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the golden head of Montezuma and the jewels which he wore will ever again see the light of day。 The Aztecs buried them deeply; having time at their disposal; no plough or surface excavation will reveal them; and the place of their sepulture is lost。 And this must anyhow be pleasing to the shade of the heroic Guatemoc。
By a little stretch of the imagination one might almost fancy that this hoard still lies under the protection of the evil Aztec gods; of one of which I will now tell the story。
Shortly before I went to Mexico; in the course of some drainage works which were then being begun at a distance from the city — I think the place was called Zumpango; but of this I am not sure — a peculiarly hideous idol was discovered。 It was grey in colour; but; if I remember rightly; more or less blotched with pink; and its head was sunk almost between the shoulders; while I can only describe the face as devilish。 On its disinterment it is a fact that the Indians of the neighbourhood identified it at once; by the tradition which had descended from father to son among them; as a slaughter…idol of the Aztecs which had been buried at this spot to save it from destruction by the Spaniards in the time of Cortes; and there remained in seclusion until the year 1890。 Its resurrection is said to have occasioned great excitement among them。
One of the old chroniclers — I think it is Bernal Diaz — describes the finding of the Place of Sacrifice over which this idol presided。 If I recollect aright he says that they saw a pole from the top of which the idol itself had been removed; and that the said pole was built all round with the skulls of human victims whose hearts had been torn out as an offering to it。 In short; the pedigree of the thing seems to be well authenticat
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