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Signs Connected
with Pictographs

A sign for cloud
is as follows: (1) Both hands partially
closed, palms facing and near each
other, brought up to level with or
slightly above, but in front of the
head; (2) suddenly separated
sidewise, describing a curve like a scallop; this
scallop motion is repeated for "many
clouds." (Cheyenne
II.)
The
same conception is in the Moqui etchings,
Figs. 180, 181, and 182 (Gilbert MS.)

The Ojibwa pictograph for cloud is
more elaborate, Fig. 183, reported in
Schoolcraft, I, pl. 58. It is composed of
the sign for sky, to which
that
for clouds is added, the latter being
reversed as compared with the Moqui
etchings, and picturesquely
hanging from the sky.
The gesture sign for rain is
described and illustrated on page 344. The
pictograph, Fig. 184, reported as found in
New Mexico by Lieutenant Simpson (Ex.
Doc.
No. 64, Thirty-first Congress, first session,
1850, pl. 9) is said to

represent
Montezuma's adjutants sounding a
blast to him for rain. The small
character inside the curve which
represents the sky, corresponds with
the gesturing
hand. The Moqui etching (Gilbert MS.)
for rain, i.e., a cloud from which
the drops are falling, is given in Fig. 185.

The same authority gives two signs for
lightning, Figs. 186 and 187. In the
latter the sky is shown, the
changing direction of the streak,
and clouds with rain falling. The
part relating specially to the
streak is portrayed in a sign as
follows: Right hand elevated before and
above the head, forefinger pointing
upward, brought down with great
rapidity with a sinuous,
undulating motion; finger still extended
diagonally downward toward the right. (Cheyenne
II.)
Figs. 188 and 189 also represent
lightning, taken by Mr. W.H. Jackson,
photographer of the late U.S. Geolog. and
Geog. Survey, from the decorated walls of an
estufa in the Pueblo de Jemez, New Mexico. The
former is blunt, for harmless, and the
latter terminating in an arrow or spear
point, for destructive or fatal,
lightning.
A common sign for speech, speak,
among the Indians is the repeated
motion of the index in a straight
line forward from the mouth. This
line, indicating the voice, is shown
 in Fig. 190, taken
from the
Dakota Calendar, being the expression
for the fact that
"the-Elk-that-hollows-walking,"
a Minneconjou chief, "made medicine." The
ceremony is indicated by the head of
an albino buffalo. A more graphic portraiture
of the conception of voice is in
Fig. 191,
representing an antelope and the
whistling sound produced by the
animal on being surprised or
alarmed. This is taken from MS.
drawing book of an Indian prisoner
at Saint Augustine, Fla., now in the
Smithsonian Institution, No. 30664.
 Fig. 192 is the exhibition of wrestling for
a turkey, the point of interest in the
present connection being the lines from the
mouth to the objects of conversation. It is
taken from the above-mentioned MS. drawing
book.
The wrestlers, according to the foot prints,
had evidently come together, when, meeting
the returning hunter, who is wrapped in his
blanket with only one foot protruding, they
separated and threw off their blankets,
leggings, and moccasins, both endeavoring to
win the turkey, which lies between them and
the donor.
 In Fig. 193, taken from the same MS. drawing
book, the conversation is about the
lassoing, shooting, and final killing of a
buffalo which has wandered to a camp. The
dotted lines indicate footprints. The Indian
drawn under the buffalo having secured the
animal by the fore feet, so informs his
companions, as indicated by the line drawn
from his mouth to the object mentioned; the
left-hand figure, having also secured the
buffalo by the horns, gives his nearest
comrade an opportunity to strike it with an
ax, which he no doubt announces that he will
do, as the line from his mouth to the head
of the animal suggests. The Indian in the
upper left-hand corner is told by a squaw to
take an arrow and join his companions, when
he turns his head to inform her that he has
one already, which fact he demonstrates by
holding up the weapon.
 The Mexican pictograph, Fig. 194, taken from
Kingsborough, II, pt. 1, p. 100, is
illustrative of the sign made by the Arikara
and Hidatsa for tell and conversation.
Tell
me is: Place the flat right hand, palm
upward, about fifteen inches in front of the
right side of the face, fingers pointing to
the left and front; then draw the hand
inward toward and against the bottom of the
chin. For conversation, talking between two
persons, both hands are held before the
breast, pointing forward, palms up, the
edges being moved several times toward one
another. Perhaps, however, the picture in
fact only means the common poetical image of
"flying words."
 Fig. 195 is one of Landa's characters, found
in Rel. des choses de Yucatan, p. 316,
and
suggests one of the gestures for talk and
more especially that for sing, in
which the extended and separated
fingers are passed forward and
slightly downward from the
mouth—"many voices." Although the
last opinion about the bishop is
unfavorable to the authenticity of
his work, yet even if it were
prepared by a Maya, under his
supervision, the latter would
probably have
given him some genuine native conceptions,
and among them gestures would be likely to
occur. The natural sign for hear, made both by
Indians and deaf-mutes, consisting in the
motion of the index, or
the index and thumb joined, in a
straight line to the ear, is
illustrated in the Ojibwa pictograph
Fig. 196, "hearing ears," and those
of the same people, Figs. 197 and
198, the latter of which is a hearing serpent, and the former
means "I hear, but your words are from a bad
heart," the hands being thrown out as
in the final part of a gesture for bad heart,
which is made by the hand being
closed and held near the breast,
with the back toward the breast,
then as the arm is suddenly extended
the hand is opened and the fingers
separated from each other. (Mandan
and Hidatsa I.)
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Sign Language
Among North American Indians Compared with
that Among Other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes,
1881
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