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Show BUEIAL SUPEESTITIONS- HIDATSA. 103 underwent a certain process of purification, others that demons were driven away by them, and again that they were to afford light to the wandering soul setting out for the spirit land. One writer states that " the Algonkins believed that the fire lighted nightly on the grave was to light the spirit on its journey. By a coincidence to be explained by the universal sacred-ness of the number, both Algonkins and Mexicans maintained it for four nights consecutively. The former related the tradition that one of their ancestors returned from the spirit land and informed their nation that the journey thither consumed just four days, and that collecting fuel every night added much to the toil and fatigue the soul encountered, all of which could be spared it." So it would appear that the belief existed that the fire was also intended to assist the spirit in preparing its repast. " Stephen Powers* gives a tradition current among the Yurok of California as to the use of fires: " After death they keep a fire burning certain nights in the vicinity of the grave. They hold and believe, at least the ' Big Indians' do, that the spirits of the departed are compelled to cross an extremely attenuated greasy pole, which bridges over the chasm of the debatable land, and that they require the fire to light them on their darksome journey. A righteous soul traverses the pole quicker than a wicked one, hence they regulate the number of nights for burning a light according to the character for goodness or the opposite which the deceased possessed in this world." Dr. Emil Bessels, of the Polaris expedition, informs the writer that a somewhat similar belief obtains among the Esquimaux. SUPERSTITIONS. An entire volume might well be written which should embrace only an account of the superstitions regarding death and burial among the Indians, so thoroughly has the matter been examined and discussed by various authors, and yet so much still remains to be commented on, but in this work, which is simply preliminary, and is hoped will be provocative of future efforts, it is deemed sufficient to give only a few accounts. The first is by Dr. W. Mathews, U. S. A., t and relates to the Hidatsa: * Cont. to N. A. Ethnol., 1877, ii, p. 58. \ Ethnol. and Philol. of the Hidataa Indians. U. S. Geol. Surv. of Terr., 1877, p. 409. |