Page:Natural History (Rackham, Jones, & Eichholz) - Vol 05.djvu/63

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BOOK XVII. xiv. 72-74

them scarcely perceptible, and we must not fail to remark on Nature's miracle of producing trees from so small a seed when a grain of wheat or barley is so much larger, not to reckon a bean. What resemblance have apple seeds and pear seeds to their source of origin? To think that from these beginnings is born the timber that contemptuously rebuffs the axe, presses that are not overcome by immense weights, masts for sails, battering rams for demolishing towers and walls! Such is the force and such the potency of Nature. XIX. 162,
XXI. 24.
But the crowning marvel will be that there is something that derives its origin from a tear-drop, as we shall mention in the proper place.

§ 60.Well then, in the months that we have specified, the tiny seed-balls are gathered from the female cypress—for the male tree, XVI. 211.as we have said, is barren—and are put to dry in the sun; and they burst open and emit their seed, which has a remarkable attraction for ants, a fact that actually increases the marvel, for the germ of such huge trees to be consumed for the food of such a small animal! The seed is sown in April, after the earth has been levelled by means of rollers or rammers; it is scattered thickly and a layer of earth a thumb deep is sprinkled upon it from sieves: it is not strong enough to rise up against a greater weight, and it twists back under the ground; on this account another method is merely to tread it into the earth. Every three days it is given a light watering, after sunset so as to soak in the moisture even, until the plants break out from the earth. They are transplanted after a year, when the seeding is nine inches long, regard being paid to the weather so that they may be planted under a bright sky and when there is no wind. And wonderful to say, on
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