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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Chapter 7<br />

Were There Giants Then?<br />

Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

Just after six in the morning the little train jerked into motion and began<br />

its slow climb up the steep sides of the valley of Cuzco. The narrowgauge<br />

tracks were laid out in a series of Z shapes. We chugged along the<br />

lower horizontal of the first Z, then shunted and went backwards up the<br />

oblique, shunted again and went forward along the upper horizontal—<br />

and so on, with numerous stops and starts, following a route that<br />

eventually took us high above the ancient city. The Inca walls and colonial<br />

palaces, the narrow streets, the cathedral of Santo Domingo squatting<br />

atop the ruins of Viracocha’s temple, all looked spectral and surreal in<br />

the pearl-grey light of a dawn sky. A fairy pattern of electric lamps still<br />

decorated the streets, a thin mist seeped across the ground, and the<br />

smoke of domestic fires rose from the chimneys over the tiled roofs of<br />

countless small houses.<br />

Eventually the train turned its back on Cuzco and we proceeded for a<br />

while in a straight north-westerly direction towards our destination:<br />

Machu Picchu, the lost city of the Incas, some three hours and 130<br />

kilometres away. I had intended to read, but lulled by the rocking motion<br />

of the carriage, I dropped off to sleep instead. Fifty minutes later I awoke<br />

to find that we were passing through a painting. The foreground, brightly<br />

sunlit, consisted of flat green meadows sprinkled with little patches of<br />

thawing frost, distributed on either side of a stream across a long, wide<br />

valley.<br />

In the middle of my view, dotted with bushes, was a large field on which<br />

a handful of black and white dairy cows grazed. Nearby was a scattered<br />

settlement of houses outside which stood small, dark-skinned Quechua<br />

Indians dressed in ponchos, balaclavas and colourful woollen hats. More<br />

distant were slopes canopied in fir trees and exotic eucalyptus. My eye<br />

followed the rising contours of a pair of high green mountains, which<br />

then parted to reveal folded and even more lofty uplands. Beyond these<br />

soared a far horizon surmounted by a jagged range of radiant and snowy<br />

peaks.<br />

Casting down the giants<br />

It was with understandable reluctance that I turned at last to my reading.<br />

I wanted to look more closely at some of the curious links I thought I had<br />

identified connecting the sudden appearance of Viracocha to the deluge<br />

legends of the Incas and other Andean peoples.<br />

60

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