There’s something about campfire; The scent of wood burning And smoke rising higher…
I close my eyes.
I blink open and I’m back With our ancestors of hunters And dwellers of caves, Sitting by the flames,
Watching the fire cast Shadows upon stone. Mixing water and mud With an old, cracked bone In a futile attempt to Capture on cave walls The fearsome beauty Of the blaze that could Consume us all.
I close my eyes.
Squint open to find myself In the Rockies on a full moon night In a circle ‘round a fire, with drums Pounding and voices raised In a chorus with the wolves, Howling praises to the Mother Of the good, green Earth.
The Elder Chief takes the peace pipe Inhales the harsh tobacco And passes it around.
Exhaling smoke, he begins To recount stories and folklore Of wise turtles and great Eagles And earth spirits come and gone. The young listen to the wise; Imaginations taking flight The fire dances in their eyes, Wide and shining in delight.
I close my eyes.
In the early hours of the morning When everyone is sleeping sound, And the blaze, no longer burning, Is reduced to embers on the ground,
I open my eyes.
Thin wisps of smoke still rise; Ethereal fingers reaching high, But disappear in wistful sighs Before reaching the dawning sky.
I smell the scent of campfire And something primal stirs; I am the stoic hunter From days of caves and furs.
I am a Native in the snowy mountains Beneath a sky full of stars by the thousands. And in the silence of the night, A crackling fire burns in the woods And under the swirl of the Northern Lights, You’ll hear me howling with the wolves.