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Chapter 10 GOING TO THE COMBAT.

Word Count: 2756    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

essions. Jugglers performed on the street-corners; dancing-girls, with tambours, and long elf-locks dressed in flowers, pos

the smoke of the volcano still lingered; but the sun ro

were deserted; hovels and palaces gave up their tenantry; canoes, gay with garlands, were abandoned in the waveless canals. The women and children came down from the roofs; from all the temples-all but the old one with the solitary gray tower and echoless court-poured the priesthood in proc

with other nobles from the provinces far and near, were collected about it in waiting, sporting on their persons the wealth of principalities. When the monarch came out, they knelt, and every one of them placed h

s," he said, afte

and passed from hand to hand. Intent on deciphering the writing, no

y lord Cacama?" asked

s dropped as

paint an eagle; When we write of t

Cuitlahua, "would the

the other strangely, saying only, "

he company, in procession, set out for the tianguez. On the way they were joined by Iztlil', th

astime found Xoli and his provincial friend lounging along the broad pave of the beautiful thoroughfare. They at once started for the tianguez. The broker was fat, and it was troublesome for him to keep pace with the hunter; nevertheless, they ove

not the green panache?" whi

bent his head, and his heart closed upon the recollection of what he saw so that it never escaped. The picture was of a girl, almost a woman, laughing; opposite her, and rather in the shade of the fringed curtain, one older, though young, an

listen. Green is the royal color, and belongs to the king's family; and wherever met, in the city or on the lake, the people salute it. Though what they me

id the hunter, as to himsel

ng the patrol upon us? They are not for such as you. Come on. It

rdly control. In the midst of it, Xoli pulled his companion to one side,

the shields of the combatants; and when the Tihuancan heard the people, as they strea

reen humming-birds brilliantly iridescent; a rope of pearls large as grapes hung, many times doubled, from his neck down over his breast; his sandals and sandal-thongs were embossed with gold, and besides anklets of massive gold, cuishes of the same metal guarded his legs from knee to anklet. Save the

look at the gages, "your brother has a mi

the javelin in his hand, and bow, quiver, and maquahuitl at his back; and in h

g, smiling. "But, son of my fr

e also. Over their heads he extended his hands, and said, softly, "They who love the god

one gage was forgotten, one combatan

ld is that,

on the plain gage,

e holy cause of Quetzal'? Go,

tspake

llenged me to this combat, and he is not here.

lushed as from a passing pain; a moment he regarded the Tezcuca

hard," he said, quietly. "But such victims are

om the lake, and large enough for man?uvring half a thousand men. It was bounded by a rope, outside of which was a broad margin crowded with rank on rank of common soldiery, whose shields were arranged be

t he can do this thing in a

you see were wrought long ago, and have been lying in the templ

he commonalty; it was also the highest of the platforms, so that its occupants could overlook the whole amphitheatre. This lordlier preparation belonged to the king, his household and nobles

er of them in sanctity of character, sat aloof in the west, also screened by a canopy. And, as the celebration was regarded in the light of a religious

n been better filled with all that constitutes royalty. Opposite him he saw the servitors of his religion; at his feet were his warriors and peopl

air was filled with plaudits and flying garlands; but hardly was the welcome ended before there was a g

che, asked you? That is Iztli

not too

ds the glitter has made him

ghed heartily a

ed fellow now fixing th

e with the will a girl goes to a feast. The other is th

lpa. "I have heard it said that, in a battle of

scorn the other nations, even the Aztecs. Probably it is well they are be

the people talking about

in leather without ornament; his escaupil was secured by a simple loop: yet the people knew him, and shouted; and when he took down the plain shield and fixed it to his ar

at the palace door; and some there were, acuter than the rest, who saw corroboration of the meaning given the writing in the fact that the shield the '

to common challengers of the proudest chiefs o

gladiators never exhibited before a Roman audience. The father was past the prime of life, but erect, broad-shouldered, and of unusual dignity; the son was slighter, and not so tall, but his limbs were round and beautiful, and he looked as if he mig

s ear that his heart is so melted? Awak

amer's arm." And with the words, he seized a bow at his feet, fitted an arrow upon the cord, and, drawing full to the head, sent it cleaving the sunshi

no time for the indulgence of affection, he turned to t

lted escaupil; each buckled the shield on his arm, and ti

f the vast audience was without comparison. With the exception of the arena, the royal platform was the cynosure. Behind the king, with a shield faced with silver, stood Maxtla, vigilant against treachery or despair. The array of nobles about the couch was imperial; and what with them, and the dark-eyed beauties of his household, and the canopy tingeing t

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Contents

Chapter 1 OUR MOTHER HAS A FORTUNE WAITING US YONDER. Chapter 2 QUETZAL', THE FAIR GOD Chapter 3 A CHALLENGE. Chapter 4 TENOCHTITLAN AT NIGHT. Chapter 5 THE CHILD OF THE TEMPLE. Chapter 6 THE C OF QUETZAL', AND MUALOX, THE PABA. Chapter 7 THE PROPHECY ON THE WALL. Chapter 8 A BUSINESS MAN IN TENOCHTITLAN. Chapter 9 THE QUESTIONER OF THE MORNING. Chapter 10 GOING TO THE COMBAT. Chapter 11 THE COMBAT.
Chapter 12 MUALOX AND HIS WORLD.
Chapter 13 WHO ARE THE STRANGERS
Chapter 14 A TEZCUCAN LOVER
Chapter 15 THE BANISHMENT OF GUATAMOZIN
Chapter 16 GUATAMOZIN AT HOME
Chapter 17 NIGHT AT THE CHALCAN'S
Chapter 18 THE CHINAMPA
Chapter 19 COURT GOSSIP
Chapter 20 GUATAMOZIN AND MUALOX
Chapter 21 A KING'S BANQUET
Chapter 22 THE 'TZIN'S LOVE
Chapter 23 THE FIRST COMBAT
Chapter 24 THE SECOND COMBAT
Chapter 25 THE PORTRAIT
Chapter 26 THE KING GIVES A TRUST TO HUALPA
Chapter 27 THE KING AND THE 'TZIN.
Chapter 28 LOVE ON THE LAKE
Chapter 29 THE KING DEMANDS A SIGN OF MUALOX
Chapter 30 THE MASSACRE IN CHOLULA
Chapter 31 THE CONQUEROR WILL COME
Chapter 32 MONTEZUMA GOES TO MEET CORTES
Chapter 33 PUBLIC OPINION
Chapter 34 A MESSAGE FROM THE GODS
Chapter 35 HOW ILLS OF STATE BECOME ILLS OF SOCIETY
Chapter 36 ENNUYé IN THE OLD PALACE.
Chapter 37 ALVARADO FINDS THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD
Chapter 38 THE IRON CROSS
Chapter 39 THE CHRISTIANS IN THE TOILS
Chapter 40 THE IRON CROSS COMES BACK TO ITS GIVER
Chapter 41 TRULY WONDERFUL.-A FORTUNATE MAN HATH A MEMORY.
Chapter 42 HOW THE IRON CROSS CAME BACK
Chapter 43 THE LORD HUALPA FLEES HIS FORTUNE
Chapter 44 WHOM THE GODS DESTROY THEY FIRST MAKE MAD
Chapter 45 THE PUBLIC OPINION MAKES WAY
Chapter 46 THE 'TZIN'S FAREWELL TO QUETZAL'
Chapter 47 THE CELLS OF QUETZAL' AGAIN
Chapter 48 LOST IN THE OLD C .
Chapter 49 HOW THE HOLY MOTHER HELPS HER CHILDREN
Chapter 50 THE PABA'S ANGEL
Chapter 51 LIFE IN THE PABA'S WORLD
Chapter 52 THE ANGEL BECOMES A BEADSWOMAN
Chapter 53 THE HEART CAN BE WISER THAN THE HEAD
Chapter 54 THE CONQUEROR ON THE CAUSEWAY AGAIN
Chapter 55 LA VIRUELA
Chapter 56 MONTEZUMA A PROPHET.-HIS PROPHECY.
Chapter 57 HOW TO YIELD A CROWN
Chapter 58 IN THE LEAGUER
Chapter 59 IN THE LEAGUER YET
Chapter 60 THE BATTLE OF THE MANTAS
Chapter 61 OVER THE WALL,-INTO THE PALACE.
Chapter 62 THE WAY THROUGH THE WALL
Chapter 63 BATTLE IN THE AIR
Chapter 64 IN THE INTERVAL OF THE BATTLE-LOVE.
Chapter 65 THE BEGINNING OF THE END
Chapter 66 THE KING BEFORE HIS PEOPLE AGAIN
Chapter 67 THE DEATH OF MONTEZUMA
Chapter 68 ADIEU TO THE PALACE
Chapter 69 THE PURSUIT BEGINS.
Chapter 70 LA NOCHE TRISTE
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