ARBORETUM AND FRUTICETUM, PART 111. 



Pallas mentions having found it in Tauria. The exact tlatc of its introduc- 

 tion into Britain is unknown, but it must have been previous to 15G2, as it is 

 mentioned in Turner's Herbal, published in that year; and we find that, in 

 the reign of Elizabeth, the floors of the houses of distinguished persons were 

 strewed with bay leaves. It was formerly eonsidered medicinal, both leaves 

 ami berries being highly aromatic and stomachic ; they are also astringent 

 and carminative. An infusion of them was not only considered beneficial, 

 when taken internally, but it was used for fomentations, &c. At present, the 

 principal use of the tree is as an ornamental plant, though the leaves are still 

 employed for flavouring custards, blancmange, &c. In mythology this tree is 

 celebrated as having once been Daphne, the daughter of Peneus, who, flying 

 from the embraces of Apollo, ami reaching the banks of her parent stream, called 

 on the river god for aid, and was changed into a laurel. In the age of 

 Etonian greatness, this tree was considered as the emblem of victory, and also 

 of clemency. The victorious generals were crowned with it in their triumphal 

 processions ; every common soldier carried a sprig of it in his hand ; and 

 even the dispatches announcing a victory were wrapped up in, and ornamented 

 w ith, leaves of bay. The aromatic odour of these trees was supposed by the 

 ancient Romans to have the power of dispelling contagion, and during a pes- 

 tilence the Emperor Claudius removed his court to Laurentine, so celebrated 

 for its bay trees. Theophrastus tells us that superstitious Greeks would 

 keep a bay leaf in their mouths all day, to preserve themselves from misfor- 

 tunes. The Greeks had also diviners who were called Daphnephagi, be- 

 cause they chewed bay leaves, which they pretended inspired them with the 

 spirit of prophecy. The bay was dedicated to Apollo, and the first temple 

 raised to that god at Delphi was formed of the branches of the tree. It 

 was the favourite tree of the poets: and we are told that Maia, the mother of 

 Virgil, dreamt that she was delivered of a bay tree; and that one of these 



sprang from Virgil's ashes, and is still growing over his tomb. In later 

 times it was supposed to be a safeguard against lightning; and Madame De 

 Genlis mentions the device of the Count De Dunois, which was a bay tree, 

 with the motto " I defend the earth that bears me." It was a custom in the 

 middle ages, to place wreaths of laurel, with the berries on, on the heads of 

 those poets who had particularly distinguished themselves; hence our ex- 

 pression, poet laureate. " Students who have taken their degrees at the 

 universities are called bachelors, from the French bachclicr, which is derived 

 from the Latin baccalaureus, a laurel berry. These students were not allowed 

 to marry, lest the duties of husband and father should take them from their 

 literary pursuits; and, in time, all single men were called bachelors." (Si/lva 

 Flor. t i. p. 1 15.) This tree is mentioned by Chaucer as the crown of the 

 Knights of the Round Table. 



Soil, Propagation, fyc. The Z>aurus nobilis requires a good free soil, and 

 it will not. thrive in the open air, in a climate much colder than that of the 

 environs of London. It is generally propagated by layers ; but as the berries 

 are ripened in the south of England, and can be had in abundance from 

 Prance, the species is very generally increased from seeds, and the varieties 

 > 1 1 1 V raised from layers or cuttings. As an evergreen shrub, not only beau- 

 tiful in itself, but connected with many classical and interesting associations, 



lit to have a place in every collection. As it forms a dense conical 

 bush, when not. trained to a single stem, it is well adapted for garden hedges. 

 This tree is very tenacious of life, and the root or stump of an apparently 



tree will often send up suckers two years after it has appeared to 



- ad. 



\. n ii r a i nobih inthi Environs of London. There are planti upward of 20 ft. high, at 



rgetl of which, that we have teen, ii a plan) at Byon 28ft. high, forming an 



■ ' bate The rate of growth in the neighbourhood of 



. Juced from tiii dimen Ion <>\ everal jroung plants tent m, ii about 15ft. in height. In 



mihqf London J Ik- largest tree of thii ipeciei In England is at Marf/ram In 



tofC.P/J I P., ibout 12 miles from Swansea. It ii 61 ft. 6 m. high, 



piiAcenl bell -shaped bu»h, aboul 60fl In diameter at the base. In Devonshire, 



