[Round About a Great Estate by Richard Jefferies]@TWC D-Link bookRound About a Great Estate CHAPTER I 14/19
The meaning was that it should be cut in the very 'dead of the year,' when the sap had retired, so that the timber might last longer.
The old folk took the greatest trouble to get their timber well seasoned, which is the reason why the woodwork in old houses has endured so well.
Passing under some elms one June evening, I heard a humming overhead, and found it was caused by a number of bees and humble-bees busy in the upper branches at a great height from the ground.
They were probably after the honey-dew.
Buttercups do not flourish under trees; in early summer, where elms or oaks stand in the mowing-grass, there is often a circle around almost bare of them and merely green, while the rest of the meadow glistens with the burnished gold of that beautiful flower. The oak is properly regarded as a slow-growing tree, but under certain circumstances a sapling will shoot up quickly to a wonderful height. When the woodmen cut down a fir plantation in the Chace there was a young oak among it that overtopped the firs, and yet its diameter was so small that it looked no larger than a pole; and the supporting boughs of the firs being now removed it could not uphold itself, but bent so much from the perpendicular as to appear incapable of withstanding a gale.
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