LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
| PAGE | |
|---|---|
| I Will Never Forget, | [Frontispiece] |
| Huetzin Wasted no Time, | [62] |
| The Blind Chieftain Placed His Hands, Etc., | [122] |
| The Figure of Topil the Chief Priest, | [170] |
| Sandoval Meets Tiata, | [176] |
| Sandoval Pulled up His Head, | [236] |
| Marina is Saved by the Tlascala Slaves, | [268] |
| This They Dragged from Its Pedestal, | [310] |
THE WHITE CONQUERORS:
A TALE OF TOLTEC AND AZTEC
CHAPTER I.
A CAPTIVE WARRIOR
Night had fallen on the island-city of Tenochtitlan, the capital of Anahuac, and the splendid metropolis of the Western world. The evening air was heavy with the scent of myriads of flowers which the Aztec people loved so well, and which their religion bade them cultivate in lavish profusion. From every quarter came the sounds of feasting, of laughter, and of music. The numerous canals of salt-water from the broad lake that washed the foundations of the city on all sides, were alive with darting canoes filled with gay parties of light-hearted revellers. In each canoe burned a torch of sweet-scented wood, that danced and flickered with the motions of the frail craft, its reflection broken by the ripples from hundreds of dipping paddles. Even far out on the placid bosom of the lake, amid the fairy-like chinampas, or tiny floating islands, the twinkling canoe-lights flitted like gorgeous fire-flies, paling the silver reflection of the stars with their more ruddy glow.