CHAPTER XXVI
YULE
FIRES
The
Peace
of the Gods which our Aryan forbears knew descended at Yuletide hovers
near always as we watch the Yule log, whether in the keen air under the
stars, or in the tapestried shelter about the carefully fended hearth.
Man loves warmth, but he worships flame, as he always has since he
first saw it fall from heaven, though few of us now make our prayer to
it. Its flicker in the night will draw us far; nor are we alone in
this, for all the wild things of the wood come as well and toss back
its flare from eyes wide with wonder. As they stand at gaze before it,
unwinking, so do we, letting its wordless message touch the primal
fonts of peace. Around the camp-fire, whether without or within, all
men are brothers and the breaking of bread and the tasting of salt are
but the more formal symbols of fellowship. Man has made God in many
images besides his own, but none has found a finer symbolism than the
ancient Persians, who saw in flame the most ethereal expression of
beneficence and purity. The race has grown older now and we strive to
outgrow what we call childish things, yet we get new strength for
dwelling in our higher levels of mature thought by dropping back now
and then to the primitive customs and touching with smiling reverence
the ancient forms of expression. Here in America is the smelting pot of
nations and we are uniting once more in one race the scattered children
of the Aryan stack. Each child brings as play what was once worship --
Saxon, Celtic, Greek or Latin, all uniting again in the Christmas
celebration and each bringing his fagot for the lighting of the Yule
log, which burns on Christmas Eve.
Nor does it
matter to us now from what tree that log is cut, though once it did.
The ancient Aryans who were forefathers of us all lived very near to
nature and all their thought was built upon her moods. Our Christmas
tree with its lighted candles and its glow of tinsel ornaments is but a
tiny image of their sun tree, which began to grow with the first
lengthening of the days. They imaged in this dawning light a pillar of
fire like a tree trunk that grew and spread over the heavens, bringing
through spring all the beneficient gifts of summer. The rays were
twigs, the glowing clouds foliage, and the sun, moon and stars golden
fruit that hung from these celestial branches. Out of this as the race
grew came also many another romantic symbolism of cherished belief.
Among the glowing sunset clouds was hung the golden fleece of the
Cholchis. The golden apples of the Hesperides grew there. The very
lightning flash was but a celestial mistletoe growing mysteriously upon
the limbs of this flame tree as it grows on the oaks in the forests
beneath which they hunted. Secure in our better beliefs, we call their
worship superstition, but it is well that they had it. It was the
groping expression of imagination without which we are no better than
the beasts and would never find the really spiritual for which we still
seek.
The most
perfect descendant of this sun tree was the world-ash of the
Scandinavian mythology, the "Yggsdrasil" of the Edda, in which it is
described, with the many mystic rites which grew up about its worship.
Hence in Western Europe the proper Yule log was the trunk of an ash
tree bound with as many green hazel withes as possible, the hazel being
also a sacred tree with these people. As late as thirty years ago, and
I doubt not still, the Yule log was thus put to burn on Christmas Eve
in many an English fireplace. There some part of it was to be kept
smouldering, however low the fire might get, and the blaze of the next
day was to be relighted from
it for the twelve days of Christmas. Moreover, from a
portion of this log should be relighted the Yule fire of the next year,
that its magic might be perpetual and thus all evil spirits be warded
from the house. Not a bad superstition this, the brand standing as a
constant reminder of the spirit of peace and good will lighted in the
Christmas fire, not to be forgotten till it is kindled anew by the
relighting of the blaze on the hearth a year hence. Here in New England
we come, little by little, back to these kindly old customs that mean
so much when the outward observance is informed with the thought which
it represents. The old fireplaces which were once ignominiously built
up with bricks to give free draft to the air-tight stove in its hollow
materialism are being reopened, and in them again we light our Yule
fires. Nor is the spirit banished with the season. The blaze from the
burning log on the open hearth is the kindliest welcome that a room can
give to him who enters it. In it the rough rind of our puritanism burns
away and the glow within shines forth as we sit about this primal altar
of our race, fire-worshipping.
It was the
olden custom for host and guests to watch the first burning of this
ashen fagot, and as the hazel withes one by one burned away the
severing of the bond was the signal for the passing of the flagon, the
loosing of the genial hospitality pent within the breasts of all and
set free with the flames. Perhaps many who took part in these
rollicking ceremonials thought they cared merely for the cakes and ale,
but even they were self deceived. It was the genial freeing of the
spirit of Christmas good-will to all, the fellowship that touched
deepest, though they may not have formulated the fact even in their
thoughts. No wonder that the children, whose clear sight is unblurred
by too much learning of things which are not so, knew that to this fond
fire on Christmas eve must come that patron saint of gifts, Santa
Claus, even though, the house being locked, he must climb down the wide
chimney to reach it. We have forgotten the shoe, which in the folk
tales of our earliest forbears of the North European forests was the
symbol of mutually helpful deeds of love. The children of these days
placed it by the Yule fire, that Santa Claus might load it with gifts.
Nowadays we hang the stocking in its stead, perhaps because it holds
more.
I do not
take it kindly of old Ben Franklin that he, almost an hundred years
ago, with his Poor Richard wisdom taught us to economize our fuel by
shutting up our fire in stoves, for what we gained in the flesh we lost
in the spirit, and it is good that in the modern house, however
mechanically complicated the heating apparatus, we build fireplaces
once again that our souls may be warmed with the sight of the flame.
The impulse to worship fire still lingers within us and though we have
better creeds than that of Zoroaster and truer spiritual ideals than
the Parsees we can have no more appealing symbol of the purely
spiritual than flame. Phlogiston might well be another word for soul
and we are unkind to the old philosophers to take them too literally.
The alchemists were dreamers rather than doers after all, and though it
is the fashion to laud the doers it is often the dreamers that see most
clearly. As the flame leapt upward from the burning wood they saw in it
a rare, pure, ethereal substance which they called Phlogiston.
Nor did
they yield their theory when Lavoisier claimed to disprove it by
burning phosphorus in oxygen and weighing the result, which was heavier
than the phosphorus had been. Thereupon the world derided the
alchemists and lauded Lavoisier whose experiments laid the foundation
for the intricate science of modern chemistry. For all that, science
gives us the truth only from one angle and the science of one age is
often disproved by the science of the next. Modern chemists
may agree on what happens when phosphorus burns, but many a theory of
Lavoisier's day has been disproved in its turn. A thousand scientists
have declared flying impossible to man, yet today men fly. Lavoisier
was right, no doubt. Combustion is the combination of an element with
oxygen. He proved that with his chemist's balance. Yet how did he prove
that some imponderable element does not leap from wood in flame? As
well say that when a man dies the spirit has not left the body because
he weighs the same. Watching the falling embers of the Yule log leap
into flames before they turn gray, I am apt to think that the intuition
of the alchemists touched a truth that the chemical apparatus missed.
You cannot measure its reaction on the mind of man or weigh the
results, but they are there.
Wood was
the sole fuel of the New England pioneers for two centuries. In fact in
many a remote farmhouse it is today, and the fathers soon found by use
which kind lighted quickest and which burned longest and with the most
steady heat, facts which the subtle analysis of the chemists only
confirmed. The conifers light most readily and burn rapidly with the
greatest heat in a given time. The hard woods burn longest, some of
them retaining fire for a surprising length of time under just the
right conditions. The woodsmen will tell you that the pines light
easily and burn fiercely because of the pitch they contain. This is
true but the chemists have added another reason. Pine gives off much
hydrogen when heated and this light and inflammable gas gives much
flame. Even in pine wood which does not seem resinous to the touch
there is much of this volatile inflammable material and a good store of
pine kindlings is a first requisite in every well ordered country
household. Of the hard woods hickory is easily king as a fire holder.
Yet the oaks, white and red, and the sugar and black maples are not far
behind in value. Our American white ash and elm rank well up with the
oaks, so does beech, while the softer woods fall behind. Moreover,
trees grown on high, droughty, barren soil show greater heating power
than those of the same variety which happen to stand in rich, but
moister soil.
Long ago an
American chemist confirmed what the practical experience of the woodman
had already decided. Marcus Bull's table of the heating value of
American woods is as follows: Shagbark hickory, 100; white oak, 81; red
oak, 68; sugar maple, 60; red maple, 54; white ash, 77; chestnut, 52;
white beech, 65; black birch, 63; white birch, 48; pitch pine, 43;
white pine, 42.
Wood,
according to the chemists, is a carbohydrate and the greater the
proportion of carbon which it contains the greater is its heat-giving
value, the greater the proportion of hydrogen the greater the output of
ruddy flames. Yet chemists, who are so sure the alchemists had no
ground for their beliefs, do not always agree among themselves.
Professor Bull's table of the heat-giving properties of the various
woods has been declared inaccurate by other chemists, in spite of the
fact that experience in actual use bears it out in many particulars.
Again, either the chemists of Europe are at variance with ours or else
their trees are, for Gottlieb's table of the heat-giving properties of
European trees of similar varieties turns ours upside down. Gottlieb's
table of calorics puts oak at the bottom of the list and pine at the
top. It is as follows: Oak, 46.20; ash, 47.11; elm, 47.28; beech,
47.74; birch, 47.71; fir, 50-35; pine, 50.85.
There is a
certain interest in all this, but to him who lights the Yule log on
Christmas Eve it probably matters little. He knows that pine will
kindle his fire readily and that one of the hard woods will hold it
longest. He knows that out of the leaping flames, whether they be
composed of phlogiston or incandescent hydrogen, loved fancies flashed
into the minds of the elder race, born of the flicker of flame on the
imagination of a primitive people, backed by dark forests, night and
wind-riding storms. If he have the hardihood let him light his Yule log
in the winter twilight of the snowy woods. He will do well to pick a
spot where a dense growth of pines shelters him from the wind and a
steep ledge makes for him fireplace and chimney at once. Then it does
not matter if the snow is deep on the ground and the air filled with
flying flakes; his hearth may soon glow with comfort. Even from a
materialistic point of view the ancients did well to worship fire. Out
of it was to come more or less directly all the material progress of
the race toward civilization.
The pines,
whose presence in the woods is always a benediction, stand ready with
the best fire kindlings in the world. Their twigs light at the flare of
a match. The larger limbs will fire from these and send flames leaping
high. On a fire well started thus between backlog and forestick he may
pile such dry, hard wood as he has at hand. The forest will give him
plenty if he is on friendly terms with it. The forest will give him
more, too. Out of its mysterious darkness will slip easily into his
mind the old-time loved and half-forgotten legends that grew out of the
winter night in the twilight of the early days of the Aryan race. At
the time of the winter solstice it was the custom of the gods to leave
their dwellings in heaven and come down to earth. In the shout of the
wind in the pines he may well hear Wotan riding overhead in his gray
cloak and broad-brimmed hat pressed low over his face.
He may
glimpse his white steed whirling by and see plainly in the upflaring
light of his fire the army of white souls that scurries behind the
winter-god as he rides on his way. Black eagles fly with him and the
wolves of the air gallop on before. The world-ash was a gigantic
evergreen in whose branches were the abodes of giants and dwarfs as
well as men and gods. Screened by night within the forest this tree may
well be near with the springs of being and non-being within its roots
and the Nornen sitting by, silent and grave. He may catch the gleam of
the eyes of Loki as the firelight glints on the frost crystals among
the snow-laden branches. Thus easily does a thousand years of
civilization slip from us when face to face with night and the forest.
Yet if
night and the winter ghosts of old ride just beyond the circle of his
firelight, within it he is in the magic ring of comfort and safety.
Around the Yule logs of centuries the race has warmed its heart as well
as its hands, its soul as well as its body, and the old gods of terror
have become the saints of good will. Out of the winter night Wotan
steps into the light of the Yule fire, transformed into St. Nicholas,
the very spirit of genial generosity. If we will go from our forest
vigil to the hearth in any home we will find the world-ash, no longer
weird and awesome with the fates sitting silent at its foot, but
transformed into the very symbol of light and happiness and cheer, the
Christmas tree. In the light of twenty centuries around the Yule log we
have forgotten to be afraid and have made out of our weird dreams
friendly fancies. Where once the fearsome dragon twined about the
sun-tree we simulate his folds with strings of pop-corn. The
unquenchable lights that flamed upon its twigs are now twinkling
candles. The sun, moon and stars that once were the symbolic fruit grow
again in tinsel ornament and, where we follow the legend closely,
Eikthyner the stag, Heidrun the goat, Freyer's boar and Wotan's ravens
and wolves, are hung in tiny effigy as confectioner's sweets. Thus with
the Christmas tree alight and with the Yule log on the hearth we
symbolize the old worship of the sun-tree and of fire through which we
have grown to the better faith of which Christmas is one great
commemorative festival.
THE
END
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