doctor must blow first upon the right hand of the patient, then upon the
left foot, then upon the left hand, and finally upon the right foot, thus
making an imaginary cross.
Bathing in the running stream, or "going to water," as it is
called, is one of their most frequent medico-religious ceremonies, and is
performed on a great variety of occasions, such as at each new moon, before
eating the new food at the green corn dance, before the medicine dance and
other ceremonial dances before and after the ball play, in connection with the
prayers for long life, to counteract the effects of bad dreams or the evil
spells of an enemy, and as a part of the regular treatment in various diseases.
The details of the ceremony are very elaborate and vary according to the
purpose for which it is performed, but in all cases both shaman and client are
fasting from the previous evening, the ceremony being generally performed just
at daybreak. The bather usually dips completely under the water four or seven
times, but in some cases it is sufficient to pour the water from the hand upon
the head and breast. In the ball play the ball sticks are dipped into the water
at the same time. While the bather is in the water the shaman is going through
with his part of the performance on the bank and draws omens from the motion of
the beads between his thumb and
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finger, or of the fishes in the water. Although the old customs are fast
dying out this ceremony is never neglected at the ball play, and is also
strictly observed by many families on occasion of eating the new corn, at each
new moon, and on other special occasions, even when it is necessary to break
the ice in the stream for the purpose, and to the neglect of this rite the
older people attribute many of the evils which have come upon the tribe in
later days. The latter part of autumn is deemed the most suitable season of the
year for this ceremony, as the leaves which then cover the surface of the
stream are supposed to impart their medicinal virtues to the water.
SHAMANS AND WHITE PHYSICIANS.
Of late years, especially since the establishment of schools
among them, the Cherokees are gradually beginning to lose confidence in the
abilities of their own doctors and are becoming more disposed to accept
treatment from white physicians. The shamans are naturally jealous of this
infringement upon their authority and endeavor to prevent the spread of the
heresy by asserting the convenient doctrine that the white man's medicine is
inevitably fatal to an Indian unless eradicated from the system by a continuous
course of treatment for four years under the hands of a skillful shaman. The
officers of the training school established by the Government a few years ago
met with considerable difficulty on this account for some time, as the parents
insisted on removing the children at the first appearance of illness in order
that they might be treated by the shamans, until convinced by experience that
the children received better attention at the school than could possibly be had
in their own homes. In one instance, where a woman was attacked by a pulmonary
complaint akin to consumption, her husband, a man of rather more than the usual
amount of intelligence, was persuaded to call in the services of a competent
white physician, who diagnosed the case and left a prescription. On a second
visit, a few days later, he found