Brownsmiths Boy - A Romance in a Garden - Page 86/241

"Look here, Grant," he said. "Some folk start life with their gardens

already dug up and planted, some begin with their bit of ground all

rough, and some begin without any land at all. Which do you belong to?"

"The last, sir," I said.

"Right! Well, I suppose you are not going to wait for one uncle to take

a garden for you and the other to dig it up?"

"No," I said sturdily; "I shall work for myself."

"Right! I don't like boys to be cocky and impudent but I like a little

self-dependence."

As the time went on, Old Brownsmith taught me how to bud roses and

prune, and, later on, to graft. He used to encourage me to ask

questions, and I must have pestered him sometimes, but he never seemed

weary.

"It's quite right," he used to say; "the boy who asks questions learns

far more than the one who is simply taught."

"Why, sir?" I said.

"Well, I'll tell you. He has got his bit of ground ready, and is

waiting for the seed or young plant to be popped in. Then it begins to

grow at once. Don't you see this; he has half-learned what he wants to

know in the desire he feels. That desire is satisfied when he is told,

and the chances are that he never forgets. Now you say to me--What is

the good of pruning or cutting this plum-tree? I'll tell you."

We were standing in front of the big red brick wall one bright winter's

day, for the time had gone by very quickly. Old Brownsmith had a sharp

knife in his hand, and I was holding the whetstone and a thin-bladed saw

that he used to cut through the thicker branches.

"Now look here, Grant. Here's this plum-tree, and if you look at it you

will see that there are two kinds of wood in it."

"Two kinds of wood, sir?"

"Yes. Can't you tell the difference?"

"No, sir; only that some of the shoots are big and strong, and some are

little and twiggy."

"Exactly: that is the difference, my lad. Well, can you see any more

difference in the shoots?"

I looked for some moments, and then replied: "Yes; these big shoots are long and smooth and straight, and the little

twiggy ones are all over sharp points."

"Then as there is too much wood there, which had we better cut out.

What should you do?"

"Cut out the scrubby little twigs, and nail up these nice long shoots."

"That's the way, Grant! Now you'll know more about pruning after this

than Shock has learned in two years. Look here, my lad; you've fallen

into everybody's mistake, as a matter of course. Those fine long shoots

will grow into big branches; those little twigs with the points, as you

call them, are fruit spurs, covered with blossom buds. If I cut them

out I should have no plums next year, but a bigger and a more barren

tree. No, my boy, I don't want to grow wood, but fruit. Look here."