<h2>PLATE XXVII<br/> THE HAWTHORN</h2>
<br>“Mark the fair blooming of the Hawthorn tree,
<br>Who, finely clothed in a robe of white,
<br>Fills full the wanton eye with May’s delight.”
<br>—Chaucer.
<p>We cannot think of the Hawthorn as one of our
noble forest trees, like the Oak and the Beech;
it is dear to us as a village tree, a friendly, bushy
tree which has grown in our garden, or in the
fields and meadows close to our country cottages.
We remember the long sunny May days when we
gathered armfuls of its lovely blossoms, and the
frosty autumn mornings when its berries shone
like rubies on the bare, wind-stripped branches.
It has always been in close touch with our lives,
and it has left many pictures graven deep in our
memory.</p>
<p>The Hawthorn (1), or May, or White-thorn, as
it is often called from the colour of its flowers,
has been known to us since very long ago.
When the hero Ulysses came home from his
weary wanderings, he found his old father
alone; all the servants had gone to the woods
to get young Hawthorn trees to make a hedge,
and the old man was busy digging trenches in
which to plant them.</p>
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<p class="ph1"><SPAN id="plate27"><span class="smcap">Plate XXVII</span></SPAN></p>
<p class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i_177.jpg" alt="" /></p>
<p class="caption">THE HAWTHORN<br/>
1. Hawthorn Tree in Early Summer<span class="gap">2. Leaves and Blossoms</span><span class="gap">3. Fruit</span></p>
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<p>Even in that far-off time people had discovered
that nothing makes so good a hedge as young
thorn trees. They grow very quickly and send
out many side-shoots and small branches. Each
branch bears sharp thorns, and so closely do
these thorny branches grow together that it is
impossible to push your hand through the hedge
without being badly scratched. Young cattle
and horses love to feed on the Hawthorn leaves,
and one wonders how they can eat them without
getting many scratches.</p>
<p>Long after the time of Ulysses we find that
bunches of flowering Hawthorn were carried in
wedding processions as an emblem of hope, and
torches made of its wood were burned. There is
a strange old legend which tells how Joseph of
Arimathea landed on the island of Avalon at
Christmas-tide. He was very weary, and lay
down to rest, but first he planted his staff of
Hawthorn firmly in the ground beside him. And
in the morning he found that the staff had put
out roots and was covered with Hawthorn
blossoms. By this he knew it was meant that
he should stay in Avalon, and he built a monastery
for himself and his brethren and remained there
till he died.</p>
<p>Until not so long ago the country people in
England used to hold gay sports in the village
in the month of May. A tall mast, or Maypole,
was planted in the ground, and the men and
maidens decorated it with wreaths of Hawthorn
blossoms. Then they danced, and sang, and held
merry games around the Maypole in honour of
summer’s return.</p>
<p>In early spring the Hawthorn tree, if you find
one growing singly in a field or meadow, is most
easily recognised by its bushy appearance. The
tree trunk is dark grey and very rough; often it
is twisted like a rope, but it is rarely a thick
trunk, as you seldom find a large Hawthorn.
Even when very old-about two hundred and fifty
years some are said to live—the Hawthorn is
always a small tree.</p>
<p>In April the young leaf buds appear; pale green
knobs, or little bundles, bursting from every
branch. Each leaf (2) is cut up into blunt fingers,
and soon it loses its paleness and becomes dark
green and glossy. In autumn these leaves change
to gold and dark red and brown; but the frosty
nights and cold winds soon strip them from the
branches.</p>
<p>May is the month when the flowers (2) begin to
bloom—clusters of tiny snow-white balls, each at
the end of a slender green stalk. In England it
was the custom to give a basin of cream for
breakfast to the person who first brought home
a branch of Hawthorn in blossom on the first of
May.</p>
<p>When the flower balls or buds unclose, you find
that they have five snow-white petals, which are
set in the throat of the calyx cup. Within this
ring of petals, round the mouth of the cup, grow
many slender stamens, each with a bright pink
head. And if you look at the back of the flower,
you will see five green points which stand out like
the rays of a star behind the white petals. These
are the sepals.</p>
<p>Below this green star the stalk looks slightly
swollen: this swelling contains the seed, and by
the time autumn comes it will have grown into
a small green berry. After the white petals and
the pink-headed stamens have fallen, you will find
clusters of these berries, which are called haws,
each with the withered remains of the sepals
clinging to the top, as you find them in the Rose
and in the Apple. The berries (3) become crimson
when the frost comes, and birds eat them greedily.</p>
<p>We have few trees which flower so beautifully
as the Hawthorn. In May and June the hedgerows
are laden with its masses of snowy blossoms.
Sometimes you will find Hawthorns on which the
flowers are a vivid crimson, and these are so
transparently beautiful they look as if the light
shone through them. And in autumn no tree is
more attractive than the Hawthorn, with its gleaming
berries and many-coloured leaves.</p>
<p>The wood of the Hawthorn is not very serviceable.
It is hard and may be highly polished, but
the trees are too small for the timber to be useful.</p>
<p>The branches, like those of the Ash and the Whin,
burn readily, even when green, and in Scotland
the bark was used in olden days to dye wool black.</p>
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