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  • July 1, 1877
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The Masonic Magazine, July 1, 1877: Page 38

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    Article THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. ← Page 2 of 5 →
Page 38

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Work Of Nature In The Months.

tudinous insects attracted by their rich store of honey . First and foremost of these , Ave find the Honey-Bee , Avhilst amongst the more brilliant , if less useful frequenters of the plant , Ave find the Lirne-HaAvk-Moth , the Kentish Glory , the large

Emerald , the Buff-tip , the Lobster Moth , Orange Moth , Dagger Moth , Brindled Beauty , and many others too numerous to mention . The Lime is a tree that in Britain we rarely see except as a cultivated favourite , ranged in trim avenues or belting those sacred spots

Avhere" The rude forefathers of the hamlet sleep . " There is , however , a small land abundant in a Avild state , especially in Sussex and Essex ; but , if we would see this tree in surpassing luxuriance , we must seek such specimens as those at Moor Parkin

Hert-, fordshire , or that vrell-known example at Knowle Park , in Kent , which might well be designated the British Banian . This unique specimen sends out luxuriant branches , which , bearing hard upon the ground at their extremitieshave rooted

, and sent up daughter stems ; these stems have again branched out and rooted like the parent stock , until this single tree , together with children and grandchildren , covers ground of well-nigh a fourth of an acre in extent . As the denizens of this tree are

numerous , so too are its uses to man , both useful and ornamental ; for turnery and toys it is invaluable , so too it is for sounding-boards of pianofortes and for carriagepanelling ; whilst to its soft , smooth-grained and light wood , we are indebted for the exquisite carvings of Grinlling Gibbonswhich

, , though executed two hundred years ago , are still to be seen at St . Paul ' s and . Canterbury Cathedrals , Windsor Castle , and Chats-Avorth , as delicate , as sharp , and as beautiful as when they left that master's hand . Humbler ' uses too the tree deigns to serve

—the bastmatthig of the gardener and the packer is prepared from its inner bark , whilst its blossoms yielded to our grandmothers one of those simples , which , if they were not useful for the purpose well-enough intendedstill did perhaps but little harm ,

, a quality that we cannot as readily accord to many of the nostrums of this our vastly more learned age . The Tamarisk we can hardly call a tree , perhaps , but it will be well to notice here

its waving feathery boughs and spikes of small white flowers , as it will lend us a step doAvnAvards towards the humbler shrubs . Many a hedgerow now , especially if the season be late , is thickly adorned Avith the

Honeysuckle , whose perfume is as sweet as its flowers are lovely , whilst , if the soil be chalky , we shall find hanging in profusion the sweet white flowers of the Traveller ' s Joy or Clematis : this plant is one of those boons of vegetation which render

every season beautiful—its clusters of trailing light green foliage in the spring , its abundant perfumed floAvers in summer , its silver-haired fruit , earning for it its rural name of Old-man's-beard in autumn whilst in winter its stem-tracery is a marvellous

study of nature ' s handywork . Nor is another sense , and that by no means an unimportant one , left ungratified , for we can readily find the grateful fruit of some of the bramble-tribe , the . Wild Raspberry , and others , whose berries , if

small , possess a flavour often sought in vain at the hands , or rather of the branches , of their more favoured garden rivals . Nor must we forget the Queen ' s or Cloud-Berry , which , if its fruit affords us but small gratification directlydoes so indirectly

, , for it is the favourite food of that royal bird , the grouse . Talking of this rightroyal bird , at once brings to mind the Ling or Heather which , now makes many a hillside of the far North extremely beautiful : where , too ,

' " Still keeps the Ling its darksome grtan . Thick set with little flowers . '' We shall find , too , especially if the ground be marshy , the large rose-coloured blooms and prettily cut foliage of the Dwarf Red Rattle , Avhich , by the way , is found

throughout almost the Avhole of Europe , and is as plentiful in the moist grounds of Siberia as those of our own land . Here , too , we find the aromatic Wild Thyme , that prime favourite of " Ann Page . " Downwards again to the less aspiring ,

but not less beautiful , family the Bindweeds . With this wild convolvulus eveiy hedgerow is now ablaze , and the stalks of corn in nearly every cornfield firmly bound together to the farmer ' s no small disgust . If noAr the sickle has not already taught

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-07-01, Page 38” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01071877/page/38/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
PREFACE Article 2
INDEX. Article 4
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 7
SONNET. Article 7
HISTORY OF THE "PRINCE OF WALES LODGE." Article 8
SUMMER. Article 18
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 19
TRAM-CAES AND OMNIBUSES. Article 22
WONDERS OF OPERATIVE MASONRY. Article 24
THE TRUE FREEMASON. Article 26
TOM HOOD. Article 27
IN MEMORIAM — BRO. GEORGE FRANK GOULEY. Article 30
THE HISTORY OF EDUCATION. Article 32
CARA IMAGO. Article 33
HARRY WATSON; Article 34
EVERY YEAR. Article 36
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 37
BRO. JAMES NEWTON'S SKETCH OF THE CONCORD ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER, No. 37, BOLTON. Article 41
"ABSENT FRIENDS." Article 42
SHIRTS AND COLLARS. Article 43
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 46
A Review. Article 47
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 50
Forgotten Stories. Article 53
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Page 38

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Work Of Nature In The Months.

tudinous insects attracted by their rich store of honey . First and foremost of these , Ave find the Honey-Bee , Avhilst amongst the more brilliant , if less useful frequenters of the plant , Ave find the Lirne-HaAvk-Moth , the Kentish Glory , the large

Emerald , the Buff-tip , the Lobster Moth , Orange Moth , Dagger Moth , Brindled Beauty , and many others too numerous to mention . The Lime is a tree that in Britain we rarely see except as a cultivated favourite , ranged in trim avenues or belting those sacred spots

Avhere" The rude forefathers of the hamlet sleep . " There is , however , a small land abundant in a Avild state , especially in Sussex and Essex ; but , if we would see this tree in surpassing luxuriance , we must seek such specimens as those at Moor Parkin

Hert-, fordshire , or that vrell-known example at Knowle Park , in Kent , which might well be designated the British Banian . This unique specimen sends out luxuriant branches , which , bearing hard upon the ground at their extremitieshave rooted

, and sent up daughter stems ; these stems have again branched out and rooted like the parent stock , until this single tree , together with children and grandchildren , covers ground of well-nigh a fourth of an acre in extent . As the denizens of this tree are

numerous , so too are its uses to man , both useful and ornamental ; for turnery and toys it is invaluable , so too it is for sounding-boards of pianofortes and for carriagepanelling ; whilst to its soft , smooth-grained and light wood , we are indebted for the exquisite carvings of Grinlling Gibbonswhich

, , though executed two hundred years ago , are still to be seen at St . Paul ' s and . Canterbury Cathedrals , Windsor Castle , and Chats-Avorth , as delicate , as sharp , and as beautiful as when they left that master's hand . Humbler ' uses too the tree deigns to serve

—the bastmatthig of the gardener and the packer is prepared from its inner bark , whilst its blossoms yielded to our grandmothers one of those simples , which , if they were not useful for the purpose well-enough intendedstill did perhaps but little harm ,

, a quality that we cannot as readily accord to many of the nostrums of this our vastly more learned age . The Tamarisk we can hardly call a tree , perhaps , but it will be well to notice here

its waving feathery boughs and spikes of small white flowers , as it will lend us a step doAvnAvards towards the humbler shrubs . Many a hedgerow now , especially if the season be late , is thickly adorned Avith the

Honeysuckle , whose perfume is as sweet as its flowers are lovely , whilst , if the soil be chalky , we shall find hanging in profusion the sweet white flowers of the Traveller ' s Joy or Clematis : this plant is one of those boons of vegetation which render

every season beautiful—its clusters of trailing light green foliage in the spring , its abundant perfumed floAvers in summer , its silver-haired fruit , earning for it its rural name of Old-man's-beard in autumn whilst in winter its stem-tracery is a marvellous

study of nature ' s handywork . Nor is another sense , and that by no means an unimportant one , left ungratified , for we can readily find the grateful fruit of some of the bramble-tribe , the . Wild Raspberry , and others , whose berries , if

small , possess a flavour often sought in vain at the hands , or rather of the branches , of their more favoured garden rivals . Nor must we forget the Queen ' s or Cloud-Berry , which , if its fruit affords us but small gratification directlydoes so indirectly

, , for it is the favourite food of that royal bird , the grouse . Talking of this rightroyal bird , at once brings to mind the Ling or Heather which , now makes many a hillside of the far North extremely beautiful : where , too ,

' " Still keeps the Ling its darksome grtan . Thick set with little flowers . '' We shall find , too , especially if the ground be marshy , the large rose-coloured blooms and prettily cut foliage of the Dwarf Red Rattle , Avhich , by the way , is found

throughout almost the Avhole of Europe , and is as plentiful in the moist grounds of Siberia as those of our own land . Here , too , we find the aromatic Wild Thyme , that prime favourite of " Ann Page . " Downwards again to the less aspiring ,

but not less beautiful , family the Bindweeds . With this wild convolvulus eveiy hedgerow is now ablaze , and the stalks of corn in nearly every cornfield firmly bound together to the farmer ' s no small disgust . If noAr the sickle has not already taught

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