“By the rivers of Babylon, there
we sat down, yea, we wept, when we remembered Zion.
Upon the willows in the midst thereof we hanged our
harps.” Thus sang the Psalmist of the sorrows
of the exiles in Babylon, and his song has fastened
the name of the great and wicked city upon one of
the most familiar willows, while also making it “weep”;
for the common weeping willow is botanically named
Salix Babylonica.
It may be that the forlorn Jews did
hang their harps upon the tree we know as the weeping
willow, that species being credited to Asia as a place
of origin; but it is open to doubt, for the very obvious
reason that the weeping willow is distinctly unadapted
to use as a harp-rack, and one is at a loss to know
just how the instruments in question would have been
hung thereon. It is probable that the willows
along the rivers of Babylon were of other species,
and that the connection of the city of the captivity
and the tears of the exiles with the long, drooping
branches of the noble tree which has thus been sorrowfully
named was a purely sentimental one. Indeed, the
weeping willow is also called Napoleon’s willow,
because the great Corsican found much pleasure in a
superb willow of the same species which stood on the
lonely prison isle of St. Helena, and from twigs of
which many trees in the United States have been grown.
The willow family presents great contrasts,
both physical and sentimental. It is a symbol
both of grief and of grace. The former characterization
is undoubtedly because of the allusion of the one
hundred and thirty-seventh Psalm, as quoted above,
thoughtlessly extended through the centuries; and
the latter, as when a beautiful and slender woman
is said to be of “willowy” form, obviously
because of the real grace of the long, swinging wands
of the same tree. I might hint that a better
reason for making the willow symbolize grief is because
charcoal made from its twigs and branches is an important
and almost essential ingredient of gunpowder, through
which a sufficiency of grief has undoubtedly entered
the world!
Willow twigs seem the very essence
of fragility, as they break from the parent tree at
a touch; and yet one of the willows furnishes the tough,
pliable and enduring withes from which are woven the
baskets of the world. The willows, usually thin
in branch, sparse of somewhat pale foliage, of so-called
mournful mien, are yet bursting with vigor and life;
indeed, the spread and the value of the family is by
reason of this tenacity and virility, which makes
a broken twig, floating on the surface of a turbid
stream, take root and grow on a sandy bank where nothing
else can maintain itself, wresting existence and drawing
strength and beauty from the very element whose ravages
of flood and current it bravely withstands.
Apparently ephemeral in wood, growing
quickly and perishing as quickly, the willows nevertheless
supply us with an important preservative element,
extracted from their bitter juices. Salicylic
acid, made from willow bark, prevents change and arrests
decay, and it is an important medical agent as well.
Flexible and seemingly delicate as
the little tree is when but just established, there
is small promise of the rugged and sturdy trunk that
in a few years may stand where the chance twig lodged.
And the color of the willows ah! there’s
a point for full enthusiasm, for this family of grief
furnishes a cheerful note for every month in the year,
and runs the whole scale of greens, grays, yellows
and browns, and even adds to the winter landscape
touches of blazing orange and bright red across the
snow. Before ever one has thought seriously of
the coming of spring, the long branchlets of the weeping
willow have quickened into a hint of lovely yellowish
green, and those same branchlets will be holding their
green leaves against a wintry blast when most other
trees have given up their foliage under the frost’s
urgency. Often have the orange-yellow twigs of
the golden osier illumined a somber countryside for
me as I looked from the car window; and close by may
be seen other willow bushes of brown, green, gray,
and even purple, to add to the color compensation
of the season. Then may come into the view, as
one flies past, a great old weeping willow rattling
its bare twigs in the wind; and, if a stream is passed,
there are sure to be seen on its banks the sturdy trunks
of the white and the black willows at least.
Think of an average landscape with the willows eliminated,
and there will appear a great vacancy not readily
filled by another tree.
The weeping willow has always made
a strong appeal to me, but never one of simple grief
or sorrow. Its expression is rather of great dignity,
and I remember watching in somewhat of awe one which
grew near my childhood’s home, as its branches
writhed and twisted in a violent rain-storm, seeming
then fairly to agonize, so tossed and buffeted were
they by the wind. But soon the storm ceased, the
sun shone on the rounded head of the willow, turning
the raindrops to quickly vanishing diamonds, and the
great tree breathed only a gentle and benignant peace.
When, in later years, I came to know the moss-hung
live-oak of the Southland, the weeping willow assumed
to me a new dignity and value in the northern landscape,
and I have strongly resented the attitude of a noted
writer on “Art Out of Doors” who says of
it: “I never once have seen it where it
did not hurt the effect of its surroundings, or at
least, if it stood apart from other trees, where some
tree of another species would not have looked far
better.” One of the great merits of the
tree, its difference of habit, its variation from the
ordinary, is thus urged against it.
I have spoken of the basket willow,
which is scientifically Salix viminalis, and
an introduction from Europe, as indeed are many of
the family. In my father’s nursery grew
a great patch of basket willows, annually cut to the
ground to make a profusion of “sprouts,”
from which were cut the “tying willows”
used to bind firmly together for shipment bundles
of young trees. It was an achievement to be able
to take a six-foot withe, and, deftly twisting the
tip of it under the heel to a mass of flexible fiber,
tie this twisted portion into a substantial loop;
and to have this novel wooden rope then endure the
utmost pull of a vigorous man, as he braced his feet
against the bundle of trees in binding the withe upon
it, gave an impression of anything but weakness on
the part of the willow.
Who has not admired the soft gray
silky buds of the “pussy” willow, swelling
with the spring’s impulse, and ripening quickly
into a “catkin” loaded with golden pollen?
Nowadays the shoots of this willow are “forced”
into bud by the florists, and sold in the cities in
great quantities; but really to see it one must find
the low tree or bush by a stream in the woods, or
along the roadside, with a chance to note its fullness
of blossom. It is finest just when the hepaticas
are at their bluest on the warm hillsides; and, one
sunny afternoon of a spring journey along the north
branch of the Susquehanna river, I did not know which
of the two conspicuous ornaments of the deeply wooded
bank made me most anxious to jump from the too swiftly
moving train.
This pussy-willow has pleasing leaves,
and is a truly ornamental shrub or small tree which
will flourish quite well in a dry back yard, as I
have reason to know. One bright day in February
I found a pussy-willow tree, with its deep purple
buds showing not a hint of the life within. The
few twigs brought home quickly expanded when placed
in water, and gave us their forecast of the spring.
One twig was, out of curiosity, left in the water
after the catkins had faded, merely to see what would
happen. It bravely sent forth leaves, while at
the base little white rootlets appeared. Its
vigor appealing to us, it was planted in an arid spot
in our back yard, and it is now, after a year and a
half, a handsome, slender young tree that will give
us a whole family of silken pussy-buds to stroke and
admire another spring.
This same little tree is called also
the glaucous willow, and it is botanically Salix
discolor. It is more distinct than some others
of the family, for the willow is a great mixer.
The tree expert who will unerringly distinguish between
the red oak and the scarlet oak by the precise angle
of the spinose margins of the leaves (how I admire
an accuracy I do not possess!) will balk at which
is crack willow, or white willow, or yellow or blue
willow. The abundant vigor and vitality and freedom
of the family, and the fact that it is of what is known
as the dioecious habit that is, the flowers
are not complete, fertile and infertile flowers being
borne on separate trees make it most ready
to hybridize. The pollen of the black willow
may fertilize the flower of the white willow, with
a result that certainly tends to grayness on the worrying
head of the botanist who, in after years, is trying
to locate the result of the cross!
There is much variety in the willow
flowers and I wonder how many observers
really notice any other willow “blossoms”
than those of the showy pussy? A superb spring
day afield took me along a fascinatingly crooked stream,
the Conodoguinet, whose banks furnish a congenial and
as yet protected (because concealed from the flower-hunting
vandal) home for wild flowers innumerable and most
beautiful, as well as trees that have ripened into
maturity. An earlier visit at the time the bluebells
were ringing out their silent message on the hillside,
in exquisite beauty, with the lavender phlox fairly
carpeting the woods, gave a glimpse of some promising
willows on the other side of the stream. Twilight
and letters to sign how hateful the desk
and its work seem in these days of springing life
outside! made a closer inspection impossible
then, but a golden Saturday afternoon found three of
us, of like ideals, hastening to this tree and plant
paradise. A mass of soft yellow drew us from
the highway across a field carpeted thickly with bluet
or “quaker lady,” to the edge of the stream,
where a continuous hum showed that the bees were also
attracted. It was one splendid willow in full
bloom, and I could not and as yet cannot safely say
whether it is the crack willow or the white willow;
but I can affirm of a certainty that it was a delight
to the eye, the mind and the nostrils. The extreme
fragility of the smaller twigs, which broke away from
the larger limbs at the lightest shake or jar, gave
evidence of one of Nature’s ways of distributing
plant life; for it seems that these twigs, as I have
previously said, part company with the parent tree
most readily, float away on the stream, and easily
establish themselves on banks and bars, where their
tough, interlacing roots soon form an almost impregnable
barrier to the onslaught of the flood. Only a
stone’s throw away there stood a great old black
willow, with a sturdy trunk of ebon hue, crowned with
a mass of soft green leafage, lighter where the breeze
lifted up the under side to the sunlight. Many
times, doubtless, the winds had shorn and the sleet
had rudely trimmed this old veteran, but there remained
full life and vigor, even more attractive than that
of youth.
Most of the willows are shrubs rather
than trees, and there are endless variations, as I
have before remarked. Further, the species belonging
at first in the Eastern Hemisphere have spread well
over our own side of the globe, so that it seems odd
to regard the white willow and the weeping willow
as foreigners. At Niagara Falls, in the beautiful
park on the American side, on the islands amid the
toss of the waters, there are many willows, and those
planted by man are no less beautiful than those resulting
from Nature’s gardening. In spring I have
had pleasure in some splendid clumps of a form with
lovely golden leaves and a small, furry catkin, found
along the edge of the American rapids. I wonder,
by the way, how many visitors to Niagara take note
of the superb collection of plants and trees there
to be seen, and which it is a grateful relief to consider
when the mind is wearied with the majesty and the vastness
of Nature’s forces shown in the cataract?
The birds are visitors to Goat Island and the other
islets that divide the Niagara River, and they have
brought there the plants of America in wonderful variety.
There is one willow that has been
used by the nurserymen to produce a so-called weeping
form, which, like most of these monstrosities, is not
commendable. The goat willow is a vigorous tree
introduced from Europe, having large and rather broad
and coarse leaves, dark green above and whitish underneath.
It is taken as a “stock,” upon which, at
a convenient height, the skilled juggler with trees
grafts a drooping or pendulous form known as the Kilmarnock
willow, thus changing the habit of the tree so that
it then “weeps” to the ground. Fortunately,
the original tree sometimes triumphs, the graft dies,
and a lusty goat willow rears a rather shapely head
to the sky.
This Kilmarnock willow is a favorite
of the peripatetic tree agent, and I have enjoyed
hugely one notable evidence of his persuasive eloquence
to be seen in a Lebanon Valley town, inhabited by the
quaint folk known as Pennsylvania Germans. All
along the line of the railroad traversing this valley
may be seen these distorted willows decorating the
prim front yards, and they are not so offensive when
used with other shrubs and trees. In this one
instance, however, the tree agent evidently found
a customer who was persuaded that if one Kilmarnock
willow was a good thing to have, a dozen of them was
twelve times better; wherefore his dooryard is grotesquely
adorned with that many flourishing weepers, giving
an aspect that is anything but decorous or solemn.
Some time the vigilance of the citizen will be relaxed,
it may be hoped; he will neglect to cut away the recurring
shoots of the parent trees, and they will escape and
destroy the weeping form which provides so much sarcastic
hilarity for the passers-by.
The willow, with its blood relation,
the poplar, is often “pollarded,” or trimmed
for wood, and its abundant vigor enables it to recover
from this process of violent abbreviation more satisfactorily
than do most trees. The result is usually a disproportionately
large stem or bole, for the lopping off of great branches
always tends to a thickening of the main stem.
The abundant leafage of both willow and poplar soon
covers the scars, and there is less cause to mourn
than in the case of maples or other “hard-wooded”
trees.
If my readers will only add a willow
section to their mental observation outfit, there
will be much more to see and appreciate. Look
for and enjoy in the winter the variation in twig
color and bark hue; notice how smoothly lies the covering
on one stem, all rugged and marked on another.
In the earliest spring examine the swelling buds, of
widely differing color and character, from which shortly
will spring forth the catkins or aments of bloom,
followed by the leaves of varied colors in the varied
species, and with shapes as varied. Vivid green,
soft gray, greenish yellow; dull surface and shining
surface above, pale green to almost pure white beneath;
from the long and stringy leaf of the weeping willow
to the comparatively broad and thick leaf of the pussy-willow there
is variety and interest in the foliage well worth
the attention of the tree-lover. When winter comes,
there will be another set of contrasts to see in the
way the various species lose their leaves and get
ready for the rest time during which the buds mature
and ripen, and the winter colors again shine forth.
These observations may be made anywhere
in America, practically, for the willow is almost
indifferent to locality, growing everywhere that its
far-reaching roots can find the moisture which it loves,
and which it rapidly transpires to the thirsty air.
As Miss Keeler well remarks, “The genus Salix
is admirably fitted to go forth and inhabit the earth,
for it is tolerant of all soils and asks only water.
It creeps nearer to the North Pole than any other
woody plant except its companion the birch. It
trails upon the ground or rises one hundred feet in
the air. In North America it follows the water-courses
to the limit of the temperate zone, enters the tropics,
crosses the equator, and appears in the mountains of
Peru and Chili.... The books record one hundred
and sixty species in the world, and these sport and
hybridize to their own content and to the despair
of botanists. Then, too, it comes of an ancient
line; for impressions of leaves in the cretaceous
rocks show that it is one of the oldest of plants.”
Common it is, and therefore overlooked;
but the reader may well resolve to watch the willow
in spring and summer, with its bloom and fruit; to
follow its refreshing color through winter’s
chill; to observe its cheer and dignity; and to see
the wind toss its slender wands and turn its graceful
leaves.
The poplars and the willows are properly
considered together, for together they form the botanical
world family of the Salicaceae. Many characteristics
of bloom and growth, of sap and bark, unite the two,
and surely both, though alike common to the world,
are common and familiar trees to the dwellers in North
America.
One of my earliest tree remembrances
has to do with a spreading light-leaved growth passed
under every day on the way to school and,
like most school-boys, I was not unwilling to stop
for anything of interest that might put off arrival
at the seat of learning. This great tree had
large and peculiar winter buds, that always seemed
to have advance information as to the coming of spring,
for they would swell out and become exceedingly shiny
at the first touch of warm sun. Soon the sun-caressing
would be responded to by the bursting of the buds,
or the falling away of their ingenious outer protecting
scales, which dropped to the ground, where, sticky
and shining, and extraordinarily aromatic in odor,
they were just what a curious school-boy enjoyed investigating.
“Balm of Gilead” was the name that inquiry
brought for this tree, and the resinous and sweet-smelling
buds which preceded the rather inconspicuous catkins
or aments of bloom seemed to justify the Biblical
designation.
Nearly a world tree is this poplar,
which in some one of its variable forms is called
also tacamahac, and balsam poplar as well. Its
cheerful upright habit, really fine leaves and generally
pleasing air commend it, but there is one trouble it
is almost too vigorous and anxious to spread, which
it does by means of shoots or “suckers,”
upspringing from its wide area of root-growth, thus
starting a little forest of its own that gives other
trees but small chance. But on a street, where
the repression of pavements and sidewalks interferes
with this exuberance, the balsam poplar is well worth
planting.
The poplars as a family are pushing
and energetic growers, and serve a great purpose in
the reforestation of American acres that have been
carelessly denuded of their tree cover. Here the
trembling aspen particularly, as the commonest form
of all is named, comes in to quickly cover and shade
the ground, and give aid to the hard woods and the
conifers that form the value of the forest growth.
This same American aspen, a consideration
of the lightly hung leaves of which has been useful
to many poets, is a well-known tree of graceful habit,
particularly abundant in the forests north of Pennsylvania
and New Jersey, and occupying clearings plentifully
and quickly. Its flowers are in catkins, as with
the rest of the family, and, like other poplars, they
are in two kinds, male and female, or staminate and
pistillate, which accounts for some troubles the inexperienced
investigator has in locating them.
There is another aspen, the large-toothed
form, that is a distinct botanical species; but I
have never been able to separate it, wherefore I do
not try to tell of it here, lest I fall under condemnation
as a blind leader, not of the blind, but of those
who would see!
In many cities, especially in cities
that have experienced real-estate booms, and have
had “extensions” laid out “complete
with all improvements,” there is to be seen
a poplar that has the merit of quick and pleasing
growth and considerable elegance as well. Alas,
it is like the children of the tropics in quick beauty
and quick decadence! The Carolina poplar, it
is called, being a variety of the wide-spread cottonwood.
Grow? All that is needed is to cut a lusty branch
of it, point it, and drive it into the earth it
will do the rest!
This means cheap trees and quick growth,
and that is why whole new streets in West Philadelphia,
for instance, are given up to the Carolina poplar.
Its clear, green, shining leaves, of good size, coming
early in spring; its easily guided habit, either upright
or spreading; its very rapid growth, all commend it.
But its coarseness and lack of real strength, and
its continual invitation to the tree-butcher and the
electric lineman, indicate the undesirability of giving
it more than a temporary position, to shade while
better trees are growing.
But I must not get into the economics
of street-tree planting. I started to tell of
the blossoms of this same Carolina poplar, which are
decidedly interesting. Just when the sun has thoroughly
warmed up the air of spring there is a sudden, rapid
thickening of buds over one’s head on this poplar.
One year the tree under my observation swelled and
swelled its buds, which were shining more and more
in the sun, until I was sure the next day would bring
a burst of leaves. But the weather was dry, and
it was not until that wonderful solvent and accelerator
of growing things, a warm spring rain, fell softly
upon the tree, that the pent-up life force was given
vent. Then came, not leaves, but these long catkins,
springing out with great rapidity, until in a few hours
the tree glowed with their redness. A second
edition of the shower, falling sharply, brought many
of the catkins to the ground, where they lay about
like large caterpillars.
The whole process of this blooming
was interesting, curious, but hardly beautiful, and
it seemed to fit in with the restless character of
the poplar family a family of trees with
more vigor than dignity, more sprightliness than grace.
As Professor Bailey says of the cottonwood, “It
is cheerful and restive. One is not moved to lie
under it as he is under a maple or an oak.”
Yet there are not wanting some poplars of impressive
character.
One occurs to me, growing on a wide
street of my home town, opposite a church with a graceful
spire. This white or silver-leaved poplar has
for many years been a regular prey of the gang of
tree-trimmers, utterly without knowledge of or
regard for trees, that infests this town. They
hack it shamefully, and I look at it and say, “Well,
the old poplar is ruined now, surely!” But a
season passes, and I look again, to see that the tremendous
vigor of the tree has triumphed over the butchers;
its sores have been concealed, new limbs have pushed
out, and it has again, in its unusual height, assumed
a dignity not a whit inferior to that of the church
spire opposite.
This white poplar is at its best on
the bank of a stream, where its small forest of “suckers”
most efficiently protects the slope against the destructive
action of floods. One such tree with its family
and friends I saw in full bloom along the Susquehanna,
and it gave an impression of solidity and size, as
well as of lusty vigor, and I have always liked it
since. The cheerful bark is not the least of its
attractions but it is a tree for its own
place, and not for every place, by reason of the tremendous
colonizing power of its root-sprouts.
I wonder, by the way, if many realize
the persistence and vigor of the roots of a tree of
the “suckering” habit? Some years
ago an ailanthus, a tree of vigor and beauty of foliage
but nastiness of flower odor, was cut away from its
home when excavation was being made for a building,
which gave me opportunity to follow a few of its roots.
One of them traveled in search of food, and toward
the opportunity of sending up a shoot, over a hundred
feet!
The impending scarcity of spruce logs
to feed the hungry maws of the machines that make
paper for our daily journals has turned attention to
several forms of the rapid-growing poplar for this
use. The aspen is acceptable, and also the Carolina
poplar, and these trees are being planted in large
quantities for the eventual making of wood-pulp.
Even today, many newspapers are printed on poplar,
and exposure to the rays of the truth-searching sun
for a few hours will disclose the yellowness of the
paper, if not of the tree from which it has been ground.
Few whose eyes are turned upward toward
the trees have failed to note that exclamation-point
of growth, the Lombardy poplar. Originating in
that portion of Europe indicated by its common name,
and, indeed, a botanical form of the European black
poplar, it is nevertheless widely distributed in America.
When it has been properly placed, it introduces truly
a note of distinction into the landscape. Towering
high in the air, and carrying the eye along its narrowly
oval contour to a skyward point, it is lofty and pleasing
in a park. It agreeably breaks the sky-line in
many places, and is emphatic in dignified groups.
To plant it in rows is wrong; and I say this as an
innocent offender myself. In boyhood I lived
along the banks of the broad but shallow Susquehanna,
and enjoyed the boating possible upon that stream when
it was not reduced, as graphically described by a
disgusted riverman, to merely a heavy dew. Many
times I lost my way returning to the steep bluff near
my home after the sun had gone to rest, and a hard
pull against the swift current would ensue as I skirted
the bank, straining eyes for landmarks in the dusk.
It occurred to me to plant six Lombardy poplars on
the top of the bluff, which might serve as easily
recognized landmarks. Four of them grew, and
are now large trees, somewhat offensive to a quickened
sense of appropriateness. Long since the old home
has been swallowed up by the city’s advance,
and I suppose none who now see those four spires of
green on the river-bank even guess at the reason for
their existence.
The poplar family, as a whole, is
exuberant with vigor, and interesting more on that
account than by reason of its general dignity or strength
or elegance. It is well worth a little attention
and study, and the consideration particularly of its
bloom periods, to which I commend the tree-sense of
my readers as they take the tree walks that ought to
punctuate these chapters.