WOODLANDS. 5 



in the lane ; the trees are at present young, but as 

 they grow older and decay they will be still more 

 resorted to. 



Jays screech in the trees of the lane almost all the 

 year round, though more frequently in spring and 

 autumn, but I rarely walked here without seeing or 

 hearing one. Beyond the stile, the lane descends into 

 a hollow, and is bordered by a small furze common, 

 where, under shelter of the hollow brambles and 

 beneath the golden bloom of the furze, the pale 

 anemones flower. 



When the June roses open their petals on the 

 briars, and the scent of new-mown hay is wafted over 

 the hedge from the meadows, the lane seems to wind 

 through a continuous wood. The oaks and chestnuts, 

 though too young to form a complete arch, cross their 

 green branches, and cast a delicious shadow. For it 

 is in the shadow that we enjoy the summer, looking 

 forth from the gateway upon the mowing grass where 

 the glowing sun pours down his fiercest beams. 



Tall bennets and red sorrel rise above the grass, 

 white ox-eye daisies chequer it below; the distant 

 hedge quivers as the air, set in motion by the intense 

 heat, runs along. The sweet murmuring coo of the 

 turtle dove comes from the copse, and the rich notes 

 of the blackbird from the oak into which he has 

 mounted to deliver them. 



Slight movements in the hawthorn, or in the 

 depths of the tall hedge grasses, movements too quick 

 for the glance to catch their cause, are where some 

 tiny bird is passing from spray to spray. It may be 

 a white-throat cj'eeping among the nettles after his 



