THE PAY OF THE SHAMAN.
The consideration which the doctor receives for his services is called
ugista'`tï, a word of doubtful etymology, but probably derived from the verb
tsï'giû, "I take" or "I eat." In former times this was generally
a deer-skin or a pair of moccasins, but is now a certain quantity of cloth, a
garment, or a handkerchief. The shamans disclaim the idea that the ugista'`tï
is pay, in our sense of the word, but assert that it is one of the agencies in
the removal and banishment of the disease spirit. Their explanation is somewhat
obscure, but
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the cloth seems to be intended either as an offering to the disease spirit,
as a ransom to procure the release of his intended victim, or as a covering to
protect the hand of a shaman while engaged in pulling the disease from the body
of the patient. The first theory, which includes also the idea of vicarious
atonement, is common to many primitive peoples. Whichever maybe the true
explanation, the evil influence of the disease is believed to enter into the
cloth, which must therefore be sold or given away by the doctor, as otherwise
it will cause his death when the pile thus accumulating reaches the height of
his head. No evil results seem to follow its transfer from the shaman to a
third party. The doctor can not bestow anything thus received upon a member of
his own family unless that individual gives him something in return. If the
consideration thus received, however, be anything eatable, the doctor may
partake along with the rest of the family. As a general rule the doctor makes
no charge for his services, and the consideration is regarded as a free-will
offering. This remark applies only to the medical practice, as the shaman
always demands and receives a fixed remuneration for performing love charms,
hunting ceremonials, and other conjurations of a miscellaneous character.
Moreover, whenever the beads are used the patient must furnish a certain
quantity of new cloth upon which to place them, and at the close of the ceremony
the doctor rolls up the cloth, beads and all, and takes them away with him. The
cloth thus received by the doctor for working with the beads must not be used
by him, but must be sold. In one instance a doctor kept a handkerchief which he
received for his services, but instead sold a better one of his own. Additional
cloth is thus given each time the ceremony is repeated, each time a second four
days' course of treatment is begun, and as often as the doctor sees fit to
change his method of procedure. Thus, when he begins to treat a sick man for a
disease caused by rabbits, he expects to receive a certain ugista'`tï; but,
should he decide after a time that the terrapin or the red bird is responsible
for the, trouble, he adopts a different course of treatment, for which another
ugista'`tï is necessary. Should the sickness not yield readily to his efforts,
it is because the disease animal requires a greater ugista'`tï, and the
quantity of cloth must be doubled, so that on the whole the doctrine is a very
convenient one for the shaman. In many of the formulas explicit directions are
given as to the pay which the shaman is to receive for performing the ceremony.
In one of the Gatigwanasti formulas, after specifying the amount of cloth to be
paid, the writer of it makes the additional proviso that it must be
"pretty good cloth, too," asserting as a clincher that "this is
what the old folks said a long time ago."