Library of Congress. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Chap Shel Eucalyptus Globulus. FoE\^EST Culture Eucalyptus Trees. e!iljx_i"^7Vooxd cdoo:e':eifl. The only Complete and Reliable Work on the Eucalypti Published, in the United States. SAN FRANCISCO: Cubery k Company, Steam Book and Ornamental Job Printers, No. 414 Market Str(?e[, below Saasome. 1876. T3w .A'^ CONTENTS. Page. Introduction 5 Forest Culture and Australian Gum-trees : A Lecture (third of a series), delivered by EUwood Cooper, Nov. 26, 1875, before the Santa Barbara College Association.. 9 Descriptions of Thirty-two Varieties of Eucalyptus- trees : Copied from the Pamphlets of Baron Ferd. von Mueller 31 Description of Twenty Varieties : Copied from the Plant • Catalogue of Anderson, Hall & Co. , Sydney '. 40 Forest Culture in its Relations to Industrial Pur- suits : By Baron Ferd. von Mueller 45 Application of Phytology to the Industrial Purposes OF Life : By Baron Ferd. von Mueller 121 Australian Vegetation : By Baron Ferd. von Mueller — 167 Santa Barbara College Catalogue 205 INTRODUCTION. In presenting to the public a printed copy of ray ^^ Lecture on Forest Planting and Australian Gum- Trees,^ ^ delivered before the Santa Barbara College Association, for the benefit of the library, it is neces- sary to preface the lecture by the statement that it appears in print in consequence of repeated demands for the publication from several localities in the south- ern part of California. Forest protection, the want of trees, in almost every part of the State, is mani- fest to all owners of land, who are eager to begin the planting ; the only question being — What shall we plant ? The rapidity of growth of the Blue Gum, and the facility with which it can be propagated, is a feature of great importance ; but information is wanted. Much that has been written on the subject is mere speculative theories, often contradictory, and too uncertain to merit the confidence necessary to base such an important industry. This industry not only necessitates that the protection should be cheap- ly and quickly obtained, but that the tree should have a value for mechanical or other purposes. This value gives confidence to the planter, without which it can not be expected the work will go on. The inquiry comes, What is the value of the tree ? This is the 6 ii^TRODUCTION. vital question to the man who invests money, time, or labor in the enterprise, and the question I have aimed to answer. In treating of forest - planting I have, to some extent, done nothing more than give the opinions of great writers on the subject, and in their own language. The sources of original ideas in any subject are few. I have, therefore, thought it wiser to copy than give anything of my own, less impressive. In a short essay the subject could not be handled with anything like completeness, and in gathering together fragments from the writings of Franklin B. Hough, the Hon. Geo. P. Marsh, Prof. Lovoe, and others, I have selected that which I thought most valuable, having in view but the one purpose — to present something to the public that would impress them with the importance of this industry. In the investigation I learned, through my corre- spondence with the Hon. Thos. Adamson, Jr., Unit- ed States Consul - general at Melbourne, that Baron Ferd. von Mueller, of Australia, had published sev- eral pamphlets on the ^^Eucalyptus-trees, and the Im- portance of Forest Culture,'''' but that a copy could not be obtained. Mr. Adamson, however, wrote that the Baron would send the copies in his possession provid- ed I would have them published at my own risk, in a connected form. I have deemed the subject of so great and vital importance that I present to the pub- lic, in this book, a part of the writings of this valua- ble author : First — "Descriptions of Thirty .two Varieties of the Eucalypti Family. " iN'tRODUCTION. 7 Second ''Forest Culture in its Relations to Indus- trial Pursuits." Third. — " Application of Phytology to the Indus- trial Purposes of Life." Fourth. — " Australian Vegetation." I have in addition to the above the following, which will soon appear in a separate volume : First. — << The Trees of Australia, Phytologically Named and Arranged, with Indications of their Ter- ritorial Distribution." Second. — ''The Principal Timber-trees Readily Eligible for Victorian Industrial Culture, with Indi- cations of their Native Countries, and some of their Technologic Uses." Third, — "Select Plants (exclusive of timber-trees) Readily Eligible for Victorian Industrial Culture, with Indications of their Native Countries and Some of their Uses." Fourth. — " Additions to 'Select Plants.' " Fifth " Second Supplement to the ' Select Plants. ' " Sixth. — "The objects of a Botanic Garden in Rela- tion to Industries." Ellwood Coopeb. FOEEST CULTUKE AND A LECTU RE (Third of a Series) Delivered by ELLWOOD COOPKR,, November 26th, 1875, befobk the Santa Bareaba College Assoclation. <' The presence of stately ruins in solitary deserts is conclusive proof that great climatic changes have taken place within the period of human history, in many eastern countries, once highly cultivated and densely peopled, but now arid wastes. << Although the records of geology teach that great vicissitudes of climate, from the torrid and humid conditions of the coal period to those of extreme cold which produced the glaciers of the drift, may have in turn occurred in the same region, we have no reason to believe that any material changes have been brought about, by astronomical or other natural causes, within the historic period. We cannot account for the changes that have occurred since these sui|ipurnt and sterile plains, where these traces of man's first civilization are found, were clothed with a luxuriant vegetation, except by ascribing them to the improvident acts of 10 FOREST CULTURE AND man in destroying the trees and plants which once clothed the surface and sheltered it from the sun and the winds. As this shelter was removed the desert approached, gaining new power as its area increased, until it crept over vast regions once populous and fer- ,tile, and left only the ruins of former magnificence." '< There are parts of Asia Minor, of Northern Africa, of Greece, and even of Alpine Europe, where the operation of causes set in action by man has brought the face of the earth to a desolation almost as com- plete as that of the moon. And though, within the brief space of time men call the ^ historical period,^ they are known to have been covered with luxuriant woods, verdant pastures, and fertile meadows, they are now too far deteriorated to bereclaimable by man. Nor can they become again fitted for human use except through great geological changes, or other mysterious influences or agencies of which we have no present knowledge, and over which we have no prospective control. The earth is fast becoming an unfit home for its noblest inhabitants, and another era of equal human crime and human improvidence, and of like duration with that through which traces of that crime and im- providence extend, would reduce it to such a condition of impoverished productiveness, of shattered surface, of climatic excess, as to threaten the depravation, barbarism, and perhaps even extinction of the spe- cies." '< In European countries, especially in Italy, Germany, Austria, and Frajace, "where the injuries resulting from the cutting off of timber have long since been realized, the attention of governments has been turned to this subject by the necessities pf the case, and con» EUCALYPTUS TREES. 11 servative measures have, in many Instances, been successfully applied, so that a supply of timber has been obtained, by cultivation, and other benefits re- sulting from this measure have been realized." In these countries there are over two dozen schools of forestry, where special instruction is imparted to the youth who are to take the future care of the pub- lic forests and private plantations. The attention of our Government was called to the importance of reserving timber for our navy, and an Act was passed March 1, 1817, making reservations of public lands for this purpose. This Act, however, proved ineflTectual, and has along time since been dis- regarded, and there is nothing at the present time to prevent the complete destruction of every wooded spot in the country. '< The preservation of forests is one of the first inter- ests of society, and consequently one of the first du- ties of government. All the wants of life are closely related to their preservation ; agriculture, architect- ure, and almost all the industries seek therein their aliment and resources, which nothing could replace. " Necessary as are the forests to the individual, they are not less so to the state. It is from thence that commerce finds the means of transportation and ex- change, and that governments claim the elements of their protection, their safety, and even their glory. << It is not alone from the wealth which they offer by their working, under wise regulation, that we may judge of their utility. Their existence is of itself of incalculable benefit to the countries that possess them, as well in the protection and feeding of the springs and rivers as in their prevention against the \vashing 12 FOREST CULTURE AND away of the soil upon mountains, and in the beneficial and healthful influence which they exert upon the atmosphere. << Large forests deaden and break the force of heavy winds that beat out the seeds and injure the growth of plants ; they form reservoirs of moisture ; they shelter the soil of the fields, and upon hill-sides, where the rain-waters, checked in their descent by the thous- and obstacles they present by their roots and the trunks of trees, have time to filter into the soil and only find their way by slow degrees to the rivers. They regu- late, in a certain degree, the flow of the waters and the hygrometrical condition of the atmosphere, and their destruction accordingly increases the duration of droughts and gives rise to the injuries of inunda- tions, which denude the face of the mountains. ''The destruction of forests has often become to the country where this has happened a real calamity and a speedy cause of approaching decline and ruin. Their injury and reduction below the degree of pres- ent or future wants is among the misfortunes which we should provide against, and one of those errors which nothing can excuse, and which nothing but centuries of perseverance and privation can repair. " But there is another and more cheering era in this history. This is when civilization has advanced, and man, under the safeguard of laws, sets about restoring the desolated forest. The cultivation of wood then becomes an art founded upon principles, and pursued for the gratification of taste, or for purposes of utility. Like every one who labors from choice, the planter experiences gratification in his pursuit. The little tree which he places in the ground quickly becomes EUCALYPTUS TEEES. 13 a part of the landscape around ; and thus the taste is gratified almost as soon as the work is done. In a few years more his woods yield shelter from the winds, and thus increase the value of the lands around, while it is rarely beyond the expectations of human life to look for a direct profit from the wood as it advances to maturity. To expend capital on planting, indeed, is merely to lay out a fund to increase at interest. Planting, then, may be readily rendered the means, on the part of a landed proprietor, of setting aside a fund for any specific purpose — as for a provision for a family ; and no man is deemed peculiarly disinterest- ed who merely obeys a dictate of reason and humanity and provides for his descendants. The planter, then, has his motives of rational interest to justify him in the opinion of those who look only to gain. He lays out his capital with a view to a profitable return. He improves the value of his estate, while, in the prac- tice of his art, he finds the materials of an innocent recreation. It may be questioned whether, in the whole range of rural occupations, one more interesting pursuit presents itself than the superintendence of a growing wood, presenting to the eye at every season new objects of interest and solicitude. Where is the planter who would wish the workmanship of his hands undone, and who does not look with an honest pride on the beautiful creation which, with a generous spirit, he has raised up around him ?" These considerations present a problem not difiicult of solution — possibly difiicult to educate land-owners of their truthfulness. We must make the people familiar with the facts and the necessities of the case. It must come to be *2 14 FOBEST CULTURE ANt) understood that a tree or a forest planted is an invest- ment of capital, increasing annually in value as it grows, like money at interest, and worth at any time what it has cost, including the expense of planting and the interest which this money would have earned at the given date. The great masses of our rural population and land-owners should be inspired with correct ideas as to the importance of planting and preserving trees, and taught the profits that may be de- rived from planting waste spots with timber, where nothing else would grow to advantage. They should learn the increased value of farms which have the roadsides lined with avenues of trees, and should un- derstand the worth of the shelter which belts of tim- ber afford to fields, and the general increase of wealth and beauty which the country would realize from the united and well-directed eiforts of the owners of land in thus enriching and beautifying their estates. The demand for lumber increases in the United States at the rate of twenty-five per cent, per annum. The decrease of forests is at the rate of 7,000,000 acres annually. Few people have any idea of the immense value of the wood which is used for purposes gen- erally considered unimportant. The fences of the United States are now valued at $1,800,000,000, and it costs, annually, $98,000,000 to keep them in repair. By far the greatest proportion of these are wood. The railroads of the United States use 150,000,000 of ties annually. There are establishments manufacturing articles of wood alone, numbering 118,684, employing 7,440,000 persons, and using wood valued at $554,000,000 an- nually. EUCALYPTUS TREES. 15 A seventy-four gun ship swallows up no less than 150,000 cubic feet, requiring 2,000 large, well-grown timber trees. Supposing these trees should stand thirty-three feet apart, it would require the timber of fifty acres to build one such ship. According to a statistical table published by our Government in 1874, there was in the New England, Middle, and Western States an average of thirty- three per cent, of wooded land. <■ <■ In France and Germany it has been estimated that at least one fifth of the land should be planted with forest trees in order to main- tain the proper hygrometric and electric equilibrium for successful farming." <anyan-tree, which required centuries for building its expansive dome and its hundreds of columnar pil- 1 irs ; nor to allow a single Cj'^rtosia Orchid to continue with its stem trailing to the length of thirty feet, and to remain with its thousands of large, fragrant blos- soms, the pride of the forest. That very Cyrtosia gives a clue to the affinity and structure of other plants not nearer to us than Java ; and its destruction, with probably that of many others which the naturalist forever is now prevented to dissect, or the artist to delineate, or the museum custodian to preserve, will 1)6 a loss to systematic natural history, also, forever. j\gain, in a spirit of Vandalism, a Fan-Palm, after a hundred years' growth, is no longer allowed to raise its slender stem and lofty crown in our own forests of (iipps Land, simply because curiosity is prompted to obtain a dishful of Palm-Cabbage at the sacrifice of a century's growth. Let it be remembered that the uncivilized inhabit- ants of many a tropical country know how to respect the original and not always restorable gifts of a boun- tiful Providence. They will invaribly climb the Palm- * On the Kiver Hastings somR magnificent dales bave been lately protected by the Government of New South Wales for tbe sake of the incomparably beautiful and grand native vegetation, an example deserving extensive imi- tation. The forests of the Bunya Araiicaria, occupying only a limited natu- ral area, are also secured against intrusion by the Goverpjnent, ^ EUCALYPTUS TREES. 133 tree to obtain its nuts or to plait its leaves ; so, also a resident in our forests might obtain from a grove of our hardy Palms, if still any are left in this land of Canaan, an annual income by harvesting the seeds as one of the most costly articles of horticultural export. Speaking of Palms, let me observe that the tall Wax Palm of New Granada (Ceroxlyon andicola) extends almost to the snow - line. It is needless to add that we might grow this magnificent product of andine vegetation in many localities of the country of our own adoption. Each stem yields annually about twenty-five pounds of a waxy, resinous coat- ing, which when melted together with tallow forms an exquisite composition for candles. Chamserops Fortunei, a Chinese Fan Palm of considerable height, is here hardy, like in South Europe ; so would be, prob- ably, the Gingerbread Palm (Hyphaene Thebaica). Of the value of some Palms we may form an appreci- ation when we reflect that Elais Guineensis, which at the end of this century should be productive in Queensland and North-west Australia, yields from the fleshy outer portion of its nut the commercially famed Palm - oil, prepared much in the manner of Olive-oil ; the value of this African Palm-oil import- ed in 1861 into England was two millions sterling, the demand for it for soap manufacture, and railway engines and carriages, being enormous.* The Chilean Jubaea or Coquito Palm grows spontaneously as fiir south as the latitude of Swan Hill, and is rich in a melliginous sap.f A Date Palm planted now would still be in full bearing two hundred years hence. *Tlie iiuport of Palm-oil into Britain during 1868 was nearly a million cwt. (960.050 cwt.). t Each tree yiclUb ninety gallons of sap at a time, used for tho jwreparation of palm-lioney. +7 134 FOREST CULTURE AND When hopeful illusion steps beyond the stern reali- ties of the day, It cannot suppress a desire that en- lightened statesmanship will always wisely foresee the absolute requirements of future generations. The colonist who lives in enjoyment of his property near the ranges and sees a flourishing family growing up around him, asks ominously what will be the aspect of these forests at the end of the century, if the pres- ent work of demolition continues to go on ? He feels that though the forests not solely bring us the rain, through forests only a comparatively arid country can have the full advantage of its showers, as bitter ex- perience has taught generation after generation since Julius Caesar's time. The colonist reflects with appre- hension that while no year nor day, when passed into eternity, can be regained, no provision whatever is made for the coming population, in whose welfare, l)erhaps as the head of a family, and perhaps even bearing political responsibility, he is interested. He would gladly co-operate in the labors of a local Forest Board, just like members of Road Boards and Shire Councils enter cheerfully on the special duties alloted to their administration. His local experience would dictate the rules under which in each district the tim- ber and other products of the forest could be most lucratively utilized without desolation for the future ; and he would be best able to judge, and to seek advice how the yield of the forest could be advantageously maintained, and its riches methodically be increased. All this will weigh more heavily on his mind when he is cognizant that even in Middle Europe, in countries so well provided with coals, and of a much cooler Clime than ours, the extent of the forests is kept scru- eucajjYptus trees. 135 pulously intact, and their regular yield remains secur- ed from year to year and from century to century. He would rest satisfied if only the trifling revenue of the forests could be applied by him and his neigh- bors to an inexpensive restoration of the woods con- sumed. He would delight in seeing the leading for- eign timber trees disseminated with our own Red Gum-tree, Red Cedars, Yarrahs or Black woods, not by hundreds but in time to come by millions, well aware that the next generations may either censure reproachfully the shortcomings of their ancestors, or may point gratefully to the results of an earnest and well-sustained foresight of future jvants. As a first step, at least in each district a few square miles should be secured for subsequent forest nurseries in the best localities, commanding irrigation by gravitation, and ready access also, before it is too late, and all such si)ots are permanently alienated from the Crown. Physical science must yet largely be called to our experimental aid before we can dispel the many crude notions in reference to the c ffect of forest vegetation on climate in all its details. It is thus a startling fact, as far as experiments under my guidance hitherto could elucidate the subject, that on a sunny day the leaves of our common Eucalypts and Casuarinas exhale a quantity of water several times, or even many times, larger than those of the ordinary or South European Elm, English Oak, or Black Poplar ; while from the foliage of our native Silver Wattle only half, or even less than half, the quantity of water is evaporated than from the Poplar or Oak. This degree of exlialation, so difi"ereut in various trees, depends on the number, position, and size of 136 FOREST CULTURE AND their stoma ta, and stands in immediate correlation to tlie power of absorption of moisture. Besides, if the evaporation of Eucalyptus-trees is so enormous during heat, and if tlie often horizontal roots of these trees thus render soil around them very dry, in consequence of the copious conveyance of moisture to the air, they simultaneously, by the rapidity of their evapo- ration in converting aqueous to gaseous liquid, or water into vapor, cause a lowering of the temperature most important in our climate during the months of extreme heat, while their capability of absorbing moisture during rain or from humid air must be com- mensurately great. It is beyond the scope of this address to dwell fur- ther on facts like these ; but I was anxious to demon- strate by a mere example how much we have yet to learn by patient research before we will have recog- nized in all its details the important part which forest vegetation plays in the great economy of nature. Concerning forest culture, I would very briefly allude to an instance showing how, by the teachings of natu- ral science and thoughtful circumspection, the rewards of industrial pursuits may become surprisingly aug- mented. In the uplands of the Madras Presidency, an ingenious method has been adopted in gathering f lie harvest of Cinchona-bark, in recent very extensive plantations, by removing.it in strips without destroy- ing the cambium layer. Then, by applying moss to the denuded part of the stem, not only is the remov- ed portion of the bark renewed within a year, to the thickness of three j^ears' growth, but the protection of the tender bark against the influence of light and air allovfs nearly all the quinine and other alkaloids EUCALYPTUS TREES. 137 to remain retained in the cortical layer without de- composition, while in the ordinary three years' bark half or more of these principles is lost. Facts like these lead us to appreciate the important bearings of the natural sciences on all branches of in- dustry ; but they warn lis, also, to pause before we give our further consent to the unlimited and reckless demolition of our most accessible forest lands, on the maintenance of which so many of our industries de- I^end. Just as it required, even under undisturbed favor- able influences, centuries before our forest riches were developed to their pristine grandeur, so it will need, in the ordinary laws of nature, at least an equal lengthened period before we can see towering up again the sj'^lvan colosses, which eminently contributed to the fame of the natural history of this land — if, indeed, the altered physical condition of the country will ren- der the restoration of the trees on a grand scale possi- ble at all. Has science drawn in vain its isothermal girdles around the globe, or has the searching eye of the philosopher in vain penetrated geologic structure, or in vain the exploring phytographer circumscribed the forms ? Well do we know what and where to choose; botanic science steps in to define the objects of our choice, which other branches of learning teach us to locate and rear. The Tea would as thriftly luxuriate in our wooded valleys as in its native haunts at Assam, and yield a harvest far more prolific than away from the ranges. Indeed, we may well foresee that many forest slopes will be dotted in endless rows with the bushes of the 138 FOREST CULTURE AND Tea, precisely as our drier ridges are verdant with the vine. Erytliroxylon-Coco, the wondrous stimulating plant of Peru, should be raised in the mildest and most sheltered forest glens, where the stillness of the air excludes the possibility of cutting frosts. Hop, cultivated as a leading industry in Tasmania since a quarter of a century, will also take a prominent place on the brooks of our mountains. Peru-bark trees of various kinds should in spots so favored be subjected to culture trials. How easily could any swampy de- pression, not otherwise readily of value, be rendered productive by allowing plants of the handf^ome New Zealand flax lily quietly to spread as a source for fu- ture wealth. How far the demand of material for industrial purposes may quickly exceed the supply may be strikingly exemplified by the fact that hun- dreds of vessels are exclusively employed for bringing the Esparto grass (not superior to several of our most frequent sedges) from Spain to England, to augment the supply of rags for the endless increasing require- ments of the paper-mills. Conversion of manifold material, even saw-dust, into paper, is carried on to a vast extent ; a multitude of samples placed here be- fore you will help to explain how wide the scope for paper material may extend. But the factories want material, not only cheap, but readily convertible, and adapted to particular working. In all these selections, a few glances through the microscope, and the result of a few chemical reactions taught in this hall, may at once advise the artisan in his choice. Phytologic inquiry is further to teach us rationally the nature of maladies to which plants are subject, EUCALYPTUS TREES. 139 just as it discloses even the sources of many of the most terrific and ravaging diseases of wliicli the human frame is the victim. The microscope, that marvelous tool for discovery, has become, also, the guardian of many an industry. The processes of morbid growth, or the development and diffusion of the minute organism, between which descriptive bota- ny knows how to discriminate, are thus traced out as the subtle and insidious causes which at times involve losses that count by hundreds of thousands in a single year, even in our yet small communities. But while the microscope discloses the form and development of the various minute organisms which cause, through the countless numbers of individuals, at times the temporary ruin of many branches of rural industry, it leaves us not helpless in our insight how to vanquish the invaders. In correctly estimating the limits of the specific forms, calling forth or concomitant with some of the saddest human maladies, phytography shares in the noble aim of alleviating human suff'er- ings, or restoring health and prolonging vital exist- ence. But it comes most pi'ominently within the scope of this Industrial Museum to delineate for the agricul- tural and forest section, in explanatory plates, the morbid processes under which crops and timber may succumb, and an industry be paralyzed or a country be verily brought to famine ; it devolves on us, also, simultaneously to explain the effect of remedial agents, such as sound reasoning from inductive science sug- gests or confirms. To array samples of all field products which our genial clime allows us to raise is doubtless the object of an instructive institution^ 140 FOREST CULTURE AND more particularly in a young country, to which im- migration streams mainly from a colder zone ; but this display of increased capabilities, and of more varied products of a mostly winterless land, may entiee the inexperienced to new operations without guarding him against failures. I should even like to see tables of calculations in this Museum, from which could be learned the yield and value of any crop with- in a defined acreage and from a soil chemically exam- ined ; but from this I would regard inseparable a close calculation of the costs under which each particular crop can only be raised. Unfortunately, surprising- data are often furnished concerning the productive- ness of new plants of culture ; but it is as frequently forgotten that the large yield is, as a rule, dependent on an expenditure commensurately large. Among the most powerful means for fostering phy- tologic knowledge for local instructive purposes, that of forming collections of the plants themselves remains one of the foremost. No school of any great preten- sion should be without a local collection of museum plants, nor should any mechanics' institute be without such. It serves as a means of reference most faith- fully ; it need not be a source of expenditure j it might be gathered as an object of recreation ; it may add even to the world's knowledge. Through the transmission of numbered duplicate sets of plants to my office the accurate naming may be secured. * From such a normal collection in each district the inhabit- * Parcels of plants pressed and dried, aud afterward closely packed, can be inexpensively forwarded by post, and, by the excellence of the Australian postal arransemtnts, can be sent from distant stations of the interior, from whence botanical specimens of any kind, for ascertaining the nature and range of the siiecies, are most acceptable ; while full information ou such material will at once be reudered. EUCALYPTUS TREES. 141 ant may learn to discriminate at once with exactness between the different timber-trees, the grasses, the plants worthy of ornamental culture, or any others possessing industrial or cultural interest. The saw- yer, as well as the trader in timber, may learn how ni'xny of the one liundred and forty Australian Eu- calypts occur within his reac^ — how phytograpliy designates each of them by a specific appellation ac- knowledged all over the globe. Phytologic inquiry, aided by collateral sciences, will disclose to him before- hand the rules for obtaining the wood at the best sea- sons, for selecting it for special purposes, for securing the best preservation. Phyto-chemistry will explain to him what average percentage of potash, oils, tar, vinegar, alcohol, tannic acid, etc., may be obtained under ordinary circumstances from each. He will understand, for instance, that the so-called Red Gum- tree of Victoria, the one so famed for the durability of its wood and for the peculiar medicinal astringency of its gum-resin, is widely different from the tree of that vernacular named in Western Australia j that it is wanting in Tasmania, yet that it has an extensive geographic range over the interior of our continent ; and that thus the experiences gained on the products of this particular species of tree by himself or others are widely applicable elsewhere. Through collections of these kinds .the thoughtful colonist may l>ave his attention directed to vegetable objects of great value in his own locality, of the existence of which he might otherwise not readily become aware. New trades may spring up, new exports may be initiated, new local factories be established. Phytographic works on Australian plants, now extant in many vol- 142 FOREST CULTURE AND umes, can readily be attached and rendered explana- tory of such collections. A prize held out by the patrons of any school might stimulate the juvenile gatherer of plants to increased exertions ; his youth- ful mind will be trained to observation and reflection and the faculties of a loftier understanding will be raised. To the adult also, and particularly often to the invalid, new sources of enjoyment may thus be dis- closed. What formerly was passed by unregarded will have a meaning ; every blade over which he stepped thoughtlessly before will have a new inter- est ; and even what he might have admired will gain additional charm ; but while penetrating wonders he never dreampt of before he ought piously to ask who called them forth ? "Bright flowers shall bloom wherever we roam, A voice Divine shall talk in each stream ; The stars shall look like worlds of love, And this earth shall be one beautiful dream.'' Thos. Moore's Irish Melodies. AVhat one single plant may do for the human race is perhaps best exemplified by the Cotton-plant. The Southern States of North America sent to England in 1860 nearly half a million tons of cotton (453,522 tons), by which means, in Britain alone, employment was given to about a million of people engaged in indus- tries of this fabric, producing cotton goods to the value of £121,364,458. From rice, which like cotton will mature its crop in some of the warmer parts of Victoria,* sustenance is obtained for a greater num- ber of human beings than from any other plant. In * Particularly if the hardy mountain rice of China and Japan is chosen , which required no irrigation. The ordinary rice has been grown sg far pprth as Ivombardy, EUCALYPTUS TREES. 143 the greater part of the Australian continent, where- ever water supply could be commanded, the rice would luxuriate. I found it wild in Arnheim's Land in 1855. Of sugar-cane the hardier varieties may within Victoria succeed in East Gipps Land and other warmer spots. Great Britain imported in 1863 not less than five hundred and eighty-six thousand six hundred tons.* Even our young colony import- ed last year to the value of nearly a million sterling (£048,329). Think of the commerce in other vegeta- ble products, such as require in dilferent places our local fostering care in order to add still more to our resources. Of various tobaccos we imported into Victoria in 1869 (deducting exports) to the value of £83,788 J of wine, £84,687; of cereals, £781,250; of paper, £123,158. I will not enter on any remarks about sugar-beet, on which one of our fellow-colonists has lately compiled an excellent treatise. Of tea, in 1865, Britain required for home consumption eighty- five millions of Ibs.f What a prospect for tea growth in Victoria, where this bush cares neither for the scorching heat of the Summer nor for the night-frosts of our lower regions ; whereas, in the forest glens of our country, Tasmania, and elsewhere, the Tea-bush would yield most prolific harvests. Test plantations for manifold new cultures were recommended by me years ago in one of my official reports to the Legisla- *" The total import of sugar into Britain was, during 18G8, six bundred and twenty-six thouKand three hundred and one tons ; during 1869, six hundred and five thousend one hundred and twenty-nine tons." t The total import of tea into Britain was — During 1865 121,156,712 lbs. 1806 139,610,044 " 1 867 128,028,726 ' ' " 1868 154,845,863 " (' J869 , , ,, 139,223,398 '» 144 FOREST CULTURE AND ture ; one plantation for the desert, one for subalpine regions, one for tlie deep valleys of the woodlands. The two latter might be in close vicinity at the Black Spur, and thus within the reach of ready traffic. The outlay in each case would be modest indeed. What an endless number of new industrial plants might thus be brought together within a few hours' drive of the city, under all the advantages of rich soil, shelter, and irrigation ! What an attractive collection for the intelligent and studious might thus be per- manently formed. I will not weary this audience by giving a long array of names of any plants resisting alpine Winters, such as in our snow-clad higher mountains they would have to endure. We know that the Apple will live where even the hardy Pear will succumb ; both will still thrive on our alpine plateaus. The Larch, strug- gling in vain with the dry heat of our open lowlands, would be a tree of comparatively rapid growth near alpine heights. The Birch, in Greenland, the only tree in Italy ascending to six thousand feet, in Rus- sia the most universal, and there yielding for famed tanning processes its valued bark, is living — to quote the forcible remarks of an elegant writer — " is living on the bleak mountain sides from which the sturdy Oak shrinks with dismay." Add to it, if you like, the Paper -Birch, and a host of arctic, andine, and other alpine trees and bushes. Disseminate the Straw- berries of the countries of our childhood, naturalize the Blackberry of northern forest moors. The Ameri- can Cranberry-bush (Vaccinium macrocarpum), with its large fruits, is said to have yielded on boggy mead- ows, such as occupy a large terrain of the Australian EUCALYPTUS TREES. l45 Alps, fully one hundred bushels on one acre in a year, worth so many dollars. If once established, such a plant would gradually spread on its own account for the benefit of future highland inhabitants. The Su- gar Maple would seek these cold heights, to be tapped when the Winter snow melts. For half a century it will yield its saccharine sap, equal to several pounds of sugar annually. Let us translocate ourselves now for a moment to our desert tracts, changed as they will likely be many years hence, when the waters of the Murray River, in their unceasing flow from snowy sources, will be thrown over the back plains, and no longer run en- tirely into the ocean, unutilized for husbandry. The lagoons may then be lined, and the fertile depres- sions be studded with the Date Palm ; Fig-trees, like in Egypt planted by the hundreds of thousands to in- crease and retain the rain, will then also have ame- liorated here the clime ; or the White Mulberry-tree will be extensively extant then instead of the Mallee scrub J not to speak of the Vine, in endless variety, nor to allude to a copious culture of Cotton in those regions. To Fig-trees and Mulberry - trees I refer more particularly, because it must be always in the first instance the object to raise in masses those utili- tarian plants which can be multiplied with the ut- most ease, and without any special skill, locally, and which, moreover, as in this case, would resist the dry heat of our desert clime. When recommending such a culture for industrial pursuits, it is not the aim to plant by the thousand, but by the million. Remem- ber, also, that a variety of the Morus Alba occurs in Aff'ghanistan, with a delicious fruit ; and that the im- 14G FOREST CULTURE AND portation of Figs into Bi'itain alone, from countries in climate alike to large tracts of Victoria, has been of late years about one thousand tons annually. What the Fig-tree has effected for rainless tracts of Egypt is now on historic record. I have spoken of horticultural industries as not al- together foreign to this institution — indeed, as repre- senting a rising branch of commerce. Were I to en- ter on details of this subject the pages of this address might swell to a volume. But this I would mention, that in our young country the manifold facilities for rearing exotic plants in specially selected and adapted localities could only as yet receive imperfect consid- eration. We have, however, ample opportunities of selecting genial spots for the growth of such singular curiosities as the Flytrap plant (Dionsea Muscipula), and the Pitcher-plants (Sarracenias) of the bogs and swamps of the pine barrens and savannahs of Caroli- na, if we proceed to moory portions of our springy forest land. There is no telling, too, whether the Pitcher-plants of Khasya and China (species of Ne- penthes) could not readily be grown and multiplied in similar localities, and the hardier of grand Epiphytes among the orchids, such as the subalpiue Oncidium Warczewickyi, of Central America, which might readily be reared in our glens by horticultural enter- prise, together with all the hardier Palms which mod- ern taste has so well adopted for the ready decoration of dwelling-rooms. Such plants as the Beaucaruea recurvata of Mexico, with its five thousand flowers in a single panicle, and the hardier Vellozias, from the bare mountain regions of Brazil, would endure our open air ; while the in- fetJCAliYPTUS TEtES. 147 humerable South African Heaths, Stapelise, the Me- sembryanthema, Pelargonia, lily-like plants, and many others, once the pride of European conservatories, can, with increased sea traffic, now gradually be in- troduced as beautiful objects of trade into this coun- .try, where they need no glass protection. It leads too far to speak of the still more readily accessible numerous showy plants of South-west Australia, but among which, as a mere instance, the gorgeous Ani- gozanthi, the lovely Stylidia, the gay Banksise, and the fragrant Boronias may be mentioned. Before leaving this topic, I may remind you that many esculent plants of foreign countries are deserv- ing yet of test culture, and, perhaps, general adop- tion in this country. The Dolichos sesquipedalis, of South American, is a bean, cultivated in France on account of its tender pod. The Arracha esculeuta, an umbellate from the cooler mountains of Central Ameri- ca, yields there, for universal use, its edible root. The climbing Chocho, of West India (Sechium edule), proved hardy in Madeira, and furnishes a root and fruit both palatable and wholesome. Vigna subter- ranea is the Earth Nut of Natal. The Taro of Tahiti (Calocasi macrorrhiza), though perfectly enduring our lowland clime, is, as yet, with allied species, but lit- tle cultivated — neither the Soja of Japan (Glycine Soja), nor the Caper of the Mediterranean. The Sea- kales (Crambe Maritima and C. Tatarica) might be naturalized on our sandy shores. Regarding fibres, much yet requires to be effected by capitalists and cultivators, to turn such plants as the Grasscloth shrub, which I distributed for upward of a dozen years, to commercial importance for ffjcto- 148 FOREST CULTURE AND ries. A kind of Jute (Corchorus olitorius) succe'eds as far north as the Mediterranean, and grows wild with the Sun Hemp ( Crotalaria juncea ) in tropical Australia ; the latter plant comes naturally almost to the boundaries of our colony. A Melbourne rope- fiictory offers £36 for the ton of New Zealand Flax, ' and can consume six tons per week. Hemp, used since antiquity, produces, along with its fibre, the Hypnotic Churras. England imported, in 1858, Hemp, to the value of more than £1,000,000.* This may suffice to indicate new resources in this direction. For Sumach our country offers, in many places, the precise conditions for its successful growth, as con- firmed by actual tests. Tannic substances, of which the indigenous supply is abundant and manifold, would assume still greater commercial importance by simple processes of reducing them to a concentrated form. How on any forest river might not the Fil- bert-tree be naturalized ; on precipitous places, among rocks, it would form a useful jungle, furnishing, be- sides, its nuts, the material for fishing-rods, hoops, charcoal crayons, and other purposes. From a single forest at Barcelona sixty thousand bushels are obtain- ed in a year. (For these and many other data brought before you in this lecture you may refer further, most conveniently, to a posthumous work of the great Pro- fessor Lindley, Treasury of Botany, edited by Mr. Th. Moore, with the aid of able contributors.) Even the Loquat would attain in our forest glens the size of a fair, or even large tree. * The import of Hemp and Jute into Britain during 1868 was three mil- lion two hundred and eighty-oue thousand two hundred and sixty-eight hundred weight ; during 1SC9, three million Ave hundred and fifty-one thousand eight hundred and thirty-eight hundred weight. The undressed Hemp imported in 1868 was valued at £2,022,419. » EUCALYPTtfS TRfiiJS. 149 Osiers and other willows used for basket-work, for charcoal, or for the preparation of salicine, might line any river banks, quite as much for the sake of shade and consolidation of the soil as for their direct utili- tarian properties. In the forest ranges any dense line of Willows and Poplars will help to check the spread of the dreadful conflagrations in wliich so much of the best timber is lost, and through which the tempera- ture of the country is for days heightened to an intol- erable degree far beyond the scenes of devastation, while injuries are inflicted far and wide to the labors in the garden or the field. In the most arid deserts the medicinal Aloes might readily be established, to yield by a simple process the drug of commerce. Gourds of half a hundred weight have been obtained in Victoria, and show what the plants of the Melon tribe might do here, like in South Africa, for eligible spots in the desert land. Among the trees for those arid tracts, the glorious Grevillea robusta, with its in- numerable trusses of fiery red, and its splendid wood for staves, is only one of the very many desirable ; just as in the oases the Carob-tree will live without water, uninjured, because its deeply-penetrating roots render it fit to resist any drought. But it may be said that much that I instance is well known and well recorded — so, doubtless, it is, in the abstract — but va- riety requires to be distinguished from variety, spe. cies from species, and their geography, internal struc- ture and components need carefully to be set forth, before any industry relating to plants can be raised on sound ground in proper localities, and be brought to its best fruitfulness. Even a pond, a streamlet — how, with intelligent 150 FOREST CULTURE AJffi foresight, may it be utilized and rendered lucrative to industry ! The Water Nuts,* naturally distributed through large tracts of Europe and Asia, aflford at Cashmere alone, for five months in the year, a nutri- tious and palatable article of food for thirty thousand people. Can the Menyanthes not be made a native here — one of the loveliest of water-plants, one of the best of tonics ? The true Bamboo, which I first prov- ed hardy here, used for no end of purposes by the ingenious Chinese — can we not plant it here, at each dwelling, at each stream, a grateful yielder to indus- trial wants, not requiring itself any care — an object destined to embellish whole landscapes ? An Arun- dinaria Bamboo from Nepal (A. falcata) proved very tall and quite hardy, even in Britain j and yet taller is the Mississippi Arundinaria (A. macrosperma) — indeed, rivaling in height the gigantic Chinese or Indian Bamboo. Imagine how there might arise on the bold rocky declivities of the Grampians the colossal columns of the Cereus giganteus of the extra-tropic Colorado regions — huge candelabras of vegetable structure, which would pierce the roof of our museum hall if planted on the floor, and would be as expansive in width as the pedestal of the monument consecrated to our unfortunate explorers. Picture to yourselves an Echinocactus Visnago of New Mexico, lodged in the wide chasm of our Pyrenees, one of these mon- sters weighing a ton, and expanding into a length of nine feet, with a diameter of three feet. " Think of such plants mingled with the Canarian Dragon-tree, one of which is supposed to have lived from our * Several species of Trapa. EUCALYPTUS TREES. 151 Redeemer's time to this age, because four centuries effected on tliese Giant Lilies but little change. Welwitchia here, like in rainless Damaraland, might grow in our desert sands as one of the most wonder- ful of plants, its only pair of leaves being cotyledo- nous and lasting well - nigh through a century. Or associate in your ideas with these one of the medici- nal Tree Aloes of Namaqua, or one of the Poison Eu- phorbias, never requiring pluvial showers (Euphorbia grandidens), some as high as a good-sized two-storied dwelling-house ; transfer to them also Cereus senilis, thirty feet high, which, with all its attempts to look venerable, only suceeds to be grotesque ; add to these extraordinary forms such Lily-trees as the Fourcroya longseva, with a stem of forty feet and an inflorescence of thirty feet, whereas Agave Americana, Agave Mexicana and allied species, while they quietly pass through the comparatively short space of time allotted to their existence, weave in the beautiful internal economy of their huge leaves the threads which are to yield the tenacious Pita-cords, so much in quest for the rope-bridges of Central America. Some of the Echinocacti extend as far south as Buenos Ayres and Mendoza, and would introduce into many arid tracts of Victoria, together with the almost numberless succulents of South Africa, a great ornamental attraction, which horticultural enterprise might turn to lucrative account ; just like our native showy plants will become objects of far higher com- mercial importance than hitherto has been attach- ed to them. The columns of Cereus Peruvianus rise sometimes to half a hundred feet j some Cactese are in reality the vegetable fountains of the desert. Such 152 i^OREST CULTURE ANt) plants as Echinocactus platyceras, with its fifty thou- sand thorns and setse, should be cultivated in our open grounds for horticultural trade, whereas the Cochineal Cacti (Opuntia Tuna, O. coccinellifera and a few other species), might well be still further distributed here, in order that food may be available for the cochineal insects when other circumstances in Australia will become favorable for the local production of this cost- ly dye. These are a few of many instances which might be adduced to demonstrate how the landscape pictures of Victoria might be embellished in another century, and new means of gain be obtained from additional manifold resources. But while your thoughts are carried to other zones and distant lands, let us not lose sight of the reason for which we assembled, namely, to deal with utilita- rian objects and the application of science thereon. All organic structures, however, whether giants or pigmies, whether showy or inconspicuous, have their allotted functions to fulfill in nature, are destined to contribute to our wants, are endowed with their spe- cial properties, are heralding the greatness of the Cre- ator. But here in this hall I would like to see dis- played by pictorial art the most majestic forms in nature, were it only to delineate for the studious the physiognomy of foreign lands, irrespective of any known industrial value of the objects thus sketched. The painter's art in choosing from nature does impress us most lastingly with the value and grandeur of its treasures. Each plant, as it were, has a history of discovery of its own ; who would not like to trace it ? And this again brings us face to face with those who EUCALYPTUS TREES. 153 carried before us the torch of scientific inquiry into the dark recesses of mystery, and shed a flood of light on perhaps long-concealed magnificence and beauty. The youth, aroused to the sublime feeling of wishing at least to follow great men in independent research- es, may be animated if in a hall like this each divis- ion were ornamented with the portraits of the fore- most of those discoverers who through ages advanced knowedge to the standard of the present day. " Deeds of great men aU remind us We can make our lives sublime. And departing leave behind us Footprints on the sands of time. " Though oft depressed and lonely, Our fears are laid aside, If we remember only Such also lived and died. "Learn from the grand old masters, Or from the bard sublime. Whose distant footsteps echo Tbrnugh the corridor of time." LoNQFEIiLO-W. Discovery proceeds step by step. Commenced by original thinkers, enlarged by sedulous experimenters, fostered by the thoughtful portion of the community, and by any administration of high views, it is util- ized by well-directed enterprise, and marches onward steadily in its progress. Guttenberg and his collabo- rators gave us the printing art, which has done more to enlighten the world than all other mechanisms taken together ; and though four centuries have alter- ed much in the speed and cost of producing prints, they have not materially changed the forms of this glorious art, as the beautifully-decorated pages of the earliest printed Bibles testify. Thus we have reason to be yet daily grateful for this invaluable gain from the genius of days long passed, 1^4 FOREST CULTURE AND Thoughtless criticism is but too often impatient of success, and demands results premature and unreason- able. Incompetent and perversive censure may even carry the sway of public opinion — misleading, and misled ; and, still worse, organized tactics may apply themselves, for sinister purposes of their own, to dis- turb the quiet work of the discoverer, mar the results of his labors, or paralyze the vitality of research, not understanding, or not wishing to understand, its di- rection or its object. And yet, should we have no foith in science, wheth- er it reveals to us the minutest organisms in a perfec- tion unalterable, * or the grandest doctrines of truth, sure ever to bear on human happiness and the peace of our soul ; should we have no faith in science, whether it unravels the metallic treasures of the depth and the coals of the forests of bygone ages, or by eter- nal laws permits us to trace the orbits of endless ce- lestial worlds through space ; no faith, if it allows us through spectroscopic marvels to count unerringly the billions of oscillations of each ray of dispersed light within a second ; or if it discloses the chemism of distant worlds, and therewith an applicability of re- search, both tellural and sidereal, ever endless and inexhaustible. Science, as the exponent of God-like * As an iustauce of the marvelous conjplexity, and yet exquisite perfection of the minutest creatures, the organ of vision in insects may he adduced. Most careful observers have ascertained that the eyes of very many insects are compound, contain numerous eyelets ; each of these provided with a distinct cornea, lens, iris, puj^il, and a whole nervous api^ratus. In our despised ordinary house-fly may he counted about four thousand of these most subtle instruments of vision; in some dragon-flies about twelve thou- sand. Reliable microscopists have counted even seventeen thousand three hundred and tifty-five in a kind of butterfly, while in the beetle genus mor- della these most delicate eyelets have been found to rise to the almost incred- ible number of twenty - five thousand and eighty - eight. — [Frovi Th- Mym, Jones.) EUCALYPTUS TREES. 155 laws, draws us in deepest veneration to tlie power divine, Ttiat is true science ! " As into tints of sevenfold ray Breats soft the silvery shimmering white ; As fade the sevenfold tints away, And all the rainbow njelts in light ; So from the Iris sportivG call Each magic tint the eye to chain, And now let truth unite them all, And light its single stream regain.' ' — Bulwer Lytlon,from Schiller. If a series of experiments witli coloring principles ftom coal-tar and bituminous substances led to the invention of the brilliant aniline colors, and brought about an almost total change in many dye processes, how many new wonders may not be disclosed to tech- nology by the rapid strides of organic chemistry ? As is well-known, three or four chemic elements are only engaged in forming numberless organic com- pounds, by a slight increase or decrease or rearrange- ment of the atomic molecules, constructing, for in- stance, from these three or four elements, ever pres- ent and ever attainable, the deadly hydrocyanic acid, the terrible atropin, or the dreadful aconitin at one time ; or at another time, harmless ammonia com- binations universally used for culinary and other pur- poses of daily life. Our wood-tars, we may remem- ber, are left, as yet, almost unexamined as regards their chemic constitutents. Few of our timbers have been chemically analyzed ; few other of our vegetable products are as yet accurately tested. What an end- less expanse for exploration does organic chemistry thus offer us ! We are called on, among a thousand things, to trace out similar mutual relation and coun- teraction of such extremely powerful plants as the 156 FOREST CULTURE AND Belladonna and Calabar Bean. Here medicine, chem- istry, and phytology go hand in hand. How, again, is any analysis of the chemic constituents of any plant, for cultural purposes or otherwise, to be ap- l»lied, unless we command a language of phytographic expressions which will name with never-failing pre- cision the object before us, and give to its elucidation value and stability ? We may speak chemically ot potash plants, lime plants, and so forth ; we may wish to define thereby the direction of certain industrial pursuits, and we may safely thereby foretell what plants can be raised profitably on any particular soil or with the use of any particular manure ; but how is this knowledge to be fixed without exact phytologic information, or how is the knowledge to be applied, if we are to trust to vernacular names, perplexing even within the area of a small colony, and useless, as a rule, beyond it ? Colonial Box-trees by dozens, yet all distinct, and utterly unlike Turkey Box ; colonial Myrtle, without the remotest resemblance to the poef s myrtle ; colo- nial Oaks, analogous to those Indian trees which as Casuarinse were distinguished so graphically by Rumpf two hundred years ago, but without a trace of simi- larity to any real Oak — afford instances of our confused and ludicrous vernacular appellations. A total change is demanded, resting on the rational observations and deductions which science already has gained for us. Assuredly, with any claims to ordinary intelligence, we ought to banish such designations, not only from museum collections, but also from the dictionary of the artisan. One of the genera ot Mushrooms, certainly the EUCALYPTUS TREES. 157 largest of them (Agaricus), contains alone about a thousand species, well distinguished from each other* a good many even occurring in this country. For the practical purposes of common life it becomes an object to distinguish the many wholesome from the multi- tude of deleterious kinds, or the circumstances under which the harmless sorts may become hurtful. In France the cultivation of mushrooms in under-ground caverns has become a branch of industry not altogeth- er unimportaut. How, in other instances, is many a culinary vegetable to be distinguished from the poi- son herb without the microscope of the phytographer being applied to dissections, or without the language of science recording the characters ? How many a life, lost through a child's playfulness, or through the unacquaintance of the adult, even with the most ordi- nary objects of knowledge among plants, might have been saved, even in these times of higher education, if phytologic knowledge was more universal ! The species of fungi which can be converted into pleasant, nutritious food are far more numerous than popularly supposed, but for extending industries in this direc- tion botanic science must assume the guardianship. In a technologic hall like this I should like to see instructive portraits also of all the edible and noxious plants likely to come within the colonist's reach. Among about one thousand kinds of Fig-trees which (so Mons. Alphonse de CandoUe tells me), through Mons. Bureau's present writings for the Prodromus, are ascertained to exist, only one yields the fig of our table, only one forms the famed sycamore fig, planted along 80 many roads of the Orient ; only one consti- tutes our own FicKS macrophylla, destined, in its *8 158 FOKEST CULTURE AND unsurpassed magnificence, to overshade here our palh- •vvays. How are these thousands of species of Ficus, all distinct in appearance, in character, and in uses — how are they to be recognized, unless a diagnosis of each becomes carefully elaborated and recorded, head- ed by a specific name ? Without descriptive botany all safe discrimination becomes futile. To bear our share in building up an universal system of specific delimitation of all plants is a task well worthy of the patronage of an intelligent and high-minded people. The physician is thereby guided to draw safe comparisons in reference to the action of herbs and roots which he wishes to prescribe, as available from native resources. Thus it was through Victorian researches that not only the -close affinity of Goodeniacese to the order of Gentianese was brought to light, but simultaneously a host of herbs and shrubs of the former order gained for therapeutic uses. When once it was ascertained that the so- called Myrtle-tree of our forest moors was a true Beech the artisan then also found offered to him a timber of great similarity to that of the Beech forests of his British home. Of the grass genus Panicum we know the world possesses, according to a recent botanic disquisition, about eight hundred and fifty species, all more or less nutritive. But one only of these is the famous Coa- pin of Angola (Panicum spectabile), one of the War- ree (Panicum miliaceum), one the Bhadlee (Panicum pilosum), one the Derran (P. frumentaceum). We might dispense, perhaps, as far as these few are con- cerned, with their scientific appellations, though not even the mere task of naming has become therewith EUCALYPTUS TREES. 159 easier, and no information whatsoever of their char- acteristics has been gained. But if we wish to refer to any of the many liundred other species of Panicum, in what way are we to express ourselves if even their vernacular names could be collected from at least a dozen of languages, and impressed on any one's mem- ory ? They are, as may readily be imagined, very different indeed in their special nutritiveness, degree of endurance, and length of life. Of one hundred and forty species of Bromus only one is the Prairie Grass, which has attained already a great celebrity as a pas- ture grass naturalized in this country ; and it is only one other Bromus, among the many nutritious kinds, which carries the palm as the most fattening fod- der-grass for cold, marshy pastures, and gradually, through depasturing, suppresses completely all other grasses and weeds ; so it is proved on the marsh- lands of Oldenburg. This Bromus (B. secalinus), as far as I am cognizant, is nowhere as. yet economically cultivated in Victoria. Nothing would be easier than to commence dissem- inating a number of the best grasses in addition to those already here ; for instance, the Canadian Rice- Grass (Hydropyrum esculentum) for our swamp-lands. Their nutritive value must be tested by analysis and other experiments, just like that of the Saltbushes of the Murray Flats. Hence ample scope for the exer- tions of science also in this direction. In Cotta's celebrated publishing establishment at Stuttgart a most useful work is issued by my friend, Prof. Noerdlinger, on the structure of timber of vari- ous kinds, illustrated by microscopic sections of the wood itself; for the latter fascicles I furnished some 160 FOREST CULTURE AND material from this colony. The work should be ac- cessible in this Museum to all interested in wood- work. How much we have yet to learn of the value of our forest products is instanced when we now know from Spanish physicians to combat ague with Eucalyptus- leaves, or when Count Maillard de Marafy, from ex- periments instituted this year in Egypt, announced to us that Eucalyptus-leaves can be usecl as a substi- tute for Sumach. (Egypte Agricole, 1870.) Already, in the earlier part of this lecture, I spoke of the Peru Bark plants ; but the Cinchonas are not all of the same kind. Some endure a lower degree of temperature than others, some are richer in qui- nine, others richer in cinchonine, others in quinoi- dine ; and this again is much subject to fluctuations under different effects of climate and soil. Great er- rors may be committed, and have been committed, by adopting from among a number of species the least valuable, or one under ordinary circumstances almost devoid of alkaloid, though a representative of the genus cinchona, and not unlike the lucrative species. When calculations in India prognosticate the almost incredible annual return of one hundred and thirty per cent, after four years, on the orighaal outlay for Cinchona plantation, it is supposed that the conditions for this new industrial culture are to the utmost favor- tjible. That one of the best species did not thrive there at all in proportion to expectations is owing, in my opinion, to geologic conditions. The Cinchonas before you, reared in soil fronj our Fern-tree gullies, I intended to have tested for the percentage of their r.lkaloids prior to this evening ; but the timely per- EUCALYPTUS TREES. 161 formance of this investigation was frustrated. I think that I have proved the hardiness or adaptabil- ity of these important plants for the warm Palm val- leys of East Gipps Land, as many indigenous plants from that genial spot are quite as much, if not more, susceptible to the night -frosts of our city than the Cinchonse, if harsh, cutting winds are kept from the latter. ' But as yet I am unacquainted with the likely results of remunerative Cinchona cultivation within the boundaries of this colony, as far as such depends on the constituents of the soil. That inquiries of this kind are not mere chimeras may be conceded after an explanation of this kind for the benefit of future technology. Geology, one of the brightest satellites which rotate around the sun of universal science, con- tinues to send its lustre into the darkness which yet involves so many of the great operations in tellurian nature. Further insight into the relation of this dis- cipline of science to vegetable physiology is certain to shed abundance of light also on many branches of applied industry. The causes why the Iron-bark trees of our auriferous quartz ridges differ so material- ly from the conspecific tree of alluvial flats can only be explained geologically. So it is with the narrow- leaved Eucalyptus amygdalina on open stony decliv- ities as compared with the broad-leaved Eucalyptus fissilis, which in such gigantic dimensions towers up from our deep forest valleys. But all this has an im- portant bearing on technological exertions in manifold directions. The timber chosen by the artisan from a wrong locality may impair the soundness of a whole building ; or a factory may prove not lucrative simply because it is placed on a wrong spot for the best raw material. 162 FOREST CULTURE AND A thousand of other industrial purposes might yet be served by a close knowledge of plants. So the designer might choose patterns far more beautiful from the simple and ever-perfect beauty of nature than he gains from distorted forms copied into much of our tapestry ; thus a room, now-a-days, as a rule, decorat- ed with unmeaning and often, as far as imitation of nature is concerned, impossible figures, might become, geographically or phytographically, quite instructive. If here the founders of territorial estates — some, per- haps, as large as the palatinates of the Middle Ages — should wish to perpetuate the custom of choosing a symbol for family arms, they — as the Highland clans, who adopted special plants of their native mountains for a distinguishing badge — might select, as the an- cestral emblem, the flowers of our soil, destined, per- haps, to be traced, not without pride, by many a lineage through a hundred generations. Precise knowledge of even the oceanic vegetation, in its almost infinite display of forms, offers not mere- ly the most delicate objects for design, but brings be- fore us its respective value for manure, or the impor- tance of various herbage on which fishes will browse ; while such marine weeds may as well be transferred from ocean to ocean, as ova of trout have been brought from the far north to these distant southern latitudes. Who could foresee when first iodine was accidentally discovered in sea - weeds, through soda factories, or bromine subsequently appeared as a mere substance of curiosity, what powerful therapeutic agents there- by were gained for medicine, what unique results they would render for chemical processes, of what incalcu- lable advantages they would prove in physiological EUCALYPTUS TREES. 163 researches or microscopic tests ; and how, without them, photographic art could not have depictured, with unerring fidelity, millions of objects, whether of landscapes or of the starry sky, whether of the beings dear to us or the relics of antiquity, whether enlarging the scope of lithography or recording the languages, which the flashing of telegraphic electricity sends to a dwelling or to an empire ? Even the vegetable fossils, deep-buried in the earth or in the cleavage of rocks, when viewed by the light of phj'tology, become so many letters on the pages of nature's revelation, from which we are to learn the age of strata, or may trace the sources of metallic wealth, or by which we may be guided to huge remnants of forests of bygone ages, stored up for the utilization of this epoch, or may comprehend, as far as mortal understanding serves us, successive changes in tellurian creation. When Ray and, subsequently, Jussieu, framed tlio first groundwork for the ordinal demarcation of plants ; when Tournefort, by defining generic limits, brought further clearness into the chaos of dawning systematic knowledge,[and when Linnse gave so hap- pily to each plant its second or specific name, but lit- tle was it indeed foreseen what a vast influence these principles of sound methodic arrangement would ex- ercise, not only on the easy recognition of the varied forms of vegetable life, but also on the philosophic elucidation of their properties and uses, and this for all times to come. Many, even at the present day, and among them at times those on whom the desti- nies of whole states and populations may depend, can recognize in phytographic and other scientific labors but little else than a mere play-work ; yet, without 164 FOREST CULT^TRE AND such labors, every solid basis for applying the knowl- edge of plants to uses of any kind would be wanting. We would stray, indeed, unguided in a labyrinth between crude masses or inordinate fragments, instead of dwelling in a grand and lasting structure of knowl- edge, unless science also in this direction had raised its imperishable temples. But how much patient and toilsome research had to be spent thus to bring togeth- er in a systematic arrangement all the products of this wide globe ; how many dangers of exploring travelers had to be braved to amplify the material for this knowledge, and how many have to pass away, even now-a-days, persecuted and worried like Galileo at his time, no one yet has told, nor will tell. Well may we feel with the great German poet, as expressed in Bulwer Lytton's beautiful wording : " I will reward thee in a holier laud, Do give to me thy youth ! All I can grant you lies in this command — I heard, and trusting in a holier laud, Gave my youug joys to truth." But is there nothing higher than the search of earthly riches, and is to this all knowledge of the earth's beautiful vegetation also to be rendered sub- servient ? Is there nothing loftier than to break the flowers for our gayeties or to strew them along a mirthful path ? There is ! They raised the noblest feelings of the poet at all ages ; they spoke the purest words of attachment; they ever were the silent har- bingers of love. They smilingly inspired hope anew in unmeasured sadness, and on the death-bed or at the grave they appear to link together, as symbols of ever -returning springs, the mortal world with im- mortality : they ever teach us some of the sublimest revelations of our eternal God. EUCALYPTUS TREES. 165 The laurel crown of the hero was a people's high- est reward of chivalrous and glorious deeds. The myrtle or orange -wreath for bridal curls re. mains the proudest gift to youthful hope. The little blooming weed, content in a parched and dreary desert, revived the strength of many a sinking wanderer (Mungo Park) ; the ever unalterable beauty and harmony of moral structures preaches the truths of eternal laws in the universe — a faith that gave expression to Schiller's memorable words, as repeated by that leading British statesman, Gladstone : <. Barhani, John H. Borrowe, Fannie Bowers, Anna A. Bowers, Demoss Bowers, John Brastow, George B. Bradbury, Nora A. Bronson, IjuIu Bronson, Kate Casebcore, Isbella Castinos, Albert Cook, Fairio Cook, Nina Coopci' Ellen Coopol*) Fuiin u! Uonant, Um T. S. Des Granges, Otto Dimmick, Walt-er Dugdale, Horace C. Dunne, James C. Duval, Charles S. Edwards, Anna Edwards, Charles El well, Frank Fernald, Beatrice Franklin, Anabel E. Franklin, Mrs. Frost, Clarinda • Gibbs, Annie Gibbs, George Gibbs, Lallra W. Gibbs, Latisian CHbbSj Mrs. E. 11. Green well, Arty C. Green well J Charles B. Ooai?, Josephine llttmptoii, Fannlo 212 SANTA BARBARA COLIiEGE. Hampton, Pallie Hampton, Jeff. Harrison, James K. Haight, Charles B. Harford, Freddie Hatch, Mrs. Hawley, Ernest S. Hawley, Lilian Hawley, Jessie 11. Hawley, Mrs. T. R. Hayne, Bennie Hayne, Alston Harris, Jake Higgins, Fred. L. Hill, Jessie Huse, Alice R. Johnson, Mackey Kalisher, Fannie Knapp, Sadia R. Lake, George B. Lake, Winnie Low, Fannie Lucas, Hattie M. Mayhew, Jennie McLaren, Anna McLaren, Jennie More, Belle More, Mary More, Wallace More, Alex. S. More, Willie Newmayer, Bene Newmayer, Bismarck Newmayer, Lillie Newmayer, Walter Norway, William R. Olsen, Fred. Olsen, Minnie Pacheco, John Perkins, Allie T. Perkins, Grace F. Perkins, Isabel D. Perkins, May W. Perin, Edi.th Pierce, Charles D. Pierce, Hiram Riggen, William Satford, Morton Sawtelle, Vivia F. Shaw, James B. Skeels, Katie Skeels, William Smith, De Witt Snodgrass, David C. Stearns, Edith Steel, .John Jay Steel, Willie Stevens, Albert B. Stoddard, Harrie Stone, George Fred. Stone, Luella Tallant, Lucy Tebbetts, Horace B. Tebbetts, John E. Tebbetts, Mollie V. Tryce, James Upson, Grace Walcott, Earle A. Walcott, Mabel Walcott, Maude Weldon, Jennie Wright, Sallie The Fuundatmn* Under the laws of California, in the year 1869, the CoLiiEGE OF Santa Barbara was incorporated. It owes its origin to the feeling that, with its health- giving breezes and almost perfect climate, southern California is destined to be the Paradise of America, and that consequently a necessity exists for an edu- cational institution which shall carry its pupils further than is the province of the public schools. The citi- zens of Santa Barbara and vicinity felt that the rap- idly - increasing population and wealth of their own county and those adjoining would justify considerable expense in providing for their children better means and methods of education. In obedience to this feel- ing, a number of public - spirited citizens of Santa Barbara organized a stock company, who erected suit- able buildings for the immediate wants. The success attained by their first efforts, and the encouragement of almost the entire community, induced the incor- porators to re-organize under the new Code, with a capital stock of One Hundred Thousand Dollars. The institution is governed by a Board of eleven Directors, who have been chosen from among the most prominent and intelligent citizens of the county. They serve only in order to promote the educational 214 SANTA BARBARA COLLEGE. interest of the State, and to open wider fields of learn- ing for the sons and daughters of the country. Their best thoughts are given to the Institution. Location. Santa Barbara, the seat of the college, lies on the coast, two hundred and ninety miles south of San Francisco. Situated to the south of the Santa Inez mountains, it is sheltered from the coast winds. The cool and invigorating sea-breeze renders the climate mild and even. All fruits common to temperate and semi-tropical climates grow luxuriantly in its vicinity. Frosts seldom come, and Winter is a word scarcely found in the language of its people. From January to January the trees are covered with leaves and the fields are green with the revolution of crops. The fevers often found in other localities of the same lati- tude are never experienced. The climate is very beneficial in cases of consumption and all pulmonary diseases. The advantages of its climate are so wide- ly admitted that people from all parts of the country are coming to make it their home. To no other locality can the parent send his child and be so assured that in every respect the climate is any nearer perfection. Character of the Institution. Directors and Faculty of Instruction pledge them- selves to do all in their power to make the Santa Bar- bara College absolutely, not relatively, a good institu- tion ; to requite the trust which the people place in them with the best possible instruction j and to cul- tivate among all their pupils true manliness and true womanliness. SANTA BARBARA COLLEGE. 215 " Our plans of education are disposed to include all that the Past has handed down of good, all that the Future may offer to us. By the study of Lan- guage, Philosophy, and History, we inherit the rich experiences of Humanity ; by the study of Natural Science we search after the Laws of Creation, and reach out for the Divine." Regular attendance and punctuality at all recitations and exercises will be demanded. It will be impossi- ble for any pupil who does not attend to his entire duty and is not prompt at every exercise to long rerpain in the Institution and retain his class rank. Each recitation is a link in a chain. The loss of one lesson destroys the unity of all lessons given upon the same subject. All knowledge afterward obtained is incomplete. By absence or tardiness, the pupil not only injures himself, but impedes the entire class with which he is associated. The others must wait while the sulject is again explained to him. No pupil will be permitted to thus do himself and others injustice. It is our aim not k) burden students with arbitrary rules, and useless restraints. Students will be given all liberty consistent with their own welfare. The government is intended to be liberal but firm in character. It will be advisory rather than compulso- ry. We believe that he who teaches one to govern himself is a better teacher than he who governs a score by compulsion. The institution will be entirely free from sectarian bias. The pure morality and piety of the Scriptures, excluding everything sectarian and denominational, is the fo^undation of all moral and religious teachings. 216 SANTA BARBARA COLLEGE. The patrons, stockholders, and directors are members of every sect and denomination. Justice to them de- mands the utmost liberality. The Sabbath will be observed as a day of rest and religious teaching, and should be made the pleasantest of the week. Attend- ance upon Divine worship is expected, and parents are requested to signify the church which they pre- fer their children shall attend. An instructor will accompany the younger pupils. All classes are to be frequently visited by an ex- amining committee, M'hose duty it will be to see that they are making commendable progress, and report to the Board of Directors. It is requested that parents having children in the institution, or contemplating putting children under its charge, visit the class- rooms, and then consult with the Principal with re- gard to the progress made or desired. The College receives pupils of both sexes. It thus places itself in accord with the progressive spirit and the necessities of the West. Girls and boys have each an equal share in the instruction, and will be treated alike. Special Features. The points in which Santa Barbara College differs from most other educational institutions of a similar general character may be briefly summed as follows : 1. Special attention is given to Physical Culture. Recognizing the great fundamental fact that a sound mind cannot exist without a sound body, we have given much thought to the physical development of those intrusted to us. The best gymnasium in the State, the only one con- nected with a school in California, is now completed BAiJTA BARBARA COLLEGE. 2l7 and fitted up with all the apparatus necessary for prac- ticing both heavy and light gymnastics. Every pu- pil will have an opportunity daily to take part in the exercises. Physiological laws will be our guide in di- recting them. Parents should encourage their chil- dren to be earnest in these pursuits ; for in this way alone can the young be given sound bodies to supply vigor to inquiring minds. Disciplined thus in body, young men and young women will leave our institu- tion better fitted to use that knowledge which they have acquired, both for their own good and for the good of the community. 2. The Modern Languages will receive special at- tention. The benefits arising from a study of the Modern Languages, both in respect to discipline and practical value, are so many and so well known that a list of them here is unnecessary. Those who desire will be offered an opportunity constantly to converse in French, German, and Spanish. 3. Vocal music will be taught every pupil. In- strumental music will receive special attention. All who have thought upon the subject acknowledge the refining influence which music has upon the individ- ual. It also affords measureless comfort and enjoy- ment to the home circle. We need not assure parents that this important branch of study will always be superintended by a teacher of much experience and culture. 4. Every pupil will be instructed in the rudiments of Drawing. By no other method is a pupil taught so well to observe minutely and attentively the phe- nomena of nature as by a course of instruction in the art of Drawing. If any one doubts this, let him sit 2l8 SANTA BARBARA C0LLEG]E!. down and attempt to put upon paper the sinoiplest object within sight. Pie will be skeptical no longer. Drawing is but an attempt to reproduce what we see, and is the test of the accuracy of oar observation and comparison. ©Bueval Statement, The Santa Barbara College contains eight depart- ments, with six grades in each. 1st, Mathematics. 2d. Natural Sciences. 3d. English. 4th. History and Geography. 5th. Modern Languagen. 6th. Ancient Languages. 7th. Drawing and Painting. 8th. Vocal and Instrumental Music. The classes are : The Elementary, Preparatory, First Year, Second Year, Junior Year, and Senior Year. EaursB txf Study/ ELEMENTARY CLASS. First Term. Arithmetic, Robinson's Rudiments. Geography, Guyot's Primary. English, Swinton's Language Primer. *Penmanship, Payson, Dunton and Scribner's No. 3. Reading, Bancroft's Fourth Reader. Drawing, Knudsen's first year's instruction in draw- ing. Spelling, Swinton's Word Book to Lesson 106. Music, Vocal and Instrumental. French, Oral Exercises. German, Ahn's Rudiments of the German Lan- guage. Spanish, Oral Exercises. Second Term. Arithmetic, Robinson's Rudiments. History, Swinton's First Lessons. English, Swinton's Language Primer. Reading, Bancroft's Fourth Reader. Penmanship, No. 4, Spelling, Swinton's Word Book to end of first year's work. 220 SANTA BARBARA COLLEGE. Drawing, Conclusion of first year's instruction. Music, Vocal and Instrumental. French, Ahn's first Primer. German, Ahn's Rudiments continued. Spanish, Oral Exercises continued ; first lessons in reading. Science, Hotze's First Lessons. PREPARATORY CLASS. First Term. Arithmetic, Robinson's Practical and Intellectual. Geography, Guyot's Elementary. English, Swinton's Language Lessons. Reading, Bancroft's Fifth Reader. * Penmanship, No. 5. Spelling, Swinton's Word Book, second year's work to lesson 106. Drawing, Second year's instruction in drawing. Music, Vocal and Instrumental. French, Ahn's first course. German, Ahn's Method of learning the German language to ex. 60. Spanish, Elements of Grammar. Science, Youman's Botany. Second Term. Arithmetic, Robinson's Practical and Intellectual. History, Higginson's United States. English, Swinton's Language Lessons. Penmanship, No. 6. Reading, Bancroft's Fifth Reader. Drawing, Conclusion of second year's instruction. SANTA BAKBARA COLLEGE. 221 Spelling, Swlnton's Word Book to end of second year's work. Music, Vocal and Instrumental. French, Ahn's first course concluded ; colloquial ex- ercises. German, Ahn's Method continued. Spanish, Spelling ; colloquial exercises. Science, Morse's Zoology. FIRST YEAR. First Term. Arithmetic, Robinson's Practical and Intellectual. Geography, Guyot's Intermediate. English, Swinton's Progressive Grammar. Penmanship, No. 7. Spelling, Swinton's Word Analysis, begun. Drawing, Third year's instruction in drawing. Music, Vocal and Instrumental. French, Ahn's second course; verbs, Spanish, Ahn's Grammar. German, Otto's Grammar. Science, Physiology. Second Term. Arithmetic, Robinson's Practical and Intellectual, completed. History, History of England. English, Swinton's School Composition. Penmanship, No. 8. Spelling, Swinton's Word Analysis, completed. Drawing, Conclusion of Third year's instruction. Music, Vocal and Instrumental. 11 222 SANTA BARBARA COLLEGE. French, Ahn's Second Course concluded ; Hachet- te's First Reader ; irregular verbs. German, Otto's Grammar ; exercises in composition. Spanish, Ahn's Grammar, continued ; irregular verbs ; First Reader of Mantilla. Science, Introduction to Geology (Dana). SECOND YEAR. First Term. Mathematics, Robinson's Higher Arithmetic, and Elementary Algebra. Geography, Guyot's Common School. English Composition and Rhetoric, Word Analysis. Penmanship, No. 9. Drawing, Crayon drawing. Spelling, McElligott's Manual. Music, Vocal and Instrumental. French, Fasquelle's Grammar ; First Reader con- cluded. German, Exercises in writing German ; translation. Spanish, De Torno's combined Grammar ; Second Reader of Mantilla ; elements of composition. Science, Gray's Botany. Latin, Harkness' Latin Grammar and Reader. Greek, Goodwin's Greek Grammar and Leighton's Reader. second term. Mathematics, Robinson's Higher Arithmetic and Elementary Algebra, completed. History, Swinton's Outlines. English, Composition and Rhetoric, Word Analysis. Penmanship, No. 10. SANTA BARBARA COLLEGE. 223 Drawing, Crayon drawing concluded. Spelling, McEUigott's Manual. Music, Vocal and Instrumental. French, Fasquelle's Grammar continued; Elements of Composition ; Reading of Guillaume Tell (Lamar- tine). German, Petermann's First Lesebuch. Spanish, De Torno's Grammar continued ; Roemer's Reader ; Conversation. Science, Chemistry. Latin, Harkness' Introduction to Latin Composi- tion ; Caesar's Commentaries, books I. andll. Greek, Jones's or Arnold's Exercises; Xenophon's Anabasis begun. ^ JUNIOR YEAR. First Ter]\i. Mathematics, Robinson's University Algebra to Equations ; Da vies' Geometry, books I. , II. and III. History, Guizot's History of Civilization. English, Underwood's British Authors. Music, Vocal and Instrumental, Spelling, Study of Words. French, Composition; Grammar continued ; Lalle- magne (Mad. de Stael). German, Whitney's Grammar and Exercises. Spanish, Ollendorfs Grammar ; Introduction to Spanish classics. Science, Quackenboss' Natural Philosophy. Latin, Cssear's Commentaries, books III. and IV.; Cicero's Orations against Cataline. Greek, Boise's First Greek Lessons ; Anabasis. 224 sAntA bahbaea coLLEtiii. Second Term. Mathematics, Kobinson's University Algebra to Se- ries. Da vies' Geometry, books IV., V. and VI. History, Hopkins' American Ideas. English, Underwood's American Authors. Music, Vocal and Instrumental. Spelling, Study of Words. French, Correspondence ; Conversation ; Introduc- tion to Classics. German, Goethe's Hermann and Dorothea^ Spanish, Correspondence ; Conversations ; Classics. Science, Mineralogy, lectures. Latin, Cicero de Amicitia ; J^neid. Greek, First three books of the Anabasis completed. Smith's History of Greece. SENIOR -YEAR. First Term. Mathematics, Davies' Geometry, and Robinson's University Algebra completed. History, Ancient History. English, Elements of Criticism. Music, Vocal and Instrumental. Spelling, Words and their Uses, by Richard Grant Whits. French, Grammaire complete de Poitevin ; Compo- sition ; French Classics. German, Lessing. Spanish, Gramatica de la Academia ; Conversation; Composition. Science, Guyot's Physical Geography. Latin, First Six Books of the Jilneid completed. Greek, Homer's Iliad, three books ; Prosody. SANTA BARBARA COLX,EGE. 225 SECOND TERM. Mathematics, Davies' Trigonometry and Mensura- tion. History, Lord's Modern History. English, Elements of Criticism. Music, Vocal and Instrumental. French, Grammaire de Poite vin, concluded ; Mod- ern Literature ; Conversation ; Philology of the French language. German, Goethe's Faust. Spanish, Modern Literature of Spain and South America compared. Science, Burritt's Geography of the Heavens. Latin, Odes of Horace. Greek, Iliad continued. OPTIONAL STUDIES. Book-keeping, Single and Double Entry. Instrumental Music, Piano and Violin. Special Singing Lessons. Painting and Special Drawing. The grade of each pupil is determined at the time of admission, by a careful examination in his or her previous studies ; and at the close of each subsequent term the pupil is advanced to the next higher grade, provided that on examination he or she is found quali- fied. The lack of thoroughness in the elementary branches on the part of the older pupils who enter the college — indeed, the almost total neglect of training in these important steps of education, makes it necessary for us to advise those who are looking forward to placing 226 SANTA BARBARA COLLEGE. their children under the care of this institution to see that this elementary work be carefully looked after, so that when these same children enter they may be able to grade with pupils who have come up through the different classes of this school. To accommodate those who may wish to have their children's education begin in this school, we have established, in connection with it, a Kindergarten on the most improyed plan. SANTA BARBARA COLLEGE. 227 TIME-TABLE— SANTA BARBARA COLLEGE. a o o a Ti and uages. t d. Eb pq o 1 Is d History an Geography Ancient Mod. Lang •S 5 ^ S U (U ft P-t 9:00 A.M. Sr. E. P. F. S. J. 9:45 " J. Sr. E. P. F. S. 10:30 " S. J. Sr. E. P. F. 11:15 " F. S. J. Sr. E. P. 2:00 P.M. P. F. S. J. Sr. E. 2:45 " E. P. F. S. J. Sr. 3:30 " B. School opens at 8:45 A. m., fifteen minutes being occupied in the morning exercises. The school-day is divided into seven recitation periods, with five- minute recess between each recitation. Drawing will alternate with writing, and reading with vocal music. In the table, Sr. stands for Senior Class; J, Junior Class; S, Second Year Class; F, First Year Class ; P, Preparatory Class ; E, Elementary Class ; and B, for Book-keeping. Miscellanetxus. Day Pupils. Kindergarten course, board, lights, washing, and tuition in all studies (excepting those un- der the head of extra charges), per term of five months.. $140 Elementary course 150 Preparatory course, with first, second, junior and senior years 175 Where two children ocQupy the same sleeping- room a deduction per term of $12.50 each will be made. Extra Charges. Piano or Violin Lessons, each 5 00 per month. Special Singing Lessons 5 00 '< '< Painting and Special Drawing 5 00 <' << Book-keeping.. 2 00 << «< When more than one modern lan- guage is taken, an extra charge willbemadeof 5 00 << " Books and stationery Jw the use of pupils are fur. nishedfree of charge. They must, however, be kept in perfect order, and be returned to the school. All abused articles will be charged. Books shoidd be covered. Pupils, in addition to their ordinary wearing appa- rel and toilet articles, will be require dto furnish nothing but a pair of heavy colored blankets. Each article of apparel must be marked with the pupil's name in full ; otherwise the laundry cannot be responsible. Calender Year — 1876-77. Begins August 1st, 1876. Ends May 24th, 1877. Vacation. Begins December 15th, 187G. Ends January 8th, 1877. General. Remarks. Pupils will not be received in the Boarding Depart- ment unless they can furnish satisfactory evidence of good moral character, and give sufficient security for the prompt payment of their bills. Any donations to the cabinets or library will be gladly received. All possible care will be taken of pupils who may become sick. Parents may rest assured they will be early informed of any illness on the part of their chil- dren. A variety of good and wholesome food will be put upon the table, and every means adopted to remove the common prejudice against the board supplied by educational institutions. Simplicity in dress is suggested. No uniform has been deemed advisable, but, in order better to per- form the various exercises in gymnastics, a loose attire is essential. All bills payable at the end of every four weeks. 230 SANTA BARBARA COLLEGE. Pupils are requested to make no presents to teach- ers. It is hard to accept, still harder to refuse. Pupils guilty of- habitual disorder, insubordination , or immorality, will be sent before the Board of Di- rectors. The only acceptable excuse for absence or tardiness is sickness or unavoidable prevention. Regulations foe, Boarding Pupils. Rising bell at 7 o'clock Dinner at 12:30 P. M, Breakfast at 7 :45 Supper at 6 P. M. Retiring bell at ' p. m. Each pupil, on entering the college, obtains a copy of the Rules to be observed, and a Time-table show- ing how he or she is employed every hour daily- Tn the Teacb^rs* First. You should be well qualified. You should have the knowledge of the science, which you can acquire by close application only, under an able teach- er, for a considerable length of time. Second. Secure the confidence and respect of your class by thorough teaching and a gentlemanly de- portment on all occasions. Third. Strive to have your class make the degree of advancement which will recommend you to to the public as an able teacher. Fourth. Stand or sit before your class, place your eyes upon the whole, and give special attention to him who is the process of analysis. Mfth. Give each member of the class the amount of time for the examination of his subject which his peculiar structure of mind may require. SANTA BARBARA COLLEGE. 231 Sixth. Never drill your class unlesfj you have the page in which you are exercising them. Seventh. Allow no time to elapse between the piqnPs error and yoin- correction. Eighth. Do not interrupt the process of analysis with a long exjilanation. Say wrong, sir, or wrong. Utter these words the very moment in which he com- mits the error. Ninth. You should speak with propriety. You should set an example which your pupils may safely follow. Tenth. Do not play with your knife, with your I'lder, with your walking-stick, with your book, with your x>encil, with your watch-chain, with your fingers, etc. , etc. , while you are teaching. No man of sound mind will ever waste his time in the practice of these dandy tricks. Eleventh. You should not permit your pupils to indulge in any of the above crazy feats. Pupils are much disposed to be shaking their feet, thumping the books and tables with their fingers, twisting and turn- ing their persons ; these are pranks which modest persons will never play off upon themselves or others. All buffoonery, debasing jests, scurrility, and low mirth are entirely destructive to anything like pi'og- ress ; and all who indulge in them, whether young or old, rich or poor, should be cut off from the class at once. Twelfth. You should not permit one pupil to teach another while you are giving instructions. Each member should listen to the teacher. Thirteenth. Devote all your spare hours to the study of valuable books ; acquire all the information which 232 SANTA BARBARA COLLEGE. your health and opportunities will permit. The more knowledge you have the better you can teach. Never slight the poor, nor flatter the rich ; view all as the children of one Father. Do all the good you can, and prevent all the harm in your power. Fourteenth. The teachers will be held responsible for the books, pens, pencils, rubbers, rulers, and ink* wells belonging to the several departments over which they preside ; also for the defacing of desks, walls, or black-boards. Ta The Students. << On Study. Sit down to your studies every day under the deep impression that what you have to do demands your best powers and your utmost diligence. Strive to acquire the habit of close and fixed atten- tion in study. He who has not learned the art of fastening his mind on the subject, and of holding that subject strictly and firmly before it, will never look deeply into anything ; will never accomplish anything which deserves the name of investigation. Constantly implore the aid of the Holy Spirit in study. The duty of humbly and importunately ask- ing the blessed Spirit's influence to sanctify our affec- tions, and to aid us in cultivating all the graces and virtues of the Christian life, will not, I suppose, be disputed by any one who has the smallest tincture of piety. Never imagine that any valuable amount of knowledge, and especially of accurate knowledge, is to be obtained without labor. Leave nothing till you have done it well. Skimming over the surface of any subject is of little use. Passing on to something SANTA BARBARA COIiLEGE. 23o else before that which precedes is lialf understood is really oftentimes worse than useless. Bring your ac- quaintance with any subject to the test of writing. It is wonderful how far the crudeness and inadequacy of a man's knowledge, on a given subject, may be hidden from his own mind, until he attempts to ex- press what he knows on paper. He then finds him- self at a loss at every step, and cannot proceed with- out much extension, and no less correction of his for- mer attainments. Carefully maintain order in study. He who does not study upon a plan will never pursue his studies to much advantage. Be a close student through life. A good scholar. It is found to be a great deal easi- er to become a good scholar than an indifferent one. He who studies everything thoroughlj', to which he turns his attention, doubles his power at almost every step. All men, whether they understand the philos- ophy of language or not, judge, and generally very correctly, of the improvements of any man's mind by the ease with which they understand what he pro- poses to communicate. There can be no accurate thinking, and of course no correct reasoning, witliout a precise and correct use of words. 1. Every pupil must conform in all respects to the regulations of the College. 2. Pupils late, and those returning after absence, must, before joining their classes, present a written excuse, signed by parent or guardian. 3. When the College-bell rings, every pupil is at 234 SANTA BARBARA COLLEGE. once to go to his class-room, and take his place quiet- ly and orderly, having all necessary books, pencils, etc., etc. 4. AVhen the lesson is finished, every pupil is to leave the class - room quietly and orderly ; and all shouting, pushing, running, and boisterous behaviour about class-room doors at the hours of meeting, chang- ing or dismissal of classes, are strictly prohibited. o. No playing or jumping over forms or desks is al- lowed in any class-room at any time. (5. When dismissed, each boy or girl is at once to proceed to the play-ground, or go home. Loitering in or about class-rooms is strictly prohibited. 7. All school-books must be covered and kept as clean as possible ,• and no writing on or destroying books will be permitted. 8. No school-books are to be left lying about any of the class-rooms or College premises. 9. No pupil is permitted to destroy or injure pens, desks, maps, windows, or any College property what- ever; all such damages to be repaired at the expense of the defaulter. 10. No pupil is permitted to cut or write upon the desks, offices, walls, boards, fences, or other College furniture or property. 11. Throwing stones or other missiles within the College grounds, or in the roads or streets adjoining, is strictly prohibited. 12. When a pupil accidentally or otherwise breaks a window, or injures College property, he must im- mediately report it to the oiflcer on duty. 13. No waste paper is to be thrown about class- rooms, premises, or play -ground, but into <