Uncle Robert's Geography Part 16
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"You shall," said Uncle Robert "I will send for one. You may carry the letter to the post office to-morrow when you go for the mail."
CHAPTER VIII.
A WALK IN THE WOODS.
It was a beautiful Sunday afternoon. The sun had marked its shortest shadows. They were now pointing toward the northeast.
The family had returned from the little village church. Dinner was over, and they had all gone into the cool, shady piazza. Mrs. Leonard and Susie had settled themselves cozily in one corner and were reading together. Mr. Leonard was nodding over the pages of his weekly newspaper. Frank, stretched out on the settee, was absorbed in a new book, while not far away Donald lay under the spreading branches of a spruce tree with Barri by his side. Uncle Robert stood gazing at the green woods, which looked so cool and inviting.
"'The groves were G.o.d's first temples,'" he said to himself, and then, turning to the others, asked, "Who wants to go for a walk?"
"I do," said Frank, springing up. "Come on, Don. Don-ald!" he called, "we're going for a walk."
"You'd better come with us," said Uncle Robert to Mrs. Leonard.
"I'll get your hat, mother," cried Susie eagerly, running into the house.
"Shall we go to the cornfield?" asked Mr. Leonard, picking up his straw hat.
"I think it would be cooler in the woods," said Mrs. Leonard.
"Oh, yes," said Donald, "let's go up the creek to the pond."
The country was in the full glory of early summer. Just beyond the rich green of the great cornfield could be seen the peaceful river. The yellowing grain on the upland waved gently in the breeze. Under the wide-spreading oak trees in the pasture the cows were lazily chewing their cuds. A feeling of quiet pleasure filled the air.
"I planted all these trees," said Mr. Leonard as they walked under the maples that grew on either side of the road. "It is wonderful how they have grown. They were like little sticks when I set them out."
"The one at the end of the row," said Mrs. Leonard, "was planted the day Frank was born."
"It is the largest of them all," said Frank.
"That's because it was planted first," said Susie. "I have a tree, too, uncle."
"So have I," said Donald. "It is the spruce in the front yard."
"We call them our birthday trees," said Susie. "Mine is the elm by the corner of the porch."
"That is a very nice custom," said Uncle Robert. "But the trees grow faster than you do."
"They don't have anything to do but grow," said Donald.
When they reached the bridge they paused to look up and down the creek valley. Through the trees they caught glimpses of the s.h.i.+ning river and the waving corn. The creek, a little stream, flowed between the two gentle slopes that formed its valley.
"There's a gate under this bridge, uncle," said Donald, "to keep the cows from going down the creek to the cornfield. In the fall, after the corn is cut, we open it, and let them go to the river."
"How pleasant it is in here!" said Uncle Robert as they walked farther into the wood.
"Just see how damp the ground is under these dead leaves!" said Susie as she pushed them back from a little violet that she was trying to pick with a long stem. "Poor little flowers! How do they ever get through all these leaves? It would be so much easier for them if it was just green gra.s.s."
[Ill.u.s.tration: The bridge. ]
"But then there wouldn't be any flowers," said Mr. Leonard, "or at least they would be very different."
[Ill.u.s.tration: HICKORY OAK WILLOW b.u.t.tER-NUT MAPLE WALNUT (leaves)]
"It's the leaves that make the soil so rich," said Frank, digging into the ground with a stick. "See how they are mixed all through it!"
"Do you know the names of all these trees?" asked Uncle Robert.
"I do," said Frank. "I can tell every tree in the wood."
"How?" asked Uncle Robert.
"By the leaves is the easiest way," said Frank, "but I know some trees by the bark."
"I can tell them by the leaves," said Donald. "Try me."
So as Uncle Robert pointed to them Donald called them all by name. There were oaks and maples, hickories, walnuts, and b.u.t.ternuts, and close to the creek the overhanging willows.
"Can you tell a tree by its shape when you look at it from a distance?"
asked Uncle Robert.
"I can tell the willows and poplars," said Frank, "and maples, too."
"The trees in the pasture have a different shape from those in the woods," said Uncle Robert. "I mean trees of the same kind. How do you explain that?"
"Why, the trees in the pasture have a chance to spread out," said Donald. "There isn't so much room in here."
"But these trees are taller," said Frank, "and they are straighter, too."
"Can you tell the direction of the winds that blow the strongest and longest by the shape of the trees?" asked Uncle Robert.
"I never thought of that," said Frank.
"The wind doesn't blow in the woods," said Donald.
"When we get out into the pasture we'll notice the trees there," said Mr. Leonard.
"Isn't this a tiny tree?" said Susie. "I wonder what it is."
"That's an oak," said Frank. "The leaves tell that."
"Oaks grow from acorns," said Donald. "I'm going to dig this up and see if it grows like the seeds in the garden."
"What a long root it has!" said Susie as Donald dug about it. "Don't take it out, Don. Put the dirt back and let it grow to be a tree."
Uncle Robert's Geography Part 16
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Uncle Robert's Geography Part 16 summary
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