Aztec Creation Myth
Quetzalcoatl, the light one, and Tezcatlipoca, the dark one, looked
down from their place in the sky and saw only water below. A gigantic goddess
floated upon the waters, eating everything with her many mouths. The two gods
saw that whatever they created was eaten by this monster. They knew they must
stop her, so they transformed themselves into two huge serpents and descended
into the water. One of them grabbed the goddess by the arms while the other
grabbed her around the legs, and before she could resist they pulled until she
broke apart. Her head and shoulders became the earth and the lower part of her
body the sky. The other gods were angry at what the two had done and decided,
as compensation for her dismemberment, to allow her to provide the necessities
for people to survive; so from her hair they created trees, grass, and flowers;
caves, fountains, and wells from her eyes; rivers from her mouth; hills and
valleys from her nose; and mountains from her shoulders. Still the goddess was
often unhappy and the people could hear her crying in the night. They knew she
wept because of her thirst for human blood, and that she would not provide food
from the soil until she drank. So the gift of human hearts is given her. She
who provides sustenance for human lives demands human lives for her own sustenance.
So it has always been; so it will ever be.
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