Page:The Conquest of Mexico Volume 1.djvu/221

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CHAPTER VI

Account of Montezuma—State of his Empire—Strange Prognostics—Embassy and Presents—Spanish Encampment

1519

WE must now take leave of the Spanish camp in the tierra caliente, and transport ourselves to the distant capital of Mexico, where no little sensation was excited by the arrival of the wonderful strangers on the coast. The Aztec throne was filled at that time by Montezuma the Second, nephew of the last, and grandson of a preceding monarch. He had A Stinging Insect
From in ancient MS.
been elected to the regal dignity in 1502, in preference to his brothers, for his superior qualifications, both as soldier and a priest,—a combination of offices sometimes found in the Mexican candidates, as it was, more frequently, in the Egyptian. In early youth he ad taken an active part in the wars of the empire, though of late he had devoted himself more exclusively to the services of the temple; and he was scrupulous his attentions to all the burdensome ceremonial of the Aztec worship. He maintained a grave and reserved demeanour, speaking little and with prudent deliberation. His deportment was well calculated inspire ideas of superior sanctity.1

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