The ugista'`tī can not be paid by either one of a married couple to the
other, and, as it is considered a necessary accompaniment of the application,
it follows that a shaman can not treat his own wife in
{p. 339}
sickness, and vice versa. Neither can the husband or wife of the sick person
send for the doctor, but the call must come from some one of the blood
relatives of the patient. In one instance within the writer's knowledge a woman
complained that her husband was very sick and needed a doctor's attention, but
his relatives were taking no steps in the matter and it was not permissible for
her to do so.
CEREMONIES FOR GATHERING PLANTS AND
PREPARING MEDICINE.
There are a number of ceremonies and regulations observed in connection with
the gathering of the herbs, roots, and barks, which can not be given in detail
within the limits of this paper. In searching for his medicinal plants the
shaman goes provided with a number of white and red beads, and approaches the
plant from a certain direction, going round it from right to left one or four
times, reciting certain prayers the while. He then pulls up the plant by the
roots and drops one of the beads into the hole and covers it up with the loose
earth. In one of the formulas for hunting ginseng the hunter addresses the
mountain as the "Great Man" and assures it that he comes only to take
a small piece of flesh (the ginseng) from its side, so that it seems probable
that the bead is intended as a compensation to the earth for the plant thus
torn from her bosom. In some cases the doctor must pass by the first three
plants met until he comes to the fourth, which he takes and may then return for
the others. The bark is always taken from the east side of the tree, and when
the root or branch is used it must also be one which runs out toward the east,
the reason given being that these have imbibed more medical potency from the
rays of the sun.
When the roots, herbs, and barks which enter into the
prescription have been thus gathered the doctor ties them up into a convenient
package, which he takes to a running stream and casts into the water with
appropriate prayers. Should the package float, as it generally does, he accepts
the fact as an omen that his treatment will be successful. On the other band,
should it sink, he concludes that some part of the preceding ceremony has been
improperly carried out and at once sets about procuring a new package, going
over the whole performance from the beginning. Herb-gathering by moonlight, so
important a feature in European folk medicine, seems to be no part of Cherokee
ceremonial. There are fixed regulations in regard to the preparing of the
decoction, the care of the medicine during the continuance of the treatment,
and the disposal of what remains after the treatment is at an end. In the
arrangement of details the shaman frequently employs the