Friday, June 13, 2014

One reason the hillbillies were a world to themselves

The only roads follow tortuous and rock-strewn water courses, which may be nearly dry when you start out in the morning, but within an hour may  be raging torrents. There are no bridges. One may ford a dozen times in a mile. A spring "tide" will stop all travel, even from neighbor to neighbor, for a day or two at a time. Buggies and carriages are unheard of. In many districts the only means of transportation is with saddlebags on horseback, or with a "tow sack" afoot. If the pedestrian tries a short-cut he will learn what the natives mean when they say: "Goin' up, you can might' nigh stand up straight and bite the ground; goin' down, a man wants hobnails in the seat of his pants."

(from Our Southern Highlanders, by Horace Kephart)

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