Ragnarok : the age of fire and gravel
416 CONCLUSIONS.
atmosphere was all afire.? Some speak of ‘ great balls of Jire unrolling and shooting forth in streams. The fire leaped over roofs and trees, and ignited whole streets at once. No one could stand before the blast. It was a race with death, above, behind, and before them.” *
A civil engineer, doing business in Peshtigo, says :
“The heat increased so rapidly, as things got well afire, that, when about four hundred Jeet from the bridge and the nearest building, I was obliged to lie down behind a log that was aground in about two feet of water, and by going under water now and then, and holding my head close to the water behind the log, I managed to breathe. There were a dozen others behind the same log. Tf I had succeeded in crossing the river and gone among the buildings on the other side, probably I should have been lost, as many were.”
We have seen Ovid describing the people of “the earth” crouching in the same way in the water to saye themselves from the flames of the Age of Fire.
In Michigan, one Allison Weaver, near Port Huron, determined to remain, to protect, if possible, some millproperty of which he had charge. He knew the fire was coming, and dug himself a shallow well or pit, made a thick plank cover to place over it, and thus prepared to bide the conflagration.
I quote :
“He filled it nearly full of water, and took care to saturate the ground around it for a distance of several rods. Going to the mill, he dragged out a four-inch plank, sawed it in two, and saw that the parts tightly covered the mouth of the little well. ‘I kalkerated it would be tech and go,’ said he, ‘but it was the best I could do.” At midnight he had everything arranged, and the roaring then was
* See “History of the Great Conflagration,”’ Sheahan & Upton, Chicago, 1871, p. 374.