For me one of the pleasures of crisp wintry days is walking
through the woods with my dog. I love the crunch of leaves underfoot and the
amazing shapes of the trees, especially at this time of year when their branches
are bare. Trees are special and the ancient ones especially so, yew, beech and
oak.
The Celts, the Norse and the Germanic races held the oak as
sacred from pre-Christian times. From the pagan image of the Green Man
garlanded by oak leaves found in many parish churches to the writing of
Shakespeare and Keats, the oak has rooted itself deep in the British national
consciousness and its influence is represented in many ways.
The Royal Oak is the second most popular pub name in Britain,
after the Red Lion. Pub names are key words and phrases that unlock doors to
social and military history, folklore, national heroes and heroines, natural
history, dialects, trades, industries and professions, sports and the sometimes
odd British sense of humour.
The original Royal Oak was the Boscobel Oak near Shifnal in
Shropshire where King Charles II and
Colonel Careless hid from noon to dusk after the Battle of Worcester in 1651. After the Restoration, the 29th May, the King's birthday was declared Royal Oak Day. Ironically, it was the popular cult of the Boscobel Oak that killed the tree itself; it was dead by the end of the nineteenth century because patriotic souvenir-hunters tore off its branches, thereby hastening its demise.
Colonel Careless hid from noon to dusk after the Battle of Worcester in 1651. After the Restoration, the 29th May, the King's birthday was declared Royal Oak Day. Ironically, it was the popular cult of the Boscobel Oak that killed the tree itself; it was dead by the end of the nineteenth century because patriotic souvenir-hunters tore off its branches, thereby hastening its demise.
The association of oak trees with national heroes can be no
coincidence. Where else could Robin Hood have met his Merry Men than under the
Major Oak in Sherwood Forest? The story could not have been the same, either
visually or symbolically if the tree had been a silver birch. The joint
symbolism of the hero and the talismanic tree is a powerful one. Here the
qualities of both man and tree are entwined, representing strength, protection,
durability, courage and truth.
The connection of hero and oak tree can also be traced
through King Arthur, whose Round Table was said to be hewn from a massive piece
of oak and whose supposed coffin at Glastonbury Abbey was made from a hollowed
out oak tree. Other oak trees that have been associated with British heroes
include the Elderslie Oak, which was said to have sheltered William Wallace and
300 of his men (that must have been a BIG tree!) and Owen Glendower’s Oak from
which tree he witnessed the battle between King Henry IV and Henry Percy,
Macbeth’s Oak at Birnam and Sir Philip Sydney’s oak tree at Penshurst. In all
cases the trees are associated with or commemorate a war hero. They shed some
of their strength and gravitas on the character, whose exploits mirror the
timeless power of the tree.
It is significant that in most cases the oak tree in English
folklore has been a symbol of loyalty rather than of revolution, Kett’s Oak, in Norfolk, however is a symbol of
rebellion. In July 1549 Robert Kett led an uprising against the Crown to demand
the end to the practice of enclosure of common land. He made a rousing speech
beneath the oak tree on the village green in Wymondham and led a mob in the
march on Norwich, where he captured the castle. Defeated by the Earl of
Warwick, Kett was condemned for treason and hanged. His oak tree lived on, however, and became a symbol of freedom
from oppression. Under the name of the Reformation Oak it became a place of
regular pilgrimage for political radicals.
In 1763 Roger Fisher, published Heart of Oak, The British
Bulwark, in which he argued empires rose or fell depending on their abundance
or dearth of the oak. Fisher warned that the gentry were squandering the future
by leaving woodlands to be destroyed by animals protected for the hunt,
frittering away the birthright of future Britons so they might fund their
passions for "horses and dogs, wine and women, cards and folly".
"We are preying on our vitals," Fisher warned, "yet the bulk of
the nation is insensible to it." It was left to the newly formed Royal
Society for the Encouragement of the Arts to change attitudes. The Society
offered prizes to those who planted the most trees - supremely the oak - but
also the softwood conifers used for masts. As a result, acorn fever took hold.
The great Dukes planted acre after acre of oak trees. Naval officers on leave,
like Collingwood, went around surreptitiously scattering acorns from holes in
his breeches in the parks of his unsuspecting hosts!
During Nelson’s time 2000 oaks would have been used to build a 74 gun warship.These ships were the "wooden walls" that protected Britain during the Napoleonic Wars. In Garrick’s famous poem the “hearts of oak” were both the British ships of the line and the men who sailed them. These were the stalwart defence, the protection against the ever-present threat of foreign invasion that had been a motif of British life for centuries.
The language of trees is in use every day. We are rooted in history, we branch out, we grow or re-grow, and we trace our family tree. Genealogy is frequently represented by the image of the tree with its visible roots going down into the earth. Even today the focus of many English villages is an ancient oak on a village green. In its shade people sit and talk. Notices pinned to its bark tell of fetes and fairs, marriages and funerals, items lost and found and other announcements of local importance. The oak has been and continues to be part of the fabric of English life.
4 comments:
Thank you for your celebration of the English oak, Nicola. It's always been my favourite tree. According to that wonderful writer, Dorothy Hartley, an oak grown on clay soil is exceptionally hard and the root stump was once used for blacksmiths' anvils. Furthermore, in mediaeval buildings, oak wood used with the roots upward, prevented damp rising; the bark was used for tanning; the oak sawdust was used for smoking York hams and oak galls made ink.
How would Shakespeare have written his plays if there had been no oaks?
Such a multi-purpose tree, Elizabeth! Practical and beautiful too. Thank you for mentioning Dorothy Hartley. Wonderful books!
A great piece, Nicola. Although the days of Wooden ships and Iron men are past, to a former professional seaman like myself the oak will always have a special place in our hearts.
THE wonderful tree!
Thanks,
John
Thank you, John. I'm so pleased you enjoyed the piece. There is something very special about the oak and to mariners I imagine it must be particularly resonant. I love these echoes of our past that endure into the present.
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