"People sneer at gardening and gardeners, Grant," said the old gentleman

to me one day. "Perhaps you may take to some other occupation when you

grow older; but don't you never be ashamed of having learned to be a

gardener."

"I'm sure I never shall," I said.

"I hope you will not, my boy, for there's something in gardening and

watching the growth of trees and plants that's good for a lad's nature;

and if I was a schoolmaster I'd let every boy have a garden, and make

him keep it neat. It would be as good a lesson as any he could teach."

"I like gardening more and more, sir," I said.

"That's right, my boy. I hope you do, but you've a deal to learn yet.

Gardening's like learning to play the fiddle; there's always something

more to get hold of than you know. I wish I had some more glass."

"I wish you had, sir," I said.

"Why, boy?--why?" he cried sharply.

"Because you seem as if you'd like it, sir," I said, feeling rather

abashed by his sharp manner.

"Yes, but it was so that I should be able to teach you, sir. But wait a

bit, I'll talk to my brother one of these days."

Time glided on, and as I grew bigger and stronger I used now and then to

go up with Ike to the market. He would have liked me to go every time,

but Mr Brownsmith shook his head, and would only hear of it in times of

emergency.

"Not a good task for you, Grant," he used to say. "I want you at home."

We were down the garden one morning after a very stormy night, when the

wind had been so high that a great many of the fruit-trees had had their

branches broken off, and we were busy with ladder, saw, and knife,

repairing damages.

I was up the ladder in a fine young apple-tree, whose branch had been

broken and was hanging by a few fibres, and as soon as I had fixed

myself pretty safely I began to cut, while when I glanced down to see if

Old Brownsmith was taking any notice I saw that he was smiling.

"Won't do--won't do, Grant," he said. "Cutting off a branch of a tree

that has been broken is like practising amputation on a man. Cut lower,

boy."

"But I wanted to save all that great piece with those little boughs," I

said.

"But you can't, my lad. Now just look down the side there below where

you are cutting, and what can you see?"

"Only a little crack that will grow up."

"Only a little crack that won't grow up, Grant, but which will admit the

rain, and the wet will decay the tree; and that bough, at the end of two

or three years, instead of being sound and covered with young shoots,

will be dying away. A surgeon, when he performs an amputation, cuts

right below the splintered part of the bone. Cut three feet lower down,

my lad, and then pare all off nice and smooth, just as I showed you over

the pruning.




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