that the family, dreading the consequences of this departure from old
customs, had employed a shaman, who asserted that the trouble was caused by a
sharpened stick which some enemy bad caused to be imbedded in the woman's side.
He accordingly began a series of conjurations for the removal of the stick,
while the white physician and his medicine were disregarded, and in due time
the woman died. Two children soon followed her to the grave, from the contagion
or the inherited seeds of the same disease, but here also the sharpened sticks
were held responsible, and, notwithstanding the three deaths under such
treatment, the husband and father, who was at one time a preacher still has
faith in the assertions of the shaman. The appointment of a competent physician
to look after the health of the Indians would go far to eradicate these false
ideas and prevent
{p. 337}
much sickness and suffering; but, as the Government has made no such
provision, the Indians, both on and off the reservation, excepting the children
in the home school, are entirely without medical care.
MEDICINE DANCES.
The Cherokees have a dance known as the Medicine Dance, which is generally
performed in connection with other dances when a number of people assemble for
a night of enjoyment. It possesses no features of special interest and differs
in no essential respect from a dozen other of the lesser dances. Besides this,
however, there was another, known as the Medicine Boiling Dance, which, for
importance and solemn ceremonial, was second only to the great Green Corn
Dance. It has now been discontinued on the reservation for about twenty years.
It took place in the fall, probably preceding the Green Corn Dance, and
continued four days. The principal ceremony in connection with it was the
drinking of a strong decoction of various herbs, which acted as a violent
emetic and purgative. The usual fasting and going to water accompanied the
dancing and medicine-drinking.
DESCRIPTION OF SYMPTOMS.
It is exceedingly difficult to obtain from the doctors any accurate
statement of the nature of a malady, owing to the fact that their description
of the symptoms is always of the vaguest character, while in general the name
given to the disease by the shaman expresses only his opinion as to the occult
cause of the trouble. Thus they have definite names for rheumatism, toothache,
boils, and a few other ailments of like positive character, but beyond this
their description of symptoms generally resolves itself into a statement that
the patient has bad dreams, looks black around the eyes, or feels tired, while
the disease is. assigned such names as "when they dream of snakes,"
"when they dream of fish," "when ghosts trouble them,"
"when something is making something else eat them," or "when the
food is changed," i.e., when a witch causes it to sprout and grow in the
body of the patient or transforms it into a lizard, frog, or sharpened stick.