How towers he, too, amid the
billowed snows,
An unquelled exile
from the summer’s throne,
Whose plain, uncintured front
more kingly shows,
Now that the obscuring
courtier leaves are flown.
His boughs make music of the
winter air,
Jewelled with
sleet, like some cathedral front
Where clinging snow-flakes
with quaint art repair
The dents and
furrows of Time’s envious brunt.
How doth his patient strength
the rude March wind
Persuade to seem
glad breaths of summer breeze,
And win the soil that fain
would be unkind,
To swell his revenues
with proud increase!
He is the gem; and all the
landscape wide
(So doth his grandeur
isolate the sense)
Seems but the setting, worthless
all beside,
An empty socket,
were he fallen thence.
So, from oft converse with
life’s wintry gales,
Should man learn
how to clasp with tougher roots
The inspiring earth;—how
otherwise avails
The leaf-creating
sap that sunward shoots?
So every year that falls with
noiseless flake
Should fill old
scars up on the stormward side,
And make hoar age revered
for age’s sake,
Not for traditions
of youth’s leafy pride.
So, from the pinched soil
of a churlish fate,
True hearts compel
the sap of sturdier growth,
So between earth and heaven
stand simply great,
That these shall
seem but their attendants both;
For nature’s forces,
with obedient zeal
Wait on the rooted
faith and oaken will,
As quickly the pretender’s
cheat they feel,
And turn mad Pucks
to flout and mock him still.
Lord! all Thy works are lessons,—each
contains
Some emblem of
man’s all-containing soul;
Shall he make fruitless all
Thy glorious pains,
Delving within
Thy grace an eyeless mole?
Make me the least of Thy Dodona-grove,
Cause me some
message of Thy truth to bring,
Speak but a word through me,
nor let Thy love
Among my boughs
disdain to perch and sing.
—James Russell Lowell.
WHAT ONE TREE IS WORTH.
It will help us, perhaps, to appreciate properly, the value and manifold uses of trees if we consider the uses to which a single one of the many species is put. A Chinese gives us the following account of the Bamboo.
“The bamboo plant is cultivated almost everywhere; it is remarkable for its shade and beauty. There are about sixty varieties, different in size according to its genus; ranging from that of a switch to a big pole measuring from four to five inches in diameter. It is reared from shoots and suckers, and, after the root once clings to the ground, it thrives and spreads without further care or labor. Of these sixty