Brownsmiths Boy - A Romance in a Garden - Page 87/241

I looked, and he cut out with clean, sharp strokes all those long shoots

but one, carefully leaving the wood and bark smooth, while to me it

seemed as if he were cutting half the tree away.

"You've left one, sir," I said.

"Yes, Grant, I've left one; and I'll show you why. Do you see this old

hard bough?"

I nodded.

"Well, this one has done its work, so I'm going to cut it out, and let

this young shoot take its place."

"But it has no fruit buds on it," I said quickly.

"No, Grant; but it will have next year; and that's one thing we

gardeners always have to do with stone-fruit trees--keep cutting out the

old wood and letting the young shoots take the old branches' place."

"Why, sir?" I asked.

"Because old branches bear small fruit, young branches bear large, and

large fruit is worth more than twice as much as small. Give me the

saw."

I handed him the thin-bladed saw, and he rapidly cut out the old hard

bough, close down to the place where it branched from the dumpy trunk,

and then, handing me the tool, he knelt down on a pad of carpet he

carried in his tremendous pocket.

"Now look here," he said; and taking his sharp pruning-knife he cut off

every mark of the saw, and trimmed the bark.

I looked on attentively till he had ended.

"Well," he said, "ain't you going to ask why I did that?"

"I know, sir," I said. "To make it neat."

"Only partly right, Grant. I've cut that off smoothly so that no rain

may lodge and rot the place before the wound has had time to heal."

"And will it heal, sir?"

"Yes, Grant. In time Nature will spread a ring of bark round that,

which will thicken and close in till the place is healed completely

over."

Then he busily showed me the use of the saw and knife among the big

standard trees, using them liberally to get rid of all the scrubby,

crowded, useless branches that lived upon the strength of the tree and

did no work, only kept out the light, air, and sunshine from those that

did work and bear fruit.

"Why it almost seems, sir," I said one day, "as if Nature had made the

trees so badly that man was obliged to improve them."

"Ah, I'm glad to hear you say that, my lad," he said; "but you are not

right. I'm only a gardener, but I've noticed these things a great deal.

Nature is not a bungler. She gives us apple and plum trees, and they

grow and bear fruit in a natural and sufficient way. It is because man

wants them to bear more and bigger fruit, and for more to grow on a

small piece of ground than Nature would plant, that man has to cut and

prune."