Round Anvil Rock A Romance
ROUND ANVIL ROCK _A ROMANCE_ BY NANCY HUSTON BANKS AUTHOR OF "OLDFIELD" 1903 [Illustration: "The Angelus was pealing from the bell of the little log chapel."] TO MY FATHER
[Footnote: On the first alarm of fire and whilst others were escaping,
Miss Kate Claxton with three other actors came bravely forward to the
footlights uttering these words of passionate entreaty.]
Those nearest haply reached the narrow way,
And thanking God, emerged from the affray,
Whilst others stumbled, dazed with terror wild
And soon in tangled heaps lay powerless piled.
In wildest proxysms of fear and pain,
Each sought his giddy footing to retain,
Whilst piercing cries of agonized despair,
Rose through the gloomy smoke-charged stifling air.
Then suffocation, oft more merciful
Than fire, its victims claimed to lull,
Scared victims, gasping for that precious air,
Which fire and smoke alike refused them there.
Fast hurried on the greedy tongues of fire,
To make of those dread mounds a funeral pyre,
As raging onward o'er their victims broke,
The fearful conflict of the fire and smoke.
Dread was the scene o'er which the Fire King laughed
ROUND ANVIL ROCK _A ROMANCE_ BY NANCY HUSTON BANKS AUTHOR OF "OLDFIELD" 1903 [Illustration: "The Angelus was pealing from the bell of the little log chapel."] TO MY FATHER