<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV<br/> <span class="medium">THE INDIAN AND SOME LUXURIES</span></h2>
<p class="drop"><span class="upper">Most</span> city men regard a shampoo as a city luxury of
modern times, except, of course, for the rich, who
could always have what they desire. Yet the shampoo
is more common with some Indians than with us, and
they enjoy it oftener than we do. The Indian’s wife
takes the root of the <i>amole</i>, macerates it, and then beats
it up and down in a bowl of water until a most delicious
and soft lather results, and then her liege lord stoops
over the bowl and she shampoos his long hair and
scalp with vigor, neatness, skill, and dispatch. I have
been operated upon by the best adepts in London,
Paris, and New York, and I truthfully affirm that a
white man has much to learn in the way of skillful
manipulation, effective rubbing of the scalp, and
delicious silkiness of the hair, if he knows no other
than such shampooing as I received.</p>
<p>Another so-called luxury of our civilization is an
every-day matter with the Indians of the Southwest.
That is the Russo-Turkish bath. The first time I
enjoyed this luxury with the Indians was on one of my
visits to the Havasupai tribe. I had been received
into membership in the tribe several years before, but
had always felt a delicacy about asking to be invited
to participate in this function. But one day I said to
the old Medicine Man, as he was going down to <i>toholwoh</i>,
“How is it you have never invited me to go into <i>toholwoh</i>
with you?” My question surprised him. He
quickly answered, “Why should I invite you to your
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span>
own? The sweat-bath is as much yours as it is mine.”
“Then,” said I, “I will go with you now.”</p>
<p>The “bath-house” consisted of a small willow
frame, some six or eight feet in diameter, which, at
the time of using, is covered over with Navaho blankets,
etc., to make it heat and steam proof. A bed of clean
willows was spread out for the “sweaters” to sit upon,
and a place left vacant for the red-hot rocks. As
soon as all was prepared I was invited to take my
seat; one Indian followed on one side and the Medicine
Man on the other. Then one of the outer Indians
handed in six or eight red-hot rocks, and the flap of
the cover was let down and the bath was fairly “on.”
Directly the shaman began to sing a sacred song which
recited the fact that Toholwoh was a gift of the good
god, Tochopa, and was for the purpose of purifying
the body from all evil.</p>
<p>As soon as the song ended, we were all sweating
freely, but when the flap was opened, it was not to let
us out, but to receive more hot rocks. As we sang a
second song the heat grew more penetrating, so that
the words seemed to have real meaning. Our petition
was that “the heat of Toholwoh might enter our eyes,
our ears, our nostrils, our mouths,” etc., each organ
being named at the end of the line of petition. The
song comprised a great long string of organs, some of
which I had never heard of before. By this time sweat
was pouring off from our bodies, but the flap was opened
only to receive more rocks. At the third time a bowl
of water was handed in to my companion, which I was
reaching for in order to enjoy a drink, when, to my
horror and surprise, he sprinkled the water over the
red-hot rocks. The result was an instantaneous cloud
of steam, which seemed to set my lips and nostrils on
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span>
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
fire and absolutely to choke me and prevent my breathing.
Yet the two Indians began another song, so I
determined to stick it out and stand it as long as I
could. Of course, in a few moments the intense heat
of the steam was lost, and then I was able to join in the
song. At its close the same process of steaming was
repeated, and then I sprang out and dived headlong
into the cool (not cold) waters of the flowing Havasu,
where for a long time I swam and enjoyed the delicious
sensations with which my body was filled. Then,
after a rub down with clean, clear, clayey mud, and
another plunge, I lay in the sun on a bed of willows,
listening to the Indians tell stories, and I can truthfully
say I never felt so clean in my life.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG id="i_164" src="images/i_164.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="caption">A MOHAVE INDIAN WRAPPED UP IN HIS RABBIT SKIN BLANKET.</p> </div>
<p>This bath is taken by thousands of the Southwest
Indians once a week as a matter of religion, so that, as
a fact, while their clothes are ragged and dirty, and
they themselves appear to be dirty, they are really clean.
It must be confessed, on the other hand, that too many
Americans value the appearance of cleanliness more
than the reality. They would far rather appear clean
even if they were not than <i>be</i> clean and appear dirty.
It is better to combine both reality and appearance,
but, for my own sake, if I had to choose between the
two, I believe I would rather <i>be</i> clean than only <i>appear</i>
clean.</p>
<p>Civilized man, for centuries, has used hot baths
of various kinds for remedial and healing purposes.
Throughout the world, wherever hot springs are found,
men and women congregate in large numbers, palatial
hotels are built, bath-houses established, and an army
of hotel-keepers, physicians, nurses, masseurs, and
bath operators organized. Some go to the baths just
as they do any other fashionable thing, or in order to
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>
mingle with the gay and fashionable throng. Other
idlers go purely for the pleasure they gain from such
associations, while still others go for the health they
long for,—the strength and vigor they have lost. And
there can be no question that they often gain it. In
spite of the fashionable doctors who care less for the
health of their patients than they do for their own
fame and pockets; in spite of the physical ills that come
from the altogether inappropriate diet of the hotel
dining-rooms; in spite of the excitement of balls and
parties, receptions and routs, common at such places;
and in spite of the injurious influences of the gaming
tables too often maintained, the use of the waters is
often beneficial to a number of the patients. Were
they to use the waters rationally, live hygienically,
avoid all stimulating foods and drinks, and religiously
refrain from all unnatural excitements, there is no
question but that the use of the hot waters, the hot mud
packs, and the like, would give health to many thousands
who now derive but little benefit from them.</p>
<p>From whom did the white race learn the use of the
hot bath, the mud bath, and the like? He learned it
from the Indian, and if he would study the present
methods of the Indians he would find many details
connected with these baths that he might learn to his
great advantage.</p>
<p>When the Indian goes to the bath he makes of it
an almost religious ceremony. In one of the illustrations
an old Indian Shaman is telling to the younger
ones the things they should heed before going into the
<i>toholwoh</i>, or sweat bath, the frame of which (as yet
uncovered) is close at hand. The hot waters that
bubble out from the interior of the earth he regards as
the special gifts of the gods. He prays that he may not
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
use these gifts unworthily. Just as the Mohammedan
believes that the desert is the “Garden of Allah” and
that no one must walk in it who is sinful until he has
first asked for forgiveness, so does the Indian believe
that the waters of healing will turn to his injury if he
does not use them in the right spirit. Would it not be
well if we—the superior race—approached this good
gift of God in like manner?</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG id="i_167" src="images/i_167.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="caption">THE SHAMAN TELLING THE STORY OF THE FIRST TOHOLWOH.</p> </div>
<p>The natural simplicity of the Indian at the baths also
offers a good lesson to us. Instead of seeking for gaiety,
frivolity, fashion, and the means of pampering his
appetite, he goes to the baths of nature resolved upon
quiet and restfulness as far as possible. He seeks to
prepare his mind beforehand, that the physical means
used will be beneficial. In other words, though he is
a rude, untutored savage,—so we say,—he has a
clearer conception of the effect the mind has upon the
body in real, practical healing, than has a large part
of his civilized brothers and sisters. As a rule, we go
to a physician, or to a sanitarium, or to baths—I
mean those of us who are sick and desire health first
of all—without any other thoughts than “I am sick.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
To go here may do me good. I hope it will.” Instead
of preparing our minds beforehand by thoughtfulness,
getting ourselves into the proper mental attitude to be
helped, we leave it to chance, to the surroundings, to
the doctor, and thus often fail to get the benefit we
might have received. We carry our business cares,
our family worries, our money-getting, with us and
thus defeat the end for which we go.</p>
<p>Nor is that all! When we get there we want “all
the comforts of a home.” In other words, we must be
assured that we have a bedroom which we can lock
up at night, a bedstead with a mattress as soft and
unhealthy as the one we regularly sleep on, stuffy
closets where we can hang our clothes,—and the rest.</p>
<p>The Indian finds his bedroom under the stars. He
puts the invalid flat on the ground,—a sheepskin,
perhaps, between him and the earth, but that is all.
When will the superior white race learn that rejuvenation
of the body comes quicker to those who “shed”
their civilization, forswear their home comforts, quit
their indulgence in fixed-up dishes, refrain from social
frivolities (commonly called duties), and first and
foremost,—after throwing away all the cares and
worries that come of being so highly civilized,—get
to a place where it is possible to sleep out of doors <i>on
the hard ground</i>, protected, of course, as the Indians
are. Get into the woods, on to the hills, down in the
canyons, out on the deserts. Take a roll of blankets
along, and no matter what the weather, learn to sleep
on the bosom of Mother-Earth, out of doors. And if
the region is one near hot springs or mud baths, all the
better. Make it for the time being your home.</p>
<p>Ah! how wise is the Indian in his choice of a home.
I have before referred to this, but I cannot help writing
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
of it again. Home! It is not a place of unrest to him,
where it requires the labor of wife and daughter, or a
host of servants, to keep it in order; where polished
furniture, polished floors, polished doors, polished
mirrors, keep one forever with wiping-cloth in hand,
removing the marks of careless fingers; where bric-a-brac
is accumulated and piled everywhere to the shattering
of nerves if the children get near it, or careless
visitors happen to call; where “social demands” are
so great that children are relegated to the care of servants;
where brothers and sisters scarce have time to
know each other, and husbands and wives meet semi-occasionally—no,
it is not a home of this kind. To
most Indians “everywhere” is home provided there
is a little shade, water, and grass for his burro or
pony. In the mountains, where he can shelter under
an overhanging rock, or in the forest where he has
a roof of emerald, supported by great pillars of
pine or cottonwood or sycamore,—there is home.
In the desert, where the roof is millions of miles high,
decorated with suns and moons and stars and comets
and meteors and Milky Way and countless nebulæ,
and the walls are bounded on the east by the rising sun,
and on the west by the setting sun, and God’s own
laboratories make new, fresh, pure air every moment—there
is home.</p>
<p>The San Francisco disaster taught thousands of
people the healthfulness of the outdoor life. People
who had been ailing for years, puny children, anæmic
youths and maidens, dyspeptic parents, all “picked
up” appetite and health when compelled to live in
the parks and on the streets.</p>
<p>Let us heed the lesson. Let us follow the example
of the Indian and be more simple, more natural. Let
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
us relegate to the museum the collecting of curios and
bric-a-brac and the thousand and one things that so
crowd our houses as to make museums rather than
homes of them.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG id="i_170" src="images/i_170.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="caption">A MOHAVE WOMAN WHOSE HAIR HAS BEEN<br/> “DRESSED” IN MUD.</p> </div>
<p>I do not suppose it is necessary that I should say
that in our civilization we cannot <i>literally</i> do as the
Indian does in this matter. That is not my thought.
What I would urge
is that we live more
simply, and that,
like the Indian,
we get out of doors
more, instead of
housing ourselves
the more as we
become more “civilized.”
And that,
in the arrangements
and accumulations
of our
home we make
personal health,
comfort and happiness
the most
important considerations, rather than display, and to
win the approval or envy of our neighbors.</p>
<p>But to return to the hot springs. The Indian has
always used them. He also learned and bequeathed
to us the knowledge that mud is a useful therapeutic
agent. The Yumas, Mohaves, and others who live
near the banks of the Colorado River are in the habit
of regularly plastering down their hair and scalp with
thick, black mud. They go where it is clean and fresh,—washed
down by the rushing waters of the mighty
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span>
Colorado through the great canyons—and, rubbing
it well into their hair, they cover it over with a cloth
tied over the scalp and go on about their daily work.
They keep the hair thus covered with mud for a day
or two, and then wash it off and give the scalp a thorough
cleansing. What is the result? Whether the fact be
a result from the use of the mud or not, it is a fact that
these river Indians have long, glossy black hair free
from all disease, and their scalps are as healthy as the
hair. They have no dandruff, no falling out of the
hair, and do not need any hair tonic or dye. The
mud contains enough of the finely ground sand commingled
with the softer silt to make a healthful mixture
for gently exciting the scalp when the rubbing off and
cleansing process takes place. And covering the hair
as well as the scalp with the mud and allowing it to
dry on demands that the hair shall be well rubbed as
well as the skin. The effect is to clean the hair thoroughly,
and who knows but that the excitement generated
by thus rubbing the hair as well as the scalp has
something to do in promoting the healthful flow of the
elements required for hair nutrition? Be that as it
may, I know the fact, which is that these Indians, men
as well as women, have hair, long, black, glossy,
reaching down to their waists, and they attribute its
healthfulness to the regular use of the mud-pack and
rub.</p>
<p>Now, while we may not care to pack the hair in
mud, we can certainly utilize the idea. I have done
so for years. I often give my scalp and hair a mud
bath, and it is both agreeable and exhilarating, and I
had the assurance a few months ago from one of the
leading scalp specialists of the East that my scalp was
in an absolutely healthful condition—one of the very
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span>
few found in such condition in the large eastern metropolis.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG id="i_172" src="images/i_172.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="caption">A MOHAVE INDIAN WHOSE HAIR AND SCALP HAVE BEEN CLEANED WITH MUD.</p> </div>
<p>The Indian also uses mud—and by this I mean the
clear, pure, uncontaminated earth and sandy mixtures
found in the rivers of the desert west—for wounds.
There is little doubt but that he learned this from the
animals. Who has not seen a dog, after a fight in
which he got worsted, run and throw himself into a
mud puddle? Many years ago—about twenty—I
read an account of a battle between a wildcat and a
dog, and the writer, who saw the conflict, told how the
dog went and bathed himself in mud thereafter. The
brief sketch made such an impression on me that I
knew just where to find it, and I have hunted it up,
and am now going to copy it for the benefit of my
readers. It will help explain why the Indian does the
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span>
same thing. He has observed the animals bathing in
the mud, when wounded, as this dog did.</p>
<p>“The dog has won the battle; but he has got some
ugly scars along his sides and flank. Observe, that
overheated as he is, he does not rush into that clear
stream. He takes his bath in that shallow spring with
a soft mud bottom. Note how he plasters himself,
laying the wounded side underneath, and then sitting
down on his haunches, buries all the wounded parts
in the ooze. That mud has medicinal properties.
The dog knows it. No physician could make so good
a poultice for the wounds of a cat’s claws as this dog
has found for himself. Pray, if you had been clawed
in that way by either feline or feminine, would you
have found anything at the bottom of your book philosophy
so remedial as this dog has found?”</p>
<p>The Indian’s use of mud, therefore, is seen to be an
inheritance as the result of his observation of the animals.
Since the time I heard of the dog and wildcat
fight I have had occasion to watch the Indians many
times. I have used the mud with them, and always
with good results. And if, when some four and a
half years ago I was bitten on the thumb by a rattlesnake,
and for a week was supposed to be hovering
between life and death, I had thought enough to have
done as the Indians do,—gone and put my hand and
arm in a mud bath at the side of a stream or at the
bottom of a shallow spring, I should have fared as well
as I did (and perhaps better), though I had two skilled
physicians, an accomplished professor, and a devoted
nurse to care for me.</p>
<p>And when I was supposed to be well again,—months
afterward,—I found that the deadly poison
had in some way lodged in the lining of the stomach,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
so that, at times, it would cause a nervous and muscular
disturbance that made me suffer intense agony.
I then recalled the use of mud by my Indian friends,
and I hied me away as speedily as I could to the hot
mud baths of Paso Robles, in California. There the
sulphur water at a temperature of over 110° Fahrenheit
comes bubbling into a great wooden tank filled with
the soft, velvety mud, black as ink, of the tule marsh.
Into this tank I stepped, and gradually worked my way
into the mud, lying down in it, and wriggling and working
my body until I was as near covered as I could be.
I brought great armfuls of the hot, soft, and soothing
nature poultice over my stomach and body, and then
lay there as long as it was wise to do so. What mattered
it that I was blacker than a negro when I came
out. Two minutes with a bucket and a hose and I was
cleaner than ever. One week of these baths and I lost
the poison, never again to return. I never think of
Paso Robles and the mud baths there without a deep
sense of gratitude that some of us at least have learned
how to utilize some good things that the Indian has
taught us.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span></p>
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