60 EFFECT OF COLD ON THE WYCH. 



feet at the butt ; yielding eight pair of naves, and 

 eight thousand, six hundred, and sixty feet of 

 boards, the sawing of which cost 10. 17s. It 

 contained ninety-seven tons of timber. As Evelyn 

 says, "this was certainly a goodly tree!" The 

 etymology of this tree seems to be unknown, and 

 different authors, who mention it, spell it, accord- 

 ingly, various ways: Evelyn calls it wich, and 

 witch; Gilpin, wich; others wych; Bacon, weech. 

 The foliage of the young trees of this elm are the 

 favourite food of the larva? of the Buff- tip-moth, 

 (Phal. Bucephala), for though they likewise feed 

 upon the young leaves of the oak, and the lime, 

 yet they give the preference to those of this tree ; 

 when so feeding it will always be known by their 

 rejectments on the earth beneath, which when the 

 larvae are in any number, may be noticed by very 

 unattentive persons. This caterpillar when nearly 

 fed for its change becomes heavy, and commonly 

 falls to the earth from the spray, and we can see 

 them crawling along the paths, or even upon the 

 clothes of persons that have walked under the trees 

 where they have fed : though this creature is very 

 often found in considerable numbers throughout 

 the summer and autumn, yet by reason of some 

 fatality, the moth is by no means so common an 

 insect as might be expected from the profusion of 

 its larvae. 



We have no indigenous tree that suffers from 



