<h2>PLATE XI<br/> THE SYCAMORE, OR GREAT MAPLE, OR MOCK PLANE</h2>
<p>There is a good deal of confusion in people’s
minds as to the right name for this familiar tree.
Sycamore is not an English word, but is made
from a Greek word meaning fig or mulberry. The
tree has been so called because many years ago
people believed that it was a relation of the fig
tree which grows so abundantly by the roadside in
Palestine. The leaves are a little alike, but there
is no real resemblance between our English
Great Maple and the Eastern Sycamore: the
name has been given by mistake.</p>
<p>Another mistaken name given to this tree is
Plane tree. The Great Maple is only a mock
Plane tree or false Plane tree; it is not even a
relation of the real Plane any more than it is a
relation of the Fig or Sycamore. But mistakes
even in names are very difficult to correct, and
in many places, particularly in Scotland, you will
find that Sycamore (1) or Plane tree is the name
usually given to the Great Maple.</p>
<p>It is a large heavy tree, with a great central
trunk covered with a gnarled bark which peels
off in flakes, leaving patches of different shades.
From every side of this central trunk there grow
stout branches covered with masses of thick
foliage, the thickest and heaviest foliage of any
British tree.</p>
<p>If you look at the Sycamore tree as it stands
in an open field, or in a hedgerow, with grass
growing close to its very trunk, I think what
will strike you most is how evenly it has grown
all round. There are so many trees that grow
all to one side if they are much exposed to a
cold wind. Look at the Beech, or the Hawthorn,
or the Elm on the crest of a ridge, and you
will at once know from which direction the
wind blows strongest and coldest, by seeing how
the tree puts out all its best branches on the
sheltered side. But the Sycamore tree is indifferent
to cold, or even to the salt sea winds; it
sends out its branches equally on every side, and
there is always a thick roof of leaves at the top.</p>
<p>The Sycamore tree prefers a dry soil, in which
it grows very quickly; and it will not die if transplanted.</p>
<p>In early spring the twigs bear many large fat
buds (3), which are covered with soft downy pink
scales. The Horse Chestnut is the only other
tree which bears such large buds, but they are
dark and very sticky.</p>
<p>In country places the children call the largest
buds at the end of the Sycamore twig “cocks,”
and the smaller buds which grow along the sides
they call “hens.” When these buds open early
in May you see how beautifully the leaves are
folded fan-ways inside. Each leaf (2) is shaped
like a large hand with five bluntly-pointed fingers;
the edges are coarsely toothed, and the leaf is
dark green above and a paler green underneath.
They grow on long stalks, which are a reddish
pink colour so long as the leaves are young,
and each stalk is scooped into a hollow at the
end, so that it may fit closely to the twig.</p>
<p>These leaves are not placed alternately on
opposite sides of the branch, as in the Beech or
Elm: they grow in clumps, or bouquets, and
each pair of leaves is placed cross-ways to the
pair above. Those that come out first have long
stalks and are the largest; then the second pair
is smaller, and the third pair smaller still, till
the bouquet is finished with two tiny leaves in
the centre.</p>
<p>Notice that the leaves of the Sycamore are
often marked with sticky drops. By old writers
these drops are called honey-dew. It is believed
that the sap of the Sycamore is sugary, and some
of this sugary juice escapes through the leaf
pores to the surface. These handsome leaves
are often spotted with small black dots, which
are caused by a tiny plant. This plant makes
its home on the Sycamore leaf, and unknowingly
disfigures its kind host.</p>
<p>Before the leaves are quite out the flowers
appear. They grow in drooping spikes (4), or
large tassels of a pale yellowish green colour.
Each tassel is made up of many separate flowers,
and most of these flowers have a calyx with five to
twelve narrow strap-shaped sepals, and a corolla
of the same number of yellow-green petals.
There is also a ring of slender stamens standing
round a flat green cushion or disc. In the centre
sits the seed-vessel, which has two curved horns at
the top. But in the flower tassel you may also
find flowers in which some of the parts are awanting:
one flower will have stamens, but no seed-vessel,
and its neighbour will have a seed-vessel
and no stamens, while in a third the petals may be
awanting. You must examine each flower till you
find one which is perfect. These Sycamore flowers
contain much honey, nearly as much as those of
the Lime tree; and the bees are glad to hover
round the tree flowers, which blossom long before
those in the meadow are open.</p>
<p>After the flowers are withered the seed (5)
develops wings like the Ash and the Elm. But
these wings are very different from those of any
other tree. They are shaped like the letter U,
with the two seeds at the bottom of the letter
where it joins the stalk. Each seed is like a
small pea, and is snugly packed in a horny case
lined with the softest and silkiest down. When it
is ripe the wind blows the winged seeds from the
tree and carries them a long way. They fall into
the ground, where the horny case prevents the
young seed from rotting during the cold winter
months before it is time for it to begin to sprout.
Then when spring comes the baby seed bursts its
covering and sends up two tiny green ribbon
leaves which are the beginning of a new Sycamore
tree. The wings of the Sycamore seed
are beautifully tinged with pink.</p>
<p>The wood of the Sycamore or Great Maple is
white and very soft, but it is closely grained.
Sometimes you see big knobs on the tree trunk
where a branch has died or been broken off, and
cabinet-makers prize these knobs, as the wood is
very curiously marked with beautiful veins and
streaks. Maple wood will polish as smooth as
satin, and the backs of violins are often made of
it. In old books we read of table-tops that were
made of curiously marked pieces of Maple, and
it is told that more than eight hundred pounds
was given for one of these Maple tables.</p>
<p>In Scotland the Sycamore tree was often called
the dool tree, or tree of mourning, because the
nobles used to hang disobedient servants or
vanquished foes on its strong branches; and at
Cassilis, in Ayrshire, there is a Sycamore tree
which is well known to have been used for this
cruel purpose.</p>
<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />