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

CHAPTER VII
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There is a chief, dressed in a girdle, and with a head-dress of feathers just like those of the Red Indians of the north.

Below the girdle he terminates in a scroll.

In the middle of the group is what may perhaps be a palm-tree, with a rabbit at its foot.

Close to the tree, and reaching nearly to the same height, is a figure with a crocodile's head wearing a crown, and with drapery in parallel lines, like the wings of the creatures in the Assyrian bas-reliefs.

Indeed this may very likely be a conventional representation of the robes of feather-work so characteristic of Mexico.
[Illustration: SCULPTURED PANEL.


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