What a Totem is
Though our adversary now abandons totems, he returns to them elsewhere
(i. 198-202). 'Totem is the corruption of a term used by North American
Indians in the sense of clan-mark or sign-board ("ododam").' The totem
was originally a rude emblem of an animal or other object 'placed by
North American Indians in front of their settlements.'
The Evidence for Sign-boards
Our author's evidence for sign-boards is from an Ottawa Indian, and is
published from his MS. by Mr. Hoskyns Abrahall. {73} The testimony is of
the greatest merit, for it appears to have first seen the light in a
Canadian paper of 1858. Now in 1858 totems were only spoken of in
Lafitau, Long, and such old writers, and in Cooper's novels. They had
not become subjects of scientific dispute, so the evidence is
uncontaminated by theory. The Indians were, we learn, divided into
[local?] tribes, and these 'into sections or families according to their
ododams'--devices, signs, in modern usage 'coats of arms.' [Perhaps
'crests' would be a better word.] All people of one ododam (apparently
under male kinship) lived together in a special section of each village.
At the entrance to the enclosure was the figure of an animal, or some
other sign, set up on the top of one of the posts. Thus everybody knew
what family dwelt in what section of the village. Some of the families
were called after their ododam. But the family with the bear ododam were
called Big Feet, not Bears. Sometimes parts of different animals were
'quartered' [my suggestion], and one ododam was a small hawk and the fins
of a sturgeon.
We cannot tell, of course, on the evidence here, whether 'Big Feet'
suggested 'Bear,' or vice versa, or neither. But Mr. Frazer has remarked
that periphrases for sacred beasts, like 'Big Feet' for Bear, are not
uncommon. Nor can we tell 'what couple of ancestors' a small hawk and a
sturgeon's fins represent, unless, perhaps, a hawk and a sturgeon. {74a}
For all this, Mr. Max Muller suggests the explanation that people who
marked their abode with crow or wolf might come to be called Wolves or
Crows. {74b} Again, people might borrow beast names from the prevalent
beast of their district, as Arkades, [Greek], Bears, and so evolve the
myth of descent from Callisto as a she-bear. 'All this, however, is only
guesswork.' The Snake Indians worship no snake. [The Snake Indians are
not a totem group, but a local tribe named from the
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