Picturesque Features of Kansas Farming
by
Henry King
Scribner’s
Monthly: An Illustrated Magazine for the People
Volume
XIX
November
1879 to April 1880
Not counting the number of commas and semicolons, I think one would be hard pressed to find a better telling of a prairie fire. So here you go:
"First
you will catch glimpses of what you take to be gray wisps of haze away off on the
horizon; and watching, you will see these vagrant particles deepened gradually,
and gather into a definite volume of smoke, black like a raincloud, and bronze
about the edge. (A mile in two minutes is not an exceptional rate of speed for
a fire once fairly under way.) It halts an instant, you note, over a broad
swale where there is standing water; but it is for an instant only. The next
moment it reaches the upland again and the dry grass; and directly it grasps a
belt of the tall, thick bluestem and the
flame leaps suddenly and madly out above the smoke, then subsides again, and
the black mass grows blacker than ever, and rolls higher, and you can scent the
burning grass, and hear the distant roar of the fire – and awful roar,
resembling the sound of artillery in heavy timber. And it is so calm
immediately about you that you do not so much as miss the ticking of your watch
in your pocket; there is no breath of air stirring, and the sun is shining, and
the heavens above you are blue and placid. But the stillness will be broken
soon.
The
oncoming cloud is only a few miles away now, and you easily trace the scarlet
and terrific energy at its base; the smoke begins to hurt your eyes, too, and the
heat becomes heavily oppressive. And then, all at once, the wind smites and
staggers you, that appalling roar deafens you, and the sun is blotted out, and
you are in a darkness as of midnight without moon or star. It is an experience
of but a dozen seconds or so, this sudden plunge into darkness, though it seems
an hour, and when you look out again, you find that the fire has passed you a
mile or more to your right, and is still rolling desperately onward; and there
in its track are charred and smoldering stacks of hay, and an occasional house
aflame and tottering to its fall, and a group of men and boys beating back the
outer line of the fire with brush and old clothes, and sending forward little counter
fires to met it and if possible keep it at a safe distance. The creek may stop
it and smother it when it gets there, though such a hope has mere chance for a
warrant: sometimes these mighty conflagrations vault across streams twenty or
thirty yards in width, so swift and resistless is their momentum; and as a rule
they are effectually stayed only when they reach a wide extent of plowed land,
and have to yield, sullenly, for lack of anything more to feed their inexorable
fury.
In
journeying on westward, past the farthest of the homesteaders, and the last of
the surveyors, out of sight of the uttermost tokens of civilization, you will
see the trampled and dingy places where many of these dismaying fires have
their origin – transient camps of hunters or scouting soldiers, or miners going
overland to the mountains. You will also find at intervals the ruins of an old
fort or stockade to remind you of the Indian days; you will stumble upon
numerous towns of the prairie-dogs, and put your vanity as a sportsman to shame
with your impotent attempts at shooting the absurd little creatures; you will
be kept awake at night, and made afraid in spite of yourself, by the sharp,
gaunt cry of the coyote; and then, finally you will come to the cattle-ranches,
and the great herds lazily grazing on the level, hushed, and still interminable
empire of prairie."
5 comments:
As I read this pieced I didn't even notice the commas or semicolons. It was captivating.
**piece - oops
interminable empire of prairie. Then.
What a vivid and fascinating description! We've burned several times, but we always work to keep the fire slow (hoping, thereby, to keep it under better control). I shudder to think what it must have felt like to be in the literal line-of-fire of a prairie fire.
I'm surprised at how well it's written, and puts us there way better than I ever could even I saw one!
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