Montezuma's Daughter

Montezuma's Daughter, is a novel by the Victorian adventure writer H. Rider Haggard. Narrated in the first person by Thomas Wingfield, an Englishman whose adventures include having his mother murdered, a brush with the Spanish Inquisition, shipwreck, and slavery. Eventually, Thomas unwillingly joins a Spanish expedition to New Spain, and the novel tells a fictionalized story of the first interactions between the natives and European explorers. This includes a number of misunderstandings, prejudice on the part of the Spaniards, and ultimately open war.


By : H. Rider Haggard (1856 - 1925)

00 - Note And Dedications



01 - Chapter 1: Why Thomas Wingfield Tells His Tale



02 - Chapter 2: Of The Parentage Of Thomas Wingfield



03 - Chapter 3: The Coming Of The Spaniard



04 - Chapter 4: Thomas Tells His Love



05 - Chapter 5: Thomas Swears An Oath



06 - Chapter 6: Good-bye, Sweetheart



07 - Chapter 7: Andres De Fonseca



08 - Chapter 8: The Second Meeting



09 - Chapter 9: Thomas Becomes Rich



10 - Chapter 10: The Passing Of Isabella De Siguenza



11 - Chapter 11: The Loss Of The Carak



12 - Chapter 12: Thomas Comes To Shore



13 - Chapter 13: The Stone Of Sacrifice



14 - Chapter 14: The Saving Of Guatemoc



15 - Chapter 15: The Court Of Montezuma



16 - Chapter 16: Thomas Becomes A God



17 - Chapter 17: The Arising Of Papantzin



18 - Chapter 18: The Naming Of The Brides



19 - Chapter 19: The Four Goddesses



20 - Chapter 20: Otomie’s Counsel



21 - Chapter 21: The Kiss Of Love



22 - Chapter 22: The Triumph Of The Cross



23 - Chapter 23: Thomas Is Married



24 - Chapter 24: The Night Of Fear



25 - Chapter 25: The Burying Of Montezuma’s Treasure



26 - Chapter 26: The Crowning Of Guatemoc



27 - Chapter 27: The Fall Of Tenoctitlan



28 - Chapter 28: Thomas Is Doomed



29 - Chapter 29: De Garcia Speaks His Mind



30 - Chapter 30: The Escape



31 - Chapter 31: Otomie Pleads With Her People



32 - Chapter 32: The End Of Guatemoc



33 - Chapter 33: Isabella De Siguenza Is Avenged



34 - Chapter 34: The Siege Of The City Of Pines



35 - Chapter 35: The Last Sacrifice Of The Women Of The Otomie



36 - Chapter 36: The Surrender



37 - Chapter 37: Vengeance



38 - Chapter 38: Otomie’s Farewell



39 - Chapter 39: Thomas Comes Back From The Dead



40 - Chapter 40: Amen


Dedication
My dear Jebb,

Strange as were the adventures and escapes of Thomas Wingfield, once of this parish, whereof these pages tell, your own can almost equal them in these latter days, and, since a fellow feeling makes us kind, you at least they may move to a sigh of sympathy. Among many a distant land you know that in which he loved and fought, following vengeance and his fate, and by your side I saw its relics and its peoples, its volcans and its valleys. You know even where lies the treasure which, three centuries and more ago, he helped to bury, the countless treasure that an evil fortune held us back from seeking. Now the Indians have taken back their secret, and though many may search, none will lift the graven stone that seals it, nor shall the light of day shine again upon the golden head of Montezuma. So be it! The wealth which Cortes wept over, and his Spaniards sinned and died for, is for ever hidden yonder by the shores of the bitter lake whose waters gave up to you that ancient horror, the veritable and sleepless god of Sacrifice, of whom I would not rob you—and, for my part, I do not regret the loss.

What cannot be lost, what to me seem of more worth than the dead hero Guatemoc’s gems and jars of gold, are the memories of true friendship shown to us far away beneath the shadow of the Slumbering Woman, and it is in gratitude for these that I ask permission to set your name within a book which were it not for you would never have been written.

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