The Dark and Bloody Ground
A History of Kentucky
'By
SAMUEL D. OSBORN
Press of The King Printing Co,
Bristol, Tenn.-Va.
1907
Copyrighted 1907
by
Samuel D. Osborn
The Dark and Bloody Ground
Kentucky is 473 miles long, 170 miles wide, and nobody knows
how thick. A man living on Beaver Creek in Floyd County dug a
well 39 feet deep and reported that it was Kentucky as far down
as he went. Some mathematicians calculate that it goes the whole
way down. I would suggest that it goes at least half way down no
the bottomless pit.
Kentucky is composed of rocks, dirt, stick-weeds and dog-fennel
on the outside, and roots, coal, red-worms and dead people on the
inside. Outsiders sometimes get the impression that Kentucky is
inhabited by people, but a greater mistake was never made. The
population of Kentucky consists of scraps, pieces, vagrants, dead-beats,
loafers, has-beens and might-bes.
Kentucky has been called the "Dark and Bloody Ground," and
in the eastern part, where I live, she is true to her ancient tradition.
The inhabitants of this section are peculiar beings. They drink blood
for coffee and use human brains for cream; dynamite for butter and
gun-powder for pepper; there is one thing they hate, yea two things
they cannot endure: they won't tell the truth and they won't be
called a liar. I am from Kentucky myself, and I am HIeing right
now, which is the reason I know this.
The chief occupations in eastern Kentucky are chewing tobacco,
whittling, advising their neighbors what to do, and informing each
other what they would do if they were in some other man's place.
They also swap horses sometimes, and will do you right, but they
reserve the right of judging what is right. I swapped horses with a
man there and he assured me that the horse was younger than he had
been four years ago. I had just stated that I would trade provided
that the horse was young. To have refused to trade with him would
have been disputing his word, so I traded with him and found ous
afterward that the horse was older than he had ever been in his life.
Kentucky is noted for fast horses, pretty women, strong tobacco
and whiskey. I remember once of a man having a horse that could
not be beaten and there came along another man with a horse that
could beat anything. They got to disputing about the horses and
flew at each other's throats and for a time there was much danger
that one of the horses would be ownerless, -but the horse was saved
this great bereavement by a scientific man who happened to be pres-
ent. He suggested that the encounter between the men would only
settle which of them was the stronger and would leave the great horse
problem for future generations to solve. He also pointed out a way
to settled the question, which was for the horses to run one mile and
the one that could run it the quickest should be winner. They ran
the mile, and both men claimed the victory. They had begun to dis-
mount and carry it to the Court of Appeals, when the shadows of
the horses came rushing up, killing both horses and both men,
instantly.
And when it comes to pretty women, Kentucky is strictly there.
I stopped to stay all night at a place in Kentucky and there came in
the prettiest woman that ever was born. This affected me very
strangely. For instance: when I shut my eyes, I could not see a wink.
Then I could open them and see to pick up a pin. She had not been
in the room but a short time until there came in another woman, and
she vas che prettiest thing that ever lived. Another strange sensation
came over me. I felt that I was right there and no place else, my
heart began to beat, and I felt as if I were alive. I had not recovered
from my astonishment till another woman entered, and she was the
prettiest thing that ever lived or died. The light of heaven beamed
from her tender eyes. Her soul was a love center, and love brooded
in the air, and danced in the sunlight for twenty feet around wherever
she went. She spoke, and her voice was as beautiful as a chime of
bells, as tender as the purr of a kitten, as kind as the sunshine of May.
My feelings were rent and torn and flung in every direction. I saw
torrents sweeping down the sides of mountains. I saw monster trees
torn from the earth by mighty winds and hurled into the sky. I saw
giants leaping from peak to pe.;. of the mountain tops. I saw earth-
quakes shaking cities into tangled heaps, and I saw the sky painted
into one rainbow and it was sometime before I could realize that I was
still on earth. But time moved on and the days and nights marched
by in a frantic race for the goal of death and that face and voice are
only a memory now.
And strong tobacco! I knew of a sawlogger once that could take
a chew of home-made tobacco and lift his best or two chews and lift
his very best. Kentucky tobacco is good for the eyesight. I once
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took a chew from a twist belonging to a neighbor of mine, and
immediately I could see two things where there was only one. I could
see also that I was a fool, and although I could not see inside my stom-
ach as I can with my X-Ray, still I believed the tobacco to be equal
to the X-Ray, for I could see what had been inside my stomach a
short time previous.
Another benefit which tobacco confers on the human race is
furnishing a subject for conversation. The inhabitants of Kentucky
never say "Good Morning," or "How do you do" but "Have you
got any good tobacco " Every man would rather chew his neighbor's
tobacco than his own, because there comes a rainy day at the end ot
every dry spell, and he wants his own for that. But a great many
men, rather than do without, would buy their own tobacco. I have
heard a great many men say that they would rather live on three
meals per day and their tobacco than to eat six meals and have
no tobacco.
But after all, the chief glory of Kentucky is her strong whiskey.
Some of it is so strong that a small quantity will turn men into hogs
and cattle. It is so strong that it will overcome the laws of gravita-
tion. I drank a bottle one time, and if it had not been for a wheat
field would have fallen upward into the sky, would have been carried
to the skies on flowery beds of ease, as it were. As it was, I pulled
up an acre and a half of f