The Leatherwood God

William Dean Howells
The Leatherwood God

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Title: The Leatherwood God
Author: William Dean Howells
Release Date: January, 2005 [EBook #7311] [This file was first posted
on April 11, 2003]
Edition: 10
Language: English

Character set encoding: US-ASCII
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THE LEATHERWOOD GOD
by
WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS
With Illustrations by Henry Raleigh

[Illustration: He was now towering over those near him, with his head
thrown back, and his hair tossed like a mane on his shoulders]
PUBLISHER'S NOTE
The author thinks it well to apprise the reader that the historical outline
of this story is largely taken from the admirable narrative of Judge
Taneyhill in the Ohio Valley Series, Robert Clarke Co., Cincinnati. The
details are often invented, and the characters are all invented as to their
psychological evolution, though some are based upon those of real
persons easily identifiable in that narrative. The drama is that of the
actual events in its main development; but the vital incidents, or the
vital uses of them, are the author's. At times he has enlarged them; at
times he has paraphrased the accounts of the witnesses; in one instance
he has frankly reproduced the words of the imposter as reported by one
who heard Dylks's last address in the Temple at Leatherwood and as
given in the Taneyhill narrative. Otherwise the story is effectively
fiction.

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
He was now towering over those near him, with his head thrown back,
and his hair tossed like a mane on his shoulders
Nancy stood staring at her, with words beyond saying in her
heart--words that rose in her throat and choked her

"You believe, maybe, that you would be struck dead if you said the
things that I do; but why ain't I struck dead?"
"It's my cloth! I spun it, I wove it, every thread! It's all we've got for our
clothes this winter!"
"Now you can see how it feels to have your own husband slap you"
She had begun to wash his wound, very gently, though she spoke so
roughly, while he murmured with the pain and with the comfort of the
pain
They swarmed forward to the altar-place and flung themselves on the
ground, and heaped the pulpit-steps with their bodies
"And he went down ag'in, and when he come up ag'in, his face was all
soakin' wet, like he'd been crying under the water"

THE LEATHERWOOD GOD
Already, in the third decade of the nineteenth century, the settlers in the
valley of Leatherwood Creek had opened the primeval forest to their
fields of corn and tobacco on the fertile slopes and rich bottom-lands.
The stream had its name from the bush growing on its banks, which
with its tough and pliable bark served many uses of leather among the
pioneers; they made parts of their harness with it, and the thongs which
lifted their door-latches, or tied their shoes, or held their working
clothes together. The name passed to the settlement, and then it passed
to the man, who came and went there in mystery and obloquy, and
remained lastingly famed in the annals of the region as the
Leatherwood God.
At the time he appeared the community had become a center of
influence, spiritual as well as material, after a manner unknown to later
conditions. It was still housed, for the most part, in the log cabins
which the farmers built when they ceased to be pioneers, but in the
older clearings, and along the creek a good many frame dwellings stood,
and even some of brick. The population, woven of the varied strains
from the North, East and South which have mixed to form the
Mid-Western people, enjoyed an ease of circumstance not so great as to
tempt their thoughts
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