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Show MOONBY] THE EAGLE 281 woods), and uluflni'ta ( tame). The robin is called tsishwa'gwd, a name which can not be analyzed, while the little sparrow is called tsishvd'yd ( the real or principal bird), perhaps, in accord with a principle in Indian nomenclature, on account of its wide distribution. As in other languages, many of the bird names are onomatopes, as wdhuhu' ( the screech owl), u'gvku' ( the hooting owl), waguW ( the whippoorwill), Mgd ( the crow), giigw# ( the quail), huhu ( the yellow mocking- bird), tst'toHW ( the chickadee), salsa! ( the goose). The turtledove is called gvltf- diskanihl' ( it cries for acorns), on account of the resemblance of its cry to the sound of the word for acorn ( gid&). The meadow lark is called ndkwM' ( star), on account of the appearance of its tail when spread out as it soars. The nuthatch ( Sitta carolinemis) is called tsuHdna ( deaf), and is supposed to be without hearing, possibly on account of its fearless disregard for man's presence. " Certain diseases are diagnosed by the doctors as due to birds, either revengeful bird ghosts, bird feathers about the house, or bird shadows falling upon the patient from overhead. The eagle ( awd'hUi) is the great sacred bird of the Cherokee, as of nearly all our native tribes, and figures prominently in their ceremonial ritual, especially in all things relating to war. The particular species prized was the golden or war eagle ( AquUa chryscetw), called by the Cherokee the " pretty- feathered eagle," on account of its beautiful tail feathers, white, tipped with black, which were in such great demand for decorative and ceremonial purposes that among the western tribes a single tail was often rated as equal in value to a horse. Among the Cherokee in the old times the killing of an eagle was an event which concerned the whole settlement, and could be undertaken only by the professional eagle killer, regularly chosen for the purpose on account of his knowledge of the prescribed forms and the prayers to be said afterwards in order to obtain pardon for the necessary sacrilege, and thus ward off vengeance from the tribe. It is told of one man upon the reservation that having deliberately killed an eagle in defiance of the ordinances he was constantly haunted by dreams of fierce eagles swooping down upon him, until the nightmare was finally exorcised after a long course of priestly treatment. In 1890 there was but one eagle killer remaining among the East Cherokee. It does not appear that the eagle was ever captured alive as among the plains tribes. The eagle must be killed only in the winter or late fall after the crops were gathered and the snakes had retired to their dens. If killed in the summertime a frost would come to destroy the corn, while the songs of the Eagle dance, when the feathers were brought home, would so anger the snakes that they would become doubly dangerous. Consequently the Eagle songs were never sung until after the snakes had gone to sleep for the winter. When the people of a town had decided upon an Eagle dance the |