Page images
PDF
EPUB

ing to some, this is a distinct species, indigenous to the island; and others even assert that it is not a willow at all. Being anxious to procure correct information as to the tree at St. Helena, we sent a letter to the Morning Chronicle, which appeared in that journal on Sept. 5. 1836. We received a great many answers; some dried specimens; a number of drawings and engravings, either lent or given; and one living plant. The result of the whole, as far as it is worth making public, is as follows:- No species of willow is indigenous to St. Helena; but about 1810, or before, when General Beatson was governor there, he, being fond of planting, had a great many forest trees and shrubs introduced from Britain; and though, as appears by the St. Helena Gazette for 1811-12, he had the greatest difficulty in preserving his plantations from the numerous goats which abounded in the island, yet several of the trees survived, and attained a timber-like size. Among these was the tree of Sàlix babylónica, which has since been called Napoleon's willow. This tree grew among other trees, on the side of a valley near a spring; and, having attracted the notice of Napoleon, he had a seat placed under it, and used to go and sit there very frequently, and have water brought to him from the adjoining fountain. About the time of Napoleon's death, in 1821, a storm, it is said, shattered the willow in pieces; and, after the interment of the emperor, Madame Bertrand planted several cuttings of this tree on the outside of the railing which surrounds the grave; and placed within it, on the stone, several flower-pots with heartsease and forget-me-not. In 1828, we are informed, the willows were found in a dying state; and twenty-eight young ones were, in consequence, placed near the tomb, which was at that time surrounded with a profusion of scarlet-blossomed pelargoniums. A correspondent, who was at St. Helena in 1834, says one of the willows was then in a flourishing condition; but another, who was there in 1835, describes it as going fast to decay, owing to the number of pieces carried away by visitors. In what year a cutting from this willow was brought to England for the first time we have not been able to ascertain; but it appears probable that it may have been in the year 1823, and that one of the oldest plants is that in the garden of the Roebuck tavern on Richmond Hill, which, as it appears by the inscription on a white marble tablet affixed to it, was taken from the tree in that year. Since that period, it has become fashionable to possess a plant of the true Napoleon's willow; and, in consequence, a great many cuttings have been imported, and a number of plants sold by the London nurserymen. There are now trees of it in a great many places. There is a handsome small one in the Horticultural Society's Garden; one at Kew; several at Messrs. Loddiges's; some in the Twickenhamn Botanic Garden; one in the garden of Captain Stevens, Beaumont Square, Mile End; one in the garden of Mr. Knight, at Canonbury Place, Islington, brought over in 1824; one in the garden of No. 2. Lee Place, Lewisham, Kent; one in the garden of No. 1. Porchester Terrace; one in the garden of S. C. Hall, Esq., Elm Grove, Kensington Gravel Pits; one, a very flourishing and large tree, in the garden of Mrs. Lawrence, Drayton Green; one at Clayton Priory, near Brighton; one at Allesley Rectory, near Coventry; several at Chatsworth; and there are various others in the neighbourhood of London, and in different parts of the country. In ornamental plantations, the weeping willow has the most harmonious effect when introduced among trees of shapes as unusual as its own; partly of the same kind, as the weeping birch, and partly of contrasted forms, as the Lombardy poplar; and the effect of these three trees is always good when accompanied by water, either in a lake, as in fig. 1305., or in a stream and waterfall, as in fig. 1306. Both these views are of scenery in the park at Monza. (See Encyc. of Gard., ed. 1835, p. 36.) Fig. 1037. is an example of the use of trees having drooping branches, and others having vertical branches, such as the Lombardy poplar, in contrasting with and harmonising horizontal lines. (See Gard. Mag., vol. i. p. 117.) For further remarks on the use of the

[graphic]

weeping willow along with the Lombardy poplar, see Pópulus fastigiata in a future page.

A large weeping willow, in a scene in which there are no other trees at all harmonising with it by their form, however beautiful it may be in itself, always more or less injures the landscape. In Gilpin's Forest Scenery, he remarks that the "weeping willow is a very picturesque tree, and a perfect contrast to the Lombardy poplar. The light airy spray of the poplar," he adds,

[graphic][subsumed]

"rises perpendicularly: that of the weeping willow is pendent. The shape of its leaf is conformable to the pensile character of the tree; and its spray, which is lighter than that of the poplar, is more easily put in motion by a breath of air. The weeping willow, however, is not adapted to sublime subjects. We wish it not to screen the broken buttresses and Gothic windows of an abbey, or to overshadow the battlements of a ruined castle. These offices it resigns to the oak, whose dignity can support them. The weeping willow seeks an humbler scene; some romantic footpath bridge, which it half conceals, or some glassy pond, over which it hangs its streaming foliage,—

[merged small][graphic][merged small][merged small][merged small]

In these situations it appears in character, and, of course, to advantage." Sir Thomas Dick Lauder remarks on this tree, that it is a native of the East, and that interesting associations are awakened in conjunction with it by that very beautiful Psalm, "By the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept, when we remembered thee, O Sion! As for our harps, we hanged them up upon the willow trees that are therein." (Psalm 137.) "The tender and melancholy recollections of the captive children of Israel, when taken in conjunction with this tree," he adds, " are of themselves sufficient to give it an interest in every human bosom that may have been touched by the strains of the Psalmist." (Lauder's Gilpin, vol. i. p. 135.)

The weeping willow roots freely by cuttings, and grows with great rapidity in a rich soil, within reach of water, in the climate of London; but, in the north, the young shoots are very apt to be killed by frost. These shoots are brittle, and neither they nor the wood are ever applied to any useful purpose. The weeping willow is particularly subject to the attacks of the Curculio lapathi Lin., Cryptorhynchus Fab., and other insects, as already pointed out in our general view of the genus Salix. (p. 1478.)

A curious instance is given in the Gardener's Magazine, vol. ix. p. 267., of a weeping willow in the Botanic Garden at Carlsruhe. This willow, which was planted in 1787, was nearly thrown down by a storm in 1816; and, in consequence of the injury it received, one branch was cut off, and an oaken prop was put under the other, as represented in fig. 1308. a. The willow sent down a root under the decayed bark of the oaken prop. This root in 1829, when we saw it, being increased to about the thickness of a man's arm, had burst from the bark; which being removed the root stood alone, as shown at b; and we are informed that it has since so increased in size and strength as to render the oaken prop unnecessary. Varieties. There is one very decided variety, commonly treated as a species, under the name of S. annulàris; and Mr. Castles of the Twickenham Botanic Garden is of opinion that, exclusive of this variety, there are two forms of the species in the country, one of which he thinks may possibly be the male plant. This form, as it appears to be the same as the plant sent from St. Helena, we shall, till something further has been decided respecting it, call it S. b. Napoleòna. The varieties will, therefore, stand as under:

[merged small][graphic][subsumed]

* S. b. 1 vulgaris fœm. Hort. has pale green young shoots, slender, with an angular twist above the axil of each leaf, and large stipules. It is the most common weeping willow in the neighbourhood of London, and flowers in June.

[ocr errors]

S. b. 2 Napoleona Hort. has round shoots, generally reddish, and the leaves are without stipules. It is of very vigorous growth; and there are a number of plants of this kind in a brickfield close to the Lunatic Asylum at Hanwell; one at the Marsh Gate, Richmond, near the Poorhouse; and one at the Ferry, near Ham House. Mr. Castles's son, Mr. George Castles, says there are also some by the canal side, near Brentford." The tree at Richmond, when measured for us in November 1836, was 60 ft. high, and the diameter of the trunk was 3 ft. 3 in.

S. b. 3 crispa Hort.; S. annulàris Forbes in Sal. Wob., No. 21., with a fig. of the female; our fig. 21. in p. 1606.; and the plate of this tree in our last Volume. The ring-leaved Willow. - Leaves lanceolate, acuminate, serrated, curled, or twisted, glabrous, and glaucous beneath. Young twigs erect, pubescent at the points. Stipules half-heart-shaped. Ovary ovate, glabrous, and sessile. Stigmas notched. (Sal. Wob., p. 41.) The preceding year's branches are pendulous. A garden production, of uncertain origin, easily distinguished from the common weeping willow (S. babylónica), by the crowded mass of its young twigs, and its curled leaves. The tree does not appear as though it would attain the same height as the species. The catkins of the ring-leaved willow appear in May. The plant of this variety in the Horticultural Society's Garden, and figured in our last Volume, was, in 1834, 17 ft. high.

Statistics of the Species. Salix babylonica in the Environs of London. There are many immense trees on the banks of the Thames, and in villa gardens where the soil is moist, from 50 ft. to 60 ft. high, with heads 60 ft. or 80 ft. in diameter. In the Horticultural Society's Garden, in 1834, two trees, 8 years planted, were 18 ft. high. At Mount Grove, Hampstead, 4 years planted, it is 12 ft. high. Salix babylonica South of London. In Devonshire, in Bystock Park, 12 years planted, it is 24 ft. high; at Endsleigh Cottage, 10 years planted, 20 ft. high. In Dorsetshire, at Melbury Park, 20 years

planted, it is 31 ft. high. In the Isle of Jersey, in Saunders's Nursery, 10 years planted, it is 30 ft. high. In Somersetshire, at Nettlecombe, 24 years planted, it is 34 ft. high. In Surrey, at Claremont, it is 30 ft. high; the diameter of the trunk í ft. 9 in., and of the head 45 ft.

Salix babylonica North of London. In Berkshire, at Bear Wood, 10 years planted, it is 20 ft. high. In Buckinghamshire, at Temple House, 40 years planted, it is 30 ft. high. In Denbighshire, at Llanbede Hall, 44 years planted, it is 54 ft. high. In Oxfordshire, in the Oxford Botanic Garden, 12 years planted, it is 30 ft. high. In Pembrokeshire, at Golden Grove, 50 years planted, it is 20 ft. high; the diameter of the trunk 14 ft., and of the head 20 ft. In Radnorshire, at Maeslaugh Castle, 50 years planted, it is 42 ft. high. In Suffolk, in the Bury Botanic Garden, 10 years planted, it is 26 ft. high; at Finborough Hall, 70 years planted, it is 70 ft, high; the diameter of the trunk 3 ft., and of the head 54 ft. In Warwickshire, at Combe Abbey, 10 years planted, it is 24 ft. high. In, Worcestershire, at Hagley, 10 years planted, it is 20 ft. high; at Croome, 70 years planted, it is 50 ft. high, the diameter of the trunk 2 ft., and of the head 30 ft. In Yorkshire, at Grimston, 30 years planted, it is 25 ft. high.

Salix babylonica in Scotland. At Hopetoun House, near Edinburgh, 16 years planted, it is 20 ft. high; the diameter of the trunk 8 in., and of the head 24 ft. In Fifeshire, at Danibristle Park, 10 years planted, it is 8 ft. high. In Perthshire, at Taymouth, 36 years planted, it is 70 ft. high; the diameter of the trunk 34 ft., and of the head 60 ft. In Stirlingshire, at Callender Park, 5 years planted, it is 16 ft. high.

Salix babylonica in Ireland. Near Dublin, at Terenure, 50 years planted, it is 35 ft. high. In Galway, at Coole, it is 50 ft. high; the diameter of the trunk 24 ft., and of the head 60 ft.

Salix babylonica in Foreign Countries. In France, near Paris, at Scéaux, 40 years planted, it is 50 ft. high; the diameter of the trunk 3 ft., and of the head 60 ft. In Austria, at Vienna, in the University Botanic Garden, 50 years planted, it is 20 ft. high; the diameter of the trunk 10 in., and of the head 12 ft. in Baron Loudon's garden, at Hadersdorf, near the tomb of the celebrated Marshal Loudon, 12 years planted, it is 14 ft. high: at Brück on the Leytha, 50 years planted, it is 49 ft. high; the diameter of the trunk 3 ft., and of the head 48 ft. In Prussia, near Berlin, at Sans Souci, 40 years old, it is 24 ft. high; the diameter of the trunk 9 in., of the head 7 ft. In the south of Russia, the tree is met with in the gardens of some noblemen, and in the govern ment garden at Nikitka. In Italy it is frequent. In the burial-grounds of Turkey it is common; and it may be found in various parts of India, and even in China. It is commoner in almost every other country than in its native habitat, the banks of the Euphrates.

20. S. DECI PIENS Hoffm.

The deceptive, White Welch, or varnished,
Willow.

Identification. Hoff. Sal., 2. p. 2. t. 31.; Sm. Eng. Bot., t. 1937.; Rees's Cyclo., No. 37.; Engl. FL, 4.
p. 184; Forbes in Sal. Wob., No. 29.; Hook. Br. Fl., ed. 3.; Mackay Fl. Hibern., pt. 1. p. 246.
Synonymes. S. amerina Walker Essays on Nat. Hist.; S. frágilis, part of, Koch Comm., p. 15.
The Sexes. Both sexes are described in Eng. Fl.: the male is figured in Eng. Bot. and Sal. Wob.
"I am only acquainted with the sterile plant." (Hook. Br. F.)

Engravings. Hoffm. Sal., 2. t. 31.; Eng. Bot., t. 1937.; Sal. Wob., No. 29.; our fig. 1309.; and fig. 29. P. 1609.

Spec. Char., &c. Leaves lanceolate, pointed, serrated, very smooth; floral ones partly obovate and recurved. Footstalks somewhat glandular. Ovary tapering, stalked, smooth. Style longer than the cloven stigmas. Branches smooth, highly polished. (Sal. Wob., p. 57.) A native of Britain, growing plentifully in woods and hedges; and flowering in May. According to Pursh, it grows in North America, on road sides and about plantations; but was introduced from Europe. (Fl. Amer. Sept.) It forms an upright, but not lofty, tree, distinguished by the smooth clay-coloured bark of the last year's branches, which shine like porcelain, as if varnished; the shoots of the present year being stained of a fine red or crimson. This species is frequently cultivated for basketwork; and, when planted in moist ground, it produces annual shoots 6 ft. or 8 ft. in length, when cut down; but, in a few years, these gradually become shorter, and the plant ceases to be worth cultivating. The crimson colour of its twigs, in this state, readily distinguishes it from every other species; though it is often confounded with S. frágilis. A tree in the Horticultural Society's Garden was, in 1834, after being ten years planted, 14 ft. high.

[graphic]

Statistics. In Oxfordshire, on the banks of the Cherwell, in Christ Church Meadow, a tree, estimated to be of 40 years' growth, is 40 ft. high; the diameter of the trunk 3 ft., and of the head 60 ft. There are plants in the Hackney and Goldworth arboretums, and at Henfield.

[blocks in formation]

Identification. Forbes in Sal. Wob., No. 19.
The Sexes. The female is figured in Sal. Wob.
Engravings. Sal. Wob., No. 19.; and our fig. 19. in p. 1606.

Spec. Char., &c. Leaves lanceolate, with long, narrow, tapering points; glaucous, and slightly hairy beneath; margins closely serrated. Branches yellow. Catkins accompanying the leaves. Ovary nearly sessile, ovate-lanceolate,

« PreviousContinue »