<h2><SPAN name="III" id="III"></SPAN>III</h2>
<p class="caption">THE HOME FIRESIDE</p>
<p>Weeks ago the camp-fire shed its last
glow in the deserted camp, its last thin
thread of smoke was spun out and vanished
in the silent air, and black brands
and gray ashes were covered in the even
whiteness of the snow. The unscared
fox prowls above them in curious exploration
of the desolate shanty, where
wood-mice are domiciled and to whose
sunny side the partridge comes to bask;
the woodpecker taps unbidden to enter
or departs from the always open door;
and under the stars that glitter through
the net of branches the owl perches on
the snowy ridge and mopes in undisturbed
solemnity.</p>
<p>For a time, camping-days are over
for the sportsman, and continue only for
the lumberman, the trapper, and the
merciless crust-hunter, who makes his
secret lair in the depths of the forest.<span class="pagenum">[14]</span>
In the chill days and evenings that fall
first in the interim between winter and
summer camping, the man who makes
his outings for sport and pleasure must
content himself by his own fireside,
whose constant flame burns throughout
the year.</p>
<p>Well may he be content when the untempered
winds of March howl like a
legion of wolves at his door, snow and
sleet pelt roof and pane with a continuous
volley from the lowering sky, or
when the chilly silence of the last winter
nights is broken by the sharp crack
of frozen trees and timbers, as if a hidden
band of riflemen were besieging
the house. Well may he be content,
then, with the snug corner of his own
hearthstone, around which are gathered
the good wife, the children, and his camp
companions, the dogs.</p>
<p>Better than the camp, is this cosy comfort
in days and nights such as these, or
in those that fall within that unnamed
season that lies between winter and
spring, when, if one stirs abroad, his feet
have sorry choice between saturated
snow and oozy mould,—a dismal season<span class="pagenum">[15]</span>
but for its promise of brighter days, of
free streams, green trees, and bird songs.</p>
<p>Better, now, this genial glow that
warms one's marrow than the camp-fire
that smokes or roasts one's front while
his back freezes. With what perfect
contentment one mends his tackle and
cleans his gun for coming days of sport,
while the good wife reads racy records
of camp-life from Maine to California,
and he listens with attention half diverted
by break or rust spot, or with
amused watching of the youngsters playing
at camping out. The callow campers
assail him with demands for stories, and
he goes over, for their and his own enjoyment,
old experiences in camp and
field, while the dogs dream by the fire
of sport past or to come,—for none but
dogs know whether dog's dreams run
backward or forward.</p>
<p>Long-used rod and gun suggest many
a tale of past adventure as they bring to
mind recollections of days of sport such
as may never come again. The great
logs in the fireplace might tell, if their
flaming tongues were given speech, of
camps made long ago beneath their lusty<span class="pagenum">[16]</span>
branches, and of such noble game as we
shall never see,—moose, elk, deer, panther,
wolf, and bear, which are but spectres
in the shadowy forest of the past.
But the red tongues only roar and hiss
as they lick the crackling sinews of oak
and hickory, and tell nothing that ordinary
ears may catch. Yet one is apt to
fall dreaming of bygone days, and then
of days that may come to be spent by
pleasant summer waters and in the woods
gorgeous with the ripeness of autumn.</p>
<p>So one is like to dream till he awakens
and finds himself left with only the dogs
for comrades, before the flameless embers,
deserted even by the shadows that
erstwhile played their grotesque pranks
behind him. Cover the coals as if they
were to kindle to-morrow's camp-fire, put
the yawning dogs to bed, and then to
bed and further dreaming.<span class="pagenum">[17]</span></p>
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