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

CHAPTER VII
36/47

From the ruined Pyramid of Xochicalco.
(After Nebel.)] Above these bas-reliefs is a frieze between three and four feet high, with another sculptured panel repeated eight times on each side of the pyramid.

This remarkable sculpture represents a man sitting barefoot and crosslegged.

On his head is a kind of crown or helmet, with a plume of feathers; and from the front of this helmet there protrudes a serpent, just where in the Egyptian sculptures the royal basilisk is fixed on the crowns of kings and queens.

The eyes of this personage are protected by round plates with holes in the middle, held on by a strap round the head, like the coloured glasses used in the United States to keep off the glare of the sun, and known as "goggles." In front of this figure are sculptured a rabbit and some unintelligible ornaments or weapons.

"Rabbit" may have been his name.
The frieze is surmounted by a cornice; and above the cornice of the second storey enough remains to show that it was covered with reliefs, in the same way as the first There were five storeys originally: the others have only been destroyed about a century.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books