394 a comparison of t m e 



Evergreen and Deciduous Trees and Shrubs Com 

 PARED. — It is a common complaint among tree-growers that ever- 

 greens are neglected more than other trees, considering their 

 peculiar merits in giving winter as well as summer verdure. We 

 do not agree with this view. The whole coniferag or evergreen 

 tribe were, Recording to the records of geology, an earlier and (if 

 the harmony of progress in the development of both the vegetable 

 and animal worlds is believed) necessarily an inferior order of vege- 

 tation to the later forms of deciduous trees. And we think that 

 those lovers of trees who study them in middle age and maturity, 

 rather than in their nursery growth and infantile graces, will rank 

 very few of the evergreens as peers in richness and cheerfulness 

 of verdure, or grace and variety of expression, with the finest spe- 

 cimens of deciduous trees. During the first twenty years of their 

 growth, however, their most beautiful characteristics are so con- 

 spicuous, and afford to the novice in the study of trees so many 

 novel graces of form, color and growth — their little pyramids of 

 verdure gleaming brightly through snows in winter, or resting 

 lovingly on the lawn and perfuming the air with their balsamic 

 breath in summer — that they seem to us more like our own chil- 

 dren, than those more aspiring trees of deciduous breeds which 

 stretch away upwards with rambling vigor while young, and whose 

 beauties begin to multiply only after their branches sway in the 

 air far over our heads. The very peculiarity which, in youth, 

 makes the evergreens, as a class, more charming than deciduous 

 trees, viz : feathery gracefulness of their foliage and outlines, is 

 reversed at maturity, when most of them become more rigid and 

 monotonous in outline, and less cheerful in expression, than the 

 average of deciduous trees. . There is a comparative sameness of 

 form and manner of branching among evergreens, in marked con- 

 trast with the infinite variety among deciduous trees. 



But though the coniferae may not take equal rank with deciduous 

 trees in the variety of their forms or expressions at maturity, they 

 certainly offer the most pleasing studies for the beginner in gar- 

 denesque planting. Many new species of a semi-dwarf character 

 have been , introduced within a few years, and it has also been 

 found that many of the larger species may, by good trimming, be 



