Bird
of the night
SMN
The
ancient Cherokees were astute observers of the natural world within
which they existed. The mountain landscape and all of its plants and
animals were a part of their spiritual cosmos.
Their spiritual system divided the world into three levels. The Upper
World — the realm of light, goodness, and the everlasting hereafter
— was represented by the birds. The Under World - the realm
of darkness, evil, and eternal death - was represented by the serpents.
By balancing these realms the Cherokees sought to bring peace and
harmony into the Middle World, the mundane everyday realm within which
humans reside.
There is a great deal of serpent imagery in Cherokee lore, especially
that having to do with the Uktena, a giant, mythic snake that haunted
their imaginations. But the main portion of their animal imagery is
devoted to the birds. For them birds were magical. Birds are beautiful
and lively . . . they sing . . . and they can do something that humans
can only dream about . . . they can fly.
Most Cherokee bird lore is concerned with the ones they saw on an
everyday basis: cardinals, chickadees, tufted titmice, etc. And most
of their bird stories are rather lighthearted. Not all of their bird
lore, however, has this aspect. At times they associated birds with
the negative aspects of the Under World. The most logical candidates
for this distinction were the owls, those woeful denizens of darkness.
There are five owl species that appear with regularity here in the
southern mountains: great-horned owls, barred owls, screech owls,
barn owls, and saw-whet owls. The Cherokees no doubt observed all
of these, but their recorded lore gives names to but three.
Tsgili is the great-horned owl, which many also know as
the hoot owl because of its hooting calls.
The barred owl is uguku, an onomatopoetic word that mimics
the birds who cooks for you call. Wahuhi
for screech owl is also onomatopoetic in that it mimics the birds
whinnying call.
Owls appear in differing contexts within Cherokee lore. The screech
owl was often a messenger of future events. Owls in general were associated
with warfare. When on the war trail the ancient Cherokees, a hyper-superstitious
people, divined the future outcome of a conflict according to screech
owl calls. If heard on the right or left, the call signified that
the Cherokees would be victorious. If heard ahead or behind, the call
signified defeat, in which instance they would cancel the expedition.
Owl calls were also used as a means of communication by scouts at
night.
Anthropologist James Mooney, who lived with the Cherokees on the Qualla
Boundary (present day Cherokee) during the late 1880s, observed that
Owls and other night-crying birds are believed to be the embodied
ghosts or disguised witches, and their cry is dreaded as a sound of
evil omen. Of the three owls named in Cherokee lore, the great-horned
owl was by far the most dreaded; indeed, the term tsgili
was expanded in meaning so as to signify witch. Both the
great-horned owls and the Cherokee witches indulged their mysterious
powers only in darkness. They were the masters of the night.
Little wonder that the great-horned owl was held in such intrepid
regard.
Aptly known as The Tiger of the Night this owl —
which can stand more than two feet tall, with a wing span of four
and a half feet — has ice-tong like talons that can rip through
a fencing mask.
The great horned will hunt by day, but it is supremely equipped for
night stalking. The feathered tufts (horns) on its head
look like ears but arent. The ear slits hidden among the feathers
can differentiate and pinpoint the origin of faint sounds. Its eyes
are 35 times more sensitive than those of a human being, so powerful
that they can capture prey in light so dim it is the equivalent of
a candle burning in the dark nearly half a mile away. Specialized
wing feathers, downy-fringed like a butterflys, enable this
predator to move silently in flight. No sound of rushing wings warns
the victim of a devastating strike.
The Cherokee witches admired and were associated with these qualities
in numerous ways. I have always been struck by the sacred formulas
(chants or incantations) that the Cherokee medicine men used to create
good luck in hunting or warfare, in healing, or in affairs of the
heart. The evil medicine men or witches used the sacred
formulas to accomplish their own nefarious ends.
One of the most drastic of these has been labeled To Lower Ones
Soul by Alan Kilpatrick, a member of the Cherokee Nation is
Oklahoma. In The Night Has a Naked Soul (Syracuse University
Press, 1997), Kilpatrick states that the Cherokee sacred formulas
which fall into this category represent instruments whose express
purpose is to destroy human life. Because of their grave and irreversible
consequences, life-threatening spells . . . were traditionally the
last incantations to be taught an apprentice.
Here is one of the lowering sacred formulas that I have
rendered from one of Kilpatricks rough paraphrase. No reader
will be surprised at this point to see which bird is invoked:
TO MY ENEMY
Your name is night.
I am the black owl
that hunts the darkness
for your heart and soul.
Your name is the night.
I am the black owl
hunting your soul.
George Ellison is a writer who lives in Bryson City. He wrote
the biographical introductions for the reissues of two Appalachian
classics: Horace Kepharts Our Southern Highlanders and James
Mooneys History, Myths, and Sacred Formulas of the Cherokees.
Readers can contact him at P.O. Box 1262, Bryson City, N.C. 28713,
or at ellisongeorge@cs.com
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