444 
DECIDUOUS TREES. 
small leaves, which turn brown but do not drop off in winter. 
Four to six feet in height. Flowers white, in May. Fruit red, 
hanging a long time on the tree, and by its brightness suggesting 
the name of fiery thorn. Parsons considers it the best of the thorns 
for low hedges. Its spines are very numerous and sharp. Hardy 
near New York. Height six to twelve feet. 
The Medlar. Mespilus (cratcegus ).—This is a species nearly 
allied in all respects to the thorn family. The fruit is larger than 
that of our largest thorn apples, and pleasantly flavored when in a 
state of incipient decay. The Dutch medlar is the variety of 
largest fruit, and Smith’s medlar, M. grandiflora, has the most 
showy flowers. The trees when old assume picturesque low 
forms, and are well covered with glossy foliage. Height fifteen to 
twenty feet. 
The Buckthorn. Rhamnus catharticus .—An upright shrubby 
tree, of European origin, which, a few years since, was greatly com¬ 
mended as a hedge plant. It has not proved of great value, being 
inferior both in beauty and density to our native cockspur thorns, 
and to the Osage orange. Its foliage is much like that of the com¬ 
mon privet—a dull dark green. It has no marked beauty of any 
lynd. 
The Broad-leaved Buckthorn, R. latifolius , is said to be very 
much finer than the foregoing. The shrub and its leaves being 
much larger and brighter colored. 
THE PEACH-TREE. Persica. 
The peach-tree runs through three stages of existence with re¬ 
markable rapidity. When from three to six years old, there are 
few more beautiful small trees. Its finely cut vivid green foliage 
and symmetrical form make it a beautiful small tree. But, after a 
few crops, the growth of the top becomes straggling, and at the end 
of six to ten years its dead twigs, broken limbs, and general “ lop¬ 
sidedness,” mark it a decrepit tree. This is the usual history of 
