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Haggard, H. Rider (Henry Rider), 1856-1925

"Montezuma's Daughter"

Oh! it was dreadful to see the farewells
that took place in that hour. Here a daughter clung to the neck of her
aged father, here husbands and wives bade each other a last farewell,
here mothers kissed their little children, and on every side rose up the
sounds of bitter agony, the agony of those who parted for ever. I buried
my face in my hands, wondering as I had often wondered before, how a God
whose name is Mercy can bear to look upon sights that break the hearts
of sinful men to witness.
Presently I raised my eyes and spoke to Otomie, who was at my side,
asking her if she would not send our son away with the others, passing
him off as the child of common people.
'Nay, husband,' she answered, 'it is better for him to die with us, than
to live as a slave of the Spaniards.'
At length it was over and the gates had shut behind the last of them.
Soon we heard the distant challenge of the Spanish sentries as they
perceived them, and the sounds of some shots followed by cries.
'Doubtless the Tlascalans are massacring them,' I said. But it was not
so. When a few had been killed the leaders of the Spaniards found that
they waged war upon an unarmed mob, made up for the most part of aged
people, women and children, and their commander, Bernal Diaz, a merciful
man if a rough one, ordered that the onslaught should cease.


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