A CAMP-FIRE RUN WILD 



tion, serenely noting that the woods are 

 on fire, and complacently congratulating 

 themselves that the disaster did not come 

 to spoil their outing ; never once think- 

 ing that by a slight exercise of that 

 care which all men owe the world, this 

 calamity, which a century cannot repair, 

 might have been avoided. 

 162 



