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Address of Kin Chē-ĕss
The following is the farewell
address of Kin Che-ess (Spectacles),
medicine-man of the Wichitas, to
Rev. A.J. Holt, missionary, on his
departure from the Wichita Agency,
in the words of the latter:
He placed one hand
on my breast, the other on his own,
then clasped his two hands together
after the manner of our
congratulations—We are friends, Fig.
320. He placed one hand on me, the
other on himself, then placed the
first two fingers of his right hand
between his lips—We are brothers. He
placed his right hand over my heart,
his left hand over his own heart,
then linked the first fingers of his
right and left hands—Our hearts are
linked together. See Fig. 232, p.
386. He laid his right hand on me
lightly, then put it to his mouth,
with the knuckles lightly against
his lips, and
| made the motion of flipping
water from the right-hand
forefinger, each flip casting the
hand and arm from the mouth a foot
or so, then bringing it back in the
same position. (This repeated three
or more times, signifying talk
or talking.) Fig. 321. He then made a
motion with his right hand as if he
were |
 |
| fanning his right
ear; this repeated. He then extended
his right hand with his index finger
pointing upward, his eyes also being
turned upward—You told me of the
Great Father. Pointing to himself,
he hugged both hands to his bosom,
as if he were affectionately
clasping something he loved, and
then pointed upward in the way
before described—I love him (the
Great Father). Laying his right hand
on me, he clasped his hands to his
bosom as before—I love you. Placing
his right hand on my shoulder, he
threw it over his own right shoulder
as if he were casting behind him a |
| little chip, only
when his hand was over his shoulder
his index finger was pointing behind
him—You go away. Pointing to his
breast, he clinched the same hand as
if it held a stick, and made a
motion as if he were trying to
strike something on the ground with
the bottom of the stick held in an
upright position—I stay, or
I stay right here, Fig. 322. Placing his
right hand on me, he placed both his
hands on his breast and breathed
deeply two or three times, then
using the index finger and thumb of
each hand as if he were holding a
small pin, he placed the two hands
in this position |
 |
| as if he were
holding a thread in each hand and
between the thumb and forefinger of
each hand close together, and then
let his hands recede from each
other, still holding |
 |
his fingers in the same
position, as if he were letting a
thread slip between them until his
hands were two feet apart—You live
long time, Fig. 323. Laying his |
| right hand on his
breast, then extending his
forefinger of the same hand, holding
it from him at half-arm's length,
the finger pointing nearly upward,
then moving his hand, with the
finger thus extended, from side to
side about as rapidly as a man steps
in walking, each time letting his
hand get farther from him for three
or four times, then suddenly placing
his left hand in a horizontal
position with the fingers extended
and together so that the palm was
sidewise, he used the right-hand
palm, extended, fingers together, |
| as a hatchet, and brought
it down smartly, just missing the
ends of the fingers of the left
hand, Fig. 324. Then placing his
left hand, with the thumb and
forefinger closed, to his heart, he
brought his right hand, fingers in
the same position, to his left;
then, as if he were holding
something between his thumb and
forefinger, he moved his right hand
away as if he |
 |
were slowly casting
a hair from him, his left hand
remaining at his breast, and his
eyes following his right—I go
about a little while longer, but
will be cut off shortly and my
spirit will go away (or will
die). Placing the
thumbs and forefingers again in such
a position as if he held a small
thread between the thumb and
forefinger of each hand, and the
hands touching each other, he drew
his hands slowly from each other, as
if he were stretching a piece of
gum-elastic; then laying his right
hand on me, he extended the left
hand in a horizontal position,
fingers extended and closed, and
brought down his right hand with
fingers extended and together, so as
to just miss the tips of the fingers
of his left hand; then placing his
left forefinger and thumb against
his heart, he acted as if he took a
hair from the forefinger and thumb
of his left hand with the forefinger
and thumb of the right, and slowly
cast it from him, only letting his
left hand remain at his breast, and
let the index finger of the right
hand point outward toward the
distant horizon—After a long time
you die. When placing his left hand
upon himself and his right hand upon
me, he extended them upward over his
head and clasped them there—We then
meet in heaven. Pointing upward,
then to himself, then to me, he
closed the third and little finger
of his right hand, laying his thumb
over them, then extending his first
and second fingers about as far
apart as the eyes, he brought his
hand to his eyes, fingers pointing
outward, and shot his hand outward—I
see you up there. Pointing to me,
then giving the last above-described
sign of look, then pointing to
himself, he made the sign as if
stretching out a piece of
gum-elastic between the fingers of
his left and right hands, and then
made the sign of cut-off before
described, and then extended the
palm of the right hand horizontally
a foot from his waist, inside
downward, then suddenly threw it
half over and from him, as if you
were to toss a chip from the back of
the hand (this is the negative sign
everywhere used among these
Indians)—I would see him a long
time, which should never be cut off,
i.e., always.
Pointing upward, then rubbing the
back of his left hand lightly with
the forefinger of his right, he
again gave the negative sign.—No
Indian there (in heaven). Pointing
upward, then rubbing his forefinger
over the back of my hand, he again
made the negative sign—No white man
there. He made the same sign again,
only he felt his hair with the
forefinger and thumb of his right
hand, rolling the hair several times
between the fingers—No black man in
heaven. Then rubbing the back of his
hand and making the negative sign,
rubbing the back of my hand and
making the negative sign, feeling of
one of his hairs with the thumb and
forefinger of his right hand, and
making the negative sign, then using
both hands as if he were reaching
around a hogshead, he brought the
forefinger of his right hand to the
front in an upright position after
their manner of counting, and said
thereby—No Indian, no white man, no
black man, all one. Making the
"hogshead" sign, and that for
look,
he placed the forefinger of each
hand side by side pointing
upward—All look the same, or
alike.
Running his hands over his wild
Indian costume and over my clothes,
he made the "hogshead" sign, and
that for same, and said thereby—All
dress alike there. Then making the
"hogshead" sign, and that for
love,
(hugging his hands), he extended
both hands outward, palms turned
downward, and made a sign exactly
similar to the way ladies smooth a
bed in making it; this is the sign
for happy—All will be happy alike
there. He then made the sign for
talk and for Father, pointing to
himself and to me—You pray for me.
He then made the sign for go away,
pointing to me, he threw right hand
over his right shoulder so his index
finger pointed behind him—You go
away. Calling his name he made the
sign for look and the sign of
negation after pointing to me—Kin Che-ess see you no more.Fig. 322,
an illustration in the preceding
address, also represents a common
gesture for sit down, if made to the
right of the hip, toward the
locality to be occupied by the
individual invited. The latter
closely corresponds to an Australian
gesture described by |
 |
Smyth (The Aborigines of
Victoria, London, 1878,Vol. II, p.
308, Fig. 260), as follows: "Minnie-minnie
(wait a little). It is shaken
downwards rapidly two or three
times. Done more slowly towards the
ground, it means 'Sitdown.'" This is
reproduced in Fig. 325. |
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