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The Great Leech Of Tlanusiyi
From Myths of the
Cherokee by James Mooney
From Nineteenth Annual Report
of the
Bureau of American Ethnology 1897-98, Part I. [1900]
The spot where Valley river joins Hiwassee, at
Murphy, in North Carolina, is known among the Cherokees as Tlanusiyi (tlanusi'yï),
"The Leech place," and this is the story they tell of it:
Just above the junction is a deep hole in
Valley river, and above it is a ledge of rock running across the stream, over
which people used to go as on a bridge. On the south side the trail ascended a
high bank, from which they could look down into the water. One day some men
going along the trail saw a great red object, full as large as a house, lying on
the rock ledge in the middle of the stream below them. As they stood wondering
what it could be they saw it unroll -- and then they knew it was alive -- and
stretch itself out along the rock until it looked like a great leech with red
and white stripes along its body. It rolled up into a ball and again stretched
out at full length, and at last crawled down the rock and was out of sight in
the deep water. The water began to boil and foam, and a great column of white
spray was thrown high in the air and came down like a waterspout upon the very spot where the men had been standing,.
and would have swept them all into the water but that they saw it in time and
ran from the place.
More than one person was carried down in this
way, and their friends would find the body afterwards lying upon the bank with
the ears and nose eaten off, until at last the people were afraid to go across
the ledge any more, on account of the great leech, or even to go along that part
of the trail. But there was one young fellow who laughed at the whole story, and
said that he was not afraid of anything in Valley river, as he would show them.
So one day he painted his face and put on his finest buckskin and started off
toward the river, while all the people followed at a distance to see what might
happen. Down the trail he went and out upon the ledge of rock, singing in high
spirits:
Tlanu'si gäe'ga digi'gäge
Dakwa'nitlaste'stï.
I'll tie red leech skins
On my legs for garters.
But before he was half way across the water
began to boil into white foam and a great wave rose and swept over the rock and
carried him down, and he was never seen again.
Just before the Removal, sixty years ago, two
women went out upon the ledge to fish. Their friends warned them of the danger,
but one woman who had her baby on her back said, "There are fish there and
I'm going to have some; I'm tired of this fat meat." She laid the child
down on the rock and was preparing the line when the water suddenly rose and
swept over the ledge, and would have carried off the child but that the mother
ran in time to save it.
The great leech is still there in the deep hole, because
when people look down they see something alive moving about on the bottom, and
although they can not distinguish its shape on account of the ripples on the
water, yet they know it is the leech. Some say there is an underground waterway
across to Nottely river, not far above the mouth, where the river bends over
toward Murphy, and sometimes the leech goes over there and makes the water boil
as it used to at the rock ledge. They call this spot on Nottely "The Leech
place" also.
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