A Religious Orgy in Tennessee: A Reporter's Account of the Scopes Monkey Trial

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

Fiercely intelligent, scathingly honest, and hysterically funny, H.L. Mencken’s coverage of the Scopes Monkey Trial so galvanized the nation that it eventually inspired a Broadway play and the classic Hollywood movie Inherit the Wind.
 
Mencken’s no-nonsense sensibility is still exciting: his perceptive rendering of the courtroom drama; his piercing portrayals of key figures Scopes, Clarence Darrow, and William Jennings Bryan; his ferocious take on the fundamentalist culture surrounding it all—including a raucous midnight trip into the woods to witness a secret “holy roller” service. Shockingly, these reports have never been gathered together into a book of their own—until now. A Religious Orgy In Tennessee includes all of Mencken’s reports for The Baltimore Sun, The Nation, and The American Mercury. It even includes his coverage of Bryan’s death just days after the trial—an obituary so withering Mencken was forced by his editors to rewrite it, angering him and leading him to rewrite it yet again in a third version even less forgiving than the first. All three versions are included, as is a complete transcript of the trial’s most legendary exchange: Darrow’s blistering cross-examination of Bryan.
 
With the rise of “intelligent design,” H.L. Mencken’s work has never seemed more unnervingly timely—or timeless.

Author(s): H. L. Mencken
Edition: 1st
Publisher: Melville House
Year: 2006, 2010

Language: English
Commentary: Metadata completed.
Pages: 232

Introduction by Art Window

I: The Tennessee Circus
II: Homo Neanderthalensis
III: In Tennessee
IV: Mencken Finds Daytonians Full of
Sickening Doubts About Value of Publicity
V: Impossibility of Obtaining Fair Jury
Insures Scopes’ Conviction, Says Mencken
VI: Mencken Likens Trial to a Religious Orgy,
with Defendant a Beelzebub
VII: Yearning Mountaineers’ Souls Need
Reconversion Nightly, Mencken Finds
VIII: Darrow’s Eloquent Appeal Wasted on Ears
That Heed Only Bryan, Says Mencken
IX: Law and Freedom, Mencken Discovers,
Yield Place to Holy Writ in Rhea County
X: Mencken Declares Strictly Fair Trial Is
Beyond Ken of Tennessee Fundamentalists
XI: Malone the Victor, Even Though Court
Sides with Opponents, Says Mencken
XII: Battle Now Over, Mencken Sees;
Genesis Triumphant and Ready for New Jousts
XIII: Tennessee in the Frying Pan
XIV: Bryan
XV: Round Two
XVI: Aftermath
XVII: To Expose a Fool

Photographs
Appendix: The Examination of William Jennings Bryan by Clarence Darrow