<h2>PLATE VII<br/> THE LIME OR LINDEN</h2>
<br>“The Lime, a summer home of murmurous wings.”
<br>—Tennyson.
<p>The Lime or Linden (1) is one of the most
familiar trees in our large towns. It is very
hardy, and you find it planted by the side of our
smoky streets, where it seems to thrive in spite
of the clouds of sooty dust that cover its delicate
leaves.</p>
<p>But if you wish to know what a Lime tree
really looks like at its best, then you must find
one growing in some country park where there
is space, and fresh air, and plenty of sunshine;
then you will see how beautiful a tree it can be.
The Lime is a tall, stately tree. It has many
slender branches closely covered with leaves, which
have each a long stalk. In old trees the branches
often bend down close to the ground, but the
sunshine always succeeds in finding its way under
the Lime tree branches, and it flickers on the
grass as it never does beneath the Beech tree
boughs.</p>
<p>In winter the Lime tree is difficult to recognise,
although there is one feature you may notice: its
bare stems and twigs are very black against the
sky, and many of the branches hang so awkwardly
that they look as if they were dead. But go to the
park in spring, and at once you will know which
is the Lime tree. Every little twig is coloured a
delicate shade of olive green tinged with crimson,
and bears many small oval buds (3) which are red
like rubies. In May these ruby buds burst open,
and their crimson coverings fall to the ground,
disclosing the pale emerald-green leaf that is
tightly folded within. The leaves (2) soon open in
the sunshine, and you see that each is shaped like
a large pointed heart, and that the two sides of
the heart are uneven.</p>
<p>The edge of the leaf is cut into sharp teeth,
and all over it a network of fine veins is spread.
When the leaf is still young you find tufts of soft,
downy hairs on the under-side, and at first each
leaf hangs straight down from its stalk as if it
had not strength to rise and face the sunlight.
But they soon raise themselves, and gradually
their pale green colour darkens, though the Lime
tree leaf never becomes so dark, nor is it as
glossy, as the leaf of the Beech tree.</p>
<p>In September the Lime tree leaves turn pale
yellow: rather a colourless yellow, very different
from the rich gold and red-brown of the Beech,
and they fall with the first touch of frost.</p>
<p>You may sometimes find leaves which are
marked with large black, sooty-looking spots.
These spots are caused by a tiny insect which
has made its home on the leaf.</p>
<p>If you sit beneath the branches of the Lime
on a warm summer day you will hear the constant
hum of myriads of bees which are buzzing round
the tree. They are gathering honey from the
Lime tree flowers, whose delicious perfume is
scenting the air.</p>
<p>From the spot where next year’s leaf bud will
grow there hangs a long stalk; at the end of
this stalk there droops a cluster of flowers (4), and
at the base of each flower cluster stands a long
slender leaf called a bract. This bract looks
like a pale yellow wing, and is covered all over
with a network of fine veins.</p>
<p>The flowers have five greeny white petals and
five pale green sepals. In the centre is a small
seed-vessel like a tiny pea, and from it there rises
a slender green pillar which ends in five sticky
points. Closely surrounding this seed-vessel is
a ring of many stamens. Each stamen has a
white stalk with an orange-coloured head, and
among these stamens lie the drops of sweet juice
which attract the bees.</p>
<p>The stamen dust is ripe before the sticky
points of the seed-vessel on the same plant are
ready for it; but the bees, when they bend down
to suck the honey juice, brush against the ripe
stamen heads, and their backs become covered
with the fine powder. Away they fly to the
flowers on another Lime tree, and the powder
will probably be rubbed off on one where the
seed-vessel is ready to receive it.</p>
<p>When the seed is ripe you see many little downy
fruit-balls (5), each hanging from a slender stalk.
In warm countries this seed ripens into a small
nut which is ground down and made into a kind of
chocolate. But it never ripens in England.</p>
<p>In some countries there are large forests of
Lime trees, and the air is filled with the busy
hum of the bees. The peasants make large holes
in the tree trunks, and these holes the bees fill
with honeycomb, which the peasants easily remove
and sell. This Lime tree honey is much
prized for its fine flavour.</p>
<p>The wood of the Lime tree is not hard enough
for building purposes, but it is greatly in demand
for carving. It is light and soft, and much of
the beautiful wood decoration in our churches is
carved from Lime tree wood. It does not easily
become worm-eaten as do so many of our harder
woods.</p>
<p>We read that in old days the soldiers’ shields
were made of Lime tree wood, as the blow of a
weapon was deadened when striking it.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p class="ph1"><SPAN id="plate8"><span class="smcap">Plate VIII</span></SPAN></p>
<p class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i_061.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p class="caption">THE ELM<br/>
1. Elm Tree<span class="gap">2. Leaf Spray</span><span class="gap">3. Ready Buds</span><span class="gap">4. Flower Spray</span><br/>
5. Stamen Flower enlarged<span class="gap">6. Seed Flower enlarged</span><span class="gap">7. Fruit Clusters and Wing</span></p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>The inner bark of the tree has always been
valuable. From it are made those mats of light
brown grass which gardeners use to protect
their delicate plants during winter; and these tails
of dried-looking grass with which they tie bunches
of flowers instead of using string, are also made
from the Lime tree bark. This inner bark is
called “bass” or “bast,” and is chiefly made
in Russia and Sweden.</p>
<p>It is from this bass or string that the tree gets
its name, which is not really Lime, but Line or
Linden, and is so called in other countries. We
in Britain have got into the bad habit of mispronouncing
the word. The true Lime tree is a
cousin of the Orange and Lemon trees, and bears
a yellow fruit called Limes. But the Linden
tree is no relation of this Lime tree, and is so
called because it is the tree from which we get
gardener’s dried string or line, and we must remember
that our popular name is a wrong one,
and not the true name of the tree.</p>
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