The youth, with hands beneath his head,
Against a great titoki's base."
1877. Anon., `Colonial Experiences or Incidents of Thirty-four Years in New Zealand,' p: 16:
"For this purpose, titoki was deemed the most suitable timber, from its hardness and crooked growth resembling English oak."
1883. J. Hector, `Handbook of New Zealand, p. 131:
"Titoki, a beautiful tree with large panicles of reddish flowers . . . Wood has similar properties to ash. Its toughness makes it valuable for wheels, coachbuilding, etc."
1889. T. Kirk, `Forest Flora of New Zealand,' p. 183:
"It is sometimes termed `the New Zealand ash,' doubtless on account of its resembling that tree in the shape of its foliage and in the toughness of its wood, but it is most generally known as the `titoki.'"
1896. `Otago Witness,' June 23, p. 42, col. 2:
"The saddling-paddock and the scales are surrounded by a fence made of stout titoki saplings, on which are perched the knowing."
<hw>Ti-tree</hw>, <i>n</i>. erroneous spelling of <i>Tea-tree</i> (q.v.). See also <i>Manuka</i>.