[Anahuac by Edward Burnett Tylor]@TWC D-Link book
Anahuac

CHAPTER III
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Outside the pulque-shops are fresco-paintings, representing Aztec warriors carousing, and draining great bowls of pulque.

These were no specimens of Aztec art, however, but seemed to be copied (by some white or half-caste sign-painter, probably) from the French coloured engravings which represent the events of the Conquest.

These extraordinary works of art are to be seen everywhere in this country, where, of all places in the world, one would have thought that people would have noticed that the artist had not the faintest idea of what an Aztec was like, but supposed that his limbs and face and hair were like an European's.

Here, with the real Aztec standing underneath, the difference was striking enough.

One ought not to be too critical about these things, however, when one remembers the pictures of shepherds and shepherdesses that adorn our English farmhouses.


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