5. B, represented with a gala mantle hanging down in front and with the copal pouch, is sitting on a head, which looks like his own, especially as to the eyes, but which notwithstanding probably belongs to D and is marked with Ik (wind) and Cauac (cumulus clouds). Of the hieroglyphs the first and second do not admit of positive identification, and the third is Kan-Imix.
6. The god is sitting on a mat in a house. All the hieroglyphs except his own are obliterated.
Pages 42a—44a.
Another Tonalamatl of the form of 10 × 26; I have restored the effaced day-signs as follows:—
| XIII | XIII | 3 | III | 2 | V | 2 | VII | 6 | XIII | 2 | II | 2 | IV | 2 | VI | 7 | XIII | |
| Oc | Cib | |||||||||||||||||
| Ik | Lamat | |||||||||||||||||
| Ix | Ahau | |||||||||||||||||
| Cimi | Eb | |||||||||||||||||
| Ezanab | Kan. | |||||||||||||||||
Thus the month days are the same as in the preceding Tonalamatl, but should be read in a different order:—Oc, Cib, Ik, Lamat, etc.
Here each of the 8 subdivisions has 6 hieroglyphs, and the order is as follows:—
| 1 | 2 | |
| 3 | 4 | |
| 5 | 6 | . |
A few of these signs are common to all the groups. Thus the first sign (v), as far as what remains is distinguishable, seems to occur in all the groups. It has the leaf-shaped prefix, but I cannot understand the rest of it; we shall find it again several times on pages 29c-41c.
Again the sign in the sixth place, as far as we can see, is always the head without an underjaw and the tuft of hair tied up on top of it (O, according to Schellhas), which we found above on page 25 and which we shall meet again on pages 65-69 no less than 13 times, with regular intervals of 6 signs between them. Indeed that passage is a remarkable parallel to this one.