DECIDUOUS TREES. 
329 
impossible for any engraving to do justice to the eccentric luxu- 
riance of this tree. It is the very embodiment of all the odd freaks 
of growth that make trees picturesque, and the vigorous healthful- 
ness of foliage that makes them beautiful. This tree is but twenty- 
five years old, forty-five feet high, and fifty feet across the greatest 
spread of its branches. There is a weeping beech growing in the 
grounds of John A. Kendrick in Newton, Mass., which has a cer- 
tain s}rmmetry of proportion, notwithstanding all its erratic ten- 
dencies. It was planted in 1834, and is now fifty feet high. From 
the ground to the top the trunk is straight, and the branches, which 
directly incline downwards, are thrown off with perfect symmetry. 
Branches, starting out twenty-six feet high, droop and trail upon 
the ground.* This, however, is not the usual habit of the tree, 
which commonly begins its growth in a great variety of tortuous 
directions; so that cultivators who have never seen well-grown 
specimens are apt to ask what there can be about that ungainly 
straggler to recommend it for an ornamental tree. We have seen 
its leading stem grow so as to tie itself up into a knot, and then 
start upward as if it quite enjoyed sitting on itself. 
The growth of the tree indicates great vitality, and it will 
doubtless become one of the largest, as well as the most curious, of 
lawn trees. Its fine masses of pendant boughs, and glossy, wavy 
leaves, do not fairly hide the occasional uncouthness of its branches 
until the tree has been five or six years planted. Of course the 
richer and deeper the soil, the more speedily its best characteristics 
will be developed. 
The Purple-leaved Beech. F. purpurea . — This singularly 
tinted tree is a sport from the common white beech, found in a Ger- 
man forest, and is one of the finest of tree-novelties. In the spring 
its opening leaves and twigs have a bright purple color, approaching 
to crimson. As the growth continues, the color changes to a dull 
purplish-green less pleasing, but still of a character to attract atten- 
tion throughout the season. The form is perhaps a little more sym- 
metrically ovate than the common beech, and the tree does not attain 
* Gardeners’ Monthly, June, 1867. 
