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Letter XV- Hickory Nut Gap |
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LETTER XV.
Asheville, North Carolina, May, 1848.
The distance from Qualla Town to this place is sixty miles. The
first half of the route is exceedingly mountainous and almost
entirely uncultivated, but the valley of Pigeon river, down which
you have to travel for a considerable distance, is very fertile and
well cultivated. A pastoral charm seems to rest upon the scenery,
and in this particular forcibly reminded me of the upper valley of
the Mohawk. I occupied the most of two days in performing this trip,
and the only incident that I met with which was at all unique, was
upon this wise. I had stopped at a farm-house to take my dinner. It
so happened that my host was about to erect a new barn, and some
twenty of his neighbors were assembled for the purpose of raising
the framework to its proper position. An abundance of whiskey had
already been, imbibed by a few of this rustic company, and among
these was one individual who had recently been grossly cheated in
purchasing a horse from a Tennessee horse-dealer. He had given a
mule and twenty dollars for the stranger's gelding, and, though the
animal was quite respectable in appearance, it had turned out to be
old, unsound, and almost without a redeeming quality. The individual
in question was noted for making a fool of himself when intoxicated,
and on this occasion he was determined to prove true to himself. At
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this time his horse speculation seemed to weigh heavily upon his
mind, and in his vehement remarks he took particular pains to curse
the entire State of Tennessee, including President Polk. The poor
man finally became so completely excited that he swore he would whip
the first man he met on the road who happened to be from Tennessee;
and so the matter rested. In about thirty minutes thereafter, as
fortune would have it, a man made his appearance on the road,
apparently from the West; and in jeering their noisy companion, the
farmers remarked that "now he would have a chance to revenge
himself." The excitement of the horse-bitten speculator was
consequently greatly increased, and when the stranger reached the
hilltop he was accosted as follows:
"May I ask you, sir, if you come from Tennessee?"
"I do. What will you have?" replied the stranger.
The Carolinian then related his trading story, which he concluded by
carefully reiterating the determination he had made. The stranger
laughed at the idea, and was about to resume his journey, when the
reins of his horse were seized, and he found that it was indeed
necessary for him to fight his way out of the queer scrape. All
remonstrance on his part was in vain; but at the very moment the
fight was to commence, another horseman rode up, who was also
interrogated as to his native State. His presence had a tendency to
suspend hostilities; but when it was
ascertained that he was only a Kentuckian, the Carolinian
insisted upon going on with his business. The feelings of the
Kentuckian were now enlisted, and he declared his intention of
regulating the fight; whereupon he made a large ring, and taking out
of his pocket a couple of pistols, he told the combatants "to go
ahead," and at the same time warned the bystand-
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ers that he would shoot the first man that interfered. The
conclusion of the whole matter was, that the intoxicated man
received a cruel thrashing for his ridiculous conduct, and the two
gentlemen from the West quietly resumed their several journeys.
On my way to this place, I stopped for a few hours at Deaver's
Sulphur Springs, which are about four miles from the French
Broad river, on the road to Clarksville, Georgia. This is one of the
most popular watering-places in the South, not only on account of
the medicinal qualities of the water, but on account of the
surrounding scenery, which is remarkably interesting, and also for
the additional reason that the style in which people are entertained
is well worthy of even such places as Saratoga. The several
buildings connected with the establishment usually accommodate about
two hundred families during the summer months, and they are chiefly
from the cities of Charleston and Savannah. The people of Eastern
North Carolina do not seem to know that they have such a delightful
retreat within their borders which, to a man of genuine taste, is as
far ahead of Saratoga as a mountain stream is ahead of a canal.
With regard to Asheville, I can only say that it is a very busy and
pleasant village, filled with intelligent and hospitable
inhabitants, and is the centre of a mountain land, where Nature has
been extremely liberal and tasteful in piling up her mighty bulwarks
for the admiration of man. Indeed, from the summit of a hill
immediately in the vicinity of the village, I had a southwestern
view which struck me as eminently superb. It was near the sunset
hour, and the sky was flooded with a golden glow, which gave a
living beauty to at least a hundred mountain peaks, from the centre
of which loomed high towards the zenith
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Mount Pisgah and the Cold Mountain, richly clothed in
purple, which are from twenty to thirty miles distant, and not far from
six thousand feet in height. The middle distancer though in reality
composed of wood-crowned hills, presented the appearance of a level
plain or valley, where columns of blue smoke were gracefully floating
into the upper air, and whence came the occasional tinkle of a bell, as
the cattle wended their way homeward, after roaming among the unfenced
hills. Directly at my feet lay the little town of Ashville, like an
oddly-shaped figure on a green carpet; and over the whole scene dwelt a
spirit of repose, which seemed to quiet even the common throbbings of
the heart.
My first expedition on arriving here was to a gorge in the Blue Ridge
called the Hickory Nut Gap. How it came by that name I cannot
imagine, since the forests in this particular region, so far as I could
ascertain, are almost entirely destitute of the hickory tree. It is true
that for a distance of four miles the gorge is watered by a brook called
after the hickory nut, but I take it that this name is a borrowed one.
The entire length of the gap is about nine miles, and the last five
miles are watered by the Rocky Broad River. The upper part of this
stream runs between the Blue Ridge proper and a spur of the Blue Ridge,
and at the point where it forces a channel through the spur its bed is
exceedingly rocky, and on either hand, until it reaches the middle
country of the State, it is protected by a series of mountain bluffs.
That portion of the gorge which might be called the gateway is at the
eastern extremity. From any point of view this particular spot is
remarkably imposing, the gap being not more than half a mile wide,
though appearing to narrow down to a few hun- |
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dred yards. The highest bluff is on the south side, and, though
rising to the height of full twenty-five hundred feet, it is
nearly perpendicular, and midway up its front stands an isolated
rock, looming against the sky, which is of a circular form, and
resembles the principal turret of a stupendous castle. The entire
mountain is composed of granite, and a large proportion of the bluff
in question positively hangs over the abyss beneath, and is as
smooth as it could possibly be made by the rains of uncounted
centuries. Over one portion of this superb cliff, falling far down
into some undiscovered and apparently unattainable pool, is a stream
of water, which seems to be the offspring of the clouds; and in a
neighboring brook near the base of this precipice are three shooting
waterfalls, at the foot of which, formed out of the solid stone, are
three holes, which are about ten feet in diameter and measure from
forty to fifty feet in depth. But, leaving these remarkable features
entirely out of the question, the mountain scenery in this vicinity
is as beautiful and fantastic as any I have yet witnessed among the
Alleghanies. At a farm-house near the gap, where I spent a night, I
had the pleasure of meeting an English gentleman and tourist, and he
informed me that, though he had crossed the Alps in a number of
places, yet he had never seen any mountain scenery which he thought
as beautiful as that of the Hickory Nut Gap. My best view of the
gorge was from the eastward, and just as the sun, with a magnificent
retinue of clouds, was sinking directly in the hollow of the hills,
and as I gazed upon the prospect, it seemed to me, as was in reality
the case, that I stood at the very threshold of an almost boundless
wilderness of mountains.
Before visiting this remarkable passage through the
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mountains, I endeavored to ascertain, from the Cherokees of Qualla Town,
its original Indian name, but without succeeding. It was my good
fortune, however, to obtain a romantic legend connected therewith. I
heard it from the lips of a Chief who glories in the two names of All
Bones and Flying Squirrel, and, though he occupied no less
than two hours in telling the story, I will endeavor to give it to my
readers in about five minutes.
There was a time when the Cherokees were without the famous Tso-lungh,
or tobacco weed, with which they had previously been made acquainted by
a wandering stranger from the far East. Having smoked it in their large
stone pipes, they became impatient to obtain it in abundance. They
ascertained that the country where it grew in the greatest quantities
was situated on the big waters, and that the gateway to that country (a
mighty gorge among the mountains) was perpetually guarded by an immense
number of little people or spirits. A council of the bravest men in the
nation was called, and, while they were discussing the dangers of
visiting the unknown country, and bringing therefrom a large knapsack of
the fragrant tobacco, a young man stepped boldly forward and said that
he would undertake the task. The young warrior departed on his mission
and never returned. The Cherokee nation were now in great tribulation,
and another council was held to decide upon a new measure. At this
council a celebrated magician rose and expressed his willingness to
relieve his people of their difficulties, and informed them that he
would visit the tobacco country and see what he could accomplish. He
turned himself into a mole, and as such made his appearance eastward of
the mountains; but, having been pursued by the guardian |
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spirits, he was compelled to return without any spoil. He next
turned himself into a humming-bird, and thus succeeded, to a very
limited extent, in obtaining what he needed. On returning to his
country, he found a number of his friends at the point of death, on
account of their intense desire for the fragrant weed; whereupon he
placed some of it in a pipe, and, having blown the smoke into the
nostrils of those who were sick, they all revived and were quite
happy. The magician now took it into his head that he would revenge
the loss of the young warrior, and at the same time become the sole
possessor of all the tobacco in the unknown land. He therefore
turned himself into a whirlwind, and in passing through the Hickory
Nut Gorge he stripped the mountains of their vegetation, and
scattered huge rocks in every part of the narrow valley; whereupon
the little people were all frightened away, and he was the only
being in the country eastward of the mountains. In the bed of a
stream he found the bones of the young warrior, and having brought
them to life, and turned himself into a man again, the twain
returned to their own country heavily laden with tobacco; and ever
since that time it has been very abundant throughout the entire
land.
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