The Priest (Witch) Stone
• On the left side of this composition is a complex figure in a long pointed ("witch") hat with a band across it, in a cape or robe with sleeves, with a cross on the right shoulder/sleeve, holding a cross outright, right hand in front of the left hand. The lower torso and legs of this figure appear to represent a stack of blocks, a foundation, or a pedestal. (*Suspicion: though there are likely to be dozens of pronounced pointy landmarks in the area, this figure's hat reminds me of the
Weaver's Needle). (*Suspicion: if this figure is meant to portray a witch (Spanish
brujo/a), perhaps it is a play on the word
brújula "compass.")
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Here's an image of a cairn by
Richard Robinson - something like this may be what the "witch" figure refers to.
• At the base of this figure, on the bottom "block" are inscriptions. The only portion I can read (from the photos I used create this illustration) is the number
1847. Perhaps this is a date, perhaps not. This number is also repeated on the "
Heart Stone."
• Beneath the cross in the hands of the "witch" is a series of associated signs that create a curving line from the head of the cross to a set of letters and numbers near the bottom of the composition. A curved line
) appears to come from the head of the cross, followed below it by a ring
O, followed to the left by a rectangle with a cross in it (which looks like a reference to the back side of the
Heart Stone), followed to the left by another curved line
(, followed below by another ring
O, followed below and to the right by a heart with either a cross
† or a number
4 within the heart (which may be a portrayal of the
Stone Heart). (*Suspicion: at least part of this sequence may be instructions on how to fit the
Stone Heart into the heart-shaped recess in the
Heart Stone (see below); given that the
Heart Stone has a few different holes in it, maybe these rings
O and even the cross represent some now lost elements that also (physically) fit into this piece of the map.)
• Beneath this series of signs is the sequence
8-N-P or possibly
B-N-P.
• The text in the middle and upper right of the tablet says
ESTA BEREDA ES PELIGROZA or
Esta vereda es peligrosa "this path is dangerous." The second line reads
YO BOY 18 LUGARES or
Yo voy (a) 18 lugares "I go (to) 18 places/locations." The third line
BUSCA EL MAPA "seek the map." This is where an amateur making a fake could have made an easy mistake, by saying
la mapa instead of
el mapa. And the final line,
BUSCA EL COAZON [
sic] or
busca el corazón "seek the heart." This conjugation of the Spanish word
buscar "to search for, to seek" is a command form -
busca "(you must) seek." Though in this text we see a substitution of
B for what is usually
V in modern Spanish, (based on my own experience with Colonial Mexican documents) it is not uncommon to see this (semiliterate) spelling variation for the sound /v/, which is pronounced like a /b/ in many Spanish dialects; variation in the usage of
S and
Z is also common. The misspelling of
corazón may be an understandable typo - once the
A was rendered, looking similar to an
R, the author had overlooked the
R and moved-on to the
Z.
• Below the word
COAZON is an image of a heart with what appears to be an arrow pointing up to the word
COAZON. To the left of the heart is a
Ω-like sign that also appears on the
Horse Stone and the
Stone Heart. To the right of the stone is a faint/blurred
__M sign. Not included in this illustration is a blurred area to the right of the text, which may be the area where the names "Pedro" and "Miguel" are inscribed (the photos I used to make this illustration are quite blurry in this area).
• *Overall suspicions: this tablet refers to the assembly of the map (the
Stone Heart set into the
Heart Stone). The text tells us that "The path is dangerous, I go to 18 locations, seek the map, seek the heart." The idea of going to 18 locations could mean many things, however on the combined
Stone Heart-Heart Stone-Trail Map (see below) there appears to be 18 evenly-spaced trail markers along the trail to the treasure (see below), perhaps this "witch figure" represents a cairn trail marker - which would explain the "pedestal" appearance of the bottom half of the figure.