the thya of the ancients gave out an aromatic smoke when it was burnt. It is called arbor vite, or tree of life, because it keeps in full leaf winter and summer; and not in allusion to the tree of life mentioned in the book of Genesis. The royal garden of Fontainbleau had the honour of giving nourishment to the first arbor vite that was planted in Europe, and which was sent from Canada as a present to Francis the First. It does not appear to have been cultivated in England during that monarch’s contemporary, as it is unnoticed by Turner, who dedicated his “ Herbal” to Queen Elizabeth, in the first year of her reign; but Gerard tells us, in his “ History of E 2 52 SYLVA FLORIFERA. Plants,” which was published in 1597, that it was then growing very plentifully in his garden at Holborn, where it flowered about May, but it had not then ripened seed. “ The Thuja from China’s fruitful lands,” being of a brighter green and thicker of ver- dure, has nearly superseded the arbor vite of Canada in our plantations. The seeds of the Chinese arbor vitze were first sent by some of the missionaries to Paris, where the quantities of these evergreens show how successfully they have been cultivated ; but, we fear, these holy fathers have not been equally fortunate in propagating the seeds of Christianity in the land that gave them the tree of life. Miller cultivated this species of the arbor vitze, at Chelsea, in 1752; and it has now, from the hardiness of its nature, and the ease of its cultivation, spread itself, like the roses of China, over every part of our island. Surely this should induce us to naturalize, or, at all events, to make the trial of culti- vating the tea-tree, which would, ere this, have covered our fields with its reviving leaves, had we bestowed half the attention on it that has been lavished on the asters and chrysanthemums of that country. The arbor vitae recommends itself to a place ARBOR VITA. 53 in the shrubbery, not only by its perpetual greenness, but by the singularity of its flat spreading branches, and the minuteness of its leaves, that cover the young branches like the scales of fish. The flowers which appear in the spring, are produced from the side of the young branches, pretty near to the foot-stalk; the male flowers grow oblong catkins; and between these, the female flowers are collected in the form of cones. When the male flowers have shed their farina, they soon drop off; but the female flowers are succeeded by a cone of a knotted or cornered ovate shape, of a beautiful grey colour, which encloses seeds of an elliptic globular shape and of a pale hue. The arbor vitz is well adapted to screen private walks or low buildings, as it gives out branches near the ground; but it has a som- bre appearance, unless associated with more cheerful foliage, or ornamented by some gay climbing plant, as the everlasting pea or the flaming nasturtium ; but no flower contrasts so beautifully with this exotic evergreen as our native bindweed, whose white convol- vuluses appear with peculiar grace when sus- pended from and enlivening the tree of life. «© Each give to each a double charm, As pearls upon an A&thiop’s arm.” E § 54 SYLVA FLORIFERA. There are many other aspiring plants that might, be more safely permitted to a “ Se catch the neighbouring shrub “With clasping tendrils, and invert his branch, Else unadorn’d, with many a gay festoon And fragrant chaplet, recompensing well The strength they borrow with the grace they lend.” : Cowrenr. Although the arbor vitee will thrive in a shaded situation, it never produces seed but where it enjoys a free circulation of air. We have observed it on the elevated part of . Pére-la-Chaise, the romantic burial-ground of Paris, accompanying almost every tomb, com- pletely covered with its singularly shaped but beautiful coloured fruit. We could not learn, whether the French planted it as a substitute for the mournful cypress, or because they consider its wood imperishable; or whether the name arbre de vie has been the induce- ment. In a few years more, this burial- ground will become a mountain filled with dead bodies, and a forest composed of the trees of life. | The celebrated professor Kalm, in his travels into North America, observes, that these trees were very plentiful in Canada ; but not much farther south than 42° 10’ north latitude. ARBOR VITA. 55 Mr. Bartram found a single tree in Vir- ginia, near the Falls in the river James. Dr, Colden saw it in many places between New York and Albany, in about 41°. 30° north latitude. It grows naturally also in Siberia and the northern parts of China in nearly the same latitude; which is an additional in- stance to those we have remarked in the work on vegetables, that the natural plants of Europe, or a species of them, are ge- nerally to be found in the same latitudes of the New World, although their uses are fre- quently reversed, for the same plant which the husbandman labours to root out of the earth in one part of the globe, is sought after with avidity by the inhabitants of other countries. The nettle, which our peasants drive from their fields with blows and male- dictions, is a crop which the Egyptians put up frequent and fervent prayers to be blessed with. Its seed affords them an oil, while the stem furnishes them with a thread, which they weave into excellent cloth. Thus, by investigation, we shall find, that there is not a plant, ** From the proud woods, whose heads the sky assail, To the low violet that loves the dale,” E 4+ 56 SYLVA FLORIFERA. . but what has certain relations to the neces- sities of man, and which does not serve him somewhere for clothing, for shelter, for ‘pleasure, for. medicine, or at least for fuel. The arbor vitae, which we have borrowed from the extremity of the east and of the west, as a mere ornament to our. pleasure-grounds, forms an article of, utility and profit to the inhabitants of its native soil. | Kalm says, that it is reckoned the most ‘durable wood in Canada, where the French .call it: cedre blanc, and the English white cedar. All the posts which are driven into the ground, and the palisades round the forts in Canada, are of this wood. The planks in the houses are made of it; and the thin nar- row pieces of wood which form both the ribs and the bottom of the bark boats, commonly made use of there, are taken from this wood, because it is pliant enough for the purpose when fresh, and likewise, because it is. very light. The Thuja wood is reckoned one of the best for the use of lime-kilns. — Its branches are used all over Canada for besoms, which leave their peculiar scent in all the houses where they are used. Our plantations have not been more beau- tified by exotic shrubs, than our schools of medicine have been enriched by Indian ARBOR VITA. 57 receipts. The poor uncolleged negro, look- ing to Nature for a salve for every wound, made many discoveries that would have escaped the notice of the best lettered and most laborious son of A‘sculapius, whose humane profession has taught him to be emulous in collecting foreign remedies to ease our native maladies,—of the botanist who collects foreign trees to embellish our native groves. The arbor vitze affords the Indian a remedy for the cough and the intermitting fever, and a medicine for rheumatic pains, which the commandant of Fort St. Frederic, M. de Lusignan, said he could never sufficiently praise, and which is simply the fresh leaves. pounded in a mortar, and mixed with lard or other grease. This is boiled together till it becomes a salve, which is spread on linen, and applied to the part where the pain is, to which it is said to give certain relief in a short time. ‘The oil is recommended against the gout, being rubbed on the part; for it acts like fire, by stimulating and opening. ‘The leaves bruised with honey dissolve tumors. * The balsam and oil of arbor vite were * Bocrh. Hist. Dale. \ 58 SYLVA FLORIFERA. very much used during the time of the plague in Dresden. In the culture of these trees, we observe the finest are always raised from seed, which should be sown in pots of light earth about the month of March, and placed in a sunny situation, with a south-east aspect. The pots should be covered with moss so as to keep the earth humid. The seed throws up little hills of earth, out of which the plant rises. For the two or three first winters, the pots should be covered with fern or other litter to secure the plants from frost, and by the fourth year they will be ready to plant in the shrubbery. * These trees are more easily raised by layers or cuttings. The latter should be planted in September, upon a shady border, and in a loam soil. They should be chosen from the shoots of the same year, with a small joint of the former year’s wood at the bottom of each. These should be planted three or four inches deep, in proportion to their length, treading the ground close to them, to prevent the admission of air. If the following spring should prove dry, there should be a little mulch laid over the surface of the ground to * Tie Bon Jardinier. ARBOR VITA. 59 prevent its drying. These cuttings may be transplanted the next autumn. When they are propagated by layers, the young branches should be laid down in Autumn or March, which will put out roots by the following Autumn. * * Miller. . 60 ALDER.— ALNUS. Natural order, Amentacee. A genus of the Monecia Tetrandria class. ‘ Tue classical reader will regard this tree with peculiar interest, as it will remind him of the lines in Virgil — Tunc alnos primum fluvii sensére cavatas. ‘“* Then first on seas the hollow’d alder swam.” DRYDEN. Nec non et torrentem undam levis innatat alnus, Missa Pado. Geor. 2. ‘** And down the rapid Po light alders glide.” Ovid also tells us, ‘* Trees rudely hollow’d did the waves sustain, Ere ships in triumph plough’d the wat’ry plain.” When the Author of Nature first clothed the earth with vegetables, every plant was adapted to its peculiar situation. There was nothing superfluous or idle, from the pine ALDER. 61 that crowns the mountain, down to the violet which perfumes the grove. All were links of one harmonious chain:— ** Nature, enchanting Nature, in whose form And lineaments divine, I trace a hand That errs not.” CowPeEr, The alder and its relatives that love the stream, follow the current through every part of the globe; confining the rivers to their due bounds, and correcting the vitiated air of those situations by the peculiar qualities allotted to aquatic trees, which absorb the corrupted air more profusely than the natives of drier situations. We cannot reflect on this great wisdom of Providence in the scat- tering of plants, without exclaiming with Pope — ——— ‘** How wondrous are thy ways ! How far above our knowledge and our praise !” In this country, the alder is seldom suffered to attain its natural bulk, but in ancient times, when men were less numerous and trees more abundant, the dimensions of the alder were sufficient to form their boats, which we have already noticed from Virgil; and if we except Noah’s ark, we shall find, that the first vessels we read of were made from these trees. Their contiguity to rivers, and the im- 62 SYLVA FLORIFERA. perishable nature of the wood when kept in the water, were doubtlessly their recom- mendations to the early navigators. As men dispersed themselves over Europe, so did they convey the nautical use of this tree; and it is singular, how little the pronunciation of its name has changed with the migrations of man. The oldest English writer we have consulted calls it Alder, from which it was changed to Aller, and again to Alder; the Scots call it Hiller; the French 1564, when Turner wrote his Herbal ; for he says, “ It came of late to us out of Spain.” Perhaps it was given to us by Spain, when their king was a husband to a British queen ; and however slight such a gift might have BROOM. 153 appeared at the time, it now shines more ornamentally in the gardens of this country than the brightest gem of the mines of the New World could have done in the crown. In favourable situations, the Spanish broom approaches nearer to the size of a tree than an humble shrub; and as it continues in blossom from July to October, it is a great enlivener to Nature’s universal green robe, which at that season is but slightly spangled with gay colours; therefore it may with great advantage be planted so as to peep over the sombre evergreens, like the rays of the sun emerging from dense clouds. The common broom, Spartium scoparium, may as judiciously be placed at the foot of towering trees, where it will shine as gay in the gloom : as a lenneey 8 fire in a forest. The broom should ey be sili in the corners of fields, and in those hedgerows which are seen from the shrubbery or the dwelling; particularly where the view is caught beneath or through the branches of trees, for then the yellow field is seen as gaily inter- changed with a variety that is as rich and as pleasing as the tiara of emeralds and gold. “6 Where the fond eye in sweet distraction strays, -.. Most pleased when most it knows not where to gaze |” 154 SYLVA FLORIFERA. The Portugal broom, multiflorum, is ais pleasing by it’s delicacy, as the Spanish broom is enlivening by it’s gaiety. This shrub, which appears in May and June, clad like a virgin bride in pearls, should be placed where it’s flexible rods are contrasted by broader foliage. It forms one of the most elegant fore-grounds to dark evergreens, and harmonizes well with most flowering shrubs; for it’s rushy spikes, which seem rather studded with flakes of snow than bedecked by Flora’s hand, are too deli- cate to offend by any neighbourhood, however flaunting it may be, whilst it’s graceful waving bend so well accords with the chastity of it’s colour. The white flowering broom is now considered as a hardy plant in our shrubbery ; although no longer back than 1724, when Miller published his first edition of the Gar- dener’s Dictionary, he writes in it, “ The “ Spanish white broom is a very tender plant “in England, and will seldom stand out the ‘“‘ winter; therefore it is cultivated in pots, “ and kept as bays, laurus tinus, myrtle, &c.” We have now two species of white flower- ing broom. ‘The first, we are told in the Hortus Kewensis, was introduced by Mr. Bentick, in 1690; but Parkinson speaks of it familiarly in 1640, but does not say posi- BROOM. 155 tively that it was or was not then cultivated in England. | Clusius, the celebrated German botanist, who with such indefatigable labour collected the plants of Spain, Languedoc, England, the Alps, Austria, some parts of Hungary, and those about Frankfort, during the 16th century, tells us, that he observed the white single-seeded broom, monospermum, about Cadiz, near the coast, flowering in February, and also abundantly in Arragon. Osbeck re- marks, that it flourishes like willow bushes along the shores of Spain, as far as the flying sands reach, where scarcely any other plant grows except the creeping restharrow. The use of this species of broom is very ereat in stopping the sand. It converts the most barren spot into a fine odoriferous garden by it’s flowers, which continue a long time. The leaves and young branches are delicious food for goats. It serves to shelter sheep, goats, and hogs, from the scorching heat. of the sun. The twigs: are used for tying bundles; and all kinds of herbs that are brought to market are fastened together with them. The Spaniards call it retamas, from the Arabic name retam. Forskahl tells us; he found this plant in Arabia; and Des- fontaines in Barbary, on the sandy coast. 156 SYLVA FLORIFERA. The Spartium multiforum is a native of Portugal and Mount Atlas. It was first in- troduced to this country by Mr. James Gordon, about the year 1770. We have now thirty distinct species of broom; some of which have several varieties, which we shall pass unnoticed, excepting the Spanish broom with double blossoms, which is very unusual, in papilionaceous flowers. | - The common broom is not deficient in it’s uses in rural economy and medicine. In most country villages it is known to the housewife as affording besoms for sweeping; from whence originated the name of “ broom”? for those domestic cleansers. Ammianus Mar- cellius, a Roman historian of the fourth century, relates, that in his time there flourished at Rome the broom, which was made use of to clean the place where the nobility assembled; which presaged, says this pagan author, that men, the very dregs of the people, would be raised to the first ranks. In the northern parts of Great Britain it serves for thatching cottages, corn, and hay ricks; and it makes an excellent substitute for reeds in fences or screens. In some parts of Scotland, where coals and wood are scarce, it is said whole fields are sown with it for fuel. The. branches are known to be capable of 3 BROOM. 157 tanning leather, and of being manufactured into cordage or coarse cloth. Pliny tells us, (Book xix. Chap. 2.) that the shepherds in Spain clothed themselves with it, and covered their dwellings with the branches; made themselves shoes with it; and that it formed their fuel and their torches; and he affirms, that no cordage is so durable in salt water as that made from the fibres of the broom. He states, that it rather improves in the water than decays ; although, for dry purposes, it is not so lasting as ropes made from hemp. It appears to have been universally employed in his time for nautical purposes. This author also tells us, (Book xix. Chap. 1.) that in Asia, they steeped the broom in water for ten days, to obtain the fibres more easily ; of which they made their fishing nets, because they endured the water without rotting better than other nets. It is well known how eagerly the inha- bitants of the hive hunt for their sweets in the gay blossoms of the broom; which in ancient times, when honey was the domes- tic sweet, and sugar was only known as a medicine, it was of the utmost importance, as we have already noticed under the head of Thyme; but to which we shall add what 158 SYLVA FLORIFERA. Pliny tells us (Book xxi. Chap. 12.) from his own knowledge. — The inhabitants of Hos- tilia, a town on the banks of the Po, when they observed the food of the bees began to fail, took the hives up in the night when the bees were housed, and placed them in a kind of boat or barge, which they rowed four or five miles up the river, and in the morning the bees went out and found flowers that had not been robbed of their nectar; and this they continued to do, until the bee-masters perceived the boats sink to a certain depth by the weight of the honey and wax thus col- lected, when they were floated home to dis, charge the treasure which these emblems of industry had rifled from the bosom of Flora. The peasants in Switzerland have a similar practice to this day ; for in the spring of the year they pack up their dairy implements, and drive their large herds of cows up the mountains, where they feed during the sum- mer ; and the business of making cheese is con- tinued in their challets or little huts until the autumn, when the cattle is driven home, and the cheese delivered to the proprietors. The emigration to and return from the mountains is equally looked forward to with pleasure. The finest cow of each drove has the largest bell BROOM. 159 attached to its neck, and ascends and descends the mountains, decorated with chaplets and wreaths of flowers. It seems a day of rejoicing with the kine as well as the peasants, for they express their joy equally on their departure and return, by loud and continued lowing. _ The flower-buds of the broom, just before they become yellow, are pickled in the man- ner of capers, and eaten as such in sauce. Many think them wholesome for the stomach, and good against diseases of the spleen and liver. Dr. James says, “ Broom is an aperitive and hepatic shrub, opening obstructions of the liver and spleen; and is very good for the dropsy, when infused in common drink.” Dr. Mead relates the case of a dropsical pa- tient who was cured by taking half'a pint of a decoction of green broom-tops, with a spoon- ful of whole mustard-seed, every morning and evening: the patient had been tapped three times, and had tried the usual remedies: be- fore. An infusion of the seeds, drunk freely, has been known to produce similar effects : but we must not infer from these cases that it is an infallible remedy for every dropsical case. We might as well expect the physician that had cured a patient of this disorder should restore to health every person that laboured 160 SYLVA FLORIFERA. under the same complaint, and this would be as unreasonable as it is unjust to condemn the broom altogether. Dr. Withering tells us that he knew the broom succeed in curing one case that was truly deplorable; but out of a great number of cases, in which it had a fair trial, this proved a single instance. Dr. Cullen ordered half an ounce of fresh broom-tops to be boiled in a pound of water, till one half was consumed, and gave two table spoonfuls of the decoction every hour till it operated as a laxative; repeating the medicine every day, or every second day: by which some dropsies have been cured. | Cordus observes that this plant smells like the elder. This may be the cause why most cattle reject it. We observe that flies avoid both of these plants. Thompson alludes to the fondness which kine show for broom fields, which they frequent much during the summer heat, probably for the sake of brush- ing off the swarms of flies with its tough | yielding branches. In Guienne and Auvergne, the people eat the blossoms of the broom in salads; and in this country the tender tops have been used as a substitute for hops in brewing. We have seen some beautiful cabinet goods veneered with this wood, which, when old, BROOM. 161 obtains a sufficient size for that purpose, for which it is a most ornamental material. The species of broom we have noticed may be raised by sowing the seeds in the spring In common earth. _ We have observed that the Spanish ey grew to the greatest height where it had not been transplanted. In one instance, where we dropped the seed in a rich soil, it grew to the size of a common laburnum im a few years, and was little inferior to that tree in beauty, and was ornamental to the shrubbery when the yellow tresses of the laburnum had ceased to shine. '.The white flowering broom being. more avy should have a warm and pryaee situation. — _ Evelyn recommends. the cultivation . of broom, and says, “ This is another improve- ment for barren grounds, and saver of more substantial fuel: it may be sown English, or (what is more sweet and beautiful,) the Spanish with equal success.. In the western parts of France, and with us in Cornwall, it grows to an incredible height.” VOL, I. M 162 CEDAR OF LEBANON. — PINUS CEDRUS. Natural order, Conifere. A genus of the Monecia Monadelphia class. ‘¢ Cedars here, foal with the sky-erown'd mountain, s self, Spread wide their giant arms.’ Mason. ” 6 No more the cedar to the turban bends ; For us th’ imperial tree from Lebanon descends.” Ere we repine at the losses which time and circumstances have made in our fortunes or our families, let us reflect on the history of the country from whence this tree first sprung, and we shall find our individual troubles and changes diminish in the comparison as a enate of sand to a mountain. Lebanon is stripped of its forest, and the first chosen People of God are driven from their country ; the land of milk and honey is become a desert ; and Christians are scorned and persecuted on the spot where Christ - taught his blessed religion. The most splen- did temple that human ingenuity ever erected is “ passed away, like the baseless fabric of a 21 CEDAR OF LEBANON. 163 vision,” and this monument, which displayed the power and the riches of the wisest mon- arch that ever existed, has had its stones turned into dust, and its gigantic beams of cedar into ashes, that have flown before the wind, “leaving not a wreck behind.” The biblical reader will form an idea of the an- cient extent of the’ cedar forest, by the four- score thousand hewers which Solomon sent to hew the timber on Mount Lebanon, and it is probable that from that time Mount Lebanon never recovered the devastation then made, for “he covered the temple with beams and boards of cedar. And he built chambers against it, which rested on the house with timber of cedar. And the cedar of the house within was carved with knops and open flowers: all was cedar — there was no stone seen. And he built the inner court with three rows of hewed stone, and a row of cedar beams.” Hiram also built many palaces for Solomon, within and without the walls of Jerusalem, all of which we may conclude were formed — of this favourite timber, for we read that “ So- lomon’s house, also of the forest of Lebanon, was covered with cedar upon the beams: and the porch of judgment was covered with cedar from one side of the floor to the other. And mM 2 164 SYLVA’ FLORIFERA. ‘the great court of his palace. was with three rows of hewed stones, and a row. of cedar beams.” ait At the same time, Solomon built a fleet of merchant ships, at Tyre, which must: also have thinned the forest, both of fir and of cedar. We observe Hiram’s answer to So- lomon: is, “ I will do all thy desire, concerning timber of cedar, and concerning timber of fir.” ~Solomon, also, celebrated the cedar in -his writings which still remain; although a vest- ige of his gorgeous palaces is not to be found. | . & His countenance. is as. lebanon cellent. as the cedars.” - ©-The beams of: our houses-a are cedar, ind our rafters of fir.” Josephus relates, that Solomon eben cedars in Judea, and the Scripture says, “he made cedars to be as the sycamore trees, that are in the vale, for abundance.” Evelyn says, “ he doubtless tried many expe- riments: of this nature, none being more kingly than that of planting for posterity.” _. From that time, it became. a-custom with the Jews to plant a cedar when they had a son born, and for a daughter a pine, which at their marriage, was cut to form their nuptial bed. ‘The cedar was considered the symbol CEDAR OF LEBANON: 165° of constancy and purity, from its sana imma nature and constant verdure.: : . ' Nearly a thousand years after the. time of Israel’s wise monarch, Virgil tells us — _ Yet Heaven their various plants for use designs, | For houses cedars, and for shipping pines.” We read that Sesostris,. or: Rameses, the. most celebrated of the ancient kings of Egypt, , built a vessel of cedar of two hundred and, eighty cubits, which was covered with gold, both. without and within. . According to. Lenglet, this-was about 600 years before the building of Solomon’s temple; but the exact. epoch of Sesostris’s reign seems uncertain, as. Dr. Blair makes it about 133 years later. We are told, that during his reign of 59 years, he extended his dominions, by conquest, over Arabia, India, Persia, and Asia Minor. Thus encircling both the gold and the cedars within bis grasp. Amongst the wonders reluted: as to the durability of cedar wood, it is recorded, that in the temple of Apollo, at Utica, a city of Africa, on the coast of the Mediterranean, which Cato’s name has rendered celebrated, there was found timber of near two thousand years old; and at Saguntum, in Spain, there was, says Pliny, a temple consecrated to > M O 166 SYLVA FLORIFERA. Diana, which was stated to have been built 200 years before the destruction of Troy ; and it contained a statue of the goddess formed of cedar, which had been formerly taken from the island of Zacynthus, now called Zante, by the inhabitants, when they formed the colony of Saguntus. It will be recollected, that after enduring a siege of eight months, the brave inhabitants of this city, took the terrible resolution of burning themselves with their effects, and the whole city, rather than fall into the hands of Han- nibal. The temple escaped the flames, as it stood in a valley without the walls; and the cedar image of the goddess was considered too sacred, even to be touched by Hannibal. The timber which composed the celebrated temple of Diana, at Ephesus, was of cedar. This temple, which was reckoned one of the seven wonders of the world, was 220 years in building, and may be supposed to have assisted greatly in thinning the forests of Lebanon during that period. This temple, where Diana was worshipped with such awful solemnity, fell a sacrifice to the flames, on the night that gave birth to Alexander the Great, which was about 285 years before the temple at Jerusalem was destroyed by that horrible trade which am- CEDAR OF LEBANON. 167 bition and revenge deem an honourable pro- fession, because they create and encourage it. The ancients believed, that the wood of the cedar of Lebanon was imperishable, and that it had likewise the property of preserving from corruption whatever it enclosed. They, therefore, deposited their precious manu- scripts in chests made of these trees, which custom gave rise to a proverb, — to praise a work, it was said, “ It is worthy of being cased in cedar.” The ancients also drew a juice from the cedar, with which they smeared their books and writings to preserve them from rotting, which is alluded to by Horace; by means of which, it was, that Numa’s books were so wonderfully preserved, as its extreme bitter would naturally keep them from worms. The Egyptians used this extract of the cedar, with other drugs, to embalm their dead bodies, be- lieving it would make them incorruptible ; and of the durability of these ancient mum- mies, we have of late years seen extraordinary instances. “© See lofty lebanon his head advance, See nodding forests on the mountains dance.” Pore. This sovereign of the forest appears to have been indigenous to Mount Lebanon M 4 168 SYLVA’ FLORIFERA. » only, where its majestic beauties attracted the admiration of the Psalmist, who celebrated its spreading branches by his pen. “ It is neither travellers nor naturalists,’ says Madame de Genlis, “ who could have named the oak, the king of trees. The rose will be in all countries the queen of flowers; but, amongst trees, this honour sina only to the ancient and majestic cedar.” This noble tree has a dignity and a gene- ral striking character of growth so peculiar to itself, that no other tree can possibly be mis- taken for it. It is instantly recognized by its wide extending branches, that incline their extremities downwards, exhibiting a most beautiful upper surface, like so many verdant. banks, which, when agitated by the wind, play in the most graceful manner, forming one of most elegant as well as one of the most noble’ objects of the vegetable kingdom. The Latins called this tree Cedrus, from the Greek xédpos, the Arabians call it Serbin; the Italians Cedro, the Spaniards Cedro, the French Cedre. At what exact period, or by whom, this superb tree was first introduced into this country, is yet to be discoved. Gerard, Park- inson, Johnson, and other old: writers on this subject, give us the history of the cedar, but —<$=——S CEDAK OF LEBANON. 169 do not say that they had seen it in England. Aiton makes its introduction as late as 1683, when two trees of this kind were planted in the physic garden at Chelsea, but as these trees were three feet high when planted, it is most probable that others had been previ- ously raised in this country. It is both re- markable and remiss, that Miller should not notice these trees in his first edition of the Gardener’s Dictionary, which was published in 1724, and which he compiled within the walls that enclosed these celebrated trees. _ Tradition, whose marvellous accounts some- times want correctness, tells us that Queen Elizabeth planted a cedar of Lebanon, on the north side of Hendon Place, in Middlesex. If the birth of this tree is incorrectly registered, its death is truly recorded, for it was unfor- tunately blown down by the hurricane that . happened on the new year’s day, 1779. Its height was seventy feet ; the diameter of the branches was one hundred feet; the circtum- ference of the trunk, seven feet above the ground, was sixteen feet; and at twelve feet above the ground, where it began to branch out, it measured twenty-one feet. This tree, which was supposed to be 200 years old, was perfectly sound, and thought not to have reached its maturity. 170 SYLVA FLORIFERA. At the Old Palace or Manor House, at En- field, in Essex, there is a cedar known to be about 156 years old, which must, therefore, have been introduced prior to those in Chel- sea Gardens: it was planted by Robert Uve- dale, LL.D. who kept a school in the house. This tree has suffered much by time and storms particularly those of 1703 and1793; but inJuly, 1821, it was sixty-four feet eight inches high, and the length of timber was sixty-eight feet and a half, the extent of the branches from N. E. to S. W. eighty-seven feet. There is also a cedar now growing at Hil- lington, near Uxbridge, supposed to be about 120 years old: the height of it is fifty-three feet; the extent of the branches, from east to west ninety-six, from north to south eighty- nine feet; the circumference of the trunk close to the ground, thirteen feet and a half; seven feet above the ground, twelve feet and a half; twelve feet above the ground, fourteen feet eight inches; at the height of thirteen feet and a half, just under the branches, fifteen feet eight inches. Archibald, Duke of Argyle, planted seve- ral of these trees at Whitton, which grew to an enormous size, and we now see them ex- tending their horizontal branches in every part of the country, that has possessed a lover CEDAR OF LEBANON. 171 of the grandeur of vegetable nature. They are extremely beautiful in the plantations about Dorking. Where “ attractive is the woodland scene, Diversified with trees of every growth.” In his travels, the antiquarian finds in every country remarkable spots distinguished, and memorable transactions stamped on the me- mory by venerable trees, which cannot be removed by the whim of men so easily as mo- numents of marble, or statues of brass, which often travel from their sacred abodes to where- ever war drives or gold leads them. How could we have ornamented our country more, than by planting our highesthills with cedars,to have commemorated the victories of the late war? The traveller would have had his mind recalled to the battle of Trafalgar, and his road pointed out by the plantation of the Nile; they would have been glorious landmarks to the British sailors, and lasting monuments of their fame, whilst the interior hills should be marked by these vegetable monuments of military fame, that would console the peas- ants who had Jost their friends in war, and rouse them to resent any attempt at invasion. The only relic of Dr. James Sherard’s famous botanic garden at Eltham, so ele- 172 SYLVA FLORIFERA. gantly displayed by Dillenius, is a cedar of: Lebanon, which, Lyson tells us, girths | nine: feet, at three feet from the ground. Inthe Fellows’ Garden at Emmanuel College, in Cambridge, on a lawn by the side of the pond, is a cedar that was planted in the year 1730, by Professor John Martin, then a member of that college. , ~The cedar of Lebanon, is now much more: common in this kingdom than on its ancient: birth-place; yet, we must not accuse the Mahommedans of destroying these venerable trees, as they almost consider it a sacrilege’ to demolish a fine tree of any description. Their greatest luxury seems to be that of re- clining under: the shade of a tree, to enjoy their tobacco. It was remarked by Chardin, at Ispahan, in the 17th century, that the re- ligious Mahommedans chose rather to pray under a very old tree, than in the ae ing mosque. “ They devoutly reverence,” says he, “ those trees which seem to have existed during many ages, piously believing that the holy men of former times had prayed and- meditated under their umbrageous shade.” The few. cedars still remaining on Mount Libanus are preserved with a religious strict- ness.. On the day of the Transfiguration, the patriarch repairs in procession to these trees, CEDAR OF LEBANON. 173 and celebrates a festival, called the feast. of cedars. Considering hiielanae relates to a spot so celebrated in holy writ, must be interesting to most readers, we shall extract observations from the works of those travellers who. have _¥isited the mountains, that afforded trees so valuable that Solomon gave cities to Hiram in exchange for them. Ranwolff, who visited Lebanon, in the year 1575, saw only bwenty four trees and two old decayed ones. “ We found ourselves,’ says he, “ upon the highest. point of the. mountain, and- saw nothing higher, but only a small hill before us, all. covered: over with snow; at the bottom whereof the high cedar trees were standing ; and though this hill hath in former ages been. quite covered over with cedars, yet, they are since so decreased, that I could tell: no: more than twenty-four that stood” round about in a circle ; and two others, the branches whereof. are quite: decayed by age. I also went about in this place to look out for some young ones, but could find none at all.” Maundrell, who journeyed there on the 9th of May, 1696, could: only.reckon 16 large trees,-but he found several small ones. ‘This author says, ‘“ Having gone for three hours across the plain of Tripoli, I arrived at the 174 SYLVA FLORIFERA. foot of Libanus; and from thence, con- tinually ascending, not without great fatigue, came in four hours and a half to a small village, called Eden, and in two hours and a half more to the cedars. These noble trees grow amongst the snow near the highest part of Libanus, and are remarkable as well for their own age and largeness, as for those fre- quent allusions made to them in the word of God. Here are some of them very old and of prodigious bulk ; and others younger of a smaller size; and the latter are very nu- merous. I measured one of the largest, and found it twelve yards six inches in girt, and yet sound, and 37 yards in the spread of its boughs. At about five or six yards from the ground, it was divided into five limbs, each of which was equal to a great tree.” “ What Maundrell has related,” says Mr. Miller, “ was confirmed to me by a worthy gentleman of my acquaintance, who was there in the year 1720; with this difference only, that in measuring the branches of the largest tree, he found them to be twenty-two yards in diameter. The traveller, Le Bruyn, counted about thirty-five or thirty-six remaining on Mount Libanus when he was there; and would persuade us, it was not easy to reckon CEDAR OF LEBANON. 175 their number, as is reported of the stones of our Stonehenge, on Salisbury Plain. Nature, who has not neglected to form her lowest vegetable works suitable to the situa- tions where they are scattered, has displayed, in the formation of the cedar, a wisdom that excites the admiration of all naturalists. This noble tree sends forth the lower part of its branches in an upward direction, to convey the rain water by these slopes to the trunk, and from thence to the roots; which other- wise could not receive sufficient moisture, whilst the extremities of the branches bend downwards, that the snows, in the region of which it takes delight to dwell, may slide from its foliage. The cones of this stately tree are endowed with a peculiar mode of sheltering their parts of fructification, for at their season of flowering they bend to the earth ; but when they are fecundated, they turn erect towards heaven, to mature their seed ; and it is then a most beautiful object to look down upon, as those must acknowledge who have mounted the artificial hill in the Jardin des Plantes, to behold the cedar which Mons. Buffon planted below. The cedar is placed, by Linnzeus, as well as the larch, in the same genus with the firs and pines; it 176 ‘SYLVA FLORIFERA. agrees with the former in its foliation, with the latter in being evergreen. _ It is pretended that these trees purify the air by their effluvia: the wood, when made into wardrobes or chests, certainly preserves clothes from insects, which are generally found. to avoid. perfumes and bitter wood, Weare told that its smell inspires worshippers with asolemn awe, when used in wainscotting churches or chapels. It may possibly have this effect on the Hebrews and the Catholics, who are accustomed to burn incense in their religi- ous ceremonies ; and the Protestant, when he meets with this timber in a place of worship, naturally has his mind carried back. to the first temple that was erected to the true God. _» “Tt is matter of surprise to me,” says Miller, “ that this tree has not been more cultivated in England, since it would be a great ornament to barren bleak mountains, where few: other trees will grow so well, it being a native of the coldest parts of Mount. Libanus, where the snow continues great part of. the year. From the observations I. have. made of. the trees: now growing in England, I find that such as’ have been planted in a strong, rich, loamy earth, have made a poor progress, in comparison: with those which have grown upon a stony meagre soil.” CEDAR. OF LEBANON. 177 We have frequently seen this native of Lebanon planted by those who could not have read or recollected the Psalm, “ They shall spread their branches like the cedar tree.” For on the banks of the Thames it is fre- quently seen as near the dwelling as to give the idea of the good old-fashioned piece of furniture, called a dumb-waiter; and it has frequently had its branches lopped off to let light into the eating-parlour; although it is known, that this tree suffers more by cutting and lopping than most other resinous trees. A court dress in a country fair is not a greater burlesque than a cedar of Lebanon in a lawn of forty feet, for the majesty of the tree de- mands an open, if not an elevated situation : its ‘beauty consists in its formation, which is lost when cramped in its growth. That it is not particularly slow in its increase, will be seen: by the progress the cedars in Chelsea gardens had made, which, in the year 1766, “‘ measured twelve feet and a half in girth, at two feet above the ground, and their branches _ extended more than twenty feet on every side their trunks; which branches, though they were produced twelve or fourteen feet above the surface, did at every termination hang very near the ground, and thereby afford a VoL. I. N 178 SYLVA FLORIFERA. goodly shade in the hottest season of the year.” The cedar of Lebanus is now so well na- turalized in this country, that the seeds not only ripen but propagate themselves without care or trouble, and it has been observed that they produce and ripen their cones bet- ter in hard winters, than in mild ones ; which should induce us to plant them on those poor cold hills, where but few other vegetables would grow. Evelyn earnestly recommended them to the planter’s attention, and informs us, that he received cones and seeds of the few remaining trees on Libanus; and adds, “ why they should not thrive in old England, I know not, save for want of industry and trial.” It is now ascertained that they will prosper in this climate, as well as our native oak; and we hope they will spring up from these hints, that future generations may see them more frequently, for every age must increase the reverence due to these celebrated trees. CHESNUT.—See Pomarium Britannicum. 179 CORNEL TREE, or DOGWOOD.—CORNUS SANGUINEA; anp CORNELIAN CHERRY.—CORNUS -MASCULA. ‘Natural order, Stellate. Caprifolia, Juss. A genus of the Tetrandria Monogynia class. ‘¢ His cornel spear Ulysses wav’d, to rouse the savage war.” Odyssey, book xix. ' 66 Fix’d in the wound th’ Italian cornel stood.” Ainets. Ir is to the lines of these matchless poets that we are indebted for much curious in- formation relating to the use the ancients made of the different trees and shrubs. Virgil further informs us, mG ‘¢ The war from stubborn myrtle shafts receives ; From cornels jav’lins; and the tougher yew Receives the bending figure of a bow.” | Georg. ii. The Aneis informs us that the murder of the youthful Polydore was discovered by the shafts and Jances with which he was slain N 2 180 SYLVA FLORIFERA. having taken root in his corpse, and sprung into their native myrtles and cornels:— «¢ When Heaven had overturn’d the Trojan state, And Priam’s throne, by too severe a fate; When ruin’d Troy became the Grecian’s prey, And Ilium’s lofty towers in ashes lay ;” fEneas and his followers land in Thrace; where they are about to offer a pull on Jove’s eape- rial altar — | ** Not far, a rising hillock ‘stood in view: Sharp myrtles on the sides, and cornels grew. There, while I went to crop the silvan scenes, And shade our altar with their leafy greens, _. I pull’d a plant—with horror I relate A prodigy so strange and full of fate— _ The rooted fibres rose, and from the wound, ~~ Black bloody drops distill’d upon the ground! Mute and amaz’d, my hair with terror stood; Fear shrunk my sinews, and congeal’d.my blood.” * * * # hs *% * A groan, as of a troubled ghost, renew’d My fright, and then these dreadful words ensued: ‘ Why dost thou thus my bury’d body rend? O! spare the corpse of thy unhappy friend ! Spare to pollute thy pious hands with blood; The tears distil not from the wounded wood; -’ But every drop this living tree contains Is kindred blood, and ran in Trojan veins. _Q!. fly from this unhospitable shore, Warn’d by my fate— for I am Polydore!’” -Pausanias, a celebrated historian of the second century, tells us there was a festival CORNEL TREE. 1s] celebrated in honour of Apollo, at Lacedemo- nia, called Cornus, which was instituted to appease that god, because the Greeks had in- curred the displeasure of Apollo, by cutting. the cornel trees which grew in a consecrated thicket, at Mount Ida. i Sacred woods and consecrated groves were. attached to most of the temples of the ancient heathens, and this superstition was preserved a long time after thefall of paganism. In ignorant ages these woods were the terror .of the timid, the refuge of the crafty, and the grave of the credulous. In their dreadful ceremonies (for, humanity forbids our calling them religious customs), human sacrifices were offered in their. horrid worship. The ancient inhabitants of the north had priests who followed this infamous practice, until Christianity happily spread its soft beams over these unhappily deluded D peoples?! spoof | | | Near the temple of Upsal, in Sweden, there was a wood of this description, called the Forest of Odin, which was generally full of the dead bodies of victims, which at certain seasons were taken down from the trees to be burnt in honour of Thor, or the sun. | Leonard Rubenus, a German, who became a priest in 1596, having received an order from his superiors to go to Dorpat, a city, of N 3 182 SYLVA FLORIFERA. Livonia, found on his way the sacred wood of the Esthonians, where there was a large pine loaded with trophies. He was told that the inhabitants of the country adored this tree ; that women newly delivered brought offerings there, and that the men refreshed its roots with beer. Rubenus wished to cut down this tree, to get rid of so ridiculous a superstition ; but the Esthonians told him, that if he had the temerity to pass under it, both himself and his horse would be taken up in the air. However, Rubenus cured them of this super- stition, without violence to himself or his horse; and we hope that the present mode of education will not only banish superstition, but also all those cruel and ignorant animo- sities which have, in different ages, so highly disgraced both the catholic and the protestant Christians. But to return to the tree whose branches afforded the ancient butchers javelins, as it now furnishes the modern ones with skewers. The — Latin name of Cornus, is after the Greek — peeve; or from cornu, a horn; because the — wood is of a hard and horny nature. The surname of Sanguinea was given to this shrub — from the beautiful red colour of its young © branches, which shine, during the winter — months, as beautifully as conspicuously, when — CORNEL TREE. 183 planted between laurels or other evergreens; and although its small umbels make no very gay appearance by their greenish-white petals, which open in June, and often again in Octo- ber, yet the variety of red, yellow, and umber tints which its foliage affords in the autumn, fully compensates for any want of splendour in its blossoms. The English names of this shrub, are scarcely less numerous than the tints of its leaves. It is often called female cornel, to distinguish it from cornus mascula, and hound’s berry-tree,. hound’s-tree, dog’s berry- tree, (because, says. Parkinson, the fruit is not even fit for the dogs); and, from hence, it has the name of dogwood. It is called prickwood, from its use in making skewers. Gerard tells us, “ that in the north of England, it was known by the name of gaten-tree and gater-tree.” The cornus sanguinea abounds in most hedge-rows and copses, where the soil is of a calcareous nature. It sends out abundance of suckers, and as it branches out close to the ground, it frequently propagates itself by layers. The fruit may more properly be styled an umbilicate drupe, than a berry. It ripens in August, and is of a purple so dark, wn 4 184 SYLVA FLORIFERA. as almost to approach to black. The pulp is soft and bitter; the stone is round and of a bony substance, divided into two cells, each of which contains a white kernel or seed. Our nurserymen have introduced seven different species of dogwood from America, which they . often engraft on the common dogwood. The cornus alba is very similar to the common cornel shrub, excepting that the fruit is white. It is a common plant in all Siberia. The seeds were first sent by Professor Ammann, of Petersburg, to England; but it was first discovered by Gmelin, and afterwards was found by Messerschmidt, near Kamschatka. “ Our common dogwood,” says Evelyn, “is like the cornel for compactness, and is made use of for cart timber and rustic in- struments, for mill-cogs, spokes, bobins, for bone-lace, and the best of tooth-pickers and butchers’ skewers. Being hard and even, it is fit also for the turner. In some countries abroad, they extract an oil from the berries for lamps, by boiling them in water and pressing them.” | In placing this shrub in the plantation, it | should be recollected, that it seldom exceeds from ten to fifteen feet in height, and that its leaves contrast well with any evergreens ; whilst its crimson sprays are not less orna- 20 | . - CORNEL TREE. 185 mental during the winter months, particularly when mixed with the common laurel. © The fruit of the cornus sanguinea is very bitter, styptic, and gives a pretty aah red colour to blue paper. ‘The cornelian cherry, cornus mascula, is now removed from the orchard to the shrub- bery; but in this latter situation, it is at present so seldom seen, that many persons do not even know that this beautifully trans- parent fruit exists, which flourished in the ear- liest English gardens, graced the deserts of our forefathers, and furnished their dames with fruit for tarts, rob, and marmalade. Tusser, who wrote in Queen Mary’s time, calls them cornet plums. Gerard says, in 1596, ‘the male cornell-tree groweth in most places of Germanie without manuring ; it groweth not wilde in England; but: yet there be sundrie trees of them growing in the gardens of such as loue rare and dainty plants, whereof I haue a tree or two in ame garden.” : Lord Bacon frequently speaks of them amongst the fruits of his day, by the name of cornelians. Pliny speaks of this fruit in a manner that induces us to think, that he considered it as indigenous to Italy as well as Austria. He 186 SYLVA FLORIFERA. describes this tree in the 40th chapter of his 16th book; and says, he cannot rank it amongst timber trees, as it does not arrive at any great size; but that the wood of this tree was nearly equal to iron for making pins and: wedges to cleave wood. It was also used by the Romans, for making spokes to their wheels,. The growth of the cornel tree, mascula, is. so slow, that it requires fifteen years to: attain ten feet in height; from hence, its: wood is very hard. In the south of France it is often used for props in the vineyards, and also to make hoops for wine casks. The finest trees of this kind which we have seen in England, are at Cowfold, in Sussex, on an estate belonging to John Wood, Esq. of Chestham. One of these trees is in the garden belonging to a farm called Walhurst, in the occupation of Mrs. Dowlan; the other is in a garden of a neighbouring farm occupied by Mr. West. These trees are the size of a moderate cherry or apple tree; and we con- clude they are of a considerable age, as their appearance has not altered much since we have known them, which is upwards of thirty years. ‘They are abundant and regular bearers. The flowers appear before the leaves, and sometimes as early as the beginning of February. They grow on umbels, of from CORNEL TREE. 187 fifteen to thirty flowers each, of a small size and yellowish colour, and therefore make no great show ; but the fruit, which is a drupe that ripens in August, has a very fine effect, as it hangs like so many cornelian drops from the branches; and it is as transparent as the stone of that name, or as the jelly of red currants, and about the size and form of a small olive. The stone is oblong, pointed at one end, and rather larger than a grain of wheat. The pulp, which forms what is vulgarly called. the fruit, is less juicy than the cherry, but more so than the plum. Its flavour is pe- culiar ; but to some persons this sweet and astringent taste 1s extremely agreeable. For- merly, it was preserved and ‘sold in the shops as rob de cornis ; it was also pickled in salt and water in its green state, as a sub- ‘stitute for olives; and we find, from Pliny, that the Romans had the same practice. Dr. James says this fruit is cooling, drying, and astringent, strengthens the stomach, and is good in fevers ; especially if attended with a diarrheea. It gives as lively a red to blue paper as alum ; which gives us room to think, that it contains a salt analagous to it. An electuary was formerly made of the strained pulp for a dysentery. 188 CYPRESS TREE.—CUPRESSUS or Puy, AND THE CYPARISSUS or Vircit anv Ovi. Natural order, Conifere. _ A genus of the Monecia Monadelphia class. *‘ I was exalted like a.cedar in Libanus, and as a cypress- tree upon the mountains of Hermon.” | Ecclesiasticus, xxiv. 13. — * Kt toi, triste cyprés, ° Fidéle ami des morts, protecteur de leur ‘cendre, Ta tige, chére au coeur mélancholique et tendre, Laisse la joie au myrte et la gloire au laurier. Tu n’es point l’arbre heureux de |’amant, du guerrier, Je le sais; mais ton deuil compatit a nos peines.” Tus tree, which is the symbol of eternal sorrow in all the civilized countries of Europe, is also the funeral tree of the east, from the Persian Gulf to the Caspian Sea; and it is like- wise dedicated to the dead frou Mazenderan to Constantinople, as well as to the utmost bounds of China’s fruitful shores. If we look so far back as even to the destruc- tion of Troy, we shall find ** In mournful pomp the matrons walk the round, - With baleful cypress and blue fillets crown’d, With eyes dejected, and with hair unbound.” | ZEneis, Book iii. CYPRESS TREE. 189 .. Fable informs us, that this emblem of grief owes its name to Cyparissus, a beautiful youth, who was the favourite of Apollo — ** Whose hand adapts with equal skill, the strings To bows with which he kills, and harps to which he sings.” Cyparissus having accidentally killed a favou- rite stag of Apollo’s, “ Much was the beast by Caea’s youth caress’d, But thou, sweet Cyparissus, lov’dst him best.” The youth could not be cured of his sorrow — ** Himself he would have slain through desp’rate grief. What said not Phoebus, that might yield relief ? To cease his mourning he the boy desir’d, Or mourn no more than such a loss requir’d. But he incessant griev’d. At length address’d To the superior powers a last request; Praying, in expiation of his crime, Thenceforth to mourn to all succeeding time. And now, of blood exhausted he appears — Drain’d by a torrent of continual tears. The fleshy colour in his body fades, — And a green tincture all his limbs invades. From his fair head, where curling locks late hung, A horrid bush, with bristled branches sprung; Which, stiff’ning by degrees its stem extends, Till to the starry skies the spire ascends. Apollo sad look’d on, and sighing cry’d, Then be for ever what thy pray’r imply’d: Bemoan’d by me, in others grief excite, And still preside at ev’ry fun’ral rite.” . Ovip, Book x. 190 SYLVA FRORIFERA. Claudian tells us, in his admirable poem of the Rape of Proserpine, that when Ceres de- cided to travel over the earth in search of her daughter, she hastened to Etna, to prepare the torch which was to light her on the road during the night; and that having rooted up two gigantic cypresses, the goddess threwthem into the crater of that mount, which, being inflamed by the sulphur, augmented the fires of Etna; and from thence the ancients, we presume, dedicated this tree to Pluto and Proserpine. ‘The Romans placed a branch of the cypress tree before their dwellings when any one died, which remained as long as the corpse was in the house; and which it then accompanied to the funeral pile, or the tomb. Lucan, who wrote about the middle of the first century, informs us that the cypress was then only used at the funerals of persons of distinction. He says, Et non plebetos luctus testata Cupressus. ** And the cypress testifying no vulgar grief.” *‘ The mournful cypress rises round, Tap’ring from the burial ground.” Lib. it. The Turks of the present day attend most religiously to the planting of the cypress tree at the tombs of their departed friends and re- 17 ee ee ee ee CYPRESS TREE. 191 latives; and they are always careful to select the upright variety, as the spreading cypress would, in such situations, be the cause of great sorrow to them, from their belief that when the tree grows with a spiral point towards heaven, it indicates that the soul of their friend is ascended into the regions of bliss. - The Armenians are not allowed to plant a cypress tree at the graves of their deceased friends, but they are permitted to plant any branching tree, as the apple, oak, or elm, &c.; which, from it’s crooked branches, indicates, as the Mahommedans affirm, the impossi- bility of the ascension of Christian souls. When will reason ascend her universal throne ! Lady M. W. Montague mentions a cypress tree in a garden at Kujuk Checkmedji,that was converted to rather a singularuse. “The house and garden now belong,” says her Ladyship, “to a hogia, or schoolmaster, who teaches boys here. I asked him to show me his own apart- ment, and was surprised to see him point to a tall cypress tree in his garden, on the top of which was a place for a bed for himself, and a little lower one for his wife and two children, who slept there every night. I was so much diverted with the fancy,” says Lady Mary, “that I resolved to examine his nest nearer; but going up fifty steps, I found I had still fifty to go up, and then I must climb from 192 SYLVA FLORIFERA. branch to branch with some hazard of my neck. I thought ia ther efore the best epee to come down again.” Cato wrote more on the cultivation of the cypress than on that of any other tree; and he calls it a Tarentine tree; but Pliny says, that was from its being first planted: in that neighbourhood, and that the isle of Candia is its natural country; where, he says, when the ground is ploughed up, the -young plants are sure to appear, and that in many parts of that island, the cypress trees spring up with- out culture; particularly on Mount Ida, on which they grow to the very point, although itis continually covered with snow. Hanway says, some of the: mountains near Reshd, in Persia, are covered with cypress trees. Thus, like the cedar, its birth-place is a cold bleak mountain ;~ and, like that’ majestic tree, . it . lives almost to eternity, and-its timber seems nearly imperishable. Sir W. Quseley tells us, in his travels, that “ the heautiful and venerable cypress of Fassa has been the boast and ornament of that city for above a thou- sand years.” Pliny speaks of a cypress. that was planted when the foundation of Rome was laid, and which fell, he says, through careless neglect, on the last year of Nero's reign. The same author tells us, the famous statue of Vejovis, Jupiter, in the capitol, was Oe d CYPRESS TREE. 193 made of cypress wood; and that when he wrote it was perfectly sound, although it had been dedicated and consecrated to the temple since the second year of the foundation of Rome. Theophrastus, who calls this tree Kuzapilros, tells us, that the doors of the cele- brated temple of Ephesus were formed of this durable wood; and every body knows that the doors of St. Peter’s church, at Rome, were framed of cypress timber, which lasted from Constantine to Pope EKugenius IV.’s time, which was eleven hundred years, and were then sound and entire, when the pope took them down to change them for bronze gates. The Egyptians kept their mummies in chests of cypress wood; and Thucydides, a Greek historian, who wrote about 400 years before the birth of Christ, tells that the Athenians used to bury their heroes in coffins formed of this timber; and Aristocles, the celebrated Athenian philosopher, (who was called Plato, from the largeness of his shoulders), and who flourished about the same time with Thucydides, would have the laws and sacred rites inscribed on tablets of cypress wood in preference to brass. The Babylonian history affirms, that the lasting bridge, which Semiramis caused to be built over the Euphrates, about 1960 before VOL. I. o 194 SYLVA FLORIFERA. > the Christian era, was entirely formed of this timber; and some learned writers, who do not hesitate to go 389 years farther back, en- deavour to prove, that the gopher mentioned in Scripture as the wood of which the ark was built, was no other than cypress, and which is not confuted by other learned authors; such as Isa, Vossius, and David Kinchi, who will have gopher to signify only | resinous timber. Epiphanius, a bishop of Salamis, who died A.D. 403, tells us, (Heres. lib. i.) some relics of the ark, circa campos Sennaar, lasted even to his days; and which was judged to have been of cypress. It is known, that at Crete this timber was em- ployed in building the largest ships; and Virgil tells us, “ that cypress provides for keels of ships that scour the watery plains.” Aristobulus affirms, that the Assyrians made shipping of this timber; and so plentiful was this tree about those parts of Assyria, where the ark is conjectured to have been built, that those vast armadas which Alexander the Great caused to be equipped and sent out from Babylon, consisted only of cypress. — (Arrianus, Alex. lib. vii., and Strabo, lib. xvi.) The ancients, who had great faith in bal- samic scents, supposed therefore that the cypress tree improved the air by its transpir- 9 i CYPRESS TREE. 195 ation; and on which account, the eastern physicians sent all those who had pulmonic disorders to the Isle of Candia, where these trees abound; and we are assured, that the aromatic smell of this evergreen was found to bea specific for the lungs, This subject de- serves minute investigation, and the serious opinions and consultations of those “* Men who suppress their feelings, but who feel The painful symptoms they delight to heal.” It is clearly ascertained, that trees correct a putrid bad air. It should, therefore, be our study to find out those that do it most power- fully; and having ourselves so often been revived and refreshed by the natural per- fumes of the garden and fields, we deem it worthy the labours of medical students, to learn how far aromatic and balsamic scents may be good for those who are troubled with weak lungs. We have no hesitation in say- ing, it must be beneficial to hypochondriacs. In making these observations, we hope the learned Esculapians, whom we venerate as much as we despise those ** Who to contention as to trade are led, To whom dispute and strife are bliss and bread,” will not deem us a disciple of those advertising 0 2 196 SYLVA FLORIFERA. quacks, who have the impudence to tell us, they have ‘¢ Men snatched from graves, as they were dropping in, Their lungs cough’d up, their bones Skt through their skin: Their liver all one schirrus, and the frame Poison’d with evils which they dare not name; Men who spent all upon physician’s fees, Who never slept, nor had a moment’s ease, Are now as roaches sound, and all as brisk as bees.” ‘¢ How strange to add, in this nefarious trade, _That men of parts are dupes by dunces made !” CRABBE. By whom the cypress tree was first intro- duced to England, and at what exact period, we are not able to learn; but it is probable, that we are indebted for this celebrated tree to some pious abbess, or holy fathers of Sion Monastery, near Brentford, which is now be- come Northumberland’s ducal palace; as Dr. Turner tells us, in his Herbal of 1568, “ it groweth right plenteously in the gardine of Sion.” Gerard notices, in 1597, that “ it groweth likewise in diuers places of Eng- lande, where it hath beene planted, as at Sion, a place near London, sometime a house of nunnes ; it groweth also at Greenwich, and at other places ; and likewise at Hampsteed, in the garden of Master Waide, one of the clarkes of hir maiesties privy-counsell.” 10 CYPRESS TREE. 197 Evelyn says, in 1664, “ the.cypress tree was, but within a few years past, reputed so tender and nice a plant, that it was cultivated with the greatest care, and to be found only amongst the curious; whereas we see it now in every garden, rising to as goodly a bulk and stature as most which you shall find even in Italy itself. For such I remember to have once seen in his late Majesty’s gardens at Theobalds, before that princely seat was demolished.” The au- ‘thor of the Sylva strongly recommends the planting of this tree in England; and of its hardiness he says, “ The March and April winds (in the years 1663 and 1665), accompa- nied with cruel frosts and cold blasts, for the space of more than two months, night and day, did not, amongst near a thousand cypresses growing in my garden, kill above three or four, which, for being very late cut to the quick, (that is, the latter end of October), were raw of their wounds, took cold, and gangreened,” From this and other recommendations of Evelyn, we presume it became fashionable to cultivate the cypress, for in 1706, when Lou- don and Wise published “The Retired Gar- dener,” they say, “cypress was formerly more in fashion than ’tis now; for we see in some places whole alleys of it; but these trees being apt to take but one sort of figure, 0 0 vo 198 SYLVA FLORIFERA. which is that of a pyramid, and the yew tree and pieca being more proper for the variety of forms of which they are susceptible, to adorn gardens, cypress has lately been ne- glected, and the other two trees been more planted.” Thus it is evident that the cypress was driven out of the garden by the shears, whose business it was to disfigure nature, by transforming evergreens into urns, sugar- loaves, extinguishers, and a thousand other whimsical devices, as suited the taste of the owner, or the ability of their gardeners, who have not been improperly called evergreen tailors. But the cypress may now safely re- turn to its station in our plantations, since the shears have left the grove, and are now as busily employed in disfiguring the human shape, as they were formerly in mutilating vegetable beauties. There is no part of ornamental planting more difficult than the distribution of ever- green trees, which are either the most perma- nent beauties of the grove, or the most gloomy features, accordingly as they are dispersed. A. plantation composed entirely of trees that are not deciduous, has an aspect so sombre, that the name of nevergreen may be more properly applied to them than that of | evergreen ; yet they cheer our winter scenes most beautifully when happily blended with CYPRESS TREE. 199 those deciduous trees, whose colour and character assimilate best with them. But we are not admirers of that regularity and uni- formity so often offensive to the eye in large plantations, where there is no deviation from the fir and the larch, unless where death has made a gap, when you are treated with a larch and a fir through hill and dale to the end of the plantation. The cypress seems admirably adapted to or- nament those lawns which surround villas or lodges built in the Grecian style, and per- haps we have no tree that accords so well with stone or stuccoed edifices as the cypress; and even the temples of marble lose half their effect if surrounded by other buildings instead of being relieved by the foliage of trees. At the present time, the burial hill of Pére-la- chaise, near Paris, forms a most interesting picture, as the numerous and various formed monuments rise above the young arbores vitae and cypresses, like a city of marble emerging from a forest, and from which, a friend observes, we may form a faint picture of the beautiful appearance of Constantinople from the Bosphorus; the hills on which that city stands being intermixed with white build- ings and green foliage, which forms a spectacle not equalled in any other part of Europe. o 4 200 SYLVA FLORIFERA. . We have two varieties of the common cypress, sempervirens, the upright and the spreading, which the ancients distinguished as male and female trees; but the botanist will know by the class in which these trees are placed, that they are androgynous plants, viz. having male and female flowers on the same root. It appears that the ancients did not consider the seed of a tree to be a fruit, unless it was eatable; for Phocion, who was so cele- brated in Athens for his private and public virtues, remarked to a young man who spoke with more vanity than good sense, “ Young man, thy discourse resembles the cypress; it is large and lofty, and bears no fruit.” What would this Athenian, whose virtues were as 4ncorruptible as the cypress itself, say to some of our modern speeches and publications? ~. Whenwe plant the cypress in the shrubbery, it should be correctly ascertained if it is the spiral or the spreading variety; for the former requires but asmall space, and should be placed behind those flowering shrubs whose extend- ing branches require such an addition: whilst the spreading cypress may wave its mournful branches over the daisy-pied lawn, or form a foreground to the pointed poplar. But it re- quires considerable ingenuity to place the cypress happily i in our plantations; for in most ee CYPRESS TREE. 201 situations its dark and slender head adds a gloom rather than cheerfulness to the scene, particularly in autumnal evenings; when either the sun leaves its last streak, or the rising moon sends a silvery stream of light down the dark foliage, which gives additional sombre to the shade, and a spectre-like appearance to the imagination of the gloomy mind. » Mr. Miller says, “the spreading cypress is by far the largest growing tree, and is the most common timber in some parts of the Levant. This, if planted upon a warm, sandy, gravelly soil, will prosper wonderfully ; and though the plants of this sort are not so finely shaped as those of the first, yet they greatly recompense for that defect by their vigorous growth and strength, in resisting all weathers. This tree is very proper to intermix with evergreens of a second size next to pines and firs, to form clumps, in which class it will keep pace with the trees of the same line, and be very handsome. Besides, the wood of this tree is very valuable, when grown to a size fit for planks, which I am convinced it: will do in as short a space as oaks; therefore, why should not this be cultivated for that pur- pose, since there are many places in England where the soil is of a sandy or gravelly nature, and seldom produces any thing worthy culti- 202 SYLVA FLORIFERA. vating ? Now, in such. places, these trees will thrive wonderfully, and greatly add to the pleasure of the owner while growing, and afterwards render as much profit to his suc- cessors, as perhaps the best plantation of oaks.” Pliny teils us, that in Italy it was. consi- dered amongst their most profitable planta- tions, and was generally cut for poles once in every thirteen years, and that this fall was called dos jilie, because the profit was reckoned a sufficient marriage portion for a _ daughter. This timber is reckoned amongst the sono- rous woods; it is therefore used for harps, violins, and other musical instruments, and it is said that no wood is better calculated to re- sist the ravages of the worm, &c. The deciduous cypress tree, cupressus dis- ticha, is a native of North America, and it appears to have been introduced to this coun- try by Mr. John Tradescant, of South Lam- beth, where it was planted prior to 1640. We have now two varieties of this species of cypress. | Cupressus lusitanica, commonly called the cedar of Goa, from whence it was first brought to Portugal, and is therefore named the Por- tugal cypress. We learn from Mr, Ray’s let- a ee CYPRESS TREE. 203 ters, that this species of cypress was cultivated in England as early as 1683, but it is not con- sidered so hardy as the common cypress, and is therefore less planted ; formerly there were some of these trees growing in the Bishop of London’s garden, at Fulham, and there was a fine tree of this species in the gardens of the Duke of Richmond, at Goodwood, near Chichester, which was killed by the frost in 1740. The arbor vitz leaved cypress, or white cedar, cupressus thyoides, is a native of North America, and Peter Collinson, Esq. had the honour of giving it British soil in 1736. This species grows naturally in China and Cochin- China; it loves a strong moist soil, and abounds in the swamps of New Jersey, and some parts of Pennsylvania and New York. “The May flower and the eglantine May shade a brow less sad than mine: But, lady, weave no wreath for me; Or weave it of the cypress tree.” However applicable these lines of the Scot- tish bard may be to us, we would not wil- lingly sow the seeds of melancholy in any person’s pleasure grounds, yet we must state that all the different species of cypresses are raised from seeds, which, Miller tells us, should be sown early in the spring on a bed of warm, 204 SYLVA. FLORIFERA. dry, sandy earth, which must be levelled very ‘smooth, and the seeds scattered thereon pretty thick, sifting the same light earth over them half an inch thick. If the seeds are sown upon a moderate hot bed, and the beds covered with mats, they will come up much sooner, and with greater certainty, than when they are sown in the cold ground. Le Bon Jardinier, for 1822, recommends the French nurseryman to sow the seeds in pots, which are plunged into hot-beds, as these pots can be removed into the orangery for protection during the winter. Mr. Boutcher recommends the same practice ; but we should most decidedly prefer planting out not only the cypress, but all other evergreens, that have been reared in the hardiest manner that their cultivation admits of, as they are in- tended.to decorate our walks and views in the most inclement season of the year. The green cones of the cypress, poundedand mixed with leaven, were one of the external remedies which the ancient physicians used for scrofulous complaints. They also recom- mended the leaves to be pounded and applied to the wound made by the bite of serpents. ELDER.—See Pomarium Britannicum, 205 ad ELM.—ULMUS. Natural order, Scabride, Amentacee, Juss. A genus of the Pentandria Digynia class. _ Ancient fable tells us, that the vegetable kingdom owes the birth of this tree to the united melody of the lyre and the voice of Orpheus, whose harmonious complaints for the loss of Euridice gained him admittance to the dominions of Pluto, ‘© Where, while the bard melodiously complains, And to his lyre accords his vocal strains, The very bloodless shades attention keep, And, silent, seem compassionate to weep. Ev’n Tantalus his flood unthirsty views, Nor flies the stream, nor he the stream pursues; Ixion’s wond’ring wheel its whirl suspends, And the voracious vulture, charm’d, attends. No more the Belides their toil bemoan, And Sisiphus, reclin’d, sits list’ning on his stone.” Ovip. On his return to earth, we are told by the poet that he retired to a verdant hill, but which was destitute of shade, where he no sooner breathed his plaintive airs or struck his 206 SYLVA FILORIFERA. sweet-resounding strings, than the elm and other trees sprang up to give him shade. ‘“‘ Themselves transplanting, all around they grow, And various shades their various kinds bestow.” The elm as well as the cypress was a funeral tree with the ancients of the eastern nations, because they considered them as fruitless trees, their seeds being disregarded bythem. Homer tells us in the Iliad, that Achilles raised a monument to Ation, the father of Andro- mache, around which elms were planted. ‘‘ Stern as he was, he yet rever’d the dead; His radiant arms preserv’d from hostile spoil, And laid him decent on the fun’ral pile; Then rais’d a mountain where his bones were burn’d: The mountain nymphs the rural tomb adorn’d, Jove’s sylvan daughters bade their elms bestow A barren shade, and in his honour grow.” Pore. The elm is also celebrated im the Iliad for having formed a hasty bridge, over which Achilles escaped the Xanthus, when that river, by its overflowing, had put him in danger of being carried away.* | The Greeks called this tree [reaca, Ptelea, therefore, from whence the Latins derived * See the Iliad, book xxi. This passage, descriptive of the wrath and fury of a river god, is perhaps one of the finest in the whole poem. ——— oe ELM. 207 their name of Ulmus, is uncertain; but from it the English name of Elm is evidently taken, as well as that of the other European lan- guages. The imperial city of Ulm, in Germany, owes its name to the great quantity of elm trees with which its vicinity abounds; and the Doomsday book mentions nearly forty places in this country which also took their names from this tree, and from hence Dr. Hunter conjectures that the elm is a native of England. But in this opinion we do not coin- cide with the learned Doctor ; for the admit- ing that this tree was known in England as early as the Saxon times, does not prove it indigenous to the soil, so strongly as it is con- futed by nature, which seldom permits it to propagate its species in this country, accord- ing to her common rules; whilst, in other countries, where the seed falls, young plants spring up as commonly as the oaks of Britain. However plentifully a plant of any description may be found in a country, we can never re- concile our minds to consider it a native of the soil where it does not spring freely from seed. We cannot, therefore, agree with those who affirm the elm to be a native plant, with- out contradicting the rules of nature, in con- sidering its parts of fructification and its fruit 208 SYLVA FLORIFERA. as unnecessary organs of the tree; and in the works of the wise Creator nothing is found wanting or superfluous, but all is beautiful union.and harmony. We have already shown how careful. the Romans were in conveying the cherry tree to this island, almost as soon as they had procured it in Italy; and it occupied their earliest attention to enrich their own land by such vegetable productions as the countries which they visited or conquered afforded. Nor did they seem more backward in beauti- fying the nations subject to them in the same proportion, and although there was a super- abundance of timber in thiscountry at the time of their invasion, we know it consisted princi- pally of oak, ash, beech, and birch, with some minor trees; and every reader knows how religiously the Romans adhered to the super- stitious customs of their ancestors, and we all know likewise how devoted most people are to the customs and habits of their country. It would not, therefore, be surprising or un- likely that they should wish to plant the elm on the graves of the heroes they lost in Bri- tain. In all ages it has been found difficult to change the habits of the lower classes of men, and the. Romans adopted particular trees for particular purposes ; and we learn from Virgil ELM. 209 that their husbandmen bent the young elms whilst growing into the proper shape, for their duris, or plough-tail. _ Continuo in silvis magna vi flera domatur In burim, et curvi formam accipit ulmus aratri. Geor. ‘i. 170. ** Young elms with early force in copses bow, Fit for the figure of the crooked plough.” DrypeEn. But, above all, they considered the elm as the necessary support and friend of the vine ; and their belief that a sympathy existed be- tween plants was so great, that they seldom planted one without the other. The gravest of the Latin authors do not hesitate to style the elm the husband to the vine; and Pliny observes, that that elm is a poor spouse which does not support three wives. This mode of marrying the vine to the elm, gave rise to the elegant insinuation of Vertumnus to Pomona, whose story may be found in Ovid. «¢¢ Tf that fair elm,’ he cried, ‘ alone should stand, No grapes would glow with gold, and tempt the hand: Or, if that vine without her elm should grow, ’T would creep a poor neglected shrub below.’ ” Tacitus states, that vineyards were planted by the Romans in Britain. They would, there- VOL. I. P 210 y SYLVA FLORIFERA. fore, naturally introduce the elm at the same time ; which, being a tree of such easy propa- gation, both from suckers and cuttings, a single tree introduced by them, would be sufficient to stock the whole island in a much shorter space than the time they had possession of this country. The learned author of the “ Sylva” was of opinion, that the elm was not indigenous to England. “ Some affirm,” says Evelyn, “ that it was first brought out of Lombardy; and I have frequently doubted whether it be a pure indigene or translatitious ; and not only because I have hardly ever known any consi- derable woods of them, but almost continu- ally in tufts, hedge-rows, and mounds; and that Shropshire, and several other counties, and rarely any beyond Stamford to Durham, have any growing in many miles together.” Aubery informed Mr. Ray, that the elm was not to be found north of Grantham or Stamford. At the present time, when ages have so happily blended exotic and native beauties in our woods, the elm is never seen in those forests that. keep their original character. It seems to have followed cultivation and en- closure, and is principally to be found in the neighbourhood where the town has been 43 ELM. 211 feared; or it marks the spot where the village once stood; and the rapid manner in which this tree propagates itself in hedgerows and on banks, by suckers from its far extend- ing roots, will easily account for the quantity now found in such situations. It must have been a happy exchange for Britannia, when she banished the wolf from her shores, and received the elm into the bosom of her woods. Our neighbouring shores are not yet entirely free from these plunderers of the fold. It was formerly the custom in France for the hunters to suspend the skins of these animals on their church-doors ; but in later times, an elm was planted in their country church- yards, on which these trophies were hung; probably, with the idea, that they would deter these ravenous animals from tearing the dead bodies out of their graves, which was no un- frequent occurrence, when hunger drove them from the mountains or the forests. Long after these kinds of offerings ceased to be made, the custom of planting elms in front of village churches was preserved ; and it is this tree, which still graces their cities and towns in their justly-boasted boulevards, under the shade of which patient industry throws the thread, and places the pin so accurately on the cushion, warbling her native airs under PZ 212 SYLVA FLORIFERA. - this verdant roof, as happily as the wealthy dame, who, bedecked by the art of the humble lace-maker, can sing or sigh under the gayest dome of the proudest saloon. English towns are strikingly deficient in these odieunals avenues, whose shade renders the summer promenade so agreeable, and gives such cheerfulness to the entrance of towns; for there can be no sight more pleas- ing to the traveller, than that of beholding the humble stalls of the little fruit-merchants, intermixed and overlooked by the knitting srandmother or netting grandfather, with here and there a seat occupied by the wounded soldier ; nor is the fume of the sailor’s pipe so offensive in this situation, as at the chequered door of the narrow street. Spain owes her vistas, which are the pride of Aranjuez, Casel del Campo, Madrid, and other royal demesnes, to the union of its Philip with Mary of England; as before that period elms were not. known in ‘Spain, Philip the Second having: caused them to be taken from England, and planted in his native land. The elm is an aboriginal of Barbary, as well as the south and south-east parts of Europe. Linnezeus says, it is rarely to be found above Helsing and Finland. The elms of England are scarcely less re-— Ee _ —————— ELM. 213 marked for their age, bulk, and beauty, than the British oaks, which form alike the world’s just wonder, the guard of friends, and the scourge of foes. Mr. John Ray, the botanist, mentions an elm which was felled in Sir Walter Bagot’s park, in Staffordshire, that measured 120 feet in length, and was at the stool seventeen feet in diameter. When sold, its head alone produced forty-eight waggon- loads of wood to burn, and its trunk, besides sixteen blocks, furnished eight thousand six hundred and sixty feet of planks; its whole mass was valued at ninety-seven tons. Fecunde frondibus ulmi. VIRGIL. Fruitful in leaves the elm. This quality in the elm, which ensures a constant shade during the summer months, has secured it a situation in most of the pub- lic, as well as the royal, gardens of Europe. Henry the Fourth of France planted an elm in the- Luxembourg gardens of Paris, which stood until the late revolution in that country levelled both tree and monarch to the dust. ‘«‘ Nor could old age itself their pity reach, No reverence to hoary barks they knew.” Queen Elizabeth, who was contemporary with Henri Quatre, it is said, planted an elm Po 214. | SYLVA FLORIFERA. with her own hands at Chelsea, where she spent a part of her early days in a palace be- longing to her father. This elm stood at the upper end of Church-lane, near the place where the turnpike now is, and was a boun- dary of the parish on the north side. It was felled, to the great regret of the neighbour- hood, on the eleventh of November, 1745, and sold for a guinea, by the lord of the manor, who was no other than the worthy Sir Hans Sloane, which induces us to think that the tree must have become dangerous, or a nuisance to the road. It was 13 feet in cir- cumference at bottom, and 6 feet 6 inches at the height of 44 feet: before the hard frost of 1739-40, which injured its top, it mea- sured 110 feet from the ground. It was in the year 1600 that Sir Francis Bacon planted Gray’s-inn walks with elms, eight of which were standing in the middle of the last century. Under the shade of these trees many a vir- tuous and worthy man studied for the good of his country ; for ‘“‘ Law was design’d to keep a state in peace ; To punish robbery, that wrong might cease ; To be impregnable; a constant fort, To. which the weak and injur’d might resort : But now perverted minds its force employ, Not to pretect mankind, but to annoy:; + —— a | | ELM. 215 And long as ammunition can be found, Its lightning flashes, and its thunders sound.” CRABBE. In modern times The trader, farmer, butcher, taylor, all Bring up a son, Professionall ; And then deal out their numerous writs, To keep their cubs, whom this trade fits. «¢ Perhaps their numbers may in time confound Their arts — as scorpions give themselves the wound.” The waik of elms at the north side of St. James’s Park, which once was the rendezvous where courtly fashion and follies were dis- played, and where now indigence and vice have fixed their station, was planted in the reign of Charles the Second; some few of the original trees were standing at the beginning of the present century. If it be true that trees have eyes and ears, how much must these venerable elms have overlooked and heard, and how fortunate will be the book- seller who has the publication of these secrets, which no doubt will shew— «¢ How creatures, nature meant should clean our streets, Have purchased lands and mansions, parks and seats.” Martyn tells us, “Two elms at St. John’s College, Oxford, were sizeable trees in the reign of Queen Mary; and at Fulham, there p 4 216 SYLVA FLORIFERA. are, or were, some elms planted in the- time of King Edward the Sixth; and one at Rich- mond, said to be planted by a courtier of King Henry VII. whilst that king kept his court there.” Madame de Genlis speaks of an elm of great size in this country; in the hollow trunk of which she says a poor woman gave birth to an infant, and where she afterwards resided for a long time. This tree, which is a great curiosity, is still standing in the village of Crawley ; but as the parish is not willing to be burthened with all the young elms that might have been brought forth from the trunk of this singular tree, the lord of the ma- nor has very wisely put up a door to the en- trance of this lying-in hospital, and which is kept locked, except upon particular occasions, when the neighbours meet to enjoy their pipe, and tell old tales in the cavity of this elm, _ that is capable of containing a party of more than a dozen. The interior of this tree is paved with bricks, and in other respects made comfortable for those that it embarks. | In our plantations we find but few trees that excel the elm in height or beauty, parti- cularly when it stands singly and meets a fa- vourable soil. Its foliage then forms grand masses of light and shade in a manner so pe- BLM. Q17 culiar to itself, that we might almost fancy it a clump of green clouds, which sometimes obscure, and sometimes admit the light, showing branches distinct from the leafy clouds, which again support other masses of foliage, that forms a group of harmony not excelled in any other majestic tree. _& Thus when we view a well-proportioned dome, (The world’s just wonder, and even thine, O Rome !) No single parts unequally surprise, All comes united to th’ admiring eyes : No monstrous height, or breadth, or length appear ; The whole at once is bold and regular.” , Pore. A few -detached elms before clumps of pines or firs, add greatly to the beauty of the plantation, as the extreme softness of the colour of the elm leaves in the spring, and the delicate manner in which they seem sprinkled over the branches, have a delightful effect. ‘*‘ No numbers can the varying robe express, While each new day presents a different dress.” The autumn changes the full green foliage of the elm to a yellow or ochre colour, which enlivens the dark tints of the fir, scarce less agreeably than its juvenile shades. This tree varies exceedingly in the colour of its foliage, as well as in the.size of its leaves; by the least change of soil. Thus:we often see two neigh- 218 SYLVA FLORIFERA. bouring elms, whose roots have run into dif- ferent strata, forming almost a different variety. of this tree. Linnzeus considered all the European elms as making only one species, whilst Ray and Goodyer describe four ; but modern botanists distinguish only two species, and consider the other kinds as varieties of these. The com- mon elm, wlmus campestris, gives out its flowers generally about the end of March, which are monopetalous, and bell-shaped, closely thrust together on the twigs or branches. They make so little show, that they would scarcely be perceptible were they not to make their appearance before the leaves come out. This species of elm does not flower until it has acquired considerable size and height. The seeds, which are not much unlike the garden arach seed in size and form, generally fall about the time the leaves come out, and few of them hang to ripen. The leaves are what botanists denominate doubly serrate, that is, with small teeth upon each of the large ones, like some descriptions of saws. The elm leaf is rough and harsh on both sides, and the leaf is remarkable for having the principal nerve not quite in the middle; therefore the branch- ing nerves are longer onone side than the other. The broad-leaved elm, Wich elm, or Wych ELM, 219 hazel, u/mus montana, suspends its flowers on longer peduncles, and more loosely spread out than those of the foregoing elm; and it likewise blossoms when younger than the common sort. The trunk of this kind of elm soon divides into long, wide-spreading, winged branches, but it seldom rises so high as the common elm. ‘This kind is hardy enough to climb the steeps, and flourish in the remotest Highlands of Scotland. | “The Wich elm,” says Mr. Gilpin, in his Forest Scenery, “ is perhaps generally more picturesque than the common sort, as it hangs more negligently; though, at the same time, with this negligence, it loses in a good degree _ that happy surface for catching masses of light, which we admire in the common elm.” The Dutch elm, ulmus suberosa. This variety was brought from Holland at the beginning of King William’s reign. The leaves of this elm are large, but the timber is of a very inferior quality to our common elm. Of the American elms cultivated in this country, the Hortus Kewensis notices three varieties; the first of which was introduced or planted by Mr. James Gordon, in 1752, who also cultivated the hornbeam-leaved elm, in 1760, which is also a native of North Ame- rica, as well as the drooping elm, which takes 990 SYLVA FLORIFERA. its name from the pendant position of its branches, and is also distinguished by its smooth oblong leaves. Columella tells us, that the Romans fed their cattle with the leaves of the elm; for which: purpose, Evelyn says, they are not to be despised; for being suffered to dry in the sun, on the branches, and the spray stripped off about the end of August, these he directs to be placed in a dry barn, and says, when hay and fodder is dear, they are of great ser- vice, and that the cattle will eat them in pre- ference to oats, and thrive exceedingly well with them. But since the introduction of clover, and other exotic grasses and plants so abundantly into our fields, the trees are but rarely robbed of their verdure to feed our cattle: yet we are surprised not to see the fallen leaves collected in the autumn, since every gardener knows that no manure is superior to decayed leaves. We learn from. the plays of M. Accius Plautus, that elm twigs were anciently used as instruments of castigation ; for this comic poet speaks of a rogue who had been chastised so often, that he had wasted all the elms in the country, in rods and cudgels. Elm timber is in great esteem for pipes that are constantly underground ; and it is.in- eee eae -_ ELM. ° 221 calculable what a quantity of these trees were swallowed by the numberless streets of our monstrous capital before iron pipes were placed in its stomach; and which, together with substituting that metal instead of elm for our last habitations, must be the means of making elm timber more plentiful for other purposes. Captain Woodroofe’s Journal informs us, that the greater part of the Persian vessels are built of elm timber, which abounds in the province of Peribazar. Evelyn says in his Sylva, “ Elm timber is of singular use; especially where it may lie con- tinually dry, or wet, in extremes; therefore, proper for water-works, mills, the ladles and soles of the wheels, pipes, pumps, aqueducts, pales, ship-planks beneath the water-line, &c. &c. A second-rate charcoal is made from this wood, and rails and gates of elm, thin sawed, are not so apt to rive as oak.” It has scarcely any superior for kirbs of coppers, feather edge, and weather boards ; but it does not without difficulty admit the nail, without boring. His Grace the Duke of Devonshire planted 54,143 young elms on his estates between the years 1816 and 1819. It was much more common formerly than at present in the southern counties of Eng- land, for weather boarding the sides of barns, 900 SYLVA FLORIFERA. stables, and even dwelling-houses for the far- mers; but many of these were exchanged for buildings of brick and stone, during the long war, which dazzled all eyes. with a deceptive prosperity, whilst it ate away the substance of the country like a polypus in the flesh. _ Medical writers have not been sparing of their commendations of the virtues of the elm, every part of which, from the root to the leaf, was esteemed a sovereign remedy for some complaint; but our space will not allow us to publish all the secrets of Theophrastus, Dioscorides, Galen, Pliny, Matthiolus, Bau- hine, Ray, and a long list of other writers, who have recorded the cures performed by means of the elm. We fear that a greater number of their patients were boxed up in the planks of this tree, than were cured by its bark. The elm leaves are often found with blis- ters on them, occasioned by the pricking of insects, and include a viscous juice, called elm water, which we should not have mentioned as being good for recent wounds and _ bruises, but we find the fair sex of former days used it to wound mankind, as an old writer assures us that it was with this wash that they “ bright- ened the skin of their faces, and made their countenances so amiable.” All the varieties of the elm may be raised ELM. 223 from seeds, or propagated by layers or suckers taken from the roots of the old trees. We have lately seen elms of a considerable size transplanted, but they seldom make much new wood; and younger trees soon produce a better shade, and outrun the older plants, particularly if little trenches be dug near the roots to hold the rain water, that will greatly facilitate their growing in dry summers, and retain their verdure much longer. We ob- served this practice and its advantages in many new-formed boulevards and plantations of elms in the vicinity of Paris, where this tree is not less a favorite than-in the environs of London, as the following beautiful lines of Gresset will shew : — Feuillage antique et vénérable, Temple des bergers de ces lieux, Orme heureux, monument durable De la pauvreté respectable, Et des amours de leurs aieux ; O toi! qui depuis la durée De trente lustres révolus, Couvres de ton ombre sacrée Leurs danses, leurs jeux ingénus ; Sur ces bords, depuis ta jeunesse Jusqu’a cette verte vieillesse, Vis-tu jamais changer leurs mceurs, Et leur félicité premiére Fuir devant la fausse lumiére, De mille brillantes erreurs ? Non. Chez cette race fidéle, 224 SYLVA FLORIFERA. Tu vois encor ce pur flambeau De l’innocence naturelle, Que tu voyois briller chez elle, Lorsque tu n’étois qu’arbrisseau. Et pour bien peindre la memoire De ces mortels qui t’ont plante, Tu nous offres pour leur histoire, Les meeurs de leur postérité. Triomphe, régne sur les ages, Echappe toujours aux ravages D’Eole, du fer et des ans; Fleuris jusqu’au dernier printemps, Et dure autant que ces rivages. Au chéne, au cédre fastueux, Laisse les tristes avantages - Dorner des palais somptueux ; Les lambris couvrent de faux sages, Tes rameaux couvrent des heureux. 225 . FIR-TREE. — PINUS. Natural order, Conifere.. A genus of the Monecia Monadelphia class. ** Yon verdant pines, that midst the winter smile, _ Offspring of Scotia or Virginia’s soil, The world’s extremes within their branches join’d, To either hemisphere convey thy mind.” DELILLE. — ‘ Towering firs in conic forms arise, And with a pointed spear divide the skies.” Prior. Ir is not only in the countries of the north, but also on the summits of eastern mountains, that the fir and the pine-tree rear their heads without the aid of man. We have already noticed, that the forests of Lebanon were composed of firs as well as cedars. “ I will do,” said Hiram to Solomon, * all thy desire, concerning timber of cedar and timber of fir.” The allwise Providence, who scattered the palms over the torrid zone, giving the cocoa- tree to the sea-shore, and the date to desert VOL. 1. Q 296 SYLVA FLORIFERA. rocks and sands, has with the same wisdons allotted the fir and the pine their dominion on those bleak and elevated mountains, which attract the snows to their summits, in order that the valleys may be refreshed by their descending streams. Every part of these trees displays infinite wisdom in their formation, which is so pecu- liarly adapted to their native mountains. The resinous juices, with which their trunks and branches abound, defy the rigour of the frost to congeal the sap, whilst the filiform nature of the leaves of these evergreen trees are not less happily adapted for resistance to the im- petuosity of the winds, that beat with such violence on elevated situations. As these trees were designed by nature for perpetual winter, their foliage possesses the farther advantage of reverberating the heat, like the hair of animals. The Swedish naturalists have observed that the fattest pines are to be found on the dryest and most sandy regions of Norway ; and Mathiola, in his useful commentary on Dioscorides, informs us that there is no sub- stance more proper than the charcoal of those trees for prompt melting the iron minerals, in the vicinity of which they peculiarly thrive. The closeness of their foliage shelters the FIR-TREE. 297 mountaineer from the snow, whilst their branches furnish him with fuel and torches. The fruit or seed of these trees is so wonderfully protected by the formation of their cones, against the inclemency of, the weather, that man evidently first borrowed from them the idea of placing shingles, tiles, and slates to the roofs of his dwellings. From the class Monecia, in which these trees are placed, the botanist will know that they produce male and female flowers se- parately, but on the same tree. The male flowers are so productive of farina, that it has sometimes been carried away by the winds, in such quantities, as to alarm the ignorant with the notion of its raining brimstone. _ Clouds of this yellow dust may often be seen hovering around these trees in the spring, when the stigmas are ready to receive this fructifying powder. The ancient Persians paid great attention to the natural history of plants, and often used them in allegory, both in writing and speaking. Herodotus relates that Darius sent word to the Greeks of Ionia, who were laying waste the country, that if they did not give over their depredations, he would treat them like pines. The Greeks, who by this time had become infected with wit, and had Q 2 | 298 SYLVA FLORIFERA. proportionably began to lose sight of nature, did not comprehend the meaning of this; but, upon enquiry, they discovered that Darius meant they should understand it to be ‘his resolution utterly to exterminate them ; for the pine-tree once cut down shoots out again no more. It is scarcely possible to behold the dark ‘towering pine and fir, without having our usbuplns carried back to very early ages, and also our reflections; for these trees remind ‘us of from what small beginnings great events often take birth. These trees were dedicated to Diana, the immaculate virgin, who was supposed to pre- side over hunting. She was represented by the moon, because the light of the moon was propitious to huntsmen, for spreading their nets and other toils to entrap the game. The sports of the field were thought to be un- favourable to Venus, and were therefore more sacred to Diana. In the forest, the pine-tree was naturally made the rendezvous for the followers of the chase... The bunts- man then suspended the head of a wolf on the branches of the pine or fir, to secure the protection of the chaste goddess. In time, the whole skin was displayed on it ; and as in that age, like the present time, there were FIR-TREE. 299 persons ready to turn this superstition to some account, they built a chapel for this goddess, where was offered not only a wolf’s skin, but whole carcasses of sheep likewise, as a secu- rity to the rest of the flock from the jaws of the wolf. As offerings multiplied, the at- tendance on the chapel increased ; the hunts- men attracted pilgrims to the altar of pines, and the pilgrims allured dealers of necessaries to the spot. Thus, a town sprang up around the chapel, naturally filled with crafty and eredulous persons. At length, oracles were announced and victories predicted ; for which, generals and kings sent magnificent presents, until one of the chapels became a temple of such vast size and magnificence, as to be deemed one of the seven: wonders of the world. It was this temple which is men- tioned in the Acts of the Apostles, by selling silver - models of which, the silversmiths of Ephesus made such great profit ; and which they were in danger of losing by the intro- duction of Christianity. They, therefore, excited a furious tumult against its first preachers, whose principles were too pure, and full of charity and humanity, to be at first understood by the heathens; whose priests, no doubt, knew that fear has greater influence over the human mind, in general, Qa 930 SYLVA FLORIFERA. than confidence. Thus, at Tauris, the wor- ship of Diana, was converted into one of terror, by having human sacrifices offered up to her ; thus, transforming, what was in simple times intended to benefit mankind, into a curse, by the craft of those who perverted simple prayers to the profit of themselves, a temple and a city, where imposts were not only levied to support the priests, but all strangers Janding there, or driven on their shores by storms, were cruelly immolated. — Garlands of pine leaves were awarded to the victors in the combats and sacred games of the Isthmia, which were celebrated by the Greeks every fifth year, and observed and held so sacred and inviolable, that even a public calamity could not prevent the cele- bration. These festivals received their name from the isthmus of Corinth, where they were observed as early as 1326 years before the Christian era; and when Corinth was de- stroyed by Mummius*, the Roman general, the games were observed with the usual so- lemnity, and the Sicyonians were entrusted * Mummuus, when he sent the precious statues and ex- quisite paintings of the Grecian artists to Rome from Corinth, threatened the masters of the vessels which con- veyed them, that if their cargoes were injured or destroyed they should furnish new articles at their own expense. FIR-TREE. 23) with the superintendence, which had been before one of the privileges of the ruined Corinthians. The fir was also dedicated to Pan as the god of huntsmen; and from his supposed residence being in those woods that are situ- ated on rugged mountains, where the pine and fir-tree love to dwell. The fir-tree was also sacred to Cybele, the ~ wife of Saturn; hence Atys is generally re- presented as being supported by a fir-tree. The cones of the fir-tree were employed in the mysteries of Cybele, where even the priests were the first to indulge in the un- bounded licentiousness and obscenities which prevailed in this festival. The cones of the fir-tree were also offered up to Bacchus, and were likewise to be seen on the altars of A‘sculapius. Most of the temples of antiquity had their sacred groves or forests attached to them; where those abominable rites were often cele- brated with the~-most horrible indecencies and terrible sacrifices. Cinnis, or Cercyon, was surnamed the bender of pines, because he tied his victims to the tops of two pines, which he bent down, and which, when he suf- fered them to rise again, tore the unfortunate wretch to pieces. Q 4 232 SYLVA FLORIFERA. How can we sufficiently admire those sacred writers, who forbid the sacrifices of these detestable groves and abominable idols, but have made them the spots for quiet con- templation and calm reflection ? Lord Thur- low says — “ The forest is to me the sweetest college Of any, that the outward world can show, Lacking professors, yet most rich in knowledge, For vile profession is to virtue foe. Wisdom doth here in all its branches grow, Preaching in stones, and from the senseless wood, Brawls in the brooks, and, wheresoe’er we go, The tongueless lecture still is understood.” Pliny tells us that neither the fir or pine grew naturally in the vicinity of Rome. This author observes that the best timber of this kind grew on the Alps and Apennines, from which circumstance we presume these mountains derived their names, as the Alps are frequently called Alpine mountains. Pliny says likewise that there are excellent firs in France, Corsica, Bithynia, Pontus, and Macedonia; those which grew in Arcadia, he states, were not so good, but the worst grew on Mount Parnassus. It is a remark of Ceesar’s, in his Commen- taries, that during his stay in Britain, he did not see a fir-tree. At what exact period it FIR-TREE. 233 ‘was first given to us by the Scotch is uncer- ‘tain ; but it now beautifies the English hills “as iiciel as the union has béniifiteds the Scot- tish people; and it appears to us that we have as good a claim to the fir as the land of thistles. Turner only notices what the ancient au- thors have written on these trees; nor does Gerard state that the fir was cultivated in England in his time ; but from his account of this tree, we may claim it as a native of some counties in England, unless the Scotch. have a claim prior to the deluge, or the formation of the Roman roads in England, in which case, with all our love for our rights, we shall cheerfully cede the fir-tree, pinus sylvestris, to our Highland friends. Gerard says, “The Firre trees growe vpon high mountains, in many woods in Germanie and Bohemia, in which it commeth downeoften- times into thevalleies: they are found, likewise, in Pruse, Pomerania, Liefeland, Russia, and especially in Norway; where I have seene the goodliest trees in the worlde of this kinde, growing vpon the rockie and craggie moun- taines, almost without any earth about them, or any other thing, sauing a little moss about the rootes, which thrust themselues heere and there into the chinkes and cranies of the 934 SYLVA FLORIFERA. rockes, and therefore are easily cast downe with any extreme gale of winde. I haue seene these trees growing in Cheshire, Staf- fordshire, and Lancashire, where they grew in great plentie, as is reported, before Noah’s floud; but then being ouerturned, and ouer- whelmed haue lien since in the mosses and waterie moorish grounds, very fresh and sound vntill this day ; and so full of a resin- ous substance, that they burne like a torch or linke, and the inhabitants of those coun- tries do call it Firre wood, and fire woode vnto this day.” From this it seems probable that we have given name to this tree, as it has no similitude to that of any other language, and it seems that its various names have been derived from the uses it was put to in Gerard’s time, who calls it Firre tree (fire tree), Mast tree, and Deale tree. Martyn says in his edition of Miller, “ As to the immense forests of fir or pinediscovered under ground, in various parts of these king- doms, they were probably the. Pinus sylvestris or Scotch pine: for the subterraneous cones which I have seen, evidently belonged to this species.” Had Czesar seen more of England, he no doubt would have seen fir-trees in many parts of the country, as they have been found in many situations, where the Romans FIR-TREE. 235 had thrown them down to form a basis to their roads in mosses and bogs. Mr. Whit- aker says in his History of Manchester, “ I have now in my possession two pieces of tried genuine fir, that were bedded with the remains of a birch-tree, one yard and a half in the mossy soil, and three yards under the crown of the Roman gravel; and it has also been very recently dug up, by myself, under the roots of the road over Failsworth Moss.” This tree is not peculiar to Scotland or England alone, as it is common in many parts of Europe, and Mr. Duhamel mentions his having received cones of this species of fir-tree from St. Domingo. The wood of this fir is the red or yellow deal, which is the most durable of any of the kinds yet known. The Scotch fir is known from other species, by the leaves which issue from a white trun- cated little sheath, in pairs ; they are linear, acuminate, quite entire, striated, convex on one side, and flat on the other, from an inch and a half to two inches in length, of a grey- ish green. The cones are small, pyramidal, and end in narrow points ; they are of a light colour, and the seeds are small. The scales of the male catkins roll back at top, and are feathered. In favourable soils and situations, this tree 236 SYLVA FLORIFERA. grows to the height of eighty feet, with a straight trunk. The bark is of a brownish colour and full of crevices. It is known by experience, that we have scarcely any soil so bad, or exposure so bleak, where this tree will not live ; but when planted upon clayey soils, the timber is not of so good a quality, or the tree so long lived, nor does this species of fir stand the sea air so well as some other kinds, particularly the Pinaster. Nature is the only pruner that should ssnich the fir-tree, as the lower branches gradually decay, from the root to the top, leaving no knot or blemish; and the time for felling these trees 1s known to be when all the branches are dead, except those at the very top. Ifa fir-tree, whilst in a vigorous state of growth, be much . pruned, it will be reduced to premature old age, by the escape. of its inflammatory juices. The fir-tree is not calculated to stand in a small shrubbery ; it belongs to a bolder style of scenery, and should be planted so as to give height to our hills, and yariety to our views, where « Trees unnumber’d rise, Beautiful in various dyes: The gloomy pine, the poplar blue, The yellow beech, the sable yew, The slender fir, that taper grows, The sturdy oak with broad spread boughs.” Dyen. Re FIR-TREE. 937 In extensive shrubberies, on hilly situa- tions, the fir-tree may sometimes be both usefully and ornamentally employed, as a back ground to shelter the more delicate trees, whose lighter foliage will also shine with more splendour by the contrast. When the walks,wind near or through the planta- tions of firs, we should do well to take a hint from Shenstone, who says, ** Not a pine in my grove is there seen, But with tendrils of woodbine is bound ; Not a beech’s more beautiful green, But a sweet-brier entwines it around.” But this hardy offspring of bleak and snowy mountains seems intended for utility more than beauty, and we would, therefore, recom- mend it to be planted for profit rather than pleasure, for few trees have been applied to more uses than this. From the time of So- lomon to the present day, it has formed raf- ters to the houses of our cities, and masts to the vessels of our navy. Dant utile lignum | Navigiis Pinus. Georg. ii. *‘ The useful pine for ships.” Its resinous and durable quality has recom- mended it for numberless domestic purposes, in modern as well as ancient times ; when, if we can rely on poetical accounts, it was used by the Greeks in the formation of the cele- 238 SYLVA FLORIFERA. brated horse which Sinon prevailed on the Trojans to admit into their city, and which caused its overthrow. “© The Grecian chiefs for many years in vain Attacking Troy, yet being repulsed again, At last a horse of mountain size contrived By Pallas’ art, that moved and seem’d alive ; For ribs were massy planks of Firs inlaid, And a report throughout their camp they spread That for their safe return, a vow they’d made; But in the hollow of the vast machine They had convey’d choice troops of armed men.” LAUDERDALE. The advantages that have arisen from the forming large plantations of the Scotch fir in the northern parts of Scotland, have not been confined alone to the profit obtained upon the timber, which has been such as fully to satisfy the owners, but it has rendered some of the barest moors, the bleakest and most inhospitable situations, habitable, and thus as it were, extended the bounds of these domi- nions ; for with these plantations, dwellings have sprung up, and land, which thirty years ago was not considered worth twopence per acre, Now, in many instances, lets from ten to thirty shillings per Scotch acre. In the neighbourhood of these large plant- ations, houses can be reared at little ex- pence, which induces settlers to make their dwellings in these spots, where they can ob- 16 FIR-TREE. 939 tain timber, not only for building, but also to form good fences to their gardens and fields, and fuel for their hearth, whilst cutting and manufacturing the wood furnishes employ- ment to many. Hence the population is augmented, and a demand for land, which is soon brought into a state for cultivating hardy plants. The leaves and branches of the Scotch fir afford a very wholesome nourishment to cat- tle and sheep, which is no small consideration in mountainous countries, where the snow lies sometimes upon the ground for many weeks together. ‘The resinous roots are dug - out of the ground in many parts of the high- _ lands of Scotland, and being divided into small splinters, are used by the inhabitants instead of candles. The fishermen make ropes of the inner bark, and hard necessity has taught the Laplanders and Kamschatdales to convert it into bread. To effect this, in spring they strip off the outer bark carefully from the fairest trees, and collect the soft white succulent interior bark, and dry it in the shade. When they have occasion to use it, they first toast it at the fire, then grind it into powder, which they steep in ‘warm water to take off the resinous taste ; it is then formed into thin cakes, baked, and eaten with as IAD SYLVA FLORIFERA. much thankfulness, or more, than the poor of this country would accept oaten cakes or brown wheaten bread. } Linnzeus remarks, that the bark of the fir- tree so prepared will fatten swine; which is an observation that may be worthy the atten- tion of the Highlander. It is said that the boys in Sweden frequently peel off the bark of this tree in the spring, and eat it raw with much pleasure. It is from the trunk and branches of the fir and pine trees that tar and pitch are obtained. Thus we take not only their body, but their very blood for the formation and security of our shipping. It is curious, says Pliny, that those trees, which are so much sought after for nautical affairs, should delight to dwell on the highest mountains, as if they fled from the sea, through fear of the waters. Burgundy pitch and turpentine are also procured from these trees, which are so extremely resinous, © that if not evacuated of their juice, they often swell and burst. The juice, as it issues from the tree, is received in trenches made in the earth, and afterwards freed of its grosser im- purities by colature through wicker baskets. - The common turpentine is about the con- sistency of honey, of an opake, brownish- white colour ; it dissolves in rectified spirits, ‘SILVER ‘ FIR-TREE. 241 and its use in medicines is.as well.known to the apothecary, as to the house-painter as a - drier. Nor is the rosin which oozes from these trees better known to the scrapers of catgut than to the manufacturers of salves and ointments ; and as Orpheus set the trees in motion by his melodious strains, so has this tree in return assisted: mankind to»make the merry movement “on light | fantastic toe.” This favourite tree of Pan lends its aid also in giving breath and tone.to the solemn sounds of the organ’s harmonious voice. Thus the gay and the grave are equally indebted to this tree of the mountain, in whose branches, says the Psalmist, “ the heron loves to build her nest.” THE SILVER FIR-TREE. — Pinus Picea. Turs noble tree is surnamed Picea, or Pitch- tree, from the quantity of tenacious juice or gum which its trunk yields; and which, in ship-building is so well known by the name of pitch. We call it the Silver Fir, from the colour of its leaves on the under side, which have a white line running lengthwise on each side of the midrib, and as these leaves are VOL. I. R 242 SYLVA FLORIFERA. shorter and broader than those of other firs and pines, and likewise set. much thicker on the spray, it has a beautiful silvery appear- ance when the under side is viewed, or when the wind turns the branches from the eye, _ whilst the upper surface is of the brightest and handsomest green of all the species of fir. The silver fir throws off its lower branches as it acquires age, leaving its bark smooth and delicate. It grows perfectly upright, and to a great height, carrying all its foliage at the top, like the palm. We have lately seen two trees of this kind in the Hare garden of —— _ Sargeson, Esq. near Cuckfield, which, for size and beauty are not exceeded by any trees of this kind in the kingdom. The cones: of this fir are of considerable size and beauty. 'Tour- nefort tells us im his travels that he has re- ceived cones of this fir from mount Olympus, upwards of a foot in length. The pinus picea is a native of Switzerland and) Germany, Dauphiné, Austria, Siberia, mount Caucasus, &c. Evelyn is the earliest author who notices the tree in this country. He tells us, in 1663, that there were then two silver firs growing in Harefield Park, Middle- sex, belonging to Mr. Serjeant Newdigate, that were planted there in 1603, at two years’ growth from the seed, the biggest of which SILVER FIR-TREE. 9243 was eighty-one feet high, and thirteen feet in cireumference below ; the length, so far as it is timber, that is, to six inches square, seventy-three feet ; in the middle, seventeen inches square, and containing 146 feet of good timber, which it acquired in about sixty- three years. It has been observed in Ireland, that no tree grows speedily to so large a size as the silver fir; some of forty years growth, in a wet clay, on a rock, measuring twelve feet in circumference, at the ground, and seven feet and a half at five feet high. It is known to be excellent timber for boat-building and Mr. Young tells us of a gentleman in Hamp- shire, who floored his library with silver fir, fresh cut down, and the boards did not con- tract in the least. In forming plantations, our first care should be to attend to the nature of the soil, and then select those trees which thrive best on the kind of food we are about to offer them ; for they are all, says Delille, ‘¢ In secret channels fed, From root to trunk the wandering sap is led; Thence through the boughs its liquid virtue sends, Till in the leaves its rising effort ends.” 9 * I have seen,’ says Martyn, “ some fine trees of this sort of fir, which grew upon natural R 2 244 SYLVA“FLORIFERA. | bogs, where, by extending their roots, they had drained the ground to a considerable distance round them.” “It isin vain,” says Mr. Bou- cher, “to plant the silver: fir in hot, dry,. or rocky situations, where it commonly loses the top shoots,andtheunder branchessoon become ragged. The largest and most flourishing trees are seen on sour, heavy, obstinate clay ; and though for ten or twelve years they do not advance so fast as several other firs and pines, yet in twenty they will outgrow them all. They should not be too. close, but require a free circulation of air; whilst, the Scotch fir, which thrives in a different soil and situation, prospers best when planted thick; for it. is observed, that until the branches intermingle and mutually support each other, the. trees never begin to advance with vigour. These plantations generally require thinning from about the tenth to the fourteenth. year . after planting.” The Dutch have made many a vain attempt to make the fir grow at the Cape of Good Hope, in order to find a supply of ship-masts, which sell at a high price in India; but in England we can find a tree that will grow in every soil we possess, and often to great ad- vantage. ‘In-a little work entitled Practical Economy, we are told that in the year.1758, SILVER FIR-TREE. 245 ninety-two fir-trees were planted upon a piece of ground, about: three quarters of an acre in extent. The land was waste and poor: no extra expense was incurred, and no attention was paid to the. young trees.: In 1813 they were cut down, and yielded ninety tons of timber, then worth 41. per ton, giving a round sum of 360/. which was equal to a rent of 6/..10s. during the ‘intervening fifty-five years. | pels We have often regretted that the trustees of public roads cannot be ‘induced to plant the waste ground which often borders the turnpike with trees, which would greatly or- mament the country, accommodate the tra- veller by shade and shelter, and in time be the means of lowering the toll. The balm of Gilead fir, pinus balsamea, is so called, because the turpentine which is ob- tained from the wounds of this tree, is similar to the true balm of Gilead, for which it is ‘sometimes sold. The buds and leaves of this tree are also very fragrant, which induces us to give it a situation in the shrubbery. — It is a native of North America, and was growing in the Bishop of London’s garden, at Fulham, as long back as 1696; but it does not ge- nerally arrive at any considerable size in this country. The finest specimens, we are told, R 3 246 SYLVA FLORIFERA. are at Woburn Abbey, in Bedfordshire, the seat of His Grace the Duke of Bedford. It requires a sheltered situation and a good deep soil. The leaves are coloured, like those of the silver fir, but wider and blunter, and disposed on each side along the branches like the teeth of a comb; but in a double row, the upper one shorter than the under. Underneath, they are marked with a double glaucous line, and each has eight rows of white dots. The cones of this fir are small and of a roundish shape. The hemlock fir, pinus Canadensis, is also a native of North America. It was first intro- duced into English pleasure-grounds by Peter Collinson, Esq., in the year 1736. It is a beautiful but delicate tree, requiring a good soil and a warm sheltered situation. Mr. Boucher says, it would be improved by tying its leading shoot to a stake annually as it advances. It is not found to thrive well in any part of England, nor in many parts of America; though, in other parts of that continent, it grows to be a very large tree. 247 FURZE. — ULEX. — GORSE OR WHIN. Natural order, Papilionacee or Leguminose. By: j genus sad the Diadelphia Decandria class. _ The common, overgrown with fern, and yee With prickly gorse, that shapeless and deform’d, And dangerous to the touch, has yet its bloom, And decks itself with ornaments of gold, | Yields no unpleasing ramble: there the turf Smells fresh, and rich in odoriferous herbs.” CowpPer. Turs British beauty too rarely occupies a spot in the English shrubbery, where its yellow flowers would shine as conspicuous in the dreary month of November, and scarcely less ornamental than the gay laburnum of May and June; and which it as greatly excels in perfume, as in the duration of its flowering, which is generally from the end of March, until the end of December; and even the remaining months, are not without some sprinkling of these papilionaceous flowers ; and from which the rustics remark, that love r 4 248 SYLVA FLORIFERA. goes out of fashion, when the furze is out of blossom. This plant, which is as singular by its chevaux-de-frise branches, as enlivening by its golden colour, is only to be found in tem- perate climates., Provence is its boundary to the south, and it reaches neither Sweden nor Russia towards the north. Linnzus lamented that he could hardly preserve it alive in a greenhouse; and so rare is it in many parts of Germany, that Dillenius, their botanist, was in a perfect ecstasy, when he first visited ‘England, and saw our commons co- vered with the gay flowers of the furze-bush. “© The sight is pleased, The scent regaled, each odoriferous leaf, Each opening blossom, freely breathes abroad Its gratitude, and thanks him with its sweets !” Gerard tells us, that he was “ desired by diuers earnest letters, to send seeds of our common furze and broom ‘to: Dantzick, Brunswick, and Poland, where the plants were most curiously kept in their fairest gardens. | The furze-bush is the favourite nestling bush of one of our feathered warblers, which did not escape the:sweet poet of the seasons. ‘“¢ Nor are the linnets, o’er the flowering furze Pour’d out profusely, silent.” FURZE. 249° ~ How many situations have we seen, where the: hedge-rows might be relieved of their sameness, and a cheerful variety given to the view, by simply scattering a few clumps of furze-seed at unequal distances ; *“‘ Affording prospect sweet To human ken; the yellow fields Gaily interchanged, with rich variety Pleasing, as when an emerald green, enchased In flamy gold, from the bright mass acquires : A nobler hue, more delicate to sight.” In the shrubbery, it should be placed at a distance from the walks; and where it. is viewed between or beneath evergreen-trees, it. has the best effect. In these situations, it often grows to a considerable height, and forms an admirable shelter to more delicate plants. Although the furze-bush is sometimes quite cut off by severe frost, yet it springs up again from the root with additional beauty; and_ it has the quality of enduring the sea-breeze, which it seems to delight in, as we have found it in flower at all seasons of the year in such situations, and often. so near to the edge of the water, as to have its roots washed by the advancing waves. These are situa- tions, also; where it should be. cultivated 250 SYLVA ‘FLORIFERA. particularly by those who have dwellings near the shore, as the ocean is seen with ad- ditional advantage, when viewed over these yellow-clad shrubs. Cf hyal The furze is generally considered to be the Looms (scorpius) of Theophrastus, and the Ulex of Pliny, which was a shrub, the ashes of which were used as a lie for separating gold from the substances with which it was mixed. In later times it was evidently thought to be a species of broom, as Dodonzeus, Bauhinus, Tragus, Lobel, and other writers style it Genista spinosa (thorny broom). Gerard says, “There be diuers sorts of prickley broome, called in our English toong by sundry names, according to the speech of the countrey people where they do growe; in some places Furzes, in others Whinnes and Gorsse, and of some Prickley Broome.” This author adds, “ We haue in our barren grounds of the north parts of England another sort of furze, bringing foorth the like prickly thornes that the others haue; the onely difference consisting in the colour of the flowers; for the others bring foorth yellowe flowers, and those of this plant are as white as snowe.” He calls this plant Genista spinosa flore albo. Parkinson says, in 1640, “In the north parts of this land I heare that in divers places, 13 FURZE. 251 the furse, or gorse bushes as they call them, beare very white flowers, differing in nothing else from them that bear yellow, for they are often seene both growing together in one ground.” As we have neither seen or heard of this variety in modern times, we fear it has be- come extinct ; and that it was merely a va- riety caused by the seed falling into some - peculiar spot of soil, which had become more delicate than the natural plant. _ Furze is not without its uses in rural eco- nomy ; but time which civilizes one country, and throws others back into barbarity, changes also the habits of men so effectually, that what is deemed a blessing in one age, is al- most considered a curse in the next. In this kingdom, where we now descend into the bowels of the earth and scoop out its stratas of sulphureous inflammable fossils, for our domestic fuel and manufactory fires, the furze- bush is less regarded than formerly, and more particularly since the improvement of our roads and the increase of our canals has ren- dered the conveyance of coals so easy to all parts of the country, that it is now generally used by the agriculturist in burning lime, which was formerly done by furze-bushes only. No longer back than the time of ae 252 SYLVA FLORIFERA. Charles the Second, we are told by Evelyn, that the cultivation of the common furze was as profitable in Herefordshire, on their poor. land, as the best wheat land in England. He adds, that “in Devonshire (the seat of the best husbands in the world) they sow on their worst land, well plowed, the seeds -of the rankest furze, which, in four or five years, becomes a rich wood: no provender, as we say, makes horses so hardy as the young tops of these furzes; no other wood so thick, nor more excellent fuel. The young and tender tops of furze, being a little bruised, and given to a lean horse,” he tells us, “ will strangely: recover and plump him.” M. Pirolle informs us in Le Bon Jardimer tor 1822, that in many: parts of France, particularly Normandy, the furze-bush is ground or bruised in a cider- mill, and given to their horses with advan- tage. Goats, kine, and sheep, as well as horses, feed upon the tender tops of furze with plea-.. sure. It is at present’ much less sown for: hedges than it was some years back, because it was found to. become naked at bottom, which might be prevented’ by keeping: it cut. in the same manner as the quick-set.. On, very poor hungry gravel. or sandy land this. crop may still be ‘tumed ‘to profit, as the: country house-wife will give a price for the, FURZE. 253 furze faggot, which heats her oven, and supplies her with excellent ashes for her lie. During the height of agricultural prosperity, it was principally sown as a cover for game, for which it is admirably adapted ; and it is with great pleasure we see it employed for this purpose in poor lands, as we are no less an advocate for the increase and preservation of game, than we are desirous to see the game laws new modelled and justly administered ; for surely what a gentleman rears with ex- pence, and preserves with care on his own estates, ought. to be as decidedly his own as the deer in his park, or the poultry in his yard. But at present it is his to shoot, but not his to dispose of ; he dares not send it to the open market to benefit himself, or to: gra- tify the public, who do, and ever will, esteem it hard that laws should forbid them to eat such wholesome food as they have a desire for, and ‘money to purchase. We admit that a quali- fied: person is allowed to make presents of game, but:we cannot ask our licensed friends for a brace of birds without giving them the idea that we think ourselves neglected; and few would wish to give, or conceive such an idea. It is not long since the physicians of Paris forbad a most interesting invalid of our family 254 SYLVA FLORIFERA. to take any animal food excepting partridges, which were recommended as a daily diet. These were easily obtained, so long as we remained not only in that city, but in all the country towns likewise; but the moment we arrived in an English town, this comfort was forbidden, unless we would either condescend to beg, or risk the penalty of offended laws. We feel satisfied that if game were allowed to be as publicly sold as venison, we should in a few years hear no more of poachers than we now hear of deer-stealers. The number of poachers, who, at the pre- sent time, fill our prisons, is a national dis- . grace, whilst their terrible boldness and infa- mous acts would be revolting to the most uncivilised nations ; but as long as luxury demands, and the laws forbid, the regular supply of this kind of food, so long will there be found mem to pursue the nefarious trade of poachers. We hear of no poachers on the continent, where game is publicly sold ; and it would be hardly more unreasonable to banish mutton from our shambles for fear of creating sheep-stealers. At the time when the luxury of the patri- cians was undermining the safety of the Roman empire, the plebeians were prohibited by law from eating artichokes, which were then con- FURZE. 255 sidered a dainty for man, although Pliny con- sidered it the natural food of the ass. Botanists divide the furze into two species, Ulex Europeus, the common large kind, and Ulex nanus, the dwarf furze, with decumbent branches, and spines horizontal, or partly de- flexed. Dr. Witherington thus distinguishes the two species. In the common one, the corolla is longer than the calyx, and the thorns longer than the corolla. In the dwarf furze the corolla is as long as the calyx, and the thorns are shorter than the corolla. Naturalists observe, that the pods of the furze open with the warmth of the sun, and that the seeds are cast out by an elastic spring to a great distance all around, where they soon vegetate. The furze is an excellent shelter, where the seeds of forest trees, such as acorns, beech- masts, chesnuts, &c, are planted; as this thorny shrub will secure them until they grow up, when the trees will starve and destroy their early protectors. ‘¢ And what more noble than the vernal furze, ~ With golden baskets hung? Approach it not, _ For ev’ry blossom has a troop of swords _..Drawn to defend it.. ’ Tis the treasury Of fays and fairies. Here they nightly meet, Each with a burnish’d kingcup in his hand, And quaff the subtile ether.” _ Huropis. 256 GUELDER ROSE.—VIBURNUM OPULUS. Natural order, Dumose Caprifolia, Juss... In the wild state vt is a genus of the Pentandria Trigynia class. ‘The snow-ball which eclipses The white bosom of Venus.’ Tus offspring of accident or cultivation, which Vertumnus presents to our shrubbery, to harmonize with the elegant lilac, and group with the gay laburnum, holds a conspicuous situation in the regions of Flora, —— “ Throwing up into the darkest gloom Of neighbouring cypress, or more sable yew, Her silver globes, light as the foamy surf That the wind severs from the broken wave.” This native shrub often rises to the height of eighteen or twenty feet, clothing itself with a light green foliage, lobed in a similar man- ner to that of the maple-tree, and decorating its grey irregular branches with clusters of abortive flowers, resembling the works of the finest chisel upon the purest alabaster ; parti- -GUELDER ROSE. Q57 cularly in the months ‘of May. and. June, when they exhibit themselves on. the glitter- ing green foliage, forming a.most agreeable picture. | Gerard, who-has left us engravings of ie neutral flowering shrub, calls it Sambucus Rosea, the Rose Elder. This excellent author says, “ The Sambucus palustris, the water elder, groweth by running streames and water- courses, and in hedges, by moist ditch.sides. The rose elder. groweth in- gardens, and the flowers are.there doubled,.by art, as_ it.is thought.” We learn from. this account. that it was not then, 1596, considered either rare or new. He says further, “In-my garden there groweth not any fruit vpon ‘this. tree, nor in any other place, whereof as yet. I haue any vnderstanding or knowledge;”’ to which he adds, “ it 1s an hedge-tree; the Dutch call it Gheldersche Roose, in English Gelders Rose, and Rose Elder.” Thus..it appears we borrowed the inelegant name of Guelder Rose from the Dutch, to. whom we would have it returned; being better pleased with the appellation of snowball, which, its extreme whiteness and globular form resem- ble. This name is also conformable. to, the Schneeball of the Germans, and Boule de Neige of the French. - VoL. I. S 258 SYLVA EFLORIFERA. The Dutch name it Guelder, after Guelder- land, from whence they first procured it, as the additional sche (from) denotes. The gene- ric name Viburnum is thought to be from vieo, to bind; because some species of these shrubs have twigs, fit for bands. Aiton notices twelve different species of viburnum, some of which have numerous varieties. It rarely occurs, that flowers growing in — their natural state and habits, become double ; and when this adventitious circumstance takes place, it arises principally from an excess of nourishment, from the effect of cultivation, or of some occurrence of natural circumstances analogous to it. It is one of the principal objects of the florist, to double the petals of flowers as much as possible, because great rarity is more sought after than pure beauty ; and in general estimation, the beauty of a flower is augmented in proportion to the number of its petals; but the botanist turns from such flowers with disappointment, be- cause he sees one of their parts unduly aug- mented, to the diminution or total exclusion of some of the rest; for the anomaly most generally consists in the multiplications of the divisions of the corolla, by the conversion of parts of the stamens into petals; but in the guelder rose, the corollas are increased, GUELDER ROSE. 259 to the utter exclusion of both stigma and stamina; hence, this plant cannot produce seed, but as it is easily propagated by layers or cuttings, as well as by suckers, this variety is kept perfect. In its natural uncultivated state, this shrub produces its flowers on cymes, the inner ones of which are perfect flowers ; but those in the margin of the cyme are abortive, and merely consist of a large, irregular, flat petal, without any organ of fruc- tification. The guelder rose or snowball-tree, loves a moist soil; where it not only grows more rapidly than in dry situations, but produces more numerous and larger globes of its pale petals. Emblematically, this flower is used to represent the winter of age. vo? . 1260. 3 HAWTHORN, or -WHITE THORN.—.. - ¥ CRATAGUS. | 9 Natural.order, Pomacee. Rosacee, Juss. A genus of the Icosandria Digynia. class. . ‘* Now let me sit beneath the whitening thorn, And mark thy spreading tints steal o’er the dale: . And watch with patient eye Thy fair unfolding charms.” Mrs. BARBAULD.. “ Gives not the hawthorn-bush a sweeter shade — To shepherds, looking on their silly sheep, Than doth a rich embroider’d canopy To kings, that fear their subjects’ treachery ! O ! yes, it doth ; a thousand fold it doth.” SHAKSPEARE. *¢ And every shepherd tells his tale Under the hawthorn in the dale.” MIcTon. Tue garland of Flora does not possess a more charming blossom than this British hedge beauty; nor do the most luxurious spices of Asia, give a more grateful perfume HAWTHORN. 261 than this flowering shrub, which covers -its thorns with petals as: white ** As when the piercing blasts of Boreas blow, And scatter o’er the fields the driving snow.” “© Now the air Is rich in fragrance ! ! fragrance exquisite As new mown hay !” - 'Then, solitude, ’tis thine in every gale To hear celestial breathings; from each hill To quaff the balmy essence of the breeze ; To mark, in every magic change of scene, The grand diversities of nature’s laws, Yet find in all the ever-present God ! _Whose’power, sublime, with equal wonder moves “In the small floweret bursting from the earth, ‘As in the sphere-crown’d eagle’s towering wing ! Mus. -RoBINSON. 1»? It is said, that the hawthorn flowers, -not only regale the spirits by their odour, but that they have the power also. of counteract- ing poison. It has been made the happy emblem of hope, because the young and beautiful Athenian girls brought branches of hawthorn flowers, to decorate their’ com- ‘panions and friends on their wedding-day ; whilst they carried large boughs of it to the altar. ‘The altar of Hymen was lighted with torches made of the wood of this tree, and it formed also the flambeaux which lighted the 5:3 262 SYLVA FLORIFERA. nuptial chamber. The Romans had, also, bedecked themselves with branches of haw- thorn, when they seized the Sabine women ; and it was, therefore, used by them in the fasces nuptiarum. Diodorus, a Sicilian historian, who flourish- ed about forty-four years before the Christian era, tells us, that the Troglodites, when they interred the corpse of their friends or parents, tied branches of hawthorn to their bodies ; and then, laughing, strewed the body first with the branches of this shrub, and after- wards with stones, until it was covered. These simple people considered death as the morning of life, where they should never separate. Happy hope! which gave the Trog- lodites immortality, and the Grecian youths fond marriages ; may you likewise, ever be the prop of the afflicted, and of those whose friends “¢ ‘When they once perceive The least rub in your fortune, fall away Like water from ye, never found again But when they mean to sink ye.” Religion, which was given to bless mankind with cheerfulness and ‘hope, has always been converted by the crafty, in ignorant ages, into rods of terror and torches of superstition ; and they did not. fail to seize on the haw- 13 HAWTHORN. 263 thorn-bush, as an instrument with which they might impose on the credulous; thus, in some parts of France, the country people affirm to you in good faith, that the hawthorn groans and sighs on the evening of Good Friday ; and on this superstition, they have made it the emblem of lamentation. There are others, who gravely adorn their hats with a bunch of hawthorn, in the belief, that during a storm, the thunder will not dare to reach them from respect to their head-dress. It.is also related, that on the morning follow- ing the horrible massacre of St. Bartholomew a hawthorn was seen to blossom in the church-yard of St. Innocent, in Paris, which is now converted into the hall or great market. It is hardly necessary to state, how differently the two parties interpreted this phenomenon. , We have also our Glastonbury thorn stories, to match those of our neighbours. Sanctified deceit affirmed, that this thorn was the iden- tical staff of Joseph of Arimathea, the coun- sellor, who buried Christ; who, according to the tradition of the abbey of Glastonbury, attended by twelve companions came over into Britain, and founded, in honour of the blessed Virgin, the first Christian church in this island. As a proof of his mission, he is s 4 264 SYLVA FLORIFERA. said to have stuck his staff ito the ground, which immediately shot forth and blossomed ; and the vulgar for a long time believed that this tree blossomed annually on Christmas day. The Glastonbury thorn is a variety of the common white thorn, oryacantha, which blos- soms in the winter about January or ~Febru- ary, and sometimes even ‘as early as Christ- mas. Dioscorides names this shrub ‘O%vaxavba (oxyacantha), whilst Theophrastus writes it Kparasyos, or Kpatasyor, which is - supposed. to be derived from xparos, which signifies strength. It appears-to be the spima and spina appendix of Pliny. The fruit of this bush are called haws, from whence the name of Hawthorn, ‘which some suppose to be from the German’ hagedorn, the Danish hagetorn, the Swedish hagtorn, or ‘the Dutch hage. : 7 -It is often called white thorn from: an co- lour of the flower-petals, and May-bush. from its blossoms appearing in- that -month,- and ‘which were more noticed in old times before ‘the country was. embellished with somany _ early-blowing exotic shrubs ; for: on the -fes- ‘tival of Flora, on the first of May, our ancestors never failed.decorating with it the May-pole, which was permanently fixed in-or - HAWTHORN. 265 “near every town and village in the kingdom, and the boldest youth climbed to fix. the gar- Jand of flowers on the top, whilst others less courageous, hung festoons and wreaths of flowers through the. garland, or twined them ‘around the pole, “To fetche the flowers fresh, and branch and blome ; And namely, hauthorn brought both page and grome, With fresh garlandes, party bleu-and white : ., And then rejoysen in hir grete delite.” CuHaucer. ‘A king’ and queen were then elected, who regulated the entertainment, and settled dis- putes ; the former was. distinguished. by an oaken wreath, and the latter by one of haw- thorn: when dancing and other rural sports took place in honour of the goddess. This rus- tic amusement was evidently introduced by the ‘Romans, as we see in- it the remains of. their ancient games, Floralia, that were instituted in ‘Rome as early‘as:'the time of Romulus, and “which the Phoceans:and Sabines ‘observed even in earlier days. As Rome became de- generated, this feast was turned into scenes of the most. unbounded licentiousness ; and it is related that: Cato wished once to be’pre- sent at the celebration, but when he saw that ‘the deference for his presence interrupted the feast, he retired,, not «choosing to. behold 266 SYLVA FLORIFERA. the indelicate spectacles about to take place in public. This behaviour so captivated the degenerate Romans, that the venerable sen- ator was treated with the most uncommon applause as he retired, which shows that vir- tue and modesty are always respected even by vice itself. At the present time there is not a door at Athens, that is not crowned with a garland of flowers on the Ist of May ; and the youth of both sexes, with the elasticity of spirits so characteristic of a Greek, forget, or brave, their Turkish masters, while, with guitars in their hands and crowns upon their heads,” “¢ They lead the dance in honour of the May.” The French have given the elegantly ap- propriate name of Aubépine to this flowering thorn, which means the morning of the year, as aube expresses the white, or twilight, before sun-rise. Passerat, a French poet, compares these flowers to the dangers of love. ‘Belle fleur d’Eglantier, belle ‘fleur d’ Aubepine, Désirant:vous cueillir, bien souvent on s’épine ; Qui désire, en amour, cueillir de belles fleurs, Il n’y cueille souvent que regrets et que pleurs. Ly: A que, Tes g ca Douglas’s Ess. on the: Ancient and Modern Greeks. HAWTHORN. 267 In the French language it is also ealled Epine blanche ; in Spanish, Espino blanco ; in Italian, Biancospino, which names are all ana- logous to our white thorn. Religious devotees call it the noble thorn, from a belief that it was this thorn which formed the crown of Christ. The hawthorn branches are scarce less _ gaily besprinkled by Flora in the spring, than adorned by Pomona in the autumn, who nou- rishes the feathered choristers with these scarlet haws ; and on this account we would have in our shrubbery *‘ berry-bearing thorns, That feed the thrush.” And none should omit *¢‘ The hawthorn-bush, with seats beneath the shade, For talking age and whispering lovers made.” The double-blossomed hawthorn is cer- tainly one of the greatest ornaments of our pleasure-grounds, whether it be kept as a shrub, or trained as a tree. ‘There are two large trees of this description on the lawn be- fore Warwick-house, at Worthing, whose im- penetrable shade defies the beams of ‘Sol, when he darts his fiercest rays. Some of the double varieties are ‘of a fine lake colour, others are white at their first ap- 268 SYLVA. FLORIFERA. pearance, and change to a faint red as they decay. The double blossoms are less fragrant. than the common variety, which reminds us, says a French writer, of those young females who fear not. to change their simple apparel for a more gaudy dress, which adds sig to their attractions. - The foliage of the hawthorn is-of the most : we sian medium green, and ‘so highly po- lished, that the white flowers are reflected on their shining surfaces. : In. husbandry, these shrubs are - called quicksets ; and when kept well cut, they form hedges scarcely less impregnable than those composed of holly. . The clipping of hedges and trimming of trees, must certainly be ad- vantageous to the farmer, although it adds nothing to the beauty of rural ts | Crabbe ‘sind “We prune our hedges, prime our slender trees, And nothing looks untutor’d and at ease.” | . These verdant walls are greatly improved in appearance, when -an occasional branch is suffered to grow. in shape of a tree, above the shorn .hedge. _ Hawthorn hedges, appear to have come into use about:the time of Charles the Second, as Evelyn observes in his Sylva, ‘““T have.been told of a gentleman .who has HAWTHORN. 269 | eonsiderably improved his revenue, by sowing haws only, and raising nurseries of . quicksets, which he sells by the hundred, far and near. This is-a commendable industry, and any neglected corners of ground will fit this plan- tation.” | ive _ The seed of the hawthorn seldom vegetates until the second year; but if turkeys be fed with these haws, and their dung planted in drills, the young plants appear above ground the first year. Mr. Boutcher says, the haws should remain on the bushes till the end of October, when they become blackish. <“ If you do not sow them immediately, as soon as they are gathered, spread them on an airy floor for five or six weeks, till the seeds are dry and firm; then.plunge them into water, and divest them wholly oftheir pulp, by -rub- bing them between your hands with a little sand ; spread them again on the loft three or four days, till quite dry; mix them with fine loose sandy mould, in quantity not less than the bulk of the seeds, and lay them in a heap against a south wall, covering them over three or four inches deep, with soil of the same quality as that with which they are mixed. If you do not sow them in the spring, in this situation let them remain till the second spring, as the seeds, if sown, will not appear 270 SYLVA FLORIFERA. the first year. That the berries may be as equally mixed with the soil as possible, turn over the heaps once in two months, blending the covering with the seeds, and at every turning give them a fresh covering, in the winter months. They should be sown the first dry weather in February, or the begin- ning of March. Separate them from the loose soil in which they were mixed, with a wire sieve. The ground should be good, dry, fresh land, well prepared; and the seeds beat down with the back of a spade, and then covered about half an inch thick with mould; or they may be dropped in drills about eight inches apart.” The yellow-berried hawthorn, which was originally brought from Virginia, has a double recommendation to the shrubbery, as it ‘¢ Smiles in the bud, and glistens in the flower;” for its buds are of a fine yellow in the spring, and its fruit, which is the colour of pure gold, or Seville oranges, hang on the branches nearly the whole winter, giving great gaiety to the plantation ; and it is generally very pro- ductive of haws. Evergreens should never be planted with- out a few of these shrubs being intermixed, to enliven them in the winter months. The HAWTHORN. 271 variety of the common hawthorn which bears large oblong haws of a bright scarlet colour, should also be planted for effect in winter ; as its red fruit is often seen shining through the snow-bedecked branches with peculiar beauty. But the lovers of nature will always find charms in plants. Philips writes to the Earl of Dorset, from Copenhagen, ‘* Soon as the silent shades of night withdrew, The ruddy morn disclosed at once to view The face of nature in a rich disguise, And brighten’d every object to my eyes; For every shrub, and every blade of grass And every pointed thorn seem’d wrought in glass ; In pearls and rubies rich the hawthorns show, While through the ice the crimson berries glow.” It has often created our suprise that men who expend large sums of money in forming gardens of pleasure, and much time in select- ing plants, should bestow no time or atten- tion on botany, which would add so materi- ally to the gratification which flowers give them ; for without some slight knowledge of this science, they cannot enjoy the works of nature, because they do not know where to look, or the utility of what they look at. The ‘botanist looks into the flowers of the haw- thorn not only to observe the stigma and to count, the chives: which surround it; but he 2712 SYLVA’ FLORIFERA. observes the shape of the: five petals, whose concave forms protect the pollen, and mature it by acting as reflectors. He then sees them bend over their chives, and rest their heads of pollen on the stigma, which has some attractive power not yet defined. He is delighted at the regularity and order with which they dis- } charge their prolific powder, . and retire back to give place to other chives, until the whole have performed their office without confusion. He knows then that. the petals have: dis- charged their part towards the formation of the future plant, and he sees them given to the wind without regret; because he knows it is necessary for the young fruit to enjoy the juices of the plant, without its being spent any longer on the petals. Thus, ‘¢ The garden yields A soft amusement, an humane delight,” not enjoyed by others, who say, «+ But our attractions are a stronger sort, | The earliest dainties and the oldest port.” — The hawthorn is peculiarly adapted for small lawns or paddocks, where larger trees cannot be admitted. When standing singly, it often reaches to the height of twenty-five or thirty feet, with a trunk from four to eight feet in- HAWTHORN. 273 circumference. The wood is tough and good for the turner’s use, being but little inferior to box. Combs were formerly made of this wood, particularly from the root.’ A decoc- tion of the bark yields a yellow dye ; and with copperas is used to dye black. Not only the birds, but the peasants in many countries, eat the haws, and in Kamschatka they are fer- mented into wine. ” | A variety of the common hawthorn, Crate- gus oxyacantha, has been discovered in a hedge near Bampton, Oxfordshire, which produces white berries. fo” HAZEL. — See Pomarium Britannicum. VOL. I. T HEATH.—ERICA. Natural order, Bicornes. Erice, Juss. A genus of the Octandria Monogynia class. “‘ Heath, and rugged thorn, Shew the sad image ofa soil forlorn.” DELILLE. Dr. ANDERSON affirms, that wherever heath abounds, there is generated, by the rotting of the plant, a peculiar black earth, that is not only of itself sterile, but has a powerful ten- dency to make any other soil unfertile. But however our native plants may be affected by this earth, it is clearly known that we cannot cultivate with success many of the exotic beau- ties that now grace the shrubbery without giving them this soil, so congenial to their nature, nor can we succeed in raising our native heaths without giving them their native mould. Ns Theophrastus calls this plant, Epeéxy (ereike) ; from epixw, Or epeinw, frango, to break; from its HEATH. 275 supposed quality of breaking the stone in the bladder. The English name of Heath is evi- dently derived from the German Heide, though some think it is from the Latin Erica. In some parts of England it is called Ling, from the Danish Lyng. In Scotland it is called _ Hather and Heather. Their Poet of nature says, ** The moorcock springs, on whirring wings, Among the blooming heather.” These undershrubs, or miniature trees, be- neath whose roots the jumping rabbit loves to burrow, enliven the dreary common by their violet bells, or empurple the forest-bank by their numerous corollas, which are often hap- pily harmonized by the cheerful broom. « A heath’s green wild lay pleasant to his view, With shrubs and field-flowers deck’d, of varied hue; There hawthorns tall their silver bloom disclosed, Here flexile broom’s bright yellow interposed.” The foliage of the heath is evergreen, and of various and beautiful shapes, which, on inspec- tion, is found as pleasing as its singular blos- soms. It is made the emblem of solitude in the language of flowers; and thus, when the fond swain presents his mistress with a bou- quet of heath and pansies, she understands his tT 2 Q46 SYLVA FLORIFERA. heart would be at ease, if his solitude were blessed by her society. Other flowers carry the expression of “Think of me in solitude;” | and a hundred other woeful speeches are thus silently told. To such a pitch of perfection is this language carried by lovers in the East, that they employ even .the different shades to describe the different degrees of their passions. i Although the Cupid-pierced of our country generally explain the nature of their wounds by vocal or ocular language, yet we are desi- rous to meet the Erica in the shrubbery; for: “ « Wen the wild heath displays its purple dyes,” and that to considerable advantage in many — situations, fillmg up spaces between the walk and higher shrubs ; and where the grounds are extensive and hilly, little clumps, let into the lawn, with a sprinkling of thyme, give a natu- ral appearance and perfume to the spot. This genus of plants was entirely neglected in orna- mental grounds until their beautiful relatives arrived ‘from the Cape of Good Hope and other parts of the globe, to embellish our crystal gardens, where, | -“ Unconscious of a less propitious clime, May bloom exotic beauty, warm and snug, While the winds whistle and the snows descend.” | HEATH. Dit . The diminutive size of ‘these plants, their extreme beauty and great variety, fit them better for the green-house than most other plants. Our collectors have now about four hundred species of heath, of such various co-— lours and forms, as to defy the pen in descrip- tion ; for some species present us with little wax-like flowers, others with pendent pearls ; some are garnished with coralline beads, whilst others seem to mimic the golden trumpet, or tempting berries, or porcelain of bell or bottle shape ; some remind us of Lilli- putian trees, bedecked with Turkish turbans in miniature ; some have their slender spray . hung with globes like alabaster, or flowers of the cowslip form: nor are their colours less varied than their shape; whilst the foliage is equally beautiful in its apparent imitation of all the mountainous trees from the Scottish fir to Lebanon’s boasted cedar, through all the tribe of pine, spruce, and larch, tamarisk, juniper, arbor vitae, mournful cypress, and funeral yew. Stages for these plants should be made to imitate rocky mountains, and the effect would be a living landscape in minia- ture. A favourable spot should be selected in the shrubbery, and planted with native heaths, amongst which the exotic kinds could be placed during the favourable season of the ie 278 SYLVA FLORIFERA. year. On the cultivation of foreign heaths, we shall only observe, that it depends more on care than art. The British Botanist admits but of four dis- tinct native species of heath, each of which has its variety; and almost every part of Europe abounds with this denoter of a poor soil. It is common in all the temperate parts of the vast Russian empire; and although it is only regarded for making brooms in warm climates, the inhabitants of the bleak and barren mountains of Scotland, and other northern countries, make it subservient to a great variety of purposes.. The poorer inha- bitants cover their huts or cabinswith it instead _ of thatch, and it is often used to form the walls of their dwellings, by laying it alternately with a cement of earth. It often forms the bed of the hardy High- lander. In most of the western isles they dye their yarn of a yellow colour, by boiling it in water with the green tops and flowers of this plant; and woollen cloth, boiled in alum water, and afterwards in a strong decoction of the tops, comes out a fine orange colour. In some of these islands they tan their leather in a strong decoction of it. They also use it in brewing their ale, in the proportion of one part malt to two of the young tops of 14 HEATH. 279 heath. Boethius relates that this liquor was much used by the Picts. The cottagers of heathy commons cut the turf with the heath on it, and after drying it, stack it for the fuel of their hearth and their oven. Bees collect largely both honey and wax from the flowers of the heath, but it is generally of a dark co- lour. Grouse feed principally on the seeds of the wild heath, for the seed-vessels are formed so as to protect the seeds for a whole year. Cattle are not fond of heath, although goats and sheep will sometimes eat the tender shoots. - 280. HOLLY.—ILEX. Natural order, Dumose. Rhamni, Juss. A genus of the Tetrandria Tetragyma class. fe ih vies ho! the nee the holly. ” } . SHAKSPEARE. “‘ No tree in all the grove but has its charms, Though each its hue peculiar ; palersome, Some glossy-leaved, and shining in the sun.” Tue Greeks named this tree “Aypia (agria) ; which is supposed to be derived from aypios, immitis, from its being armed with prickles. The admirers of Virgil’s Pastorals will be. reminded of the poetical contentions of Co- rydon and Thyrsis, when the i/ex meets their view. “‘ Beneath a holm, repair’d two jolly swains : Their sheep and goats together grazed the plains.” DrypeEn. French naturalists have made the holly the emblem of foresight, because, they say, that the foresight of nature is admirably ex- emplified in this beautiful tree, which, when growing in its natural forest, protects itself by HOLLY. 281 numerous leaves bristling with thorns, until it arrives to about the height of ten feet, when the leaves cease to be thorny, and are per- fectly smooth and even, because it has no longer occasion to arm itself against an ene- my who cannot reach higher ; but we revere the holly branch with its spiny and highly varnished foliage, which reflects its coral berries, as an emblem that foretells the fes- tival of Christmas, and the season when Eng- lish hospitality shines in .roast beef, turkeys, and the national pudding. _ _ Tradition says, that the first ee church in Britain was built of boughs ; and that the disciples adopted the ‘leat, as more likely to attract the notice of the people, because the heathens built their temples in that manner, probably to imitate the temples of Saturn, which were always under the oak. The great feast of Saturn was held in De- cember ; and as the oaks of this country were then without leaves, the’ priests obliged the people to bring in boughs and sprigs of evergreens; and Christians, on the twenty- fifth. of the same month did the like; from whence originated: the present ‘custom. of placing holly and other evergreens in our churches and houses, to Row. the feast of Christmas is arrived. 282 SYLVA FLORIFERA- This tree appears to have been formerly called Hulver, by which name itis still known in Norfolk, and Holme, in the southern counties; as appears by the name it has given to many places where it grows na- — turally, as the Holmwood between Horsham and Dorking. Mr. Evelyn says, that the vale near his house, in Surry, was anciently called Holmesdale. We presume, the name of Holly is a corruption of the word holy, as Dr. Turner, our earliest writer on plants, calls it Poly and olp-tree; which appellation was given it, most probably, from its being used in holy places. It has a great variety of names in Germany, amongst which is Christ- dorn; in Danish, it is also called Chirstorn, ~and in Swedish Christtorn, amongst other appellations ; from whence it appears, that it is considered a holy plant by certain classes in those countries. The disciples of Zoroaster believe, that the sun never shadows the holly-tree. There are still some followers of this king of the magt to be found in the wilds of Persia, and some parts of India; who, when a child is born, throw in its face water which has been put in the bark of a holly-tree. Pliny tells us, that Tiburtus built the city of Tibur, near three holly-trees, over which HOLLY. 283 he had observed the flight of birds that pointed out the spot whereon the gods had fixed for its erection; and that these trees were stand- ing in his own time, and must, therefore, have been upwards of 1,200 years old. He also tells us, that there was a holly-tree then growing near the Vatican, in Rome, on which was fixed a plate of brass, with an inscription engraven in Tuscan letters; and that this tree was older than Rome itself, which must have been then more than 800 years (book xvi. chap. 44.). This author notices a holly-tree, in Tusculum, the trunk of which measured thirty-five feet in circumference, and which sent out ten branches of such magnitude that each might pass for a tree; he says, this single tree alone resembled a small wood. The holly grows to a considerable size, even as a timber tree,in this country, when permitted to stand. Cole tells us, in his ‘‘ Paradise of Plants,” that he knew a tree of this kind which grew in an orchard; and the owner, he says, “ cut it down, and caused it to be sawed into boards, and made himself thereof a coffin; and if I mistake not, left enough to make his wife one also. Both the parties were very corpulent ; and, therefore, you may imagine the tree could not be small.” 2984: SYLVA FLORIFERA. ' Bradley mentions, that he has seen holly- trees sixty feet in height, at a’ place called Holly-walk, near Frensham, in Surry. Dr. Withering says, that on the north of the Wrekin, in Shropshire, the holly-trees grow to a large size, and they are very common in the Chiltern division of Buckinghamshire. We have also observed it growing abundantly in some parts of St. Leonard’s Forest, in Sussex, particularly in the neighbourhood of Handcross. We presume that many noble trees of holly would be seen in this country, but for the practice of cutting all the finest young plants to make coachmen’s whips, thus leaving only the crooked branches or suckers to form shrubs. — its The holly, when it stands detached and is left to nature, forms one of the most beau- tiful evergreen trees that this or any other country. produces; its pyramidal form, its . immoveable foliage, its bright deep-green colour, and brilliant vermilion berries, con- — trast happily with almost every tree and shrub which the forest or the grove affords. | - In the shrubbery these trees have a good effect, when judiciously placed ; and although we prefer the common holly in general, we recommend the variegated kinds as great en- liveners to dark evergreens, as the yew, cy- HOLBY! 285 press, &c. They should: have the box, or ° some dwarf shrub in front, and a dark back- ground, whilst the common variety should be mixed with gayer neighbours; and the pale tints of the larch, which tower above its head, harmonize as well with this tree as does the waving birch or tremulous asp. ‘The variety with yellow berries was fitind wild near Walder Castle,.as also at Wiston, near Buers, in Suffolk ; it is a very ornamen- tal tree in the shrubbery, as its berries at a distance carry the appearance of blossoms from the month of October to March. 4 Our nurserymen now offer us nearly fifty varieties of this plant, all of which may be propagated by grafting on a stock of the com- mon sort. ‘The most curious variety is that known by the name of Hedgehog holly, from its leaves being defended in all directions by thorns ; this kind grows naturally in Canada; and- Mr. Miller considered it a distinct spe- cies, and says it continues its natural charac- ter when raised from seeds. It was first planted in the Bishop of London’s Garden, at Fullham, in the time of Compton, by Mr. George London, who is supposed to have in- troduced it from France. This ingenious nurseryman says, in his “ Retired Gardener,” 1706. “ We have great variety. of hollies 286 SYLVA FIORIFERA. in England, and have brought them to more perfection than they are in any other part of the world.” Amongst the kinds of holly which we no- ticed in the Jardin des Plantes, at Paris, we were most pleased with a variety, with a very small pointed leaf, named Aquifolium serratum, and a second, with a very broad leaf, quite free from spines, which was called Ilex balearica. Columella seems to have recommended the holly to the Romans, as a proper fence for gardens. In his tenth book he says, «* And let such grounds with walls or prickly hedge, Thick set, surrounded be, and well secured; Not pervious to the cattle, nor the thief.” Evelyn tells us, that his garden at Say’s Court was surrounded with an impregnable hedge of about four hundred feet in length, nine feet high, and five in diameter ; “ It mocks,” says this worthy author, “ the rudest assaults of the weather, beasts, or hedge-breakers ;” and it was almost the only thing belonging to his garden that was not destroyed by the Czar of Muscovy. Mr. Evelyn had lent his house to Peter the Great, in order that he might be near the Dock-yard at Deptford, during his stay in England ; and we are told that this im- HOLLY. 287 perial shipwright was so fond of being driven in a wheelbarrow over the box edgings and the parterres of the author of the Sylva, that they were entirely destroyed ; “ which” says he, “ I can shew in my now ruined gardens at Say’s Court (thanks to the Czar). ” Mr. Evelyn was evidently a good Christian, but he appears to have overlooked the pas- sage in Scripture, which says, *‘ Put not your faith in princes;” for it does not appear that the Eiiparor of Russia made him the least recompence for the devastation he committed, both in the garden and the mansion ; and he certainly was an unrewarded slave to Charles the Second. Mr. Evelyn informs us, that Lord Dacres had a Park in Sussex, environed with a holly- hedge, so as to keep in any game; and he adds, “I have seen hedges, or, if you will, stout walls of holly twenty feet in height, kept upright, and the gilded sort budded low, and in two or three places one above another, shorn and fashioned into columns and pilasters, architectonially shaped, and at due distance ; than which, nothing can possibly be more pleasant, the berry adorning the intercolum- niations with scarlet festoons and encarpa.” At the time this author flourished, land- scape gardening did not exist, and all the gar- 288 SYLVA FLORIFERA. ‘dens of Europe were laid out on geometrical ‘principles, therefore, these shorn hedges were well adapted to the formal and gloomy dig- nity of the gardens of that age of avenues, right angles, and octagons ; yet we are of opi- — nion with Mr. London, that this style is not altogether to be condemned, it is well adapted to the Palace of Versailles and of the Thuil- leries, and all edifices which unite formality with splendour.. Few trees are better adapted for the lawn than the holly, as the colour, either of the darkest or the most silvered, contrast equally — well with the turf,-and when ——— ** The cherish’d fields Put on their winter robe of purest white,” It shines still more conspicuous; for the snows glide off the slippery leaves, as if dis- solved by the fiery colour of its fruit, around which the feathered tribe crowd to claim the boon. which nature has provided .for them when other food is. buried deep beneath the fleecy waters. | _ The holly, which forms a verdant again forthe chirping tribe, protecting them from the inclemency of the stormy season, forms also a snare for their destruction ; for the fowler ob- _ tains a viscid substance from the bark of this HOLLY. 289 tree, which he prepares into birdlime, and thus entangles his prey. This tree, which loves a cold loamy soil and a sheltered situation, will thrive also where the south-west sea-blasts cut most other trees as if mown with a scythe, nor does it refuse to grow on gravel, chalk, or rocky land; and we have often seen it thrive upon brick earth, as well as upon dry hot sand and sterile heathy commons; thus ac- commodating itself to almost every soil and situation in the kingdom. Grouping itself with the yellow-broom or furze, it shines un- — rivalled in the vegetable kingdom, parti- cularly in the month of February. The holly is valuable as well as ornamental. The timber is the whitest of all the hard woods; and therefore preferred by the turner and engraver to most others, as well as by the cabinet- maker, when fashion permits the inlaying of coloured woods. It is often dyed black to imitate ebony; and it has long been in great demand at Tunbridge, in Kent, where it is manufactured into numerous fancy articles. Deer feed upon the leaves in winter, and sheep browse upon it to their advantage. Like the hawthorn, the holly sends forth its white flowers in May, and its berries, like the haws of the thorn, hang on the branches VOL. I. U 290 SYLVA FLORIFERA. all the winter, and remain in the earth two years before they germinate; unless when they have passed through the stomach of fowls, when they vegetate the first year. We have, therefore, only to give them a similar fermentation by art, which nature gives them in the body of birds, to enable us to raise young plants in one year instead of two. For this purpose, we are recommended to take a bushel of bran, and to mix it with the seeds in a tub or earthen vessel, and wet it with soft water, and let it remain undisturbed for ten days, when it will begin to ferment. It must be sprinkled occasionally with warm water to keep it moist, and in about thirty or forty days the heat of the moistened bran will put the berries into a state of vegetation fit for sowing in about a week after the fer- mentation has commenced. March is the best season for sowing this - seed, which may also be treated according to the direction given for raising hawthorns. September is the proper season for transplant- ing young hollies ; but in cold or moist soils, they may be planted safely in the spring. Mr. Evelyn says, he has raised hedges four feet high in four years, from seedlings taken out of the woods, ‘This should induce us to make more frequent trials of raising fences of HOLLY. 29) this prickly plant; and, particularly, on hilly situations, where it would afford shelter to the shepherd and his flock, agaist either ex- cessive heat or piercing storms. Old medical writers tell us, that the ripe berries are relaxing, and astringent when dried; but it is not our intention to recom- mend the robbing of the feathered tribe, to the injury of the sons of A‘sculapius, and, perhaps, of our constitutions at the same time ; nor would we willingly be deemed cre- dulous, in noticing the old customs of our forefathers, who trusted to a branch of holly for their defence against witchcraft; but this precaution has become unnecessary, since old ladies have lost their charming powers, and the spells of the youthful fair are too agree- able to be driven from us by a rod of holly. The Zlex Vomitoria, commonly called the South-sea ‘Tea, or Evergreen Cassine, is a na- tive of West Florida, Carolina, and some of the warmer parts of Virginia, and principally found on the sea-coast.. This species of holly was cultivated in England as long back as 1700, but the severe winter of 1739 des- troyed most of the plants; but it has since been raised from seeds, and is found to resist the cold otf our winters without protection, excepting that of neighbouring shrubs. — Tt WY 292 SYLVA FLORIFERA. rises to the height of ten or twelve feet, the flowers are produced in close whorls at. the joints of the branches, near the footstalks of the leaves; they are of a white colour, and the fruit is a red berry, similar to the common holly. The tea, made by an infusion of these leaves, is almost the only physic used by the natives of some parts of the New World. At a certain time of the year these people come in droves, from a distance of some hun- dred miles, to the coast, for the leaves of this tree; when they make a fire on the ground, over which they place a vessel of water, and throw into it a large quantity of these leaves. They then seat themselves round the fire, and take large draughts of the infusion until it operates as an emetic. In this manner they continue to physic themselves for two or three days; and when their stomachs are sufficiently cleansed, every one takes a bundle of the branches with him to his habitation. 2935 HONEYSUCKLE, or WOODBINE. — LONI- -CERA PERICLYMENUM. Natural order, Aggregate. Caprifolia, Juss. A genus of the Pentandria Monogynia class. ** Copious of flowers, the woodbine, pale and wan, But well compensating her sickly looks _ With never cloying odours, early and late.” : Cowprn. ———- * Or the woodbine wild, That loves to hang, on barren boughs remote, Her wreaths of flowery perfume.” Mason. Tur Greeks named this vine Tlegieaupevor, and the modern Greeks call. it, Tegiracnac. it received the generic name of Lonicera, as a compliment from Plumier to Adam Lonicer, a physician at Frankfort. Wename it Wood- bine, because it winds itself as it were in wed- lock to every tree and shrub in its neighbour- hood, which it graces by its well attired us 2O4 SYLVA FLORIFERA. branches in return for the support it borrows; from hence it is styled the Bond of Love. «The woodbines mix in am’rous play, And breath their fragrant lives away.” In the time of Edward the Third, it appears to have been emblematical of true love, as Chaucer, the father of English poetry, says, ** And tho that were chapelets, on.hir hede, , Of fresh wodebind, be such as never were ‘To love untrue, in word, in thought, ne dede; But ay stedfast; ne for plesance ne fere, Tho that they shulde hir hertes all to tere, Woud never flit, but ever were stedfast, Till that hir lives there assunder brast.” This climbing plant always turns from east to west, and so firmly does it hold its sup- porter in embrace, that we often see young trees and branches indented like a screw by the pressure. As the gentle Desdemona clung to the dark warrior, so have we seen the pri and supple stalks of the wood- bine endeavour. to embrace the trunk of the sturdy oak, and in the bold attempt it is often seen thrown off to perish on the ground, unless caught. by humbier shrubs, who seem proud to display the flowery festoons which the monarch, of our woods had rejected. So have we seen modern Desdemeonas turn HONEYSUCKLE. 995 from support within their reach, aspiring to climb by means too large for their grasp ; they have been drawn up, in weak hopes, by a slight hold, which the first winds severed throwing them to the earth, too feeble to catch the most lowly plant. We love to see shrubs “o’er-canopied with luscious woodbine,” but in the oak of the forest. its beauties wither in the shade of its too grand supporter. The name of Honeysuckle, we presume, was given to this plant, from the trick of children, who draw out the trumpet-shaped corollas from the calix, to suck the honey from the nectary. This flower has what is termed a tubulose nectary, and the sweet liquid laying at the bottom is secure from the reach of the in- dustrious bee; but the hawk-moth, a species: of the sphinx, hovers over these flowers in the evening, and with its long tongue extracts the honey from the very bottom of the flower. Other insects that have not the advantage of so lengthened a tongue, tap the tubes of the flower, by making a puncture towards the bottom, and then revel in the luxurious sweet. The nectary of a flower is that part of the blossom which contains a liquid honey, and we are inclined to think that this saccharine u 4 296 SYLVA FLORIFERA. juice is distilled from the plant, and conveyed to the nectary, for the double purpose of giv- ing nourishment to the parts of fructification and decomposition to the farina, “These, nature’s works, the curious mind employ, Inspire a soothing melancholy joy.” The woodbine has a light and elegant, but negligent air, better calculated to ornament rural groves than to embellish stately gardens, and a more suitable climber for the rustic porch than the modern portico. Cunning- ham has given it to the Cottage of Content. ‘¢ Green rushes were strew’d on her floor, Her casement sweet woodbines crept wantonly round, And deck’d the sod seats at her door.” The perfume of the honeysuckle being of the most agreeable kind, it should be fre- quently met with in the shrubbery; when planted near the fore-ground it ought to be kept cut as a shrub, which, as well as giving neatness, ensures a succession of flowers. In the wilderness walks, it should have liberty to climb the trees, and hang its wreaths from branch to branch; and where the ivy gives verdure to the bare trunk, there should the woodbine display its blossoms and shed its odours ; as also over the rural arbours of the HONEYSUCKLE. 297 present day, as it did o’er those of Shak- speare’s. ‘¢ Beatrice, who e’en now Is LM SER in the woodbine coverture.” Much Ado. The nurserymen of this country now offer us eighteen distinct species of the lonicera, besides many varieties of the common wood- bine. The Dutch honeysuckle, Lonicera - Belgica, may be trained with a stem, and formed into a head like a tree ; the flowers of this variety are of areddish colour on their out- sides, and yellowish within, of a very delightful odour. ‘There are two varieties of the Dutch honeysuckle, one of which is called the Long- blowing, as it blossoms in June, July, and Au- gust; the other succeeds it, and is therefore called the Late Red-blowing Honeysuckle, L. serotina. Both of these should be planted in considerable quantities. ‘The latter kind has only been introduced about a century ; for in 1715 it was esteemed a great curiosity, and is supposed to have been first brought to this country by the Flemish florists, who were then in the habit of coming over annually with plants for sale. The Virginia trumpet honeysuckle, Loni- cera sempervirens, was cultivated in_ this country by John ‘Tradescant, jun. as long back 298 SYLVA FLORIFERA. as 1656, and although it is without odour, it is a desirable evergreen climber, the bright scarlet flowers being so ornamental from May to August. This kind of honeysuckle requires a south aspect, and a sheltered situation. ‘The branches being, weak and rambling, it is gene- rally trained to a wall; but it has a better effect when its branches are interwoven with the cypress, or any other evergreen, which will shelter it, from the north, and support its gay trumpets to advantage. The common honeysuckles will grow in almost any soil or situation, and there are few inmates of the shrubbery more desirable than these odoriferous stragglers, which perfume the air to a great distance, particularly in the morning and evening. ‘They are easily propa- gated, either by layers or cuttings; but the latter are preferred. The cuttings should have four joints, three of which should’ be buried in the earth, and the fourth above the surface, from which the shoots are produced. September is the best month for planting the woodbine cuttings. How greatly would our hedges be improved by a few cuttings being stuck in the ground; how little the trouble, the expence none,—but the delightful air would well repay the labour. We should have passed over the medicinal HONEYSUCKLE. 299 qualities of this plant, had we not accidentally opened the work of a student in physic, who flourished in London, in the year 1681;, and. as we conclude it is but little known to the students of 1823, we extract. it for the sole purpose of benefiting the faculty—by a laugh. This learned A‘sculapian author says, under the head ‘ Woodbind, “It is a plant. so common, that every one that hath eyes knows them; and he that hath none cannot read a description if I should write it. Doctor Tradition, that grand introducer of errors, that hater of bzisili; that lover of folly, and that mortal foe to Doctor Reason, hath taught the common people to use the leaves of flowers of this plant in mouth waters ; and by long continuance of time hath so grounded it in the brains of the vulgar, that you cannot beat it out with a beetle. All mouth waters ought to be cooling and drying, o, but honey- suckles are cleansing, consuming, and digest- ing, and therefore no ways fit for ya tions: Thus Doctor Reason. And, if you please, we will leave Doctor Reason awhile, and come to Doctor Experience, a learned gentleman, and his brother. ‘Take a leat and chew it in your mouth, and you will quickly find it likelier to cause a sore mouth, or throat, than to cure it. It is an herb of Mercury, 300 SYLVA FLORIFERA. and appropriated to the lungs; the celestial Crab claims dominion over it, neither is it a foe to the Lion: if the lungs be afflicted by Jupiter, this is your cure.” | In later days, wisdom has shone equally con- spicuous in one of the physicians of the cele- brated Johanna Southcott. ‘‘ There was a time, when we beheld the quack, On public stage, the licensed tribe attack ; He made his labour’d speech with poor parade, And then a laughing zany lent him aid; But now our quacks are gamesters, and they play, With craft and skill, to ruin and betray: With monstrous promise they delude the mind, And thrive on all that tortures human kind. Void of all honour, avaricious, rash, The daring tribe compound their boasted trash.” CRABBE. The leaves of the woodbine are the favour- ite food of the goat, hence the French have named this plant, Chevre-feuille (Goat’s-leaf.) 301 HORNBEAM, or HARDBEAM-TREE. —CARPINUS. Natural order, Amentacee. Balanifere, Juss. A genus of the Monecia Polyandria class. ‘“¢ Art thrives most Where commerce has enrich’d the busy coast. He catches all improvements in his flight, Spreads foreign wonders in his country’s sight.” CowPER. Tue introduction of so many exotic trees and shrubs within this last century has ba- nished some of our native plants from the grove, but fashion, who reigns with arbitrary power in these dominions, has entirely swept away the hornbeam, which composed the labyrinth, the maze, the alleys, the verdant galleries, arcades, porticoes and arches of our forefathers; and which formed the leafy walls that divided their stately gardens into stars, goose-foot avenues, and devices as numerous as geometrical figures are various. ‘These have all been banished with the hornbeam, which taste has outlawed from the modern plantation for having so long usurped a pre- 302 SYLVA FLORIFERA. cedency in the groves of our ancestors; and it is now deemed high treason, in the statutes alamode, to name either this tree or a right angle in the dominions of a modern British gardener. *«* Say, shall we muse along yon arching shades, Whose awful gloom no brightening ray pervades ?” The clipping of trees, we are told by Mar- tial, was first introduced by Cneius Matius, a friend of Augustus; and in the account which Pliny the younger gives of his Tusculan gar- dens, we read that the trees were planted to form circles and semicircles, and that the box- trees were cut with shears, so as to form ani- mals, obelisks —and even the name of Pliny was represented in verdant box. This style of laying out gardens seems to have been followed on a larger scale by Le Notre, who planned the. celebrated gardens of Versailles, which cost Louis XIV. between eight and nine hundred thousand pounds sterling; and which are well calculated to display courtly pomp, and that kind of magnificent revelry which this monarch indulged in. But to us this heavy grandeur appears more gloomy than the thickest forest, excepting when the alleys and walks are crowded with company, and the waterworks in full action; then every beholder must be HORNBEAM. 3038 struck with the splendour of the scene, which the dress of the French ladies is particularly calculated to improve; for the gaiety of their costume relieves the sombre appearance of the trained hornbeam and clipped elm. Their light gauze, gay ribbons, feathers and flowers, substitute blossoms; for whilst one seems to display a basket of roses on her head, others carry nodding tyruses of lilac,. or waving laburnum; and with the mixture of poppies, nasturtiums, and sunflowers, with which they are bedecked, you forget that the trees are without blossom; for here you see the gay rank of scarlet soldiers, and there files of green elms; here waves the winged leaves of the acacia, there bows the no less pliable head of the courtier; here dances the jet d’eau in air, there drops to the earth the well-taught curtseying belle; here monsters spout out water to cool the air, while flattery as abundantly sends forth her streams to refresh the vain. in one spot we see the proud officer flaunting round the brazen image of Venus, whilst the opposite angle shows the sentimental dame reclining on the pedestal of Mars or Jupiter. Agricola, a German author, says, this scene gave him a foretaste of Paradise. But when we lett it, and entered that part of the gardens which has been lately laid out im the style of an 304 SYLVA FELORIFERA. English shrubbery, we felt as much relieved as one who escapes from the drawing-room on court days to his own domestic hearth. «« For many a floweret blossoms there, to bless The gentle loveliness whose charms imbue Its border.” Bradley, who flourished in this country when the hornbeam was in its highest estimation, says, “ Versailles, is the sum of every thing that has been done in gardening.” The gardens of the Tuilleries and the Champs Elysées were modelled after the gardens at Versailles, and the taste soon reached this country. Evelyn, in his discourse on the hornbeam-tree, says, “ That admirable espalier hedge, in the long middle walk of the Lux- emburgh garden at Paris, than which there is nothing more graceful, is planted of this tree ; _ and so was that cradle, or close walk, with that perplex canopy which lately covered the seat in his Majesty’s garden at Hampton Court.” This author speaks in terms of ecstasy of the clipped hedges at Old Brompton Park, then occupied by London and Wise, two eminent nurserymen of that age of clip- ping and cutting. | Lord Bacon seems to have been the first who tried to reform the national taste: “ I * HORNBEAM. 305 do not like,” says this great man, “ images cut out of juniper or other garden stuff; they are for children ; and as for the making knots or figures, with tien coloured earths, they be but toys.” G. Mason considers the efficacy of Veru- lam’s ideas to have been the introduction of classical landscapes, which banished the iree whose birth and parentage we are about to relate. Its education and death having already been noticed, we shall extract what Gerard has registered as to its name and early residence in these kingdoms. He says, «“ The hornbeame-tree is called in Greeke Zuyia, which is as if you should say coniugalis, or belonging to the yoke, because it serueth well to make Guys% of ; in Latin Juga, yokes, wherewith oxen are yoked together, which are also, euen at this time, made thereof in our owne countrie; and, therefore, may be Englished yoke od It is called of some Carpinus, and Zugia; it is also called Betulus, as if it were a kind of birch; but myselfe better like that it should be one of the elmes. The hornbeame-tree groweth plen- tifully in Northamptonshire; also in Kent, by Gravesend, where it is commonly taken for a kind of elme. In English, it is called VOL. 1. X 306 “SYLVA FLORIFERA. Hornbeame, Hardbeame, Yoke elme, and in some places Witch hasell.” The generic name of this tree is derived from carpere (to crop) ; and the English name of Hardbeam and Hornbeam, from the hard and horny nature of the wood when old. It is sometimes called the Horse-beech, from the resemblance of the leaf. The French call this tree Charme and Charmille ; and most of the cabinets and di- visions of their great gardens are formed of these trees. It is very common in many parts of Eng- land; but is rarely suffered to grow to a timber tree, being generally pollarded by the country people: but Dr. Hunter says, he has seen some of these trees in woods upon a cold stiff clay, that have been nearly seventy feet high, with large noble stems, perfectly straight and sound. Its propagation is recommended on cold barren hills, and in such situations where few other trees will prosper; and it is found to resist the winds better than most other timber; nor is it slow in growth: but it is recommended to raise it from seed, upon the same soil and situation that it is in- tended to-be planted on... The seeds should be sown in the autumn, soon after they are HORNBEAM. 307 ripe; for if they be kept out of the ground until the spring, the plants will not come up till the following year. The foliage of the hornbeam is very similar to that of the elm, strongly nerved and of a bright green; it begins to expand about the end of March, and it often re- mains on the branches until the spring, thus forming an excellent shelter for more tender trees. The flowers are in full blossom about the end of April: the male flowers are dis- posed in a cylindric ament, and hang like the catkins of the hazel; the female flowers or ament arise from a leafy calix, but having an appearance like a young hazel-nut ; and from whence, and its catkins, it has been called Wych-hazel: but the female flowers are also disposed in a long ament, which gives them a nearer resemblance to hops; and on which account, one variety is called the Hop Horn- beam, Carpinus Ostrya, or Orientalis. This variety was first cultivated in England, in 1739. It was first observed in Italy, and is very common in Germany, growing with the common hornbeam. The Virginian flowering hornbeam, C. Ame- ricana, was first introduced in 1812. Lin- nzeus observes, that the timber of the hornbeam is very white; and tough, and x 2 308: SYLVA FLORIFERA. harder even than that of the hawthorn, and. capable of supporting great weights. He also: tells us, that the inner bark is much used in: dyeing wool yellow. | The: hornbeam,. by its. mode of shila out its branches, preserves itself well from the: buttings of deer; so that clumps of this tree: are proper in pdt both on account of their: beauty and. oath : : Ee % 309 JASMINE. — JASMINUM. Natural order, Sepiarie, Jasminee, Juss. A genus of the Diandria Monogynia class. ‘* The jasmine, throwing wide her elegant sweets, The deep dark green of whose unvarnish’d leaf Makes more conspicuous, and illumines more The bright profusion of her scatter’d stars.” CowPeEr. _ Tris sweet emblem of amiability is always acceptable wherever we meet it. It graces alike, the lowly casement of the lone widow, and the proud parterre of the rich and gay; the bosom of the village lass, and the oriental vase of the saloon. Its modesty pleases, and its fragrance charms, in all situations; like those whose happy dispositions and amiable manners seem to make them the bond of society, by the grace and facility with which they accommodate themselves to all situations and circumstances. The pretty face of the jasmine flower is, only surpassed in loveliness, by the fair whose countenance is. brightened by amiability. x 3 310 SYLVA FLORIFERA. «¢ And brides, as delicate and fair As the white jasmine flowers they wear, Hath Yemen in her blissful clime.” T. Moore. Thecommon jasmine, Officinale, which grows naturally at Malabar, is registered in the Hortus Kewensis as a native of the South of Europe; but we are opinion that it did not leave the East until the taking of Constanti- nople by the Turks, whose fondness for flow- ers would induce them to transport it to the land they conquered in 1453. It certainly would not have passed unnoticed by Pliny and other ancient authors, had it either erown naturally, or been introduced to that country previous to their time. Dioscorides is the only Greek author that notices it ; and as he has given no description of the plant or flower, but only tells us that the Persians ob- tained an oil from a white flower, with which they perfumed their apartments during their repasts, it is probable he only became ac- quainted with the oil of jasmine during his attendance as physician on Antony and Cleo- patra, in Egypt, whose unbounded luxury would naturally call this essence from the land of odours. This author calls it laczw, from iv (viola), and cour (odor), on account of its fragrance ; and from whence the name of Jas- 14 JASMINE. 311 mine has been copied by all European lan- guages. In early days this was mutilated by the English into Gethsamine, Jesemin, and Jasme. It is also the Jasmin, as well as Kajan, and Zambach of the Arabians. At what time this agreeable plant first perfumed the British atmosphere is uncertain: Mr. Aiton says, in 1548 ; but we consider it to have been much longer acquainted with our soil, as Dr. Tur- ner calls it our comen jsefemine in his work, part of which was printed in 1557; and it ap- pears to have been so common in the time of Gerard, as to have been thought a native plant by some persons. This excellent au- thor says, “ Gelsemine is fostered in gar- dens, and is vsed for arbors, and to couer banquetting houses in gardens; it groweth not wilde in England, that I can vnderstande of, though master Lyte be of another opi- nion: the white jasmine is common In most places of Englande.” If we may believe a Tuscan tale, we owe our thanks to Cupid for the distribution of this pretty shrub. We are told that a Duke of Tuscany was the first possessor of it in Europe, and he was so jealously fearful lest others should enjoy what he alone wished to possess, that strict. junctions were given to Xi 312 SYLVA FLORIFERA. | his gardener not to: give a slip, nor.so much as a single flower, to any person. ‘To this command the gardener would. have been faithful, had not the god of love wounded him by the sparkling eyes of a fair but por- tionless peasant, whose want of a little dowry and his poverty alone. kept them from ‘the hymeneal. altar. On the birth-day of his mistress, the gardener presented her with a nosegay ; and to render the bouquet more ac- ceptable, he ornamented it with a branch of jasmine. The Povera Figla wishing to pre- serve the bloom of this new flower, put it into fresh earth; and the branch remained green all the year, and in the following spring it grew, and was covered with flowers; and it flourished and multiplied so much under the hand of the fair nymph’s cultivation, that she was able to amass a little fortune from the sale of the precious gift which love had made her ; when, with a sprig of jasmine in her breast, she bestowed her hand and her wealth on the happy gardener of her heart. And the,Tuscan girls, to. this day, preserve the remembrance of this adventure, by invariably wearing a nosegay of jasmine on their wedding-day ; and they have a. proverb, which says, that a young girl, worthy of wearing this nosegay, JASMINE. 313 is rich enough to make the fortune of a good husband. * Let us then cultivate more abundantly what love has scattered so happily ; for the supple and pliant branches of the jasmine accommo- date themselves to numerous situations in the shrubbery. *“¢ Flere jasmines spread the silver flower, To deck the wall, or weave the bower.” Corron. They should be woven into the trellised arch or alcove, climb the palisades, rest on the branches of the broad-leafed laurel, cover the dead wall, and run gaily wild over the shrubs of the wilderness walks ; whilst, obedient to the scissors of the gardener, they are formed into bushy shrubs and little trees for the near approach to the dwelling, where in the morning and evening their star-topped tubes send forth a shower of odours that embalm, refresh, and purify the surrounding air. ‘“¢ Many a perfume breathed From plants that wake when others sleep, From timid jasmine buds, that keep * As this story is told of a Grand Duke of Tuscany, in 1699, we conclude it was the Goa gre i and not the common sort. 314 SYLVA FLORIFERA. _ Their odour to themselves all day, But, when the sun-light dies away, Let the delicious secret out To every breeze that roams about.” T. Moore. ‘Then how serene ! when in your favourite room, Gales from your jasmines soothe the evening gloom.” CRABBE. From. the tube of this eastern flower the bee extracts its most exquisite honey ; and the painted butterfly i is never seen to more ad- vantage, than when resting on the delicate petals of the white jasmine. When the jasmine was first introduced into France, it was thought to require all the heat they could give it ; it next occupied a place in the orangery, and at length exposed to the open garden, where it thrives as freely as a native plant, and still holds the situation of a favourite with the Parisian belles, and is al- ways the most saleable bouquet that les dames de la halle bring to their gay market. We have often been astonished that our cottagers, who possess little gardens, should not cultivate flowers for sale, particularly the jasmine, which is so hardy and so easily pro- pagated; and with which they might even form their fences, or suffer it to run over their hedges, without taking away any part of their potatoe ground. JASMINE. 315 In the market they would find one bunch of jasmine flowers would bring them as much money as three cabbages or a bunch of tur- nips.— As long back as the time of Charles the Second, Evelyn says, “ Were it as much em- ployed for nosegays, &c., with us, as it is in Italy and France, they might make money enough of the flowers ; one sorry tree in Paris, where they abound, has been worth to a poor woman near a pistole a year.” And at the pre- sent time a great deal of money is made by the nurserymen in that neighbourhood, who trim them up with ahead on a single stem, and then pot them, and send them to the flower- market covered with blossoms, where they soon find customers amongst those who are wise enough to prefer familiar beauty to costly rarity ; and you see it there flourishing equally in the cobbler’s window and the palace bal- -cony. The Turks cultivate the jasmine for the sake of the branches, of which the tubes of their summer tobacco-pipes are as invari- ably made, as those for the winter are formed of the cherry-tree. As the jasmine does not ripen its seed in our climate, it is increased by laying down the branches, which take root in one year ; which may then be cut from the old stock, and planted where they are to remain. It is also 316 SYLVA’ FLORIFERA. propagated by cuttings, which should be planted. early in the autumn, and the earth covered with sand, ashes, or sawdust, to keep the frost from entering the ground. In situations where it is necessary to prune this plant, it must never be done until the end. of March, or when the frost is past. It should also be observed, that the flowers are always produced at the extremity of the same year’s shoots, which are often cut off in the summer, by those who are ignorant of its na- ture ; and thus the plant is deprived of the power of treating us with its fragrant flowers. The common yellow jasmine, J. fruticans, is a native of the South of Europe; yet it did not reach this country so early as the white jasmine, as Gerard tells us, in. 1597, that it had not then been seen in this country; and Mr. Martyn is therefore mistaken in his state- ment, that it was cultivated by Gerard in that year. Parkinson tells us, in 1629, that the yellow jasmine “ will well abide in our London gar- dens, and any where else.” This shrub is easily increased by suckers or layers; but being deficient of odour, it is much less cultivated than formerly. Sheep eat the leaves and young branches of this shrub with great avidity. JASMINE. 317 The Italian yellow jasmine, J. humile, pro- duces larger flowers than the common yellow jasmine, and is therefore preferred in the shrubbery ; where it requires a south aspect and sheltered situation. It was first cultiva- ted with us in 1730, but its native soil still remains unknown ; it acquired its name from being sent out of Italy with oranges, trees, &c. This kind is generally propagated by bud- ding, or inarching it upon the common yellow sort, as these plants are more hardy than those raised by layers. We shall pass over the more tender spe- cies of jasmines, which are the inmates of the conservatory; only observing, that the florist cannot. bestow his labour on a more delightful genus of plants. We now reckon eleven distinct species of jasmines, besides varieties of several of them. , - The ancients employed the berries of the jasmine in their pretended divinations ; and the oil obtained from the flowers was used in the baths of females. | 318 _ JUDAS-TREE. — CERCIS. Natural order, Lomentacee. Leguminose, Juss. A genus of the Decandria Monogyma class. ‘© And where Judzea’s tree its bloom expands . Of purple hue, to fancy’s eye it shows The fertile banks where hallow’d Jordan flows.” , DELILLE. Ir this tree possessed no other recommend- ation to a situation in the shrubbery, than that of being the identical species of tree on which Judas Iscariot hanged himself, we would have passed it over in neglect, however we might have been condemned by those credulous devotees who often believe the absurdities which have had no other birth than that given to them by their own lunatic brain. Gerard, who is less given to superstitious stories than most authors of his day, says, « This is the tree whereon Judas did hang himselfe ; and not upon the elder-tree, as it is said.” At that period, it had no other Latin JUDAS-TREE. 319 name than that of Arbor Jude ; and Parkinson observes, in 1640, that * we have no other English name to call it by than Judas-tree, until some other can impose a more apt for it.” We have been told of an impudent fellow, who makes money by christening the fruit-trees of other nurserymen with names of his own; and thus, not only passing off the offspring of others’ industry for his own progeny, but creating a second name for every apple and pear that leaves his marshy grounds. We are most desirous to see this handsome tree more frequent in our plant- ations ; and sooner than it should be lost for - want of a name, we would beg one from the Castilians, who call it Arbold Amor (Tree of Love). The French name it Arbre de Judée. It is, therefore, probable that we received both the tree and its name from that country, where they have now bestowed a second name on it; viz. Gainier, from the likeness the pods bear to the sheath of a knife: but as the common shape of their knives differs so materially from those of our own country, their sheaths would not suit us ; therefore, we object to their new appellation for this tree, and. henceforward call it Tree of Love, with a hope that it will oftener flourish by the Tree of Life. 320 SYLVA FLORIFERA. This tree reaches about the same height as the laburnum ; with which, and the guelder rose, it makes. an admirable group, as its papilionaceous flowers, being of a rich purple, contrast delightfully with the gold colour of the one, and the snowy balls of the other. Its flowers appear in May, before the leaves have: fully expanded ;. and they come out of the old branches, and often from the stem of the tree, in large clusters. It is also a de- sirable neighbour for the hawthorn, flowering at the same time, and blending purple with silver in the happiest manner. The foliage is scarcely less ornamental than the flowers, as its form and colour are peculiar to this tree alone; the leaflets being reniform and. alter- nately pinnate, of a pale bluish-green on the upper surface, and sea-green underneath. And it is observed, that they are never injured by insects ; but the birds are fond of the flowers, and often destroy them when fully open. The bark on the branches is of a purplish brown, and the branches grow alternately, like the leaves. The French. gardeners often prune and shorten the branches, which renders the tree more: productive of flowers. It loves a light soil.and a sunny situation ; and grows so freely in the South of France, Spain, and Italy, as to be considered a native of 10 JUD AS@TREE:' : . 321. these places by modern travellers, although the ancients do not appear to have noticed it. It grows naturally in Japan, and was cul- tivated by Gerard, at. Holborn, in 1596, who does not mention it as a rare tree; therefore its introduction to this country most. pro- bably was much earlier than his time. The flowers of the Judas-tree are fre- quently eaten in salads, from their having an agreeable poignancy. The wood of this tree is beautifully veined with black and green ; and, as it takes a fine polish, it would be an acquisition to the cabinet-maker. There are varieties of this tree with white flowers, and also with flesh-coloured blossoms, but they have not the beauty of the bright purple kind; and we possess so few trees that yield a purple or blue flower, that it should be cultivated more particularly on that account. These plants are propagated, by sowing their seeds upon a moderately hot bed, to- wards the latter end of March, or in a warm sunny border; and the young plants require a slight protection from the frosts of the following winter. We have introduced a species of this tree from North America, called the Canada Judas- tree, Cercis canadensis. It is also named the Red bud-tree, from the colour of the flower- VOL.- 1. x 322 SYLVA FLORIFERA. buds in the spring ; but this tree is not so ors namental, either by its flowers or foliage as our favourite tree of love. The latter species was introduced in 1730. The young branches are said to dye wool of a very fine nankeen colour. IVY.— HEDERA HELIX. Natural order, Hederacee. Caprifolia, Juss. A genus of the Pentandria Monogynia class. *¢ T love the ivy-mantled tower, Rock’d by the storms of thousand years.” CUNNINGHAM. Tuis symbol of a generous friendship attaches itself generally to the wretched. ** Thus stands an aged elm, in ivy bound, Thus youthful ivy clasps an elm around.” PARNELL. And often when death itself has smitten its protector, it restores to him again the honours of the forest or the shrubbery, where he lives no longer, by decorating his sapless branches - with festoons of undecaying verdure and gar- lands of winter flowers. It seems to cling closer to the trunk, screening its death-struck supporter by its glossy foliage, as if to prevent the fatal blow of the axe. In this situation the black-headed yellow- hammer loves to nestle, giving cheerfulness to the shade by its bright plumage. y 2 con 324 SYLVA FLORIFERA. The ivy so much revered by the ancient bacchanalians, was called by the Greeks Kiros and Kirres (kissus and kittus), from an infant boy of that name, whom it is pretended that the god of wine transformed into this plant. The Athenians called Bacchus himself Kittus. According to Pliny, he was the first that wore a crown, and this crown was composed of ivy. Silenus the demi-god, who became the foster-father of Bacchus, is also represented as wearing a coronet of ivy, as may be seen in an antique statue (No. 468), in the Louvre, at Paris. We are told that Silenus was crowned with, and wore a wreath of flowers. This mistake, we presume, has originated from the ivy leaves being formed into rosets, and a clus- — ter of ivy berries placed in the centre of each, with which his temples are surrounded, and which, in diminutive-sized antique groups of bacchanalians, can only be distinguished from flowers by close inspection, and comparison with those on a larger scale. At the marriage ceremonies of the Greeks, when the young couple arrived at the temple, the priest presented them with a branch of ivy, symbolical of the tie which should unite them; and the omission of which, at. the wedding of Proserpine, was said to cause the Cocytus to flow only with waves of tears. IVY. 325 The metamorphosis of Acetes’s mariners into dolphins, and his vessel into a forest, by Bacchus, is too elegantly described by Ovid not to be recalled to mind when we see this climber ascending lofty trees. ' The mighty miracle that did ensue, Although it seems beyond belief, is true. The vessel, fix’d and rooted in the flood, Unmoved by all the beating billows, stood; In vain the mariners would plough the main With sails unfurl’d, and strike their oars in vain; Around their oars a twining ivy cleaves, And climbs the mast, and hides the cords in leaves; The sails are cover’d with a cheerful green, And berries in the fruitful canvass seen ; Amidst the waves a sudden forest rears Its verdant head, and a new spring appears.” Some ancient writers would have us believe that the ivy was first brought into Greece by Bacchus, from Thebes, which is said to have been the birth-place of the jolly god. Alexander the Great, who could transplant whole nations with ease, could not, it is said, with all his efforts, make the ivy of Greece grow in the vicinity of Babylon. It is related that when he visited the mountain where Bacchus was supposed to have been brought up, that his army saw the ivy for the first _ time since they had left Macedonia, to over- Y 3 326 SYLVA FLORIFERA. run the east; and that at the sight of this plant, which recalled the endearing remem- brance of their country, they immediately began to make themselves crowns of its branches, and to sing hymns in honour of Bacchus. Pliny tells us that when Alexander returned from India, all his soldiers wore chaplets of ivy on their heads ; and it is generally supposed that the too frequent libations which the son of Philip made to the god of wine, caused his early visit to the shades of Pluto. Crowns of ivy were consecrated to Apollo before the metamorphosis of Daphne into a bay-tree, and Virgil says, *‘ Fierce tigers Daphnis taught the yoke to bear, And first with curling ivy dress’d the spear.” Past. iv. The ivy, which of old crowned alike the brow and the bowl of Bacchus, has been ingeniously used, in later times, to represent faithful friend- ship; and a sprig of this plant, with the pathetic device, “ I die where I attach myself,” cannot fail of being understood, as well as one which was adopted by the friend who fol- lowed the fortunes of an elevated exile, whose device was ivy entwining a felled tree, sur- rounded by the motto, “his fall cannot de- . tach me.” : { ; 5 | IVY. 32% It is recorded that Ptolemy Philopater ordered the figure of a leaf of ivy to be im- printed on the Jews who forsook their religion. When this heathen monarch visited Jerusa- lem, the Jews forcibly prevented his entering their temple ; for which insolence the tyrant determined to extirpate the whole nation, and ordered an immense number of Jews to be exposed in a plain, and trodden under the feet of elephants; but, by a supernatural instinct, the generous animals turned their fury not on those who had been devoted to death, but upon the Egyptian spectators. This circumstance terrified Philopater, and caused him to behave with more than common kind- ness to a nation that he had so lately devoted to destruction, and on which account, we pre- sume, he upheld their religion. It is to be feared that we should be taken for a nation of bacchanalians, were all those who have dissented from the church to dis- tinguish themselves by a sprig of ivy on their forehead. We presume that the ancients merely se- lected the ivy, as emblematical of youth and freshness, to represent Bacchus who is thus described by Ovid: *«‘ Opheltes heard my summons, and with joy Brought to the shore a soft and lovely boy, y 4 328 SYLVA FLORIFERA. With more than female sweetness in his look, Whom, straggling in the neighb’ring fields he took. With fumes of wine the little captive glows, And nods with sleep, and staggers as he goes.” It is but natural to suppose that the god who presided over their wine should be a favourite 1 image, and that they should there- fore hold the ivy in superstitious reverence. It was pretended by them that a cup formed of the wood of ivy, would prove the purity of wine, which, by means of its pores, would con- sume the wine, and leave the rejected water in the vase, free from mixture. | It is singular that the ancients should select a crown for the god of wine from a plant to which the wine is said to have so strong an antipathy. “‘ The prudent will observe what passions reign In various plants (for not to man alone, But all the wide creation, nature gave Love and aversion). Everlasting hate The vine to ivy bears.” It is easy to make ourselves acquainted with those supposed antipathies of plants, as by attending to nature we should find, that two climbing plants cannot well exist on the same spot; their roots being of a similar nature, would defraud each other of their natural nourishment, and. the prop which they seek S- a) a | IVY. S929 to climb would be overpowered, and the vine would perish in the continual shade of the ivy ; therefore, the one has. been wisely or- dained to flourish in the sun, and the other to grace the shade. Man cannot, therefore, bring together with advantage what has been separated by the Creator in infinite wisdom. Plants are often extolled or condemned, as they are brought forward by celebrity or kept back by caprice. We introduce varieties whose virtues are undiscovered; and suffer others to languish uncultivated on the bosom of the desert, whose beauties or qualities have not been sanctioned by the hand of fashion. The fate of man is similar. An accidental circumstance often sets mediocrity of talent upon a tottering pinnacle; whilst superior ability decays unseen and unknown in a neglected shade, or a single accident of fortune keeps him from the society he was ordained to ornament. Like the ivy, he can exist when he has fallen ; but, like this plant, he produces neither flowers nor fruit, unless supported to a height above the level of lowly herbs. Of the virtues of ivy little is known. Some pretend that it prevents intoxication; and hence it entwined the brow of Bacchus to 330 SYLVA FLORIFERA. keep off the fumes of wine. Cato directs that it should be given to cattle when other fodder is scarce ; and we have known it given to sheep with apparent advantage, at a season when the snow had buried other green food. The ivy is, as generally as improperly, styled a parasitical plant. We consider it merely a fixing climber, and that parasitical plants are such, as not only subsist entirely on the juices of the branches of other trees, but which have no situation allotted them on the earth, as the misletoe and several others. The ivy draws its nourishment from the earth, as well as the oak or the elm to which it clings. The filaments which it sends forth from its branches are merely grapples, by which it fixes itself to the uneven part of the bark of trees or stone buildings; and that it receives no nourishment from these supposed roots is evident, for if the roots which enter the earth be destroyed, the plant will decay notwithstanding the numerous fixtures it has made, but not so when trailing on the earth ; then these filaments become roots like other plants that are propagated by layers, and it can be separated from the parent plant with- out danger. The Bignonia radicans, Ash- leaved trumpet flower, adheres to buildings and trees by numerous thready fibres in the same IVY. 331 manner as the ivy; but this elegant North American climber has never been considered a parasitical plant. It is true, that the ivy is often known to fix its root in the decayed . trunk of a tree or in the crevices of old buildings, but other plants do the same. We have found a hazel-tree growing on the top of a church tower at Henfield, in Sussex ; an apple-tree on the leads of Romsey church, in Hampshire ; a Scotch fir on a stone building called Gog and Magog, near Petworth; and we have gathered flowers of the valley, which were growing out of the crevices.on the highest pinnacle of the church of St. Sulpice at Paris. These were all offsprings of accident and not parasitical plants. That ivy must injure young growing tim- ber by confining its trunk too closely, and by also drawing the same juices, is probable and generally admitted ; but in some situations it has secured timber also by preserving the trunk from those severe frosts, which by con- gealing the sap and causing it to expand, often split the body of the tree, and thus render the timber only fit for fire-wood. We are not without instances of trees having actually pe- rished when they have been stripped of this protecting leaf, and suddenly exposed to cold. In ancient times such a circumstance would 332 SYLVA FLORIFERA. have been accounted for by telling us that the sympathy was such as to cause the death of the tree through grief. The ivy was not a favourite plant with Pliny. He says it injures plants wherever it adheres, that it breaks sepulchres of stone, and undermines city walls; but with all our attachment to this great iain we shall recommend it to the shrubbery, with the cau- tion, however, of not planting it so as to overrun the walls of the dwelling, where it will cause damp, and create litter by the nu- merous insects that will seek its shelter. ‘We would rather that the shrubbery should ap- pear green from the dwelling, than that the house should be seen clothed in that colour from the walks. There are certain styles of building which admit it better than others ; but we prefer even the Norman tower and the Gothic arch when unadorned with this climber, which breaks the harmony of the parts, and gives it too much the appearance of a clipped hedge, which is particularly conspicuous in the south front of Arundel Castle, which stands on a bold eminence sur- rounded by noble trees, and therefore is in- jured in its boldness by the ivy that has been added with so much care. Ruined towers, broken archways, and un- ee ee IVY. 333 inhabited monasteries, are the works of man, with which it should be blended. It is also an admirable cover for walls and other fences which surround the shrubbery; and it may be properly used to ornament the lodges where the mansion is either in the castle or Gothic style. We have often seen it give a picturesque appearance to cottages; but we also prefer to see a white cottage through the branches of green trees, than to look on a green-clad cottage in a naked plain. Plantations within view of the mansion, or the walks that surround it, are generally laid out more for effect: than with an idea of the’ pro- fit to be derived from the timber; and in such situations, particularly where evergreens do not abound, the ivy may be cultivated so as to add considerably to the beauty of the prospect,and even within the boundaries of the shrubbery, where other evergreens have been destroyed by the drip or shade of lofty trees, which should always form a back-ground, the ivy may be suffered both to cover the surface and climb the trunks to great advan- tage. When trained to a stake, and suffered to form a head, it becomes one of the most or- namental of all the evergreens; for the sin- gular complication of its pliable branches, and 354 SYLVA FLORIFERA. the vivid green of its foliage, together with its black clusters of berries, form a mass of beauty that is exceeded by few exotic plants. There is a singular character to be observed in the natural history of the ivy: it never produces flowers whilst trailing on the ground, but when it can climb to display its simple umbels, it flowers amply, and pro- duces fruit abundantly ; and so long as it can find support upwards, its stalks remain slen- der and flexible, but when it has reached to the top of its support, they shorten and be- come woody, and the top becomes bushy like atree. Its leaves also take a different shape. They are no longer lobed as at first, but as- sume a more oval shape, and expand to a larger size: thus the plant seems to prune its branches when it would be no longer safe to ramble, and to spend its leery sap in enlarging its leaves. Its principal time of flowering is in Octo- ber; and the bees and flies seem to know that it is one of the last offerings that Flora will make them, by the eagerness with which they buzz around it. The berries are not perfect before Febru- ary, nor ripe before April; but between these months, the wood-pigeon, the thrush, and the blackbird feast on the frnit continually. IVY. $35 The ivy is found wild in most parts of Europe; but Linnzeus observes, that it is by no means common in Sweden; Kalm remarks, that he never saw the common ivy in North America, excepting in one instance, against a stone building, which was most probably brought from Europe, and planted there. Ac- cording to Thunberg, it is found in Japan ; but he observes, that its leaves are never lobed there as with us. Our nurserymen furnish us with a variety with white or silver striped leaves, and ano- ther with yellowish leaves, both of which may be ornamentally employed. Modern practice has abandoned the use of this plant in medicine, but it is not long since the leaves were in use, to put over issues to keep them cool and free from inflammation. Pliny enumerates the various disorders for which it was anciently used ; but he remarks, that in physic, the ivy is both doubtful and dangerous. A decoction of ivy leaves was for- merly used to dye the hair of the head black, which was a colour the ancients seemed as anxious to possess as our modern grandmamas are to retain flaxen locks. The roots of the ivy are used by leather- cutters to whet their knives upon. ° , 336 SYLVA: FLORIFERA. The ivy is’ propagated by its. trailing branches, which send forth roots at every joint. It is also increased by planting cuttings in a shady border, in the autumn, or by sowing the seeds in April, as soon as they are ripe, and which must be kept. shaded and moist, or they will otherwise remain a year in the ground before they germinate. JUNIPER See Pomarium Britannicum. END OF THE FIRST VOLUME. Lonpon : Printed by A. & R. Spottiswoode, New-Street-Square. \ { : F 7 > \ a \ ¢ i ¢ eS . mf . y - . i is Waa, ©, pC 4 a, Sh >* i we « RS f "3 1853 00041 6078