登陆注册
11359600000005

第5章 A BuSH FIRE

No rain yet. and we were in the end of January; the foun- tains of heaven were dried up. But now all round the northern horizon the bush fires burnt continually, a pillar of smoke by day and a pillar of fire by night.

Nearer by night, like an enemy creeping up to a belea- guered town. The weather had been very still for some time. and we took the precaution to burn great strips of grass all round the paddocks to the north; but, in spite of all our precautions, I knew that should a strong wind come on from that quarter nothing short of a miracle would save us.

On the third of February the heat was worse than ever, but there was no wind; and as the sun went down among the lurid smoke, red as blood, I thought I made out a few white, brush-shaped clouds rising in the north.

Jim and I sat very late, not talking much. We knew that if we were to be burnt out our loss would be very heavy; but we thanked God that even were we to lose everything it would not be irreparable, and that we should still be wealthy. Our brood mares and racing stock wereour greatest anxiety. We had a good stack of hay, by which we might keep them alive for another month, supposing all the grass was burnt; but, if we lost that, our horses would probably die. I said at last-"Jim, we may make up our minds to have the run swept.

The fire is burning up now."

"Yes, it is brightening," said he; "but it must be twenty miles off still, and if it comes down with a gentle wind we shall save the paddocks and hay. There is a good deal of grass in the lower paddock. I am glad we had the forethought not to feed it down. Well, fire or no fire, I shall go to bed."We went to bed, and, in spite of anxiety, mosquitoes, and heat, I fell asleep. In the grey morning I was awakened, nearly suffocated, by a dull, continuous roar. It was the wind in the chimney. The north wind, so long imprisoned, had broken loose, and the boughs were crashing, and the trees were falling before the majesty of his wrath.

I ran out and met Jim on the veranda. "It"s all up," I said. " Get the women and children into the river, and let the men go up to windward with the sheepskins to beat out the fire in the short grass. I"ll get on horseback and go out and see how the Morgans get on. That obstinate fellow will wish he had come in now."Morgan was a stockman of ours, who lived, with a wife and two children, about eight miles to the northward. We always thought it would have been better for him to movein; but he had put it off, and now the fire had taken us by surprise.

I rode away, dead up-wind. Our station had a few large trees about it, and then all was clear plain and short grass for two miles. I feared from the density of the smoke that the fire had reached them already; but I thought it my duty to go and see, for I might meet them fleeing, and help them with the children.

I have seen many bush fires, but never such a one as this. The wind was blowing a hurricane, and when I had ridden about two miles into high scrub I began to get frightened. Still I persevered, against hope; the heat grew more fearful every moment. But I reflected that I had often ridden up close to a bush fire, turned when I began to see the flame through the smoke, and cantered away from it easily.

Then it struck me that I had never yet seen a bush fire in such a hurricane as this. I remembered stories of men riding for their lives, and others of burnt horses and men found in the bush, And now I saw a sight which made me turn in good earnest.

I was in lofty timber, and, as I paused, I heard the mighty crackling of fire coming through the wood. At the same instant the blinding smoke burst into a million tongues of flickering flame, and I saw the fire-not where I had seen it before, not creeping along among the scrub, but up aloft, a hundred and fifty feet overhead. It hadcaught the dry tops of the higher boughs, and was flying along from tree-top to tree-top like lightning. Below, the wind was comparatively moderate; but, up there, it was travelling twenty miles an hour. I saw one tree ignite like gun-cotton, and then my heart grew small, and I turned and fled.

I rode as I never rode before. There were three miles to go ere I cleared the forest and got among the short grass, where I could save myself-three miles! Ten minutes nearly of intolerable heat. blinding smoke, and mortal terror. Any death but this! Drowning were pleasant; glorious to sink down into the cool, sparkling water! But to be burnt alive! I would give all my money now to be naked and penniless, rolling about in a cool, pleasant river.

The maddened, terrified horse went like the wind, but not like the hurricane-that was too swift for us. The fire had outstripped us overhead, and I could see it dimly through the choking reek, leaping and blazing a hundred yards before us among the feathery foliage, devouring it as the south wind devours the thunder-clouds. Then I could see nothing. Was I clear of the forest? Yes-I was riding over grass.

I managed to pull up the horse; and as I did so a mob of kangaroos blundered by, blinded, almost against me, noticing me no more in their terror than if I had been a stump or a stone. Soon the fire came hissing along through the grassscarcely six inches high, and I walked my horse through it; then I tumbled off on the blackened ground, and felt as if I should die.

I lay there on the hot, black ground. My head felt like a block of stone, and my neck was stiff, so that I could not move my head. My throat was swelled and dry as a sand- hill, and there was a roaring in my ears like a cataract. I thought of the cool waterfalls among the rocks far away in Devon. I thought of everything that was cold and pleasant; and then came into my head about Dives praying for a drop of water. I tried to get up, but could not, so lay down again with my head upon my arm.

It grew cooler, and the atmosphere was clearer. I got up, and, mounting my horse. turned homeward, Now I began to think about the station Could it have escaped! Impossible ! The fire would fly a hundred yards or more on such a day as this, even in a low plain. No, it must be gone! There was a great roll in the plain between me and home, so that I could see nothing of our place-all round the country was black, without a trace of vegetation. Behind me were the smoking ruins of the forest I had escaped from, where now the burnt-out trees began to thunder down rapidly, and before, to the south, I could see the fire raging miles away.

So the station is burnt, then? No! For, as I top the ridge, there it is before me, standing as of old-a bright oasis inthe desert of burnt country round. Ay! the very haystack is safe! And the paddocks? -all right!

I got home, and Jim came running to meet me.

"I was getting terribly frightened, old man," said he. "I thought you were caught. You look ten years older than you did this morning!"I tried to answer, but could not speak for drought. He ran and got me a great tumbler of water; and in the evening, having drunk about a gallon, I felt pretty well revived.

Men were sent out at once to see after the Morgans, and found them perfectly safe, but very much frightened; they had, however, saved their hut, for the fire had passed before the wind had got to its full strength.

Henry Kingsley

Author.-Henry Kingsley (1830-1876), brother of the more famous Charles Kingsley, author of Westward Ho! Henry wrote Geoffrey Hamlyn and Ravenshoe, the former of which is, by some critics, considered to be one of the best Australian novels.

General Notes.-This excerpt may tempt you to read the whole book Geoffrey Hamlyn, the latter part of which deals with life in South-eastern Australia. Why is February a likely month for bush fires? What tells you that the station was a large one? Was it a sheep or a cattle station? Where would the fire travel quickest-in forest, scrub, or grass? Devon is a country in the south-west of England; find it on the map. Discuss the causes of bush fires. Are bush fires always harmful? What are thebest preventives? Recall any poems or stories connected with bush fires. Write a real or an imaginary account of heroism in this connexion. "Dives praying for a drop of water." Dives (dy"-veez) is a Latin word meaning rich. It is used to indicate the rich man mentioned in the sixteenth chapter of Luke.

同类推荐
  • 社会交往英语口语即学即用

    社会交往英语口语即学即用

    取材于人们所从事的社交活动的方方面面,范围广、实用性强。共包括7个部分:社交惯用语、家庭交往、社会生活、电话交往、商务交往、出行交往和社交语气。希望该书对具有中低层次英语水平的读者提高英语口语水平有所帮助。
  • 用耳朵听最优美的名著

    用耳朵听最优美的名著

    系列图书精选的各类故事、散文、演讲、时文及名著片段,均用词精准简洁,语句流畅优美,将引领你进入趣、情、爱与理的博大世界,使你更加充满信心地去追求梦想。这里有嘻嘻哈哈的幽默故事,有体会幸福与生活的感悟故事,有帮你战胜挫折给你勇气的故事,有闪烁着人性光辉的美德故事,有发人深省的智慧故事,也有在成长路上给你动力的哲理故事。相信本系列图书能为你展现一个美丽新世界并使您的英语学习更上一层楼。
  • 出行英语会话想说就会说

    出行英语会话想说就会说

    本书通过真实的对话情景以及旅游过程中可能遇到的各类问题,帮助大家掌握英语口语交流的基本技能,内容涉及交通、旅游观光等。本书借鉴了国内外的实用旅游用书,使读者在学习英语口语的同时,能够充分了解各个国家的国家概况、风土人情、异国礼仪等与旅游密不可分的相关信息。
  • 爱在尘埃堆积的角落(英文爱藏双语系列)

    爱在尘埃堆积的角落(英文爱藏双语系列)

    很多时候,爱就是这样简简单单的两三事。我牵着你的手,你靠着我的肩膀,刹那间,爱就是一切。过寻常日子,看细水长流。虽无声,却动人。
  • 商务外贸英语口语即学即用

    商务外贸英语口语即学即用

    本书取材于人们商务外贸英语生活的方方面面,范围广、实用性强,《商务外贸英语口语即学即用》共包括8个部分:商务交际、日常工作、市场营销、商务出行、对外贸易、商务谈判、电子商务和求职应聘。希望《商务外贸英语口语即学即用》对具有中低层次英语水平的读者提高英语口语水平有所帮助。
热门推荐
  • 天问记

    天问记

    太古初年,天地间诞生一神花,其名七彩,神花一万年一开花,一万年一结果,一万年一枯萎。经年间,有俗人得遇神花而开悟明理,消灾减难百病不扰;有圣人幸儿倚触花旁,通彻至理,感化世人,教化众生;有神人窃取造化,后修炼神通,开宗立派,传承至今。
  • 阿娇翁主

    阿娇翁主

    陈阿娇不愿陷入这争斗中,陈家因窦太主而成为诸侯,因陈阿娇而成为外戚,故刘彻终会除之。为了保的陈家注定仅剩的血脉,为了能够离开那座皇城,她宁愿一步一步的退,一步步出卖着自己的仅有。她与刘彻妥协着。曾经深爱刘彻,却因为刘彻的不爱而放弃在感情上对他的追逐,一次次的伤害,学会了隐藏自己的真实情绪,虚与委蛇。
  • 重生西游之我是黑无常

    重生西游之我是黑无常

    重生到西游的世界里变成黑无常程云竟发现自己是第一个应劫之人!被孙悟空的金箍棒险些打死更兼身上还背负着大因果!更是发现一个个惊天大秘密之前一个个坑程云都是围观,可是终于有一次他掉到了坑里,很深的那种本来想着绕着西游走,这下还是多做些谋划吧且看程云如何从神道起家,从长安城隍做起,坑了圣人坑天道,我在坑内,不拉一把你们显得多不仗义?哎呀,这么可爱的娃娃,怎么能扔这江里呢?什么!你不知道算命要到城隍庙报备的吗?嗯,江流儿跟咱也是熟人,这法事准许了。什么?有和尚抢了你的道观?我后园有十桶火油,无量天尊,该做什么你看着办!
  • 李大钊与早期中国共产党

    李大钊与早期中国共产党

    从现代政治学、现代政党文明的视角。全方位、体地展示和解读李大钊在中国共产党创建前后的思想发展及其政治实践,剖析李大利政党观总结其建党理念,揭示李大钊在矢志于中华民旌解放事业的道路上如何把马克思主义与中国国情相耐接,探索马克思主义中国化之路。
  • 梦醒星云

    梦醒星云

    星际航海年代,机甲师作为单兵王者,受人尊重的同时却时刻伴随着死亡的危险。是什么,让他苦苦追寻,舍弃逍遥在家的荣华富贵?是什么,促使一个贪生怕死的少年,变成了顶天立地的男人?为了探寻不为人知的秘密,他用性命相搏,毅然踏上了艰苦的行程,不惧令人绝望的异种生物,用鲜血和机甲杀出一条正路……
  • EXO之心锁

    EXO之心锁

    一个注定不平凡的女孩,她的感情之路也十分坎坷,她的王子究竟是天使还是恶魔,她能否认清自己的爱。命运的齿轮已经转动,故事即将开始
  • 九天飞舞

    九天飞舞

    逆转修为,踏天而上,批掉荆棘,斩碎过往,这是一个传奇的故事,令的每个人都感觉到热血沸腾,这也是一个神奇的传说,没有人超越的高度。上官飞天峥嵘一生,将一切都给掌控在手中,令的天地颤抖,令的大地震动,刀锋所指,所向披靡。
  • 我欲屠天

    我欲屠天

    无极大陆,大周皇朝衰败,七国征战无数年,家族、宗门林立,是时百家争鸣,无数强者幡然崛起,大陆乱,各族争霸,荒兽窥探,人族生灵涂炭。强者享天地封号,掌御众生;弱者命如萍草,无立锥之地。且看一代废柴少年,如何逆天崛起……
  • 管理越简单越好Ⅴ

    管理越简单越好Ⅴ

    简单化是解决管理问题的最佳方法。管理者要力求简单,做好“画饼、画圈、画叉”三方面:方向明确、人才运用得当、制度令行禁止,贯彻到位,将有限的资源效应运用到最好,相信定会终有所成。
  • 卡耐基成功说服经典

    卡耐基成功说服经典

    卡耐基是二十世纪伟大的人生导师,半个多世纪以来,从西方到东方,几乎世界上任何一个语族都有卡耐基的译著,他也因而被誉为“人类出版史上第二大畅销书作家”。本书将卡耐基的好口才的说服技巧公布天下,只等你来参阅。