<h2>PLATE II<br/> THE BEECH</h2>
<p>In the south of England there lived a holy hermit
named St. Leonard whose hut was surrounded by
a glade of noble Beech trees. The saint loved the
beautiful trees, but by day he could not sit under
their shady branches because of the vipers which
swarmed about the roots, and by night the songs
of many nightingales disturbed his rest. So he
prayed that both the serpents and the birds might
be taken away, and from that day no viper has
stung and no nightingale has warbled in the
Hampshire forests. So we read in the old story
books. There are many such legends connected
with the Beech tree. It has grown in this country
as far back as we have any history, and it is often
called the mother of the forest, because its thickly
covered branches give shelter and protection to
younger trees which are struggling to live.</p>
<p>The Beech is a cousin of the Oak. It is a large,
handsome tree, with a noble trunk and widely
spreading branches which sweep downward to the
ground, and in summer every branch and twig is
densely covered with leaves. No other tree gives
such shade as the Beech, and in a hot summer day
how tempting it is to lie underneath the branches
and watch the squirrels glancing in and out among
the rustling leaves and tearing the young bark.</p>
<p>In early spring you will recognise the Beech
tree (1) by its smooth olive-grey trunk. Only the
Beech tree has such a smooth trunk when it is
fully grown, and in consequence, every boy with
a new knife tries to cut his name on its bark.
In summer the young bud (3) of next year’s leaf
is formed where each leaf joins the stem. All
winter time you can see slender-pointed buds (4)
growing at the end of every twig, and when April
comes each of these pointed buds has become a
loose bunch of silky brown scales. Inside these
protecting scales is hidden the young leaf bud, and
soon the winter coverings unclose. For a short
time they hang like a fringe round the base of
the leaf stalk, but they quickly fall off and strew
the ground beneath. The young leaves inside are
folded like a fan, and they have soft silky hairs
along the edges. How lovely they are when
open! Each leaf (2) is oval, with a blunted point
at the end, and the edges are slightly waved.</p>
<p>At first the leaf colour is a clear pale green,
through which the light seems to shine; and
there is nothing more lovely than a Beech tree
wood in early May when the young leaves are
glistening against the clear blue sky. But as
summer comes nearer the leaf colour darkens, and
by July it is a deep, glossy green. You can then
see very distinctly the veins which run from the
centre to the edge of every leaf. These leaves
grow so thickly that no stems or branches can be
seen when the tree is in full foliage; and they are
beautiful at all seasons. When autumn comes,
bringing cold winds and a touch of frost, then the
Beech tree leaves change colour: they seem to
give us back again all the sunshine they have
been storing up during summer, for they blaze
like the sunset sky in myriad shades of gold, and
red, and orange. In windy open places, these
beautiful leaves soon strew the ground with a
thick carpet that whirls and rustles in every
breeze. But in sheltered glades, and especially in
hedges, the leaves will hang all winter till they
are pushed off by the new spring buds, and they
glow russet red in the December sunshine, like
the breast of the robin that is singing on the twig.</p>
<p>At every stage the Beech tree is a thing of
beauty, and it is one of England’s most precious
possessions.</p>
<p>The young flowers appear about the same time
as the leaves, and, like many other trees, the Beech
has two kinds of flowers. The stamen flower (6)
has a long, drooping stalk, from the end of which
hangs a loose covering of fine brown scales,
with pointed ends. Beyond this scaly covering
hangs a tassel of purplish brown stamens, eight
or twelve, or more, each with a yellow head.</p>
<p>On the same twig, not very far distant, you find
the seed flower (5). This grows upright on a short
stout stalk which bears at the end a bristly oval
ball (7). At the top of this bristly ball you see six
slender threads waving in the air. These rise from
two seeds which are enclosed in the bristly covering.
By and by the ball opens at the top and
forms a cup with four prickly brown sides, each
lined with silky green down. Inside the cup are
two triangular green nuts which are the fruit (8).
These nuts become dark brown when they ripen,
and on windy days they are blown in thousands
from their coverings and fall to the ground, where
they lie hidden among the rustling brown leaves.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p class="ph1"><SPAN id="plate3"><span class="smcap">Plate III</span></SPAN></p>
<p class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i_029.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p class="caption">THE BIRCH<br/>
1. Birch Tree in Autumn<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Seed Catkin</span><br/>
4. Stamen Catkin<span class="gap">5. Winged Seed enlarged</span><span class="gap">5<span class="allsmcap">A</span>. Winged Seed natural size</span></p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>In old times people called these Beech nuts
Beech-mast or food, and herds of pigs were taken
to the Beech woods to feed on the nuts, which are
said to contain oil. But pigs prefer to eat acorns,
and nowadays the Beech nuts are left to fatten
the squirrels and dormice, and the thrushes and
deer, except those which children gather to
string into necklaces.</p>
<p>No grass or plant will grow below the Beech
tree branches: the leaves are too close together
to let the sunshine reach the ground; also the
roots are greedy, and are said to use up all the
nourishment.</p>
<p>About a hundred years ago a Beech tree was
found in Germany whose young leaves were dark
purple red, and never became green. Young plants
from this strange tree were much sought after,
and now in many parts of the country you see red
or copper beeches, as we usually call them.</p>
<p>Beech wood is used in various ways. In France
the peasants make it into shoes—wooden shoes
called sabots, which keep out the damp better than
those made of any other wood. It is also used in
ship-building and for making cheap furniture; but
Beech wood is not nearly so valuable as that of the
Oak, or Ash, or Elm.</p>
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