A Book on
Aust. Trees, by W. A. W. de Beuzeville The
Land, Review by Peter Snodgrass 2 April 1954 |
Here is an extraordinary story involving a gentleman named W. A. W. de
Beuzeville, who was pointed Ecologist to the
Forestry Commission of New South Wales many years ago, so many years ago that
you and I were comparatively unimportant people at the time, and there is an
excuse for us for forgetting. An Ecologist, by the way, is a person devoted to that branch of
science which deals with the habits of living organisms, including trees, in
relation to the environment in which they live. After & lifetime in the service of the Forestry Commission Mr. de Beuzeville retired some years ago. He died last weekend,
but he has left as a legacy, not only his accumulated knowledge, but the
manuscript of a book entitled "Australian Trees for Australian
Planting," That book has been published by the Government Printer, and it was
issued last September. Our friend, Guy Moore, of Moore's Bookshop, Sydney, who is himself a
Vice-President of the Forestry Advisory Council of this State, and whose
interest in tree planting can only, be described as impassioned, sent me
& copy to review. Unhappily, Calliope and I must have had a minor altercation at the
time, and she pinched it. She has had it, by her for the last, few months,
and it has had a profound effect. She tells me, most reproachfully, that no person earning a living from
the soil or dealing with it in any way should be without a copy, and that every
page of it will yield dividends far greater and more enduring than any other
kind of investment. But fancy a man, having devoted his entire life to the study of trees
in relation to their environment, bequeathing the manuscript of a book to a
people who, only a few years ago, were notorious for the destruction of
trees! I am quite certain that there could be no more extraordinary story. In the days of my respectability, I used to be invited to speak at the
meetings of the Forestry Advisory Council and if my memory serves me well, I
came to know Mr. de Beuzeville, and the work that
he and the other members of that most enthusiastic organisation
are doing. One of their very distinguished members,; Mr.
Swain, has just been over in Abyssinia advising the Ethiopians how to recover
the devastation of wanton tree destruction. Fortunately the Ethiopians are not fully informed as to our own record
in that regard, and it is to be hoped that Mr. Swain did not enlighten them
beyond minimum requirements. This book, "Australian Trees for Australian Planting," is
the measure of a remarkable reformation. Thirty years or more ago every tree
seemed to be the enemy of nearly every farmer. I have very vivid recollections of a discussion which took place among
my friends over the ring-barking of trees on roads adjacent to arable land
under cultivation. The view was advanced that it was utterly impossible for any farmer to
make a success of his business if trees on the road were to be allowed to de-
stroy half-a-chain of crop along the boundary
fences. That view was supported by bankers, businessmen, and even experts from
the Department of Agriculture. It was contested by a handful of stout-hearted shire councillors
representing both the Illabo and Coolamon Shires, and they were literally
threatened with electoral disaster if they persisted in such a stupid
attitude. When it was suggested that the day would surely come when every farmer
would be planting trees, the answer was a loud and
majority "Rubbish!" The incident was impressed on my mind by the fact that one of the
disputants went straight home, got an axe, and worked feverishly until he had
rung every tree along half the width of every road around his property, and
defied the Council to take action. The Council took no action, for the matter was lamentably unimportant
at the time, but I lived to see the day when that particu-
lar farmer, and all those who shared his views,
did, actually, plant trees, and their heirs and successors have been planting
trees ever since. I know of no other reformation which has met with such universal
success in such a short space of time, or that is likely to be more enduring. The conversions did not come from preaching, or even reading, but from
practical experience and the slow thinking that is inseparable from it. MR. W, A. W. de Beuzeville opens his book
with a quotation taken from a tree in a Spanish park. Thirty years ago that
quotation would have been the cause of ribald laughter among those of us who
were clearing land at that time. I speak of those who might have been in a position to understand it,
for the rest of us it would have been a complete and senseless mystery. Here it is:- "Ye who pass by and would raise your hand against me,
hearken ere you harm me. "I am
the heat of your hearth on cold nights, the friendly shade screening you
front the summer sun; and my fruits are refresh- ing
draughts quenching your thirst as you journey on. "I am
the beam that holds your house, the bed on which you lie, and the timber that
builds your boat. "I am
the handle of your hoe, the door of your homestead,
the wood of your cradle, and the shell of your coffin. I am the bread of
kindness and the flower of beauty. "Ye who pass by, listen to my prayer: Harm Me Not." It is beautiful, isn't it? And it is true, isn't it? Of course, we have always had people who have appreciated trees at
their true worth. That has been our saving grace right from the very
beginning, or the whole place would have been converted into a desolate
wilderness long ago. Poor George Weir, he who spent a miserable few years in the State
Parliament to become Minister for Conservation, and who has now escaped to a
Judgeship, has written a Foreword to "Australian Trees For Australian
Planting," and I venture to say that he never had a happier task. "When there is a generation of Australians, who, like Mr. de Beuzeville," writes George Weir, "can 'find
tongues in trees, books in running brooks, sermons in stones and good in
everything,' then, truly, the era of Conservation in Australia will have
arrived." Mr. E. H. F. Swain, who was Commissioner for Forests in N.S.W., and
who is the very distinguished gentleman who has just returned from Ethiopia,
has this to say in an introduction to "Australian Trees for Australian
Planting." "Mr. de Beuzeville makes a
comprehensive survey of the unique vegetation which became our heritage a
hundred and sixty years ago; he analyses the conflict that has gone on during
that century and a half, between Nature's achievement and man's
'development'; he explains the dominant part that climate plays in deciding
what shall grow where; and he hopefully indicates his belief that public
opinion has, in fact, moved from the concept of exploit- tation
to that of conservation ..." I know hundreds of farmers who will like this book just as much as
they like machinery catalogues, and farmers' wives who will like it just as
much as they like fashion books, and farmers' children who will read it with
the same delight as they read stories; for this is a machinery catalogue, a
folio of fashions, and a story book. If you want to know how Narrandera got its
trees, what they have done for Narrandera, and what
they look like, it is all here, and Narrandera is
only one place - although it is a very beautiful one. Guy Moore should know that we are indebted to him for drawing our
attention to "Australian Trees For Australian Planting." It is most
unfortunate that it came at a time when Calliope and I were not exactly on
speaking terms. That does not excuse her for pinching it, nor am I attempting to
excuse her. It is the kind of book that anyone might be tempted to pinch,
because it has the same kind of fascination as the Queen's tiara, or the
Duke's wretched brown bonnet. "Australian Trees for Australian Planting," by W. A. W. de Beuzeville, 15/9 posted from Moore's Bookshop, 264 Pitt
Street, Sydney. |