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Show MAM. EKY J HISTORIC AND MYTHIC SIGNIFICANCE. 17 as it is in the possession of the Bureau of Ethnology iu a shape not yet arranged for publication, or forms part of the forthcoming volume of the Transactions of the Anthropological Society of Washington, which may not be anticipated. The following general remarks of Schoolcraft, Vol. I, p. 351, are of some value, though they apply with any accuracy only to the Ojibwa and are tinctured with a fondness for the mysterious: For their pictogrsphic devices the North American Indians have two terms, namely, Kekeetcin, or such things as are generally understood by the tribe; and Kekeenowin, or teachings of the medas or priests, and jossakeeds or prophets. The knowledge of the latter is chiefly confined to persons who are versed in , their system of magic medicine, or their religion, and may be deemed hieratic. The former consists of the common figurative signs, sach as are employed at places of sepulture, or by hunting or traveling parties. It is also employed in the muzzindbiks, or rock- writings. Many of the figures are common to both, and are seen in the drawings generally; but it is to be understood that this results from the figure- alphabet being precisely the same in both, while the devices of the nngamoons, or medicine, wabino, hunting, and war songs, are known solely to the initiates who have learned them, and who always pay high to the native professors for this knowledge. It must, however, be admitted, as above suggested, that many of the pictographs found are not of the historic or mythologic significance once supposed. For instance, the examination ot the rock carvings in several parts of the country has shown that some of them were mere records of the visits of individuals to important springs or to fords on regularly established trails. In this respect there seems to have been, in the intention of the Indians, very much the same spirit as induces the civilized man to record his initials upon objects in the neighborhood of places of general resort. At Oakley Springs, Arizona Territory, totemic marks have been found, evidently made by the same individual at successive visits, showing that on the number of occasions indicated he had passed by those springs, probably camping there, and such record was the habit of the neighboring Indians at that time. The same repetition of totemic names has been found in great numbers in the pipestone quarries of Dakota, and also at some old fords in West Virginia. But these totemic marks are so designed and executed as to have intrinsic significance and value, wholly different in this respect from vulgar nariies in alphabetic form. It should also be remembered that mere graffiti are recognized as of value by the historian, the anthropologist, and the artist. One very marked peculiarity of the drawings of the Indians is that within each particular system, such as may be called a tribal system, of pictography, every Indian draws in precisely the same manner. The figures of a man, of a horse, aud of every other object delineated, are made by every one who attempts to make any such figure with all the identity of which their mechanical skill is capable, thus showing their conception and motive to be the same. The intention of the present work is not to present at this time a view of the whole subject of pictography, though the writer has been 4 ETH 2 |