(. ' ' illit,;; !•' 1,1;, , !mii;t( ';•'';• TIE SPANIARDS THEIR COUNTRY. BY RICHARD FORD, AUTHOR OF THE HANDBOOK OF SPAIN. NEW EDITION, COMPLETE IN ONE VOLUME. NEW YORK: GEORGE P. PUTNAM, 155 BROADWAY. 1848. •X) f^iii -+- %■ HONOURABLE MRS. FORD, These pages, which she has been, so good as to peruse and approve of, are dedicated, in the hopes that other fair readers may follow her example, By her very affectionate Husband and Servant, Richard Ford. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. PAOK. A General View of Spain — Isolation — King of the Spains — Castilian Precedence— Localism — Want of Union — Admiration of Spain — M. Thiers in Spain , . 1 CHAPTER II. The Geography of Spain — Zones — Mountains — The Pyrenees — The Gabacho, and French Politics . ... 7 CHAPTER in. The Rivers of Spain — Bridges— Navigation — The Ebro and Tagus . 23 CHAPTER IV. Divisions into Provinces — Ancient Demarcations — Modern Depart- ments — Population — Revenue — Spanish Stocks .... 30 CHAPTER V. Travelling in Spain — Steamers— Roads, Roman, Monastic, and Royal — Modern Railway — English Speculations 40 CHAPTER VI. Post Office in Spain— Travelling with Post Horses— Riding post — Mails and Diligences, Galeras, Coches de DoUeras, Drivers and Manner of Driving, and Oaths 53 CHAPTER VII. SpanishHorsea— Mules— Asses— Muleteers— Maragatos ... 69 CONTENTS. CHAPTER VIII. PAGB. Riding Tour in Spain — Pleasures of it — Pedestrian Tour — Choice of Companions — Rules for a Riding Tour — Season of year — Day's journey — Management of Horse ; his Feet ; Shoes • General Hints 80 CHAPTER IX. The Rider's cos.tume — Alforjas : their contents — The Bota, and How to use it — Pig Skins and Borracha — Spanish Money — Onzas and smaller coins 94 CHAPTER X. Spanish Servants: their Character — Travelling Groom, Cook, and Valet ... ... . .105 CHAPTER XI. A Spanish Cook — Philosophy of Spanish Cuisine — Sauce — Difficulty of Commissariat — The Provend — Spanish Hares and Rabbits — The 011a — Garbanzos — Spanish Pigs — Bacon and Hams — Omelette — Salad and Gazpacho . . ... 119 CHAPTER XII. Drinks of Spain — Water — Irrigation — Fountains — Spanish Thirsti- ness — The Alcarraza — Water Carriers — Ablutions — Spanish Choc- olate — Agraz — Beer Lemonade 136 CHAPTER XIII. Spanish Wines — Spanish Indifference — Wine-making — Vins du Pays — Local Wines — Benicarlci — Valdepenas 146 CHAPTER XIV. Sherry Wines — The Sherry District — Origin of the Name — Varieties of Soil — Of Grapes — Pajarete — Rqjas Clemente — Cultivation of Vines — Best Vineyards — The Vintage — Amontillado — The Capataz — The Bodega — Sherry Wine — Arrope and Madre Vino — A lecture on Sherry in the Cellar— at the Table— Price of Fine Sherry— Fal- sification of Sherry — Manzanilla — The Alpistera . . . .161 CONTENTS. CHAPTER XV. PACK Spanish Inns: Why so Indifferent — The Fonda — Modern Improve- ments — The Posada — Spanish Innkeepers — The Venta : Arrival in it — Arrangement — Garlic — Dinner — Evening — Night — Bill — Iden- tity with the Inns of the Ancients 167 CHAPTER XVI. Spanish Robbers — A Robber Adventure — Guardias Civiles — Exag- geratedAccounts — Cross of the Murdered — Idle Robber Tales — French Bandittiphobia — Robber History — Guerrilleros — Smugglers — Jose Maria — Robbers of the First Class — The Ratero — Miguelites — Escorts and Escopeteros — Passes, Protections, and Talismans — Execution of a Robber 188 CHAPTER XVII. The Spanish Doctor : his Social Position — Medical Abuses — Hospitals — Medical Education — Lunatic Asylums— Foundling Hospital of Seville — Medical Pretensions — Dissection — Family Physician- Consultations — Medical Costume— Prescriptions — Druggists— Snake Broth— Salve for Knife-cuts 215 CHAPTER XVIII. Spanish Spiritual Remedies for the Body — Miraculous Relics — Sanative Oils — Philosophy of Relic Remedies — Midwifery and the Cinta of Tortosa— Bull of Crusade 239 CHAPTER XIX. The Spanish Figaro — Mustachios — Whiskers — Beards — Bleeding — Heraldic Blood — Blue, Red, and Black Blood — Figaro's Shop — The Baratero — Shaving and Toothdrawing . .... 259 CHAPTER XX. What to observe in Spain — How to observe — Spanish Incuriousness and Suspicions — French Spies and Plunderers — Sketching in Spain — Difficulties ; How surmounted — Efficacy of Passports and Bribes — Uncertainty and Want of Information in the Natives . . . 269 CHAPTER XXI. Origin of Bull-fight or Festival, and its Religious Character — Fiestas Reales — Royal Feasts — Charles I. at one — Discontinuance of the Old System — Sham Bull-fights— Plaza de Toros— Slang Lan- guage — Spanish Bulls — Breeds — The Going to a Bull-fight . . 290 CONTENTS. CHAPTER XXII. PASS. The Bull-fight — Opening of Spectacle — ^First Act, and Appearance of the Bull — The Picador — Bull Bastinado — The Horses, and their Cruel Treatment — Fire and Dogs — The Second Act — The Chulos and their Darts— The Third Act— The Matador— Death of the Bull — The Conclusion, and Philosophy of the Amusement — Its Effect on Ladies 305 CHAPTER XXIII. ' Spanish Theatre ; Old and Modern Drama ; Arrangement of Play- houses — The Henroost — The Fandango ; National Dances — A Gipsy Ball — Italian Opera — National Songs and Guitars .... 324 CHAPTER XXIV. Manufacture of Cigars — Tobacco — Smuggling via Gibraltar — Cigars of Ferdinand VII. — Making a Cigarrito — Zumalacarreguy and the Schoolmaster — Time and money wasted in smoking — Postscript on Spanish Stock 341 THE SPANIABDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. CHAPTER I. A general Tiew of Spain — Isolation — King of the Spains — Castilian pre- cedence — Localism — Want of Union — Admiration of Spain — M. Thiers in Spain. The kingdom of Spain, which looks so compact on the map, is composed of many distinct provinces, each of which in earlier times formed a separate and independent kingdom ; and although all are now united under one crown by marriage, inheritance, conquest, and other circumstances, the original distinctions, geo- graphical as well as social, remain almost unaltered. The lan- guage, costume, habits, and local character of the natives, vary no less than the climate and productions of the soil. The chains of mountains which intersect the whole peninsula, and the deep rivers which separate portions of it, have, for many years, operated as so many walls and moats, by cutting off intercommu- nication, and by fostering that tendency to isolation which must exist in all hilly countries, where good roads and bridges do not abound. As similar circumstances led the people of ancient Greece to split into small principalities, tribes and clans, so in Spain, man, following the example of the nature by which he is surrounded, has little in common with the inhabitant of the ad- joining district ; and these differences are increased and perpetu- ated by the ancient jealousies and inveterate dislikes, which petty and contiguous states keep up with such tenacious memory. The general comprehensive term " Spain," which is convenient for geographers and politicians, is calculated to mislead the traveller, PART I. 2 2 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. for it would be far from easy to predicate any single thing of Spain or Spaniards which will be equally applicable to all its heterogeneous component parts. The north-western provinces are more rainy than Devonshire, while the centre plains are more calcined ihan those of the Deserts of Arabia, and the littoral south or eastern coasts altogether Algerian. The rude agricultural Gallician, the industrious manufacturing artisan of Barcelona, the gay and voluptuous Andalucian, the sly vindictive Valencian, are as essentially different from each other as so many distinct characters at the same masquerade. It will therefore be more convenient to the traveller to take each province by itself and treat it in detail, keeping on the look-out for those peculiarities, those social and natural characteristics or idiosyn- cracies which particularly belong to each division, and distinguish it from its neighbors. The Spaniards who have written on their own geography and statistics, and who ought to be sup- posed to understand their own country and institutions the best, have found it advisable to adopt this arrangement from feeling the utter impossibility of treating Spain (where union is not unity) as a whole. There is no king of Spain ; among the infinity of king- doms, the list of which swells out the royal style, that of " Spain" is not found ; he is king of the Spains, Rex Hispaniarum, Eey de las Espanas, not " Eey de Epana.'" Philip II., called by his countrymen el prudente, the prudent, wishing to fuse down his heterogeneous subjects, was desirous after bis conquest of Por- tugal, which consolidated his dominion, to call himself King of Spain, which he then really was ; but this alteration of title was beyond the power of even his despotism ; such was the opposition of the kingdoms of Arragon and Navarre, which never gave up the hopes of shaking off the yoke of Castile, and recovering their former independence, while the empire provinces of New and Old Castile refused in anywise to compromise their claims of pre-eiTiinence. They from early times, as now, took the lead in national nomenclatures ; hence " Castellano," Castilian, is syno- nymous with Spaniard, and particularly with the proud genuine older-stock. " Castellano a las derechas, means a Spaniard to the backbone ; " Hahlar Castellano," to speak Castilian, is the correct expression for speaking the Spanish language. Spain LOCALISM OF SPANIARDS. again was long without the advantage of a fixed metropolis, like Rome, Paris, or London, which have been capitals from their foundation, and recognized and submitted to as such ; here, the cities of Leon, Burgos, Toledo, Seville, Valladolid, and others, have each in their turns been the capitals of the kingdom. This constant change and short-lived pre-eminence has weakened any- prescriptive superiority of one city over another, and has been a cause of national weakness by raising up rivalries and disputes about precedence, which is one of the most fertile sources of dissension among a punctilious people. In fact the king was the state, and wherever he fixed his head-quarters was the court, La Corte, a word still synonymous with Madrid, which now claims to be the only residence of the Sovereign — the residenz, as Germans would say ; otherwise, when compared with the cities above mentioned, it is a modern place ; from not having a bishop or cathedral, of which latter some older cities possess two, it has not even the rank of a ciudad, or city, but is merely de- nominated villa, or town. In moments of national danger it ex- ercises little influence over the Peninsula : at the same time, from being the seat of the court and government, and therefore the centre of patronage and fashion, it attracts from all parts those who wish to make their fortune ; yet the capital has a hold on the ambition rather than on the affections of the nation at large. The inhabitants of the different provinces think, indeed, that Madrid is the greatest and richest court in the world, but their hearts are in their native localities. " Mi paisano," my fellow- countryman, or rather my fellow-countyman, fellow-parishioner, does not mean Spaniard, but Andalucian, Catalonian, as the case may be. When a Spaniard is asked. Where do you come from ? the reply is, " Soy liijo de Murcia — Jiijo de Gra?iada," " I am a son of Murcia — a son of Granada," &c. This is strictly analo- gous to the " Children of Israel," the " Beni" of the Spanish Moors, and to this day the Arabs of Cairo call themselves chil- dren of that town, " Ihn el Musr,'' &c. ; and just as the Milesian Irishman is " a hoy from Tipperary," &c., and ready to fight with any one who is so also, against all who are not of that ilk ; similar too is the clanship of the Highlander ; indeed, every. where, not perhaps to the same extent as in Spain, the being of 4 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. the same province or town creates a powerful freemasonry ; the parties cling together like old school-fellows. It is a ho7ne and really binding feeling. To the spot of their birth all their recollec- tions, comparisons, and eulogies are turned ; nothing to them comes up to their particular province, that is, their real country. " La Patria," meaning Spain at large, is a subject of declama- tion, fine words, palahras — palaver, in which all, like Orien- tals, delight to indulge, and to which their grandiloquent idiom lends itself readily ; but their patriotism is parochial, and self is the centre of Spanish gravity. Like the German, they may sing and spout about Fatherland : in both cases the theory is splendid, but in practice each Spaniard thinks his own province or town the best in the Peninsula, and himself the finest fellow in it. From the earliest period down to the present all observers have been struck with this localism as a salient feature in the character of the Iberians, who never would amalgamate, never would, as Strabo said, put their shields together — never would sacrifice their own local private interest for the general good ; on the contrary, in the hour of need they had, as at present, a constant tendency to separate into distinct juntas, " collective" assemblies, each of which only thought of its own views, utterly indifferent to the in- jury thereby occasioned to what ought to have been the common cause of all. Common danger and interest scarcely can keep them together, the tendency of each being rather to repel than to attract the other : the common enemy once removed, they in- stantly fall to loggerheads among each other, especially if there be any spoil to be divided ; scarcely ever, as in the East, can the energy of one individual bind the loose staves by the iron power of a master mind ; remove the band, and the centrifugal mem- bers instantaneously disunite. Thus the virility and vitality of the noble people have been neutralized : they have, indeed, strong limbs and honest hearts ; but, as in the Oriental parable, " a head" is wanting to direct and govern : hence Spain is to-day, as it al- ways has been, a bundle of small bodies tied together by a rope of sand, and, being without union is also without strength, and has been beaten in detail. The much-used phrase Espanolismo expresses rather a " dislike of foreign dictation," and the " self-estimation" of Spaniards, Espanoles sohre todos, than any real patriotic love of ADMIRATION OF SPAIN. country, however highly they rate its excellences and superiority to eveiy other one under heaven : this opinion is condensed in one of those pithy proverbs which, nowhere more than in Spain, are the exponents of popular sentiment : it runs thus, — " Quien dice Espana, dice todo," which means, " Whoever says Spain, says everything." A foreigner may perhaps think this a trifle too comprehensive and exclusive ; but he will do well to express no doubts on the subject, since he will only be set down by every native as either jealous, envious or ignorant, and probably all three. To boast of Spain's strength, said the Duke of Wellington, is the national weakness. Every infinitesimal particle which con- stitutes nosotros, or ourselves, as Spaniards term themselves, will talk of his country as if the armies were still led to victory by the mighty Charles V., or the councils managed by Philip II. instead of Louis-Philippe. Fortunate, indeed, was it, according to a Castilian preacher, that the Pyrenees concealed Spain when the Wicked One tempted the Son of Man by an offer of all the king- doms of the world, and the glory of them. This, indeed, was predicated in the mediseval or dark ages, but few peninsular con- gregations, even in these enlightened times, would dispute the in- ference. It was but the other day that a foreigner was relating in a tertulia, or conversazione of Madrid, the well-known anecdote of Adam's revisit to the earth. The narrator explained how our first father on lighting in Italy was perplexed and taken aback ; how, on ci'ossing the Alps into Germany, he found nothing that he could understand — how matters got darker and stranger at Paris, until on his reaching England he was altogether lost, con- founded, and abroad, being unable to make out any thing. Spain was his next point, where, to his infinite satisfaction, he found himself quite at home, so little had things changed since his ab- sence, or indeed since the sun at its creation first shone over Toledo. The story concluded, a distinguished Spaniard, who was present, hurt perhaps at the somewhat protestant-dissenting tone of the speaker, gravely remarked, the rest of the party coin- ciding, — Si, Senor, y tenia razon ; la Espana es Paradiso — " Adam, Sir, was right, for Spain is paradise ;" and in many respects this worthy, zealous gentleman was not wrong, although THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. it is affirmed by some ol' hid countrymen that some portions of it are inhabited by persons not totally exempt from original sin ; thus the Valencians will say of their ravishing huerta, or garden, Es un paradiso halltado por demonios, — "It is an Eden peopled by subjects of his Satanic Majesty." Again, according to the natives, Murcia, a land overflowing with milk and honey, where Flora and Pomona dispute the prize with Ceres and Bacchus, possesses a cielo y suelo bueno, el entresuelo malo, has " a sky and soil that are good, while all between is indiiferent ;" which the entresol occupant must settle to his liking. Another little anecdote, like a straw thrown up in the air, will point out the direction in which the wind blows. Monsieur Thiers, the great historical romance writer, in his recent hand-gallop tour through the Peninsular, passed a few days only at Madrid ; his mind being, as logicians would say, of a subjective rather than an objective turn, that is, disposed rather to the consideration of the ego, and to things relating to self, than to those that do not, he scarcely looked more at any thing there, than he did during his similar run through London : " Behold," said the Spaniards, " that little gabacho ; he dares not remain, nor raise his eyes from the ground in tliis land, whose vast superiority wounds his personal and national vanity." There is nothing new in this. The old Castilian has an older saying : — Si Dios no fuese Dios, seria rey de las Espanas, y el de Francia su cocinero — " If God were not God, he would make himself king of the Spains, with him of France for his cook." Lope de Vega, without de- rogating one jot from these paradisiacal pretensions, used him of England better. His sonnet on the romantic trip to Madrid ran thus : — " Carlos Stuardo soy, due siendo amor mi guia Al cieh de Espaha voy, Por ver mi estrella Maria." " I am Charles Stuart, who, with love for my guide, hasten to the heaven Spain to see my star Mary." The Virgin, it must be remembered, after whom this infanta was named, is held by every Spaniard to be the brightest luminary, and the sole empress of heaven. GEOGRAPHY OF SPAIN. CHAPTER II. The Geography of Spain — Zones — Mountains — The Pyrenees — The Ga- bacho, and French Politics. From Spain being the most southern country in Europe, it is very natural that those who have never been there, and who in England criticise those who have, should imagine the climate to be even more delicious than that of Italy or Greece. This is far from being the fact ; some, indeed, of the sea coasts and sheltered plains in the S. and E. provinces are warm in winter, and ex- posed to an almost African sun in summer, but the N. and W. districts are damp and rainy for the greater part of the year, while the interior is either cold and cheerless, or sunburnt and wind-blown : winters have occurred at Madrid of such severity that sentinels have been frozen to death; and frequently all com- munication is suspended by the depth of the snow in the elevated roads over the mountain passes of the Castiles. All, therefore, who are about to travel through the Peninsula, are particularly cautioned to consider well their line of route beforehand, and to select certain portions to be visited at certain seasons, and thus avoid every local disadvantage. One glance at a map of Europe will convey a clearer notion of the relative position of Spain in regard to other countries than pages of letter- pi'ess : this is an advantage which every school- boy possesses over the Plinys and Strabos of antiquity ; the an- cients were content to compare the shape of the Peninsula to that of a bull's hide, nor was the comparison ill chosen in some re- spects. We will not weary readers with details of latitude and longitude, but just mention that the whole superficies of the Pe- ninsula, including Portugal, contains upwards of 19,000 square leagues, of which somewhat more than 15,500 belong to Spain; it is thus almost twice as large as the British Islands, and only 8 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. one-tenth smaller than France ; the circumference or coast-line is estimated at 750 leagues. This compact and isolated territory, inhabited by a fine, hardy, warlike population, ought therefore, to have rivalled France in military power, while its position be- tween those two great seas which command the commerce of the old and new world, its indented line of coast, abounding in bays and harbors, offered every advantage of vying with England in maritime enterprise. Nature has provided commensurate outlets for the infinite pro- ductions of a country which is rich alike in everything that is to be found either on the face or in the bowels of the earth ; for the mines and quarries abound with precious metals and marbles, from gold to iron, from the agate to coal, while a fertile soil and every possible variety of climate admit of unlimited cultivation of the natural productions of the temperate or tropical zones : thus in the province of Granada the sugar-cane and cotton-tree luxuriate at the base of ranges which are covered with eternal snow : a w^ide range is thus afforded to the botanist, who may ascend by zones, through every variety of vegetable strata, from the hothouse plant growing wild, to the hardiest lichen. It has, indeed, required the utmost ingenuity and bad government of man to neutralize the prodigality of advantages which Provi- dence has lavished on this highly-favored land, and which, wliile under the dominion of the Romans and Moors, resembled an Eden, a garden of plenty and delight, when in the words of an old author, there was nothing idle, nothing barren in Spain — "nihil otiosum, nihil sterile in Hispania." A sad change has come over this fair vision, and now the bulk of the Peninsula offers a picture of neglect and desolation, moral and physical, which it is painful to contemplate : the face of nature and the mind of man have too often been dwarfed and curtailed of their fair proportions ; they have either been neglected and their in- herent fertility allowed to run into vice and luxuriant weeds, which it will show against any country in the world, or their energies have been misdirected, and a capability of all good con- verted into an element equally powerful for evil ; but pride and laziness are here as everywhere the keys to poverty, aUivez y pereza, llaves de pobreza. CLIMATE AND ELEVATION OF SPAIN. 9 The geological construction of Spain is very peculiar, and unlike that of most other countries ; it is almost one mountain or agglomeration of mountains, as those of our countrymen who are speculating in Spanish railroads are just beginning to discover. The interior rises on every side from the sea, and the central portions are higher than any other table-lands in Europe, ranging on an average from two to three thousand feet above the level of the sea, while from this elevated plain chains of mountains rise again to a still greater height. Madrid, which stands on this central plateau, is situated about 2000 feet above the level of Naples, which lies in the same latitude ; the mean temperature of Madrid is 50°, while that of Naples is 63° 30' ; it is to this difference of elevation that the extraordinary difference of cli- mate and vegetable productions between the two capitals is to be ascribed. Fruits which flourish on the coasts of Provence and Genoa, which lie four degrees more to the north than any por- tion of Spain, are rarely to be met with in the elevated interior of the Peninsula : on the other hand, the low and sunny mari- time belts abound with productions of a tropical vegetation. The mountainous character and general aspect of the coast are nearly analogous throughout the circuit which extends from the Basque Provinces to Cape Finisterre : and offer a remarkable contrast to those sunny alluvial plains which extend, more or less, from Cadiz to Barcelona, and which closely resemble each other in vegetable productions, such as the fig, orange, pomegranate, aloe, and carob tree, which grow everywhere in profusion, except in those parts where the mountains come down abruptly into the sea itself. Again, the central districts, composed of vast plains and steppes, Parameras, Tierras de campo, y Secanos, closely resemble each other in their monotonous denuded aspect, in their scarcity of fruit and timber, and their abundance of cereal productions. Spanish geographers have divided the Peninsula into severx distinct chains of mountains. These commence with the Pyre- nees and end with the Boetican or Andalucian ranges : these Cordilleras, or lines of lofty ridges, arise on each side of inter- vening plains, which once formed the basins of internal lakes, until the accumulated waters, by bursting through the obstruc- 2* 10 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. tions by which they were dammed up, found a passage to the ocean : the dip or inclination of the country lies from the east towards the west, and, accordingly, the chief rivers which form the drains and principal water- sheds of the greater parts of the surface, flow into the Atlantic : their courses, like the basins through which they pass, lie in a transversal and almost a parallel direction ; thus the Duero, the Tagus, the Guadiana, and the Guadalquivir, all flow into their recipient between their distinct chains of mountains. The sources of the supply to these leading arteries arise in the longitudinal range of elevations which descends all through the Peninsula, approaching rather to the eastern than to the western coast, whereby a considerably greater length is obtained by each of these four rivers, when compared to the Ebro, which disembogues in the Mediter- ranean. The Moorish geographer Alrasi was the first to take diflerence of climate as the rule of dividing the Peninsula into distinct portions ; and modern authorities, carrying out this idea, have drawn an imaginary line, which runs north-east to south-west, thus separating the Peninsula into the northern, or the boreal and temperate, and the southern or the torrid, and subdividing these two into four zones : nor is this division altogether fanciful, for there is no caprice or mistake in tests derived from the vegetable world ; manners may make man, but the sun alone modifies the plant : man may be fused down by social appliances into one uniform mass, but the rude elements are not to be civilized, nor can nature be made cosmopolitan, which heaven forfend. The first or northern zone is the Cantabrian, the European ; this portion skirts the base of the Pyrenees, and includes portions of Catalonia, AiTagon, and Navarre, the Basque provinces, the Asturias, and Gallicia. This is the region of humidity, and as the winters are long, and the springs and autumns rainy, it should only be visited in the summer. It is a country of hill and dale, is intersected by numerous streams which abound in fish, and which irrigate rich meadows for pastures. The valleys form the now improving dairy country of Spain while the mountains furnish the most valuable and available timber of the ZONES OF SPAIN. Peninsula. In some parts corn will scarcely ripen, while in others, in addition to the cerealia, cider and an ordinary wine are produced. It is inhabited by a hardy, independent, and rarely subdued population, since the mountainous country offers natural means of defence to brave highlanders. It is useless to attempt the conquest with a small army, while a large one would find no means of support in the hungry localities. Tlie second zone is the Iberian or eastern, which, in its mari- time portions, is more Asiatic than European, and where the lower classes partake of the Greek and Carthaginian character, being false, cruel, and treacherous, yet lively, ingenious, and fond of pleasure ; this portion commences at Burgos, and includes the southern portion of Catalonia and Arragon, with parts of Castile, Valencia, and Murcia. The sea-coasts should be visited in the spring and autumn, when they are delicious : but they are in- tensely hot in the summer, and infested with myriads of mus- kitoes. The districts about Burgos are among the coldest in Spain, and the thermometer sinks very much below the ordinary average of our more temperate clinnate ; and as they have little at any time to attract the traveller, he will do well to avoid them except during the summer months. The population is grave, sober, and Castilian. The elevation is very considerable ; thus the upper valley of the Miiio and some of the north-western por- tions of old Castile and Leon are placed more than 6000 feet above the level of the sea, and the frosts often last for three months at a time. The third zone is the Lusitanian, or western, which is by far the largest, and includes the central parts of Spain and all Por- tugal. The interior of this portion, and especially the provinces of the two Castiles and La Mancha, both in the physical condition of the soil and the moral qualities of the inhabitants, presents a very unfavorable view of the Peninsula, as these inland steppes are burnt up by summer suns, and are tempest and wind-rent during winter. The general absence of trees, hedges, and en- closures exposes these wide unprotected plains to the rage and violence of the elements : poverty-stricken mud houses, scattered here and there in the desolate extent, afford a wretched home to a poor, proud, and ignorant population ; but these localities, which 12 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. offer in themselves neither pleasure nor profit to the stranger, contain many sites and cities of the highest interest, which none who wish to understand Spain can possibly pass by unnoticed. The best periods for visiting this portion of Spain are May and June, or September and October. The more western districts of this Lusitanian zone are not so disagreeable. There in the uplands the ilex and chesnut abound, while the rich plains produce vast harvests of corn, and the vine- yards powerful red wines. The central table-land, which closely resembles the plateau of Mexico, forms nearly one-half of the entire area of the Peninsula. The peculiarity of the climate is its dryness ; it is not, however, unhealthy, being free from the agues and fevers which are prevalent in the lower plains, river-swamps, and rice-grounds of parts of Valencia and Andalucia. Rain, indeed, is so comparatively scarce on this table-land, that the annual quantity on an average does not amount to more than ten inches. The least quantity falls in the mountain regions near Guadalupe, and on the high plains of Cuenca and Murcia, where sometimes eight or nine months pass without a drop fall- ing. The occasional thunder-storms do but just lay the dust, since here moisture dries up quicker even than woman's tears. The face of the earth is tanned, tawny, and baked into a verit- able terra cotta : everything seems dead and burnt on a funeral pile. It is all but a miracle how the principle of life in the green herb is preserved, since the very grass appears scorched and dead ; yet when once the rains set in, vegetation springs up, phoenix-like, from the ashes, and bursts forth in an inconceivable luxuriance and life. The ripe seeds which have fallen on the soil are called into existence, carpeting the desert with verdure, gladdening the eye with flowers, and intoxicating the senses with perfume. The thirsty chinky dry earth drinks in these genial showers, and then rising like a giant refreslied with wine, puts forth all its strength ; and what vegetation is, where moisture is combined with great heat, cannot even be guessed at in lands of stinted suns. The periods of rains are the winter and spring, and when these are plentiful, all kinds of grain* and in many places wines, are produced in abundance. The olive, however, is only to be met with in a few favored localities. GEOGRAPHY OF SPAIN. The fourth zone is the Bcetican, which is the most southern and African ; it coasts the Mediterranean, basking at the foot of the mountains which rise behind and form the mass of the Peninsula : this mural barrier offers a sure protection against the cold winds which sweep across the central region. Nothing can be more striking than the descent from the table elevations into these maritime strips ; in a few hours the face of nature is completely- changed, and the traveller passes from the climate and vegeta- tion of Europe into that of Africa. This region is characterized by a dry burning atmosphere during a large part of the year. The winters are short and temperate, and consist rather in rain than in cold, for in the sunny valleys ice is scarcely known ex- cept for eating ; the springs and autumns delightful beyond all conception. Much of the cultivation depends on artificial irriga- tion, which was carried by the Moors to the highest perfection : indeed water, under this forcing, vivifying sun, is the blood of the earth, and synonymous with fertility : the pz'oductions are tropical ; sugar, cotton, rice, the orange, lemon, and date. The algarrobo, the carob tree, and the adelfa, the oleander, may be considered as forming boundary marks between this, the tierra caliente, or torrid district, and the colder regions by which it is encompassed. Such are the geographical divisions of nature with which the vegetable and animal productions are closely connected ; and we shall presently enter somewhat more fully into the climate of Spain, of which the natives are as proud as if they had made it themselves. This Boetican zone, Andalucia, which contains in itself many of the most interesting cities, sites, and natural beauties of the Peninsula, will always take precedence in any plan of the traveller, and each of these points has its own peculiar attractions. These embrace a wide range of varied scenery and objects ; and Andalucia, easy of access, may be gone over almost at every portion of the year. The winters may be spent at Cadiz, Seville, or Malaga ; the summers in the cool mountains of Ronda, Aracena, or Granada. April, May, and June, or September, October, and November, are, however, the most preferable. Those who go in the spring should reserve June for the moun- tains J those who go in the autumn should reverse the plan, and 14 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. commence with Ronda and Granada, ending with Seville and Cadiz. Spain, it has thus been shown, is one mountain, or rather a jumble of mountains — for the principal and secondary ranges are all more or less connected with each other, and descend in a ser- pentising direction throughout the Peninsula, with a general in- clination to the west. Nature, by thus dislocating the country, seems to have suggested, nay, almost to have forced, localism and isolation to the inhabitants, who each in their valleys and districts are shut off from their neighbors, whom to love, they are enjoined in vain. The internal communication of the Peninsula, which is thus divided by the mountain-walls, is effected by some good roads, few and far between, and which are carried over the most conve- nient points, where the natural dips are the lowest, and the ascents and descents the most practicable. These passes are called Pu- ertos — portce,, or gates. There are, indeed, mule-tracks and goat- paths over other and intermediate portions of the chain, but they are. difficult and dangerous, and being seldom provided with ventas or villages, are fitter for smugglers and bandits than honest men ; the farthest and fairest way about will always be found the best and shortest road. The Spanish mountains in general have a dreary and harsh character, yet not without a certain desolate sublimity ; the high- est are frequently capped with snow, which glistens in the clear sky. They are rarely clad with forest trees ; the scarped and denuded ridges cut with a serrated outline the clean clear blue sky. The granitic masses soar above the green valley or yellow corn-plains in solitary state, like the castles of a feudal baron, that lord it over all belov/, with which they are too proud to have aught in common. These mountains are seen to greatest advan- tage at the rise and setting of the sun, for during the day the ver- tical rays destroy all form by removing shadows. These geographical peculiarities of Spain, and particularly the existence of the great central elevation, when once attained are apt to be forgotten. The country rises from the coast, directly in the north-western provinces, and in some of the southern and eastern, with an intervening alluvial strip and swell ; but when THE PYRENEES. once the ascent is accomplished, no real descent ever takes place — we are then on the summit of a vast elevated mass. The roads indeed ap'parenily ascend and descend, but the mean height is seldom diminished : the interior hills or plains are undulations of one mountain. The traveller is often deceived at the apparent low level of snow-clad ranges, such as the Guadarrama ; this will be accounted for by adding the great elevation of their bases above the level of the sea. The palace of the Escorial, which is placed at the foot of the Guadarrama, and at the head of a seem- ing plain, stands in reality at 272.5 feet above Valencia, while the summer residence of the king at ha Granja, in the same chain, is thirty feet higher than the summit of Vesuvius. This, indeed, is a castle in the air — a chateau en Espagne, and worthy of the most German potentate to whom that element belongs, as the sea does to Britannia, The mean temperature on the plateau of Spain is as 15° Reaumur, while thatof the coast is as 18° and 19°, in addition to the protection from cutting winds which their moun- tainous backgrounds afford ; nor is the traveller less deceived as regards the heights of the interior mountains than he is with the champaigns or table-land plains. The eye wanders over a vast level extent bounded only by the horizon, or a faint blue line of other distant sierras ; this space, which appears one townless level, is intersected with deep ravines, iarrancos, in which villages lie concealed, and streams, arroyos, flow uuperceived. Another im- portant effect of this central elevation is the searching dryness and rarification of the air. It is often highly prejudicial to strangers ; the least exposure, which is very tempting under a burning sun, will often bring on ophthalmia, irritable colics, and inflammatory diseases of the lungs and vital organs. Such are the causes of the puhiionia, which carries off the invalid in a few days, and is the disease of Madrid. The frozen blasts descending from the snow-clad Guadarrama catch the incautious passenger at the turn- ing of streets which are roasting under a fierce sun. Is it to be wondered at, that this capital should be so very insalubrious ? in winter you are frozen alive, in summer baked. A man taking a walk for the benefit of his health, crosses with his pores open from an oven to an ice-house ; catch-cold introduces the Spanish doc- tor, who soon in his turn presents the undertaker. 16 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. As the Pyrenees possess an European interest at this moment, when the Napoleon of Peace proposes to annihilate their existence, which defied Louis XIV. and Buonaparte, some details may not be unacceptable. This gigantic barrier, which divides Spain and France, is connected with the dorsal chain which comes down from Tartary and Asia. It stretches far beyond the transversal spine, for the mountains of the Basque Provinces, Asturias and Gallicia, are its continuation. The Pyrenees, properly speaking, extend E. to W., in length about 270 miles, being both broadest and highest in the central portions, where the width is about 60 miles, and the elevations exceed 11,000 feet. The spurs and offsets of this great transversal spine penetrate on both sides into the lateral valleys like ribs from a back-bone. The central nuo- leus slopes gradually E. to the gentle Mediterranean, and W. to the fierce Atlantic, in a long uneven swell. This range of mountains was called by the Romans Monies and Saltus Pyrenei, and by the Greeks IIv^ip'i], probably from a local Iberian word, but which they, as usual, catching at sound, not sense, connected with their Uvo, and then bolstered up their erroneous derivation by a legend framed to fit the name, assert- ing that it either alluded to a fire through which certain precious metals were discovered, or because the lofty summits were often struck with lightning, and dislocated by the volcanos. Accord- ing to the Iberians, Hercules, when on his way to " lift" Ger- yon's cattle, was hospitably received by Bebryx, a petty ruler in these mountains ; whereupon the demigod got drunk, and rav- ished his host's daughter Pyrene, who died of grief, when Her- cules, sad and sober, made the whole range re-echo with her name ; a legend which, like some others in Spain, requires con- firmation, for the Phoenicians called these ranges Purani from the forests, Pura meaning wood in Hebrew. The Basques have, of course, their etymology, some saying that the real root is Bin, an elevation, while others prefer jBiem enac, the "two countries," which, separated by the range, were ruled by Tubal ; but when Spaniards once begin with Tubal, the best plan is to shut the book. The Maledeta is the loftiest peak, although the Pico del Me- diodia and the Canigii, because rising at once out of plains and THE GABACHO. therefore having the greatest apparent altitudes, were long con- sidered to be the highest ; but now these French usurpers are dethroned. Seen from a distance, the range appears to be one mountain-ridge, with broken pinnacles, but, in fact, it consists of two distinct lines, which are parallel, but not continuous. The one which commences at the ocean is the most forward, being at least 30 miles more in advance towards the south than the cor- responding line, which commences from the Mediterranean. The centre is the point of dislocation, and here the ramifications and reticulations are the most intricate, as it is the key-stone of the sysHfem, which is buttressed up by Las Tres Sorellas, the three sisters Monte Perdido, Cylindro, and Marhore. Here is the source of the Garonne, La Garono ; here the scenery is the grandest, and the lateral valleys the longest and widest. The smaller spurs enclose valleys, down each of which pours a stream : thus the Ebro, Garona, and Bidasoa ai'e fed from the mountain source. These tributaries are generally called in France Gaves,* and in some parts on the Spanish side Gabas ; but Gav signifies a " river," and may be traced in our Avon ; and Humboldt derives it from the Basque Gav, a " hollow or * The word Gahaoho^ which is the most offensive vitui^erative of the Spaniard against the Frenchman, and has by some been thought to mean " those who dwell on Gaves," is the Arabic Cabach^ detestable, filthy, or, " qui prava indole est, moribusque." In fact the real meaning cannot be further alluded to beyond referring to the clever tale of El Frances y Espaiiol, by duevedo. The antipathy to the Gaul is natural and national, and dates far beyond history. This nickname was first given in the eighth century, when Charlemagne, the Buonaparte of his day, invaded Spain, on the abdication and cession of the crown by the chaste Alonso, the prototype of the wittol Charles IV. : then the Spanish Moors and Christians, foes and friends, for- got their hatreds of creeds in the greater loathing for the abhorred intruder, whose " peerage fell " in the memorable passes of Roncesvalles. The true derivation of the word Gabacho^ which now resounds from these Pyrenees to the Straits, is blinked in the royal academical dictionary, such was the ser- vile adulation of the members to their French patron Philip V. Mueraii los Gabachos, " Death to the miscreants," was the rally cry of Spain after the inhuman butcheries of the terrorist Murat ; nor have the echoes died awUy ; a spark may kindle the prepared mine : of what an unspeakable value is a national war-cry which at once gives to a whole people a shibboleth, a rallying watch- word to a common cause ! Vox populi vox Dei. 18 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. ravine ;" cavus. The parting of these waters, or their flowing down either N. or S., should naturally mark the line of division between France and Spain : such, however, is not the case, as part of Cerdana belongs to France, while Aran belongs to Spain ; thus each country possesses a key in its neighbor's territory. It is singular that this obvious inconvenience should not have been remedied by some exchange when the long disputed boundary, question was settled between Charles IV. and the French re- »public. Most of the passes over this Alpine barrier are impracticable for carriages, and remain much in the same state as in the time of the Moors, who from them called the Pyrenean range ATbori, from the Roman PortcB, the ridge of " gates." Many of the wild passes are only known to the natives and smuggler.s, and are often impracticable from the snow ; while even in summer they are dangerous, being exposed to mists and the hurricanes of mighty rushing winds. The two best carriageable lines of inter- communication are placed at each extremity : that to the west passes through Irun ; that to the east through Figueras. The Spanish Pyrenees offer fev/ attractions to the lovers of the fleshly comforts of cities ; but the scenery, sporting, geology, and botany are truly Alpine, and will -well repay those who can " rough it " considerably. The contrast which the unfrequented Spanish side offers to the crowded opposite one is great. In Spain the mountains themselves are less abrupt, less covered with snow, while the numerous and much frequented baths in the French Pyrenees have created roads, diligences, hotels, tables-d'hote, cooks, Ciceronis, donkeys, and so forth ; for the Badauds de Paris who babble about green fields and des belles horreurs, but who seldom go beyond the immediate vicinity and hackneyed " lions." A want of good taste and real perception of the sublime and beautiful is nowhere more striking, says Mr. Erskine Mur- ray, than on the French side, where mankind remains profoundly lignorant of the real beauties of the Pyrenees, which have been 'chiefly explored by the English, who love nature with all their jheart and soul, who worship her alike in her shyest retreats and in her wildest forms. Nevertheless, on the north side many com- I forts and appliances for the tourist are to be had j nay, invalids FRENCH POLICY. and ladies in search of the picturesque can ascend to the Brdche de Roland. Once, however, cross the frontier, and a sudden change comes over all facilities of locomotion. Stern is the first welcome of the "hard land of Iberia," scarce is the food for body or mind, and deficient the accommodation for man or beast, and simply because there is small demand for either. No Spaniard ever comes here for pleasure ; hence the localities are given up to the smuggler and izard. The Oriental insesthetic iucuriousness for things, old stones, wild scenery, &c., is increased by political reasons and fear. The neighbor, from the time of the Celt down to to-day, has ever been the coveter, ravager, and terror of Spain : her " knavish tricks," fire and rapine are too numerous to be blinked or written away, too atrocious to be forgiven : to revenge becomes a sacred duty. However governments may change, the policy of France is im- mutable. Perfidy, backed by violence, " ruse doublee de force," is the state maxim from Louis XIV. and Buonaparte down to Louis-Philippe : the principle is the same, whether the instru- ment employed be the sword or wedding ring. The weaker Spain is thus linked in the embrace of her stronger neighbor, and has been made alternately her dupe and victim, and degraded into becoming a mere satellite, to be dragged along by fiery Mars. France has forced her to share all her bad fortune, but never has permitted her to participate in her success. Spain has been tied to the car of her defeats, but never has been allowed to mount it in the day of triumph. Her friendship has always tended to dena- tionalize Spain, and by entailing the forced enmity of England, has caused to her the loss of her navies and colonies in the new world. " The Pyrenean boundary," says the Duke of Wellington, " is the most vulnerable frontier of France, probably the only vulne- rable one ;" accordingly she has always endeavored to dismantle the Spanish defences and to foster insurrections and pronunciami- enios in Catalonia, for Spain's infirmity is her opportunity, and therefore the " sound policy" of the rest of Europe is to see Spain strong, independent, and able to hold her own Pyrenean key. While France, therefore, has improved her means of approach and invasion, Spain, to whom the past is prophetic of the future. 20 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. has raised obstacles, and has left her protecting barrier as broken and hungry as when planned by her tutelar divinity. Nor are her highlanders more practicable than their granite fastnesses. Here dwell the smuggler, the rifle sportsman, and all who defy the law : here is bred the hardy peasant, who, accustomed to scale mountains and fight wolves, becomes a ready raw material for the guerrilleros, and none were ever more formidable to Rome or France than those marshalled in these glens by Sertorius and Mina. When the tocsin bell rings out, a hornet swarm of armed men, the weed of the hills, starts up from every rock and brake. The hatred of the Frenchman, which the Duke said formed " part of a Spaniard's nature," seems to increase in intensity in propor- tion to vicinity, for as they touch, so they fret and rub each other : here it is the antipathy of an antithesis ; the incompatibility of the saturnine and slow with the mercurial and rapid ; of the proud, enduring, and ascetic against the vain, the fickle, and sen- sual ; of the enemy of innovation and change, to the lover of variety and novelty ; and however tyrants and tricksters may assert in the gilded galleries of Versailles that // n'y a plus de Pyrenees, this party-wall of Alps, this barrier of snow and hurri- cane, does and will exist for ever ; placed there by Providence, as was said by the Gothic prelate Saint Isidore, they ever have forbidden and ever will forbid the banns of an unnatural alliance, as in the days of Silius Italicus : " Pyrene celsa. nimbosi verticis arce Divisos Celtis late prospectat Hiberos Atque ffiterna tenet magnis divortia terris." If the eagle of Buonaparte could never build in the Arragonese Sierra, the lily of the Bourbon assuredly will not take root in the Castilian plain ; so sings Ariosto : * " Che noD lice Che '1 giglio in quel terreno habbia radice !" This inveterate condition either of pronounced hostility, or at best of armed neutrality, has long rendered these localities dis- agreeable to the man of the,; note-book. The rugged mountain frontiers consist of a series of secluded districts, which constitute the entire world to the natives, who seldom go beyond the natural \ THE PYRENEES. walls by which they are bounded, except to smuggle. This vo- cation is the curse of the country ; ii fosters a wild reliance on self-defence, a habit of border foray and insurrection, which seems as necessary to them as a moral excitement and combustible ele- ment, as carbon and hydrogen are in their physical bodies. Their habitual suspicion against prying foreigners, which is an Oriental and Iberian instinct, converts a curious traveller into a spy or partisan. Spanish authorities, who seldom do these things except on compulsion, cannot understand the gratuitous braving of hard- ship and danger for its own sake — the botanizing and geologizing, &c., of the nature and adventure-loving English. The iinperii- nente curioso may possibly escape observation in a Spanish city and crowd, but in these lonely hills it is out of the question : he is the observed of all observers ; and they, from long smuggling and sporting habits, are always on the look-out, and are keen- sighted as hawks, gipseys, and beasts of prey. Latterly some, who, by being placed immediately under the French boundary, have seen the glitter of our tourists' coin, have become more hu- manized, and anxious to obtain a share in the profits of the season. The geology and botany have yet to be properly investigated. In the metal-pregnant Pyrenees rude forges of iron abound, but every thing is conducted on a small, unscientific scale, and pro- bably after the unchanged primitive Iberian system. Fuel is scarce, and transport of ores on muleback expensive. The iron is at once inferior to the English and much dearer : the tools and implements used on both sides of the Pyrenees are at least a century behind ours ; while absurd tariffs, which prevent the Importation of a cheaper and better article, retard improve- ments in agriculture and manufactures, and perpetuate poverty and ignorance among backward, half-civilized populations. The timber, moreover, has suffered much from the usual neglect, waste and improvidence of the natives, who destroy more than they consume, and never replant. The sporting in these lonely wild districts is excellent, for where man seldom penetrates the ferae naturse multiply : the bear is, however, getting scarce, as a premium is placed on every head destroyed. The grand object is the Cabra Montanez, or Rupicapra, German Steinbock, the Bouquetin of the French, the Izard (Ibex, becco, bouc, bock, 22 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. buck). The fascination of this pursuit, like that of the Chamois in Switzerland, leads to constant and even fatal accidents, as this shy animal lurks in almost inaccessible localities, and must be stalked with the nicest skill. The sporting on the north side is far inferior, as the cooks of the table-d'hotes have waged a guerra al cucMllo, a war to the knife, and fork too, against even Us petits oiseaux ; but your French artiste persecutes even minnows, as all sport and fair play is scouted, and everything gives way for the pot. The Spaniards, less mechanical and gastronomic, leave the feathered and finny tribes in comparative peace. Ac- cordingly the streams abound with trout, and those which flow into the Atlantic with salmon. The lofty Pyrenees are not only alem- bics of cool crystal streams, but contain, like the heart of Sappho, sources of warm springs under a bosom of snow. The most celebrated issue on the north side, or at least those which are the most known and frequented, for the Spaniard is a small bather, and no great drinker of medical waters. Accommodations at the baths on this side scarcely exist, while even those in France are paltry when compared to the spas of Germany, and dirty and indecent when contrasted with those of England. The scenery is alpine, a jumble of mountain, precipice, glacier, and forest, enlivened by the cataract or hurricane. The natives, when not smugglers or guerrilleros, are rude, simple, and pastoral : they are poor and picturesque, as people are who dwell in mountains. Plains which produce " bread-stuffs" may be richer, but what can a traveller or painter do with their monotonous commonplace ? In these wild tracts the highlanders in summer lead their flocks up to mountain huts and dwell with their cattle, strug- gling against poverty and wild beasts, and endeavoring really to keep the wolf from the door ; their watch-dogs are magnificent ; the sheep are under admirable control — being, as it were, in the presence of the enemy, they know the voice of their shepherds, or rather the peculiar whistle and cry : their wool is largely smug- gled into France, and when manufactured in the shape of coarse cloth is then re-smuggled back again. THE RIVERS OF SPAIN. 23 CHAPTER III. The Rivers of Spain — Bridges — Navigation — The Ebro and Tagus. There are six great rivers in Spain, — the arteries whicli run betw^een the seven mountain chains, the vertebrse of the geologi- cal skeleton. These water-sheds are each intersected in their extent by others on a minor scale, by valleys and indentations, in each of which runs its own stream. Thus the rains and melted snows are all collected in an infinity of ramifications, and are car- ried by these tributary conduits into one of the main trunks, which all, with the exception of the Ebro, empty themselves into the Atlantic. The Duero and Tagus, unfortunately for Spain, disembogue in Portugal, and thus become a portion of a foreign dominion exactly where their commercial importance is the great- est. Philip II. saw the true value of the possession of an angle which rounded Spain, and insured to her the possession of these valuable outlets of internal produce, and inlets for external com- merce. Portugal annexed to Spain gave more real power to his throne than the dominion of entire continents across the Atlantic, and is the secret object of every Spanish government's ambition. The Miiio, which is the shortest of these rivers, runs through a bosom of fertility. The Tajo, Tagus, which the fancy of poets has sanded with gold and embanked with roses, tracks much of its dreary way through rocks and comparative barrenness. The Chiadiana creeps through lonely Estremadura, infecting the low plains with miasma. The Guadalquivir eats out its deep banks amid the sunny olive-clad regions of Andalucia, as the Ebro divides the levels of Arragon. Spain abounds with brackish streams, Salados, and with salt-mines, or saline deposits after the evaporation of the sea- waters ; indeed, the soil of the central por- tions is so strongly impregnated with " villainous saltpetre," that the small province of La Mancha alone could furnish materials 24 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. to blow up the world ; the surface of these regions, always arid, is every day becoming more so, from the singular antipathy which the inhabitants of the interior have against trees. There is nothing to check the power of rapid evaporation, no shelter to protect or preserve moisture. The soil becomes more and more parched and dried up, insomuch that in some parts it has almost ceased to be available for cultivation : another serious evil, which arises from want of plantations, is, that the slopes of hills are everywhere liable to constant denudation of soil after heavy- rain. There is nothing to break the descent of the water ; hence the naked, barren stone summits of many of the sierras, which have been pared and peeled of every particle capable of nourish- ing vegetation : they are skeletons where life is extinct ; not only is the soil thus lost, but the detritus washed down either forms bars at the mouths of rivers, or chokes up and raises their beds ; they are thus rendered liable to overflow their banks, and convert the adjoining plains into pestilential swamps. The supply of water, which is affbi'ded by periodical rains, and which ought to support the reservoirs of rivers, is carried off at once in violent floods, rather than in a gentle gradual disembocation. From its mountainous character Spain has very few lakes, as the fall is too considerable to allow water to accumulate ; the exceptions which do exist might with greater propriety be termed lochs — not that they are to be compared in size or beauty to some of those in Scotland. The volume in the principal rivers of Spain has di- minished, and is diminishing ; thus some which once were navi- gable, are so no longer, while the artificial canals which were to have been substituted remain unfinished : the progress of deterior- ation advances, while little is done to counteract or amend what every year must render more difficult and expensive, while the means of repair and correction will diminish in equal proportion, from the poverty occasioned by the evil, and by the fearful extent which it will be allowed to attain. However, several grand water- companies have been lately formed, who are to dig Artesian wells, finish canals, navigate rivers with steamers, and issue shares at a premium, which will be effected if nothing else is. Tiie rivers which are really adapted to navigation are, however, only those which are pe^rpetually fed by those tributary streams SPANISH BRIDGES. 25 that flow down from mountains which are covered with snow all the year, and these are not many. The majority of Spanish rivers are very scanty of water during the summer time, and very rapid in their flow when filled by rains or melting snow : during these periods they are impracticable for boats. They are, moi'eover, much exhausted by being drained off", sangrado — that is, bled, for the purposes of artificial irrigation ; thus, at Madrid and Valencia, the wide beds of the Manzanares and the Turia are frequently dry as the sands of the seashore when the tide is out. They seem only to be entitled to be called rivers by courtesy, because they have so many and such splendid bridges ; as numerous are the jokes cut by the newly-arrived stranger, who advises the townsfolk to sell one of them to pur- chase water, or compares their thirsting arches to the rich man in torments, who prays for one drop ; but a heavy rain in the moun- tains soon shows the necessity for their strength and length, for their wide and lofty arches, their buttress-like piers, which be- fore had appeared to be rather the freaks of architectural mag- nificence than the works of public utility. Those who live in a comparatively level country can scarcely form an idea of the rapidity and fearful destruction of the river inundations in this land of mountains. The deluge rolls forth in an avalanche, the rising water coming down tier above tier like a flight of steps let loose. These tides carry everything before them — scarring and gullying up the earth, tearing down rocks, trees, and houses, and strewing far and wide the relics of ruin ; but the fierce fury is short-lived, and is spent in its own violence ; thus the traveller at Madrid, if he wishes to see its Thames, should run down or take the 'bus as he can, when it rains, or the river will be gone before he gets there. When the Spaniards, under those block- heads Blake and Cuesta, lost the battle of Rio Seco, which gave Madrid to Buonaparte, the French soldiers, in crossing the dry river bed in pursuit of the fugitives, exclaimed — " Why, Spanish rivers run away too !" Many of these beds serve in remote districts, where highways and bridges are thought to be superfluous luxuries, for the double purposes of a river when there is water in them, and as a road when there is not. Again, in this land of anomalies, some PART I. 3 26 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. streams have no bridges, while other bridges have no streams ; the most remarkable of these po7ite^ asinorum is at Coria, where the Alagon is crossed at an inconvenient, and often dangerous ferry, while a noble bridge of five arches stands high and dry in tlie meadows close by. This has arisen from the river having quitted its old channel in some inundation ; or, as Spaniards say, salido de su madre, gone out from its mother, who does not seem to know that it is out, or certainly does not care, since no steps have ever been taken by the Corians to coax it back again under its old arches ; the)?^ call on Hercules to turn this Alpheus, and rely in the meantime on their proverb, that all fickle, unfaithful rivers repent and return to their legitimate beds after a thousand years, for nothing is hurried in Spain, Despues de anos mil, vuelve el rio a su cuhil. On the fishing in these wandering streams we shall presently say something. The navigation of Spanish rivers is Oriental, classical, and im- perfect ; the boats, barges, and bargemen carry one back beyond the mediaeval ages, and are better calculated for artistical than commercial purposes. The " great river," the Guadalquivir, which was navigable»in the time of the Romans as far as Cor- dova, is now scarcely practicable for sailing-vessels of a mode- rate size even up to Seville. Passengers, however, have facilities afforded them by the steamers which run backwards and for- wards between this capital and Cadiz ; these conveniences, it need not be said, were introduced from England, although the first steamer that ever paddled in waters was of Spanish inven- tion, and was launched at Barcelona in 1543 ; but the Spanish Chancellor of the Exchequer of the time was a poor red tapist, and opposed the whole thing, which, as usual, fell to the ground. The steamers on the Guadalquivir are safe ; indeed, in our times, the advertisements always stated that a mass was said before starting in the heretical contrivance, just as to this day Birming- ham locomotives, when a railway is first opened in France, are sprinkled with holy water, and blessed by a bishop, which may be a new " wrinkle" to Mr. Hudson and the primate of York. There is considerable talk in Arragon about rendering the Ebro navigable, and it has been surveyed this year, by two en- gineers — English of course. The local neAvspapei's compared THE TAGUS. 27 the astonishment of the herns and peasantry, created on the banks by this arrival, as second only to that occasioned when Don Quixote and Sancho ventured near the same spot into the en- chanted bark. There has been still older and greater talk about establishing a water communication between Lisbon and Toledo, by means of the Tagus. This mighty river, which is in every body's mouth, because the capital of the kingdom of Port wine is placed at its embouchure, is in fact almost as little known in Spain and out of it, as the Niger. It has been our fate to behold it in many places and various phases of its most poetical and picturesque course — first green and arrowy amid the yellow cornfields of New Castile ; then freshening the sweet Tempe of Aranjuez, clothing the gardens with verdure, and filling the nightingale- tenanted glens with groves ; then boiling and rushing around the granite ravines of rock-built Toledo, hurrying to escape from the cold shadows of its deep prison, and dashing joyously into light and liberty, to wander far away into silent plains, and on to Talavera, where its waters were dyed with brave blood, and gladly reflected the flash of the victorious bayonets of England, — triumphantly it rolls thence, under the shattered arches of Almaraz, down to desolate Estremadura, in a stream as tranquil as the azure sky by which it is curtained, yet powerful enough to force the mountains at Alcantara. There the bridge of Trajan is worth going a hundred miles to see ; it stems the now fierce condensed stream, and ties the rocky gorges together ; grand, simple, and solid, tinted by the tender colors of seventeen centu- ries, it looms like the grey skeleton of Roman power, with all the sentiment of loneliness, magnitude, and the interest of the past and present. Such are the glorious scenes we have beheld and sketch- ed ; such are the sweet waters in which we have refreshed our dusty and weary limbs. How stern, solemn, and striking is this Tagus of Spain ! No commerce has ever made it its highway — no English steamer has ever civilized its waters like those of France and Germany. Its rocks have witnessed battles, not peace ; have reflected castles and dungeons, not quays or warehouses : few cities have risen on its banks, as on those of the Thames and Rhine j it is truly a 28 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. river of Spain — that isolated and solitary land. Its waters are without boats, its banks without life ; man has never laid his hand upon its billows, nor enslaved their free and independent gambols. It is impossible to read Tom Campbell's admirable description of the Danube before its poetry was discharged by the smoke of our ubiquitous countrymen's Dampf Schifif, without applying his lines to this uncivilized Tagus : — " Yet have I loved thy ■wild abode, Unknown, unploughed, untrodden shore, Where scarce the woodman finds a road, And scarce the fisher plies an oar ; For man's neglect I love thee more, That art nor avarice intrude To tame thy torrent's thunder shock, Or pi'une the vintage of thy rock, Magnificently rude !" As rivers in a state of nature are somewhat scarce in Great Britain, one more extract may be perhaps pardoned, and the more as it tends to illustrate Spanish character, and explain las cosas de Espana, or the things of Spain, which it is the object of these hum- ble pages to accomplish. The Tagus rises in that extraordinary jumble of mountains, full of fossil bones, botany, and trout, that rise between Cuenca and Teruel, and which being all but unknown, clamor loudly for the disciples of Isaac Walton and Dr. Buckland. It disembogues into the sea at Lisbon, having flowed 375 miles in Spain, of which nature destined it to be the aorta. The Toledan chroniclers deme the name from Tagus, fifth king of Iberia, but Bochart traces it to Dag, Dagon, a fish, as besides being considered au- riferous, the ancients pronounced it to be piscatory. Not that the present Spaniards trouble their head more about the fishes here than if they were crocodiles. Grains of gold are indeed found, but barely enough to support a poet, by amphibious pau- pers, called artesilleros from their baskets, in which they collect the sand, which is passed through a sieve. The Tagus might easily be made navigable to the sea, and then with the Xarama connect Madrid and Lisbon, and facilitate importation of colonial produce, and exportation of wine and NAVIGATION OF THE TAGUS. grain. Such an act vvould confer more benefits upon Spain than ten thousand charters or paper constitutions, guaranteed by the sword of Narvaez, or the word and honor of Louis-Philippe. The performance has been contemplated by manj foreigners, the Toledans looking lazily on ; thus in 1581, Antonelli, a Neapo- litan, and Juanelo Turriano, a Milanese, suggested the scheme to Philip II., then master of Portugal ; but money was wanting — the old story — for his revenues were wasted in relic-removing and in building the useless Escorial, and nothing was made except water parties, and odes to the " wise and great king" who was to perform the deed, to the tune of Macbeth's witches, " Til do, ril do, ril do," for here the future is preferred to the present tense. The project dozed until 1641, when two other foreigners, Julio Martelli and Luigi Carduchi, in vain roused Philip IV. from his siesta, who soon after losing Portugal itself, forthwith forgot the Tagus. Another century glided away, when in 1755 Richard Wall, an Irishman, took the thing up ; but Charles III., busy in waging French wars against England, wanted cash. The Tagus has ever since, as it roared over its rocky bed, like an unbroken barb, laughed at the Toledan who dreamily angles for impossibilities on the bank, invoking Brunei, Hercules, and Rothschild, instead of putting his own shoulder to the water- wheel. In 1808 the scheme was revived: F"- Xavier de Ca- banas, Avho had studied in England our system of canals, pub- lished a survey of the v/hole river; this folio ' Memoria sohre la Navigacion del Tajo,' or, ' Memoir on the Navigation of the Tagus,' Madrid, 1829, reads like the blue book of one dis- covering the source of the Nile, so desert-like are the unpeopled, uncultivated districts between Toledo and Abrantes. Ferd. VII. thereupon issued an approving paper decree, and so there the thing ended, although Cabanas had engaged with Messrs. Wallis and Mason for the machinery, &c. Recently the project has been re- newed by Seiior Bermudez de Castro, an intelligent gentleman, who, from long residence in England, has imbibed the schemes and energy of the foreigner. Veremos ! " we shall see ;" for hope is a good breakfast but a bad supper, says Bacon ; and in Spain things are begun late in the day, and never finished ; so at least says the proverb : — En Espana se empieza tarde, y se acaia nunca. THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. CHAPTER IV. Divisions into Provinces — Ancient Demarcations — Modern Departments — Population — Revenue — Spanish. Stoclis. In the divisions of the Peninsula which are effected by moun- tains, rivers, and climate, a leading principle is to be traced throughout, for it is laid down by the unerring hand of nature. The artificial, political, and conventional arrangement into king- doms and provinces is entirely the work of accident and absence of design. These provincial divisions were formed by the gradual union of many smaller and previously independent portions, which have been taken into Spain as a whole, just as our inconvenient coun- ties constitute the kingdom of England ; for the inconveniences of these results of the ebb and flow of the different tides in the affairs of man's dominion — these boundaries not fixed by the lines and rules of theodolite-armed land surveyors, use had provided remedies, and long habit had reconciled the inhabitants to divis- ions which suited them better than any new arrangement, how- ever scientifically calculated, according to statistical and geo- graphical principles. The French during their intrusive rule, were horrified at this " chaos administratif," this apparent irregularity, and introduced their own system of d^partements, by which districts were neatly squared out and people re-arranged, as if Spain were a chess- board and Spaniards mere pawns — peones, or footmen, which this people, calling itself one of caballeros, that is riders on horses par excellence, assuredly is not : nor, indeed, in this paradise of the church militant, can the moves of any Spanish bishop or knight be calculated on with mathematical certainty, since they seldom will take the steps lo-morrow which they did yesterday. Accordingly, however specious the theory, it was found to be PROVINCES. no easy matter to carry departementalization out in practice : indi- viduality laughs at the solemn nonsense of in-door pedants, who would class men like ferns or shells. The failure in this attempt to remodel ancient demarcations and recombine antipathetic popu- lations was utter and complete. No sooner, therefore, had the Duke cleared the Peninsula of doptrinaires and invaders than the Lion of Castile shook off their papers from his mane, and reverted like the Italian, on whom the same experiment was tried, to his own pre-existing divisions, which, however defective in theory, and unsightly and inconvenient on the map, had from long habit been found practically to suit better. Recently, in spite of this experience among other newfangled transpyrenean reforms, inno- vations, and botherations, the Peninsula has again been parcelled out into forty-nine provinces, instead of the former national divis- ions of thirteen kingdoms, principalities, and lordships ; but long will it be before these deeply impressed divisions, which have grown with the growth of the monarchy, and are engraved in the retentive memories of the people, can be effaced. Those who are curious in statistical details are referred to the works of Paez, Antillon, and others, who are considered by Span- iards to be authorities on vast subjects, which are fitter for a gaz- etteer or a handbook than for volumes destined like these for lighter reading ; and assuredly the pages of the respectable Span- iards just named are duller than the high-roads of Castile, which no tiny rivulet the cheerful companion of the dusty road ever freshens, no stray flower adorns, no song of birds gladdens — " dry as the r mainder of the biscuit after the voyage." The thirteen divisions have grand and historical names ; they belong to an old and monarchical country, not to a spick and span vulgar democracy, without title-deeds. They fill the mouth when namedj and conjure up a thousand recollections of the better and more glorious times of Spain's palmy power, when there were giants in the land, not pigmies in Parisian paletots, whose only ambition is to ape the foreigner, and disgrace and denationalize themselves. First and foremost Andalucia presents herself, crowned with a quadruple, not a triple tiara, for the name los cuatro reinos, " the four kingdoms," is her synonym. They consist of those of Se- 32 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. ville, Cordova, Jaen, and Granada. There is magic and birdlime in the very letters. Secondly advances the kingdom of Murcia, vi^ith its silver-mines, barilla and palms. Then the gentle king- dom of Valencia appears, all smiles, with fruits and silk. The principality of grim and truculent Catalonia scowls next on its fair neighbor. Here rises the smoky factory chimney; here cotton is spun, vice and discontent bred, and revolutions con- cocted. The proud and stifl'-necked kingdom of Arragon marches to the west with this Lancashire of Spain, and to the east with the kingdom of Navarre, which crouches with its green valleys under the Pyrenees. The three Basque Provinces which abut thereto, are only called El Senorio, " The Lordship," for the king of all the Spains is but simple lord of this free highland home of the unconquered descendants of the aboriginal man of the Peninsula. Here there is much talk of bullocks and fueros, or "privileges;" for when not digging and delving, these gentle- men by the mere fact of being born here, are fighting and up- holding their good rights by the sword. The empire province of the Castiles furnishes two coronets to the royal brow ; to wit, that of the older portion, where the young monarchy was nursed, and that of the newer portion, which was wrested afterwards from the infidel Moor. The ninth division is desolate Estremadura, which has no higher title than a province, and is peopled by locusts, wandering sheep, pigs, and here and there by human bipeds. Leon, a most time-honored kingdom, stretches higher up, with its corn-plains and venerable cities, now silent as tombs, but in auld lang syne the scenes of mediceval chivalry and romance. The kingdom of Gajlicia and the principality of the Asiurias form the seaboard to the west, and constitute Spain's breakwater against the Atlantic. It is not very easy to ascertain the exact population of any country, much less that of one which does not yet possess the advantages of public registrars ; the people at large, for whom, strange to say, the pleasant studies of statistical and political economy have small charms, consider any attempt to number them as boding no good ; they have a well-grounded apprehension of ulterior objects. To "number the people " was a crime in the East, and many moral and practical difficulties exist in arri- POPULATION. 33 ving at a true census of Spain. Thus, while some writers on statistics hope to flatter the powers that be, by a glowing exagger- ation of national strength, " to boast of which," says the Duke, " is the national weakness," the suspicious many, on the other hand, are disposed to conceal and diminish the truth. We should be always on our guard when we hear accounts of the past or present population, commerce, or revenue of Spain. The better classes will magnify them both, for the credit of their country ; the poorer, on the other hand, will appeal ad misericordiam, by representing matters as even worse than they really are. They never afford any opening, however indirect, to information which may lead to poll-taxes and conscriptions. The population and the revenue have generally been exagge- rated, and all statements may be much discounted ; the present population, at an approximate calculation, may be taken at about eleven or twelve millions, with a slow tendency to increase. This is a low figure for so large a country, and for one which, under the Romans, is said to have swarmed with inhabitants as busy and industrious as ants ; indeed, the longest period of rest and settled government which this ill-fated land has ever en- joyed was during the three centuries that the Roman power was undisputed. The Peninsula is then seldom mentioned by au- thors ; and how much happiness is inferred by that silence, when the blood-spattered page of history was chiefly employed to regis- ter great calamities, plagues, pestilences, wars, battles, or the freaks of men, at which angels weep ! Certainly one of the causes which have changed this happy state of things, has been the numerous and fierce invasions to which Spain has been ex- posed ; fatal to her has been her gift of beauty and wealth, which has ever attracted the foreign ravisher and spoiler. The Goths, to whom a worse name has been ' given than they deserved in Spain, were ousted by the Moors, the real and wholesale destroy- ers; bringing to the darkling West the luxuries, arts and sci- ences of the bright East, they had nothing to learn from the con- quered ; to them the Goth was no instructor, as the Roman had been to him ; they despised both of their predecessors, with whose wants and works they had no sympathy, while they ab- horred their creed as idolatrous and polytheistic — down went al- 34 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. tar and image. There was no fair town which they did not des- troy ; they exterminated, say their annals, the fowls of the air. The Gotho-Spaniard in process of time retaliated, and com- bated the invader with his own weapons, bettering indeed the destructive lesson which was taught. The effects of these wars, carried on without treaty, without quarter, and waged for coun- try and creed, are evident in those parts of Spain which were their theatre. Thus, vast portions of Estremadura, the south of Toledo and Andalucia, by nature some of the richest and most fertile in the world, are now dehesas y despoblados, depopulated wastes, abandoned to the wild bee for his heritage ; the country remains as it was left after the discomfiture of the Moor. The early chronicles of both Spaniard and Moslem teem with accounts of the annual forays inflicted on each other, and to which a fron- tier-district was always exposed. The object of these border guerrilla-warfares was extinction, talar, quemar y rohar, to deso- late, burn, and rob, to cut down fruit-trees, to " harry," to " raz- zia."* The internecine struggle was that of rival nations and creeds. It was truly Oriental, and such as Ezekiel, who well knew the Phoenicians, has described : " Go ye after him through the city and smite ; let not your eye have pity, neither have ye pity ; slay utterly old and young, both maids and little children and women." The religious duty of smiting the infidel precluded mercy on both sides alike, for the Christian foray and crusade was the exact coun- terpart of the Moslem algara and algiliad ; while, from military reasons, everything was turned into a desert, in order to create a frontier Edom of starvation, a defensive glacis, through which no invading army could pass and live ; the " beasts of the field alone increased." Nature, thus abandoned, resumed her rights, and has cast off every trace of former cultivation ; and districts the granai'ies of the Roman and the Moor, now offer the saddest con- trasts to that former prosperity and industry. To these horrors succeeded the thinning occasioned by causes of a bigoted and political nature : the expulsion of the Jews * Razzia is derived from the Arabic Al ghazia, a word whicli expresses these raids of a ferocious, barbarous age. It has been introduced to Eu- ropean dictionaries by the Pelissiers, who thus civilize Algeria. They make a solitude, and call it peace. BUONAPARTE'S INVASION. deprived poor Spain of her bankers, while the final banishment of the Moriscoes, the remnant of the Moors, robbed the soil of its best and most industrious agriculturists. Again, in our time, have the fatal scenes of contending Chris- tian and Moor been renewed in the struggle for national independ- ence, waged by Spaniards against the Buonapartist invaders, by Avhom neither age nor sex was spared — neither things sacred nor profane ; the land is everywhere scarred with ruins ; a few hours' Vandalism sufficed to undo the works of ages of piety, wealth, learning and good taste. The French retreat was worse than their advance : then, infuriated by disgrace and disaster, the Soults and Massenas vented their spite on the unarmed villagers and their cottages. But let General Foy describe their progress : — " Ainsi que la neige precipitee des sommets des Alpes dans les vallons, nos armees innombrables detruisaient en quelques heures, par leur seul passage, les ressources de toute une contree ; elles bivouaquaient habituellement, et a chaque gite nos soldats demo- lissaient les maisons baties depuis un demi-siecle, pour construire avec les decombres ces longs villages alignes qui souvent ne devaient durer qu'un jour : au defaut du bois des forets les arbres fruitiers, les vegetaux precieux, comme le murier, I'olivier, I'oranger, servaient a les rechauffer ; les conscrits irrites a la fois par le besoin et par le danger contractaient une ivresse morale dont nous ne cherchions pas a les guerir." "So France gets drunk with blood to vomit crime, And fatal ever have her saturnalia been." Who can fail to compare this habitual practice of Buonaparte's legions with the terrible description in Hosea of the " great people and strong" who execute the dread judgments of heaven ? — " A fire devoureth before them, and behind them a flame burneth ; the land is the garden of Eden before them, and behind them a desolate wilderness, yea, and nothing shall escape them." No sooner were they beaten out by the Duke, than population began to spring up again, as the bruised flowrets do when the iron heel of marching hordes has passed on. Then ensued the civil fratricide wars, draining the land of its males, from which bleeding Spain has not yet recovered. Insecurity of property 36 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. and person will ever prove bars to marriage and increased popu- lation. Again, a deeper and more permanent curse has steadily oper- ated for the last two centuries, at which Spanish authors long have not dared to hint. They have ascribed the depopulation oi' Estremadura to the swarm of colonist adventurers and emigrants who departed from this province of Cortez and Pizarro to seek for fortune in the new world of gold and silver ; and have attrib- uted the similar want of inhabitants in Andalucia to the similar outpouring from Cadiz, which, with Seville, engrossed the traffic of the Americas. But colonization never thins a vigorous, well- conditioned mother state — witness the rapid and daily increase of population in our own island, which, like Tyre of old, is ever sending forth her outpouring myriads, and wafts to the uttermost parts of the sea, on the white wings of her merchant fleets, the blessings of peace, religion, liberty, order, and civilization, to dis- seminate which is the mission of Great Britain. The real permanent and standing cause of Spain's thinly peo- pled state, want of cultivation, and abomination of desolation, is Bad Government, civil and religious ; this all who run may read in her lonely land and silent towns. But Spain, if the anecdote which her children love to tell be true, will never be able to re- move the incubus of this fertile origin of every evil. When Fer- dinand III. captured Seville and died, being a saint he escaped purgatory, and Santiago presented him to the Virgin, who forth- with desired him to ask any favors for beloved Spain. The mon- arch petitioned for oil, wine, and corn — conceded ; for sunny skies, brave men, and pretty women — allowed ; for cigars, relics, garlic, and bulls — by all means ; for a good government — " Nay, nay," said the Virgin, " that never can be granted ; for were it bestowed, not an angel would remain a day longer in heaven." ■^ The present revenue may be taken at about 12,000,000/. or 13,000,000/. sterling ; but money is compared by Spaniards to oil ; a little will stick to the fingers of those who measure it out ; and such is the robbing and jobbing, the official mystification and peculation, that it is difficult to get at facts whenever cash is in question. The revenue, moreover, is badly collected, and at a ruinous per centage, and at no time during this last century has THE BOLSA. been sufficient for the national expenses. Recourse has been had to the desperate experiments of usurious loans and wholesale con- fiscations. At one time church pillage and appropriation was al- most the only item in the governmental budget. The recipients were ready to " prove from Vatel exceedingly well" that the first duty of a rich clergy was to relieve the necessitous, and the more when the State was a pauper ; croziers are no match for bayonets. This system necessarily cannot last. Since the reign of Philip II. every act of dishonesty has been perpetrated. Public securi- ties have been " repudiated," interest unpaid, and principal spunged out. No country in the Old World, or even New drab- coated World, stands lower in financial discredit. Let all be aware how they embark in Spanish speculations : however pro- mising in the prospectus, they will, sooner or later, turn out to be deceptions ; and whether they assume the form of loans, lands, or rails, none are real securities : they are mere castles in the air, chateaux en Espagne : " The earth has bubbles as the water has, and these are of them." For the benefit and information of those who have purchased Iberian stock, it may be stated that an exchange, or Bolsa de Comercio, was established at Madrid in 1831. It may be called the coldest spot in the hot capital, and the idlest, since the usual " city article" is short and sweet, " sin operaciones," or nothing has been bought or sold. It might be likened to a tomb, with " Here lies Spanish credit " for its epitaph. If there be a thing which "La perjide Albion," "a nation of shopkeepers," dislikes, worse even than a French assignat, it is a bankrupt. One cir- cumstance is clear, that Castilian pundonor, or point of honor, will rather settle its debts with cold iron and warm abuse than with gold and thanks. The Exchange at Madrid was first held at St. Martin's, a saint who divided his cloak with a supplicant. As comparisons are odious, and bad examples catching, it has been recently removed to the Calle del Desengaiio, the street of " finding out fallacious hopes," a locality which the bitten will not deem ill-chosen. As all men in power use their official knowledge in taking ad- vantage of the turn of the market, the Bolsa divides with the court and army the moving influence of every situacion or crisis of the 38 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. moment: clever as are the ministers of Paris, they are mere tyros when compared to their colleagues of Madrid in the arts of working the telegraph, gazette, (fee, and thereby feathering their own nests. The Stock Exchange is open from ten to three o'clock, where those who like Spanish funds may buy them as cheap as stinking mackerel ; for when the 3 per cents, of perfidious Albion are at 98, surely Spanish fives at 2*2 are a tempting investment. The stocks are numerous, and suited to all tastes and pockets, whether those funded by Aguado, Ardouin, Toreno, Mendizabal, or Mon, " all honorable men," and whose punctuality is un-remitting, for in some the principal is consolidated, in others the interest is deferred ; the grand financial object in all having been to re- ceive as much as possible, and pay back in an inverse ratio — their leading principle being to bag both principal and interest. As we have just said, in measuring out money and oil a little will stick to the cleanest fingers — the Madrid ministers and con- tractors made fortunes, and actually "did" the Hebrews of Lon- don, as their forefathers spoiled the Egyptians. But from Philip II. downwards, theologians have never been wanting in Spain to prove the religious, however painful, duty of bankruptcy, and particularly in contracts with usurious heretics. The stranger, when shown over the Madrid bank, had better evince no imperti- nent curiosity to see the " Dividend fay office," as it might give offence. Whatever be our dear reader's pursuit in the Penin- sula, let him — " Neither a borrower nor lender be, For loan oft loseth both itself and friend." Beware of Spanish stock, for in spite of official reports, docu- mentos, and arithmetical mazes, which, intricate as an arabesque pattern, look well on paper without being intelligible ; in spite of ingenious conversions, fundings of interest, coupons — some active, some passive, and other repudiatory terms and tenses, the present excepted — the thimblerig is always the same ; and this is the question, since national credit depends on national good faith and surplus income, how can a country pay interest on debts, whose revenues have long been, and now are, miserably insuffi- PUBLIC DEBT. 39 cient for the ordinary expenses of government ? You cannot get blood from a stone ; ex nihilo nihil fit. Mr. Macgregor's report on Spain, a truthful exposition of commercial ignorance, habitual disregard of treaties and viola- tion of contracts, describes her public securities, past and pres- ent. Certainly they had very imposing names and titles — Juros Bonos, Vales reales, Titulos, &c., — much more royal, grand, and poetical than our prosaic Consols ; but no oaths can attach real value to dishonored and good-for-nothing paper. According to some financiers, the public debts of Spain, previously to 1808, amounted to 83.763, 966Z., which have since been increased to 279,083,089?., farthings omitted, for we like to be accurate. This possibly may be exaggerated, for the government will give no information as to its own peculation and mismanagement : ac- cording to Mr. Henderson, 78,649,675Z. of this debt is due to English creditors alone, and we wish they may get it, when he gets to Madrid. In the time of James I., Mr. Howell was sent there on much such an errand ; and when he left it, his " pile of unredressed claims was higher than himself" At all events, Spain is over head and ears in debt, and irremediably insolvent. And yet few countries, if we regard the fertility of her soil, her golden possessions at home and abroad, her frugal temperate population, ought to have been less embarrassed ; but Heaven lias granted her every blessing, except a good and honest government. It is either a bully or a craven : satisfaction in twenty-four hours, d la Bresson, or a line-of-battle ship off Malaga — Cromwell's re- ceipt — is the only argument which these semi-Moors understand : conciliatory language is held to be weakness : you may obtain at once from their fears what never will be granted by their sense of justice. THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. CHAPTER V. Travelling in Spain — Steamers — Roads, Roman, Monastic, and Royal — Modern Railways — English Speculations. Of the many misrepresentations regarding Spain, few are more inveterate than those which refer to the dangers and difficuhies that are there supposed to beset the traveller. This, the most romantic, racy, and peculiar country of Europe, may in reality be visited by sea and land, and throughout its length and breadth, with ease and safety, as all who have ever been there well know, the nonsense with which Cockney critics who never have been there scare delicate writers in albums and lady-bird tourists, to the contrary notwithstanding : the steamers are regular, the mails and diligences excellent, the roads decent, and the mules sure-footed ; nay, latterly, the posadas, or inns, have been so in- creased, and the robbers so decreased, that some ingenuity must be evinced in getting either starved or robbed. Those, however, who are dying for new excitements, or who wish to make a pic- ture or chapter, in short, to get up an adventure for the home- market, may manage by a great exhibition of imprudence, chat- tering, and a holding out luring baits, to gratify their hankering, although it would save some time, trouble, and expense to try the experiment much nearer home. As our readers live in an island, we will commence with the sea and steamers. The Peninsular and Oriental Navigation Company depart regu- larly three times a month from Southampton for Gibraltar. They often arrive at Corunna in seventy hours, from whence a mail starts directly to Madrid, which it reaches in three days and a half. The vessels are excellent sea-boats, are manned by Eng- lish sailors, and propelled by English machinery. The passage to Vigo has been made in less than three days, and the voyage STEAMERS. to Cadiz — touching at Lisbon included — seldom exceeds six. The change of climate, scenery, men, and manners effected by this week's trip, is indeed remarkable. Quitting the British Channel we soon enter the '• sleepless Bay of Biscay," where the stormy petrel is at home, and where the gigantic swell of the Atlantic is first checked by Spain's iron-bound coast, the moun- tain break-water of Europe. Here The Ocean will be seen in all its vast majesty and solitude : grand in the tempest-lashed storm, grand in the calm, when spread out as a mirror ; and never more impressive than at night, when the stars of heaven, free from eai'th-born mists, sparkle like diamonds over those '' who go down to the sea in ships, and behold the works of the Lord, and his wonders in the deep." The land has disappeared, and man feels alike his weakness and his strength ; a thin plank separates him from another world ; yet he has laid his hand upon the billow, and mastered the ocean ; he has made it the highway of commerce, and the binding link of nations. The steamers which navigate the Eastern coast from Marseilles to Cadiz and back again, are cheaper indeed in their fares, but by no means such good sea-boats ; nor do they keep their time — the essence of business — with English regularity. They are foreign built, and worked by Spaniards and Frenchmen. They generally stop a day at Barcelona, Valencia, and other large towns, which gives them an opportunity to replenish coal, and to smuggle. A rapid traveller is also thus enabled to pay a flying visit to the cities on the seaboard ; and thus those lively authors who comprehend foreign nations with an intuitive eagle-eyed glance, obtain materials for sundry octavos on the history, arts, sciences, literature, and genius of Spaniards. But as Mons. Feval remarks of some of his gifted countrymen, they have mei'ely to scratch their head, according to the Horatian expression, and out come a number of volumes, ready bound in calf, as Minerva issued forth armed from the temple of Jupiter. The Mediterranean is a dangerous, deceitful sea, fair and false as Italia ; the squalls are sudden and terrific ; then the crews either curse the sacred name of God, or invoke St. Telmo, ac- cording as their notion may be. We have often been so caught when sailing on these perfidious waters in these foreign craft, 42 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. and think, with the Spaniards, that escape is a miracle. The hilarity excited by witnessing the jabber, confusion, and lubber proceedings, went far to dispel all present apprehension, and future also. Some of our poor blue-jackets in case of a war may possibly escape the fate with which they are threatened in this French lake. But no wise man will ever go by sea when he can travel by land, nor is viewing Spain's coasts with a telescope from the deck, and passing a few hours in a sea-port, a very satisfactory mode of becoming acquainted with the country. The roads of Spain, a matter of much importance to a judicious traveller, are somewhat a modern luxury, having been only regularly introduced by the Bourbons. The Moors and Span- iards, who rode on horses and not in carriages, suffered those magnificent lines with which the Romans had covered the Penin- sula to go to decay ; of these there were no less than twenty- nine of the first order, which were absolutely necessary to a na- tion of conquerors and colonists to keep up their military and commercial communications. The grandest of all, which like the Appian might be termed the Queen of Roads, ran from Merida, the capital of Lusitania, to Salamanca. It was laid down like a Cyclopean wall, and much of it remains to this day, with the grey granite line stretching across the aromatic wastes, like the vertebrae of an extinct mammoth. We have followed for miles its course, which is indicated by the still standing military columns that rise above the cistus underwood ; here and there tall forest trees grow out of the stone pavement, and show how long it has been abandoned by man to Nature ever young and gay, who thus by uprooting and displacing the huge blocks slowly recovers her rights. She festoons the ruins with neck- laces of flowers and creepers, and hides the rents and wrinkles of odious, all-dilapidating Time, or man's worse neglect, as a pretty maid decorates a shrivelled dowager's with diamonds. The Spanish muleteer creeps along by its side in a track which [he has made through the sand or pebbles ; he seems ashamed to trample on this lordly way, for which, in his petty wants, he has no occasion. Most of the similar roads have been taken up by monks tx) raise convents, by burgesses to build houses, by military men to construct fortifications — thus even their ruins have perished. LEGEND OF SANTO DOMINGO. The mediseval Spanish roads were the works of the clergy ; and the long-bearded monks, here as elsewhere, were the pioneers of civilization ; they made straight, wide, and easy the way which led to their convent, their high place, their miracle shrine, or to whatever point of pilgrimage that was held out to the de- vout ; traffic was soon combined with devotion, and the service of mammon with that of God. This imitation of the Oriental practice which obtained at Mecca, is evidenced by language in which the Spanish term Feria signifies at once a religious func- tion, a holiday, and a fair. Even saints condescended to become waywardens, and to take title from the highway. Thus Sanio Domingo de la Calzada, " St. Domenick of the Paved Road," was so called from his having been the first to make one through a part of Old Castile for the benefit of pilgrims on their way to Compostella, and this town yet bears the honored appellation. This feat and his legend have furnished Southey with a sub- ject of a droll ballad. The saint having finished his road, next set up an inn or Ve7ita, the Maritornes of which fell in love with a handsome pilgrim, who resisted ; whereupon she hid some spoons in this Joseph's saddlebags, who was taken up by the Alcalde, and forthwith hanged. But his parents some time afterwards passed under the body, which told them that he was innocent, alive, and well, and all by the intercession of the sainted road- maker ; thereupon they proceeded forthwith to the truculent Al- calde, who was going to dine off two roasted fowls, and, on hear- ing their report, remarked. You might as well tell me that this cock (pointing to his roti) would crow ; whereupon it did crow, and was taken with its hen to the cathedral, and two chicks have ever since been regularly hatched every year from these respect- able parents, of which a travelling ornithologist should secure one for the Zoological Garden. The cock and hen were duly kept near the high altar, and their white feathers were worn by pil- grims in their caps. Prudent bagsmen will, however, put a couple of ordinary roast fowls into their " provend," for hungry is this said road to Logrono. In this land of miracles, anomalies, and contradictions, the roads to and from this very Coirvpostella are now detestable. In other provinces of Spain, the star-paved milky way in heaven is 44 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. called El Camino de Santiago, the road of St. James ; but the Gallicians, who know what their roads really are, namely, the worst on earth, call the milky-way El Camino de Jerusalem, " the road to Jerusalem," which it assuredly is not. The an- cients poetically attributed this phenomenon to some spilt milk of Juno. Meanwhile the roads in Gallicia, although under the patronage of Santiago, who has replaced the Roman Hermes, are, like his milky-way in heaven, but little indebted to mortal repairs. The Dean of Santiago is waywarden by virtue of his office or dignity, and especially " protector." The chapter, however, now chiefly profess to make smooth the road to a better world. They have altogether degenerated from their forefathers, whose grand object was to construct roads for the pilgrims ; but since the cessation of offering-making Hadjis, little or nothing has been done in the turnpike-trust line. Some of the finest roads in Spain lead either to the siiios or ro3i'al pleasure-seats of the king, or wind gently up some elevated and monastery-crowned mountain like Monserrat. The ease of the despot was consulted, while that of his subjects was neglected ; and the Sultan was the State, Spain was his property, and Span- iards his serfs, and willing ones, for as in the East, their perfect equality amongst each other was one result of the immeasurable superiority of the master of all. Thus, while he rolled over a road hard and level as a bowling-green, and rapidly as a gallop- ing team could proceed, to a mere summer residence, the com- munication between Madrid and Toledo, that city on which the sun shone on the day light was made, has remained a mere track ankle deep in mud during winter and dust-clouded during sum- mer, and changing its direction with the caprice of wandering sheep and muleteers ; but Bourbon Royalty never visited this widowed capital of the Goths, The road therefore was left as it existed if not before the time of Adam, at least before MacAdam. There is some talk just now of beginning a regular road ; when it will be finished is another affair. The church, which shared with the state in dominion, followed the royal example in consulting its own comforts as to roads. Nor could it be expected in a torrid land, that holy men, whose ROAD TO LA CORUNA. 45 abdomens occasionally were prominent and pendulous, should lard the stony or sandy earth like goats, or ascend heaven-kissing hills so expeditiously as their prayers. In Spain the primary consider- ation has ever been the souls, not the bodies, of men, or legs of beasts. It would seem indeed, from the indifference shown to the sufferings of these quadrupedal blood-engines, Maquinas de sangre, as they are called, and still more from the reckless waste of biped life, that a man was of no value until he was dead ; then what admirable contrivances for the rapid travelling of his winged spirit, first to purgatory, next out again, and thence from stage to stage to his journey's end and blessed rest ! More money has been thus expended in masses than would have covered Spain with railroads, even on a British scale of magnifi- cence and extravagance. To descend to the roads of the peninsular earth, the principal lines are nobly planned. These geographical arteries, which form the circulation of the country, branch in every direction from Madrid, which is the centre of the system. Tliio road- making spirit of Louis XIV. passed into his Spanish descendants, and during the reigns of Charles III. and Charles IV. commu- nications were completed between the capital and the principal cities of the provinces. These causeways, " Arrecifes" — these royal roads, " Caminos reales'' — were planned on an almost un- necessary scale of grandeur, in regard both to width, parapets, and general execution. The high road to La Coruiia, especially afler entering Leon, will stand comparison with any in Europe ; but when Spaniards finish anything it is done in a grand style, and in this instance the expense was so enormous that the king inquired if it was paved with silver, alluding to the common Spanish corruption of the old Roman via lata into " camino de plata,^' of plate. This and many of the others were constructed from fifty to seventy years ago, and very much on the M'Adam system, which, having been since introduced into England, has rendered our roads so very different from what they were not very long since. The war in the Peninsula tended to deteriorate the Spanish roads — when bridges and other conveniences were fre- quently destroyed for military reasons, and the exhausted state of the finances of Spain, and troubled times, have delayed many of 46 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. the more costly reparations ; yet those of the first class were so admirably constructed at the beginning, that, in spite of the in- juries of war, ruts, and neglect, they may, as a whole, be pro- nounced equal to many of the Continent, and are infinitely more pleasant to the traveller from the absence of pavement. The roads in England have, indeed, latterly been rendered so excellent, and we are so apt to compare those of other nations with them, that we forget that fifty years ago Spain was in advance in that and many other respects. Spain remains very much what other countries were : she has stood on her old ways, moored to the anchor of prejudice, while we have progressed, and consequently now appears behind-hand in many things in which she set the fashion to England. The grand royal roads start from Madrid, and run to the prin- cipal frontier and sea-port towns. Thus the capital may be com- pared to a spider, as it is the centre of the Peninsular web. These diverging fan-like lines are sufficiently convenient to all who are about to journey to any single terminus, but inter-com- munications are almost entirely wanting between any one ter- minus with another. This scanty condition of the Peninsular roads accounts for the very limited portions of the country which are usually visited by foreigners, who — the French especially — keep to one beaten track, the high road, and follow each other like wild geese ; a visit to Burgos, Madrid, and Seville, and then a steam trip from Cadiz to Valencia and Barcelona, is considered to be making the grand tour of Spain ; thus the world is favored with volumes that reflect and repeat each other, which tell us what we know already, while the rich and rare, the untrodden, unchanged, and truly Moro-Hispahic portions are altogether ne- glected, except by the exceptional few, who venture forth like Don Quixote on their horses, in search of adventures and the pic- turesque. The other roads of Spain are bad, but not much more so than in other parts of the Continent, and serve tolerably well in dry weather. They are divided into those which are practicable for wheel-carriages, and those which are only bridle-roads, or as they call them, " of horseslioe," on which all thought of going with a carriage is out of the question ; when these horse or mule tracks TRAVELLING. are very bad, especially among the mountains, they compare them to roads for partridges. The cross roads are seldom tolera- ble ; it is safest to keep the high-road — or, as we have it in Eng- lish, the furthest way round is the nearest way home — for there is no short cut without hard work, says the Spanish proverb, " ho hayatajo, sin traiajo." All this sounds very unpromising, but those who adopt the cus- toms of the country will never find much practical difficulty in getting to their journey's end ; slowly, it is true, for where leagues and hours are convertible terms — the Spanish Jiora being the heavy German stunde — the distance is regulated by the day- light. Bridle roads and travelling on horseback, the former sys- tems of Europe, are very Spanish and Oriental ; and where people journey on horse and mule back, the road is of minor importance. In the remoter provinces of Spain the population is agricultural and poverty-stricken, unvisiting and un visited, not going much beyond their chimney's smoke. Each family pro- vides for its simple habits and few wants ; having but little money to buy foreign commodities, they are clad and fed, like the Be- douins, with the productions of their own fields and flocks. There is little circulation of persons ; a neighboring fair is the mart where they obtain the annual supply of whatever luxury they can indulge in, or it is brought to their cottages by wandering muleteers, or by the smuggler, who is the type and channel of the really active principle of trade in three-fourths of the Penin- sula. It is wonderful how soon a well-mounted traveller becomes attached to travelling on horseback, and how quickly he becomes reconciled to a state of roads which, startling at first to those ac- customed to carriage highways, are found to answer perfectly for all the purposes of the place and people where they are found. Let us say a few things on Spanish railroads, for the mania of England has surmounted the Pyrenees, although confined rather more to words than deeds ; in fact, it has been said that no rail exists, in any country of either the new world or the old one, in which the Spanish language is spoken, probably from other objec- tions than those merely philological. Again, in other countries, roads, canals, and traffic usher in the rail, which in Spain is to pre- pede and introduce them. Thus, by the prudent delays of na- 48 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. tional caution and procrastination, much of the trouble and ex- pense of these intermediate stages will he economized, and Spain will jump at once from a mediteval condition into the comforts and glories of Great Britain, the land of restless travellers. Be that as it may, just now there is much talk of railroads, and splendid official and other docwnentos are issued, by which the " whole country is to be intersected (on paper) with a net-work of rapid and bowling-green communications," which are to create a "perfect homogeneity among Spaniards ;" for great as have been the labors of Herculean steam, this amalgamation of the Iberian rope of sand has properly been reserved for the crowning performance. It would occupy too much space to specify the infinite lines which are in contemplation, which may be described when com- pleted. Suffice it to say, that they almost all are to be effected by the iron and gold of England. However this estrangerismo, this influence of the foreigner, may offend the sensitive pride, the EspaTiolismo of Spain, the power of resistance offered by the national indolence and dislike to change, must be propelled by British steam with a dash of French revolution. Yet our speculators might, perhaps, reflect that Spain is a land which never yet has been able to construct or support even a sufficient number of 'common roads or canals for her poor and passive commerce and circulation. The distances are far too great, and the traffic far too small, to call yet for the rail ; while the geolo- gical formation of the country offers difficulties which, if met with even in England, would baffle the colossal science and extravagance of our first-rate engineers. Spain is a land of mountains, which rise everywhere in Alpine barriers, walling off" province from province, and district from district. These mighty cloud-capped sierras are solid masses of hard stone, and any tunnels which ever perforate their ranges will reduce that at Box to the delving of the poor mole. You might as well cover Switzerland and the Tyrol with a net-work of level lines, as those caught in the aforesaid net will soon discover to their cost. The outlay of this up-hill work may be in an inverse ratio to the remuneration, for the one will be enormous, and the other DIFFICULTIES OF RAILROADS. 49 paltry. The parturient mountains may produce a most musipular interest, and even that may be "deferred." Spain, again, is a land of dehesas y despoblados : in these wild unpeopled wastes, next to travellers, commerce and cash are what is scarce, while even Madrid, the capital, is without in- dustry or resources, and poorer than many of our provincial cities. The Spaniard, a creature of routine and foe to inno- vations, is not a moveable or locomotive ; local, and a parochial fixture by nature, he hates moving like a Turk, and has a par- ticular horror of being hurried ; long, therefore, here has an ambling mule answered all the purposes of transporting man and his goods. Who again is to do the work even if England will pay the wages '? The native, next to disliking regular sustained labor himself, abhors seeing the foreigner toiling even in his service, and wasting his gold and sinews in the thankless task. The villagers, as they always have done, will rise against the stranger and heretic who comes to " suck the wealth of Spain." Supposing, however, by the aid of Santiago and Brunei, that the work were possible and were completed, how is it to be secured against the fierce action of the sun, and the fiercer violence of popular ignorance ? The first cholera that visits Spain will be set down as a passenger per rail by the dispossessed muleteer, who now performs the functions of steam and rail. He consti- tutes one of the most numerous and finest classes in Spain, and is the legitimate channel of the semi-Oriental caravan system. He will never permit the bread to be taken out of his mouth by this Lutheran locomotive : deprived of means of earning his livelihood, he, like the smuggler, will take to the road in another line, and both will become either robbers or patriots. Many, long, and lonely are the leagues which separate town from town in the wide deserts of thinly-peopled Spain, nor will any pre- ventive service be sufficient to guard the rail against the guer- rilla warfare that may then be waged. A handful of opponents in any cistus-overgrown waste, may at any time, in five minutes, break up the road, stop the train, stick the stoker, and burn the engines in their own fire, particularly smashing the luggage-train. What, again, has ever been the recompense which the foreigner has met with from Spain but breach of promise and ingratitude ? PART I. 4 50 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. He will be used, as in the East, until the native thinks that he has mastered his arts, and then he will be abused, cast out, and trod- den under foot ; and who then will keep up and repair the costly artificial undertaking ? — certainly not the Spaniard, on whose pericranium the bumps of operative skill and mechanical construc- tion have yet to be developed. The lines which are the least sure of failure will be those which are the shortest, and pass through a level country of some natural productions, such as oil, wine, and coal. Certainly, if the rail can be laid down in Spain by the gold and science of England, the gift, like that of steam, will be worthy of the Ocean's Queen, and of the world's real leader of civilization ; and what a change will then come over the spirit of the Peninsula ! how the siestas of torpid man-vegetation, will be disturbed by the shrill whistle and panting snort of the monster engine ! how the seals of this long hermetically shut-up land will be broken ! how the cloistered obscure, and dreams of treasures in heaven, will be enlightened by the flashing fire-demon of the wide-awake money-worshipper ! what owls will be vexed, what bats dispos- sessed, what drones, mules, and asses will be scared, run over, and annihilated ! Those who love Spain, and pray, like the author, daily for her prosperity, must indeed hope to see this " net- work of rails" concluded, but will take especial care at the same time not to invest one farthing in the imposing specu- lation. Recent results have fully justified during this year what was prophesied last year in the Hand-Book : our English agents and engineers were received with almost divine honors by the Span- iards, so incensed were they with flattery and cigars. Their shares were instantaneously subscribed for, and directors nomi- nated, with names and titles longer even than the lines, and the smallest contributions in cash were thankfully accepted : — " L'argfent dans une bourse entre agreablement ; Mais le terme venu, quand il faut le rendre, C'est alors que les douleurs commencent a nous prendre." When the period for booking up, for making the first instalments, arrived, the Spanish shareholders were found somewhat wanting : ANGLO-HISPANO RAILROADS. they repudiated ; for in the Peninsula it has long been easier to promise than to pay. Again, on the only line which seems likely to be carried out at present, that of Madrid to Aranjuez, the first step taken by them was to dismiss all English engineers and navvies, on the plea of encouraging native talent, and in- dustry rather than the foreigner. Many of the English home proceedings would border on the ridiculous, were not the laugh of some speculators rather on the wrong side. The City capi- talists certainly have our pity, and if their plethora of wealth re- quired the relief of bleeding, it could not be better performed than by a Spanish Sangrado. How different some of the windings-up, the final reports, to the magnificent beginnings and grandiloquent prospectuses put forth as baits for John Bull, who hoped to be tossed at once, or elevated, from haberdashery to a throne, by being offered a " potentiality of getting rich beyond the dreams of avarice !" Thus, to clench assertion by example, the London directors of the Royal Valencia Company made known by an advertisement only last July, that they merely required 240,000,000 reals to connect the seaport of Valencia — where there is none — to the capital Madrid,- with 800,000 inhabitants, — there not being 200,000. One brief passage alone seemed omi- nous in the lucid array of prospective profit — " The line has not yet been minutely surveyed;" this might have suggested to the noble Marquis whose attractive name heads the provisional com- mittee list, the difficulty of Sterne's traveller, of whom, when observing how much better things were managed on the Continent than in England, the question was asked, "Have you, sir, ever been there ?" A still wilder scheme was broached, to connect Aviles on the Atlantic with Madrid, the Austrian Alps and the Guadarrama mountains to the contrary notwithstanding. The originator of this ingenious idea was to receive 40,000Z. for the cession of his plan to the company, and actually did receive 25,000?., which, considering the difficulties, natural and otherwise, must be con- sidered an inadequate remuneration. Although the original and captivating prospectus stated " that the line had been surveyed, and presented no engineering difficulties," it was subsequently thought prudent to obtain some notion of the actual localities, 52 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. and Sir Joshua Walmsley was sent forth with competent assist- ance to spy out the land, which the Jewish practice of old was rather to do before than after serious undertakings. A sad change soon came over the spirit of the London dream by the discovery that a country which looked level as Arrowsmith's map in the prospectus, presented such trifling obstacles to the rail as sundry leagues of mountain ridges, which range from 6000 to 9000 feet high, and are covered with snow for many months of the year. This was a damper. The report of the special meeting (see ' Morning Chronicle,' December 18, 1845) should be printed in letters of gold, from the quantity of that article which it will preserve to our credulous countrymen. Then and there the chairman observed, with equal naiveU and pathos, " that had he known as much before as he did now, he would have been the last man to carry out a railway in Spain." This experience cost him, he observed, 5000Z., which is paying dear for a Spanish rail whistle. He might for five pounds have bought the works of Townshend and Captain Cook : our modesty prevents the naming another red book, in which these precise localities, these mighty Alps, are described by per- sons who had ridden, or rather soared, over them. At another meeting of another Spanish rail company, held at the London Tavern, October 20, 1846, another chairman announced "a fact of which he was not before aware, that it was impossible to sur- mount the Pyrenees." Meanwhile, the Madrid government had secured 30,000Z. from them by way of caution money ; but cau- tion disappears from our capitalists, whenever excess of cash mounts from their pockets into their heads ; loss of common sense and dollars is the natural result. But it is the fate of Spain and her things, to be judged of by those who have never been there, and who feel no shame at the indecency of the nakedness of their geographical ignorance. When the blind lead the blind, beware of hillocks and ditches. POST-OFFICE. CHAPTER VI. Post-office in Spain — Travelling with post horses — Riding post — Mails and Diligences, Galeras, Coches de Colleras, Drivers and manner of Driving, and Oaths. A SYSTEM of post, both for the despatch of letters and the con- veyance of couriers, was introduced into Spain under Philip and Juana, that is, towards the end of the reign of our Henry VII. ; whereas it was scarcely organized in England before the Govern- ment of Cromwell. Spain, which in these matters, as well as in many others, was once so much in advance, is now compelled to borrow her improvements from those nations of which she for- merly was the instructress : among these may be reckoned all travelling in carriages, whether public or private. The post-office for letters is arranged on the plan common to most countries on the Continent : the delivery is pretty regular, but seldom daily — twice or three times a week. Small scruple is made by the authorities in opening private letters, whenever they suspect the character of the correspondence. It is as well, there- fore, for the traveller to avoid expressing the whole of his opin- ions of the powers that be. The minds of men have been long troubled in Spain ; civil war has rendered them very distrustful and guarded in their written correspondence — " carta cantaj" " a letter speaks." There is the usual continental bother in obtaining post-horses, which results from their being a monopoly of government. There must be a passport, an official order, notice of departure, &;c. ; next ensue vexatious regulations in regard to the number of pas- sengers, horses, luggage, style of carriage, and so forth. These, and other spokes put into the wheel, appear to have been invented by clerks who sit at home devising how to impede rather than facilitate posting at all. 64 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. Post-horses and mules are paid at the rate of seven rials each for each post. The Spanish postilions generally, and especially if well paid, drive at a tremendous pace, often amounting to a gallop ; nor are they easily stopped, even if the traveller desires it — they seem only to be intent on arriving at their stages' end, in order to indulge in the great national joy of then doing nothing ; to get there, they heed neither ruts nor ravines ; and when once their cattle are started the inside passenger feels like a kettle tied to the tail of a mad dog, or a comet ; the wild beasts think no more of him than if he were Mazeppa : thus money makes the mare and its driver to go, as surely in Spain as in all other countries. Another mode of travelling is by riding post, accompanied by a mounted postilion, who is changed with the cattle at each relay. It is an expeditious but fatiguing plan ; yet one which, like the Tartar courier of the East, has long prevailed in Spain. Thus our Charles I. rode to Madrid under the name of John Smith, by which he was not likely to be identified. The delight of Philip II., who boasted that he governed the world from the Escorial, was to receive frequent and early intelligence ; and this desire to hear something new is still characteristic of the Spanish govern- ment. The cabinet couriers have the preference of horses at every relay. The particular distances they have to perform are all timed, and so many leagues are required to be done in a fixed time ; and, in order to encourage despatch, for every hour gained on the allowed time, an additional sum was paid to them : hence the common expression "ganando horas,'' gaining hours — equiva- lent to our old " post haste — haste for your life." The usual mode of travelling for the affluent is in the public conveyances, which are the fashion from being novelties and only introduced under Ferdinand VII. ; previously to their being allowed at all, serious objections were started, similar to those raised by his late Holiness to the introduction of railways into the papal states ; it was said that these tramontane facilities would bring in foreigners, and with them philosophy, heresy, and innovations, by which the wisdom of Spain's ancestors might be upset. These scruples were ingeniously got over by bribing the monarch with a large share of the profits. Now that the DILIGENCES. royal monopoly is broken down, many new and competing com- panies have sprung up ; this mode of travelling is the cheapest and safest, nor is it thought at all beneath the dignity of " the best set," nay royalty itself goes by the coach. Thus the Infante Don Francisco de Paula constantly hires the whole of the diligence to convey himself and his family from Madrid to the sea-coast ; and one reason gravely given for Don Enrique's not coming to marry the Queen, was that his Royal Highness could not get a place, as the dilly was booked full. The public carriages of Spain are quite as good as those of France, and the company who travel in them generally more respectable and better bred. This is partly accounted for by the expence : the fares are not very high, yet still form a serious item to the bulk of Spaniai'ds ; consequently those who travel in the public carriages in Spairi are the class who would in other countries travel per post. It must, however, be admitted that all travelling in the public con- veyances of the continent necessarily implies great discomfort to those accustomed to their own carriages ; and with every possible precaution the long journeys in Spain, of three to five hundred miles at a stretch, are such as few English ladies can undergo, and are, even with men, undertakings rather of necessity than of pleasure. The mail is organized on the plan of the French malle-poste, and offers, to those who can stand the bumping, shak- ing, and churning of continued and rapid travelling without halt- ing, a means of locomotion which leaves nothing to be desired. The diligences also are imitations of the lumbering French model. It will be in vain to expect in them the neatness, the well-appointed turn-out, the quiet, time-keeping, and infinite facilities of the English original. These matters when passed across the water are modified to the heroic Continental contempt for doing things in style ; cheapness, which is their great prin- ciple, prefers rope-traces to those of leather, and a carter to a regular coachman ; the usual foreign drags also exist, which render their slow coaches and bureaucratic absurdities so hateful to free Britons ; but when one is once booked and handed over to the conductor, you arrive in due time at the journey's end. The " guards" are realities ; they consist of stout, armed, most picturesque, robber-like men and no mistake, since many, before 56 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. they were pardoned and pensioned, have frequently taken a purse on the Queen's highway ; for the foreground of your first sketch, they are splendid fellows, and worth a score of marshals. They are provided with a complete arsenal of swords and blunder- busses, so that the cumbrous machine rolling over the sea of plains looks like a man-of-war, and has been compared to a marching citadel. Again in suspicious localities a mounted escort of equally sus,pi.cious look gallops alongside, «or is the primitive practice of black mail altogether neglected : the consequence of these admirable precautions is, that the diligences are seldom or never robbed ; the thing, however, is possible. The whole of this garrisoned Noah's ark is placed under the command of the Mayoral or conductor, who like all Spanish men in authority is a despot, and yet, like them, is open to the conciliatory influences of a bribe. He regulates the hours of toil and sleep, which latter — blessings, says Sancho, on the man who invented it ! — is uncertain, and depends on the early or late arrival of the diligence and the state of the roads, for all that is lost of the fixed time on the road is made up for by curtailing the time allowed for repose. One of the many good effects of setting up diligences is the bettering the inns on the road ; and it is a safe and general rule to travellers in Spain, whatever be their vehicle, always to inquire in every town which is the po- sada that the diligence stops at. Persons were dispatched from Madrid to the different stations on the great lines, to fit up houses, bedrooms, and kitchens, and provide everything for table service ; cooks were sent round to teach the innkeepers to set out and pre- pare a proper dinner and supper. Thus, in villages in which a few years before the use of a fork was scarcely known, a table was laid out, clean, well served, and abundant. The example set by the diligence inns has produced a beneficial effect, since they offer a model, create competition, and suggest the existence of many comforts, which were hitherto unknown among Spaniards, whose abnegation of material enjoyments at home, and praiseworthy endurance of privations of all kinds on journeys, are quite Oriental. In some of the new companies every expense is calculated in the fare, to wit, journey, postilions, inns, &c., which is very con- venient to the stranger, and prevents the loss of much money and BEDS FOR TRAVELLERS. 57 temper. A chapter on the dilly is as much a standing dish in every Peninsular tour as a bullfight or a bandit adventure, for which there is a continual demand in the home-market ; and no doubt in the long distances of Spain, Avhere men and women are boxed up for three or four mortal days together (the nights not being omitted), the plot thickens, and opportunity is afforded to appreciate costume and character ; the farce or tragedy may be spun out into as many acts as the journey takes days. In general the order of the course is as follows : the breakfast consists at early dawn of a cup of good stiff chocolate, which being the favor- ite drink of the church and allowable even on fast days, is as nu- tritious as delicious. It is accompanied by a bit of roasted or fried bread, and is followed by a glass of cold water, to drink which is an axiom with all wise men who respect the efficient condition of their livers. After rumbling on, over a given num- ber of leagues, when the passengers get well shaken together ai^d hungry, a regular knife and fork breakfast is provided that closely resembles the dinner or supper which is served up later in the evening ■ the table is plentiful, and the cookery, to those who like oil and garlic, excellent. Those who do not can always fall back on the bread and eggs, which are capital ; the wine is occasionally like purple blacking, and sometimes serves also as vinegar for the salad, as the oil is said to be used indifferently for lamps or stews ; a bad dinner, especially if the bill be long, and the wine sour, does not sweeten the passengers' tempers ; they become quarrelsome, and if they have the good luck, a little robber skirmish gives vent to ill-humor. At nightfall, after supper, a few hours are allowed on your part to steal whatever rest the mayoral and certain voltigeurs, creeping and winged, will permit ; the beds are plain and clean ; sometimes the mattresses may be compared to sacks of walnuts, but there is no pillow so soft as fatigue ; the beds are generally arranged in twos, threes, and fours, according to the size of the room. The traveller should immediately on arriving secure his, and see that it is comfortable, for those who neglect to get a good one must sleep in a bad. Generally speaking, by a little man- agement, he may get a room to himself, or at least select his com- panions. There is, moreover, a real civility and politeness shown 58 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. by all classes of Spaniards, on all occasions, towards strangers and ladies ; and that even failing, a small tip, " una gratijicacionr- cita" given beforehand to the maid, or the waiter, seldom fails to smooth all difficulties. On these, as on all occasions in Spain, inost things may be obtained by good humor, a smile, a joke, a proverb, a cigar, or a bribe, which, though last, is by no means the least resource, since it will be found to mollify the hardest heart and smooth the greatest difficulties, after civil speeches had been tried in vain, for Dadivas quehrantan penas, y entra sin har- renas, gifts break rocks, and penetrate without gimlets \ again, Mas ablanda dinero que -palahras de Cahallero, cash softens more than a gentleman's palaver. The mode of driving in Spain, which is so unlike our way of handling the ribbons, will be de- scribed presently. Means of conveyance for those who cannot afford the diligence are provided by vehicles of more genuine Spanish nature and dis- comfort ; they may be compared to the neat accommodation for man and beast which is doled out to third-class passengers by our monopolist railway kings, who have usurped her Majesty's high- way, and fleece her lieges by virtue of act of Parliament. First and foremost comes the galera, which fully justifies its name ; and even those who have no value for their time or bones will, after a short trial of the rack and dislocation, exclaim : " que diahle allais-je faire dans cette gaUre .?" These machines travel periodically from town to town, and form the chief public and carrier communication between most provincial cities ; they are not much changed from that classical cart, the rheda, into which, as we read in Juvenal, the whole family of Fabricius was con- vejred. In Spain these primitive locomotives have stood still in the general advance of this age of progress, and carry us back to our James I., and Fynes Mory son's accounts of " carryers who have long covered waggons, in which they carry passengers from city to city; but this kind of journeying is so tedious, by reason they must take waggons very early and come very late to their innes, none but women and people of inferior condition used to travel in this sort." So it is now in Spain. This galera is a long cart without springs ; the sides are lined with matting, while beneath hangs a loose open net, as under the CARRIAGES AND CARTS. calesinas of Naples, ia which lies and barks a horrid dog, who keeps a Cerberus watch over iron pots and sieves, and such like gipsey utensils, and who is never to be conciliated. These gale- ras 'are ox" all sizes ; but if a galera should be a lai'ger sort of vehicle than is wanted, then a " tartana," a sort of covered tilted cart, which is very common in Valencia, and which is so called from a small Mediterranean craft of the same name, will be found convenient. The packing and departure of the galera, when hired by a family who remove their goods, is a thing of Spain ; the heavy luggage is stowed in first, and beds and mattresses spread on the top, on which the family repose in admired disorder. The galera is much used by the " poor students" of Spain, a class unique of its kind, and full of rags and impudence ; their adventures have the credit of being rich and picturesque, and recall some of the accounts of " waggon incidents" in ' Roderick Random,' and Smollett's novels. Civilization, as connected with the wheel, is still at a low ebb in Spain, notwithstanding the numerous political revolutions. Except in a few great towns, the quiz vehicles remind us of those caricatures at which one laughed so heartily in Paris in 1814; and in Madrid, even down to Ferdinand VII. 's decease, the Prado — its rotten row — was filled with antediluvian carriages — grotesque coachmen and footmen to match, which with us would be put into the British Museum ; they are now, alas for painters and authors ! worn out, and replaced by poor French imitations of good Eng- lish originals. As the genuine older Spanish ones were built in remote ages, and before the invention of folding steps, the ascent and descent were facilitated by a three-legged footstool, which dangled, strap- ped up near the door, as appears in the hieroglyphics of Egypt 4000 years ago ; a pair of long-eared fat mules, with hides and tails fantastically cut, was driven by a superannuated postilion in formidable jackboots, and not less formidable cocked hat of oil- cloth. In these, how often have we seen Spanish grandees with pedigrees as old-fashioned, gravely taking the air and dust ! These slow coaches of old Spain have been rapidly sketched by the clever young American ; such are the ups and downs of na- 60 THE SPANIARDS AND THEIR COUNTRY. tions and vehicles. Spain for having discovered America has in return become her butt ; she cannot go a-head ; so the great dust of Alexander may stop a bung-hole, and we too join in the laugh and forget that our ancestors — see Beaumont and Fletcher's ' Maid of the Inn' — talked of " hurrying on featherbeds that move upon four-wheel Spanish earaches." While on these wheel subjects it may be observed that the carts and other machines of Spanish rural locomotion and husbandry have not escaped better ; when not Oriental they are Roman ; rude in form and material, they are always odd, picturesque, and inconvenient. The peasant, for the most part, scratches the earth with a plough modelled after ihat invented by Triptolemus, beats out his corn as described by Homer, and carries his harvest home in strict obedience to the rules in the Georgics. The iron work is iniquitous, but both sides of the Pyrenees are centuries behind England ; there, absurd tariffs prohibit the importation of our cheap and good work in order to encourage their own bad and dear wares — thus poverty and ignorance are perpetuated. The carts in the north-west provinces are the unchanged plau- stra, with solid wheels, the Roman tympana which consists of mere circles of wood, without spokes or axles, much like mill- stones or Parmesan cheeses, and precisely such as the old Egypt- ians used, as is seen in hieroglyphics, and no doubt much resem- bling those sent by Joseph for his father, which are still used by the Affghans and other unadvanced coachmakers. The whole wheel turns round together with a piteous creaking ; the drivers, whose leathern ears are as blunt as their edgeless teeth, delight in this excruciating Chirrio, Arabice charrar, to make a noise, which they call music, and delight in, because it is cheap and plays to them of itself: they, moreover, think it frightens wolves, bears, and the devil himself, as Don Quixote says, which it well may, for the wheel of Ixion, although damned in hell, never whined more piteously. The doleful sounds, however, serve like our waggoners' lively bells, as warnings to other drivers, who, in narrow paths and gorges of rocks, where two carriages cannot pass, have this notice given them, and draw aside until the coast is clear. We have reserved some details and the mode of driving for the THE COCHE DE COLLERAS. cache de coUeras, the caroche of horse-collars, which is the real coach of Spain, and in which we have made many a pleasant trip ; it too is doomed to be scheduled away, for Spaniards are descending from these coaches and six to a chariot and pair, and by degrees beautifully less, to a fly. Mails and diligences, we have said, are only established on the principal high roads connected with Madrid : there are but kw local coaches which run from one provincial town to another, where the necessity of frequent and certain intercommunication is little called for. In the other provinces, where these modern conveniences have not been introduced, the earlier mode of travel- ling is the only resource left to families of children, women, and invalids, who are unable to perform the journey on horseback. This is the festina lente, or voiturier system ; and from its long continuance in Italy and Spain, in spite of all the improvements adopted in other countries, it vvould appear to have something con- genial and peculiarly fitted to the habits and wants of those cog- nate nations of the south, who have a Goth-Oriental dislike to be hurried — no corre priesa, there is plenty of time. Sie haben zeit genug. The Spanish vetturino, or " Calesero,^'' is to be found, as in Italy, standing for hire in particular and well-known places in every principal town. There is not much necessity for hunting for Am; he has the Italian instinctive perception of a stranger and traveller, and the same importunity in volunteering himself, his cattle, and carriage, for any part of Spain. The man, how- ever, and his equipage are peculiarly Spanish ; his carriage and his team have undergone little change during the last two cen- turies, and are the representatives of the former ones of Europe ; they resemble those vehicles once used in England, which may still be seen in the old prints of country-houses by Kip ; or, as regards France, in the pictures of Louis XIV. 's journeys and campaigns by Vandermeulen. They are the remnant of the once universal " coach and six," in which according to Pope, who was not infallible, British fair were to delight for ever. The "coche de colleras" is a huge cumbrous machine, built after the fashion of a reduced lord mayor's coach, or some of the e