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About The Chemawa American (Chemawa, Or.) 19??-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1914)
TH E CHEMAW A A M E R IC A N 7 west, n o rth , and south, and twice diagonally. T h e chant was renew ed; it grew slow er; the rattles were rattled m ore slowly; then the singing stopped and all was over. A t the end of the cerem ony I th an k ed my hosts and asked if there was an y th in g I could do to show my appreciation of the courtesy they had shown me. T h ey asked if I could send them some cow rie shells, w hich they use as decorations for the dance. I told th?m I w ould send them a sackful. T hey shook hands cordially w ith all of us, and we left. I have never seen a w ilder or, in its way, m ore im pressive spectacle than th a t of these ch an tin g , sw aying, red-skinned m edicine-m en, their lithe bodies naked, unconcernedly h an d lin g the death th a t glides and strikes w hile they held their m ystic w orship in the gray tw ilig h t of the kiva. T h e ritu al and the soul-needs is m et, and th e symbolism and the dark savagery, were all relics of an ages-vanished past, survivals of an elder w orld. T h e snake dance itself took place in the afternoon at five o ’clock. T here were m any h u n d red s of onlookers, alm ost as m any w hites as I n dians, and m ost of th e Indian spectators were in w hite m a n ’s dress, in stro n g contrast to the dancers. T he antelope priests entered first and ranged them selves bv a tree-like bundle of cottonw ood branches against the wall of buildings to one side of the open place where the dance takes place; th e other side is the cliff edge. T he snakes, in a bag, were stowed by the bundle of cottonw ood branches. Y oung girls stood near th e big pillar of stone w ith sacred meal to scatter at the foot of the pil lar after the snakes had been throw n dow n there an 1 taken away. T hen the snake priests entered in th eir fringed leather kilts and eagle plum e head-dress, fox skins h u n g at th e backs of th eir girdles, th eir bodies were splashed and streaked w ith w hite, and on each of them the upper part of th e face was painted black and the lower part w hite. C hanting , stepping in rhythm to the chant, and on one p articu lar stone slab stam ping h ard as a signal to the underw orld, they circled the em pty space, and for some m inutes danced opposite the line of antelope priests. T hen, in couples, one of each couple seizing and carry in g in his m outh a snake, they began to circle th e space again. T h e leading couple consisted of one man who had his arm across the shoulder of another, w hile this second man held in his teeth, by the upper m iddle of its body, a rattlesnake four feet long, the flat, ace-of-c'.ubs-shaped head and curving neck of the snake being alm ost against th e m a n ’s face. R attlesnakes, ribbon-snake, all were carried in the su n ? w iy . One man carried at the same tim e two small side w inder rattlesnakes in his m outh. A fter a w hile each snake was throw n on the rock and soon again picked up and held in his hand, w hile a new snake was held in th e m outh. F inally, each man carried a bundle of snakes in his hand,