<h2><SPAN name="topic7" id="topic7"></SPAN>Around the Camp Fire</h2>
<p>Did you ever camp in the woods on a moonlight night and listen
to nature's voices? Have you seen the light flicker through the
trees, and glisten on the little brook, its ripples breaking into
molten silver as it glides away between banks o'erhung with fern
and trailing grasses?</p>
<p>Did you ever sit by the camp fire after a day's climb over rocks
and treacherous trails, or after whipping the stream up and down
for the speckled beauties, and watch the flames climb higher and
higher, the sparks flying upward as you throw on the dry pine
branches, and listen to the trees overhead, swayed by the gentle
breeze, croon their drowsy lullaby? Thus were Hal and I camped one
night in June, at Ben Lomond, in the Santa Cruz mountains, and I
shall never forget the glory of that moonlight night.</p>
<p>There is a delightful, comforting feeling about it, and somehow
it always reminds me of a theater, one of God's own handiwork,
whose dome is the blue vault of heaven, studded with its millions
of stars. The silver moon just peeping over the mountain, throwing
into grand relief its rugged seam-scarred sides, the calcium light;
the pine trees with waving plumes, rising file on file like
shrouded specters, form the stage setting; the mountain brook, on
whose bosom the moon leaves a streak of molten silver, the
footlights; while all the myriad voices of the night, harmoniously
blended, are the orchestra. Even the birds in their nests, awakened
by the firelight, join their sleepy chirpings to the chorus.</p>
<p>It has something primeval about it, and one almost expects to
see Robin Hood or Friar Tuck step out into the firelight. The camp
fire carries one back to the days when the red men roamed the
woods, sat round their camp fires, listened to the talking leaves,
and boasted of their prowess.</p>
<p>What sweet memories linger round the camp fire, where the song
of the cricket brings to us recollections of boyhood's days on the
farm, when we listened to the little minstrel, joined to the voice
of the katydids, as their elfin music came floating up from field
and meadow in a pulsating treble chorus. Dear little black musician
of my childhood! Your note still lingers in my memory and brings
before me the faces of those long since departed, who sat around
the fireplace and listened to your cheery song. There was an
unwritten law among us boys never to kill a cricket, and we kept it
as sacredly as was kept the law of the Medes and Persians.</p>
<p>There is another side to the camp fire: the genial comradery of
its cheery blaze, after the supper is over and the pipes lit, which
invites stories of the day's catch. The speckled beauties are
exhibited, lying side by side on the damp moss at the bottom of the
basket. The tale is told of repeated casts, under the overhanging
boughs, in the shadow of the big rock, where the water swirls and
rushes: how the brown hackle went skittering over the pool, or
dropped as lightly as thistledown on the edge of the riffle, the
sudden rise to the fly, the rush for deep water, of the strain on
the rod when it throbbed like a thing of life, sending a delicious
tingle to the finger tips, the successful battle, and the game
brought to the net at last.</p>
<p>The delicious odor of the coffee bubbling in the pot, the
speckled beauties, still side by side, sizzling in the pan, all
combine to tempt the appetite of an epicure.</p>
<p>The camp fire has strange and varied companions. Men from all
walks of life are lured by its cheery blaze. Here sits the noted
divine in search of recreation, and, incidentally, material for
future sermonic use; a prominent physician, glad to escape for a
season the complaining ills, real or imaginary, of his many
patients; a judge, whose benign expression, as he straightens the
leaders in his flybook, or carefully wipes the moisture from his
split bamboo rod, suggests nothing of justice dispensed with an
iron hand; and Emanuel, our Mexican guide, who contentedly inhales
the smoke from his cigarette as he lounges in the warmth of the
blazing camp fire, dreaming of his señorita.</p>
<p>Who can withstand the call of the camp fire, when the sap begins
to run in the trees, and the buds swell with growing life? The
meadow larks call from the pasture, and overhead the killdee pipes
his plaintive call. One longs to lie in the sunshine and watch the
clouds go trailing over the valley. The smell of the woods and the
smoke of the camp fire are in the air, and that old restless
longing steals over him. It is a malady that no prescription
compounded by the hand of a physician can alleviate. Its only
antidote is a liberal dose of Mother Nature's remedy, "God's
Out-of-Doors."</p>
<p>What changes the close contact of nature makes in her loving
children! You would hardly know these men dressed in khaki suits
and flannel shirts, smoking their evening pipes around the camp
fire, as the same men who attend receptions and banquets in the
city, dressed in conventional evening clothes; and I dare say they
enjoy the camp fire, with its homely fare and cheery blaze, far
more than electric-lighted parlors and costly catering.</p>
<p>But the camp fire wanes. A stick burns through and falls
asunder, sending up a shower of sparks. Charred embers only remain.
We spread our blankets with knapsack for pillow. With no sound of
traffic to mar our slumbers, soothed by the wind in the branches,
and the gentle song of the mountain brook for a lullaby, we are
wooed to sleep on the broad bosom of Mother Earth.</p>
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<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href= "images/topic08.png" target="blank"><ANTIMG width-obs="100%" src= "images/topic08.png" alt= "Trout Fishing in the Berkeley Hills" /></SPAN></div>
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