APPLE TREES. 275 



APPLE TREES. 



" Inutilesquc falce ramos amputans 

 Feliciores inierit" HORACB. 



MANY a time have I helped to cut away the 

 branches of decaying apple trees, and to insert 

 healthy grafts in their places ; noping to restore the 

 tree to the sound and fertile state in which it once 

 had been. Revolving seasons did but tend to show 

 that I had completely lost my time ; for the Ame- 

 rican bug, supposed to have been unknown formerly, 

 in this country, attacked my labours in such formi- 

 dable array, that nothing could withstand its fury. 



Every lover of the orchard must have observed 

 this white pestilence in the enclosures sacred to Po- 

 mona. It is seen on the branches and on the bole 

 of the apple tree in the month of June, when it gives 

 them the appearance of being dotted over with little 

 patches of a downy white. 



Long ago I turned my thoughts to the extermina- 

 tion of the spoliator, which had nearly rendered the 

 choicest parts of the orchard a sickly, sad, unprofit- 

 able waste. 



I began by trying to make the branches, upon 

 which these diminutive harpies had settled, as dis- 

 agreeable to them as it were possible, hoping by this 

 manoeuvre to starve them out of house and home. 

 With this in view, I applied unctuous preparations to 

 the injured parts of the trees; but finding, in the long 

 run, that this availed me nothing, I made a decoction 

 from walnut leaves, and washed the branches well 

 T 2 



