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AMERICAN FORESTS.
AMERICAN HE American mind has so long been trained to regard a tree as a natural
enemy that the prejudice seems now as difiicult to eradicate as to uproot one of the giants of the “ forest primeval.” As a shelter for a savage foe, as an obstacle to be removed before corn could be
planted, it fell before the axe of the sturdy pioneer of the Western World; yet the needless destruction of the for ests was an idea inherited from our Anglo-Saxon ancestors, who, long before they heard of the discovery of a new continent, had swept down with unspar
ing hand the forests of England and Scotland. It was not until the time of Charles the First that an alarm was sounded through Great Britain that the
woods were falling too rapidly, and that im mediate and active measures were needed
to prevent those islands from becoming entirely denuded of trees and unfit for the habitation of man. While the Puritans in New England and the Cavaliers in Virginia had begun, on American soil, another act of the
sylvan drama they had learned so well at
FORESTS.
this work so well that his name will be kept for ever green in the woods of his native land. Evelyn’s books are now seldom met with except in old libraries ; but his true love of nature and quick perceptions, his earnest loyalty and desire to improve his age and generation, make these volumes, though old-fashioned in language and ob solete in the botanical learning of the present time, some of the pleasantest summer-reading in the language. Evelyn wrote of what he saw and knew; and
though sometimes affected by the super stitions that hung around woodcraft in that age, he brought together so much practical knowledge that, even in the greater light of the nineteenth century, his general rules are followed and his conclusions considered correct. Nature
is ever the same: “ Oh there is not lost One of earth‘: charms: upon her bosom yet, After the flight of untold centuries,
The freshness of her far beginning lies."
We have alluded to the wholesale de struction of the British forests, yet it is
home, the people of the mother-coun try were bewailing the scarceness of
true that the early Saxon kings protected
wood for ship-building, for fuel and
tious reverence paid to it by the Druids, but on account of its acorns, which were
other domestic purposes. The first need of a country, and that an island which had just made itself mistress of the seas, was felt in her ships : timber could
not be had at the royal dock-yards.
the oak, not only because of the supersti
the food of the serfs and the swine.
The
earliest recorded notice of the oak tree in England is found in the Saxon Chroni cles. About the end of the seventh
century, King Ina, among the few laws
Government took the alarm, and John Evelyn was appointed by the Royal So ciety, at the command of the king, to repair, if possible, the waste of the
and destroying these trees penal, and
forests.
those who did so clandestinely were
Evelyn was a country gentleman, and,
which he enacted to regulate the simple economy of his subjects, made injuring
fined thirty shillings.
The very sound
although a courtier, he wa.s a true lover
of the axe was sufiicient conviction, and
of sylyan pursuits and a practical man.
the man who felled a tree under whose
Not only by lectures and books did he
shadow thirty hogs could stand incurred a double penalty. Woods of old were
awaken the attention of his countrymen, but he taught by example how a private
gentleman could serve his country by planting and protecting trees, as well as
by fighting for his king.
He performed
valued according to the number of hogs they could fatten; and in times of scarcity the acorns (or mast) were eaten by man, even after the introduction of rye and