When Raymond heard Caleb’s voice
calling to him so loudly, he paused a moment from
his work, and seeing that the fire had actually taken,
in earnest, he told Caleb that he must go back a little
way, for by-and-bye the tree would fall. So Caleb
went back to some distance, and asked Raymond if that
was far enough. Raymond said it was, and Raymond
then sat down upon a log, with his maple pole in his
hand, to watch the progress of the fire.
A dense smoke soon began to pour out
of the top of the chimney. The fire roared up
through the hollow, and it caught outside too, under
the bark, and soon enveloped the whole tree in smoke,
sparks, and flame. Large pieces of the blazing
bark detached themselves, from time to time, from
the side of the tree, and came down, crackling and
sparkling to the ground; and the opening below where
Caleb had crammed in his fuel, soon glowed like the
mouth of a furnace.
Near the top of the tree was an old
branch, or rather the stump of an old branch, decayed
and blackened, reaching out a little way, like an
arm. This was soon enveloped in smoke; and, as
Caleb was watching it, as it appeared and disappeared
in the wreaths, he thought he saw something move.
He looked again, intently. It was a squirrel, - half
suffocated in the smoke, and struggling to hold on.
Caleb immediately called out to Raymond as loud as
he could call,
“Raymond, Raymond, come here,
quick: here is a poor squirrel burning up.”
Raymond dropped his axe, and ran, - bounding
over the logs, and hummocks; but before he reached
the place, the squirrel, unable to hold on any longer,
and half stifled with the smoke and scorching heat,
dropped from his hold to the ground. Raymond
came up at the moment, and seized him; he brought
him to where Caleb was sitting, - Caleb himself
eagerly coming forward to see.
“Is it dead?” said Caleb.
“Pretty much,” said Raymond.
The squirrel lay gasping helplessly in Raymond’s
hands. “Here, put him in my cap,”
said Caleb; “that will make a good bed for him,
and perhaps he will come to life again.”
Raymond examined him pretty carefully,
and he did not seem to be burnt. He said he thought
he must have been suffocated by breathing the smoke
and hot air. Raymond then went back to his work,
and Caleb sat upon the log, watching alternately the
squirrel and the burning tree.
In a few minutes a great flame flashed
out at the top of the tree: and finally, after
about half an hour, the whole trunk, being all in a
blaze, from top to bottom, began slowly to bend and
bend over.
“Raymond,” shouted Caleb, - “Raymond,
look; - it is going to fall!”
The tall trunk moved at first slowly,
but soon more and more rapidly, and finally came down
to the ground with a crash.
The crash startled the little squirrel,
so that he almost regained his feet; and Caleb was
afraid that he was going to run away. But he laid
over again upon his side, and was soon quiet again
as before.
Not long after this, Raymond finished
his work, and prepared to go home. He proposed
to Caleb that they should leave the squirrel there,
upon the log; but Caleb was very desirous to carry
him home, because, he said, he could tame him, and
give him to Mary Anna. So Raymond asked how they
should contrive to carry him. Caleb wanted to
carry him home in his cap; but Raymond said that he
would take cold by riding home bare-headed. “However,”
said Raymond, “Perhaps I can contrive something.”
So he went after another piece of birch bark from
the tree, about six inches wide, and two feet long,
and rolled it over, bringing the two ends together,
so as to make a sort of round box, - only
it was without top or bottom. To keep it in shape
he tied a string round it.
“But how are you going to keep him in?”
asked Caleb.
Raymond said nothing, but he took
a handkerchief out of his jacket pocket, and spread
it out upon the ground, and put his birch bark box
upon it. He then laid the squirrel gently in upon
the handkerchief, which thus served for a bottom.
Next he drew the corners of the handkerchief up over
the top, and tied the opposite pairs of ends together.
Thus the handkerchief served for top, bottom, and handle.
They soon reached the place where
they had left the cart; they got into it and rode
on. Caleb held the squirrel in his lap, and of
course, as there was nothing but the thin handkerchief
for a bottom to the box, Caleb felt the weight of
the squirrel, pressing soft and warm upon his knees.
The squirrel lay very still until they got very near
home, and then Caleb began to feel a creeping sensation,
as if he was beginning to move. Caleb was highly
delighted to perceive these signs of returning life;
he held his knees perfectly still, that he might not
disturb him, crying out, however, to Raymond,
“He’s moving, Raymond; he’s moving,
he’s moving.”