<h2>CHAPTER IV<br/> <span class="small">ON FORESTS</span></h2>
<p class="hanging">The forests of the Coal Age—Monkey-puzzle and ginkgo—Wood, its uses,
colour, and smell—Lasting properties of wood—Jarrah and deodar—Teak—Uses
of birch—Norwegian barques—Destruction of wood in
America—Paper from wood pulp—Forest fires—Arid lands once fertile—Britain
to be again covered by forests—Vanished country homes—Ashes
at farmhouses—Yews in churchyards—History of Man versus
Woods in Britain.</p>
<p><span class="dropcap2">W</span>HAT was the first tree like? That is a very difficult
question to answer. Perhaps the first forests
were those of the great coal period, of which the
remains, buried for untold ages in the earth, became the
coal which we now burn.</p>
<p>The flames and red-glowing heat of a fire are the work of
the sunlight which fell in these long-past ages through a
steamy, misty atmosphere, upon these weird, grotesque
vegetables, unlike anything which now exists upon the earth.
Their nearest allies amongst living plants are the little club-mosses
which creep over the peat and through the heather
in alpine districts.</p>
<p>Of course no one can say exactly what these coal forests
were like. But although some modern authorities have
questioned the general accuracy of the descriptions of Heer
and others, yet, as they have not given anything better in
the way of description, we shall endeavour to describe them
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</SPAN></span>
according to our own beliefs, and as they probably existed
in the Lanarkshire coalfield and other places in Britain.</p>
<p>In that gloomy mirk of the Carboniferous epoch, an
observer (if there had been any) would have dimly perceived
huge trunks rising to sixty or eighty feet and divided at the
top into a very few branches. All branches were covered over
by comparatively quite small leaves. Not a bad idea of the
Sigillarias, Lepidodendrons, etc., which made the forest and can
be obtained by carefully looking at a pan of Selaginella
such as one finds in almost every botanical garden, and
imagining this to be eighty feet high. Through the bottomless
oozy slime which formed the ground, horizontal runners and
roots penetrated in every direction. Great fern-like plants
might be observed here and there. Sluggish rivers meandered
slowly through these forests, carrying silt and refuse
(their deposits are our Cannel coals). In the water and in
pools, or perhaps in the mud, were curious waterferns with
coiled-up crozier-like leaves. Perhaps horsetail-like plants
of huge size might have formed great reed-beds to which
those of to-day are as a plantation of one-year-old firs is to
a pine forest that has lasted for a century.</p>
<p>Fishes and crustaceans, or lobster-like creatures, crawled
and squattered through the slime, pursued by salamander-like
animals with weak limbs and a long tail. Some of
these latter were seven to eight feet long. Millipedes,
scorpions, beetles and maybugs existed, and huge dragonflies
preyed on them.</p>
<p>But there is one very ancient group of trees, the Araucarias
or Monkey-puzzles, which are by no means uncommon
even now. The ordinary one (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Araucaria imbricata</i>) is often
planted in the British Isles, and it has, if you look closely
at it, a most peculiar appearance. It is like the sort of tree
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</SPAN></span>
that a child would draw; it is a clumsy attempt at one, and
very different from the exquisite irregularity of the ash or
oak.</p>
<p>Its leaves are especially curious: they cover the branches
very closely, and are hard, rigid, and spiny. Its cones,
though of the nature of pine-cones, are yet quite unique.
The seeds are edible, and used to be an important article of
diet to the Indians on the slopes of the Chilian Andes,
where monkey-puzzle forests used to exist. This of course
is a very out-of-the-way region; other species of Araucaria
are found scattered about the world in a most perplexing
manner. One kind grows in Norfolk Island, in the Pacific;
another occurs in the inner mountainous districts of Brazil;
there are some in Australia and others in New Caledonia.</p>
<p>But in the Jurassic period of geology, in the age of
ammonites and gigantic lizards and crocodiles, Araucarias
were the regular, ordinary trees. They grew all over Europe,
and apparently as far north as Greenland, and, indeed, seem
to have existed everywhere.</p>
<p>Perhaps the spiny leaves discouraged some huge lizard,
perhaps Atlantosaurus himself (he was thirty feet high and
one hundred feet long), from browsing on its branches.
Perhaps the Pterodactyls, those extraordinary bird or bat-like
lizards, used to feed upon the seeds of the monkey-puzzle,
and carried them in their toothed jaws to New
Caledonia, Australia, and Norfolk Island. Other improved
types have driven the monkey-puzzles from Europe, Asia, and
Africa, and taken their places, but in out-of-the-way districts
of South America and Australia they are still able to hold
their own.</p>
<p>An ally of theirs, the Ginkgo or Maidenhair tree, seems to
have been extremely common in certain geological periods.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</SPAN></span>
To-day it has almost entirely disappeared. A few trees
were discovered in certain Chinese temples, where they had
been preserved as curiosities for centuries, but it is almost
extinct as a wild plant. The Bigtree group (<i>Sequoia</i> p. <SPAN href="#Page_47">47</SPAN>)
was a companion of the Ginkgo in its flourishing period.
So also were the Sago palms or Cycads. All the ordinary
trees, Pines, Oaks, Beeches, and the like, did not appear upon
the earth's surface till a much later period.</p>
<p>The most important economic product of trees is the
timber which they furnish. Wood, as we have tried to show
in the last chapter, has been always of the greatest importance
to mankind. It is easily worked, durable, buoyant, and
light, and it is used for all sorts of purposes.</p>
<p>Silver fir,<SPAN name="FNanchor_21" id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</SPAN> which is accustomed, when growing, to be continually
swayed and balanced by the wind, is preferred for
the sounding-board of pianos and for the flat part of violins,
whilst Sycamore or hard Maple is employed for the back and
sides of the latter.</p>
<p>But there are enormous differences in different kinds of
woods. The colour of wood varies from white (Beech),
yellow (Satinwood), lemon-yellow and bluish red (sap and
heartwood of Barberry), to dark and light brown mottled
(Olive), black (Persimmon), and dark brown (Walnut). Some
woods have a distinct smell or perfume. Cedarwood, Sandalwood,
Deal, and Teak, are all distinctly fragrant. The
Stinkwood of South Africa and the Til of Madeira have an
unpleasant smell.</p>
<p>More important in practice are the differences in the hardness
and weight of wood. The Ironwood of India cannot be
worked, as its hardness blunts every tool. It requires a
pressure of something like 16,000 lb. to force a square-inch
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</SPAN></span>
punch to a depth of one-twentieth of an inch in <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Lignum vitæ</i>.
Even Hickory and Oak (if of good quality) require a pressure
of 3200 lb. to the square inch to do this. On the other
hand the Cotton tree of India (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Bombax malabaricum</i>) has
exceedingly soft wood. It is quite easy to drive a pin into
the wood with the fingers.</p>
<p>Some woods are far too heavy to float: many tropical
woods are especially very weighty. Perhaps the Black Ironwood,
of which a cubic foot weighs 85 lb., is the heaviest of
all. But the same volume of Poplar, Willow, or Spruce does
not weigh more than 24 lb.</p>
<p>There are many ancient and modern instances of the
extraordinary way in which timber lasts when at all carefully
looked after. Thus the Cedar which "Hiram rafted
down" to make the temple of Solomon (probably Cedar of
Lebanon) seems to have been extraordinarily durable. Pliny
says that the beams of the temple of Apollo at Utica were
sound 1200 years after they were erected.</p>
<p>Cypress wood (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cupressus sempervirens</i>) was often used to
make chests for clothes because the clothes moth cannot
penetrate it, and it also lasts a very long time. There is a
chest of this wood in the South Kensington Museum which
is 600-700 years old. The Cypresswood gates of Constantinople
were eleven centuries old when they were
destroyed by the Turks in 1453. The fleet of Alexander
the Great, and the bridge over the Euphrates built by
Semiramis, were made of Cypress. This wood seems to have
been of extraordinary value to the ancients, and was used
for mummy cases in Egypt, for coffins by the Popes, as well
as for harps and organ pipes.<SPAN name="FNanchor_22" id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</SPAN></span>
Perhaps the most valuable woods are Box, which is used
for woodcuts, and Walnut, which used to be highly prized
for gun-stocks, as much as £600 having been paid for
a single tree.</p>
<p>But the most interesting histories of trade in timber
belong to the commoner and more usual woods. The great
woods of Jarrah (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Eucalyptus marginata</i>) cover 14,000
square miles of Australia, but they are being rapidly cut
down and sawn up into small blocks to be carried right
across the world in order to form the pavement which
London cabmen and cab-horses prefer to any other.</p>
<p>One remembers also the beautiful Deodar forests of
Afghanistan, and the Himalayas. Logs of deodar were floated
down the rivers to form bridges or temple pillars in Srinagar,
the capital of far Cashmere. Nowadays great "slides" are
made, winding down into the valleys from the recesses of the
hills. When winter approaches, water is sprinkled on the
logs which make the slide; this freezes and forms a slippery
descending surface, down which the deodar timber rushes till
it reaches the low ground, where it is cut up into railway
sleepers and takes part in the civilizing of India.</p>
<p>The fragrant Teak has an oleoresin which prevents the
destructive white ants from attacking it; it is the most
valuable timber for shipbuilding, and grows in many places
of India, Malaysia, Java, and Sumatra. It floats down the
rivers of Burmah, coming from the most remote hill jungles,
and elephants are commonly used at the ports to gather the
trunks from the water and pile them ready for shipment.</p>
<p>The Birch is carried all the way from Russia to Assam
and Ceylon, in order to make the chests in which tea is sent
to England and Russia (native Indian woods are also used).
It is also used in the distillation of Scotch whisky, for
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</SPAN></span>
smoking herrings and hams, for clogs, baskets, tanning,
dyeing, cordage, and even for making bread.</p>
<p>But one of the most curious and interesting sights in any
seaport is sure to be an old white Norwegian or Swedish
sailing barque or brigantine. She will have a battered, storm-beaten
appearance, and is yet obviously a comfortable home.
The windows of the deck-house may be picked out with a
lurid green. The tall, slowmoving, white-bearded skipper and
his wife, children, and crew, not to speak of a dog and cats,
have their home on this veteran "windjammer." She carries
them from some unpronounceable, never-heard-of port in
Norway, all over the world. You may see her discharging
a cargo of deal plank, through the clumsy square holes
in her stern, in a forgotten Fifeshire village, in Madagascar,
in China, or in the Straits of Magellan. All her life
she is engaged in this work, and her life is an exceedingly
long one, to judge from the Viking lines on which she is
built.</p>
<p>Moreover, her work is done so economically that it used
to be much cheaper to use her cargo in Capetown than to
utilize the beautiful forests of the Knysna and King
Williamstown.</p>
<p>But there are not wanting signs that the forests of Norway,
of Sweden, and even those of the United States, are
doomed.</p>
<p>It is said that seven acres of primeval forest are cut down
to supply the wood which is used up in making the paper
required for one day's issue of a certain New York journal.
What a responsibility and a source of legitimate pride this
must be to the journalists! Let us hope that the end
justifies the means.</p>
<p>Boulger calculates that in 1884 all the available timber
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</SPAN></span>
from 4,131,520 acres of Californian Redwood was used in
making the sleepers of the railways then existing in the
United States.</p>
<p>He finds that no less than 18,000,000 acres of forest are
necessary to keep up the supply of sleepers for the old lines
and to build new ones.</p>
<p>So that, if we remember the wood required for paper,
firewood, and the thousand other important requisites of
civilized man, the United States must soon exhaust her
supply and import wood.</p>
<p>Then will come the opportunity of British North America.
The Southern forest of Canada, which extended for 2000
miles from the Atlantic to the head of the St. Lawrence, has
indeed gone or is disappearing into pulpwood and timber,
but there is still the great Northern forest from the Straits of
Belleisle to Alaska (4000 miles long and 700 miles broad),
and in addition the beautiful forests of Douglas Spruce and
other trees in British Columbia covering 285,000 square miles.</p>
<p>It is the wood-pulp industry which is at present destroying
the Canadian forests. The penny and halfpenny papers, and
indeed most books nowadays, are made of paper produced by
disintegrating wood: it is cheap, and can be produced in
huge quantities; nevertheless it is disquieting to reflect that
probably nineteen-twentieths of the literary output of the
twentieth century will be dust and ashes just about the same
time (some fifty years) that the writers who produced it reach
the same state.<SPAN name="FNanchor_23" id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</SPAN></p>
<p>Yet, considering the amount daily produced to-day, the
future readers of fifty years hence who are now in their cradles,
may consider this a merciful dispensation of Providence.</p>
<p>One very curious use of wood may be mentioned here.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</SPAN></span>
Near Assouan, on the First Cataract of the Nile, one discovers
broken granite or syenite needles, which had been
intended by the ancient Egyptians for monuments. Where
the broken pillar lies, there are rows of wedge-shaped holes
cut in the rock.</p>
<p>They used to drive in wedges of dry wood and then wet
them with water. The expansion of the wood split the rock,
though this is hard granite or syenite. Very often the process
failed because the stone cracked. The same method is said
to be still used in some quarries.</p>
<p>The destruction of the forest is really necessary. Most of
the corn land and rich pasture of the world has been at one
time forest. It could scarcely be such fertile soil if it had
not been for the many years during which leaf-mould fell on
it, and the roots broke up and penetrated the subsoil
below. Canada, Russia, and the United States are now passing
through the same experience as that of Great Britain
in the time of the Romans, Saxons, and Danes.</p>
<p>But there is terrible waste by fire.</p>
<p>When the trees become dry and withered in the height of
summer in either India or the United States, some careless
tramp may throw aside a lighted match. If a fire once
starts, it spreads with enormous rapidity; great clouds of
smoke roll over the surrounding country, and every village
sounds the alarm. Everybody rushes to help and try to
stop the conflagration, or if too late hurriedly saves whatever
he can get of his possessions. His log hut and all the
accumulations of years of saving may be turned into a
heap of ashes in a very few minutes.</p>
<p>But the crackling of the leaves and the flaming twigs and
scorching bark make such a volume of fire that nothing
which man can do is of any avail.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</SPAN></span>
Of course every beast, every bird and insect is in the
greatest possible danger.</p>
<p>This is how a fire in New Zealand has been described by
Mr. William Satchell:—<SPAN name="FNanchor_24" id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</SPAN></p>
<p>"For a while it seemed that the battle must go to the wind,
the fiery monster withdrew, lay hidden, roaring angrily in the
dry heart of the woods; then insidiously he stretched forth
his glittering arms, first one, then another, and locking the
shuddering trees in an irresistible embrace, sprang once again
erect. In an instant the whole bush from edge to edge
became a seething, rocking mass of flames.</p>
<p>"'Fire! Fire!'</p>
<p>"Then, insignificant no longer, transfigured rather beyond
all living possibilities of loveliness, the bush stood revealed
to its centre. It became less a fire than an incandescence,
waxing in brilliance to the point when, as it seemed, it must
perforce burst into indistinguishable flame. Every leaf and
twig of that fairy forest was wrought and hammered in virgin
gold, every branch and trunk was a carved miracle of burnished
copper. And from the golden leaves to the golden
floor, floatingly or swiftly, there fell an unceasing rain of
crimson flame petals, gorgeous flame fruits. Depth after
depth stood revealed, each transcending the last in loveliness.
And as the eye sought to penetrate those magic interiors
there seemed to open out yet farther vistas, beyond belief
beautiful, as of the streets of a city incorruptible, walled
and towered, lost in the light of a golden incomparable
star."</p>
<p>"'Fire! Fire!'</p>
<p>"In the face of that vision of glory the cry rang out with
all the ineptitude and inappropriateness of the human
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</SPAN></span>
weakling. On one side the titanic forces of nature, inexorable,
eternal; on the other the man, frail of body, the
creature of an hour, matching himself against them.</p>
<p>"'Fire! Fire!'</p>
<p>"Sheltering his face from the insufferable heat, the Swede
hammered madly at the solid house-door. At the back, now
utterly unapproachable, the kitchen, the roof, and a part of
the main wall were already in flames. A few minutes—five
at the most—would complete the demolition of the house.
To right and left the great trees one after another went off
like rockets, the roar of their burning foliage shaking the
very earth. A deafening crashing of falling timber came at
intervals from the bush beyond."</p>
<p>In some countries the destruction of the forests has had a
very serious effect on the climate. The rain which falls upon
a forest is partly absorbed by the leaves, and but a very small
part of it is carried off by burns and streams: most sinks
down into the forest soil, and is only gradually given back
again after being taken in by the tree roots and evaporated
by the leaves.</p>
<p>But bare hills denuded of wood allow most of their rain to
rush down to the sea in dangerous spates of the rivers and
burns, and then the ground becomes afterwards very dry
and burnt up. There are very many countries now barren
and desolate because they have been robbed of the beautiful
forests which once covered the springheads and mountain
valleys.</p>
<p>Perhaps Palestine is one of the worst instances. But it is
when we remember Babylon, Nineveh, and all the cities of the
coast of Asia Minor, as they were even a thousand years
ago, and compare their present barren, desolate condition,
that the full meaning of mountain forests becomes clear.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</SPAN></span>
Where once there were thriving, prosperous cities with
enormous populations, now the goats graze or a few miserable
peasants carefully husband the water of a few miserable
streams. The same thing has happened in Mauritius, in
the Cape Verde and Canary Islands, and in many other places.</p>
<p>But men are now beginning to see how dangerous the
destruction of forests may be, and in many countries and
especially in Britain, new forests are being planted. Perhaps
in time we may grow in Britain so much timber that we shall
gain something like £32,000,000 a year, which is what we
spend on imported woods.</p>
<p>At present plover, whaups, snipe, and grouse, or useless red
deer, inhabit what was once the Caledonian forest, and every
thousand acres of such land nowadays supports perhaps one
shepherd and half a gamekeeper. But when it is planted
again with woodlands it will afford a living to at least ten
foresters, and surely a whole gamekeeper as well.</p>
<p>In the lowlands of Scotland and in England one often
discovers, in walking over the hills, remains of cottages and
farmhouses which have now vanished. The people have
gone into the towns, and the healthy yeomen and farmers'
boys have become weak-chested factory hands and hooligans.
Such sites of old farms can often be recognized by a patch
of nettles, and especially by eight or nine ash trees. These
were always planted near the houses to give a ready supply
of wood for spears. The ash, "for nothing ill," as Spenser
puts it, would be available also for repairing the handles of
tools, carts, etc. Some authorities say that it was the law of
Scotland that these eight or nine ash trees should be planted
at every "farmtoon."</p>
<p>So also, when forests began to vanish in England, laws
were made to the effect that yew trees should be planted in
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</SPAN></span>
every village churchyard. Probably this was to ensure a
good supply of bows for the English archers, who, like the
Scottish spears, were the best soldiers of their kind in
Europe.</p>
<div><SPAN name="a_forest_fire" id="a_forest_fire"></SPAN></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG class="mw" src="images/i_066.jpg" alt="" /> <div class="caption"> <p class="smcap">A Forest Fire</p> <p>Such fires frequently occur in New Zealand, and the Maoris have to fly for their lives.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>So that if we try to compare the conditions of man and
of the forests in Great Britain from the earliest days, it
would be something like this:—</p>
<p>1. When the earliest inhabitants lived on shell-fish, seabirds'
eggs, nuts, and fruits, almost the whole country was
covered by oak, Scotch fir, or birch forests.</p>
<p>2. When man was a hunter of reindeer and other deer,
horses, cattle, and birds, he used much wood for fires and
for building his lake dwellings.</p>
<p>3. When man kept herds of swine to eat acorns, black
cattle, goats, and ponies, there would be many clearings
and a great deal of open wood in which the cattle roamed
about.</p>
<p>4. When man grew corn and other plants, the forest
vanished altogether. Dr. Johnson said he scarcely saw a
tree between Carlisle and Edinburgh. Yet first the King,
then the Barons, had their parks and woodlands for preserving
game. Moreover, the yews in the churchyards of
England, and the ash trees by the Scotch farmtoons and
peel-towers, were carefully looked after.</p>
<p>5. When great towns arose, and men became factory hands
and steel workers, rich men began to make plantations in
the lowlands, and to use the depopulated highlands for
grouse moors and deer forests.</p>
<p>6. When men become wiser than they are now, it will be
seen that great forests are necessary on all waste-land and
barren places, both to keep a healthy country population
and because it will pay.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />