<h2>PLATE XVI<br/> THE GOAT WILLOW OR SALLOW</h2>
<br>“In Rome upon Palm Sunday
<br>They bear true palms,
<br>The cardinals bow reverently
<br>And sing old psalms.
<br>Elsewhere these psalms are sung
<br>Beneath the olive branches,
<br>The holly-bush supplies their place
<br>Amid the avalanches.”
<p>The second Willow or group of Willows you
should learn about is the most difficult of all.
In it there are many different varieties, and you
would require to plant one of each kind in your
garden, as a gentleman in England has done,
and study them carefully for many years to
discover the points wherein each Willow differs
from the other.</p>
<p>Though the Goat Willow or Sallow (1) sometimes
grows into a tall tree, it is more often seen
as a bush—a bush with a short, rough stem, which
does not rise far above the ground, and which
sends up many tall, slender branches, covered
with smooth, purplish brown peel or skin. Early
in March, before the snowdrops have withered,
you will find the Goat Willow in every hedge
and coppice bursting into scaly brown buds. It
is one of our earliest trees, and after a few days
of warm sunshine the brown scales unclose and
the branches are dotted with the softest and
silkiest little pussy buds (3), shaped like tiny eggs
and covered with grey down.</p>
<p>These buds grow alternately on the smooth
stem with a small space between each bud. In
a few days the baby buds have changed, and you
may find two Willow bushes growing quite near
each other on which the buds are very different.
For those woolly buds are the flower catkins, and
the Goat Willow bears two kinds of flowers, which
do not grow on the same tree.</p>
<p>The bees have found out that the Willow is in
flower; you can hear a swarm of them buzzing
in the leafless branches, and you wonder where
there is any honey to be found. On one tree the
soft grey downy buds have grown larger, and they
are now golden yellow catkins (4). The whole bud
is covered with dainty yellow-headed stamens,
nestling in pairs among oval scales edged with
silky down, and it is at the base of these yellow-headed
stamens that the bee finds the sweet
drops of honey juice.</p>
<p>For many hundreds of years branches of the
Goat Willow or Sallow have been carried in
this country to church on Palm Sunday in remembrance
of the branches of palm which the
people strewed in front of Christ when He
entered Jerusalem. Troops of boys and girls
go into the country lanes and coppices to gather
Willow-palms, which they sometimes pluck so
roughly and carelessly that the tree remains
broken and ruined for the rest of the year. These
silky stamen catkins of the Goat Willow are one
of the most welcome signs of the return of spring.</p>
<p>But there are other Willow flowers to be looked
at: flowers which may not be so attractive, but
which bear the seeds and make ready the new
plants. These flowers are silky too, and underneath
the soft down is an egg-shaped catkin
(5), covered with small pear-shaped green seeds.
Each seed has a thick yellow point at the top,
and at the base there rises a scale which
is pointed like a cat’s ear and is covered with
long, silky hairs. When the stamen flowers are
ripe their yellow heads burst, and the fine dust
which fills them falls on the backs of the bees
who are sipping the honey juice. Then they fly
away to find another honey flower, and they
often alight on a seed catkin, where the pollen
dust is shaken off among the little yellow points
which are waiting for it to help in the making of
the new seeds. Each flower catkin sits upright
on a tuft of small pale green leaves.</p>
<p>The leaves (2) of the Goat Willow are very
different from those of the other Willows; they
are broad and oval, with edges which are crinkled
or waved all round and with a network of fine
veins covering the leaf. These leaves, when they
first come out, are covered with white down,
but by the time they are full grown they are
dark and shiny on the upper side, and are only
downy beneath.</p>
<p>There is another bushy Willow which perhaps
you might mistake for the Goat Willow or Sallow:
this is the Purple Osier. It grows in boggy
marshes, by the banks of slow-running streams,
and it too has silky grey catkins. But you will
easily recognise the Purple Osier by two things.
It has long, slender stems like whips, rising
straight from the tree trunk. These slender
stems are covered with a fine purple skin or peel,
and if you try to pick an Osier stem the peel comes
away in your hand, leaving the white Willow stem
still growing. These Osier stems are valuable for
making baskets, and are grown in great quantities
for this purpose.</p>
<p>The second point in which the Purple Osier
differs from the Goat Willow is this: if you
gather a yellow catkin and look at the yellow-headed
stamens which cover it, you will see that
the slender stalks of the stamens are joined
together, making one stalk with two yellow heads,
whereas in the Goat Willow or Sallow each
yellow stamen head sways at the end of its own
stalk.</p>
<p>There is one other Willow tree I should like to
tell you about, because it is so curious. It is a
tree which creeps close to the ground, and which
is found growing in great quantities in the
Highlands among the grass and heather. It
is called the Dwarf Willow, and it too has
silky catkins which grow on the tough wiry
branches.</p>
<p>You might not notice these stamen catkins, but
you could not help noticing the seed catkins.
These cover the ground with tufts of white cotton
wool like thistle-down, and when you lift one of
these tufts you find that the pear-shaped green
seed-vessels have split down the centre to allow
many tiny seeds to escape, and each seed is winged
with a tuft of silky down. After all the seeds
have flown away on the wind, the withered seed-vessels
still remain on the catkin, no longer green,
but a rusty red-brown colour, which is very
noticeable among the small glossy green leaves.</p>
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