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To Destroy Life
DIDA“LATLI“'TI
Sge! Nā“gwa tsūdantā“gi
tegū“nyatawā“ilateli“ga. Iyusti (0 0)
tsilastū“'li Iyu“sti (0 0) ditsadā“ita.
Tsūwatsi“la elawi“ni tsidā“histani“ga.
Tsūdantāgi elawi“ni tsidā“histani“ga. Nū“nya
gū“nnage gūnyu“tlūntani“ga. A'nūwa“gi
gū“nnage“ gūnyu“tlūntani“ga. Sūntalu“ga
gū“nnage degū“nyanu“galū“ntani“ga,
tsū“nanugā“isti nige“sūnna. Usūhi“yi
nūnnā“hi wite“tsatanū“nūnsi gūne“sā gū“nnage
asahalagi“. Tsūtū“neli“ga. Elawā“ti
asa“halagi“a“dūnni“ga. Usinuli“yu Usūhi“yi
gūltsā“te digū“nnagesta“yi, elawā“ti
gū“nnage tidā“histi wa'yanu“galūntsi“ga.
Gūne“sa gū“nage sūntalu“ga gū“nnage
gayu“tlūntani“ga. Tsūdantā“gi ūska“lūntsi“ga.
Sa'ka“ni adūnni“ga. Usū“hita atanis“se“ti,
ayā“lātsi“sesti tsūdantā“gi, tsū“nanugā“isti
nige“sūnna. Sge!
Translation
To Destroy Life
Listen! Now I have come to
step over your soul. You are of the (wolf)
clan. Your name is (A'yū“nini). Your spittle
I have put at rest under the earth. Your
soul I have put at rest under the earth. I
have come to cover you over with the black
rock. I have come to cover you over with the
black cloth. I have come to cover you with
the black slabs, never to reappear. Toward
the black coffin of the upland in the
Darkening Land your paths shall stretch out.
So shall it be for you. The clay of the
upland has come (to cover you. (?))
Instantly the black clay has lodged there
where it is at rest at the black houses in
the Darkening Land. With the black coffin
and with the black slabs I have come to
cover you. Now your soul has faded away. It
has become blue. When darkness comes your
spirit shall grow less and dwindle away,
never to reappear. Listen!
Explanation
This formula is from the
manuscript book of A'yū“nini, who explained
the whole ceremony. The language needs but
little explanation. A blank is left for the
name and clan of the victim, and is filled
in by the shaman. As the purpose of the
ceremony is to bring about the death of the
victim, everything spoken of is symbolically
colored black, according to the significance
of the colors as already explained. The
declaration near the end, "It has become
blue," indicates that the victim now begins
to feel in himself the effects of the
incantation, and that as darkness comes on
his spirit will shrink and gradually become
less until it dwindles away to nothingness.
When the shaman wishes to destroy the life
of another, either for his own purposes or
for hire, he conceals himself near the trail
along which the victim is likely to pass.
When the doomed man appears the shaman waits
until he has gone by and then follows him
secretly until he chances to spit upon the
ground. On coming up to the spot the shaman
collects upon the end of a stick a little of
the dust thus moistened with the victim's
spittle. The possession of the man's spittle
gives him power over the life of the man
himself. Many ailments are said by the
doctors to be due to the fact that some
enemy has by this means "changed the
spittle" of the patient and caused it to
breed animals or sprout corn in the sick
man's body. In the love charms also the
lover always figuratively "takes the
spittle" of the girl in order to fix her
affections upon himself. The same idea in
regard to spittle is found in European folk
medicine.
The shaman then puts the clay thus moistened
into a tube consisting of a joint of the
Kanesā“la or wild parsnip, a poisonous plant
of considerable importance in life-conjuring
ceremonies. He also puts into the tube seven
earthworms beaten into a paste, and several
splinters from a tree which has been struck
by lightning. The idea in regard to the
worms is not quite clear, but it may be that
they are expected to devour the soul of the
victim as earthworms are supposed to feed
upon dead bodies, or perhaps it is thought
that from their burrowing habits they may
serve to hollow out a grave for the soul
under the earth, the quarter to which the
shaman consigns it. In other similar
ceremonies the dirt-dauber wasp or the
stinging ant is buried in the same manner in
order that it may kill the soul, as these
are said to kill other more powerful insects
by their poisonous sting or bite. The wood
of a tree struck by lightning is also a
potent spell for both good and evil and is
used in many formulas of various kinds.
Having prepared the tube, the shaman goes
into the forest to a tree which has been
struck by lightning. At its base he digs a
hole, in the bottom of which he puts a large
yellow stone slab. He then puts in the tube,
together with seven yellow pebbles, fills in
the earth, and finally builds a fire over
the spot to destroy all traces of his work.
The yellow stones are probably chosen as the
next best substitute for black stones, which
are not always easy to find. The formula
mentions "black rock," black being the
emblem of death, while yellow typifies
trouble. The shaman and his employer fast
until after the ceremony.
If the ceremony has been
properly carried out, the victim becomes
blue, that is, he feels the effects in
himself at once, and, unless he employs the
countercharms of some more powerful shaman,
his soul begins to shrivel up and dwindle,
and within seven days he is dead. When it is
found that the spell has no effect upon the
intended victim it is believed that he has
discovered the plot and has taken measures
for his own protection, or that, having
suspected a design against him-as, for
instance, after having won a girl's
affections from a rival or overcoming him in
the ball play-he has already secured himself
from all attempts by counter spells. It then
becomes a serious matter, as, should he
succeed in turning the curse aside from
himself, it will return upon the heads of
his enemies.
The shaman and his employer then retire to a
lonely spot in the mountains, in the
vicinity of a small stream, and begin a new
series of conjurations with the beads. After
constructing a temporary shelter of bark
laid over poles, the two go down to the
water, the shaman taking with him two pieces
of cloth, a yard or two yards in length, one
white, the other black, together with seven
red and seven black beads. The cloth is the
shaman's pay for his services, and is
furnished by his employer, who sometimes
also supplies the beads. There are many
formulas for conjuring with the beads, which
are used on almost all important occasions,
and differences also in the details of the
ceremony, but the general practice is the
same in all cases. The shaman selects a bend
in the river where his client can look
toward the east while facing up stream. The
man then takes up his position on the bank
or wades into the stream a short distance,
where-in the ceremonial language-the water
is a "hand length" (awā“hilū) in depth and
stands silently with his eyes fixed upon the
water and his back to the shaman on the
bank. The shaman then lays upon the ground
the two pieces of cloth, folded into
convenient size, and places the red
beads-typical of success and his client upon
the white cloth, while the black
beads-emblematic of death and the intended
victim-are laid upon the black cloth. It is
probable that the first cloth should
properly be red instead of white, but as it
is difficult to get red cloth, except in the
shape of handkerchiefs, a substitution has
been made, the two colors having a close
mythologic relation. In former days a piece
of buckskin and the small glossy, seeds of
the Viper's Bugloss (Echium vulgare) were
used instead of the cloth and beads. The
formulistic name for the bead is sū“nikta,
which the priests are unable to analyze, the
ordinary word for beads or coin being adélā.
The shaman now takes a red bead,
representing his client, between the thumb
and index finger of his right hand, and a
black bead, representing the victim, in like
manner, in his left hand. Standing a few
feet behind his client he turns toward the
east, fixes his eyes upon the bead between
the thumb and finger of his right hand, and
addresses it as the Sū“nikta Gigage“i, the
Red Bead, invoking blessings upon his client
and clothing him with the red garments of
success. The formula is repeated in a low
chant or intonation, the voice rising at
intervals, after the manner of a revival
speaker. Then turning to the black bead in
his left hand he addresses it in similar
manner, calling down the most withering
curses upon the head of the victim. Finally
looking up he addresses the stream, under
the name of Yū“nwi Gūnahi“ta, the "Long
Person," imploring it to protect his client
and raise him to the seventh heaven, where
he will be secure from all his enemies. The
other, then stooping down, dips up water in
his hand seven times and pours it upon his
head, rubbing it upon his shoulders and
breast at the same time. In some cases he
dips completely under seven times, being
stripped, of course, even when the water is
of almost icy coldness. The shaman, then
stooping down, makes a small hole in the
ground with his finger, drops into it the
fatal black bead, and buries it out of sight
with a stamp of his foot. This ends the
ceremony, which is called "taking to water."
While addressing the beads the shaman
attentively observes them as they are held
between the thumb and finger of his
outstretched hands. In a short time they
begin to move, slowly and but a short
distance at first, then faster and farther,
often coming down as far as the first joint
of the finger or even below, with an
irregular serpentine motion from side to
side, returning in the same manner. Should
the red bead be more lively in its movements
and come down lower on the finger than the
black bead, he confidently predicts for the
client the speedy accomplishment of his
desire. On the other hand, should the black
bead surpass the red in activity, the spells
of the shaman employed by the intended
victim are too strong, and the whole
ceremony must be gone over again with an
additional and larger quantity of cloth.
This must be kept up until the movements of
the red beads give token of success or until
they show by their sluggish motions or their
failure to move down along the finger that
the opposing shaman can not be overcome. In
the latter case the discouraged plotter
gives up all hope, considering himself as
cursed by every imprecation which he has
unsuccessfully invoked upon his enemy, goes
home and-theoretically-lies down and dies.
As a matter of fact, however, the shaman is
always ready with other formulas by means of
which he can ward off such fatal results, in
consideration, of a sufficient quantity of
cloth.
Should the first trial, which takes place at
daybreak, prove unsuccessful, the shaman and
his client fast until just before sunset.
They then eat and remain awake until
midnight, when the ceremony is repeated, and
if still unsuccessful it may be repeated
four times before daybreak (or the following
noon?), both men remaining awake and fasting
throughout the night. If still unsuccessful,
they continue to fast all day until just
before sundown. Then they eat again and
again remain awake until midnight, when the
previous night's program is repeated. It has
now become a trial of endurance between the
revengeful client and his shaman on the one
side and the intended victim and his shaman
on the other, the latter being supposed to
be industriously working countercharms all
the while, as each party must subsist upon
one meal per day and abstain entirely from
sleep until the result has been decided one
way or the other. Failure to endure this
severe strain, even so much as closing the
eyes in sleep for a few moments or partaking
of the least nourishment excepting just
before sunset, neutralizes all the previous
work and places the unfortunate offender at
the mercy of his more watchful enemy. If the
shaman be still unsuccessful on the fourth
day, he acknowledges himself defeated and
gives up the contest. Should his spells
prove the stronger, his victim will die
within seven days, or, as the Cherokees say,
seven nights. These "seven nights," however,
are frequently interpreted, figuratively, to
mean seven years, a rendering which often
serves to relieve the shaman from a very
embarrassing position.
With regard to the oracle of the whole
proceeding, the beads do move; but the
explanation is simple, although the Indians
account for it by saying that the beads
become alive by the recitation of the sacred
formula. The shaman is laboring under
strong, though suppressed, emotion. He
stands with his hands stretched out in a
constrained position, every muscle tense,
his breast heaving and voice trembling from
the effort, and the natural result is that
before he is done praying his fingers begin
to twitch involuntarily and thus cause the
beads to move. As before stated, their
motion is irregular; but the peculiar
delicacy of touch acquired by long practice
probably imparts more directness to their
movements than would at first seem possible.
Sacred Formulas
of the Cherokee
Sacred Formulas Of The Cherokees, By James Mooney, 1885-1886
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