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Danger of Symbolic Interpretation
In the examination of sign language it is
important to form a clear distinction between signs proper
and symbols. The terms signs and symbols are often used
interchangeably, but with liability to misconstruction, as
many persons, whether with right or wrong lexical
definition, ascribe to symbols an occult and mystic
signification. All characters in Indian picture-writing have
been loosely styled symbols, and, as there is no logical
distinction, between the characters impressed with enduring
form and when merely outlined in the ambient air, all Indian
gestures, motions, and attitudes might with equal
appropriateness be called symbolic. While, however, all
symbols come under the generic head of signs, very few signs
are in accurate classification symbols. S.T. Coleridge has
defined a symbol to be a sign included in the idea it
represents. This may be intelligible if it is intended that
an ordinary sign is extraneous to the concept and, rather
than suggested by it, is invented to express it by some
representation or analogy, while a symbol may be evolved by
a process of thought from the concept itself; but it is no
very exhaustive or practically useful distinction. Symbols
are less obvious and more artificial than mere signs,
require convention, are not only abstract, but metaphysical,
and often need explanation from history, religion, and
customs. They do not depict but suggest subjects; do not
speak directly through the eye to the intelligence, but
presuppose in the mind knowledge of an event or fact which
the sign recalls. The symbols of the ark, dove, olive
branch, and rainbow would be wholly meaningless to people
unfamiliar with the Mosaic or some similar cosmology, as
would be the cross and the crescent to those ignorant of
history. The last named objects appeared in the class of
emblems when used in designating the conflicting powers of
Christendom and Islamism. Emblems do not necessarily require
any analogy between the objects representing, and the
objects or qualities represented, but may arise from pure
accident. After a scurrilous jest the beggar's wallet became
the emblem of the confederated nobles, the Gueux of
the Netherlands; and a sling, in the early minority of Louis
XIV, was adopted from the refrain of a song by the Frondeur
opponents of Mazarin. The portraiture of a fish, used,
especially by the early Christians, for the name and title
of Jesus Christ was still more accidental, being, in the
Greek word ιχθυς, an acrostic composed of the initials of
the several Greek words signifying that name and title. This
origin being unknown to persons whose religious enthusiasm
was as usual in direct proportion to their ignorance, they
expended much rhetoric to prove that there was some true
symbolic relation between an actual fish and the Saviour of
men. Apart from this misapplication, the fish undoubtedly
became an emblem of Christ and of Christianity, appearing
frequently on the Roman catacombs and at one time it was
used hermeneutically.
The several tribal signs for the Sioux, Arapahos, Cheyennes,
&c., are their emblems precisely as the star-spangled flag
is that of the United States, but there is nothing symbolic
in any of them. So the signs for individual chiefs, when not
merely translations of their names, are emblematic of their
family totems or personal distinctions, and are no more
symbols than are the distinctive shoulder-straps of army
officers. The crux ansata and the circle formed by a
snake biting its tail are symbols, but consensus as
well as invention was necessary for their establishment, and
the Indians have produced nothing so esoteric, nothing which
they intended for hermeneutic as distinct from descriptive
or mnemonic purposes. Sign language can undoubtedly be and
is employed to express highly metaphysical ideas, but to do
that in a symbolic system requires a development of the mode
of expression consequent upon a similar development of the
mental idiocrasy of the gesturers far beyond any yet found
among historic tribes north of Mexico. A very few of their
signs may at first appear to be symbolic, yet even those on
closer examination will probably be relegated to the class
of emblems.
The point urged is that while many signs can be used as
emblems and both can be converted by convention into symbols
or be explained as such by perverted ingenuity, it is futile
to seek for that form of psychologic exuberance in the stage
of development attained by the tribes now under
consideration. All predetermination to interpret either
their signs or their pictographs on the principles of
symbolism as understood or pretended to be understood by its
admirers, and as are sometimes properly applied to Egyptian
hieroglyphs, results in mooning mysticism. This was shown by
a correspondent who enthusiastically lauded the Dakota
Calendar (edited by the present writer, and which is a
mere figuration of successive occurrences in the history of
the people), as a numerical exposition of the great
doctrines of the Sun religion in the equations of time, and
proved to his own satisfaction that our Indians preserved
hermeneutically the lost geometric cultus of pre-Cushite
scientists.
Another exhibition of this vicious practice was recently
made in the interpretation of an inscribed stone alleged to
have been unearthed near Zanesville, Ohio. Two of the
characters were supposed, in liberal exercise of the
imagination, to represent the Α and Ω of the
Greek alphabet. At the comparatively late date when the
arbitrary arrangement of the letters of that alphabet had
become fixed, the initial and concluding letters might
readily have been used to represent respectively the
beginning and the end of any series or number of things, and
this figure of speech was employed in the book of
Revelations. In the attempted interpretation of the
inscription mentioned, which was hawked about to many
scientific bodies, and published over the whole country, the
supposed alpha and omega were assumed to constitute a
universal as well as sacred symbol for the everlasting
Creator. The usual menu of Roman feasts, commencing
with eggs and ending with apples, was also commonly known at
the time when the book of Revelations was written, and the
phrase "ab ovo usque ad mala" was as appropriate as
"from alpha to omega" to express "from the beginning to the
end." In deciphering the stone it would, therefore, be as
correct in principle to take one of its oval and one of its
round figures, call them egg and apple, and make them the
symbols of eternity. In fact, not depending wholly for
significance upon the order of courses of a feast or the
accident of alphabetical position, but having intrinsic
characteristics in reference to the origin and fruition of
life, the egg and apple translation, would be more
acceptable to the general judgment, and it is recommended to
enthusiasts who insist on finding symbols where none exist.
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Sign Language
Among North American Indians Compared with
that Among Other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes,
1881
Indian Sign
Language
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