The Medicine-Men of the Apache. (1892 N 09 / 1887-1888 (pages 443-604)). Bourke John Gregory

The Medicine-Men of the Apache. (1892 N 09 / 1887-1888 (pages 443-604)) - Bourke John Gregory


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      The preceding practice is strictly in line with the "medicinal" and "magical" values attached in Europe to human teeth, human skin, etc. The curious reader may find much on this subject in the works of Frommann, Beckherius, Etmüller, Samuel Augustus Flemming, and others of the seventeenth century, where it will be shown that the ideas of the people of Europe of that period were only in name superior to those of the savages of America, the islands of the South Seas, and of Central Africa. In my work upon "The Scatalogic Rites of all Nations" I have treated this matter more in extenso, but what is here adduced will be sufficient for the present article.

      The skin of Ziska, the Bohemian reformer, was made into a "medicine drum" by his followers.

      THE SCRATCH STICK

      When Gen. Crook's expedition against the Chiricahua Apache reached the heart of the Sierra Madre, Mexico, in 1883, it was my good fortune to find on the ground in Geronimo's rancheria two insignificant looking articles of personal equipment, to which I learned the Apache attached the greatest importance. One of these was a very small piece of hard wood, cedar, or pine, about two and a half to three inches long and half a finger in thickness, and the other a small section of the cane indigenous to the Southwest and of about the same dimensions. The first was the scratch stick and the second the drinking reed.

      The rule enjoined among the Apache is that for the first four times one of their young men goes out on the warpath he must refrain from scratching his head with his fingers or letting water touch his lips. How to keep this vow and at the same time avoid unnecessary personal discomfort and suffering is the story told by these petty fragments from the Apache's ritual. He does not scratch his head with his fingers; he makes use of this scratch stick. He will not let water touch his lips, but sucks it into his throat through this tiny tube. A long leather cord attached both stick and reed to the warrior's belt and to each other. This was all the information I was able to obtain of a definite character. Whether these things had to be prepared by the medicine-men or by the young warrior himself; with what ceremonial, if any, they had to be manufactured, and under what circumstances of time and place, I was unable to ascertain to my own satisfaction, and therefore will not extend my remarks or burden the student's patience with incoherent statements from sources not absolutely reliable. That the use of the scratch stick and the drinking reed was once very general in America and elsewhere, and that it was not altogether dissociated from ritualistic or ceremonial ideas, may be gathered from the citations appended.

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      1

      Narrative of Captivity, Cincinnati, 1871, p. 141.

      2

      Padre Boscana, Chinigchinich, in Robinson's California, p. 261.

      3

      Origine de tous les Cultes, vol. 2, pt. 2, pp. 87, 88.

      4

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1

Narrative of Captivity, Cincinnati, 1871, p. 141.

2

Padre Boscana, Chinigchinich, in Robinson's California, p. 261.

3

Origine de tous les Cultes, vol. 2, pt. 2, pp. 87, 88.

4

Diego Duran, vol. 3, pp. 237, 238.

5

Higgins, Anacalypsia, lib. 2, p. 77.

6

Balboa, Hist. du Pérou, in Ternaux-Compans, Voy., vol. 15.

7

Ross, Fur Hunters, quoted by Spencer, Desc. Soc.

8

Max Müller, Science of Religion, p. 88.

9

Davis, Spanish Conq. of N. M., p. 98.

10

I Samuel, XII, 17, 18.

11

Cérémonies et Coûtumes, vol. 6, p. 75.

12

Everard im Thurn, Indians of Guiana, London, 1883, p. 334.

13

Tanner's Narrative, p. 390.

14

Diego Duran, lib. 3, cap. 3, p. 201.

15

Dorman, Primitive Superstitions, p. 384.

16

Spencer, Desc. Sociology.

17

Picart, Cérémonies et Coûtumes Religieuses, Amsterdam, 1735, vol. 6, p. 122.

18

Myths of the New World, p. 281.

19

Domenech, Deserts, vol. 2, p. 392.

20

Bancroft, Nat. Races, vol. 1, p. 777.

21

Hakluyt, Voyages, vol. 5, p. 462.

22

Brinton, Myths of the New World, p. 281.

23

Spencer, Ecclesiastical Institutions, cap. V.

24

Salverte, Philosophy of Magic, vol. 2, pp. 6-7.

25

Tylor, Primitive Culture, London, 1871, vol. 2, p. 377.

26

"St. Patrick, we are told, floated to Ireland on an altar stone. Among other wonderful things, he converted a marauder into a wolf and lighted a fire with icicles." – James A. Froude, Reminiscences of the High Church Revival. (Letter V.)

27

Demonology and Witchcraft, p. 184.

28

Jesuits in North America, pp. 34, 35.

29

Herrera, dec. 4, lib. 8, cap. 5, 159.

30

Ibid., dec. 3, lib. 4, p. 121.

31

Hist. de las Indias, p. 283.

32

American Antiquarian, November, 1886, p. 334.

33

Dorman, Primitive Superstitions, p. 380, quoting Herrera, dec. 3, p. 262.

34

Descriptive Sociology.

35

Admiral Smyth's translation in Hakluyt Society, London, 1857, vol. 21, p. 9.

36

American Indians, p. 26.

37

Gomara, Hist. de las Indias, p. 173.

38

"Estos mascan cierta yerba, y con el zumo rocian las soldados estando para dar batalla." Gomara, ibid., p. 179.

39

Herrera, dec. 2, lib. 10, p. 260.

40

Father Dobrizhoffer, quoted by Spencer, Eccles. Institutions, cap. 10, sec. 630.

41

Catlin, N. A. Indians, London, 1845, vol. 2, p. 232.

42

Gomara, op. cit., p. 173.

43

Spencer,


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