For many and many a moon the
people of the village lived at the foot of the great fire-mountain.
On summer evenings, the children watched the light, and when a child
asked, "Father, what makes it?" the father said, "That is the home
of God of Fire, who is our good friend." Then all in
the little village went to sleep and lay safely on their beds till
the coming of the morning.
But one night when all the people in the village were asleep, the
flames in the mountain had a great frolic. They danced upon the sea
of fire as warriors dance the war-dance. They seized great rocks and
threw them at the sky. The smoke above them hid the stars; the
mountain throbbed and trembled. Higher and still higher sprang the
dancing flames. At last, they leaped clear above the highest point
of the mountain and started down it in a river of red fire. Then the
gentle Spirit of Fire called, "Come back, my flames, come back
again! The people in the village will not know that you are in a
frolic, and they will be afraid."
The flames did not heed her words, and the river of fire ran on and
on, straight down the mountain. The flowers in its pathway perished.
It leaped upon great trees and bore them to the earth. It drove the
birds from their nests, and they fluttered about in the thick smoke.
It hunted the wild creatures of the forest from the thickets where
they hid, and they fled before it in terror.
At last, one of the warriors in the village awoke. The thick smoke
was in his nostrils. In his ears was the war-cry of the flames. He
sprang to the door of his lodge and saw the fiery river leaping down
the mountain. "My people, my people," he cried, "the flames are upon
us!" With cries of fear the people in the village fled far away into
the forest, and the flames feasted upon the homes they loved.
The two hunters went to look upon the mountain, and when they came
back, they said sadly, "There are no flowers on the mountain. Not a
bird-song did we hear. Not a living creature did we see. It is all
dark and gloomy. We know the fire is there, for the blue smoke still
floats up to the sky, but the mountain will never again be our
friend."