<h2><SPAN name="XXXIII" id="XXXIII"></SPAN>XXXIII</h2>
<p class="caption">A CAMP-FIRE RUN WILD</p>
<p>Some wooden tent-pins inclosing a
few square yards of ground half covered
with a bed of evergreen twigs, matted
but still fresh and odorous, a litter of
paper and powder-smirched rags, empty
cans and boxes, a few sticks of fire wood,
a blackened, primitive wooden crane, with
its half-charred supporting crotches, and
a smouldering heap of ashes and dying
brands, mark the place of a camp recently
deserted.</p>
<p>Coming upon it by chance, one could
not help a feeling of loneliness, something
akin to that inspired by the cold
hearthstone of an empty house, or the
crumbling foundations of a dwelling long
since fallen to ruin. What days and
nights of healthful life have been spent
here. What happy hours, never to return,
have been passed here. What
jokes have flashed about, what merry<span class="pagenum">[159]</span>
tales have been told, what joyous peals
of laughter rung, where now all is silence.
But no one is there to see it.
A crow peers down from a treetop to
discover what pickings he may glean,
and a mink steals up from the landing,
which bears the keelmarks of lately departed
boats, both distrustful of the old
silence which the place has so suddenly
resumed; and a company of jays flit silently
about, wondering that there are
no intruders to assail with their inexhaustible
vocabulary.</p>
<p>A puff of wind rustles among the
treetops, disturbing the balance of the
crow, then plunges downward and sets
aflight a scurry of dry leaves, and out
of the gray ashes uncoils a thread of
smoke and spins it off into the haze of
leaves and shadows. The crow flaps in
sudden alarm, the mink takes shelter in
his coign of vantage among the driftwood,
and the jays raise a multitudinous
clamor of discordant outcry. The dry
leaves alight as if by mischievous guidance
of evil purpose upon the dormant
embers, another puff of wind arouses a
flame that first tastes them, then licks<span class="pagenum">[160]</span>
them with an eager tongue, then with
the next eddying breath scatters its
crumbs of sparks into the verge of the
forest. These the rising breeze fans till
it loads itself with a light burden of
smoke, shifted now here, now there, as
it is trailed along the forest floor, now
climbing among the branches, then soaring
skyward.</p>
<p>Little flames creep along the bodies
of fallen trees and fluffy windrows of
dry leaves, toying like panther kittens
with their assured prey, and then, grown
hungry with such dainty tasting, the
flames upburst in a mad fury of devouring.
They climb swifter than panthers
to treetops, falling back they gnaw savagely
at tree roots, till the ancient lords
of the forest reel and topple and fall before
the gathering wind, and bear their
destroyer still onward.</p>
<p>The leeward woods are thick with a
blinding, stifling smoke, through which
all the wild creatures of the forest flee
in terror, whither they know not—by
chance to safety, by equal chance perhaps
to a terrible death in the surging deluge
of fire. The billows of flame heave and<span class="pagenum">[161]</span>
dash with a constant insatiate roar, tossing
ever onward a red foam of sparks and
casting a jetsam of lurid brands upon
the ever-retreating strand that is but
touched with the wash of enkindling,
when it is overrun by the sea of fire.</p>
<p>The ice-cold springs grow hot in its
fierce overwhelming wave, the purling
rills hiss and boil and shrink before it,
then vanish from their seared beds. All
the living greenness of the forest is utterly
consumed—great trees that have
stood like towers, defying the centuries,
with the ephemeral verdure of the
woodland undergrowth; and to mark
the place of all this recent majesty and
beauty, there is but smouldering ruin
and black and ashen waste. Little
farms but lately uncovered to the sun
out of the wilderness, cosy homesteads
but newly builded, are swept away, and
with them cherished hopes and perhaps
precious lives. What irreparable devastation
has been wrought by the camp-fire
run wild!</p>
<p>Meanwhile the careless begetters of
this havoc are making their leisurely
way toward the outer world of civilization,<span class="pagenum">[162]</span>
serenely noting that the woods are
on fire, and complacently congratulating
themselves that the disaster did not come
to spoil their outing; never once thinking
that by a slight exercise of that
care which all men owe the world, this
calamity, which a century cannot repair,
might have been avoided.<span class="pagenum">[163]</span></p>
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