Some warriors had medicine to change their shape as they pleased,
so that they could escape from their enemies. Once one of these
medicine warriors who had been away from home came back and found
a strong party of the enemy attacking the settlement while nearly
all the men were off on a hunt. The town was on the other side of
the river, but his grandmother was there, so he made up his mind
to save her. Going down the stream a little way, he hunted until he
found a mussel shell. With his medicine he changed this to a canoe,
in which he crossed over to his grandmother's house, and found her
sitting there, waiting for the enemy to come and kill her. Again he
made medicine and put her into a small gourd which he fastened to his
belt. Then climbing a tree he changed himself to a swamp woodcock,
and with one cry he spread his wings and flew across to the other
side of the river, where both took their natural shape again and made
their way through the woods to another settlement.
There was another great Cherokee warrior, named Dasi`giya'gi, or
Shoe-boots, as the whites called him, who lived on Hightower creek,
in Georgia. He was so strong that it was said he could throw a corn
mortar over a house, and with his magic power could clear a river
at one jump. His war medicine was an uktena scale and a very large
turtle shell which he got from the Shawano. In the Creek war he put
this scale into water and bathed his body with the water, and also
burned a piece of the turtle shell and drew a black line around his
men with the coal, and he was never wounded and never had a man killed.
Some great warriors had a medicine by the aid of which they could
dive under the ground as under water, come up among the enemy to kill
and scalp one, then dive under the ground again and come up among
their friends.
Some war captains knew how to put their lives up in the tree tops
during a fight, so that even if they were struck by the enemy they
could not be killed. Once, in a battle with the Shawano, the Cherokee
leader stood directly in front of the enemy and let the whole party
shoot at him, but was not hurt until the Shawano captain, who knew this
war medicine himself, ordered his men to shoot into the branches above
the head of the other. They did this and the Cherokee leader fell dead.