Legends of the city of Mexico / collected by Thomas A. Janvier ; illustrated by Walter Appleton Clark.
- Thomas Allibone Janvier
- Date:
- 1910
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Legends of the city of Mexico / collected by Thomas A. Janvier ; illustrated by Walter Appleton Clark. Source: Wellcome Collection.
49/228 page 15
![LEGEND OF THE MULATA DE CORDOBA IT is well known, Serior, that this Mulata of Cordoba, being a very beautiful woman, was in close touch with the devil. She dwelt in Cordoba—the town not far from Vera Cruz, where coffee and very good mangos are grown —and she was bom so long ago that the very oldest man now living was not then alive. No one knew who was her father, or who was her mother, or where she came from. So she was called La Mulata de Cordoba—and that was all. One of the wonders of her was that the years passed her without marking her, and she never grew old. She led a very good life, helping every one who was in trouble, and giving food to the hungry ones; and she dressed in modest clothes simply, and always was most neat and clean. She was a very wicked witch—and beyond that nobody really knew anything about her at all. On the same day, and at the same hour, she [15]](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b31349043_0051.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


