SKYLINE DRIVE

The Skyline Drive is not a road To bring you near the skies Where you can sit and gather clouds That flit before your eyes, Or jump upon a golden fleece And sail to paradise— But it is a super-mountain road Where you can feast your eyes Upon the beauties of the world The Lord God gave to man For his enjoyment and his use; Improve it if you can. The builders of this Skyline Drive Have filed no patent right That they improved upon God’s plan, Nor have more power and might; But they have seen His handiwork, This panoramic view, Have paved this road to ease the load Of all the world and you. This is akin to hallowed ground, A sacred beauty shrine; Its fame has traveled all around; It now is yours and mine. There’s little points of vantage—views, Where you can see afar— Compare the beauty with that land That stands with “Gates Ajar.” The people who have given much To save this precious shrine Must surely all be friends of God And friends of yours and mine.
—George A. Barker

Feud

THE LOVE OF ROSANNA McCOY

Come and listen to my story Of fair Rosanna McCoy. She loved young Jonse Hatfield, Old Devil Anse’s boy.
But the McCoys and Hatfields Had long engaged in strife, And never the son of a Hatfield Should take a McCoy to wife.
But when they met each other, On Blackberry Creek, they say, She was riding behind her brother, When Jonse came along that way.
“Who is that handsome fellow?” She asked young Tolbert McCoy. Said he, “Turn your head, sister. That’s Devil Anse’s boy.”
But somehow they met each other, And it grieved the Hatfields sore; While Randall, the young girl’s father, Turned his daughter from the door.
It was down at old Aunt Betty’s They were courting one night, they say, When down came Rosanna’s brothers And took young Jonse away.
Rosanna’s heart was heavy, For she hoped to be his wife, And well she knew her brothers Would take his precious life.
She ran to a nearby pasture And catching a horse by the mane, She mounted and rode like a soldier, With neither saddle nor rein.
Her golden hair streamed behind her, Her eyes were wild and bright, As she urged her swift steed forward And galloped away in the night.
Straight to the Hatfields’ stronghold, She rode so fearless and brave, To tell them that Jonse was in danger And beg them his life to save.
And the Hatfields rode in a body. They saved young Jonse’s life; But never, they said, a Hatfield Should take a McCoy to wife.
But the feud is long forgotten And time has healed the sting, As little Bud and Melissy This song of their kinsmen sing.
No longer it is forbidden That a fair-haired young McCoy Shall love her dark-eyed neighbor Or marry a Hatfield boy.
And the people still remember, Though she never became his bride, The love of these young people And Rosanna’s midnight ride.
—Coby Preston

Legend

THE ROBIN’S RED BREAST

Through the southern mountains the Robin is often called the “Christ Bird” because of this legend. It is also called “Love Bird.”