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lowing assignment of parts of the body to the cardinal points: CHINESE. North Kidneys. West Lungs. South Heart. East Liver. Middle Stomach. Zenith ---- Nadir ---- Although it differs in detail, an analogous association of various parts of the body with the directions in space and the twenty calendar-signs, may be seen in a Mexican Codex. In this case, however, it is clear that the origin of this assignment was the natural association between the "complete finger-and-toe count=a complete man=20=with the 20 or complete count of the day signs." I have already produced evidences showing that the human figure was employed in primitive times to represent "a complete count, or 20 years." When chieftains were elected for a term of twenty years and their names were given to their period of office, the full-length portrait of the chief was sculptured on a stela and he thus represented, primarily, "a complete count," an epoch (see p. 221). Portraiture and accompanying inscriptions were obviously later developments, but the primitive employment of the human form as a means of expressing a fixed number, is one that claims consideration and will undoubtedly lead to a wider comprehension of the significance of the human form in aboriginal archaic sculpture. The curious conventionalized representations of Mictlantecuhtli, in which the body and limbs almost simulate a swastika, have already been discussed, as well as the inference that they symbolized Polaris and the four positions of Ursa Major=the Middle and Four Quarters. The most striking confirmation of this inference is furnished by Mr. Cushing's account that the Zunis associated the directions in space with the imaginary form of a quadruped as follows: ZUNI. North Right fore foot. West Left fore foot. South Right hind leg. East Left hind leg. Middle Heart. Zenith Head. Nadir Tail. It is obvious from this that, to a Zuni, the State and its subdivisions appear under the allegorical form of a quadruped and I have traced the identical mode of thought in Mexico and Central America(84) where, owing to linguistic associations, an ocelot is in some instances employed as a symbol for a State whilst in others the form of an eagle was adopted for the same purpose (see Appendix I). To sum up: in ancient America the human form was employed to represent qua
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