<h2>PLATE XXXII<br/> THE CEDAR OF LEBANON</h2>
<p>In the Old Testament we read that when Solomon
was building the temple he sent to Hiram,
King of Tyre, for stores of goodly Cedar wood from
the forests of Lebanon. And Hiram sent the
wood by sea in floats, or rafts, as much Cedar and
timber of Fir as King Solomon wanted. This
was used to cover the stonework of the temple,
within and without.</p>
<p>There is a delightful fragrance in these planks
of Cedar wood which is said to come from the sap
or resin with which the tree abounds. Cedar oil
is made from this resin, and it was long in use as
a safeguard against the attacks of insects, which
dislike the smell.</p>
<p>The Cedar (1), as we see it in this country, rarely
rises to the dignity of a large tree; it is most
familiar to us as a stunted, bushy tree with a
thick, short trunk divided into more than one
main stem. Short branches rise from these stems,
and at first these point upwards to the sky, but
after the branch has grown some length it bends
backward and stands straight out from the tree.
From a distance the tree looks as if the branches
grew in layers, or shelves, with a clear space
between each shelf. You will always recognise
a Cedar by these layers of branches densely
covered with gloomy green leaves. It is said that
in countries where much snow falls the Cedar
branches always remain upright, because the tree
knows that it could not carry the great weight of
snow that would gather on its leafy shelves if
they grew flat as in warmer lands.</p>
<p>The Cedar is frequently found growing in
churchyards, beside the Yew tree, and a dark,
gloomy tree it is. The trunk is covered with a
thick rough bark of a pale greenish brown colour,
but on the branches this bark is thin and flaky.
The Cedar grows very slowly. The tree may be
a hundred years old before it produces any seeds,
though you sometimes find seedless cones on
Cedars that are twenty-five to thirty years old.</p>
<p>The leaves (2) are evergreen, and usually remain
on the twigs for four or five years. They grow in
tufts, like those of the Larch, on the upper side
of the twig; but each leaf is needle-shaped, as in
the Scotch Pine, and is much harder than the
soft Larch leaves. In colour they are a dark
bluey green.</p>
<p>The Cedar has two kinds of flowers. Those
that bear the stamens (3) appear at the end of
short, stunted little twigs which have taken many
years to grow. The stamens are in slender
catkins, about two inches long, and are a pale
reddish yellow colour.</p>
<p>The seed flowers (4) grow in cones, and the
Cedar of Lebanon has very curious cones. They
grow in pairs, and are like fat green eggs, sitting
upright on the branch, with the blunt end uppermost.
These cones look quite solid, because the
scales are so tightly pressed together. You can
scarcely see where one begins and the other ends.
It takes two or three years before these scales
unclose, and during that time the cones (5)
become a rich, dark purple. When the scales
unclose, the three-cornered seeds are blown out
by the wind, and each seed is furnished with a
wing to float it away on the air. The Cedar cones
remain on the tree several years after all their
seeds have fallen.</p>
<p>The timber of the Cedars grown in this country
is of little value; the tree is usually planted for
ornament. But in warmer lands, where there are
large forests of mighty Cedar trees, the wood is
sold for a great deal of money.</p>
<p class="center">PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN.</p>
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