328 OUR WOODLAND TREES. 
to the millwright and the wheelwright. The 
term ‘wych’ indicates, it is believed, one of the 
uses to which it was formerly put, namely, that 
of making boxes or chests—wyche being the old 
name for a chest or box. A noble specimen of 
the Tree may be seen near Roxburgh, in Teviot- 
dale, a Tree—the famous ‘Trysting Tree’—which 
at four feet from the ground measures thirty feet 
in circumference. Another Tree, near Chepstow 
Castle, measures thirty-six feet in girth at four 
feet from the ground. 
