which is put into the same decoction, in order that in the same mysterious
manner its sharp cutting qualities may be communicated to the liquid and enable
it to cut the worms into pieces. In like manner, biliousness is called by the
Cherokees dalâ'nï or "yellow," because the most apparent symptom of
the disease is the vomiting by the patient of the yellow bile, and hence the
doctor selects for the decoction four different herbs, each of which is also
called dalânï, because of the color of the root, stalk, or flower. The same
idea is carried out in the tabu which generally accompanies the treatment. Thus
a scrofulous patient must abstain from eating the meat of a turkey, because the
fleshy dewlap which depends from its throat somewhat resembles an inflamed
scrofulous eruption. On killing a deer the hunter always makes an incision in
the hind quarter and removes the hamstring, because this tendon, when severed,
draws up into the flesh; ergo, any one who should unfortunately partake of the
hamstring would find his limbs draw up in the same manner.
There can be no doubt that in course of time a haphazard use of plants would
naturally lead to the discovery that certain herbs are efficacious in certain
combinations of symptoms. These plants would thus come into more frequent use
and finally would obtain general recognition in the Indian materia medica. By
such a process of evolution an empiric system of medicine has grown up among
the Cherokees, by which they are able to, treat some classes of ailments with some
degree of success, although without any intelligent idea of the process
involved. It must be remembered that our own medical system has its remote
origin in the same mythic conception of disease, and that within two hundred
years judicial courts have condemned women to be burned to death for producing
sickness by spells and incantations, while even at the present day our
faith-cure professors reap their richest harvest among people commonly supposed
to belong to the intelligent classes. In the treatment of wounds the Cherokee
doctors exhibit a considerable degree of skill, but as far as any internal
ailment is concerned the average farmer's wife is worth all the doctors in the
whole tribe.
The faith of the patient has much to do with his recovery, for the Indian
has the same implicit confidence in the shaman that a child has in a more
intelligent physician. The ceremonies and prayers are well calculated to
inspire this feeling, and the effect thus produced upon the mind of the sick
man undoubtedly reacts favorably upon his physical organization.
The following list of twenty plants used in Cherokee practice will give a
better idea of the extent of their medical knowledge than
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could be conveyed by a lengthy dissertation. The names are
given in the order in which they occur in the botanic notebook filled on the
reservation, excluding names of food plants and species not identified, so that
no attempt has been made to select in accordance with a preconceived theory.
Following the name of each plant are given its uses as described by the Indian
doctors, together with its properties as set forth in the United States
Dispensatory, one of the leading pharmacopœias in use in this country.[1] For
the