From: jraynor@minerva.cis.yale.edu (John Raynor (GD 1998)) Subject: Re: Pagan Statue Date: Tue, 14 Jun 1994 16:34:41 GMT Izzy (hxgzlanei@unl.ac.uk) wrote: > By Aztec standards the worship of Quetzecoatl was quite blood-free > as there was only one celebration involving blood sacrifices per > year. Other Gods (and Goddess?) 'received' victims at dozens of > celebrations per year. Izzy Indeed, the Aztec myth which explains why Quetzelcoatl was driven into "exile" in the first place is tied directly to his distaste for human sacrifice. It seems that, at one point in his career, Quetzelcoatl assumed human force, and preached a rather ascetic religion based upon restraint, regular severe penances, and personal purity - with relatively trivial sacrifices, such as snakes, flowers, and butterflies. Tezcatlipoca, the Obsidian Mirror, regarded this new religion as a threat, and assumed the form of a sorcerer. He tricked Quetzelcoatl into getting drunk, and then forced him look into his magic mirror. The image in the mirror was, of course, badly distorted (deformed and aged) and Quetzelcoatl, already shaken, fell rather badly from grace, so to speak, and was either driven out or fled in disgrace (he sailed away, to the east, aboard a raft made from living serpents). I'm not sure if I have all of the details right (I don't have a book of Aztec mythology with me as I write), but I know the general theme is right... - J. Raynor