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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/32821-0.txt b/32821-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b0a0192 --- /dev/null +++ b/32821-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9765 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Picturesque Antiquities of Spain, by +Nathaniel Armstrong Wells + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Pictureque Antiquities of Spain; + Described in a series of letters, with illustrations + representing Moorish palaces, cathedrals, and other + monuments of art, contained in the cities of Burgos, + Valladolid, Toledo, and Seville. + +Author: Nathaniel Armstrong Wells + +Release Date: June 15, 2010 [EBook #32821] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: UTF-8 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PICTUREQUE ANTIQUITIES *** + + + + +Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team +at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + + +[Illustration: CHAPEL OF SAN ISIDRO, + +IN THE CHURCH OF SAN ANDRES, MADRID.] + + + + +THE + +PICTURESQUE ANTIQUITIES + +OF + +SPAIN; + +DESCRIBED IN A SERIES OF LETTERS, + +WITH ILLUSTRATIONS, + +REPRESENTING MOORISH PALACES, CATHEDRALS, AND OTHER MONUMENTS OF ART, + +CONTAINED IN THE CITIES OF + +BURGOS, VALLADOLID, TOLEDO, AND SEVILLE. + +BY + +NATHANIEL ARMSTRONG WELLS. + +LONDON: + +RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET, + +Publisher in Ordinary to Her Majesty. + +M.DCCC.XLVI. + +LONDON: + +Printed by S. & J. BENTLEY, WILSON, and FLEY, Bangor House, Shoe Lane. + + + + +PREFACE. + + +The author of the following letters is aware that his publication would +have possessed greater utility, had the architectural descriptions been +more minute. He ventures to hope, however, that this imperfection may be +in some measure balanced by the more extended sphere opened to whatever +information it may contain. + +The absence of many technical expressions, especially those which enter +into a detailed description of almost all Gothic buildings, and the +employment of which was forbidden by the occasion, may tend to +facilitate the satisfaction of popular curiosity respecting Spanish art: +the more so from the circumstance that the most intelligent in such +subjects are scarcely sufficiently agreed on the application of +technical terms, to allow of the compilation of a standard vocabulary. +His ambition will be more than satisfied, should his past, and perhaps +future researches, succeed, in some degree, in pioneering the path for a +more scientific pen. + +Should this work fall into the hands of any reader, whose expectations +of entertainment may have been encouraged by the announcement of another +Spanish tour, but who may feel but moderate enthusiasm for the artistic +and monumental glories of the Peninsula, an explanation is due to him, +exonerative of the author from much of the responsibility attached to +the matter-of-fact tone of his descriptions. It is no less his nature +than it was his wish to paint what he saw as he saw it. Unfortunately +his visits to Spain took place after the accomplishment of the +revolution, the hardest blows of which were aimed at her church. The +confiscation of the ecclesiastical revenues has necessarily stripped the +processions and other ceremonies of their former splendour, and by +suppressing what constituted one of their chief attractions to the +native population, transferred the interest of the lover of the +picturesque from the bright colours of animated grouping, to the dead +background of stone and marble they have left. + +In studying, however, to preserve this strict accuracy in all that +related to the principal subject of his correspondence, his aim was to +enliven it by the introduction of any incidents worthy of notice which +came under his observation. In this object he hopes he may have +succeeded. + +One more remark is necessary. The letters from Seville, which form the +second of the two parts into which the volume is divided, although +placed last in order of succession, date in reality from an earlier +period than the rest; and even from a different tour, as will appear +from the description of the route. They were addressed to various +individuals, whereas those forming the first part were all written to +the same person. They are thus placed with a view to geographical order +and clearness, and to a sort of unity, which appeared advisable in the +subject of a volume. The two excursions having been separated by an +interval of three years, should alterations have taken place during that +period in the places described, the above circumstance not being borne +in mind might lead to an appearance of chronological inaccuracy in the +descriptions, although there is not much probability of the existence of +such changes. + +LONDON. _December 1845._ + + + + +CONTENTS. + + + PAGE + +PART I. + + +LETTER I. + +TO MRS. C----R 1 + +LETTER II. + +ROUTE TO SPAIN THROUGH FRANCE 9 + +LETTER III. + +THE BASQUE PROVINCES 15 + +LETTER IV. + +ARRIVAL AT BURGOS. CATHEDRAL. 28 + +LETTER V. + +TOMB OF THE CID. CITADEL. 52 + +LETTER VI. + +CARTUJA DE MIRAFLORES. CONVENT OF LAS HUELGAS. 70 + +LETTER VII. + +ROUTE TO MADRID. MUSEO. 78 + +LETTER VIII. + +PICTURESQUE POSITION OF TOLEDO. FLORINDA. 103 + +LETTER IX. + +CATHEDRAL OF TOLEDO 121 + +LETTER X. + +CAFES. WEDDING CEREMONY. CATHEDRAL CONTINUED. ALCAZAR HOSPITAL +OF SANTA CRUZ. CONVENT OF LA CONCEPTION. MYSTERIOUS CAVERN. +CONVENT OF SANTA FE, OR OF SANTIAGO. SONS-IN-LAW OF THE CID. 143 + +LETTER XI. + +STREETS OF TOLEDO. EL AMA DE CASA. MONASTERY OF SAN JUAN DE +LOS REYES. PALACE OF DON HURTADO DE MENDOZA. 172 + +LETTER XII. + +ARAB MONUMENTS. PICTURES. THE PRINCESS GALIANA. ENVIRONS. 195 + +LETTER XIII. + +CASTLES OF ALMONACID, GUADAMUR, MONTALBAN, AND ESCALONA. +TORRIJOS. 214 + +LETTER XIV. + +VALLADOLID. SAN PABLO. COLLEGE OF SAN GREGORIO. ROUTE BY +SARAGOZA. 240 + +PART II.--SEVILLE. + + +LETTER XV. + +JOURNEY TO SEVILLE. CHARACTER OF THE SPANIARDS. VALLEY OF +THE RHONE. 259 + +LETTER XVI. + +VOYAGE TO GIBRALTAR 288 + +LETTER XVII. + +CADIZ. ARRIVAL AT SEVILLE. 308 + +LETTER XVIII. + +THE ARABS IN SPAIN. ALCAZAR OF SEVILLE. 315 + +LETTER XIX. + +CATHEDRAL OF SEVILLE 350 + +LETTER XX. + +SPANISH BEGGARS. HAIRDRESSING. THE GIRALDA. CASA DE PILATOS. +MONASTERIES. ITALICA. 369 + +LETTER XXI. + +PRIVATE HOUSES, AND LOCAL CUSTOMS IN SEVILLE 399 + +LETTER XXII. + +INQUISITION. COLLEGE OF SAN TELMO. CIGAR MANUFACTORY. BULL +CIRCUS. EXCHANGE. AYUNTAMIENTO. 416 + +FOOTNOTES + + + + +ENGRAVED PLATES. + + + PAGE + +CHAPEL OF SAN ISIDRO, MADRID To face Title. + +TRANSEPT OF CATHEDRAL, BURGOS 38 + +INTERIOR OF THE CHURCH OF MIRAFLOR ES 72 + +VIEW OF TOLEDO 106 + +INTERIOR OF CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO 140 + +FAÇADE OF SAN GREGORIO, VALLADOLID 248 + +HALL OF AMBASSADORS, DO. 315 + +FAÇADE OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE 325 + +GREAT COURT OF DO. 328 + +INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, SEVILLE 353 + + +WOOD ENGRAVINGS. + +ARCO DE SANTA MARIA. BURGOS. 30 + +INTERIOR OF THE CHOIR, CATHEDRAL OF BURGOS 33 + +SCULPTURE IN THE APSE, DO. DO. 40 + +HEAD OF ST. FRANCIS 48 + +FOUNTAIN OF SANTA MARIA, BURGOS 69 + +ITALIAN GALLERY AT THE MUSEO, MADRID 94 + +FLORINDA'S BATH, TOLEDO 112 + +APSE OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO 129 + +COSTUME OF A MILITARY NUN, SANTA FE, TOLEDO 165 + +CHURCH OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES, DO. 179 + +CLOISTER OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES, DO. 182 + +INTERIOR OF SANTA MARIA LA BLANCA, DO. 196 + +INTERIOR OF CHRISTO DE LA LUZ, DO. 201 + +CASTLE OF GUADAMUR. ENVIRONS OF DO. 226 + +FAÇADE OF SAN PABLO. VALLADOLID 242 + +COURT OF SAN GREGORIO. VALLADOLID 249 + +COURT OF DOLLS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE 331 + +FOUNTAINS AT THE ALCAZAR 339 + +PORTAL OF SAN TELMO, SEVILLE 422 + + + + +PICTURESQUE ANTIQUITIES + +OF + +SPAIN. + + + + +LETTER I. + +TO MRS. C---- R. + + +Rue de Richelieu. + +You perceived at a glance the satisfaction you caused me, when, on +receiving my temporary adieus, you requested me to send you some account +of my travels in Spain. Had it not been so, you had not been in +possession, on that day, of your usual penetration. Indeed, you no doubt +foresaw it; aware that, next to the pleasure of acquiring ocular +information respecting the peculiar objects which interest an +individual, there is no greater one than that of communicating to a +spirit, animated by congenial tastes, the results of his explorations. +You must have foreseen, that, with my recollections of the pleasure I +had derived from our excursions in one of the most interesting regions +of France, during which I was witness to the intelligence and rapidity +of perception you displayed in the appreciation of the monuments of the +Middle Ages, the opportunity of committing to paper the impressions I +should receive in a country so rich in those treasures, with a view to +your information, would give an additional interest to my tour, as well +as encouragement in surmounting the obstacles to be met with among a +people not yet broken in to the curiosity of tourists. + +You professed also, with a modesty always becoming to talent and worth, +a complete ignorance respecting Spain: adding, that you would be +grateful for every sort of information; and that you were anxious to be +enlightened on the subject not only of the monuments and fine arts, but +also of the history of that country, of which you had never had an +opportunity of informing yourself; summing up by the enumeration of the +three names of the Cid, Charles the Fifth, and Roderic the Goth, the +entire amount of your acquaintance with the leading characters of +Spanish history. + +Indeed, the ignorance you profess with some exaggeration, is more or +less general in our country; nor is it surprising that such should be +the case. Spain has been in modern times in the background of European +progress. The thousand inconveniences of its routes and inns have +deterred the most enterprising from making it a place of resort; and +while a hundred less interesting scenes of travel, such as Baden-Baden, +Bohemia, sporting adventures in Norway, or winterings in St. Petersburg, +have claimed your attention during the reposes of quadrilles, and +substantiated the conversation of several of your morning visitors, +Spain has been unnoticed and unknown--laid on the shelf with the Arabian +Nights--considered a sort of fabulous country, which it would be +charming to know, but with which there would never be a chance of +forming an acquaintance; and you have contented yourself with a sort of +general information respecting it, derived from a few romances and +poems. You are intimate with Boabdil and the wars of Granada, but to +those events is limited your knowledge of its ancient history; and the +reigns of Charles the Fifth and Philip the Second, with the addition of +some confused visions, in which _autos-da-fé_ and dungeons contrast in a +rather gloomy background with laughing majas, whirling their +castagnettes to the soft cadences of guitars, fill up the remaining +space allotted to Spain in your recollections. + +It would be a task full of interest for me--possessed, as I shall +probably be, of ample opportunities for its accomplishment--to draw up +for your information a summary of the leading events of Spanish +history; connecting them by the chain of reigns of the successive +sovereigns; and thus to press into a limited compass a sort of abstract +of the annals of this extraordinary nation: but I am deterred by the +certainty that such an attempt, by me, would fail of its intended +object. The events, thus slurred over, would have the effect of whetting +the appetite for knowledge, which they would not satisfy; and the +interminable lists of monarchs, of successions, usurpations, alliances +and intermarriages, rendered doubly intricate by the continual +recurrence of the same names, without sufficient details to +particularise each--a chaos of outlines without the necessary shading to +bring out the figures from the canvass--would not only set at defiance +the clearest memory, but would be a trial which I would not for worlds +impose upon your patience. No history is more attractive than that of +Spain; and those works which exist upon the subject, although all, more +or less, sullied with inaccuracies, and most of them infected with +prejudice, and immersed in superstitious delusion, are still well worth +your perusal; but it would lead me out of my depth, were I to undertake +in my correspondence more than an occasional historical quotation, when +required by the interest attached to any monument which it may fall to +my lot to describe. + +Were I not to transmit to you a conscientious and faithful account of +all that I shall see, I should be guilty of cruelty; and that the more +base, from the certain impunity that must attend it. I say this, from +the impossibility of your ever undertaking the same journey, and +consequently of your ever being able to compare my portraits with their +originals. In fact, the incompatibility of your nature, and that of the +Spanish climate, must ever be present to me, who, during the vivifying +heats of the late very bearable _canicule_, in your French château--so +constructed as to perform the functions of an atmospheric sieve, by +separating the wind, which rushed through its doors and windows, +judiciously placed in parallels for the purpose, from the warmer +sunshine without--was witness, nevertheless, to your unaffected +distress, when you protested against any lofty, oak-panelled room being +sat or reclined in by more than one human being at a time, lest it +should be over-heated; placing thus an obstacle in the way of +conversation, in which to shine is your especial province, by rendering +it necessary to converse through various open doors; while, were an +additional testimony necessary to prove the sincerity of your +sufferings, your favourite of favourites, Caliph, repulsed and +uncaressed, hung his silken ears, as he solemnly retreated to coil +himself on a distant rug, and voted the dog-days a misnomer. + +Nor were you contented with your atmosphere, until, the season of +insects and _al-fresco_ suppers being long left behind, and the autumnal +equinox having peremptorily closed the doors and windows, fitted, alas! +by a carpenter who flourished in the reign of Louis the Fourteenth, so +plentiful a supply of air was afforded by the handy-works of the said +carpenter, that the Chinese screen had some difficulty in maintaining +its post, and the flames of the well-furnished elm-fire ascended with a +roar that would have shamed many a cataract of the rival element. Not +but that I would willingly forego the opportunity of sending you +erroneous information, in exchange for your presence in that country; +and for your assistance in comprehending the nature of a people +apparently composed of such contradictory ingredients. You might +probably succeed in fathoming the hidden springs of character, which +give birth to a crowd of anomalies difficult to explain. You would +discover by what mystery of organization a people, subject to the +influence of violent passions, combine an abject subjection to the forms +of etiquette, carried to its extreme in every-day life, with occasional +outbreaks of adventure and romance worthy of the days of Orlando and +Rodomonte; and account for a nation exchanging a costume which combines +utility with grace, for one inferior in both respects. Inventors of +whatever is most fascinating in dances and music--you would discover the +motive which induces them to abandon both, but principally the first, +which they replace by the French _rigodon_, or dancing-made-easy, and +adapted to youth, manhood, and all stages of paralysis; and, possessing +the cathedrals of Leon, Burgos, and Seville, to denounce Gothic +architecture as barbarous, and to brand it with the contemptuous +denomination of "crested masonry." + +Should my mono-(--monument-) mania run riot, and over-describe, +over-taxing even your passion for that branch of art, be assured--and to +this promise you may always look back for consolation and +encouragement--that I will not write you a history of the recent, or any +previous Spanish revolution, _apropos_ of the first sentry-box I meet +with, even though its form be that of a Lilliputian brick castle. Nor +shall my first glimpse of a matador occasion you a list of bull-fights, +voluminous enough to line the circumference of the _barrera_. No +Diligence shall be waylaid, nor in my presence shall any ladies' fingers +be amputated, the quicker to secure her rings, if I can possibly avoid +it; and, as far as depends on me, I shall arrive in a whole skin at each +journey's end, and without poisoning you or myself with garlick, unless +the new Cortes pass a law for denying to the stranger all other sorts of +aliment. + +I have resolved, by a process of reasoning which I need not at present +impart to you, and in virtue of a permission which I have little doubt +of your granting, to publish my part of our correspondence. I think that +neither of us will be a loser by this plan, however conceited I may +appear to you for saying so. Yourself, in the first place, must be a +gainer by the perusal of descriptions, on which, from their being +prepared for the ordeal of a less indulgent eye, greater care will +necessarily be expended: the public may benefit in obtaining +information, which shall be at all events accurate, relative to subjects +as yet inadequately appreciated by those they are the most likely to +interest: while the chief gainer, in the event of these two ends being +attained, will of course be your devoted and humble correspondent. + + + + +LETTER II. + +ROUTE TO SPAIN THROUGH FRANCE. + + +Bayonne. + +The position of Burgos on the principal line of communication by which +Madrid is approached from the north of Europe; the fact of its being the +first city met with, after crossing the Pyrenees, in which monuments are +found remaining of the former genius and grandeur of the country; and +the name of which calls up the more stirring and eventful epochs of +Spanish history,--render it, notwithstanding its actual distance from +the frontier, a sort of introduction or gateway to Spain--the Spain of +the tourist. + +The most agreeable and least troublesome way of visiting the best parts +of Spain excludes, it is true, this route; for the provinces of the +Peninsula which combine the greater number of requisites for the +enjoyment of life with the most attractive specimens of the picturesque, +whether natural or artificial, are those nearest to the coast, and they +are approached more conveniently by sea. Those, however, who can devote +sufficient time, will be repaid, by a tour in the interior of the +country, for the increase of trouble it may occasion them; and this tour +should precede the visit to the maritime provinces, as it will render +their superior comforts and climate the more acceptable from the +contrast. The scenery of the Pyrenees, and the passing acquaintance +formed with the original and picturesque population of the Basque +provinces, secure the traveller against any danger of ennui throughout +the land-journey between the frontier and the city of Burgos. + +There does not exist the same security throughout the extent of route +which it is necessary to travel in order to reach this frontier. The +approach to Spain across the south-western provinces of France offers +few objects worthy of detaining us on our way to the Peninsula. It is +one of the least interesting of French routes. From Paris you pass +through Orleans and Tours. At Chatellerault--between the latter city and +Poitiers--the inn-door is besieged by women offering knives for sale. It +is everywhere known that cutlery is not one of the departments of French +manufactures which have attained the greatest degree of superiority. A +glance at the specimens offered for our choice while changing horses at +Chatellerault, showed them to be very bad, even for France. + +This did not, however, prevent a multitude of travellers from purchasing +each his knife, nor one of them from laying in a plentiful stock, +stating that he destined a knife for each member of his +family--evidently one of the most numerous in France. I inquired of a +native the explanation of this scene, and whether these knives were +considered superior to those met with in other towns. "Oh no," was the +reply; "but it is usual to buy knives here." I ventured to say I thought +them very bad. "That is of no consequence; because, whenever you have +passed through Chatellerault, every one asks you for a knife made on the +spot." These victims of custom had paid enormous prices for their +acquisitions. + +Poitiers is a crazy old town, but contains one of the most admirable +specimens of the architecture immediately preceding the pointed, or +ogivale, and which the French savans call "the Romane." I allude to the +church called "the Notre Dame de Poitiers." The west front is highly +ornamented, and unites all the peculiar richness with the quaintness and +simplicity of design which characterize that fine old style. I must not +omit the forest of Chatellerault, passed through on leaving that town. +It is famous as the scene of the picnic given to the ladies of the +neighbouring city by the officers of a Polish regiment quartered there, +immediately before the breaking out of the Peninsular war. It is +related that Polish gallantry overstepped etiquette to such a +degree,--and _that_ by premeditation,--as to urge these cavaliers, by +force of bayonet, and sentries, to separate all the husbands, and other +male relatives, from the fairer portion of the guests. The consequences +of such a termination of the festivities may easily be imagined; +Bonaparte, a rigid judge with regard to all divorces except his own, on +receiving the complaint of the insulted town, condemned the officers _en +masse_ to be decimated, and the survivors degraded from their rank. He +relented, however, afterwards, on an understanding that they were to +regain their sullied laurels in the Peninsula; where, in fact, in +consequence of his orders, such opportunities were afforded them, that +scarcely a man in the regiment survived the earliest campaigns. + +The inhabitants of Chatellerault are said to take great offence on being +asked their age, suspecting the inquirer of a malicious calculation. + +The new quarter of Bordeaux is handsome, spacious, and airy. In the +promenade called "La Quinconce," on the bank of the river, a large +insulated edifice, the most monumental in view, is discovered by the +inscription on its front to be an establishment for warm baths. At one +extremity of the principal façade is seen, in sculptured letters, "Bains +des dames;" at the other, "Bains des hommes." At this latter entrance a +handsome staircase leads to the corridor of general communication, on +the unsullied white wall of which the code of discipline of the +establishment, traced in large sable characters, forces itself on the +notice of the visitor. It consists of the following single and rather +singular statute: "Il est expressement défendu aux garçons de permettre +à deux hommes de se servir de la même baignoire." After some reflection +I concluded it to be a measure of precaution with regard to cleanliness, +carried, no doubt, to an extreme at Bordeaux. This town is well +deserving of a few days' halt, should the traveller's object be +amusement, or the pleasures of the table, for which it enjoys a +well-merited reputation. It is a large and handsome city, the second in +France in beauty, and vies with the capital in the elegance of its shops +and principal streets. The theatre is, externally, the finest in France; +and there is, besides the cathedral, and surpassing it in interest and +antiquity, a remarkable Gothic church. + +Of the sixty leagues which separate this town from Bayonne, forty afford +the most perfect example of monotony. One sighs for the Steppes of +Russia. These are the well-known Landes, consisting of uncultivated +sands and morass; now covered league after league with the unvarying +gloom of the pine and cork forests,--now dreary and bare,--but ever +presenting to the wearied eye a wide interminable waste, replete with +melancholy and desolation. It is true, that a day of pouring rain was +not calculated to set off to advantage the qualities of such a region, +and should in strict justice be admitted in evidence before passing +condemnation on the Landes. + + + + +LETTER III. + +THE BASQUE PROVINCES. + + +Burgos. + +It never causes me surprise when I see the efforts made by persons of +limited means to obtain the situation of Consul in a continental town. + +In spite of one's being, as it were, tied to one's residence,--and that +not one's home,--there are advantages which counterbalance the evil. The +place carries with it a certain degree of consequence. One feels oneself +suddenly a man of influence, and a respectable public character. I have +heard one, certainly far from being high on the list of these +functionaries, termed by a humbler inhabitant of his "residence," the +"Premier Consul." + +The income, too, is, it is true, limited; but then one is usually in a +cheap place. In fact, I always envied these favoured individuals. No +calling, however, is without its _déboires_. It seems as if Providence +had decreed that an income cannot be fairly, if agreeably, earned. +Thus, the set-off against the bliss of the consul, is the necessity he +is under of holding out his hand for his fee. I make these remarks, to +introduce to your notice an ingenious method, put in practice--probably +invented--by our consul at Bayonne, for getting over the irksomeness of +this duty. I found him in his _bureau_, pen in hand, and a large sheet +of official-shaped paper before him, half written over. On my passport +being presented for his _visa_, his countenance assumed a painful +expression, in which regret was blended with a sort of tendency to +compassion, and which at first occasioned me a sensation of alarm, +conjuring up in my imagination all the consequences of an irregular +passport--tedious routes to be retraced, time lost, expense incurred, +and suspicion, and even incarceration--infection--death! + +Meanwhile he pointed to the letter he was writing, and, drawing forward +with the other hand a chair, said that he was at that moment +memorializing the Foreign Office on the subject of these visas; that his +pain was extreme at seeing travellers compelled to send or come to his +office, and to lose thus much valuable time; he was likewise concerned +at their having to pay three francs each for so useless a ceremony as +his visa; but he wished it to be remarked, that it was at present a +ceremony quite indispensable; since, only four days back, a gentleman +had been compelled to return from the Spanish frontier (a distance of +seven leagues) in the middle of the night, in consequence of his having +neglected this, as yet, necessary observance.[1] + +Leaving Bayonne by Diligence, although still at some distance from the +frontier, you are already in a Spanish vehicle. The only difference +consists in its being drawn by horses as far as Irun, a few hundred +yards in Spain, at which place they are replaced by a team of mules; but +the _mayoral_ is Spanish from the commencement, as also usually the +greater number of the travellers. From the first view of Spanish ground, +the monotony of the landscape ceases, and gives place to picturesque +scenery. This effect is as sudden as if produced by the whistle of a +scene-shifter. From the brow of a hill the valley of the Bidassoa opens +on the view, the bay on the right, two or three towns in the centre, and +beyond them, stretching to the left, the chain of the Pyrenees. This +opening scene is very satisfactory to the newly arrived traveller, whose +expectations have been rising towards fever-heat as he gradually neared +the object of his dreams--the "renowned romantic land;" the more so, as +he is well prepared, by the Landes of France, to enjoy to the utmost +the variety of scene afforded by the two days of mountain and valley +which separate the frontier from the town of Vitoria. + +The Diligence comes to a halt every afternoon; the day's journey having +commenced at three in the morning. There are three of these days between +Bayonne and Burgos. At Tolosa and Vitoria--the intermediate places of +rest--the system is as follows: Arriving at about four in the afternoon, +an interval is allowed of about two hours, which in a long journey can +always be profitably employed, until the meal, called supper. This is +Homerically plentiful, and varied sufficiently to suit the tastes of all +such as are accustomed to the vicissitudes of travelling. The repast +over, all gradually retire to their sleeping apartments, where they are +undisturbed until two o'clock in the morning. + +At this hour each passenger is furnished with a candle, and requested to +get up; and at a quarter to three the _muchacha_ (chambermaid) +reappears, bearing in her hand a plate, on which, after rubbing his +eyes, the traveller may discover, if it be allowed so to speak, an +imperceptible cup, a _xicara_,--since, having the thing, they have a +name for it, which is of course untranslateable,--of excellent +chocolate, an _azucarillo_ (almost transparent sugar prepared for +instantaneous melting), a glass of water, and a piece of bread. After +partaking of this agreeable refreshment, you have just time left to pay +your bill, fold up your passport, which during the night has remained in +the hands of the police, and to take your seat in the Diligence. + +The towns of the Basque provinces appear not to have been much +maltreated during the Carlist war; not so the villages, most of which +present a melancholy aspect of ruin and desolation. The churches, built +so as to appear more like keeps of castles, have mostly withstood the +shock. The destruction was oftener the result of burning than of +artillery. The lover of the picturesque offers his silent gratitude to +the combatants on both sides, for sparing, although unintentionally, +some of the most charming objects of all Spain. + +Among the most striking of these is Hernani. It is composed of one +street, of the exact required width for the passage of an ordinary +vehicle. This street is a perfect specimen of picturesque originality. +The old façades are mostly emblazoned with the bearings of their ancient +proprietors, sculptured in high relief. On entering the place, the +effect is that of a deep twilight after the broad blaze of the sunny +mountains. This is caused by the almost flat roofs, which advance +considerably beyond the fronts of the houses, and nearly meet in the +centre of the street: the roof of each house is either higher or lower, +or more or less projecting, than its neighbour; and all are supported by +carved woodwork, black from age. The street terminates on the brow of a +hill, and widens at the end, so as to form a small square, one +retreating side of which is occupied by the front of a church covered +with old sculpture; and the diligence, preceded by its long team of +tinkling mules, disappears through the arched gateway of a Gothic +castle. + +In this part of Spain one does not hear the sounds of the guitar; these +commence further on. On Sundays and holydays, the fair of Tolosa, and of +the other Basque towns, flourish their castagnettes to the less romantic +whinings of the violin; but, in traversing the country, the ear is +continually met by a sound less musical, although no less national, than +that of the guitar--a sort of piercing and loud complaint, comparable to +nothing but the screams of those who have "relinquished hope" at Dante's +grim gateway. + +These unearthly accents assail the ear of the traveller long before he +can perceive the object whence they proceed; but, becoming louder and +louder, there will issue from a narrow road, or rather ravine, a +diminutive cart, shut in between two small round tables for wheels. +Their voice proceeds from their junction with the axle, by a +contrivance, the nature of which I did not examine closely enough to +describe. A French tourist expresses much disgust at this custom, which +he attributes to the barbarous state of his neighbours, and their +ignorance of mechanical art; it is, however, much more probable that the +explanation given by the native population is the correct one. According +to this, the wheels are so constructed for the useful purpose of +forewarning all other drivers of the approach of a cart. The utility of +some such invention is evident. The mountain roads are cut to a depth +often of several yards, sometimes scores of yards, (being probably +dried-up beds of streams,) and frequently for a distance of some +furlongs admit of the passage of no more than one of these carts at a +time, notwithstanding their being extremely narrow. The driver, +forewarned at a considerable distance by a sound he cannot mistake, +seeks a wide spot, and there awaits the meeting. + +You need not be told that human experience analysed resolves itself into +a series of disappointments. I beg you to ask yourself, or any of your +acquaintances, whether any person, thing, or event ever turned out to be +exactly, or nearly, such as was expected he, she, or it would be. +According to the disposition of each individual, these component parts +of experience become the bane or the charm of his life. + +This truth may be made, by powerful resolve, the permanent companion of +your reflections, so as to render the expectation of disappointment +stronger than any other expectation. What then? If you know the expected +result will undergo a metamorphosis before it becomes experience, you +will not be disappointed. Only try. For instance,--every one knows the +Spanish character by heart; it is the burden of all literary +productions, which, from the commencement of time, have treated of that +country. A Carlist officer, therefore,--the hopeless martyr in the +Apostolic, aristocratic cause of divine right; the high-souled being, +rushing into the daily, deadly struggle, supported, instead of pay and +solid rations, by his fidelity to his persecuted king;--such a character +is easily figured. The theory of disappointments must here be at fault. +He is a true Spaniard; grave, reserved, dignified. His lofty presence +must impress every assembly with a certain degree of respectful awe.--I +mounted the _coupé_, or _berlina_, of the Diligence, to leave Tolosa, +with a good-looking, fair, well-fed native, with a long falling auburn +moustache. We commenced by bandying civilities as to which should hold +the door while the other ascended. No sooner were we seated than my +companion inquired whether I was military; adding, that he was a Carlist +captain of cavalry returning from a six months' emigration. + +Notwithstanding the complete polish of his manners in addressing me, it +was evident he enjoyed an uncommon exuberance of spirits, even more than +the occasion could call for from the most ardent lover of his country; +and I at first concluded he must have taken the earliest opportunity (it +being four o'clock in the morning) of renewing his long-interrupted +acquaintance with the flask of _aguardiente_: but that this was not the +case was evident afterwards, from the duration of his tremendous +happiness. During the first three or four hours, his tongue gave itself +not an instant's repose. Every incident was a subject of merriment, and, +when tired of talking to me, he would open the front-window and address +the _mayoral_; then roar to the postilion, ten mules ahead; then swear +at the _zagal_ running along the road, or toss his cigar-stump at the +head of some wayfaring peasant-girl. + +Sometimes, all his vocabulary being exhausted, he contented himself with +a loud laugh, long continued; then he would suddenly fall asleep, and, +after bobbing his head for five or six minutes, awake in a convulsion of +laughter, as though his dream was too merry for sleep. Whatever he said +was invariably preceded by two or three oaths, and terminated in the +same manner. The Spanish (perhaps, in this respect, the richest European +language) hardly sufficed for his supply. He therefore selected some of +the more picturesque specimens for more frequent repetition. These, in +default of topics of conversation, sometimes served instead of a fit of +laughter or a nap: and once or twice he hastily lowered the window, and +gave vent to a string of about twenty oaths at the highest pitch of his +lungs; then shut it deliberately, and remained silent for a minute. +During dinner he cut a whole cheese into lumps, with which he stuffed an +unlucky lap-dog, heedless of the entreaties of two fair +fellow-travellers, proprietors of the condemned quadruped. This was a +Carlist warrior! + +The inhabitants of the Basque provinces are a fine race, and taller than +the rest of the Spaniards. The men possess the hardy and robust +appearance common to mountaineers, and the symmetry of form which is +almost universal in Spain, although the difference of race is easily +perceptible. The women are decidedly handsome, although they also are +anything but Spanish-looking; and their beauty is often enhanced by an +erect and dignified air, not usually belonging to peasants, (for I am +only speaking of the lower orders,) and attributable principally to a +very unpeasant-like planting of the head on the neck and shoulders. I +saw several village girls whom nothing but their dress would prevent +from being mistaken for German or English ladies of rank, being moreover +universally blondes. On quitting Vitoria, you leave behind you the +mountains and the pretty faces. + +For us, however, the latter were not entirely lost. There were two in +the Diligence, belonging to the daughters of a Grandee of the first +class, Count de P. These youthful señoritas had taken the opportunity, +rendered particularly well-timed by the revolutions and disorders of +their country, of passing three years in Paris, which they employed in +completing their education, and seeing the wonders of that town, +_soi-disant_ the most civilized in the world; which probably it would +have been, had the old _régime_ not been overthrown. They were now +returning to Madrid, furnished with all the new ideas, and the various +useful and useless accomplishments they had acquired. + +Every one whose lot it may have been to undertake a journey of several +days in a Diligence,--that is, in one and the same,--and who +consequently recollects that trembling and anxious moment during which +he has passed in review the various members of the society of which he +is to be, _nolens volens_, a member; and the feverish interest which +directed his glance of rapid scrutiny towards those in particular of the +said members with whom he was to be exposed to more immediate contact, +and at the mercy of whose birth and education, habits, opinions, +prejudices, qualities, and propensities, his happiness and comfort were +to be placed during so large and uninterrupted a period of his +existence,--will comprehend my gratitude to these fair _émigrées_, whose +lively conversation shortened the length of each day, adding to the +charms of the magnificent scenery by the opportunity they afforded of a +congenial interchange of impressions. Although we did not occupy the +same compartment of the carriage, their party requiring the entire +interior and _rotonde_, we always renewed acquaintance when a prolonged +ascent afforded an opportunity of liberating our limbs from their +confinement. + +The two daily repasts also would have offered no charm, save that of the +Basque _cuisine_,--which, although cleanly and solid, is not perfectly +_cordon bleu_,--but for the entertaining conversation of my fair +fellow-travellers, who had treasured up in their memory the best sayings +and doings of Arnal, and the other Listons and Yateses of the French +capital, which, seasoned with a slight Spanish accent, were +indescribably _piquants_ and original. My regret was sincere on our +respective routes diverging at Burgos; for they proceeded by the direct +line over the Somo sierra to Madrid, while I take the longer road by the +Guadarramas, in order to visit Valladolid. I shall not consequently make +acquaintance with the northern approach to Madrid, unless I return +thither a second time; as to that of my fellow-travellers, I should be +too fortunate were it to be renewed during my short stay in their +capital. + + + + +LETTER IV. + +ARRIVAL AT BURGOS. CATHEDRAL. + + +Burgos. + +The chain of the Lower Pyrenees, after the ascent from the French side, +and a two days' journey of alternate mountain and valley, terminates on +the Spanish side at almost its highest level. A gentle descent leads to +the plain of Vitoria; and, after leaving behind the fresh-looking, +well-farmed environs of that town, there remains a rather monotonous +day's journey across the bare plains of Castile, only varied by the +passage through a gorge of about a mile in extent, called the Pass of +Pancorbo, throughout which the road is flanked on either side by a +perpendicular rock of from six to eight hundred feet elevation. The +ancient capital of Castile is visible from a considerable distance, when +approached in this direction; being easily recognised by the spires of +its cathedral, and by the citadel placed on an eminence, which forms a +link of a chain of hills crossing the route at this spot. + +The extent of Burgos bears a very inadequate proportion to the idea +formed of it by strangers, derived from its former importance and +renown. It is composed of five or six narrow streets, winding round the +back of an irregularly shaped colonnaded plaza. The whole occupies a +narrow space, comprised between the river Arlançon, and the almost +circular hill of scarcely a mile in circumference, (on which stands the +citadel) and covers altogether about double the extent of Windsor +Castle. + +The city has received a sort of modern facing, consisting of a row of +regularly built white houses, which turn their backs to the Plaza, and +front the river; uniting at one extremity with an ancient gateway, +which, facing the principal bridge, must originally have stood slightly +in advance of the town, to which it formed a very characteristic +entrance. It is a quadrangular edifice, pierced with a low semicircular +arch. The arch is flanked on the river front by small circular turrets, +and surmounted by seven niches, containing statues of magistrates, +kings, and heroes; while over these, in a centre niche, stands a +semicolossal statue of the Virgin, from which the monument derives its +title of "Arco de Santa Maria." Another arch, but totally simple, +situated at the other extremity of the new buildings, faces another +bridge; and this, with that of Santa Maria, and a third, placed halfway +between them, leading to the Plaza, form the three entrances to the city +on the river side. + +[Illustration: ARCO DE SANTA MARIA.] + +The dimensions of this, and many other Spanish towns, must not be +adopted as a base for estimating their amount of population. Irun, at +the frontier of France, stands on a little hill, the surface of which +would scarcely suffice for a country-house, with its surrounding +offices and gardens: it contains, nevertheless, four or five thousand +inhabitants, and comprises a good-sized market-place and handsome +town-hall, besides several streets. Nor does this close packing render +the Spanish towns less healthy than our straggling cities, planned with +a view to circulation and purity of atmosphere, although the difference +of climate would seem to recommend to each of the two countries the +system pursued by the other. The humidity of the atmosphere in England +would be the principal obstacle to cleanliness and salubrity, had the +towns a more compact mode of construction; whilst in Spain, on the +contrary, this system is advantageous as a protection against the +excessive power of the summer sun, which would render our wide +streets--bordered by houses too low to afford complete shade--not only +almost impassable, but uninhabitable. + +The Plaza of Burgos (entitled "de la Constitucion," or "de Isabel II.," +or "del Duque de la Victoria," or otherwise, according to the government +of the day,) has always been the resort of commerce. The projecting +first-floors being supported by square pillars, a sort of bazaar is +formed under them, which includes all the shop population of the city, +and forms an agreeable lounge during wet or too sunny weather. +Throughout the remainder of the town, with the exception of the modern +row of buildings above mentioned, almost all the houses are entered +through Gothic doorways, surmounted by armorial bearings sculptured in +stone, which, together with their ornamental inner courts and +staircases, testify to their having sheltered the chivalry of Old +Castile. The Cathedral, although by no means large, appears to fill half +the town; and considering that, in addition to its conspicuous and +inviting aspect, it is the principal remaining monument of the ancient +wealth and grandeur of the province, and one of the most beautiful +edifices in Europe, I will lose no time in giving you a description of +it. + +This edifice, or at least the greater portion of it, dates from the +thirteenth century. The first stone was laid by Saint Ferdinand, on the +20th of July 1221. Ferdinand had just been proclaimed king by his mother +Doña Berenguela, who had invested him with his sword at the royal +convent of the Huelgas, about a mile distant from Burgos. Don Mauricio, +Bishop of Burgos, blessed the armour as the youthful king girded it, +and, three days subsequently to the ceremony, he united him to the +Princess Beatrice, in the church of the same convent. This bishop +assisted in laying the first stone of the cathedral, and presided over +the construction of the entire body of the building, including half of +the two principal towers. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE CHOIR.] + +His tomb may be seen at the back of the Choir. From the date of the +building its style may at once be recognised, allowing for a difference +which existed between England and the Continent, the latter being +somewhat in advance. The original edifice must have been a very perfect +and admirable specimen of the pointed architecture of its time in all +its purity. As it is, unfortunately, (as the antiquary would say, and, I +should add, the mere man of taste, were it not that tastes are various, +and that the proverb says they are all in nature,) the centre of the +building, forming the intersection of the transept and nave, owing to +some defect in the original construction, fell in just at the period +during which regular architecture began to waver, and the style called +in France the "Renaissance" was making its appearance. An architect of +talent, Felipe de Borgoña, hurried from Toledo, where he was employed in +carving the stalls of the choir, to furnish a plan for the centre tower. +He, however, only carried the work to half the height of the four +cylindrical piers which support it. He was followed by several others +before the termination of the work; and Juan de Herrera, the architect +of the Escorial, is said to have completed it. In this design are +displayed infinite talent and imagination; but the artist could not +alter the taste of the age. It is more than probable that he would have +kept to the pure style of his model, but for the prevailing fashion of +his time. Taken by itself, the tower is, both externally and internally, +admirable, from the elegance of its form, and the richness of its +details; but it jars with the rest of the building. + +Placing this tower in the background, we will now repair to the west +front. Here nothing is required to be added, or taken away, to afford +the eye a feast as perfect as grace, symmetry, grandeur, and lightness, +all combined, are capable of producing. Nothing can exceed the beauty of +this front taken as a whole. You have probably seen an excellent view of +it in one of Roberts's annuals. The artists of Burgos complain of an +alteration, made some fifty years back by the local ecclesiastical +authorities, nobody knows for what reason. They caused a magnificent +portal to be removed, to make way for a very simple one, totally +destitute of the usual sculptured depth of arch within arch, and of the +profusion of statuary, which are said to have adorned the original +entrance. This, however, has not produced a bad result in the view of +the whole front. Commencing by solidity and simplicity at its base, the +pile only becomes ornamental at the first story, where rows of small +trefoil arches are carved round the buttresses; while in the +intermediate spaces are an oriel window in an ornamental arch, and two +narrow double arches. The third compartment, where the towers first rise +above the body of the church, offers a still richer display of ornament. +The two towers are here connected by a screen, which masks the roof, +raising the apparent body of the façade an additional story. This +screen is very beautiful, being composed of two ogival windows in the +richest style, with eight statues occupying the intervals of their lower +mullions. A fourth story, equally rich, terminates the towers, on the +summits of which are placed the two spires. + +These are all that can be wished for the completion of such a whole. +They are, I imagine, not only unmatched, but unapproached by any others, +in symmetry, lightness, and beauty of design. The spire of Strasburg is +the only one I am acquainted with that may be allowed to enter into the +comparison. It is much larger, placed at nearly double the elevation, +and looks as light as one of these; but the symmetry of its outline is +defective, being uneven, and producing the effect of steps. And then it +is alone, and the absence of a companion gives the façade an unfinished +appearance. For these reasons I prefer the spires of Burgos. Their form +is hexagonal; they are entirely hollow, and unsupported internally. The +six sides are carved _à jour_, the design forming nine horizontal +divisions, each division presenting a different ornament on each of its +six sides. At the termination of these divisions, each pyramid is +surrounded near the summit by a projecting gallery with balustrades. +These appear to bind and keep together each airy fabric, which, +everywhere transparent, looks as though it required some such +restraint, to prevent its being instantaneously scattered by the winds. + +On examining the interior of one of these spires, it is a subject of +surprise that they could have been so constructed as to be durable. +Instead of walls, you are surrounded by a succession of little +balustrades, one over the other, converging towards the summit. The +space enclosed is exposed to all the winds, and the thickness of the +stones so slight as to have required their being bound together with +iron cramps. At a distance of a mile these spires appear as transparent +as nets. + +On entering the church by the western doors, the view is interrupted, as +is usual in Spain, by a screen, which, crossing the principal nave at +the third or fourth pillar, forms the western limit of the choir; the +eastern boundary being the west side of the transept, where there is an +iron railing. The space between the opposite side of the transept and +the apse is the _capilla mayor_ (chief chapel), in which is placed the +high altar. There are two lower lateral naves, from east to west, and +beyond them a series of chapels. The transept has no lateral naves. Some +of the chapels are richly ornamented. The first or westernmost, on the +north side, in particular, would be in itself a magnificent church. It +is called the "Chapel of Santa Tecla." Its dimensions are ninety-six +feet in length, by sixty-three in width, and sixty high. The ceiling, +and different altars, are covered with a dazzling profusion of gilded +sculpture. The ceiling, in particular, is entirely hidden beneath the +innumerable figures and ornaments of every sort of form, although of +questionable taste, which the ravings of the extravagant style, called +in Spain "Churriguesco" (after the architect who brought it into +fashion), could invent. + +The next chapel--that of Santa Ana--is not so large, but designed in far +better taste. It is Gothic, and dates from the fifteenth century. Here +are some beautiful tombs, particularly that of the founder of the +chapel. But the most attractive object is a picture, placed at an +elevation which renders difficult the appreciation of its merits without +the aid of a glass,--a Holy Family, by Andrea del Sarto. It is an +admirable picture; possessing all the grace and simplicity, combined +with the fineness of execution, of that artist. The chapel immediately +opposite (on the south side) contains some handsome tombs, and another +picture, representing the Virgin, attributed by the cicerone of the +place to Michael Angelo. We next arrive at the newer part, or centre of +the building, where four cylindrical piers of about twelve feet +diameter, with octagonal bases, form a quadrangle, and support the +centre tower, designed by Felipe de Borgoña. These pillars are +connected with each other by magnificent wrought brass railings, which +give entrance respectively, westward to the choir,--on the east to the +sanctuary, or capilla mayor,--and north and south to the two ends of the +transept. Above is seen the interior of the tower, covered with a +profusion of ornament, but discordant with every other object within +view. + +[Illustration: _W.F. Starling, sc._ + +TRANSEPT OF THE CATHEDRAL, BURGOS.] + +The high altar at the back of the great chapel is also the work of +Herrera. It is composed of a series of rows of saints and apostles, +superposed one over the other, until they reach the roof. All are placed +in niches adorned with gilding, of which only partial traces remain. The +material of the whole is wood. Returning to either side-nave, a few +smaller chapels on the outside, and opposite them the railings of the +sanctuary, conduct us to the back of the high altar, opposite which is +the eastern chapel, called "of the Duke de Frias," or "Capilla del +Condestable." + +[Illustration: SCULPTURE IN THE APSE.] + +All this part of the edifice--I mean, from the transept eastward--is +admirable, both with regard to detail and to general effect. The pillars +are carved all round into niches, containing statues or groups; and the +intervals between the six last, turning round the apse, are occupied by +excellent designs, sculptured in a hard white stone. The subjects are, +the Agony in the Garden, Jesus bearing the Cross, the Crucifixion, the +Resurrection, and the Ascension. The centre piece, representing the +Crucifixion, is the most striking. The upper part contains the three +sufferers in front; and in the background a variety of buildings, trees, +and other smaller objects, supposed to be at a great distance. In the +foreground of the lower part are seen the officers and soldiers employed +in the execution; a group of females, with St. John supporting the +Virgin, and a few spectators. The costumes, the expression, the symmetry +of the figures, all contribute to the excellence of this piece of +sculpture. It would be difficult to surpass the exquisite grace +displayed in the attitudes, and flow of the drapery, of the female +group; and the Herculean limbs of the right-hand robber, as he writhes +in his torments, and seems ready to snap the cords which retain his feet +and arms,--the figure projecting in its entire contour from the surface +of the background,--present an admirable model of corporeal expression +and anatomical detail. + +In clearing the space to make room for these sculptures, the artist had +to remove the tomb of a bishop, whose career, if the ancient _chronique_ +is to be depended on, must have been rather singular. The information, +it must be owned, bears the appearance of having been transmitted by +some contemporary annalist, whose impartiality may have perhaps been +biassed by some of the numerous incitements which operate upon +courtiers. + +Don Pedro Fernandez de Frias, Cardinal of Spain, Bishop of Osma and +Cuenca, was, it is affirmed, of low parentage, of base and licentious +habits of life, and of a covetous and niggardly disposition. These +defects, however, by no means diminished the high favour he enjoyed at +the successive courts of Henry the Third and Juan the Second. The Bishop +of Segovia, Don Juan de Tordesillas, happened by an unlucky coincidence +to visit Burgos during his residence there. The characters of the two +prelates were not of a nature to harmonise in the smallest degree, and, +being thrown necessarily much in each other's way, they gave loose +occasionally to expressions more than bordering on the irreverent. It +was on one of these occasions, that, the eloquence of the Cardinal +Bishop here interred being at default, a lacquey of his followers came +to his assistance, and being provided with a _palo_, or staff, inflicted +on the rival dignitary certain arguments _ad humeros_--in fact, gave the +Bishop of Segovia a severe drubbing. The Cardinal was on this occasion +compelled to retire to Italy. + +Turning our backs to the centre piece of sculpture last described, we +enter the Capilla del Condestable through a superb bronze railing. In +these railings the Cathedral of Burgos rivals that of Seville, +compensating by number for the superior size and height of those +contained in the latter church. That of the chapel we are now entering +entirely fills the entrance arch, a height of about forty feet; the +helmet of a mounted knight in full armour, intended to represent St. +Andrew, which crowns its summit, nearly touching the keystone of the +arch. This chapel must be noticed in detail. Occupying at the extremity +of the church a position answering to that of Henry the Seventh's +Chapel at Westminster Abbey, it forms a tower of itself, which on the +outside harmonises with peculiar felicity with the three others, and +contributes to the apparent grandeur and real beauty of the exterior +view. The interior is magnificent, although its plan and style, being +entirely different from those of Henry the Seventh's Chapel, prevent the +comparison from going further. Its form is octagonal, measuring about +fifty feet in diameter, by rather more than a hundred in height. Its +style florid Gothic of the fourteenth century. The effect of its first +view is enhanced by its being filled, unlike the rest of the church, +with a blaze of light introduced through two rows of windows in the +upper part. + +Two of the sides are furnished with recesses, which form lesser chapels, +and in one of which there is a fine organ. Between the centre of the +pavement and the principal altar, a large square block of mixed marble +covers the remains of the founders of the chapel, and bears on its +surface their recumbent figures executed in great perfection.[2] This +is the finest tomb in the cathedral. The embroidery of the cushions, the +ornaments on the count's armour, the gloves of the countess, are among +the details which merit particular notice amidst the beautiful execution +of the whole. The high altar of this chapel does not accord with the +general effect, being designed in the style of the _renascimiento_. In +the centre of it is nevertheless fixed a treasure that would compensate +for worse defects. A small circular medallion represents the Virgin and +Child, in an attitude very similar to that of the Madonna della +Seggiola, executed on porphyry. This delicious little work, of about +nine inches in diameter, forms the centre of attraction, and is the most +precious ornament of the chapel. On the right hand, near the altar, a +small doorway admits to the sacristy. + +This contains several relics of the founders. A small portable altar of +ivory, forming the base of a crucifix of about eighteen inches in +height, is an exquisite model of delicate workmanship. Here also has +been treasured up a picture, behind a glass, and in a sort of wooden +case; a bequest likewise of the founders. Unfortunately they neglected +to impart the name of its author. The nebulous sort of uncertainty thus +made to surround this relic has magnified its merits, which might +otherwise perhaps not have claimed particular notice, to the most +colossal dimensions. They scarcely at last know what to say of it. At +the period of my first visit to Burgos, it was a Leonardo da Vinci; but, +after a lapse of two years, the same sacristan informed me that it was +uncertain whether the painting was executed by Raffaelle or Leonardo, +although it was generally supposed to be by Raffaelle; and a notice, +published since, gives the authority of an anonymous connaisseur, who +asserts it to be far superior to Raffaelle's "Perle." It is now +consequently decided that it cannot be a Leonardo, and is scarcely bad +enough for a Raffaelle. + +Without venturing _tantas componere lites_, I may be allowed to give my +impression, on an inspection as complete as the studied darkness of the +apartment, added to the glass and wooden case, would permit. It is a +half-figure of the Magdalene. The execution is very elaborate and highly +finished, but there are evident defects in the drawing. In colouring and +manner it certainly reminds you of da Vinci--of one of whose works it +may probably be a copy; but, whatever it is, it is easy to discover that +it is _not_ a Raffaelle. + +This chapel does not occupy the precise centre of the apse. A line drawn +from the middle of the western door through the nave would divide it +into two unequal parts, passing at a distance of nearly two yards from +its centre. An examination of the ground externally gives no clue to the +cause of this irregularity, by which the external symmetry of the +edifice is rendered imperfect, although in an almost imperceptible +degree; it must therefore be accounted for by the situation of the +adjoining parochial chapel, of more ancient construction, with which it +was not allowable to interfere, and by the unwillingness of the founder +to diminish the scale on which his chapel was planned. + +Before we leave the Chapel del Condestable, one of its ceremonies +deserves particular mention. I allude to the _missa de los carneros_ +(sheep-mass). At early mass on All Souls day, a feast celebrated in this +chapel with extraordinary pomp, six sheep are introduced, and made to +stand on a large block of unpolished marble, which has been left lying +close to the tombs, almost in the centre of the chapel; near the six +sheep are placed as many inflated skins of pigs, resembling those +usually filled with the wine of the country; to these is added the +quantity of bread produced from four bushels of wheat: and all remain in +view during the performance of high mass. At the conclusion of the final +response, the sheep are removed from their pedestal, and make for the +chapel-gates, through which they issue; and urged by the voice of their +driver, the peculiar shrill whistle of Spanish shepherds, and by the +more material argument of the staff, proceed down the entire length of +the cathedral to the music of the aforesaid whistle, accompanied by +their own bleatings and bells, until they vanish through the great +western portal. + +Returning to the transepts, we find two objects worthy of notice. The +cathedral having been erected on uneven ground, rising rapidly from +south to north, the entrance to the north transept opens at an elevation +of nearly thirty feet from the pavement. To reach this door there is an +ornamental staircase, of a sort of white stone, richly carved in the +_renaissance_ style. This door is never open, a circumstance which +causes no inconvenience; the steps being so steep as to render them less +useful than ornamental, as long as any other exit exists. + +A beautifully carved old door, of a wood become perfectly black, +although not so originally, gives access to the cloister from the east +side of the south transept. The interior of the arch which surmounts it +is filled with sculpture. A plain moulding runs round the top, at the +left-hand commencement of which is carved a head of the natural size, +clothed in a cowl. + +[Illustration: HEAD OF SAINT FRANCIS.][3] + +The attention is instantly rivetted by this head: it is not merely a +masterpiece of execution. Added to the exquisite beauty and delicate +moulding of the upper part of the face, the artist has succeeded in +giving to the mouth an almost superhuman expression. This feature, in +spite of a profusion of hair which almost covers it, lives and speaks. A +smile, in which a barely perceptible but irresistible and, as it were, +innate bitterness of satire and disdain modifies a wish of benevolence, +unites with the piercing expression of the eyes in lighting up the stone +with a degree of intellect which I had thought beyond the reach of +sculpture until I saw this head. Tradition asserts it to be a portrait +of Saint Francis, who was at Burgos at the period of the completion of +the cathedral; and who, being in the habit of examining the progress of +the works, afforded unconsciously a study to the sculptor. + +The two sacristies are entered from the cloister: one of them contains +the portraits of all the bishops and archbishops of Burgos. +Communicating with this last is a room destined for the reception of +useless lumber and broken ornaments. Here the cicerone directs your +attention to an old half-rotten oaken chest, fixed against the wall at a +considerable height. This relic is the famous Coffre del Cid, the +self-same piece of furniture immortalised in the anecdote related of the +hero respecting the loan of money obtained on security of the supposed +treasure it enclosed. The lender of the money, satisfied by the weight +of the trunk, and the chivalrous honour of its proprietor, never saw +its contents until shown them by the latter on the repayment of the +loan: they were then discovered to consist of stones and fragments of +old iron. + +One is disappointed on finding in this cathedral no more durable +_souvenir_ of the Cid than his rat-corroded wardrobe. His remains are +preserved in the chapel of the Ayuntamiento; thither we will +consequently bend our steps, not forgetting to enjoy, as we leave the +church, a long gaze at its elegant and symmetrical proportions. It may +be called an unique model of beauty of its particular sort, especially +when contemplated without being drawn into comparison with other +edifices of a different class. Catalani is said, on hearing Sontag's +performance, to have remarked that she was "la première de son genre, +mais que son genre n'était pas le premier." Could the cathedral of +Seville see that of Burgos, it would probably pronounce a similar +judgment on its smaller rival. + +The profusion of ornament, the perfection of symmetry, the completeness +of finish, produce an instantaneous impression that nothing is wanting +in this charming edifice; but any one who should happen to have +previously seen that of Seville cannot, after the first moments of +enthusiasm, escape the comparison which forces itself on him, and which +is not in favour of this cathedral. It is elegant, but deficient in +grandeur; beautiful, but wanting in majesty. The stern and grand +simplicity of the one, thrown into the scales against the light, airy, +and diminutive, though graceful beauty of the other, recalls the +contrast drawn by Milton between our first parents; a contrast which, +applied to these churches, must be considered favourable to the more +majestic, however the balance of preference may turn in the poem. + + + + +LETTER V. + +TOMB OF THE CID. CITADEL. + + +Burgos. + +The Ayuntamiento, or Town-hall, presents one façade to the river, and +the other to the Plaza Mayor, being built over the archway which forms +the already mentioned entrance to the central portion of the city. The +building, like other town-halls, possesses an airy staircase, a large +public room, and a few other apartments, used for the various details of +administration; but nothing remarkable until you arrive at a handsomely +ornamented saloon, furnished with a canopied seat fronting a row of +arm-chairs. This is the room in which the municipal body hold their +juntas. It contains several portraits: two or three of kings, suspended +opposite to an equal number of queens; the two likenesses of the +celebrated judges Nuño Rasura and Lain Calvo, near which are seen the +simple square oaken chairs from within the angular and hard embrace of +which they administered the laws and government of Castile; a +full-length of Fernan Gonzalez; and lastly, one of the Cid. + +Owing to the singularity of this last portrait, it is the first to +attract attention. The hero is represented in the most extraordinary of +attitudes: the head is thrown back, and the face turned towards one +side; the legs in a sort of studied posture; a drawn sword is in the +right hand, the point somewhat raised. The general expression is that of +a comic actor attempting an attitude of mock-heroic impertinence; and is +probably the result of an unattained object in the mind of the artist, +of producing that of fearless independence. + +Beyond this apartment is the Chapel, a plain, not large room, containing +but two objects besides its very simple altar, with its, almost black, +silver candlesticks. Over the altar is a Conception, by Murillo; and, in +the centre of the chapel, a highly polished and neatly ornamented +funereal urn, composed of walnut-wood, contains the remains of the Cid: +the urn stands on a pedestal. On its two ends in letters of gold, are +inscriptions, stating its contents, and the date of its application to +its present purpose. I was told that the bones were contained in a +leaden box, but that a glass one was being prepared, which, on opening +the lid of the urn, would afford a view of the actual dust of the +warrior. + +The remains of the Cid have only recently been conveyed to Burgos from +the monastery of San Pedro de Cardenas, about four miles distant. They +had been preserved there ever since his funeral, which took place in the +presence of King Alonzo the Sixth, and the two Kings, sons-in-law of the +hero, as soon as the body arrived from Valencia. + +This monastic retreat, if dependence may be placed on the testimony of +the Cerberus of the Alcalde,--the cicerone (when duly propitiated) of +the municipal edifice,--did not turn out to be altogether a place of +repose to the warrior. According to this worthy, an amusing interpreter +of the popular local traditions, the exploits performed subsequently to +the hero's interment were such as almost to throw a shadow over those he +enacted during his mortal existence. One specimen will suffice. Some +twenty thousand individuals, including the monks of all the neighbouring +monasteries, were assembled in the church of San Pedro, and were +listening to a sermon on the occasion of the annual festival in honour +of the patron saint. Guided by curiosity, a Moor entered the church and +mingled with the crowd. After remaining during a short time motionless, +he approached a pillar, against which was suspended a portrait of the +Cid, for the purpose of examining the picture. Suddenly the figure was +seen by all present, whose testimony subsequently established the fact, +to grasp with the right hand the hilt of its sword, and to uncover a few +inches of the naked blade. The Moor instantly fell flat on the pavement, +and was found to be lifeless. + +You would be surprised at the difficulty of forming even here, in the +midst of the scenes of his exploits, a definite idea of this Hercules of +the Middle Ages. For those who are satisfied with the orthodox histories +of the monks, he is without defects--a simple unsophisticated demi-god. +But there have been Mahometan historians of Spain. These are universally +acknowledged to have treated of all that concerned themselves with +complete accuracy and impartiality; and, when this happens, it should +seem to be the best criterion, in the absence of other proof, of their +faithful delineation of others' portraits. + +However that may be, here is an instance which will give you an idea of +the various readings of the Cid's history. + +Mariana relates, that an Arab expedition, headed by five kings (as he +terms them) of the adjoining states, being signalized as having passed +the mountains of Oca, and being occupied in committing depredations on +the Christian territory, Rodrigo suddenly took the field, recovered all +the booty, and made all five kings prisoners. All this being done by +himself and his own retainers. The kings he released after signing a +treaty, according to which they agreed to pay him an annual tribute. It +happened, that on the occasion of the first payment of this, Rodrigo was +at Zamora, whither he had accompanied the King of Castile; and he took +an opportunity of receiving the Arab messengers in presence of the +court. This was at least uncommon. The messengers addressed him by the +appellation of Syd (sir) as they handed over the money. Ferdinand, +delighted with the prowess of his courtier, expressed on this occasion +the desire that he should retain the title of Syd. + +This anecdote undergoes, in the hands of the Arab writers, a curious +metamorphosis. According to them, the expression Syd was employed, not +by tributary kings, but by certain chiefs of that creed whose pay the +Catholic hero was receiving in return for aid lent against the +Christians of Aragon. + +They attribute, moreover, to this mirror of chivalry, on the surrender +of Valencia, a conduct by no means heroic--not to say worthy a +highwayman. He accepted, as they relate, the pay of the Emyr of Valencia +to protect the city against the Almoravides, who at that period were +extending their conquests all over Moorish Spain. The Cid was repulsed, +and the town taken. After this defeat he shut himself up in a castle, +since called the Peña del Cid (Rock of the Cid), and there waited his +opportunity. On the departure of the conquerors from the city, in which +they left an insufficient garrison, he hastened down at the head of his +campeadores, and speedily retook Valencia. + +The Cadi, Ahmed ben Djahhaf, left in command of the place, had, however, +only surrendered on faith of a capitulation couched in the most +favourable terms. It was even stipulated that he should retain his post +of governor; but no sooner was the Cid master of the place than he +caused the old man to be arrested and put to the torture, in order to +discover from him the situation of a treasure supposed to be concealed +in the Alcazar; after which, finding he would not speak, or had nothing +to reveal, he had him burned on the public place. + +The Citadel of Burgos, at present an insignificant fortress, was +formerly a place of considerable importance, and commanded the +surrounding country; especially on the side on which the town--placed at +the foot of the eminence--lay beneath its immediate protection, and +could listen unscathed to the whizzing of the deadly missiles of war as +they passed over its roofs. During the various wars of which Castile has +been the theatre at different periods, this citadel has, from its +important position, occupied the main attention of contending armies; +and, from forming a constant _point-de-mire_ to attacking troops, has +finally been almost annihilated. The principal portion of the present +buildings is of a modern date, but, although garrisoned, the fortress +cannot be said to be restored. + +The extent of the town was greater than at present, and included a +portion of the declivity which exists between the present houses and the +walls of the fortress. At the two extremities of the town-side of the +hill, immediately above the level of the highest-placed houses now +existing, two Arab gate-ways give access through the ancient town-walls, +which ascended the hill from the bottom. Between these there exists a +sort of flat natural terrace, above the town, and running along its +whole length, on to which some of the streets open. On this narrow level +stood formerly a part, probably the best part, of the city, which has +shared the fate of its protecting fortress; but, not being rebuilt, it +is now an empty space,--or would be so, but for the recent erection of a +cemetery, placed at about half the distance between the two extremities. + +Before, however, the lapse of years had worn away the last surviving +recollections of these localities, some worshipper of by-gone glory +succeeded in discovering, on the now grass-grown space, the situations +once occupied by the respective abodes of the Cid and of Fernan +Gonzalez. On these spots monuments have been erected. That of Gonzalez +is a handsome arch, the piers supporting which are each faced with two +pillars of the Doric order on either side; above the cornice there is a +balustrade, over which four small obelisks correspond with the +respective pillars. The arch is surmounted by a sort of pedestal, on +which is carved an inscription, stating the object of the monument. +There is nothing on the top of the pedestal, which appears to have been +intended for the reception of a statue. + +The monument in memory of the Cid is more simple. It consists of three +small pyramids in a row, supported on low bases or pedestals; that in +the centre higher than the other two, but not exceeding (inclusive of +the base) twenty feet from the ground. On the lower part of the centre +stone is carved an appropriate inscription, abounding in ellipsis, after +the manner usually adopted in Spain. + +It is not surprising that these monuments, together with the memory of +the events brought about by the men in whose honour they have been +erected, should be fast hastening to a level with the desolation +immediately surrounding them. The present political circumstances of +Spain are not calculated to favour the retrospection of by-gone glories. +Scarcely is time allowed--so rapidly are executed the transmutations of +the modern political diorama--for examining the events, or even for +recovery from the shock, of each succeeding revolution; nor force +remaining to the exhausted organs of admiration or of horror, to be +exercised on almost forgotten acts, since those performed before the +eyes of the living generation have equalled or surpassed them in +violence and energy. The arch of Fernan Gonzalez, if not speedily +restored, (which is not to be expected,) runs the risk, from its +elevation and want of solidity, of being the first of the two monuments +to crumble to dust; a circumstance which, although not destitute of an +appearance of justice,--from the fact of the hero it records having +figured on an earlier page of Castilian annals,--would nevertheless +occasion regret to those who prefer history to romance, and who estimate +essential services rendered to the state, as superior to mere individual +_éclat_, however brilliant. + +You will not probably object to the remainder of this letter being +monopolized by this founder of the independence of Castile; the less so, +from the circumstance of the near connection existing between his +parentage and that of the city we are visiting, and which owes to him so +much of its celebrity. Should you not be in a humour to be lectured on +history, you are at all events forewarned, and may wait for the next +despatch. + +Unlike many of the principal towns of the Peninsula, which content +themselves with no more modern descent than from Nebuchadnezzar or +Hercules, Burgos modestly accepts a paternity within the domain of +probability. A German, Nuño Belchides, married, in the reign of Alonzo +the Great, King of Oviedo, a daughter of the second Count of Castile, +Don Diego Porcellos. This noble prevailed on his father-in-law to +assemble the inhabitants of the numerous villages dispersed over the +central part of the province, and to found a city, to which he gave the +German name of "city" with a Spanish termination. It was Don Fruela +III., King of Leon, whose acts of injustice and cruelty caused so +violent an exasperation, that the nobles of Castile, of whom there +existed several of a rank little inferior to that of the titular Count +of the province, threw up their allegiance, and selected two of their +own body, Nuño Rasura and Lain Calvo, to whom they intrusted the supreme +authority, investing them with the modest title of Judges, by way of a +check, lest at any future time they should be tempted, upon the strength +of a higher distinction, to make encroachments on the common liberties. + +The first of the two judges, Nuño Rasura, was the son of the +above-mentioned Nuño Belchides and his wife, Sulla Bella (daughter of +Diego Porcellos), and grandfather of Fernan Gonzalez. His son Gonzalo +Nuño, Fernan's father, succeeded on his death to the dignity of Judge of +Castile, and became extremely popular, owing to his affability, and +winning urbanity of deportment in his public character. He established +an academy in his palace for the education of the sons of the nobles, +who were instructed under his own superintendence in all the +accomplishments which could render them distinguished in peace or in +war. The maternal grandfather of Fernan Gonzalez was Nuño Fernandez, one +of the Counts of Castile who were treacherously seized and put to death +by Don Ordoño, King of Leon. The young Count of Castile is described as +having been a model of elegance. To singular personal beauty he added an +unmatched proficiency in all the exercises then in vogue, principally in +arms and equitation. These accomplishments, being added to much +affability and good-nature, won him the affections of the young nobles, +who strove to imitate his perfections, while they enjoyed the +festivities of his palace. + +It appears that, notwithstanding the rebellion, and appointment of +Judges, Castile had subsequently professed allegiance to the Kings of +Leon; for a second revolt was organized in the reign of Don Ramiro, at +the head of which we find Fernan Gonzalez. On this occasion, feeling +themselves too feeble to resist the royal troops, the rebels had +recourse to a Moorish chief, Aecipha. The King, however, speedily drove +the Moors across the frontier, and succeeded in capturing the principal +revolters. After a short period these were released, on the sole +condition of taking the oath of allegiance; and the peace was +subsequently sealed by the marriage of a daughter of Gonzalez with Don +Ordoño, eldest son of Ramiro, and heir to the kingdom. + +The Count of Castile was, however, too powerful a vassal to continue +long on peaceable terms with a sovereign, an alliance with whose family +had more than ever smoothed the progressive ascent of his pretensions. +Soon after the accession of his son-in-law Don Ordoño, he entered into +an alliance against him with the King of Navarre. This declaration of +hostility was followed by the divorce of Fernan's daughter by the King, +who immediately entered into a second wedlock. The successor of this +monarch, Don Sancho, surnamed the Fat, was indebted for a large portion +of his misfortunes and vicissitudes to the hostility of the Count of +Castile. Don Ordoño, the pretender to his throne, son of Alonzo surnamed +the Monk, with the aid of Gonzalez, whose daughter Urraca, the +repudiated widow of the former sovereign, he married, took easy +possession of the kingdom, driving Don Sancho for shelter to the court +of his uncle the then King of Navarre. It is worth mentioning, that King +Sancho took the opportunity of his temporary expulsion from his states, +to visit the court of Abderahman at Cordova, and consult the Arab +physicians, whose reputation for skill in the removal of obesity had +extended over all Spain. History relates that the treatment they +employed was successful, and that Don Sancho, on reascending his throne, +had undergone so complete a reduction as to be destitute of all claims +to his previously acquired _sobriquet_. + +All these events, and the intervals which separated them, fill a +considerable space of time; and the establishment of the exact dates +would be a very difficult, if not an impossible, undertaking. Various +wars were carried on during this time by Gonzalez, and alliances formed +and dissolved. Several more or less successful campaigns are recorded +against the Moors of Saragoza, and of other neighbouring states. The +alliance with Navarre had not been durable. In 959 Don Garcia, King of +that country, fought a battle with Fernan Gonzalez, by whom he was taken +prisoner, and detained in Burgos thirteen months. The conquest of the +independence of Castile is related in the following manner. + +In the year 958, the Cortes of the kingdom were assembled at Leon, +whence the King forwarded a special invitation to the Count of Castile, +requiring his attendance, and that of the Grandees of the province, for +"deliberation on affairs of high importance to the state." Gonzalez, +although suspicious of the intentions of the sovereign, unable to devise +a suitable pretext for absenting himself, repaired to Leon, attended by +a considerable _cortége_ of nobles. The King went forth to receive him; +and it is related, that refusing to accept a present, offered by +Gonzalez, of a horse and a falcon, both of great value, a price was +agreed on; with the condition that, in case the King should not pay the +money on the day named in the agreement, for each successive day that +should intervene until the payment, the sum should be doubled. Nothing +extraordinary took place during the remainder of the visit; and the +Count, on his return to Burgos, married Doña Sancha, sister of the King +of Navarre. + +It is probable that some treachery had been intended against Gonzalez, +similar to that put in execution on a like occasion previous to his +birth, when the Counts of Castile were seized and put to death in their +prison; for, not long after, a second invitation was accepted by the +Count, who was now received in a very different manner. On his kneeling +to kiss the King's hand, Don Sancho burst forth with a volley of +reproaches, and, repulsing him with fury, gave orders for his immediate +imprisonment. It is doubtful what fate was reserved for him by the +hatred of the Queen-mother, who had instigated the King to the act of +treachery, in liquidation of an ancient personal debt of vengeance of +her own, had not the Countess of Castile, Doña Sancha, undertaken his +liberation. + +Upon receiving the news of her husband's imprisonment, she allowed a +short period to elapse, in order to mature her plan, and at the same +time lull suspicion of her intentions. She then repaired to Leon, on +pretext of a pilgrimage to Santiago, on the route to which place Leon is +situated. She was received by King Sancho with distinguished honours, +and obtained permission to visit her husband, and to pass a night in his +prison. The following morning, Gonzalez, taking advantage of early +twilight, passed the prison-doors in disguise of the Countess, and, +mounting a horse which was in readiness, escaped to Castile. + +This exploit of Doña Sancha does not belong to the days of romance and +chivalry alone: it reminds us of the still more difficult task, +accomplished by the beautiful Winifred, Countess of Nithisdale, who, +eight centuries later, effected the escape of the rebel Earl, her +husband, from the Tower, in a precisely similar manner; thus rescuing +him from the tragic fate of his friends and fellow-prisoners, the Lords +Derwentwater and Kenmure. + +Doña Sancha obtained her liberty without difficulty, being even +complimented by the King on her heroism, and provided with a brilliant +escort on her return to Castile. Gonzalez contented himself with +claiming the price agreed upon for the horse and falcon; and--the King +not seeming inclined to liquidate the debt, which, owing to the long +delay, amounted already to an enormous sum, or looking upon it as a +pretext for hostility, the absence of which would not prevent the Count +of Castile, in his then state of exasperation, from having recourse to +arms--passed the frontier of Leon at the head of an army, and, laying +waste the country, approached gradually nearer to the capital. At length +Don Sancho sent his treasurer to clear up the account, but it was found +that the debt exceeded the whole amount of the royal treasure; upon +which Gonzalez claimed and obtained, on condition of the withdrawal of +his troops, a formal definitive grant of Castile, without reservation, +to himself and his descendants. + +Before we quit Burgos for its environs, one more edifice requires our +notice. It is a fountain, occupying the centre of the space which faces +the principal front of the cathedral. This little antique monument +charms, by the quaint symmetry of its design and proportions, and +perhaps even by the terribly mutilated state of the four fragments of +Cupids, which, riding on the necks of the same number of animals so +maltreated as to render impossible the discovery of their race, form +projecting angles, and support the basin on their shoulders. Four +mermaids, holding up their tails, so as not to interfere with the +operations of the Cupids, ornament the sides of the basin, which are +provided with small apertures for the escape of the water; the top being +covered by a flat circular stone, carved around its edge. This stone,--a +small, elegantly shaped pedestal, which surmounts it,--and the other +portions already described, are nearly black, probably from antiquity; +but on the pedestal stands a little marble virgin, as white as snow. +This antique figure harmonises by its mutilation with the rest, although +injured in a smaller degree; and at the same time adds to the charm of +the whole, by the contrast of its dazzling whiteness with the dark mass +on which it is supported. The whole is balanced on the capital of a +pillar, of a most original form, which appears immediately above the +surface of a sheet of water enclosed in a large octagonal basin. + +[Illustration: FOUNTAIN OF SANTA MARIA.] + + + + +LETTER VI. + +CARTUJA DE MIRAFLORES. CONVENT OF LAS HUELGAS. + + +Burgos. + +The Chartreuse of Miraflores, situated to the east of the city, half-way +in the direction of the above-mentioned monastery of San Pedro de +Cardeñas, crowns the brow of an eminence, which, clothed with woods +towards its base, slopes gradually until it reaches the river. This spot +is the most picturesque to be found in the environs of Burgos,--a region +little favoured in that respect. The view, extending right and left, +follows the course of the river, until it is bounded on the west by the +town, and on the east by a chain of mountains, a branch of the Sierra of +Oca. Henry the Third, grandfather of Isabel the Catholic, made choice of +this position for the erection of a palace; the only remnant of it now +existing is the church, which has since become the inheritance of the +Carthusian monks, the successors of its royal founder. + +The late revolution, after sparing the throne of Spain, displayed a +certain degree of logic, if not in all its acts, at least in sparing, +likewise, two or three of the religious establishments, under the +protection of which the principal royal mausoleums found shelter and +preservation. The great Chartreuse of Xeres contained probably no such +palladium, for it was among the first of the condemned: its lands and +buildings were confiscated; and its treasures of art, and all portable +riches, dispersed, as likewise its inhabitants, in the direction of all +the winds. + +In England the name of Xeres is only generally known in connection with +one of the principal objects of necessity, which furnish the table of +the _gastronome_; but in Andalucia the name of Xeres de la Frontera +calls up ideas of a different sort. It is dear to the wanderer in Spain, +whose recollections love to repose on its picturesque position, its +sunny skies, its delicious fruits, its amiable and lively population, +and lastly on its once magnificent monastery, and the treasures of art +it contained. The Prior of that monastery has been removed to the +Cartuja of Burgos, where he presides over a community, reduced to four +monks, who subsist almost entirely on charity. This amiable and +gentleman-like individual, in whom the monk has in no degree injured +the man of the world,--although a large estate, abandoned for the +cloister, proved sufficiently the sincerity of his religious +professions,--had well deserved a better fate than to be torn in his old +age from his warm Andalucian retreat, and transplanted to the rudest +spot in the whole Peninsula, placed at an elevation of more than four +thousand feet above the level of the Atlantic, and visited up to the +middle of June by snow-storms. At the moment I am writing, this innocent +victim of reform is extended on a bed of sickness, having only recently +escaped with his life from an attack, during which he was given over. + +This Cartuja possesses more than the historical reminiscences with which +it is connected, to attract the passing tourist. It owes its prolonged +existence to the possession of an admirable work of art,--the tomb of +Juan the Second and his Queen Isabel, which stands immediately in front +of the high altar of the church. This living mass of alabaster, the work +of Gil de Siloë, son of the celebrated Diego, presents in its general +plan the form of a star. It turns one of its points to the altar. Its +mass, or thickness from the ground to the surface, measures about six +feet; and this is consequently the height at which are laid the two +recumbent figures. + +[Illustration: _N. A. Wells. deb._ W. I. Starling, "84" + +INTERIOR OF THE CHURCH OF MIRAFLORES, + +NEAR BURGOS.] + +It is impossible to conceive a work more elaborate than the details of +the costumes of the King and Queen. The imitation of lace and +embroidery, the exquisite delicacy of the hands and features, the +infinitely minute carving of the pillows, the architectural railing by +which the two statues are separated, the groups of sporting lions and +dogs placed against the foot-boards, and the statues of the four +Evangelists, seated at the four points of the star which face the +cardinal points of the compass,--all these attract first the attention +as they occupy the surface; but they are nothing to the profusion of +ornament lavished on the sides. The chisel of the artist has followed +each retreating and advancing angle of the star, filling the innermost +recesses with life and movement. It would be endless to enter into a +detailed enumeration of all this. It is composed of lions and lionesses, +panthers, dogs,--crouching, lying, sitting, rampant, and standing; of +saints, male and female, and personifications of the cardinal virtues. +These figures are represented in every variety of posture,--some +standing on pedestals, and others seated on beautifully wrought +arm-chairs, but all enclosed respectively in the richest Gothic tracery, +and under cover of their respective niches. Were there no other object +of interest at Burgos, this tomb would well repay the traveller for a +halt of a few days, and a country walk. + +At the opposite side of the town may be seen the royal convent of Las +Huelgas; but as the nuns reserve to themselves the greater part of the +church, including the royal tombs, which are said to be very numerous, +no one can penetrate to satisfy his curiosity. It is, however, so +celebrated an establishment, and of such easy access from the town, that +a sight of what portions of the buildings are accessible deserves the +effort of the two hundred yards' walk which separates it from the river +promenade. This Cistercian convent was founded towards the end of the +twelfth century by Alonzo the Eighth,--the same who won the famous +battle of the Navas de Tolosa. It occupies the site of the +pleasure-grounds of a royal retreat, as is indicated by the name itself. +In its origin it was destined for the reception, exclusively, of +princesses of the blood royal. It was consequently designed on a scale +of peculiar splendour. Of the original buildings, however, only +sufficient traces remain to confirm the records of history, but not to +convey an adequate idea of their magnificence. What with the +depredations of time, the vicissitudes of a situation in the midst of +provinces so given to contention, and repeated alterations, it has +evidently, as far as regards the portions to a view of which admission +can be obtained, yielded almost all claims to identity with its ancient +self. + +The entire church, with the exception of a small portion partitioned off +at the extremity, and containing the high altar, is appropriated to the +nuns, and fitted up as a choir. It is very large; the length, of which +an estimate may be formed externally, appearing to measure nearly three +hundred feet. It is said this edifice contains the tomb of the founder, +surrounded by forty others of princesses. The entrance to the public +portion consists of a narrow vestibule, in which are several antique +tombs. They are of stone, covered with Gothic sculpture, and appear, +from the richness of their ornaments, to have belonged also to royalty. +They are stowed away, and half built into the wall, as if there had not +been room for their reception. The convent is said to contain handsome +cloisters, courts, chapter-hall, and other state apartments, all of a +construction long subsequent to its foundation. The whole is surrounded +by a complete circle of houses, occupied by its various dependants and +pensioners. These are enclosed from without by a lofty wall, and face +the centre edifice, from which they are separated by a series of large +open areas. Their appearance is that of a small town, surrounding a +cathedral and palace. + +The convent of the Huelgas takes precedence of all others in Spain. The +abbess and her successors were invested by the sovereigns of Leon and +Castile with especial prerogatives, and with a sort of authority over +all convents within those kingdoms. Her possessions were immense, and +she enjoyed the sovereign sway over an extensive district, including +several convents, thirteen towns, and about fifty villages. In many +respects her jurisdiction resembles that of a bishop. The following is +the formula which heads her official acts: + +"We, Doña ..., by the grace of God and of the Holy Apostolic See, Abbess +of the royal monastery of Las Huelgas near to the city of Burgos, order +of the Cister, habit of our father San Bernardo, Mistress, Superior, +Prelate, Mother, and lawful spiritual and temporal Administrator of the +said royal monastery, and its hospital called 'the King's Hospital,' and +of the convents, churches, and hermitages of its filiation, towns and +villages of its jurisdiction, lordship, and vassalage, in virtue of +Apostolic bulls and concessions, with all sorts of jurisdiction, proper, +almost episcopal, _nullius diocesis_, and with royal privileges, since +we exercise both jurisdictions, as is public and notorious," &c. + +The hospital alluded to gives its name to a village, about a quarter of +a mile distant, called "Hospital del Rey." This village is still in a +sort of feudal dependance on the abbess, and is the only remaining +source of revenue to the convent, having been recently restored by a +decree of Queen Isabella; for the royal blood flowing in the veins of +the present abbess had not exempted her convent from the common +confiscation decreed by the revolution. The hospital, situated in the +centre of the village, is a handsome edifice. The whole place is +surrounded by a wall, similar to that which encloses the convent and its +immediate dependances, and the entrance presents a specimen of much +architectural beauty. It forms a small quadrangle, ornamented with an +elegant arcade, and balustrades of an original design. + + + + +LETTER VII. + +ROUTE TO MADRID. MUSEO. + + +Toledo. + +The route from Burgos to Madrid presents few objects of interest. The +country is dreary and little cultivated; indeed, much of it is incapable +of culture. For those who are unaccustomed to Spanish routes, there may, +indeed, be derived some amusement from the inns, of which some very +characteristic specimens lie in their way. The Diligence halts for the +night at the Venta de Juanilla, a solitary edifice situated at the foot +of the last or highest _étage_ of the Somo Sierra, in order to leave the +principal ascent for the cool of early dawn. The building is seen from a +considerable distance, and looks large; but is found, on nearer +approach, to be a straggling edifice of one story only. + +It is a modern inn, and differs in some essential points from the +ancient Spanish _posada_,--perfect specimens of which are met with at +Briviesca and Burgos. In these the vestibule is at the same time a +cow-shed, sheepfold, stable, pigsty,--in fact, a spacious Noah's Ark, in +which are found specimens of all living animals, that is, of all sizes, +down to the most minute; but for the purification of which it would be +requisite that the entire flood should pass within, instead of on its +outside. The original ark, moreover, possessed the advantage of windows, +the absence of which causes no small embarrassment to those who have to +thread so promiscuous a congregation, in order to reach the staircase; +once at the summit of which, it must be allowed, one meets with +cleanliness, and a certain degree of comfort. + +The Venta de Juanilla, on the Somo Sierra, is a newish, clean-looking +habitation, especially the interior, where one meets with an excellent +supper, and may feast the eyes on the sight of a printed card, hanging +on the wall of the dining-room, announcing that luxury of exotic +gastronomy--Champagne--at three crowns a bottle: none were bold enough +that evening to ask for a specimen. + +There is less of the exotic in the bed-room arrangements; in fact, the +building appears to have been constructed by the Diligence proprietors +to meet the immediate necessity of the occasion. The Madrid road being +served by two Diligences, one, leaving the capital, meets at this point, +on its first night, the other, which approaches in the contrary +direction. In consequence of this arrangement, the edifice is provided +with exactly four dormitories,--two male, and two female. + +Nor is this the result of an intention to diminish the numbers quartered +in each male or female apartment; on the contrary, two rooms would have +answered the purpose better than four, but for the inconvenience and +confusion which would have arisen from the denizens of the Diligence +destined to start at a later hour being aroused from their slumbers, and +perhaps induced to depart by mistake, at the signal for calling the +travellers belonging to the earlier conveyance,--the one starting at two +o'clock in the morning, and the other at three. + +On the occasion of my _bivouaque_ in this curious establishment, an +English couple, recently married, happened to be among the number of my +fellow-sufferers; and the lady's report of the adventures of the female +dormitory of our Diligence afforded us sufficient amusement to enliven +the breakfast on the other side of the mountain. It appeared, that, +during the hustling of the males into their enclosure, a fond mother, +moved by Heaven knows what anxious apprehensions, had succeeded in +abstracting from the herd her son, a tender youth of fourteen. Whether +or not she expected to smuggle, without detection, this contraband +article into the female pen we could not determine. If she did, she +reckoned somewhat independently of her host; for on a fellow-traveller +entering in the dark, and groping about for a considerable time in +search of an unoccupied nest, a sudden exclamation aroused the fatigued +sleepers, followed by loud complaints against those who had admitted an +interloper to this holy of holies of feminine promiscuousness, to the +exclusion of one of its lawful occupants. The dispute ran high; but it +must be added to the already numerous proofs of the superior energy +proceeding from aroused maternal feelings, that the intruder was +maintained in his usurped resting-place by his determined parent, +notwithstanding the discontent naturally caused by such a proceeding. + +We have now reached the centre of these provinces, the destinies of +which have offered to Europe so singular an example of political +vicissitude. It is an attractive occupation, in studying the history of +this country, to watch the progress of the state, the ancient capital of +which we have just visited,--a province which, from being probably the +rudest and poorest of the whole Peninsula, became the most influential, +the wealthiest, the focus of power, as it is geographically the centre +of Spain,--and to witness its constantly progressive advance, as it +gradually drew within the range of its influence all the surrounding +states; exemplifying the dogged perseverance of the Spanish character, +which, notwithstanding repeated defeat, undermined the Arab power by +imperceptible advances, and eventually ridded the Peninsula of its +long-established lords. It is interesting to thread the intricate +narrative of intermarriages, treaties, wars, alliances, and successions, +interspersed with deeds of heroic chivalry and of blackest treachery, +composing the annals of the different northern states of Spain; until at +length, the Christian domination having been borne onward by successive +advantages nearly to the extreme southern shores of the Peninsula, a +marriage unites the two principal kingdoms, and leads to the subjection +of all Spain, as at present, under one monarch. + +It is still more attractive to repair subsequently to the country +itself; and from this central, pyramidal summit--elevated by the hand of +Nature to a higher level than the rest of the Peninsula; its bare and +rugged surface exposed to all the less genial influences of the +elements, and crowned by its modern capital, looking down in all +directions, like a feudal castle on the fairer and more fertile regions +subject to its dominion, and for the protection of which it is there +proudly situated,--to take a survey of this extraordinary country, view +the localities immortalized by the eventful passages of its history, and +muse on its still varying destinies. + +Madrid has in fact already experienced threatening symptoms of the +insecurity of this feudal tenure, as it were, in virtue of which it +enjoys the supreme rank. Having no claim to superiority derived from its +commerce, the fertility of its territory, the facility of its means of +communication and intercourse with the other parts of the kingdom or +with foreign states,--nothing, in fact, but its commanding and central +position, and the comparatively recent choice made of it by the +sovereigns for a residence; it has seen itself rivalled, and at length +surpassed in wealth and enterprize, by Barcelona, and its right to be +continued as the seat of government questioned and attacked. Its fall is +probably imminent, should some remedy not be applied before the +intermittent revolutionary fever, which has taken possession of the +country, makes further advances, or puts on chronic symptoms; but its +fate will be shared by the power to which it owes its creation. No +residence in Europe bears a prouder and more monarchical aspect than +Madrid, nor is better suited for the abode of the feudal pomp and +etiquette of the most magnificent--in its day--of European courts: but +riding and country sports have crossed the Channel, and are +endeavouring to take root in France; fresco-painting has invaded +England; in Sicily marble porticoes have been painted to imitate red +bricks; and a Constitutional monarchy is being erected in Spain. +Spaniards are not imitators, and cannot change their nature, although +red bricks should become the materials of Italian _palazzi_, Frenchmen +ride after fox-hounds, and Englishmen be metamorphosed to Michael +Angelos. The Alcazar of Madrid, commanding from its windows thirty miles +of royal domains, including the Escorial and several other royal +residences, is not destined to become the abode of a monarch paid to +receive directions from a loquacious and corrupt house of deputies,--the +utmost result to be obtained from forcing on states a form of government +unsuited to their character. If the Spanish reigning family, after +having settled their quarrel with regard to the succession, (if ever +they do so,) are compelled to accept a (so-called) Constitutional form +of government, with their knowledge of the impossibility of its +successful operation, they will probably endeavour, in imitation of the +highly gifted sovereign of their neighbours, to stifle it, and to +administrate in spite of it; until, either wanting the talent and energy +necessary for the maintenance of this false position, or their subjects, +as may be expected, getting impatient at finding themselves mystified, +a total overthrow will terminate the experiment. + +I am aware of the criticism to which this opinion would be exposed in +many quarters; I already hear the contemptuous upbraidings, similar to +those with which the "exquisite," exulting in an unexceptionable +wardrobe, lashes the culprit whose shoulders are guilty of a coat of the +previous year's fashion. We are told that the tendency of minds, the +progress of intellect, the spirit of the age,--all which, translated +into plain language, mean (if they mean anything) the fashion,--require +that nations should provide themselves each with a new Liberal +government; claiming, in consideration of the fashionable vogue and the +expensive nature of the article, its introduction (unlike other British +manufactures) duty-free. But it ought first to be established, whether +these larger interests of humanity are amenable to the sceptre of so +capricious a ruler as the fashion. It appears to me, that nations should +be allowed to adapt their government to their respective characters, +dispositions, habits of life, and traditions. All these are more +dependant than is supposed by those who possess not the habit of +reflection, on the race, the position, the soil and climate each has +received from nature, which, by the influence they have exercised on +their habits and dispositions, have fitted them each for a form of +constitution equally appropriate to no other people; since no two +nations are similarly circumstanced, not only in all these respects, but +even in any one of them. + +What could be more Liberal than the monarchy of Spain up to the +accession of the Bourbon dynasty? the kings never reigning but by the +consent of their subjects, and on the condition of unvarying respect for +their privileges; but never, when once seated on the throne, checked and +embarrassed in carrying through the measures necessary for the +administration of the state. The monarch was a responsible but a free +monarch until these days, when an attempt is being made to deprive him +both of freedom of action and responsibility--almost of utility, and to +render him a tool in the hands of a constantly varying succession of +needy advocates or military _parvenus_, whom the chances of civil war or +the gift of declamation have placed in the way of disputing the +ministerial salaries, without having been able to furnish either their +hearts with the patriotism, or their heads with the capacity, requisite +for the useful and upright administration of the empire. In Spain, the +advocates of continual change, in most cases in which personal interest +is not their moving spring, hope to arrive ultimately at a republic. +Now, no one more than myself admires the theories of Constitutional +governments, of universal political power and of republicanism: the last +system would be the best of all, were it only for the equality it is to +establish. But how are men to be equalised by the manufacturers of a +government? How are the ignorant and uneducated to be furnished with +legislative capacity, or the poor or unprincipled armed against the +seductions of bribery? It is not, unfortunately, in any one's power to +accomplish these requisite preliminary operations; without the +performance of which, these plausible theories will ever lose their +credit when brought to the test of experiment. How is a republic to be +durable without the previous solution of the problem of the equalisation +of human capacities? In some countries it may be almost attained for a +time; in others, never put in motion for an instant. No one more than +myself abhors tyranny and despotism; but, after hearing and reading all +the charges laid at the door of Absolutism during the last quarter of a +century, I am at a loss to account for the still greater evils and +defects, existing in Constitutional states, having been overlooked in +the comparison. The subject is far less free in France than in the +absolute states of Germany: and other appropriate comparisons might be +made which would bring us still nearer home. I would ask the advocates +for putting in practice a republican form of government, and by way of +comparing the two extremes, whether all the harm the Emperors of Russia +have ever done, or are likely to do until the end of the +world,--according to whatever sect the date of that event be +calculated,--will not knock under to one week of the exploits of the +French republicans of the last century? And if we carry on the +observation to the consequences of that revolution, until we arrive at +the decimation of that fine country under the military despotism which +was necessarily its offspring, we shall not find my argument weakened. + +I entreat your pardon for this political digression, which I am as happy +to terminate as yourself. I will only add, that, should the period be +arrived for the Spanish empire to undergo the lot of all human +things--decline and dissolution, it has no right to complain, having had +its day; but, should that moment be still distant, let us hope to see +that country, so highly favoured by Nature, once more prosperous under +the institutions which raised her to the highest level of power and +prosperity. + +Meanwhile, the elements of discord still exist in a simmering state +close to the brim of the cauldron, and a mere spark will suffice at any +moment to make them bubble over. The inhabitants of Madrid are in +hourly expectation of this spark; and not without reason, if the +_on-dits_ which circulate there, and reach to the neighbouring towns, +are deserving of credit. Queen Christina, on her road from Paris to +resume virtually, if not nominally, the government, conceived the +imprudent idea of taking Rome in her way. It is said that she confessed +to the Pope, who, in the solemn exercise of his authority as +representative of the Deity, declared to her that Spain would never +regain tranquillity until the possessions of the clergy should be +restored to them. + +Whatever else may have passed during the interview is not stated; but a +deep impression was produced on the conscience of the Queen, to which is +attributed the change in her appearance evident to those who may happen +to have seen her a few months since in Paris. This short space of time +has produced on her features the effect of years. She has lost her +_embonpoint_, and acquired in its place paleness and wrinkles. She is +firmly resolved to carry out the views of the Pope. Here, therefore, is +the difficulty. The leading members of her party are among those who +have profited largely by the change of proprietorship which these vast +possessions have undergone: being the framers or abettors of the decree, +they were placed among the nearest for the scramble. In the emptiness of +the national treasury, they consider these acquisitions their sole +reward for the trouble of conducting the revolution, and are prepared to +defend them like tigers. + +When, therefore, Queen Christina proposed her plan[4] to Narvaez, she +met with a flat refusal. He replied, that such a decree would deluge the +country with blood. The following day he was advised to give in his +resignation. This he refused to do, and another interview took place. +The Queen-mother insisted on his acceptance of the embassy to France. He +replied, that he certainly would obey her Majesty's commands; but that, +in that case, she would not be surprised if he published the act of her +marriage with Muños, which was in his power.[5] This would compel +Christina to refund all the income she has received as widow of +Ferdinand the Seventh. The interview ended angrily; and, doubtless, +recalled to Christina's recollection the still higher presumption of the +man, who owed to her the exalted situation from which, on a former +occasion, he levelled his attack on her authority. I am not answerable +for the authenticity of these generally received reports; but they prove +the unsettled state of things, when the determined disposition of the +two opposite parties, and the nearly equal balance of their force, are +taken into consideration. + +I was scarcely housed at Madrid, having only quitted the hotel the +previous day, when the news reached me of the death of one of the fair +and accomplished young Countesses--the companions of my journey from +Bayonne to Burgos. You would scarcely believe possible the regret this +intelligence occasioned me,--more particularly from the peculiar +circumstances of the occurrence. Her father had recently arrived from +France, and the house was filled for the celebration of her birthday; +but she herself was forbidden to join the dinner-party, being scarcely +recovered from a severe attack of small-pox. The father's weakness could +not deny her admission at dessert, and an ice. The following day she was +dead. + +Acquaintances made on the high road advance far more rapidly than those +formed in the usual formal intercourse of society. I can account in no +other way for the tinge of melancholy thrown over the commencement of my +sojourn at Madrid by this event,--befalling a person whose society I had +only enjoyed during three days, and whom I scarcely expected to see +again. + +The modern capital of Spain is an elegant and brilliant city, and a very +agreeable residence; but for the admirer of the picturesque, or the +tourist in search of historical _souvenirs_, it contains few objects of +attraction. The picture-gallery is, however, a splendid exception; and, +being the best in the world, compensates, as you may easily suppose, for +the deficiency peculiar to Madrid in monuments of architectural +interest. + +To put an end to the surprise you will experience at the enumeration of +such a profusion of _chefs d'Å“uvre_ of the great masters as is here +found, it is necessary to lose sight of the present political situation +of Spain, and to transport ourselves to the age of painting. At that +time Spain was the most powerful, and especially the most opulent empire +in Europe. Almost all Italy belonged to her; a large portion actually +owning allegiance to her sceptre, and the remainder being subject to her +paramount influence. The familiarity which existed between Charles the +Fifth and Titian is well known; as is likewise the anecdote of the +pencil, picked up and presented by the Emperor to the artist, who had +dropped it. + +The same taste for, and patronage of, painting, continued through the +successive reigns, until the period when painting itself died a natural +death; and anecdotes similar to that of Charles the Fifth are related of +Philip the Fourth and Velasquez. All the works of art thus collected, +and distributed through the different palaces, have been recently +brought together, and placed in an edifice, some time since commenced, +and as yet not entirely completed. Titian was the most favoured of all +the Italian painters, not only with respect to his familiar intercourse +with the Emperor, but also in a professional point of view. The Museo +contains no less than forty of his best productions. Nor is it +surprising that the taste of the monarch, being formed by his +masterpieces, should extend its preference to the rest of the Venetian +school in a greater degree than to the remaining Italian schools. There +are, however, ten pictures by Raffaelle, including the Spasimo, +considered by many to be his greatest work. + +A cause similar to that above named enables us to account for the riches +assembled in the Dutch and Flemish rooms, among which may be counted +more than two hundred pictures of Teniers alone. I should observe, that +I am not answerable for this last calculation; being indebted for my +information to the director, and distinguished artist, Don Jose +Madrazo. There is no catalogue yet drawn up. Rubens has a suite of rooms +almost entirely to himself, besides his just portion of the walls of the +gallery. The Vandykes and Rembrandts are in great profusion. With regard +to the Spanish schools, it may be taken for granted that they are as +well represented as those of the foreign, although partially subject, +nations. The works of Velasquez are the most numerous; which is +accounted for by his situation of painter to the Court, under Philip the +Fourth. There are sixty of his paintings. + +[Illustration: ITALIAN GALLERY AT THE MUSEO, MADRID.] + +The Murillos are almost as numerous, and in his best style: but Seville +has retained the cream of the genius of her most talented offspring; and +even at Madrid, in the collection of the Academy, there is a +Murillo--the Saint Elizabeth--superior to any of those in the great +gallery. It is much to be wished that some artist, gifted with the pen +of a Joshua Reynolds, or even of a Mengs (author of a notice on a small +portion of these paintings), could be found, who would undertake a +complete critical review of this superb gallery. All I presume to say on +the subject is, were the journey ten times longer and more difficult, +the view of the Madrid Museo would not be too dearly purchased. + +Before I left Madrid, I went to the palace, to see the traces of the +conspiracy of the 7th October, remaining on the doors of the Queen's +apartments. You will recollect that the revolt of October 1842 was that +in favour of Christina, when the three officers, Concha, Leon, and +Pezuela, with a battalion, attacked the palace in the night, for the +purpose of carrying off the Queen and her sister. On the failure of the +attempt, owing to its having been prematurely put in execution, the +Brigadier Leon was shot, and the two others escaped. + +It appears that the execution of this officer, unlike the greater number +of these occurrences, caused a strong sensation in Madrid, owing to the +sympathy excited by his popular character, and the impression that he +was the victim of jealousy in the mind of the Regent. The fine speech, +however, attributed to him by some of the newspapers, was not pronounced +by him. His words were very few, and he uttered them in a loud and clear +tone, before giving the word of command to his executioners. This, and +his receiving the fire without turning his back, were the only incidents +worthy of remark. + +One of the two sentries stationed at the door of the Queen's anteroom +when I arrived, happened to have played a conspicuous part on the +eventful night. The Queen was defended by the guard of hallebardiers, +which always mounts guard in the interior of the palace. This sentinel +informed me that he was on guard that night, on the top step of the +staircase, when Leon, followed by a few officers, was seen to come up. +Beyond him and his fellow-sentry there were only two more, who were +posted at the door of the Queen's anteroom, adjoining her sleeping +apartment. This door faces the whole length of the corridor, with which, +at a distance of about twenty yards, the top of the staircase +communicates. In order to shield himself from the fire of the two +sentinels at the Queen's door, Leon grasped my informant by the ribs +right and left, and, raising him from the ground, carried him, like a +mummy, to the corridor; and there, turning sharp to the left, up to the +two sentries, whom he summoned to give him admittance in the name of the +absent Christina. + +On the soldiers' refusal, he gave orders to his battalion to advance, +and a pitched battle took place, which was not ultimately decided until +daybreak--seven hours after. The terror of the little princesses, during +this night, may be imagined. Two bullets penetrated into the bed-room; +and the holes made by about twenty more in the doors of some of the +state apartments communicating with the corridor, are still preserved as +souvenirs of the event. The palace contains some well-painted ceilings +by Mengs, and is worthy of its reputation of one of the finest +residences in Europe. The staircase is superb. It was here that +Napoleon, entering the palace on the occasion of his visit to Madrid, to +install Joseph Buonaparte in his kingdom, stopped on the first landing; +and, placing his hand on one of the white marble lions which crouch on +the balustrades, turned to Joseph, and exclaimed, "Mon frère, vous serez +mieux logé que moi." + +There is no road from Madrid to Toledo. On the occasions of religious +festivities, which are attended by the court, the journey is performed +by way of Aranjuez, from which place a sort of road conducts to the +ancient capital of Spain. There is, however, for those who object to +add so much to the actual distance, a track, known, in all its +sinuosities, throughout its depths and its shallows, around its bays, +promontories, islands, and peninsulas--to the driver of the diligence, +and to the mounted bearer of the mail; both of whom travel on the same +days of the week, in order to furnish reciprocal aid, in case of damage +to either. A twenty-four hours' fall of rain renders this track +impassable by the usual conveyance; a very unusual sort of carriage is +consequently kept in reserve for these occasions, and, as the period of +my journey happened to coincide with an uncommonly aqueous disposition +of the Castilian skies, I was fortunately enabled to witness the less +every day, and more eventful transit, to which this arrangement gave +rise. + +Accordingly at four o'clock on an April morning--an hour later than is +the custom on the road from France to Madrid--I ascended the steps of a +carriage, selected for its lightness, which to those who know anything +of Continental coach-building, conveys a sufficient idea of its probable +solidity. There was not yet sufficient daylight to take a view of this +fabric; but I saw, by the aid of a lantern, my luggage lifted into a +sort of loose net, composed of straw-ropes, and suspended between the +hind wheels in precisely such juxtaposition, as to make the +portmanteaus, bags, &c. bear the same topographic relation to the +vehicle, as the truffles do to a turkey, or the stuffing to a duck. +There was much grumbling about the quantity of my luggage, and some +hints thrown out, relative to the additional perils, suspended over our +heads, or rather, under our seats, in consequence of the coincidence of +the unusual weight, with the bad state of the _road_, as they termed it, +and the acknowledged caducity of the carriage. I really was, in fact, +the only one to blame; for I could not discover, besides my things, more +than two small valises belonging to all the other six passengers +together. + +At length we set off, and at a distance of four miles from Madrid, as +day began to break, we broke down. + +The break-down was neither violent nor dangerous, and was occasioned by +the crash of a hind wheel, while our pace did not exceed a walk: but it +was productive of some amusement, owing to the position, near the corner +of the vehicle which took the greatest fancy to _terra firma_, of a not +over heroic limb of the Castilian law, who had endeavoured to be +facetious ever since our departure, and whose countenance now exhibited +the most grotesque symptoms of real terror. Never, I am convinced, will +those moments be forgotten by that individual, whose vivacity deserted +him for the remainder of the journey; and whose attitude and +expression, as his extended arms failed to recover his centre of gravity +exchanged for the supine, folded-up posture, unavoidable by the occupant +at the lowest corner of a broken-down vehicle,--while his thoughts +wandered to his absent offspring, whose fond smiles awaited him in +Toledo, but to whom perhaps he was not allowed to bid an eternal +adieu--will live likewise in the memory of his fellow-travellers. + +This _dénouement_ of the adventures of the first carriage rendered a +long halt necessary; during which, the postilion returned to Madrid on a +mule, and brought us out a second. This proceeding occupied four hours, +during which some entered a neighbouring _venta_, others remained on the +road, seated on heaps of stones, and all breakfasted on what provisions +they had brought with them, or could procure at the said _venta_. The +sight of the vehicle that now approached, would have been cheaply bought +at the price of twenty up-sets. Don Quixote would have charged it, had +such an apparition suddenly presented itself to his view. It was called +a phaeton, but bore no sort of resemblance to the open carriage known in +England by that name. Its form was remarkable by its length being out of +all proportion to its width,--so much so as to require three +widely-separated windows on each side. These were irregularly placed, +instead of being alike on the two sides, for the door appeared to have +been forgotten until after the completion of the fabric, and to have +taken subsequently the place of a window; which window--pursuant to a +praiseworthy sense of justice--was provided for at the expense of a +portion of deal board, and some uniformity. + +The machine possessed, nevertheless, allowing for its rather exaggerated +length, somewhat of the form of an ancient landau; but the roof +describing a semicircle, gave it the appearance of having been placed +upside down by mistake, in lowering it on to the wheels. Then, with +regard to these wheels, they certainly had nothing very extraordinary +about their appearance, when motionless; but, on being subjected to a +forward or backward impulse, they assumed, respectively, and +independently of each other, such a zigzag movement, as would belong to +a rotatory, locomotive pendulum, should the progress of mechanics ever +attain to so complicated a discovery. Indeed, the machine, in general, +appeared desirous of avoiding the monotony attendant on a +straight-forward movement; the body of the monster, from the groans, +sighs, screams, and other various sounds which accompanied its heaving, +pitching, and rolling exertions, appearing to belong to some unwieldy +and agonised mammoth and to move by its own laborious efforts, instead +of being indebted for its progress to the half-dozen quadrupeds hooked +to its front projections. + +The track along which this interesting production of mechanical art now +conveyed us, bore much resemblance to a river, in the accidents of its +course. Thus we were reminded at frequent intervals, by the suddenly +increased speed of our progress, that we were descending a rapid: at +other times the motion was so vertical, as to announce the passage down +a cataract. These incidents were not objectionable to me, as they +interrupted the monotony of the walking pace, to which we were +condemned; although one or two passengers of rather burly proportions, +seemed not much to enjoy their repetition. However this might be, +assuredly we were none of us sorry to find ourselves at eight o'clock +that evening safely housed at Toledo. + + + + +LETTER VIII. + +PICTURESQUE POSITION OF TOLEDO. FLORINDA. + + +Toledo. + +Every traveller--I don't mean every one who habitually assists in +wearing out roads, whether of stone or iron--nor who travels for +business, nor who seeks to escape from himself--meaning from ennui, (a +vain attempt, by the way, if Horace is to be depended on; since, even +should he travel on horseback, the most exhilarating sort of locomotion, +ennui will contrive to mount and ride pillion)--but every one who +deserves the name of traveller, who travels for travelling sake, for the +pleasure of travelling, knows the intensity of the feeling which impels +his right hand, as he proceeds to open the window-shutter of his +bed-room, on the morning subsequent to his nocturnal arrival in a new +town. + +The windows of the Posada del Miradero at Toledo are so placed as by no +means to diminish the interest of this operation. The shutter being +opened, I found myself looking from a perpendicular elevation of +several hundred feet, on one of the prettiest views you can imagine. The +town was at my back, and the road by which we had arrived, was cut in +the side of the precipice beneath me. In following that direction, the +first object at all prominent was the gate leading to Madrid--a cluster +of half Arab embattled towers and walls, standing somewhat to the left +at the bottom of the descent. These gave issue to the track mentioned in +my journey, and which could now be traced straight in front, to a +considerable distance. + +The ground rises slightly beyond the gates of the town, and preserves a +moderate elevation all across the view, retreating right and left, so as +to offer the convex side of the arc of an immense circle. This formation +gives to the view a valley, extending on either side, shut in on the +left by mountains at a distance of four miles; while to the east it +extends as far as the eye can reach,--some mountains, scarcely +perceptible, crossing it at the horizon. The Tagus advances down the +eastern valley from Aranjuez; which château is in view at the distance +of twenty-eight miles, and approaching with innumerable zigzags to the +foot of the town, suddenly forms a curve, and, dashing into the rocks, +passes round the back of the city, issues again into the western valley, +and, after another sharp turn to the left, resumes the same direction +as before. All this tract of country owes to the waters of the Tagus a +richness of vegetation, and a bright freshness nowhere surpassed. So +much for the distant view. + +To judge of the nearer appearance of the town, I crossed the bridge of +Alcantara, placed at the entrance of the eastern valley, and leading to +Aranjuez. The situation may be described in a few words. Toledo stands +on an eminence nearly circular in its general form. It is a mass of +jagged rock, almost perpendicular on all its sides. The river flows +rather more than half round it, descending from the east, and passing +round its southern side. The left or south bank is of the same +precipitous formation; but, instead of presenting that peculiarity +during only a short distance, it continues so both above and below the +town; while on the opposite side the only high ground is the solitary +mass of rock selected, whether with a view to defence or to +inconvenience, for the position of this ancient city. The Tagus is +crossed by two bridges, one at each extremity of the semi-circle +described by it round the half of the town. These bridges are both +highly picturesque, from their form no less than their situation. They +are raised upon arches of a height so disproportionate to their width, +as to appear like aqueducts; and are provided at each extremity with +towers, all, with one exception, Moorish in their style. The lower +bridge (lower by position, for it is the higher of the two in actual +elevation) bears the name of San Martin, and is traversed by the road to +Estremadura; the other leads to Aranjuez, and is the puente de +Alcantara. We are now standing on this last, having passed under the +Arab archway of its tower. + +Its width is just sufficient for the passage of two vehicles abreast, +and it is covered with flag-paving. The river flows sixty feet below. At +the back of the tower which faces you, at the opposite end of the +bridge, rises a rock, almost isolated from the rest of the cliff, and on +its top the half-ruined towers and walls of a Moorish castle. On the +left hand extends the valley, through which the river approaches in a +broad mass. The road to Aranjuez follows the same direction, after +having first disappeared round the base of the rock just mentioned, and +is bordered with rose-trees, and occasional groups of limes, which +separate it from the portions set apart for pedestrians. On the right +hand the river (still looking from the bridge) is suddenly pressed in +between precipices, becomes narrow, and at the distance of a few hundred +yards, forms a noisy cascade. + +[Illustration: VIEW OF TOLEDO] + +Still looking in that direction, the left bank--a rocky precipice, as I +mentioned before--curves round and soon hurries it out of sight. The +lower part of the opposite or town bank is ornamented, close to the +cascade, with a picturesque ruin, on which you look down from your +position. This consists of three stories of arches, standing partly in +the water. Above and behind them rise a few larger buildings, almost +perpendicularly over each other, and the summit is crowned with the +colossal quadrangular mass of the Alcazar. + +The ruinous arches just mentioned, are the remains of a building erected +by a speculator, who had conceived a plan for raising water to the +Alcazar by means of wheels, furnished with jars, according to the custom +of this part of Spain. The arrangement is simple; the jars, being +attached round a perpendicular wheel, successively fill with water, as +each arrives at the bottom, and empty themselves, on reaching the +summit, into any receptacle placed so as to receive their contents. The +speculator, having to operate on a colossal scale, intended probably to +super-pose wheel over wheel, and to establish reservoirs at different +elevations, as it would scarcely be possible to work a wheel of such +dimensions as to carry jars to the height required (more than three +hundred feet), even though furnished with ropes, which are made to turn +round the wheel and descend below it. + +Crossing the bridge, the road quits the river, or rather is left for a +certain space by it, until it meets it at the distance of a mile. This +road is a favourite promenade of the inhabitants, and deservedly so. On +each side, for the distance of a mile, it is bordered by hedges of +magnificent rose-trees. These hedges are double on both sides, enclosing +walks for the promenaders on foot. Behind those on the outside, the +colours are varied by the pale green of the olive-tree; and over them +occasional clusters of lime-trees, mingled with the acacia and laburnum, +furnish shade, in case of an excess of sunshine. This promenade, flanked +on one side by the hills, and on the other, by the highly cultivated +plain, in parts of which the Tagus is seen occasionally to peep through +its wooded banks, is most delicious during the rose season. I should +especially recommend the visitor of Toledo to repair to it during the +first hour after sunrise, when thronged with birds, which are here +almost tame, and fill the air with their music; and also in the evening, +when frequented by the mantilla-hooded fair of the city. + +There is, however, notwithstanding the beauty and gay appearance of this +profusion of roses, a singular effect produced by their situation. +Usually seen surrounded by other flowers or by well-kept grass or earth, +they do not look quite themselves on the side on which they rest their +bushy foundations on a dusty road, covered with deep ruts. The fish out +of water forms a hackneyed, not to say a dried up, comparison; but we +can compare the rather pallid and unnatural appearance of these plants +to that of a bevy of ladies, who, tired of the monotony of a ball-room +in Grosvenor Place, should resolve, precisely at the crisis when +candle-light is more than ever required for their rather suffering +complexions, to compel their partners to lead them, at sunrise, a +galopade down Tattersall's yard. The roses, thus misplaced, are +nevertheless roses, and cease not to be fair, in spite of their unusual +_entourage_, and to contribute to the beauty and novelty of this +picturesque promenade. + +Amongst the variety of harmless weaknesses by which human imagination, +and consequently human locomotion are influenced, I look upon one of the +most irresistible (if such an epithet be applicable to a weakness) to be +that fractional component part of the cravings of antiquarianism, which +urges some persons in the search after, and rewards their labours on the +discovery of, the locality supposed to be the birthscene of some great +historical event, however insignificant in other respects, or even +however loathsome its actual state may be to the outward senses. Thus, +when, in Normandy, the worthy and probably waggish majordomo of the +crumbling old castle of Falaise, directs your attention to the window +from which Duke Robert caught the first glance of the ankle of William +the Conqueror's mother,--as she pursued her professional labours, and +polluted with her soapsuds the silver brook a quarter of a mile below +him,--and suddenly yielded his soul to its irresistible beauty: +notwithstanding the impossibility of the thing, many, and I confess +myself one, are too delighted with the window, and the rivulet, and the +majordomo, and the--God knows what!--perhaps with the very +impossibility--to allow themselves a moment's sceptical or sarcastic +feeling on the subject. + +I should mention that my visit to Falaise happening to take place +shortly after the passage of the King of the French on a tour through +his western provinces, the aforesaid cicerone pointed out a highly +suspicious-looking inscription, being the initials of the monarch, +carefully engraved in the stone; which he informed me had been cut by +Louis Philippe, on the occasion of his visit at midnight to the room of +Duke Robert; but of which I took the liberty of suspecting himself of +being the sculptor, during some idle moment,--fond as he probably was of +contemplating the innocently expressive countenances of his satisfied +visitors. + +Actuated by the feeling I have attempted to describe, one of my first +inquiries at Toledo related to the well-known story of Florinda and her +bath, so fatal to the Gothic sway in Spain. I was immediately directed +to the spot, on which is seen a square tower, pierced by arched openings +through its two opposite sides, and on a third side by a similar but +smaller aperture. The four walls alone remain, and the whole is +uncovered. This symmetrical-looking edifice, well built and composed of +large stones, measures about sixteen feet square, and from forty to +fifty in elevation, and stands on the edge of the river, on the town +side, about a hundred yards below the western bridge--that called after +Saint Martin--at the precise point at which the river quits the town, +and its north bank ceases to be precipitous. + +The extreme point of the termination of the high ground is immediately +over the building, and is covered with the ruins of King Roderick's +palace, the outer walls of which descend to the water, and are +terminated by a small roundtower within a few yards of the quadrangular +edifice. The edifice is called the Baño de la Cava, meaning Florinda's +bath, although the native popular tradition, losing sight of the events +of the history, has metamorphosed the heroine of the spot into a Moorish +princess. + +In fact, the rocky precipice terminates at this spot,--the last piece +of rock forming part of the foundation of the square tower, immediately +beyond which is a gently descending sand-bank most convenient and +tempting to bathers. This circumstance, added to the situation of +Roderick's residence, immediately above the scene, was delightfully +corroborative of the tradition; and proved sufficiently, had all +investigation ceased there, the identity of the spot with the scene of +the anecdote. Owing to an excess of curiosity a new discovery threw a +doubt over the whole affair. + +[Illustration: FLORINDA'S BATH.] + +A bridge is too public a thoroughfare to allow of bathing to be +practised in its immediate neighbourhood: and, in fact, the erection of +the neighbouring one of St. Martin is of much later date than the events +of the history in question. Fatal curiosity, however, led me to the back +of the building,--the very bath of Florinda,--where it was impossible +not to discover, even to conviction, that it, the square tower itself, +had formerly been the entrance of a bridge. This is proved by the ruins +of two piers, which appear above the water,--one near to the shore on +which I was standing, the other near to the opposite bank, and both +forming a line with the square tower on looking through its two opposite +arches. The tower possesses other peculiarities which, compared with +those belonging to the bridges actually in existence, fully confirm the +supposition. + +Now, although the tradition has christened the spot Baño de la Cava, +which expression is translated "bath of the prostitute," it is certain +that Florinda was the daughter of Count Julian, governor of the Spanish +possessions in Africa, and a personage of sufficient rank and influence +to obtain a hearing at the court of the Arab Caliph, or at all events of +his viceroy in Africa, and to conceive the idea of calling a foreign +army to execute his private vengeance. It is therefore extremely +improbable that the daughter of such a person should have been seen to +measure and compare the proportions of her legs with those of her +companions in the immediate vicinity of a bridge, necessarily the most +frequented of thoroughfares. + +I confess I left the spot filled with disappointment. In vain I +reflected that after all the fact is fact--that the sensual Roderick may +certainly have spied from behind a window-lattice the frolics of some +ladies at their bath; and that, wherever his _espionage_ took place, he +may for that purpose have intentionally procured himself a place of +concealment, and have formed the resolution of possessing one of them. +In fact, it was a matter of indifference to me whether the circumstance +had occurred or not, provided I should ascertain its whereabouts, +supposing it real, instead of merely discovering the spot on which it +did not take place. + +Having thus convicted the generally received tradition of deceit,--at +least, in one of its parts,--it became an object to discover some other +version of the story, which might tally in a more satisfactory manner +with present existing proofs. The Arab historians deny the invasion to +have been brought about by any such occurrence; but Mariana, copied by +more recent writers, has either discovered or compiled a very plausible +story, clear in its details, only erroneous in respect of the heroine's +name, which he makes out to be Cava. From this version the bath is +entirely excluded. + +According to the custom in Gothic Spain, the sons of the nobles received +their education in the royal palace, and on attaining the age of +manhood, they formed an escort round the sovereign on all expeditions, +whether to the field or the chase. Their daughters were likewise +entrusted to the care of royalty, and attended the person of the Queen, +after having completed their education and instruction in the +accomplishments suited to their sex, under her superintendence. When +these noble damsels could number sufficient summers, their hands were +bestowed according to the royal selection. + +Among the attendants of Queen Egilona, was a daughter of Count Julian, +possessed of extreme beauty. Florinda, while playing with her companions +in a garden, situated on the banks of the Tagus, and overlooked by a +tower, which contained a portion of Don Rodrigo's apartments, exposed to +view, more than accorded either with etiquette or with her intention, +the symmetry of her form. King Rodrigo, who, favoured by the concealment +of a window-blind, had been watching the whole scene, became suddenly +enamoured of her, and resolved to obtain a return of his passion; but, +after finding every effort useless, and his object unattainable, he at +length employed violence. + +Every circumstance of this story is corroborated, as far as is possible +in the present time, by the position of the localities, the known +customs of the period, and the character of King Roderick. But the +historian Mariana, to show the minuteness and triumph of research, on +which he has founded his relation, quotes the young lady's own version +of the affair; in fact, no less interesting a document than her letter +to her father, then in Africa, disclosing the insult offered to the +family. The following is the translation of this portentous dispatch. A +_billet-doux_ pregnant with greater events never issued from the boudoir +of beauty and innocence. + +"Would to Heaven, my lord and father!--Would to Heaven the earth had +closed over me, before it fell to my lot to write these lines, and with +such grievous news to cause you sadness and perpetual regret! How many +are the tears that flow while I am writing, these blots and erasures are +witnesses. And yet if I do not immediately, I shall cause a suspicion +that not only the body has been polluted, but the soul likewise blotted +and stained with perpetual infamy. Would I could foresee a term to our +misery!--Who but yourself shall find a remedy for our misfortunes? Shall +we delay, until time brings to light that which is now a secret, and +the affront we have received entail on us a shame more intolerable than +death itself? I blush to write that which I am bound to divulge. O +wretched and miserable fate! In a word, your daughter--your blood, that +of the kingly line of the Goths, has suffered from King Rodrigo,--to +whose care, alas! she was entrusted like the sheep to the wolf,--a most +wicked and cruel affront. It is for you, if you are worthy the name of a +man, to cause the sweet draught of our ruin to become a deadly poison to +his life; nor to leave unpunished the mockery and insult he has cast on +our line and on our house." + +Don Julian, who, as some say, was of royal descent, and a relative, not +far removed, of Roderick--was possessed of qualities no less marked by +daring than artifice. His plans well digested, he committed his +government in Africa to the charge of a deputy, and repaired to the +court at Toledo. There he made it his business to advance in credit and +favour until the moment should arrive for action. His first step was, by +means of false alarms of attacks meditated on the northern frontier, to +get rid of the principal part of the disposable forces in that +direction. Meanwhile he caused a letter from his Countess, who remained +in Africa, to be forwarded to the King, in which, on the plea of serious +illness, she urgently entreats the royal permission for the departure +of Florinda to Ceuta. It is related that the profligate Rodrigo +consented to the journey with so much the better grace, that possession +had divested the attractions of his victim of all further hold of his +passions, already under the dominion of new allurements. + +There is a gate at Malaga, giving issue towards the sea-shore, which +bears to this day the name of Gate of the Cava: through it she is said +to have passed on embarking for Africa. + +With regard to the name "la Cava" given to the gate and to the bath, I +am disposed to prefer the popular notion to the assertion of Mariana, +that it was her name. It is a natural supposition that the anecdote of +the affair of Toledo, spread among the Arabs, who, for centuries after +this period, were the depositaries of the annals and traditions of the +Peninsula,--should have become tinted with a colour derived from their +customs and ideas. Now it would be difficult to persuade an Arab that +the circumstances of the story in question could befall a virtuous +female, surrounded with the thousand precautions peculiar to an oriental +court. If we add to this the contemptuous tone assumed by them towards +those of the hostile creed--a tone that must have suited in an especial +degree with their way of thinking on the subject of female deportment +among the Christians, which they look upon as totally devoid of +delicacy and reserve--the epithet applied to Florinda is easily +accounted for. But to return to the story. + +It only now remained for Don Julian to determine the Caliph's viceroy in +Africa in favour of the invasion. Repairing to his court, he obtained an +audience, in which he painted to the Prince, in such eloquent terms, the +natural and artificial wealth of the Spanish peninsula, the facility of +the enterprise, owing to the absence of the principal part of the +disposable hostile force, and the unpopularity of King Rodrigo, that an +expedition was immediately ordered; which, although at first prudently +limited to a small troop under Tharig, led to the conquest, in a few +campaigns, of the whole Peninsula. + +Mingled with the ruins of Roderick's palace are seen at present those of +the monastery of Saint Augustin, subsequently erected on the same site: +but on the side facing the river, the ancient wall and turrets, almost +confounded with the rock, on which they were built, have outlived the +more recent erections, or perhaps have not been interfered with by them. +Immediately beyond the portion of these walls, beneath which is seen the +Baño de la Cava, they turn, together with the brink of the precipice, +abruptly to the north, forming a right angle with the river bank: this +part faces the western _vega_ or valley, and looks down on the site of +the ancient palace gardens, which occupied the first low ground. They +extended as far as the chapel of Santa Leocadia. The ground is now +traversed by the road to the celebrated sword-blade manufactory, +situated on the bank of the river, half a mile lower down. With the +exception of the inmates of that establishment, the only human beings +who frequent the spot are the votaries on their way to the shrine of +Santa Leocadia, and the convicts of a neighbouring _Presidio_ in search +of water from the river. + + + + +LETTER IX. + +CATHEDRAL OF TOLEDO. + + +Toledo. + +Every successive æra of civilization, with the concomitant religion on +which it has been founded, and from which it has taken its peculiar +mould, has, after maintaining its ground with more or less lustre, and +throughout a greater or smaller duration, arrived at its inevitable +period of decline and overthrow. + +In ceasing, however, to live, and to fill society far and wide with its +enlightening influence,--in exchanging its erect attitude for the +prostrate one consequent on its fall,--seldom has a creed, which has +long held possession of the most enlightened intellects of our race for +the time being, undergone an entire extinction, so as to disappear +altogether from the face of the earth, and leave no trace of its +existence. The influence of the soil, formation, and climate of the +region, in the bosom of which such civilization has had its birth, on +the dispositions and faculties of the race which has become its +depositary, has always set its peculiar mark on its monuments, whether +civil, military, or religious, but especially the last; which monuments, +surviving the reign of the power to which they owe their existence, +prolong and sanctify its memory, while they stand, erect and silent, +over its grave; and furnish valuable information and benefit to those +future generations sufficiently enlightened to consult them. + +If this theory of successions and vicissitudes be consonant (which +probably no one will deny) with the march of events on the surface of +this our planet, then do the circumstances of the present situation +invest, as far as regards Spain, those relics of human genius and human +enthusiasm, the venerable temples of her declining faith, with an +interest beyond that which they have possessed at any period since their +foundation. It is impossible to have paid any attention to the events of +the last few years, without having received the conviction that the +reign of Christianity is here fast approaching,--not the commencement, +but the termination of its decline. Spaniards will never do things by +halves; and will probably prefer the entire overthrow of ancient customs +to the system pursued in France, of propping up, by government +enactments and salaries, a tottering edifice of external forms, long +since divested of its foundation of public belief. + +To speak correctly, the decline of religious supremacy in Spain is by no +means recent. It was coeval with that of the arts, and of the political +grandeur of the country. The gradual cessation of the vast gifts and +endowments for the erection of the religious establishments was a +symptom of devotional enthusiasm having passed its zenith. Had not this +occurred nearly three centuries back, Madrid would not have wanted a +Cathedral. Nothing could ever have tended more directly to compromise +the durability of Christianity in Spain, than the final expulsion or +extermination of the Moors and Jews. Had Torquemada and a few others +possessed heads as clear and calculating as their hearts were resolute +and inexorable--a knowledge of human nature as profound as their +ambition of divine honours was exalted, they would have taken care not +entirely to deprive the Church of food for its passions and energies. +They would not have devoured all their heretics at a single meal, but +would have exercised more _ménagement_ and less voracity. They would +have foreseen that by burning a few hundred Jews and Arabs less each +year, nourishment would remain to animate the declamations of preachers, +and the energies of the faithful; without which the fatal effects of +sloth and indifference must inevitably take root in the imaginations, +and eventually undermine their lofty fabric. + +The decline was, however, so gradual as to exercise no perceptible +influence on the general conduct of the population, by whom forms were +still observed, churches filled, and acts of devotion unceasingly +accomplished. A variety of causes (into a description of which it is not +my object, nor would it be your wish, that I should enter, but of which +one of the most influential has been the importation of foreign +ideas--as well through natural channels, as by special and interested +exertions) has precipitated the _dénouement_ of this long-commenced +revolution; and that with so headlong a rapidity, that, in that Spain +which surpassed all other nations in bigoted attachment to religious +rites, the confiscation of all the possessions of the Church, under a +promise (not to be performed) of salaries for a certain number of +ecclesiastics, insufficient for the continuation of the ancient +ceremonies, is received by the population with indifference! The +Cathedral of Toledo, deprived of the greater number of its +functionaries,--including its archbishop and fifty-six of its sixty +canons, and no longer possessing, out of an income of hundreds of +thousands sterling, a treasure sufficient for providing brooms and +sweepers for its pavement,--will, in perhaps not much more than another +year, if the predictions of the inhabitants be verified, be finally +closed to public worship. + +The same interest, therefore, which surrounded the Arab monuments three +centuries since, and the Roman edifices of Spain in the fifth century, +attaches itself now to the Christian temples; which, at this crisis, +offer themselves to the tourist in the sad but attractive gloom of +approaching death; since depriving them of the pomp and observances +which filled their tall arcades with animation, is equivalent to +separating a soul from a body. He will explore them and examine their +ceremonies with all the eagerness and perseverance of a last +opportunity,--he will wander untired through the mysterious twilight of +their arched recesses, and muse on the riches lavished around him to so +little purpose, and on the hopes of those who entrusted their memories +to the guardianship of so frail and transient a depositary. The tones of +their giant though melodious voices, as, sent from a thousand brazen +throats, they roll through the vaulted space the dirge of their +approaching fate, will fill him with sadness; and the ray that streams +upon him from each crimson and blue _rosace_ will fix itself on his +memory, kindling around it an inextinguishable warmth, as though he had +witnessed the smile of a departing saint. + +I had read of Toledo being in possession of the finest church in +Spain,--and _that_ in the book of a tourist, whose visit to this town +follows immediately that to Seville. Begging pardon of the clever and +entertaining writer to whom I allude, the Cathedral of Toledo strikes me +as far from being the finest in Spain; nor would it be the finest in +France, nor in England, nor in other countries that might be enumerated, +could it be transported to either. It is large; but in this respect it +yields to that of Seville. What its other claims to pre-eminence may be, +it is difficult to discover. It is true that its interior presents a +specimen of the simple and grand pointed style of its period. This being +put in execution on a large scale, would render it an imposing and a +beautiful edifice, but for a subsequent addition, which, to render +justice to the architect, he certainly never could have contemplated. +The noble pillars, towering to a height of sixty feet, have been +clothed, together with their capitals, in a magnificent coat of +whitewash! Without having witnessed such a desecration in this or some +similar edifice, it is impossible to conceive the deadening effect it +produces on the feeling of admiration such a building ought to excite. +An inscription in distinct and large characters, over the southernmost +of the three western doors, after recording the conquest of Granada by +the Catholic Kings, as Ferdinand and Isabella are here termed, the +expulsion of the Jews, and the completion of the Cathedral, brands with +this act of barbarism one Don Francisco Fernandez de Cuença, _obrero +mayor_ (almost a Dean) of the Cathedral in the year 1493. + +There is, however, a moment of each day when the tall arcades vindicate +their outraged majesty. "La nuit tous les chats sont gris," says the +proverb. I therefore proceeded at the approach of twilight (all access +at a later hour being prohibited) to see whether its application would +extend to this church. This is, in fact, the hour, just before the +closing of the doors, at which it should be visited. Darkness has +assumed his empire within these walls long before the stirring labyrinth +without has had warning of his approach. No colours nor gildings (the +latter being rather injudiciously distributed) are visible--nothing but +a superb range of beautifully painted windows; and the columns only +trace their dim outline a little less black against the deep gloom of +the rest of the building. At this hour, could it last, it would be +impossible to tire of wandering through this forest of magnificent +stems, of which the branches are only seen to spring, and immediately +lose themselves beneath the glories of the coloured transparencies +rendered doubly brilliant by their contrast with the gloom of all below +them. The principal merit, in fact, of this edifice, consists in its +windows. That of the purity of its general style deserves also to be +allowed; but with some reserve in the appreciation of the accessory +points of the design. It depended, for instance, on the judgment of the +architect, to diminish or to increase the number of columns which +separate the different naves, and by their unnecessary abundance he has +impaired the grandeur of the general effect. + +The interior dimensions are as follows:--Length, including a moderately +sized chapel at the eastern extremity, three hundred and fifty English +feet; width, throughout, one hundred and seventy-four feet; height of +the principal nave and transept, about one hundred and twenty feet. The +width is divided into five naves; those at the outside rising to about +two-thirds of the height of the two next adjoining; and these to about +half that of the centre nave. An entire side of a chapel opening out of +the southernmost nave, is ornamented in the Arab style--having been +executed by a Moorish artist at the same period as the rest; and not (as +might be conjectured) having belonged to the mosque, which occupied the +same site previously to the erection of the present cathedral. This +small chapel would be a beautiful specimen of the Arab ornament in +stucco, but for several coats of whitewash it has received. An arched +recess occupies the centre, and is called the Tomb of the Alguazil. A +handsome doorway in the same style is seen in the anteroom of the +Chapter-saloon. + +[Illustration: APSE OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO.] + +Facing the entrance to the centre or extreme eastern chapel, that of San +Ildefonzo, the back of the high altar, or, as it is vulgarly called, the +Trascoro, is--not adorned, would it were possible not to say +disfigured, by an immense mass of sculpture called the Transparente. It +is not easy to imagine the reason of this altar-piece having received +its name, for it is not more transparent than any other mountain--never +was witnessed so lamentable a mis-application of riches and labour! Some +of the marble was brought from Carrara; the rest is not of a very good +white, and being thus exposed to an unfavourable contrast, adds to the +displeasing effect of the unwieldy forms which enter into the +composition of this huge blunder of art--this pile of masses on masses +of ugliness. At the sight of a large spherical form rising abruptly from +the surface of some shaft of a pillar, you step back, and discover that +it forms part of the posteriors of a corpulent cherub, as large as the +column itself, which he has thus unmercifully annihilated, in order to +save himself the trouble of passing a few inches to the left or right. +But it is needless to notice the details of this piece of sculpture, +which being the largest, and occupying the most conspicuous position in +the whole church, forcibly attracts the attention which, but for that +circumstance, one would rather bestow in another direction. + +It is a relief to take one's station on the shining mahogany benches +adjoining the wall of the opposite chapel of San Ildefonzo; and to +contemplate its chaste style and graceful proportions, and the handsome +tombs which occupy its octagonally divided walls. The piece of sculpture +in marble, placed over the principal altar, is undeserving of its +conspicuous situation. It represents the Vision of San Ildefonzo, to +which we shall shortly have occasion to direct our attention. + +The adjoining chapel, as we proceed towards the northernmost nave, that +of Santiago, or more generally called after its founder, Don Alvaro de +Luna, is still finer. It is larger and loftier, and of a more ornamental +design. It presents five sides of an octagon: the three remaining sides +turning inwards to suit the form of the apse. This Alvaro de Luna, the +Lord Essex of Juan the Second, having by the high favour he enjoyed in +the intimacy of the monarch, given umbrage to the courtiers, was put to +death by the King, who gave credit to the charges falsely brought +against him. Don Juan, however, who did not long survive his friend, had +justice done to his remains. Being found innocent by a posthumous trial +at Valladolid, his body was conveyed with great pomp to Toledo, and +placed in the centre of his chapel. The tomb of his Countess stands +close to his own; and in the niches of the surrounding walls, those of +his most distinguished relatives, one of whom, on the right of the +altar, is represented in complete armour, with a turban on his head. The +treasures bestowed on this favourite, flowed plentifully into the +Cathedral of Toledo. Besides his chapel, the finest of all--the +elaborately executed enclosure of the sanctuary, is one of his gifts: +his arms are there recognised, frequently recurring among the various +designs of the external tracery. + +A narrow passage, leading from the apse between the chapel of Don +Alvaro, and the entrance to the sacristy, communicates with the chapel +of the kings. After passing through a simply designed anteroom of more +recent date, the eye reposes with pleasure on a small interior in the +pointed style of the latest period--of proportions, perhaps, not the +less graceful from their being rather narrow for the length. Two richly +ornamented arches, stretching across the interior, divide it into three +parts, in the first of which is seen a gallery containing an elaborately +wrought gilded confessional. The walls of the two other divisions are +divided into six parts; the chapel having been constructed and endowed +by Juan the First, for the reception of six monuments: those of himself +and his Queen Isabella; those of his father Henry the Second, (natural +son of Alonzo the Eleventh, and who dethroned and killed with his own +hand his half-brother, Pedro the cruel,) and Doña Juana his wife; and +those of Henry the Third, and Doña Catalina his wife. + +Returning to the interior of the apse, and continuing in the direction +of the north side, another small passage and anteroom lead to the +principal sacristy, which communicates with the next chapel, called the +Sagrario, and composed of three apartments. The great sacristy contains +some good paintings, particularly the ceiling by Giordano--a modern tomb +of the late archbishop, Cardinal de Bourbon, and a series of narrow +doors, within which are recesses. The first of these contains the crown +and bracelets of the Virgin of the Sagrario: in four others are +preserved magnificent ornaments of silver, representing emblematically +the four quarters of the globe. Each quarter is personified by a figure +invested with the attributes which characterize the region she +represents, seated on a large silver globe, on the front of which is +traced the quarter represented. The globe is supported by figures of +animals. In the last of these recesses is seen the sword of Alonzo the +Sixth, who won Toledo from the Moors. It is small, and unornamented, +except by a hilt of embossed silver, on which the arms are repeated four +times. In the smaller sacristy within are several good pictures, but not +so remarkable as to prevent their being eclipsed by the splendid robe +of the Virgin of the neighbouring Sagrario, here exhibited, extended +flat on a semicircular board, such being the form of the garment. + +No one knows the value of this treasure. During the Peninsular War, the +archbishop, in order to spare the French Generals too great a +temptation, conveyed it, together with whatever else deserved the +precaution, to Cadiz. It is embroidered almost entirely with pearls on a +tissue of silver; but none of the silver is visible without separating +the pearls, diamonds, &c., with the fingers. Most of the larger pearls +possess the irregular sort of beaten shape often observed in the best +specimens. Some are enormous. Numbers of diamonds, rubies, and other +stones are admitted in the upper part, to vary and enliven the effect of +the different designs of the embroidery. In another case is extended the +front-piece, worn together with the robe, which is open in front. The +robe sits nearly in the fashion of a lady's cloak, but perfectly stiff, +and widening as it descends, so much as to make the figure assume the +appearance of a triangle, of which the base is longer than the two other +sides. The opening in front corresponds with the outline of the two +sides, being wider below than above, although not in as great a degree. +This opening is occupied by the front-piece, which is much smaller than +the robe, but still more valuable, being principally worked in +brilliants. It contains also every variety of precious stones, +introduced as their colours may happen to accord with the design. + +In addition to these is shown the dress of the Bambino, similar in +materials to the two others; but the pearls and diamonds more equally +distributed. + +But the marvel of this costume is the crown. This ornament adds to the +splendour of its materials, the most exquisite and elaborate +workmanship. It would require hours to appreciate the labour and taste +displayed in all its details. Marshal Soult, could he but see it, would +order masses for the soul of the prelate who spared him such a +temptation. The diamonds, especially those which compose a cross +surmounting the centre, are of the purest water, and of immense size. +But in the midst of the dazzling and harmonious intricacy of this gem of +all colours, there is a centre of attraction, which took my fancy more +than the rest. Immediately under the centre ball, an immense spherical +emerald, which supports the diamond cross, is a small bird suspended on +a hook within the crown. All the parts of this bird are composed of +white enamel, except the body, around which the wings, legs, neck, and +head, are attached, and which consists of a pearl of an oval form, about +the size of a sparrow's egg. The movement of the statue during a +procession, keeps the bird (hanging from its hook) in constant +agitation, and produces the effect of a living bird enclosed in a cage +of precious stones.[6] + +A pair of bracelets, possessing no less magnificence than the crown, but +rather too heavy and bulky to be graceful, are suspended in the same +recess, and worn on the same occasions. + +It should not be forgotten, as a proof of the judgment shown in the +choice of ornaments, which, as far as regards the front, consist +principally of diamonds, that the complexion of the Virgin of the +Sagrario, is more than dark--in fact, quite black.[7] The innermost of +the three apartments forming the chapel of the Sagrario is called the +Ochavo, and is the deposit of a collection of relics of all kinds. It is +an octagon, surmounted at an elevation of more than double its diameter +by a dome ornamented with excellent painting. The walls are faced with +the best Spanish marbles. Each of the eight sides contains an open +recess reaching to the first cornice--an elevation of about twenty-five +feet; and in these recesses are contained all the valuable relics +belonging to the cathedral;--a rich display of silver statues, +reliquaries, coffins, chests, and crosses of gold and silver, some +containing jewels of great value. A silver statue of Saint Ferdinand +wearing a golden crown is among the objects most worthy of remark; also +a cross containing a portion of the true cross, presented to the +cathedral by St. Louis. This and several other relics, such as a phial +containing the Virgin's milk, a portion of our Saviour's purple garment, +&c., were presented to the cathedral by St. Louis on his return from the +east, and are here preserved, together with the letter in his own +hand-writing, which accompanied them. + +The Virgin of the Sagrario receives by far the greatest share of +devotion brought to the numerous shrines of this vast temple, even +greater than that offered at the high altar. More masses are performed +at her altar than at all the others added together. The aisles facing +her antechapel are constantly filled with a crowd of kneeling votaries. +She stands in the second enclosure, turning her back to the Ochavo. An +iron railing separates her apartment from the first chapel, which is +usually open to the aisles. She stands consequently in full view, +magnificently robed in a _fac simile_ imitation of her pearl dress, the +original being only worn on one or two occasions during the year. + +The interior of the Capilla Mayor, is ornamented with several rows of +statues, and some handsome funereal monuments, forming together a sort +of transparent wall of sculpture on each of its sides. In the midst of a +series of mitred archbishops, and coroneted princes, the figure of a +peasant occupies one of the most conspicuous positions. It stands on the +left side, as you face the High Altar, and about twenty feet from the +pavement. This statue represents a celebrated historical personage. +Alonzo the Eighth, when penetrating across the Sierra Morena into +Andalucia, in search of the Moorish army under the King of Morocco, +Mahomed ben Jacob, was in danger of losing the fruit of his exertions, +in bringing together the forces of the Kings of Aragon and Navarre, +together with numerous other confederates. He had led the combined army +into a defile, in which he would have had to receive the attack of the +Moor at an insuperable disadvantage. The hostile forces occupied a +height called the Puerto del Miradal. + +It was at the moment that retreat was the subject of deliberation, that +a peasant presented himself, and offered to guide the army out of the +pass. Having assured himself of the man's sincerity, Alonzo put himself +under his conduct, and was led to the summit of the mountain, where he +found himself on the border of an immense plain. This decided the great +victory of las Navas de Tolosa gained over the Moors on the 16th of +July, 1212. Alonzo ordered a statue of the peasant to be placed in this +cathedral. He is represented in a costume not unlike that of an ancient +Roman rustic, a sort of tunic reaching to the knees, and his face is +covered with a profuse beard. + +The interior of the choir is the work of Felipe de Borgoña, and +Berruguete; the latter having been employed, after the death of Felipe +de Borgoña, in 1548, in continuing the sculptures. The entire south side +was left for him to complete; after which he added a group in marble, +representing the Transfiguration, placed rather injudiciously, since it +out-tops the screen or back of the choir; thus presenting to the view of +those who enter from the western or grand entrance, and who are more +likely to have come with the intention of viewing the ornaments, than +the canons who are seated in the choir--the back of the subject, or +rather, forms which represent no subject whatever. There is a Virgin on +a pedestal in the centre of the eastern end of the choir, turning her +back to the bronze railing which separates it from the transept. This +statue has occupied its present position ever since the erection of the +cathedral; and it is probable would long since have quitted it, but for +a still greater inconvenience consequent on its removal. The attempt was +recently made, when a mass of water issued with much violence from +beneath the pedestal, and putting to flight the canons who were +assembled to preside at the operation, instantly inundated the whole +church. The virgin occupies probably the site of the fountain which must +have been the centre of the court, at the period of the existence of the +mosque. However that may be, the spot is the exact centre of the present +edifice. + +At the two eastern angles of the quadrangle, formed by the intersection +of the transept and principal nave, close to the railing of the capilla +mayor are two pulpits of bronze, excellently wrought; supported on short +pillars of rare marbles. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO.] + +A tall pyramidal Gothic edifice[8] of gilded and painted wood, rising to +the full height of the ceiling, stands in front of a column of the +second nave from the north side. All its sides are open, and furnished +with bronze railings, through which is seen an altar, raised on three or +four steps. In the centre of the altar is inserted a marble slab--a +highly prized relic, being the stone on which the Virgin placed her foot +on the occasion of her appearing in the cathedral in _propriâ personâ_ +to the Archbishop San Ildefonzo. This peculiar favour bestowed on the +saint--and a robe with which she invested him with her own hands, were +bestowed, according to the historian Mariana, in recompense of his zeal +in opposing the doctrine of the two Frenchmen, Pelagio and Helvidio, +whose writings and preachings tended to shake the belief in the +virginity of the Saviour's mother. The occurrence is thus described: + +"The night immediately preceding the feast of the Annunciation, the +archbishop entered the church, surrounded by several of the clergy. As +they entered, the cathedral appeared filled with a brilliant light. +Those who accompanied the saint, overcome with terror, turned and fled. +Remaining alone, he advanced to the foot of the high altar, and fell on +his knees; when, on the chair from which it was his custom to deliver +his exhortations to the people,--clothed in more than human +majesty--appeared the mother of Christ, who addressed him in the +following words:--'This gift, brought from Heaven, shall be the reward +of the virginity which thou hast preserved in thy body, joined with +purity of mind, and ardour of faith; and for having defended our +virginity.' + +"Having thus spoken, she placed on him, with her own hands, a robe, +which she commanded him to wear on the celebration of her festivals, and +those of her Son." + +The representations of this scene, from which is derived the claim of +superior sanctity assumed by this cathedral, are multiplied both in +marble and on canvas in all parts of the edifice, as well as in almost +all the churches of Toledo. In most cases, the execution of them has +been intrusted to unskilful hands. The best specimen is that executed in +marble over the small altar I have just noticed. It is remarkable for +the graceful and good-humoured expression of the Virgin, and the easy, +almost merry, demeanour of her celestial attendants. + +The marble box which contains the Host is let into the altar-piece, of +which it appears to form a part of the surface, only projecting slightly +as its sides are convex. Turning on a pivot, it presents four different +fronts, each representing, in well executed relief, a different scene in +the Virgin's life. + + + + +LETTER X. + +CAFÉS. WEDDING CEREMONY. CATHEDRAL CONTINUED. ALCAZAR HOSPITAL OF SANTA +CRUZ. CONVENT OF LA CONCEPTION. MYSTERIOUS CAVERN. CONVENT OF SANTA FE, +OR OF SANTIAGO. SONS-IN-LAW OF THE CID. + + +Toledo. + +One of the first contrasts between this and other countries, which +forces itself on the observation, is the amalgamation of the different +classes of society in public places of resort. The grandee is far too +sure of his personal importance and consideration, to entertain any fear +of its being diminished by contact with those of inferior rank; and the +peasant is far too proud to importune his superiors by any indiscreet +efforts at familiarity. + +At Burgos I found the _Gefe politico_, or governor of the province, +sipping his lemonade in the evening at the _café_; his elbow brushing +the back of a mayoral of a diligence, and surrounded by an assemblage of +all classes of the male inhabitants of the town. These cafés are curious +establishments; they are divided into two classes--the Café, properly +so called, and the Botilleria--in which tea and coffee are not usually +called for, but all the other refreshments of the café; such as +_helados_ (frozen beverages of all sorts), _sorbetes_ (ices), liqueurs, +wines, etc. These latter are the resort, in some towns, of both sexes, +and indeed the cafés also in a less degree. But the etiquette in these +things differs in the different provinces. + +At Madrid, where foreign customs first penetrate, ladies are rarely seen +in these resorts; by which they are considerable losers. No doubt, were +the attractions of French cafés sufficiently powerful, your sex would +not have withered them, by their disdain, into the uncivilized dens +which they are. You are not of course invited by the billiard tables, or +by the allurements of black coffee and cognac; but were the waiters to +set before you a tumbler of frozen lemonade after a July evening's dusty +walk, you would speedily bring such habits into fashion. + +Much as the refreshments of Spanish cafés have been celebrated, their +fame is surpassed by the reality. It is only when you have panted +through a southern summer's day, and breathed an atmosphere of fire, +that you are disposed to receive the illustration of the full sense of +the word refreshment; and it is then they hand you a brobdignag goblet, +brim full of frozen orange-water or lemonade, or snow-white +orgeat--which, from the imperceptible inroads made by the teaspoon on +its closing-up surface, appears likely to last you the whole night. +These and other similar luxuries, including the ices, at which those of +a Grange or Tortoni would melt with jealousy, are plentiful in second +and third-rate towns, and rank among the necessaries of life, rather +than as objects of indulgence. They are of course cheap, or it would not +answer. + +The poor apply to the distributors of iced barley-water, who carry about +a sort of cask, strapped between their shoulders, and containing ice in +the centre, to maintain the frigidity of the beverage. By lowering and +advancing the left shoulder, the vendor pours the contents of the cask +through a small neck or pipe into the glasses, which he carries in a +flat basket with cellaret partitions. A tumbler of this costs a +halfpenny; its imbibing occupies two or three minutes, and assuages for +hours the sufferings of the thirstiest palate. + +At Madrid, the cafés have each its political colour; except that called +del Principe, after the adjoining theatre. In this, politics are less +characterised, literature having here taken up her quarters. It is +probable that she is a less profitable customer, being habitually less +thirsty. Accordingly, on putting your head into the door, you see a +saloon far more brilliantly lighted up than the others; but the +peripatetic doctrines seem to prevail. Few persons are seated at the +tables; and instead of the more profitable wear and tear of broken +glasses, the proprietor probably finds substituted a thankless annual +item for worn out floors. In the same street there is a club; but this +is an exotic importation and on the exclusive plan, not quite of London, +but of the Paris _cercles_. + +In the cafés of Toledo, on the days of _fiesta_, the fair sex +predominates, especially in summer. The great resort is, however, the +Zocodover, from nine to ten in the evening. This little irregularly +formed _plaza_ is crowded like an assembly-room, and possesses its rows +of trees, although a respectable oak would almost fill it. + +A soirée has occasionally been known to be given in Toledo, but it is an +occurrence of much rarity, and mostly occasioned by some unusual +event,--the arrival of a public singer, or, still more unusual, a newly +made fortune. The other evening I was admitted to one, the pretext for +which was a wedding. This ceremony takes place at the residence of the +bride, and although a subsequent formality is necessary in the Church, +its delay does not defer the validity of the union, nor its +consummation. The wedding-day arrived, the families and friends of both +parties assemble at eight in the evening. + +The bride was distinguishable by a white veil or _mantilla_ in the +middle seat of a sofa, between her mother and sister, who rose to +receive the guests. A narrow table had been dressed up into a temporary +altar, and furnished with a crucifix and candles. All the party being +arrived, a priest left his chair, and entered an adjoining room to robe; +on his reappearance the company rose and flocked round the bride and +bridegroom, who stood together before the priest, doing penance each +with a long wax-light in the right hand, held in a muslin handkerchief. + +The ceremony lasts about ten minutes without any change of posture. The +priest departs to unrobe; the miserable bride and blushing bridegroom +receive felicitations; and all resume their seats, and look at each +other. + +Presently chocolate was handed round, and an attempt at conversational +murmur commenced, afterwards ices. And now the minister took a formal +leave of the company, after complimenting the bride. Two or three other +holy men, obedient to the signal, carried out their interminable hats +before them: when a sudden revolution broke out. At the closing of the +door on the hindmost ecclesiastic the bridegroom rushed to the altar, +and grasping with one hand the crucifix, and with the other two of the +candlesticks, ran to the apartment that had assumed the character of +vestry, and deposited them there, followed by officious friends bearing +the remaining articles, until every awe-compelling symbol had +disappeared. One or two guitars were extracted from their hiding-places +under sofas, and sent forth careless but lively preludes. The men stood +up and circulated; the women talked and laughed; a quadrille was +speedily formed, and concluded; waltzing followed, and forfeits, and +whatever you like, and--"the arrangements were on a scale of costly +magnificence, and the festivities were prolonged, &c." + +But these events are rare in Toledo. The every-day amusements consist in +an infamous theatre, and the promenade; this is only on Saints' days; +but these are almost every day. On six or seven occasions in the year, +these promenades are absolute events, and much looked forward to. It is +necessary to inquire which is the promenade patronised by the saint of +the great day, whoever he is, and take your place in the tide, for no +one absents himself. + +Dresses for these celebrations are things pre-meditated; and the effect +produced, and all the little events and rencontres of the day form for +each belle, thrilling subjects of retrospection. _Mantillas_ may be +trimmed, and innocent plots woven for these occasions, without danger of +disappointment by clouds or storms; and instead of the Virgin being +implored that the sun may shine, who never disappoints them, she is +sometimes requested to inspire some ruse for a momentary escape from his +too searching effulgence. + +Here may fair foreigners feast their eyes on fawn-coloured _majos_, +whose every step (although no more exalted beings than butchers, +postilions, horsedealers, and such like) would be envied by Antinous and +Apollo. I should advise no veils, nor winkings, nor blinkings on these +occasions, but eyes wide open--for never more (the Pyrenees once +repassed) will their orbits expand to the forms and costumes of +blackguards half so beautiful. + +But these are subjects slightly unsuited to the interior of the +cathedral, of our presence in which we are evidently forgetful. The +Mozarabic Chapel, founded by Cardinal Ximenes de Cisneros, is situated +under the southern tower, and contains a Virgin and Child executed in +Mosaic, and a curious old fresco painting, representing the battle of +Oran, at which the Cardinal was victorious over the Arabs. This chapel +is set apart for the performance of the Mozarabic ritual, still retained +by a portion of the population of Toledo, and the exercise of which was +continued in several churches, until the closing of some of them at the +recent revolution. + +The Arab conquerors of Spain exercised towards the religion of the +country, the most complete and liberal tolerance. All who preferred +remaining in the conquered towns to flight and exile, were allowed to +retain a sufficient number of places of worship for the free exercise of +their religion. On the subsequent introduction of the Italian missal, +those who retained the ancient gothic forms were called Mozarabes (mixti +Arabes, according to some, from their service being the same as that in +use during the co-existence together of the two creeds). A more probable +origin is attributed to the expression by some antiquaries, who derive +it from Muza, the name of the Moorish general. The mass of the +Christians who had taken refuge in the Asturias, applied the term to +their brethren, who preferred accepting from the Arabs what they +considered a degrading tolerance. The following singular mode of +decision was adopted for the purpose of settling the question between +the two missals. + +The King, Alonzo the Sixth, the Archbishop Don Bernardo, and the court, +were among the advocates of the new missal, which, being adopted in +Rome, they were very desirous of establishing on the occasion of the +restoration of the Christian supremacy at Toledo. The mass of the +people were attached to their ancient forms. It was resolved that the +question should be decided by an appeal to a sort of neutral power; and +Mars was selected, probably on account of his being a person +disinterested in the affair. A champion was chosen by each party, and a +day appointed for settling the difference by single combat. Accordingly, +the court, the clergy, and the people being assembled, the +representatives of the two missals took their station, lance in rest, +and on the appointed signal spurred to the encounter. The ancient missal +was approved of by the warlike god; but the King and his party were +dissatisfied with the result, and resolved on another trial. A large +fire was lighted in the principal plaza, and the two missals were thrown +into it. + +Again the ancient forms conquered, the rival parchment having caught the +flame and being drawn out in a blaze. The populace now commenced a cry +of triumph; but, to their great disappointment, the King, in his quality +of umpire, pronounced a judgment which he might as easily have put in +execution before the trials: namely, that considering that the Roman +Missal, although on fire, was not consumed, they were both equally +agreeable to the deity--they should therefore both be preserved, and +that some of the more ancient churches should continue the exercise of +the Mozarabic service, while the Roman ritual should be established in +the metropolitan temple, and in the greater number of the parishes. + +Before we leave the cathedral, the cloister claims our attention. It is +a spacious and handsome quadrangle, inclosing a garden. The eastern wall +is adorned with excellent frescos of comparatively modern date, and all +bearing the same signature--Francisco Bayeu. There are seven subjects on +that side, being the number of intervals corresponding with the arcades, +and three more continuing down another side. The best are two, taken +from the history of Saint Casilda; and three from that of San Eugenio, +first archbishop of Toledo, martyrised in France. The arcades on the +east side are shut in by large pieces of sail-cloth, in order to protect +the paintings against the sun's rays. + +The library of manuscripts belonging to this cathedral is distinguished +rather by the quality than the quantity of its contents. It is +approached by a staircase communicating with the cloister, and is a +handsome room. It contains a copy of the Talmud on the papyrus leaves, +and in the Coptic dialect. The following are also among its treasures: +The Book of Esther in Hebrew, on a single piece of parchment; two +bibles of the seventh century, one of which belonged to St. Isidore; the +missal used by Charles the Fifth in the monastery of Yuste; the poems of +Dante, manuscript of the poet's time, with illustrations; the laws of +Alonso the Tenth (surnamed the wise), and a volume of his poetical +works, with the music opposite those intended to be sung: two ancient +Chinese volumes, one on botany, the other on natural history, both +illustrated. + +The next edifice I visited was the Alcazar, the largest and most +conspicuous building in Toledo. I expected to find there some Arab and +Roman remains, having so read in more than one tour. It was not until +some time after my visit that I obtained the information that the +Moorish palace occupied a different site. The present comparatively +modern building is principally of two epochs. On the east is the +original portion erected by Alonzo the Sixth. The entire north and south +fronts are probably additions of Philip the Second. The whole partakes +of a divided character between castle and palace: it is not remarkable +for any architectural merit, possessing neither beauty as a palace, nor +solidity as a fortress; and having been occupied as a military position +during the war of the succession, and more recently in that of +independence, its being already a ruin, before its modern appearance +would seem to legitimize such a state, causes no surprise. But its +position is superb. Occupying the most elevated point of the town, it +far exceeds the whole by the immense height of its walls, and commands +an admirable view of the surrounding country. The only object deserving +notice in this ruin is a colossal staircase, which occupies an entire +side of the court,--a length of about two hundred and fifty feet,--and +is ornamented by a light and elegant colonnade. This edifice ceased to +be a palace on the final establishment of the court at Madrid, and after +some time became the manufactory whence issued the famous silk and +velvet brocades, the fabrication of which has now ceased, but with which +Toledo formerly supplied the wardrobes of the court, and the +well-garnished sacristies of Spain's wealthiest cathedrals. + +Descending from the Alcazar through the Plaza de Zocodover, and thence +towards the bridge of Alcantara, a few yards from the Plaza bring us in +view of the façade of the Hospital of Santa Cruz, or "de los niños +expositos,"--foundling hospital. The institution owes its origin to the +Archbishop, Don Pedro Gonzalez de Mendoza, called the Great Cardinal of +Spain. Although death prevented his witnessing the execution of his +project, his fortune, administered by his next relatives and +executors,--the Queen Isabella, and the Duke of Infantado,--was +employed in the erection of the buildings, and in the endowment of the +establishment. The plans and conditions were not even drawn up until +after the Cardinal's death; and they were never entirely put in +execution. The church consists of one nave, of a length out of all +proportion to its width and elevation. It was to have been crossed by +another of the same proportions, with the exception of the elevation, +which was to have been eighty feet in both. This combined with the +length--about three hundred and fifty feet, as is seen in the existing +nave,--would have rendered the edifice one of the most extraordinary in +existence. The altar was to have stood in the centre of the intersection +of the two naves. As it is, the long bare interior looks as though it +had been destined for a picture gallery or library, but rather for the +latter from the low-coved roof of cedar, and from the inadequate +distribution of light. To the left of the altar is seen a portrait of +the founder; and on the opposite side, about a hundred feet further down +the nave, a large Adoration,--a superior painting, especially with +regard to the colouring: the author unknown. + +There are two large courts surrounded by arcades: one of them is a model +of lightness and beauty, and contains in one of its angles an admirably +ornamented staircase. The architect of the Santa Cruz was Enrique Egas, +who also built the celebrated hospital of the same name at Valladolid. +He designed the whole according to the style then introduced, after the +pointed style had been abandoned, and which in Spain received vulgarly +the appellation of Plateresco, from the ornaments resembling the +embossing of a silversmith. It is also confounded with the Renacimiento. +The Plateresco style, from the too great liberty it afforded the +architect, of setting aside the classic models, and following his own +inventions, has produced in Spain, more than in any other country, (from +there being at that period more wealth devoted to the construction of +public monuments there than elsewhere,) the evil effects resulting from +ill-guided and unrestrained powers of imagination. Fortunately, however, +a few architects existed whose more correct taste kept them within some +bounds; and who, in deserting the old models, replaced them by a style, +if less pure, yet by no means inelegant. The architect Egas appears to +have partaken of both natures at different moments; for, while his court +above-mentioned is a specimen of consummate grace and good taste, the +entrance front of the building is one of the bad examples of the style +of the period. + +The establishment covers a large space, about half the extent occupied +by the double palace of the Arab kings of Toledo. The remainder of the +site contains two convents,--that of Santiago, and that of the +Conception. The hospital was conducted formerly on a scale proportionate +to the extent of its accommodation; but it is now no more than a +reminiscence; the revenues having probably been incorporated in the +recent registrations of national property. The number of inmates at +present enjoying the benefits of the foundation amounts to fourteen +only. + +The Convent of la Conception adjoins the hospital of Santa Cruz. From +the exterior are seen two churches, placed in close parallel contact, +and each composed of a single nave. Both are evidently very ancient, one +being in the Arab style; but the form of the other renders it probable +that it is the more ancient of the two. You are disappointed after being +shown this last, on being informed that the Moorish portion is forbidden +ground, being appropriated by the nuns to their private use, and +possessing no communication with the adjoining edifice, but a curtained +grating, through which its secluded inmates assist at religious +services. In the public church, a singular ornament figures on a +conspicuous part of the wall near the entrance; it is the carcass of a +large crocodile, fixed high enough to be out of reach, although no one +would be likely to purloin so unwieldy a curiosity. We are told the +animal frequented the neighbourhood of Toledo; where, under cover of the +pine forests, which formerly extended far over this mountainous region, +its existence had long filled with terror the few travellers whom their +mercantile pursuits compelled to pass within its accustomed haunts: that +at length a knight (it was in the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella) +clothed in a full suit of armour, rode forth from Toledo, fully resolved +to try conclusions with the monster, in order if possible to immortalize +his name throughout the surrounding regions, by ridding them of so dire +a scourge. The battle took place, and victory declaring for the knight, +whose name unfortunately does not figure in the legend,--he assembled +the peasants, and had his enemy's carcass borne in triumph to Toledo, +where he made a present of it to the convent. + +While on the subject of traditions, it is worth while adverting to a +cavern, the entrance of which exists in this part of the town; and which +is said to extend to a distance of eight miles, passing under the Tagus. +It is related that somewhat less than a century back, the government +ordered this cavern to be explored; but the exploring party was met at +the commencement of the descent by so violent a gust of wind, as to +extinguish all the torches, and the courage of the explorers, for the +attempt was never resumed. The failure by no means contributed to +diminish the mysterious qualities attributed to the cavern, on the +subject of which the wildest notions are currently entertained. + +A worthy and excellent native of Toledo, to whose antiquarian enthusiasm +(a quality doubly valuable here from its scarcity) I am indebted for +some information and much entertainment, undertook one day to enlighten +me with regard to the origin of this subterranean curiosity. Commencing +by warning my credulity against the innumerable fables current on the +subject, and which only resembled each other in their absurdity and +impossibility, he added, "The real fact is this,--the cavern is the work +of Hercules, who excavated it for the accommodation of the assemblies of +the people, whom he instructed in the elements of magic." + +The convent of Santiago, or of Santa Fé, or of Las monjas santiagistas, +or Las cavalleras, occupies the portion of the ancient Moorish alcazar, +remaining from the site of the two last-mentioned buildings. It is built +round two courts, one of which is divided into planted parterres, +intersected with brick-paved walks. The architecture of this first court +is very simple; it consists of a plain arcade of semicircular arches +supported on square piers, and a repetition of the same on the first +story. From this court opens the parlour of the Commendadora or abbess, +and the choir, which forms a continuation of the public chapel. There is +also under the arcade a folding door, which, when opened exhibits a +collection of small pictures attached to it, as on the leaves of an +album, and others suspended against the portion of wall it encloses. The +centre painting of these last represents the Mater dolorosa weeping over +the dead body of her Son. It has much of the manner of Alonzo Cano, and +is an admirable painting, more especially the dead body: the superior, +however, did not know the name of the artist. She complained bitterly of +the loss of a first-rate picture of the Divino Morales, which formerly +occupied the place of her little collection, and which was taken +possession of by Marshal Soult. + +The second court is highly ornamental owing to the elegance of its +architecture, and its magnificent proportions; it is a long quadrangle; +the pillars below are very lofty, and support the gallery above without +intermediate arches. They are not of a pure design, the shafts being too +long for their diameter: in other respects they imitate the Tuscan +order. Those of the arcade above are Ionic; but the effect here is +destroyed by walls and windows, which have been constructed in their +intervals, for the purpose of converting the open gallery into a warmer +corridor. The walls below are clothed to the height of about four feet +with the _azulejos_, or porcelain mosaic, of the sort originally +employed by the Arabs, and from which the ornament took its name, being +blue and white, without any other colour. + +Opening from this court is the Sala Capitular a handsome saloon used on +occasions of elections of the Commendadora, or other solemnities, which +do not take place in the church. It contains a portrait of the sister of +St. Ferdinand,--a member of the community; and a curious picture of St. +Iago leading to victory the christian army of Don Ramiro the First. In +fulfilment of a promise made to the king the night preceding the battle +of Albayde, the apostle, according to the historians, led the army in +person, mounted on a milk-white charger, which cantered along at a +sufficient elevation over the heads of the combatants, to be visible to +all; thus inspiring, simultaneously, his _protégés_ with confidence, and +the Moors with terror. From that victory the Spanish war-cry of Santiago +is said to derive its origin. + +The buildings on the north side of the large court stand on the brink of +a perpendicular rock, overhanging the _faubourg_ on the Madrid side of +Toledo, and commanding right and left the luxuriant _vega_, to an extent +of from forty to fifty miles. Over the highest story of this portion of +the building, and forming a continuation of the rock, a Belvidere has +been constructed, the roof of which is supported by piers, leaving all +the sides open: it forms a promenade of about a hundred feet in length, +by twenty-five in width. + +The regulations of this convent are much less strict than those observed +by all other religious communities. It would not otherwise have been +possible to obtain permission to visit the establishment in detail. The +_monjas cavalleras_ (knight-nuns) of the military order of Santiago, +take the white veil only, and not the black. If a nun inherits a +property, she obtains permission from the council of military orders, +sitting at Madrid, to absent herself from the convent for the purpose of +transacting all necessary business. The same permission may be obtained +in cases of illness. In taking the vows there is no prostration beneath +the veil. The novice crosses her hands in a kneeling posture, and takes +the oath on the Gospel. One is struck by something invincibly puzzling +in this amalgamation of military regulation with religious hierarchy and +female seclusion. They call themselves knights; their abbess, commander. +The king, as Grand Master of the military orders (since Ferdinand the +Fifth) of Calatrava, Alcantara, and Santiago, is their recognised chief; +and whenever military mass is required to be performed, the troops march +into their chapel to beat of drum. + +I was even assured that these recluses are not obliged to refuse a hand +offered for a waltz, if it belongs to an arm having an epaulette at its +other extremity; and that such scenes are known to occur in the presence +of the commandress herself. + +Our party, formed for the visit to this convent, having been presented +to the superior, she gave directions to a nun to show us every part of +the establishment. This sister, who, we were told, bore the title and +rank of serjeantess (sargenta), possessed the remains of great beauty, +and her (probably) forty summers had not injured her commanding and +graceful figure. No sooner had she ushered us into the choir than she +left us for an instant, and returned with her mantle of ceremony,--the +costume in which they take the vow, and in which they appear on all +occasions of solemnity. It was with evident satisfaction that she +performed this part of her duties of cicerone; nor was it to be wondered +at. No costume could have been invented better calculated to set off her +natural advantages. It is composed of a sort of white serge, and +appears to have no seam. Attached round the shoulders it sweeps the +ground with a train of four or five feet. A cross of scarlet cloth, +bound with dark brown edges, and of a graceful form, figures on the +portion which covers the left arm from the shoulder to the elbow. The +white cap, gathered all over into minute plaits, rises into two parallel +ridges, which passing over to the back of the head, imitate the form of +a helmet. Two large lappets descend to the shoulders and complete the +costume, which is entirely white, with the exception of the cross. In +walking round the choir to display to us the effect of this dress, the +fair _santiagista_ was a model of majesty and grace. + +To judge from her replies to our questions, it would appear that the +system of softening the severity of monastic seclusion, and of partial +and occasional communication with the beings of the outer world, instead +of producing more contentment in the minds of the recluses, may possibly +tend to unsettle them, and render them more dissatisfied with their lot. +When asked how long she had inhabited the convent, she replied with an +unrestrained and most pathetic inflation of the chest, more eloquent +than the loudest complaint--"A very long time; nearly twenty years." The +white mantle, she told us, was an object the sight of which always gave +birth to serious reflections; since it was destined not even to quit her +after death, but to serve also for her shroud. + +[Illustration: COSTUME OF A MILITARY NUN.] + +The nun's choir is entirely separated from the public chapel, with the +exception of two gratings, which admit to the latter the sound of the +organ, and through which the nuns have a better view of the church than +the public can obtain of the choir, this being less lighted, and on a +lower level. Near the choir a small oratory of no greater dimensions +than about seven feet square, appears to be the only remains extant of +the Arab buildings, which occupied the site. The ceiling is +hemispherical, and ornamented in the Arab style; and one of the walls +contains a niche surrounded by Arab tracery. I should mention likewise a +fountain in the garden, which bears a similar character. + +These nuns live less in community with each other than those of other +convents; in fact, their life resembles in many respects that of +independent single ladies. Each inhabits her own suite of apartments, +and keeps her own servant. Her solitary repasts are prepared in her own +separate kitchen, and at the hour chosen by herself. Once a-year only, +on the occasion of the festival of the patron Apostle, the community +assembles at dinner. The common refectory is at present let to +strangers, together with other portions of the convent. The novice who +wishes to enter this convent must be of good family, (proof of noble +descent being demanded up to grand-fathers and grandmothers inclusive) +and possessed of property. Of the entrance of the present _commendadora_ +into the convent thirty years since, a romantic story is related. She +belongs to a family of rank in the province of La Mancha,--and it is +worth mentioning, that she recollects Espartero's father, who, as she +states, served a neighbouring family in the capacity of cowherd. + +A match, _de convenance_, had been arranged for her by her parents, on +the accomplishment of which they insisted the more rigidly from her +being known to entertain an attachment, the object of which was +disapproved. No resistance being of any avail, the wedding-day was +named; and she was taken to Toledo for the purpose of making the +necessary purchases for the occasion. It so happened that she was +received by a relative, a member of the community of Santiagistas; and +whether she confided her pains to the bosom of this relative, and +yielded to her persuasions--nuns being usually given to proselytism; or +perhaps acting on the impulse of the moment; she declared on the morning +after her arrival her resolution never to quit the convent; preferring, +as she resolutely affirmed, an entire life of seclusion, to an union +with a man she detested. Instead, therefore, of the wedding dresses, a +_manton capitular_ was the only ornament purchased. + +The property of this establishment remaining for the most part in +possession of the respective original possessors, and not forming a +common stock, the conscientious scruples of the revolution made an +exception in its favour, owing to which it is not reduced to so +destitute a condition as that of the other unclosed convents. The nuns +of San Clemente--the principal convent of Toledo, and of which the +abbess alone possessed private property, are reduced to a life of much +privation, as are also those of all the other convents. Some obtain +presents in return for objects of manual industry, such as dolls' +chairs, and other similar toys. Those of San Clemente had, and still +have, a reputation for superior skill in confectionary. A specimen of +their talent, of which I had an opportunity of judging in the house of a +friend of the abbess, appeared to me to warrant the full extent of their +culinary fame. They do not, however, exercise this art for gain. At San +Clemente, and no doubt at all the others, the new government--besides +the confiscation of all rents and possessions in money and land--seized +the provisions of corn and fruits which they found on searching the +attics of the building. + +Immediately below the ruined modern Alcazar, and facing the Expositos, +is seen a vast quadrangular building, each front of which presents from +twenty to thirty windows on a floor. It is without ornament, and is +entered by a square doorway, which leads to an interior court. It is now +an inn, called Fonda de la Caridad, but was originally the residence of +the Cid, who built it simultaneously with the erection of the Alcazar, +by Alonzo the Sixth, shortly after the taking of the town; Ruy Diaz +being at that time in high favour, and recently appointed first Alcalde +of Toledo, and governor of the palace. It was on the occasion of the +first cortez held in this town, that the hero demanded a formal audience +of Alonzo, in which he claimed justice against his two sons-in-law, the +counts of Carrion. + +These were two brothers, who had married the two Countesses of Bivar. On +the occasion of the double marriage, a brilliant party had assembled at +the Cid's residence, where all sorts of festivities had succeeded each +other. The two bridegrooms, finding themselves, during their presence in +this knightly circle, in positions calculated to test their mettle, +instead of proving themselves, by a display of unequalled valour and +skill, to be worthy of the choice by which they had been distinguished, +gave frequent proofs of deficiency in both qualities; and, long before +the breaking up of the party, their cowardice had drawn upon them +unequivocal signs of contempt from many of the company, including even +their host. Obliged to dissimulate their vexation as long as they +remained at the château of the Cid, they concerted a plan of vengeance +to be put in execution on their departure. + +They took formal leave, and departed with their brides for their +estate, followed by a brilliant suite. No sooner, however, had they +reached the first town, than, inventing a pretext, they despatched all +the attendants by a different route, and proceeded on their journey, +only accompanied by their wives. Towards evening the road brought them +to a forest, which appeared to offer facilities for putting their +project in execution. Here they quitted the highway, and sought a +retired situation. + +It happened that an attendant of the Countesses, surprised at the +determination of the party to divide routes, had been led by curiosity +to follow them unobserved. This follower, after having waited some time +for their return to the high-road, penetrated into the midst of the +wood, in order to discover the cause of the delay. He found the two +brides lying on the ground, almost without clothing, and covered with +blood, and learned that they had just been left by their husbands, who +had been scourging them almost to death. + +It was against the perpetrators of this outrage that the Cid pleaded for +justice. A certain number of nobles were selected by Alonzo, and +directed to give a decision after hearing the accusation and the +defence. The offence being proved, the Counts had nothing to urge in +extenuation, and judgment was pronounced. All the sums of money, +treasures, gold and silver vases and goblets, and precious stones, +given by the Cid with his daughters as their dowry, to be restored; and +(at the request of Ruy Diaz) the two Counts of Carrion, and their uncle, +who had advised them to commit the act, were condemned to enter the +lists against three of the followers of the Cid. The last decision was +momentarily evaded by the Counts; who urged, that, having come to Toledo +to be present at the cortez, they were unprovided with the necessary +accoutrements. The King, however, insisted that they should not escape +so mild a punishment, and repaired himself to Carrion, where he +witnessed the combat, in which, it is needless to add, the culprits came +off second best. The marriages being, at the same time, declared null, +the Cid's daughters were shortly afterwards married a second time; the +eldest, Doña Elvira, to Don Ramiro, son of Sancho, King of Navarre; and +the younger, Doña Sol, to Don Pedro, hereditary Prince of Aragon. + + + + +LETTER XI. + +STREETS OF TOLEDO. EL AMA DE CASA. MONASTERY OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES. +PALACE OF DON HURTADO DE MENDOZA. + + +Toledo. + +We will now hasten to the opposite extremity of the city, where the +monastery of San Juan de los Reyes lays claim to especial interest. But +I already hear you cry for mercy, and exclaim against these endless +convents and monasteries; the staircases, courts, and corridors of which +cause more fatigue to your imagination, than to the limbs of those who, +however laboriously, explore their infinite details. Infinite they are, +literally, in Toledo; where the churches, the greater number of which +belong to convents, are not seen, as elsewhere, scattered singly among +the masses of the habitations, but are frequently to be found in +clusters of three or four, whether united by the same walls, or facing +each other at the two sides of a street. It may, perhaps, afford you a +short relief to pick your way over the somewhat rugged pavement of a +few of the Toledo streets, and take a survey of the exterior town, which +our present destination requires us to traverse in its entire extent. I +must inform you that, for the success of this enterprise, the stranger +stands in absolute need of a pilot, without whose assistance his +embarrassments would be endless. + +Toledo scarcely boasts a street in which two vehicles could meet and +continue their route. Most are impassable for a single cart; and, in +more than one, I have found it impossible to carry an open umbrella. +Such being the prevailing width of the streets, their tortuous direction +causes a more serious inconvenience. He who has attempted the task of +Theseus, in the mazes of some modern garden labyrinth, will comprehend +the almost inevitable consequence of relying on his own wits for finding +his way about Toledo,--namely, the discovery that he has returned to his +point of departure at the moment he imagined that half the town +separated him from it. This result is the more favoured by the +similarity of the streets and houses. No such thing as a land-mark. All +the convents are alike. You recollect at a particular turning, having +observed a Moorish tower; consequently, at the end of the day, the sight +of the Moorish tower leads you on, buoyed up by doubly elevated +spirits, in the required direction, most anxious to bring the tiring +excursion to a close: but this tower leads you to the opposite extremity +of the city to that you seek, for there are half a dozen Moorish towers, +all alike, or with but a trifling difference in their construction. + +Nor is this obstacle to solitary exploration unaccompanied by another +inconvenience. I allude to the continual ascents and descents. The +surface of the mountain on which Toledo is built, appears to have been +ploughed by a hundred earthquakes, so cut and hacked is it, to the +exclusion of the smallest extent of level ground. To carry a railroad +across it, would require an uninterrupted succession of alternate +viaducts and tunnels. In consequence of this peculiarity, the losing +one's way occasions much fatigue. To do justice to the inhabitants, an +almost universal cleanliness pervades the town,--an excellence the +attainment of which is not easy in a city so constructed, and which +gives a favourable impression of the population. It is one of the towns +in which is proved the possibility of carrying on a successful war +against the vermin for which the Peninsula has acquired so bad a +reputation, by means of cleanliness maintained in the houses. + +In the house I inhabited on my arrival, I had suspected for some days an +unusual neglect in the duties of the housemaid, to whose department it +belonged to sweep the _esteras_ or matting, which serve for carpets, +from the circumstance of my having been visited by one or two unwelcome +tormentors. I ventured a gentle remonstrance to the _ama_ (landlady), +stating my reasons for the suspicion I entertained. It happened that on +the previous day I had mentioned my having been shown over the +Archbishop's palace. This she had not forgotten; for with a superb +coolness, scarcely to be met with out of Spain, she replied, "Fleas! oh, +no! sir! we have none here,--you must have brought them with you from +the Palace." Satisfied, however, with having maintained her dignity of +landlady, she took care to have the nuisance removed. + +This _ama_, as may be already judged, was a curiosity. In the first +place, she was a dwarf. The Spaniards are not, generally speaking, a +more diminutive race than the other inhabitants of Southern Europe: but +when a Spaniard, especially a woman, takes it into her head to be small, +they go beyond other nations. Nowhere are seen such prodigies of +exiguity. The lady was, moreover, deformed, one of her legs describing a +triangle, which compelled her in walking to imitate the sidelong +progress of a crab. Possessed of these peculiarities she had attained, +as spinster, that very uncertain age called by some "certain," but +agreed by all to be nearer the end than the commencement of life. + +Although not an exception, with regard to temper, to the generality of +those whose fate it is to endure such a complication of ills, she +nevertheless on frequent occasions gave way to much amiability, and +especially to much volubility of discourse. She was not without a tinge +of sentimentality; and when seated, fan in hand, and the _mantilla +puesta_, on one of the chairs shorn of almost their entire legs, which +were to be found in all parts of the house,--she made by no means a bad +half-length representation of a fine lady. + +She had apparently experienced some of the sorrows and disappointments +incident to humanity; and on such occasions had frequently, no doubt, +formed the resolution of increasing, although in a trifling degree, some +religious sisterhood, of which establishments she had so plentiful a +choice in her native city; but, whether on a nearer approach, she had +considered the veil an unbecoming costume, or her resolution had failed +her on the brink of the living tomb, the project had not as yet taken +effect. The turn, however, thus given to her reflections and inquiries, +had perfected in her a branch of knowledge highly useful to strangers +who might be thrown in her way. She was a limping encyclopedia of the +convents and monasteries of Toledo; and could announce each morning, +with the precision of an almanack, the name of the saint of the day,--in +what church or convent he was especially fêted, and at what hour the +ceremony would take place. She was likewise _au fait_ of the foundation, +ancient and modern annals, and peculiarities of every sort which belong +to every religious establishment of the many scores existing in Toledo. +Her administration of the household affairs was admirably organized +owing to her energetic activity. Her love of cleanliness would +frequently induce her to take the sweeping department into her own +hands--a circumstance which was sure to render the operation doubly +successful, for the brooms, which in Toledo are not provided with +handles or broomsticks, were exactly of a length suited to her stature. +Before we take leave of her, here is one more of her original replies. + +I complained to her at breakfast that the eggs were not as fresh as +usual; and, suiting the action to the word, approached the egg-cup +containing the opened one so near to her, that the organs of sight and +smell could not but testify to the justice of my _reclamation_. +Shrugging her shoulders, until they almost reached the level of the +table--and with much contempt depicted on her countenance: "How could it +be otherwise?" she exclaimed, "the egg was taken a quarter of an hour +ago from under the hen; but you have broken it at the wrong end." + +The monastery called San Juan de los Reyes, was founded by Ferdinand and +Isabella, on their return from the conquest of Granada, and given to a +fraternity of Franciscan friars. An inscription to this effect in gothic +characters runs round the cloister walls, where it forms a sort of +frieze, in a line with the capitals of the semi-columns. The inhabited +part of the establishment is in a state of complete ruin, having been +destroyed by the French during the Peninsular War. The cloisters are, +likewise, in a semi-ruinous state: the part best preserved being the +church; although that was not entirely spared, as may be supposed from +its having been used as cavalry stables. + +The choice of a situation for the erection of this convent was perfect +in the then flourishing state of Toledo; and, even now, its picturesque +position lends a charm to the melancholy and deserted remains still +visible of its grandeur and beauty. It stands on the brow of the cliff, +commanding the termination of the chasm already described as commencing +at the bridge of Alcantara. It commands, therefore, the ruins of +Roderick's palace, placed a few hundred yards further on, and on a lower +level; still lower the picturesque bridge of St. Martin, striding to +the opposite cliff, over arches of ninety feet elevation, and the lovely +_vega_ which stretches to the west. + +[Illustration: CHURCH OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES.] + +This monastery was one of the most favoured amongst the numerous royal +endowments of that period. It is said that its foundation was the result +of a vow pronounced by Ferdinand and the Queen before the taking of +Granada. In addition to the scale of magnificence adopted throughout the +entire plan, the royal founders, on its completion, bestowed a highly +venerated donation--the collection of chains taken from the limbs of the +Christian captives, rescued by them from the dungeons of the Alhambra. +They are suspended on the outside walls of the two sides of the +north-eastern angle of the church, and are made to form a frieze, being +placed in couples crossing each other at an acute angle; while those +that remained are suspended vertically in rows by fours or fives, in the +intervals of the pilastres. + +The interior of the church is still sufficiently entire to give some +idea of its original splendour. Its dimensions are rather more than two +hundred feet in length, by eighty in width, and as many in +height--excepting over the intersection of the nave and transept, where +the ceiling rises to a hundred and eight feet. These dimensions are +exclusive of three recesses on either side, forming chapels open to the +nave, there being no lateral naves or aisles. The style of the whole is +very ornamental; but the east end is adorned with an unusual profusion +of sculpture. The transept is separated from the eastern extremity of +the building, by a space no greater than would suffice for one of the +arches; and its ends form the lines, which being prolonged, constitute +the backs of the chapels. The royal arms, supported by spread eagles, +are repeated five times on each end-wall; separated respectively by +statues of saints in their niches, and surmounted by a profusion of rich +tracery. These subjects entirely cover the walls to a height of about +forty feet, at which elevation another inscription in honour of the +founders runs round the whole interior. The transepts not being formed +by open arches, the sides afford space for a repetition of the same +ornament, until at their junction with the nave they are terminated by +two half-piers covered with tracery, and surmounted by semi-octagonal +balconies, beneath which the initials of Ferdinand and Isabella, made to +assume a fancy shape, and surmounted by coronets, are introduced with +singularly graceful effect. + +But the chief attraction of this ruin is the cloister. A small +quadrangle is surrounded by an ogival or pointed arcade, enriched with +all the ornament that style is capable of receiving. It encloses a +garden, which, seen through the airy-web of the surrounding tracery, +must have produced in this sunny region a charming effect. At present, +one side being in ruins and unroofed, its communication with the other +three has been interrupted; and, whether or not in the idea of +preserving the other sides from the infection, their arches have been +closed nearly to the top by thin plaister walls. Whatever may have been +the motive of this arrangement, it answers the useful purpose of +concealing from the view a gallery which surmounts the cloister, the +arches of which would neutralize the souvenirs created by the rest of +the scene, since they announce a far different epoch of art, by the +grievous backsliding of taste evinced in their angular form and uncouth +proportions. + +[Illustration: CLOISTER OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES, TOLEDO.] + +Until the destruction of the monastery by the French, the number of +monks was very considerable; and in consequence of the unusual +privileges accorded to their body, had become the objects of especial +veneration. A curious proof of this still exists in the form of a +printed paper, pasted on one of the doors in the interior of the church, +and no doubt preserved carefully by the fifteen or sixteen brothers, who +continued after the dispersion of the rest to inhabit the few +apartments, which, by their situation over the cloister, had escaped the +flames; and who were only finally compelled to evacuate their retreat on +the occasion of the general convent crusade of the late revolution. It +is an announcement of indulgences, of which the following is the opening +paragraph:-- + +"Indulgence and days of pardon to be gained by kissing the robe of the +brothers of San Francisco. + +"All the faithful gain, for each time that they kiss the aforesaid holy +robe with devotion of heart, two thousand and seventy-five days of +Indulgence. Further than this, whosoever of the faithful shall kiss the +aforesaid holy robe devoutly, gains each time eight thousand one hundred +days of pardon. The which urges to the exercise of this devotion the +Princes, Kings, Emperors, Bishops, and highest dignitaries of the +Church, and the monks of other religious orders; and even those of the +same order gain the same, according to the doctrine of Lantusca, who +writes, 'Videant religiosi quantum thesaurum portent secum.' Since those +who with hearts filled with lowliness and love, bend the knees to kiss +the precious garment, which opens to so many souls the entrance to +Heaven, leading them aside from the paths of perdition, with trembling +and terror of the entire hosts of hell, are doubtless those who gain the +above-mentioned Indulgences, &c." + +Cardinal Ximenes had assumed the habit of this monastery before his +nomination to the see of Toledo. + +Among the numerous relics of the ancient prosperity of this ruinous +corner of Toledo, are seen the walls of the palace of Don Juan Hurtado +de Mendoza. To them were confided the secret murmurings of Charles the +Fifth's vexation, when, elated with his Italian successes--lord of the +greatest empire of Christendom, and flattered by the magnificent +hospitality of the Genoese, he only resorted hither to be bearded by his +Spanish vassals, and to hear his request for supplies unceremoniously +refused. Although monarch of nearly half Europe, and, better still, of +Mexico and Peru, that sovereign appears to have undergone the torments +of a constantly defective exchequer. + +His armies were not numerous for such an empire, and yet they were +frequently in revolt for arrears of pay. Could at that time the inventor +of a constitution on the modern principle have presented himself to +Charles, with what treasures would he not have rewarded him? On his +arrival in Spain, in the autumn of 1538, the emperor convoked the cortez +in Toledo, "for the purpose of deliberation on the most grave and urgent +causes, which obliged him to request of his faithful vassals an +inconsiderable contribution, and of receiving the assurance of the +desire with which he was animated, of diminishing their burdens as soon +as circumstances should enable him to do so." All assembled on the +appointed day--the prelates, the grandees, the knights, the deputies of +cities and towns. The opening session took place in the great salon of +the house of Don Juan Hurtado de Mendoza, Count of Melita, in which the +emperor had taken up his abode; and two apartments in the convent of San +Juan de los Reyes, were prepared for the remaining meetings--one for the +ecclesiastical body, presided by the Cardinal de Tavera, archbishop of +Toledo, accompanied by Fray Garcia de Loaysa, cardinal, and confessor of +the emperor, afterwards Archbishop of Seville--the other for the lay +members of the cortez. + +Although an adept at dissimulation, what must have been the impatience +of Charles, while under the necessity of listening, day after day, to +reports of speeches pronounced by the independent members of his _junta_ +on the subject of his unwelcome proposition, without the consolation of +foreseeing that the supplies would eventually be forthcoming. The +orators did not spare him. The historian, Mariana, gives at full length +the speech of the condestable Don Velasco, Duke of Frias, a grandee +enjoying one of the highest dignities at the court, who commences by +declaring that, "with respect to the Sisa," (tax on provisions, forming +the principal subject of the emperor's demand,) "each of their +lordships, being such persons as they were, would understand better than +himself this business: but what he understood respecting it was, that +nothing could be more contrary to God's service, and that of his +Majesty, and to the good of these kingdoms of Castile, of which they +were natives, and to their honour, than the Sisa;" and, further on, +proposes that a request be made to his Majesty, that he would moderate +his expenditure, which was greater than that of the Catholic kings. + +On an address to this effect being presented to the emperor, he replied, +that "he thanked them for their kind intentions; but that his request +was for present aid, and not for advice respecting the future:" and +finding, at length, that no Sisa was to be obtained, he ordered the +archbishop to dissolve the _junta_, which he did in the following +words:--"Gentlemen,--his Majesty says, that he convoked your lordships' +assembly for the purpose of communicating to you his necessities, and +those of these kingdoms, since it appeared to him that, as they were +general, such also should be the remedy; but seeing all that has been +done, it appears to him that there is no need of detaining your +lordships, but that each of you may go to his house, or whither he may +think proper." + +It must be confessed that the grandees, who had on this occasion +complained of Charles's foreign expeditions, and neglect of his Spanish +dominions, did not pursue the system best calculated to reconcile him to +a residence among them. Instead of taking advantage of the opportunities +afforded by social intercourse, for making amends for the repulse he had +suffered from the cortez, they appeared desirous of rendering the amount +of humiliation which awaited him in Spain a counterpoise to his triumphs +in his other dominions. On the close of the above-mentioned session, a +tournament was celebrated in the _vega_ of Toledo. On arriving at the +lists, an _alguacil_ of the court, whose duty it was to clear the way +on the emperor's approach--seeing the Duke de l'Infantado in the way, +requested him to move on, and on his refusal struck his horse with his +staff. The duke drew his sword and cut open the officer's head. In the +midst of the disturbance occasioned by the incident, the _alcalde_ +Ronquillo came up, and attempted to arrest the duke in the emperor's +name--when the constable, Duke de Frias, who had just ridden to the +scene of bustle, reining in his horse, exclaimed, "I, in virtue of my +office, am chief minister of justice in these kingdoms, and the duke is, +therefore, my prisoner;" and addressing himself to the alcalde: "know +better another time, on what persons you may presume to exercise your +authority." The duke left the ground in company of the last speaker, and +was followed by all the nobles present, leaving the emperor entirely +unaccompanied. It appears that no notice was taken by Charles of this +insult; his manner towards the Duke of Infantado on the following day +being marked by peculiar condescension, and all compensation to the +wounded _alguacil_ left to the duke's generosity. + +The personal qualities of this prince, as a monarch, appear to have been +overrated in some degree in his own day; but far more so by subsequent +writers. The brilliancy of his reign, and the homage which surrounded +his person were due to the immense extent of his dominions; and would +never have belonged to him, any more than the states of which he was in +possession, had their attainment depended in any degree on the exercise +of his individual energies. When in the prime of youth, possessed of +repeated opportunities of distinguishing himself at the head of his +armies, he kept aloof, leaving the entire conduct of the war to his +generals. His rival, Francis the First, wounded at Pavia in endeavouring +to rally his flying troops, and at length taken prisoner while half +crushed beneath his dead horse, was greater--as he stood before the +hostile general, his tall figure covered with earth and blood--than the +absent emperor, who was waiting at Valladolid for the news of the war. + +Nor were the qualities of the statesman more conspicuous than those of +the warrior on this occasion. Having received the intelligence of his +victory, and of the capture of his illustrious prisoner, he took no +measures--gave no orders. To his general every thing was left; and when +the captive King was, at his own request, conveyed some time after to +Spain, the astonished emperor had received no previous notice of his +coming. He allowed himself to be out-manÅ“uvred in the treaty for the +liberation of his prisoner; and when Francis broke the pledge he had +given for the restitution of Burgundy, he took no steps to enforce the +execution of the stipulations; and he ultimately gave up the two French +princes, who remained in his power as hostages, in return for a sum of +money. + +Far from maintaining the superiority in European councils due to his +extensive dominions, the Italian republics were only prevented with the +greatest difficulty, and by the continual presence of armies, from +repeatedly declaring for France: and even the popes, to whom he paid +continual court, manifested the small estimation in which they held his +influence by constantly deserting his cause in favour of Francis,--the +cause of the champion of Christianity in favour of the ally of the +Infidel, and _that_ frequently in defiance of good faith; shewing how +little they feared the consequences of the imperial displeasure. + +If these facts fail in affording testimony to his energy and capacity, +still less does his character shine in consistency. He professed an +unceasing ardour in the cause of Christianity; offering to the French +king the renunciation of his rights, and a release from that monarch's +obligations to him, on condition of his joining him in an expedition +against the Infidels; but when he found himself at the head of an +immense army under the walls of Vienna, he sat still and allowed +Solyman to carry off at his leisure the spoils of the principal towns of +Hungary. + +When at length he made up his mind to take the field, he selected, as +most worthy of the exercise of his prowess, the triumph over the pirate +Barbarossa and his African hordes: the most important result of the +campaign being the occupation of Tunis, (where in his zealous burnings +for Christianity he installed a Mahometan sovereign,) and the wanton +destruction by his soldiers of a splendid library of valuable +manuscripts. + +We have seen how little his Spanish subjects allowed themselves to be +dazzled by the splendours of his vast authority, and history informs us +how far he was from conceiving the resolution of reducing them to +obedience by any measures savouring of energetic demonstration. The +irreverence to his person he calmly pocketed, and the deficiences in his +exchequer were supplied by means of redoubled pressure on his less +refractory Flemings. He submitted to the breach of faith of Francis of +France, and to the disrespect of his Castilian vassals; but, on the +burghers of the city of Ghent being heard to give utterance to +expressions of discontent at the immoderate liberties taken with their +purse-strings, he quits Madrid in a towering rage, crosses France at +the risk of his liberty, and enters his helpless burg at the head of a +German army, darting on all sides frowns of imperial wrath, each +prophetic of a bloody execution. + +Aware of the preparations of Francis for attacking his dominions +simultaneously in three different directions, he took insufficient or +rather no measures to oppose him, but turning his back, embarked for +Algiers, where he believed laurels to be as cheap as at Tunis. There, +however, he lost one half of his armament, destroyed by the elements; +and the remainder narrowly escaping a similar fate, and being dispersed +in all directions, he returned in time to witness the unopposed +execution of the plans of his French enemy. What measures are his on +such an emergency? Does he call together the contingents of the German +States? Unite the different corps serving in Lombardy and +Savoy,--dispatch an order to the viceroy of Naples to march for the +north of Italy; and having completed his combinations, cross the +Pyrenees at the head of a Spanish army, and give the law to his far +weaker antagonist? No! nothing that could lead to an encounter with the +French king accorded with his policy, as it has been called, but more +probably with his disposition. He quits Spain, it is true, and using all +diligence, travels round France, but not too near it, and arrives in +Flanders. Here he puts himself at the head of his Germans, and +marches--against the Duke of Cleves! who had formed an alliance with his +principal enemy. + +Seeing the emperor thus engaged, Francis completes a successful +campaign, taking possession of Luxembourg and other towns. At length the +sovereign of half Europe, having received news of the landing of an +English army in Picardy, resolves to venture a demonstration against +France. He therefore traverses Lorraine at the head of eighty thousand +troops, and makes himself master of Luneville: after which, hearing that +Francis had despatched his best troops to oppose Henry the Eighth, and +was waiting for himself, as the less dangerous foe, with an army of half +the strength of his own, and composed of recruits, he makes up his mind +to advance in the direction of Paris. After a fortnight's march he finds +himself in presence of the French king, to whom he sends _proposals of +peace_! + +These being rejected, he continues his march; when a messenger from +Francis announces his consent to treat. Under these circumstances, does +he require the cession of Burgundy, according to the terms of the +unexecuted treaty of Madrid? Does he even stipulate for any advantage, +for any equality? No! he agrees, on the contrary, to cede Flanders to +the French, under colour of a dowry with his daughter the Infanta Maria, +who was to be married to the Duke of Orleans; or else Milan, with his +niece the daughter of the King of the Romans; and he beats a retreat +with his immense army, as if taking the benefit of a capitulation. + +There is something in the result of this French campaign which appears +to explain much of Charles's previous conduct; and shows that in many +instances he was actuated by personal fear of his gallant rival. On this +occasion he did not hesitate to desert the King of England, who had no +doubt calculated on his coöperation, as much as Charles had depended on +the diversion created by the British army. The more one reflects on the +passages of this emperor's history, the less one is surprised at his +resolution to abdicate. He gave in this a proof of his appreciation of +his real character, which undoubtedly fitted him rather for a life of +ease and retirement, than for the arduous duties of supreme power. + + + + +LETTER XII. + +ARAB MONUMENTS. PICTURES. THE PRINCESS GALIANA. ENVIRONS. + + +Toledo. + +Returning along the edge of the cliff, a very short space separates the +extreme walls of the ruined monastery of Ferdinand and Isabella, from an +edifice of much greater antiquity, although not yet a ruin. Its exterior +as you approach, is more than simple. It is not even a neatly +constructed building; but such a pile of rough looking mud and stone, +as, on the continent, announces sometimes a barn, or granary of a +farming establishment _mal monté._ A high central portion runs from end +to end, from either side of which, at about four-fifths of its height, +project lower roofs of brownish-red tiles. The old square rotten door is +in exact keeping with all this exterior, and contributes its share to +the surprise experienced on entering, when you discover, on a level with +the eye, distributed over a spacious quadrangular area, a forest of +elaborately carved capitals, surmounting octagon-shaped pillars, and +supporting innumerable horse-shoe arches, scattered in apparent +confusion. All these as you advance down a flight of steps, fall into +rank, and you speedily find yourself in the centre of an oriental temple +in all its symmetry. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF SANTA MARIA LA BLANCA, TOLEDO.] + +The principal light entering from the western extremity, you do not at +first perceive that three of the five naves terminate at the opposite +end, by half domes of more modern invention. These have since been +almost built out, and do not form a part of the general view,--not in +consequence of a decree of a committee of fine arts, but for the +convenience of the intendant of the province, who selected the edifice, +as long as it remained sufficiently weather-proof for such a purpose, +for a magazine of government stores. There is no record of the antiquity +of this church, supposed to be the most ancient in Toledo: at all +events, it is the most ancient of those constructed by the Arabs. It was +originally a synagogue, and received the above mentioned half cupolas on +its conversion to a Catholic church; since which period it has been +known by its present title of Santa Maria la Blanca. + +A few hundred yards further on, following the same direction, is the +church called the Transito, also in the oriental style, but on a +different plan: a large quadrangular room, from about ninety to a +hundred feet in length, by forty in width, and about seventy high, +without arches or columns, ornamented with Arab tracery in stucco, on +the upper part of the walls, and by a handsome cedar roof. A cement of a +different colour from the rest runs round the lowest portion of the +walls, up to about breast high; no doubt filling the space formerly +occupied by the azulejos. Some remains of these still decorate the +seats, which are attached to the walls at the two sides of the altar. +The building is in excellent preservation, and until lately was used as +a church of the Mozarabic sect. The ornaments are remarkable for the +exquisite beauty of their design, and are uninjured, excepting by the +eternal whitewash, the monomania of modern Spanish decorators. + +The Jews were the primitive occupants of this elegant temple also. +Samuel Levi, treasurer and favourite of Pedro the Cruel (who +subsequently transferred his affection from the person of his faithful +servant to the enormous wealth, amassed under so indulgent a prince, and +seized a pretext for ordering his execution) was the founder of this +synagogue. The inauguration was accompanied by extraordinary pomp. The +treasurer being, from his paramount position at the court of Castile, +the most influential personage of his tribe, the leading members of +Judaism flocked from all parts of Europe to Toledo to be present on the +occasion, and a deputation from Jerusalem brought earth of the Holy +Land, which was laid down throughout the whole interior before the +placing of the pavement. + +A very different origin, more suited to believers in miracles, is +attributed to this church by the present titular sacristan. This +Quasimodo of the fabric, a simple and worthy functionary, enjoys a +sinecure, except, it is to be feared, with regard to salary. Although, +however, no duties confine him to his post, his attachment to the +edifice prevents his ever being found further from it than the porch; +under the cool shelter of which, as he leans against the wall, he +fabricates and consumes the friendly _cigarito_. When questioned with an +appearance of interest on the subject of the building, he replies with +unrestrained delight. Its foundation he attributes to Noah, fixing the +date at seventeen hundred years back; but without adding any particulars +relative to this miraculous visit paid to Toledo, by the ghost of the +patriarch. + +As is the case with all other ecclesiastical edifices closed pursuant to +the recent decrees, this building may become the property of any one, +who would offer a sufficient price, not according to the real value, but +to that to which such objects are reduced by the great number in the +market. Several other churches are simply closed and left unguarded; but +the antiquarian sacristan above mentioned, is placed here on account of +the existence of a room in which are contained the archives of the +knights of Calatrava and Alcantara, until recently its proprietors. No +reparations, however, are ordered; and there is many an enthusiast in +archæological research who, should such an edifice fall under his +notice, would, no doubt, rescue it from its now imminent fate. It is not +only a monument admirable for the details of the ornaments, the best of +its sort to be met with north of Andalucia, but it forms a valuable link +in the chain of architectural history. It is the first ecclesiastical +edifice of its style recorded as having set the example of an open area, +destitute of columns and arcades. + +At the distance of a few hundred yards from this building, a portion of +the precipice is pointed out, to which was given in former times the +name of the Tarpeian rock. It was the spot selected by the Jewish +authorities, (who enjoyed in Toledo, under the Kings of Castile, the +right of separate jurisdiction in their tribe,) for the execution of +their criminals. It is a perpendicular rock, but with an intermediate +sloping space between its base and the Tagus. + +One of the most curious of the Arab monuments of Toledo, is the church +called the Christo de la Luz, formerly a mosque. It is extremely small; +a square of about twenty feet; and is divided by four pillars into three +naves, connected with each other, and with the surrounding walls, by +twelve arches. This disposition produces in the ceiling nine square +compartments, which rise each to a considerable height, enclosed by +walls from the tops of the arches upwards. Each small square ceiling is +coved and ornamented with high angular ribs, rising from the cornice and +intersecting each other, so as to form a different combination in each +of the nine. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF CHRISTO DE LA LUZ. TOLEDO.] + +The principal remaining Arab buildings are, the beautiful gate called +Puerta del Sol; part of the town walls with their towers; the parochial +church of San Roman; the tower of the church of St. Thomas; and two or +three other similar towers. Several private houses contain single rooms +of the same architecture, more or less ornamental. The most considerable +of these is situated opposite the church of San Roman, and belongs to a +family residing at Talavera. They have quitted the house in Toledo, +which is in a ruinous state. The Moorish saloon is a fine room of about +sixty feet in length by upwards of forty high, and beautifully +ornamented. The Artesonado roof of cedar lets in already, in more than +one part, light and water; and half the remainder of the house has +fallen. + +The good pictures in Toledo are not very plentiful. It is said some of +the convents possessed good collections, which were seized, together +with all their other property. Many of these are to be seen in the +gallery called the Museo Nacional, at Madrid. Others have been sold. +Those of the cathedral have not been removed; but they are not numerous: +among them is a St. Francisco, by Zurbaran; and a still more beautiful +work of Alonzo del Arco, a St. Joseph bearing the Infant. It is in a +marble frame fixed in the wall, and too high to be properly viewed: but +the superiority of the colouring can be appreciated, and the excellence +of the head of the saint. In the smaller sacristy are two pictures in +Bassano's style, and some copies from Raphael, Rubens, and others. At +the head of the great sacristy, there is a large work of Domenico +Theotocopuli, commonly called El Greco, (the head of the school of +Toledo) which I prefer much to the famous Funeral of the Count Orgaz, in +the church of Santo Tonie, which, according to some, passes for his +masterpiece. In the first are traits of drawing, which forcibly call to +mind the style of the best masters of the Roman school, and prove the +obligation he was under to the instructions of his master Michel Angelo. +The subject is the Calvary. The soldiery fill the back ground. On the +right hand the foreground is occupied by an executioner preparing the +cross, and on the left, by the group of females. The erect figure of the +Christ is the principal object, and occupies the centre, somewhat +removed from the front. This is certainly a fine picture; the +composition is good, and the drawing admirable, but the colouring of the +Greco is always unpleasing. + +In the Funeral of Count Orgaz it is insufferably false; nor, in fact, is +it easy to conjecture to what sort of merit this picture owes its +celebrity. It possesses neither that of conception, nor that of +composition, nor of expression: least of all that of colouring. All that +can be said in its favour is, that the row of heads extending from one +end of the canvass to the other, across the centre, are correct +portraits of personages of note, who figured in the history of the +epoch. The worst part of all is, the Heaven of the upper plan of the +picture, into which the soul of the Count has the bad taste to apply for +admission. This was, in fact, one of the works which gave occasion to +the saying of a critic of a contemporary school, who declared that the +Glorias (heavenly visions) of the Greco looked like Infernos, and his +Infernos like Glorias. + +In the Transito there is an Adoration, a charming picture, apparently by +Rembrandt. There are here and there good pictures among the other +churches, but none very remarkable. In general, the most attractive +objects are the old picture-frames, and other gilded ornaments and wood +carvings. All these, in the taste of the commencement of the last +century and earlier, which is at present so much in request, are in such +profusion, as would draw tears of admiration from the eyes of a Parisian +upholsterer, and showers of bank notes from the purses of furniture +collectors. + +You will not, I am sure, by this time, object to our quitting Toledo, +and making a short excursion in its environs. I shall therefore request +you to accompany me to the ruins of a Moorish palace, on the banks of +the Tagus, a mile distant from the town, called the Palacio de Galiana. +The Princess Galiana was the daughter of Galafre, one of the earlier +Arab Kings of Toledo. The widely extended fame of her beauty, is said to +have fired the imagination of Charles, son of Pepin, King of France, who +resolved to throw himself at her feet as a suitor, and forthwith +repaired to Toledo. However glowing the terms in which report had +represented her charms, he found them surpassed by the reality; but a +prince of a neighbouring state had forestalled him in his suit. This +obstacle did not, however, deter him from persisting in his resolution. +He forthwith challenged his rival to mortal combat; and, clearing his +road to the hand of the princess with the point of his lance, married +her, and carried her back with him to Paris. + +The attachment of her father to this princess is said to have been such +from her earliest childhood, that he gave himself up entirely to this +affection--devoting all his wealth to the gratification of her caprices. +The Arab palace, now no longer in existence, took its name from hers, in +consequence of a new one having been erected for her by her father, +adjoining his own, at a period at which she had scarcely grown out of +childhood. The two residences being occupied by succeeding princes as +one, received the appellation of los Palacios, (the Palaces) of Galiana. + +In addition to her town residence, she soon after had the other palace +constructed about a mile from Toledo. To arrive at the ruins, we pass +the bridge of Alcantara, and follow the rose-tree promenade. From this a +path on the left-hand leads to the spot across a field in garden-like +cultivation. The selection made by the Arab princess of this situation, +proves her to have possessed, in addition to her beauty, a consummate +taste and intelligence of rural life. + +The Tagus--a name, by the way, more deserving of poetic fame than many a +more widely echoed stream--in this spot, as if conscious of the pains he +must shortly undergo, while dashing through the deep and narrow chasm +through which he must force a passage around Toledo, seems to linger, +desirous of putting off the fated storm. His course becomes more +circuitous as he approaches; and indulging in a hundred irregularities +of form, he plays round several small thickly wooded islands, +penetrating with innumerable eddies and back currents, into flowery +nooks and recesses; while here and there he spreads out in a wide sheet +his apparently motionless waters, as if seeking to sleep away the +remainder of his days on these green and luxurious banks. + +In the midst of this delicious region, which recalls to the recollection +some of the more favoured spots in England, but which, with the addition +of the Spanish climate in early summer, is superior to them all, was +placed the palace. The valley for a considerable distance still bears +the name of the Garden of the King,--Huerta del Rey. The site of part of +the pleasure grounds immediately adjoining the river, is left wild, and +covered with woods; and the remainder is converted into a farm in the +highest state of cultivation. The ruin consists of three sides of a not +very large quadrangle; the massive walls of which are pierced with two +stories of arched windows. The remainder of the edifice was doubtless +less solid, and has entirely disappeared. + +Many a tale of romance would be gathered--many a stirring scene +recorded, could so precious a document be brought to light as a +chronicle drawn up by some St. Simon of the Court of Toledo, who had +recorded the daily events of which this retreat was the theatre, during +the time it served as a residence for several successive sovereigns. But +in this land words have always been fewer than deeds, and records are +the rarest sort of subsisting monuments. One anecdote, however, is +transmitted, of which this spot was the scene, in the time of the last +but one of the Moorish princes who reigned at Toledo, before its +surrender to Alonzo the Sixth. + +Alonzo was himself one of the actors on the occasion. In early life he +had been deprived by his brother Sancho, King of Castile, of the portion +of the kingdoms which fell to his share by the will of his father, +Ferdinand the First. On his expulsion from his inheritance he took +refuge at the court of the Arab king of Toledo, by whom he was received +with every mark of favour which could have been lavished on a friend. +The Moor (for the family then reigning was not Arab, although the two +races are constantly confounded in Spanish histories) gave him a palace, +and settled on him splendid revenues, to be continued during the time he +should think fit to accept his hospitality. He even sent invitations to +all the friends and followers of his guest, in order that he might be +surrounded with his own court. + +Alonzo, touched by this delicate hospitality, attached himself warmly to +his host; his friendship for whom (I believe a solitary instance in +those times among the sovereigns in Spain) lasted until the death of the +latter. The youthful exile, thus handsomely treated, passed much of his +time in the society of his royal protector. + +On one occasion, the court being at the country palace of Galiana, the +king and his attendants were reclining in the cool shade of the garden, +and Alonzo at a short distance, apparently asleep. The king, pointing to +the town, which towered on its precipice immediately in front of the +party, was expatiating on the strength of its position. All agreed that +it was impregnable; until a brother of the monarch observed, that there +was one mode of warfare against which it would not hold out: and he +proceeded to explain his plan, which consisted of an annual devastation +of the valley of the Tagus at the time of harvest, to be executed by an +invading army, which might be disbanded during the winter months. This +system, he maintained, would inevitably reduce the city by famine to the +necessity of a surrender. + +No sooner was the last phrase uttered, than all present in an instant +struck by the same thought, turned towards the sleeper; and the greater +number, filled with suspicion respecting the reality of his slumbers, +addressed significant looks to the king, the intention of which could +not be mistaken, and which boded no good to Alonzo. Whatever might have +been the feelings of the Moor at this moment, he took no further notice +of the incident, and allowed his guest to terminate his nap when he +thought proper. + +When the death of Sancho took place before Zamora, Alonzo was still at +Toledo. The intelligence being conveyed to him by a confidential +messenger from his sister, he lost no time in taking leave of his host, +who wished him success with every demonstration of friendship, and +repairing to Burgos. There, after some hesitation, the nobles consented +to his investiture with the sovereignty. During his brilliant reign he +resisted several tempting opportunities of breaking with his Moorish +ally and former host, and thus adding to his dominions,--and preserved +his friendship and loyalty unstained. After the death of the Moorish +king, he, however, speedily fell out with his successor. War was +declared on both sides, and it was resolved to attack Toledo. The well +known result was, the taking of the town after seven years, the time +mentioned in the garden of Galiana, and by means of the annually +repeated devastation of the Vega, according to the plan imagined and +described in the above mentioned conversation. + +Returning by the Rose-tree Walk, immediately on approaching the bridge, +an advanced portion of the cliff which bounds the road on the left +detaches itself from the rest towards the summit, which rises in a +circular form. On it stands the Castle of San Servando, one of the most +picturesque of the Arab remains existing in this part of Spain. The +origin of this fort is uncertain. Some attribute it to the Romans, and +consider the Moorish windows and ornaments to be subsequent additions, +from their being constructed with bricks instead of the same stone as +the rest of the walls. But this is not a sufficient reason, since the +same peculiarity exists in all the Arab edifices in Toledo. In fact, the +reason is evident. The hard black sort of stone used for the walls, +would almost have defied the chisel which should have attempted to +fashion its surface into the delicate forms required by the Arab mode of +decorating. This argument, therefore, being set aside--remains the +masonry, which is more likely from its appearance to be Gothic or Arab, +than Roman. + +It is probably entirely Arab. It encloses a quadrangular space of about +a quarter of an acre, and is a ruin; but the walls and towers are almost +entire. There are three small towers, that is of small diameter, but +lofty; and two larger, one of which is circular: the other is a +parallelogram terminating by a semicircle at one of its extremities. +This tower has lost apparently about a third of its elevation. Their +walls are so perfectly constructed as to appear externally like solid +rocks smoothed and rounded. Each larger tower contains two rectangular +brick projections, in which are small elegantly-arched openings for +windows. + +The edifice was thoroughly repaired by Don Pedro Tenorio, archbishop of +Toledo; the same who built the bridge of San Martin. It has since played +its part in numberless wars, and was at length reduced to a ruin during +the insurrection headed by Juan de Padilla, at the commencement of +Charles the Fifth's reign. + +During the Peninsular war of the present century, the old battlements +echoed once more with the sounds of warfare. It was occupied by a body +of French, who repaired a portion of the masonry at the summits of the +towers, and erected a low wall along the whole length of the Toledo +side. They were able, from their position, to batter the Alcazar, which +is immediately opposite, but on a higher level; and to command the +bridge of Alcantara, and road to Aranjuez. + +In the other valley which extends to the west of Toledo exist the +remains of a circus for chariot races, generally supposed, at first +sight, to be Roman. They present, in fact, every characteristic of a +Roman work. The rough interior masonry is all that remains; and that +only rising to a height of from three to four feet from the ground, with +the exception of a single arch. The earth mingled with ruins, has +apparently filled up much of the interior, and surrounding the exterior +simultaneously, has only left visible the upper portion of the edifice. +The end which is in the best preservation is of a semicircular form. +From it the sides run in parallel directions, and lose themselves in the +ruins of a more recently erected convent. They are traceable to a length +of more than four hundred yards. The width is two hundred and ninety +feet within the building, at the present elevation of the ground, and +three hundred and twenty feet on the outside, which appears to have +consisted of a series of arches. There are also remains of an +amphitheatre adjoining the semicircular end of the stadium. + +There being no indication of the Romans having at any period planted any +considerable establishment at Toledo, in fact no author but Livy having +noticed the place, and he but slightly; the antiquaries have sought for +the origin of these monuments among Gothic traditions; and it is +believed by them, that they were erected during the early part of the +sixth century, by Theudio, a Gothic King, who manifested much attachment +to Roman customs. + + + + +LETTER XIII. + +CASTLES OF ALMONACID, GUADAMUR, MONTALBAN, AND ESCALONA. TORRIJOS. + + +Toledo. + +I met this morning with an entertaining scene, in a quarter in which it +might be the least looked for. The archiepiscopal palace contains an +excellent library, which has always been open to the public. Although +the revenues of the see are now withdrawn, and the palace is vacant, the +books remain on the shelves, and the head librarian, a _racionero_ of +the cathedral, has the good nature to throw open the rooms from eleven +to twelve, on all days of labour, (as those are called on which no saint +is celebrated,) although he no longer enjoys a salary, nor the means of +providing a single attendant to see to what passes in the different +apartments. + +I was occupied this morning in the _racionero's_ room, when he received +a visit from two French tourists, both persons of notoriety; one being +a member of the chamber of deputies, and one of the leaders of the +republican party; and the other, I believe, also in the chamber, but +principally known as a writer of political pamphlets, in which the +French reigning family, and the powers that be are lashed with +unwearying severity. The first mentioned personage commenced the +conversation in Spanish, which the other did not speak: but on hearing +the librarian make an observation in French, the pamphleteer took up the +argument in his own language, and nearly in the following terms. + +"As this gentleman understands French, I will explain to him the object +of my tour," and addressing himself to the Spaniard, he continued--"I +find it a relief, in the midst of my arduous political duties, to make +an occasional excursion in a foreign country, and thus to enlarge the +sphere of my usefulness, by promoting the cause of humanity in the +various localities I visit. It is thus that I have recently passed +through Andalucia, and have recommended, and, I doubt not, successfully, +to the principal personages possessed of influence in its numerous +cities, the establishment of all sorts of useful institutions. I am now +in Toledo, animated with the same zeal. I have obtained an introduction +to you, Sir, understanding that you are an individual possessed of +considerable influence, and enjoying unbounded means of carrying out +the projects, which, I doubt not, you will agree with me in considering +essential to the well being and improvement, both moral and material, of +your ancient locality." + +During this exordium, the Spaniard, who happens to be possessed of a +vivacity, unusual in his countrymen, and a sort of impatience of manner, +had endeavoured more than once to obtain a hearing. At length he +replied, that he feared it would not be in his power to carry out the +views which Monsieur did him the honour to communicate to him, owing to +the absence of sufficient resources at his disposal, whether for public +purposes, or in his individual and private capacity. + +The Frenchman was not, however, to be so easily discouraged. "This, +Sir," he replied, "is the result of your modesty; but I am persuaded +that I have only to make my objects understood, in order to obtain their +complete execution. For instance, one of the most insignificant in +expense, but of infinite utility, is this: it would be a source of much +gratification to me, if you would have the most conspicuous spots +throughout Toledo ornamented with statues, representing, with greater or +less resemblance, all the personages, distinguished from various causes +in the history of Spain, to whom Toledo has given birth. These works I +should wish to be entrusted to artists of acknowledged talent, and"--he +was proceeding with constantly increasing rapidity of enunciation, when +the exhausted librarian's patience being at an end, he interrupted the +torrent. "However grateful the city of Toledo and myself must be for +your interest and advice, I am grieved to repeat that my anxiety to +comply with your wishes is totally powerless. We are without funds; and +I, for my own part, can assure you that I am _sans le sou_. Do me the +favour to name any service of a less expensive nature, and I shall +rejoice in proving to you my entire devotion. Excuse my _impolitesse_. I +am called for in the next room. I kiss your hand." It is needless, in +fact the attempt would baffle human intelligence, to conjecture what the +real object of these very liberal and very political gentlemen might be, +in honouring all parts of Spain with their visit. + +The more distant environs of Toledo, principally towards the south and +south-east, are remarkable for a profusion of ruined castles. Supposing +a circle drawn at a distance of thirty miles from Toledo as its centre, +and divided, as it would be, by the Tagus, descending from east to west, +into two equal parts, the southern half, and the western portion of the +other, are so plentifully strewed with these fortresses, that, in many +instances, five or six are visible from the same point of view. + +A chain of low mountains crosses the southern portion of the semicircle, +in a parallel line with the Tagus. Some of its branches advance into +this region, and terminate in detached peaks, which have afforded to the +aristocracy of former times favourable positions for their strongholds; +and a still greater number of proprietors, not being possessed of the +same advantages of site, were compelled to confide in the solidity of +their walls and turrets, which they constructed in the plain, usually +adjoining the villages or towns inhabited by their vassals. The greater +number of these edifices are of a date subsequent to the surrender of +Toledo to the Christians, and were erected on the distribution of the +different towns and estates among the nobility, on their being +successively evacuated by their Moorish proprietors. The Count of +Fuensalida, Duke of Frias, is the most considerable landed proprietor on +this side of Toledo, and several of the ruined castles have descended to +him. + +I will not fatigue you by the enumeration of all these remains, of which +but a few are remarkable for picturesque qualities, and still fewer for +the possession of historical interest, as far as can be known at +present. One of them, situated ten miles to the south-east of Toledo, +and visible from its immediate neighbourhood, attracts notice owing to +its striking position. Occupying the summit of a conical hill, which +stands alone on the plain, and placed at four times the elevation of +Windsor Castle, you expect to find it connected with the history of some +knightly Peveril of the Peak, but learn with surprise that it was the +stronghold of the Archbishops of Toledo; and was erected by Don Pedro +Tenorio, the same prelate who rebuilt the bridge of San Martin, and +repaired the Moorish castle of San Servando. + +Before you ascend the peak, you pass through the village of Almonacid, +from which the castle takes its name, and which, unlike that more +recently erected pile, is completely Arab in aspect. All the houses are +entered through back courts, and present no difference of appearance, +whether shops, taverns, _posadas_, or private residences. After tying my +horse in the stable of the posada, and giving him his meal of barley, +which he had carried in the _alforjas_ (travelling bags) suspended +behind the saddle, I took my own provisions out of the opposite +receptacle, and established myself before the kitchen fire. + +On my asking for wine, the hostess requested I would furnish her with +two _quartos_ (one halfpenny) with which she purchased me a pint, at the +tavern next door. The host of the posada, who was seated next me, and a +friend at the opposite corner of the fire-place, favoured me, during my +meal, with their reminiscences of a battle fought here, during the +Peninsular war. They had not heard of the English having taken any part +in the quarrel, with the exception of the old woman, who recollected +perfectly the name of Wellington, and pronounced it as perfectly, but +thought he had been a Spanish general. They described the battle as a +hard fought one, and won by the French, who marched up the hill with +fixed bayonets, as the old host, almost blind, described by assuming the +attitude of a soldier jogging up a hill, and dislodged the Spanish +garrison from the castle. + +I could have willingly passed a week in this village, so exciting are +the remains of Arab manners to the curiosity. The name of the place had +already raised my expectations, but the blind landlord of the posada +unconsciously won my attachment from the first moment. No sooner was I +seated, than, leaning towards me, and patting my arm to draw my +attention, he pointed to his two eyes. At first I was at a loss to +understand him; but soon discovered that he was desirous of knowing +whether I was sufficiently versed in the mysteries of Esculapius, to +prescribe for the relief of his suffering organs. To this trait he soon +added one still more characteristic, by actually speaking of Toledo, by +its Moorish appellation Tolaite. Had he worn a turban, sat cross-legged +and offered me coffee and a pipe, I should not have been more taken by +surprise, than by this Arab expression assailing the ear, in the heart +of Spain, ten miles from the town itself, in which the name had probably +not been uttered for three or four centuries. + +The builder of the castle of Almonacid must have placed more confidence +in the difficulties of approach, than in the solidity of his structure. +The walls are partly of stone, and partly of _tapia_, or earth. There +only remain, the exterior wall, enclosing an area of about sixty to +seventy yards in diameter, and of a pentagonal form; and, in the centre, +the keep, a quadrangular tower, somewhat higher than the rest of the +buildings. There are no traces of living apartments. At each of the five +angles of the outer wall, is a small tower, and others in the centres of +some of the fronts; those looking to the west are circular, the rest +square. The nearer view of this ruin causes disappointment, as it +appears to have been a slovenly and hasty construction: but, at a +distance, its effect is highly picturesque. + +The castle of Montalban is situated to the south-west of Toledo, at a +distance of six Spanish leagues. It resembles, in size and importance, +some of the largest English castles; and justifies thus far the +tradition preserved here, of its having for a short period, served for a +royal prison--Juan the Second being said to have been confined there by +his exasperated favourite, Don Alvaro de Luna. This story is not, +however, confirmed by historians, several of whom I have vainly +consulted, for the purpose of discovering it. Ferreras mentions the +castle, or rather the town, which lies at a distance of two leagues +(eight miles) from it, as having belonged to the queen of Juan the +Second; who, he states, was deprived of it, against her will, in favour +of Don Alvaro, and another place given her in exchange. On the +confiscation of the favourite's possessions, previous to his +decapitation, it reverted to the crown; and there is no further notice +taken of it in the history, until the Emperor Charles the Fifth, confers +on its then proprietor the title of Count. This personage was Don Alonzo +Tellez Giron, third in descent from Juan Pacheco, Duke of Escalona, who +had erected Montalban into a separate fief, in favour of one of his sons +and his descendants, on the singular condition of the family name +undergoing a change, on each successive descent. The alternate lords +were to bear the names respectively of Giron and Pacheco. The first +Count of Montalban married a daughter of D. Ladron de Guevara, +proprietor, _à propos_ of castles, of that of Guevara, in the +neighbourhood of Vitoria, constructed in an extremely singular form. The +centre tower appears intended to imitate the castles of a chess-board. +It is situated on the southern declivity of the chain of mountains, a +branch of the Pyrenees, which separates the province of Guipuscoa from +those of Navarre and Alava. + +On the opposite descent of the chain another fortress existed in remote +times. Both were strongholds of robbers, whose descendants derived their +family name, Ladron (robber) from their ancestors' profession. In a +document signed by D. Garcia Ramirez, King of Navarre in 1135, D. Ladron +de Guevara, governor of Alava, figures among the grandees of the +kingdom; the descendants were afterwards called lords of Oñate, and the +castle is at present the property of the Count de Oñate, a grandee of +the first class. From its occupying a point _stratégique_ of +considerable importance, commanding the plain of Alava, and the high +road as it enters the valley of Borunda, it has been in recent times +occupied by the Carlists, and fortified. + +Montalban belongs at present to the Count of Fuensalida. It is +completely ruinous, but the outer wall is almost entire; and one of two +lofty piles of building, in the form of bastions, which flanked the +entrance, is in sufficient preservation to allow the apartments to be +recognised. Their floors were at a height of about eighty feet from the +ground; and the mass of masonry which supported them, is pierced by an +immense gothic arch reaching to the rooms. The opposite corresponding +mass remains also with its arch; but the upper part which contained +rooms, no longer exists. On this, the entrance side, the approach is +almost level, and the defence consisted of a narrow and shallow moat; +but the three other sides, the fortress being of a quadrangular form, +look down into a deep ravine, through which a river, issuing from the +left, passes down two sides of the castle, and makes for the valley of +the Tagus, which river is seen at a distance of five or six miles. + +The precipice at the furthest side descends perpendicularly, and is +composed of rocks in the wildest form. The river below leaps from rock +to rock, and foams through a bed so tormented, that, although owing to +its depth of at least five hundred feet from the foundations of the +castle, it looks almost like a thread, it sends up a roar not less loud +than that of the breakers under Shakspeare's Cliff. The valley, opening +for its passage, gives to the view, first, the Tagus, on the opposite +bank of which lies the town of Montalban, dependant on the lords of the +castle; beyond it an extensive plain, dotted with castles and towns, +most of them on the road from Madrid to Talavera; and at the horizon the +Sierra del Duque, coated with snow from about half its height upwards. +The extent of the view is about sixty miles. + +The outer enceinte of the castle of Montalban encloses a space of five +or six acres in extent, in which no buildings remain, with the exception +of the picturesque ruin of a small chapel in the centre. Like almost all +other residences possessed of scenery sufficiently precipitous, this +castle boasts its lover's leap. A projection of wall is pointed out, +looking over the most perpendicular portion of the ravine, to which a +tradition is attached, deprived by time of all tangible distinctness, if +ever it possessed any. The title given to the spot in this instance is +"The Leap of the Moorish Girl," Despeñadera de la Mora. The position +will probably bear no comparison with the Leucadian promontory; nor is +it equal to the Peña de los Enamorados, near Antequera, in Andalucia, +immortal likewise in the annals of passion, and of which the authentic +story is preserved. Of those in our country I could name one--but I will +not, though few know it better--nor is it the meanest of its tribe. But +with these exceptions I know of none among the numerous plagiarisms of +the famous lover's leap of antiquity that offers to despair in search of +the picturesque more attractions than the Despeñadera of Montalban. + +[Illustration: CASTLE OF GUADAMUR.] + +The best preserved castle of these environs, and the handsomest +building, is that of Guadamur. It is not large, but it is impossible for +a residence-fortress to be more complete, and more compact. It is +composed of three enclosures, one within the other, and forms a +quadrangle, with the addition of a lofty and massive tower, projecting +from one of the angles. The centre, or inner quadrangle, is about half +the height of the tower, and has, at its three remaining angles, and at +the centre of each front, an elegant circular turret. This portion of +the edifice formed a commodious and handsome residence. It was divided +into two stories, with vaulted ceilings,--the lower apartments being +probably set apart for the offices of attendants, and places of +confinement for prisoners: in the centre of the upper story was a +diminutive open court, supported by the vaults of the ground-floor, and +into which a series of elegantly proportioned rooms opened on all sides. +Although the greater part of the vaults and interior walls are fallen +in, the rooms are all to be traced, and inscriptions in the old Gothic +letter run round the walls of some of the apartments. A second enclosure +rises to about two-thirds of the elevation of the inner quadrangle, and +is provided with corresponding turrets; but the proportions of these are +more spacious, and their construction and ornament more massive. Beyond +this are the exterior defences rising out of the moat, and very little +above the surrounding ground. + +Viewed from without, nothing indicates that this edifice is a ruin. Over +the entrance are the arms of the Counts of Fuensalida. It is supposed by +many that this castle was erected by Garcilaso de la Vega, grandfather +of the "Prince of Spanish poets," as the celebrated bard of Toledo is +entitled. Others maintain its founder to have been Pedro Lopez de +Ayala, first Count of Fuensalida. This latter story is the more probable +one; since, besides its being confirmed by the armorial shield above +mentioned, it has been adopted by Haro in his Nobiliario, a work drawn +up with care and research, in which Garcilaso de la Vega is stated to +have purchased some towns from the family of Ayala,--among others +Cuerva, in the near neighbourhood, but not Guadamur. + +The Ayalas were descended from the house of Haro, lords of Biscay. +Several of them had held high offices at the Court of Castile. The +grandfather of the founder of the castle had been High Chancellor of +Castile, and Great Chamberlain of Juan the First; and his father, the +first lord of Fuensalida, was High Steward, and first Alcalde of Toledo. +He lost an eye at the siege of Antequera,--taken from the Moors by +Ferdinand, afterwards King of Aragon, in the year 1410, and thus +acquired the surname of the One-eyed. To him Juan II. first granted the +faculty of converting his possessions into hereditary fiefs: "Because," +according to one of the clauses of the act, "it was just that the houses +of the grandees should remain entire in their state for the eldest son; +and in order that the eldest sons of the grandees might be maintained in +the estates of their predecessors, that the name and memory of the +grandees of the kingdom might not be lost, and that the hereditary +possessions and houses, and the generations of the sons of grandees +might be preserved." + +It was Pedro Lopez de Ayala, son of the one-eyed lord of Fuensalida +created Count by Enrique the Fourth, that built the castle. He was a +great favourite with the king, and his constant companion, +notwithstanding his being afflicted with deafness--a bad defect in a +courtier, and which procured him also a surname. He succeeded his father +in his different dignities. His loyalty did not keep pace with his +obligations to Henry the Fourth; for, being first Alcalde of Toledo, he +made no effort to prevent that town from joining the party of the Prince +Alonzo, who pretended to his brother's crown; but he was recalled to his +allegiance by the devoted exertions of his wife. + +This lady was Doña Maria de Silva, a daughter of Alonzo Tenorio de +Silva, Adelantado of Cazorla. On the breaking out of the rebellion of +Toledo, she agreed with her brother Pedro de Silva, Bishop of Badajos, +to send a joint letter to the king, in which they pressed him to come to +Toledo in disguise. Enrique the Fourth approved of the plan; and +arriving in the night, accompanied by a single attendant, was received +by the bishop at his residence in the convent of San Pedro Martir. +Notwithstanding the darkness, he had been recognised by a servant of +Marshal Payo de Ribera, a partisan of Prince Alonzo. This noble, +immediately on learning the king's arrival, joined with the Alcalde, who +had not been let into the secret by his wife, and called the citizens to +arms by sounding the great bell of the cathedral. A crowd was speedily +assembled at the king's lodging, who would have been immediately made +prisoner, but for his attendant Fernando de Ribadenegra, who succeeded, +single handed, in repulsing a party who had forced an entrance. + +At this crisis the disloyal magistrate became alarmed, and sent his two +sons, Pedro de Ayala, and Alonzo de Silva, accompanied by Perafande +Ribera, son of the above-mentioned marshal, to entreat the king to quit +the town. Henry consented; and at midnight left the convent, accompanied +by the three youths. He had ridden sixteen leagues that day, and his +horses being exhausted with fatigue, he requested the two sons of Ayala +to lend him theirs. They did so, and accompanied him on foot as far as +the city gates, where he left them, and set off for Madrid. + +In order to pacify the people, Pedro Lopez ordered his brother-in-law, +the bishop, to quit the town, and he repaired to the Huerta del Rey, a +country-house in the environs. On arriving at Olias the king sent the +two brothers, in recompense of their good service, a deed of gift of +seventy thousand _maravedis_ of annual revenue. + +The grief of Maria de Silva at the failure of her project was such as +almost to deprive her of her reason, and added to the eloquence of her +entreaties to win over her husband to the king's interests. He now, +therefore, exerted himself to gain the principal citizens, and succeeded +so completely, that within three days from the departure of Enrique the +Fourth, he was enabled to recall the Bishop of Badajos to Toledo, and to +banish in his stead the Marshal de Payo and his son, who retired to +their estates. Unanimous was now the cry of "Viva Enrique Quarto, y +Mueren los rebeldes!" and the following day, a Sunday, the king +re-entered Toledo in the midst of the general joy and festivity, and +preceded directly to the residence of the Alcalde, in order to thank his +wife for her loyal efforts. A lodging was there in readiness to receive +him, which he occupied during his stay in Toledo. Pedro Lopez de Ayala +received on the king's return to Madrid the title of Count of his town +of Fuensalida, and shortly afterwards, at Medina del Campo, a grant of +the towns of Casaruvias del monte, Chocas, and Arroyomolinos. + +The town and castle of Escalona are situated at eight leagues, or +thirty-two miles, to the east of Toledo. It is one of the towns, about +a dozen in number, the foundation of which is attributed by the Count de +Mora, in his history of Toledo, to the Jews. He fixes the date at about +five centuries before the Christian era, when a large number of +Israelites, to whom Cyrus, king of Babylon, had granted their liberty, +arrived in Spain under the guidance of a Captain Pirrus, and fixed +themselves principally in and around Toledo. He also states that the +synagogue of Toledo--since called Santa Maria la Blanca--was erected by +them. The name given by them to Escalona was Ascalon. The neighbouring +Maqueda was another of their towns, and was called Mazeda. It was +created a duchy by Ferdinand and Isabella in favour of their courtier +Cardenas. I cannot learn the date of the castle of Escalona. Alonzo the +Sixth won the town from the Moors; and it is probable that the castle +was erected, at least in part, by Diego and Domingo Alvarez, two +brothers, to whom he granted the place. After their death it reverted to +the crown of Castile, and continued to be royal property until Juan II. +gave it to his favourite Don Alvaro de Luna. + +This grandee was known to have amassed great treasures in the castle; +and on the confiscation of his possessions at the period of his final +disgrace, the king marched an army to take possession of the fortress; +but the countess held out successfully, and obliged the royal troops to +raise the siege. On a second attempt, made after Don Alvaro's execution, +his widow considered she had no further object in maintaining it, and +lost no time in coming to terms. The conditions of the surrender were, +that the treasure should be divided into three equal parts, one for the +king, another for herself, and the third for her son. The son was +likewise allowed to inherit the castle, and by the marriage of his +daughter, it came into the possession of the Marquis of Villena, D. +Lopez Pacheco, created Duke of Escalona by Henry the Fourth. The family +of Fellez Giron, proprietors of Montalban, were descendants of this +duke. At present the castle of Escalona belongs to the Duke of Ossuna. +It is not only the most considerable of the numerous ruins disposed over +the territory of Toledo, but one of the most interesting historical +relics of Spain, having filled an important place in the annals of +several of the most stirring periods. The unfortunate Blanche, Queen of +Pedro the Cruel, was its inmate during several years; as also her rival, +Maria de Padilla, at a subsequent period. + +The best excursion from Toledo in point of architectural interest, is +that to Torijos, a small town situated rather to the left of the direct +road to Escalona, and five leagues distant. Immediately before arriving +there, the castle of Barciense is met with, situated on an eminence +which commands an admirable view, extending south and west to a +semi-circle of mountains, composed of the Sierra del Duque, and the +chain called the mountains of Toledo, and for a foreground looking down +on a perfect forest of olive-grounds, surrounding the town of Torijos, +two miles distant. The ruin of Barciense consists of a lofty square +tower, and the outer walls of a quadrangle. There is nothing worth +notice, with the exception of a bas-relief, which occupies all the upper +half of the tower on the east side. It consists of a solitary lion +rampant; probably the largest crest ever emblazoned. The Dukes of +Infantado were proprietors of this castle. + +The little town of Torijos contains a Gothic, or rather semi-Moorish +palace, two Gothic churches, an ancient picturesque gateway, and the +ruins of a magnificent monastery. It is one of those towns here and +there met with on the Continent, which, at a favourable crisis of the +arts, have fallen to the proprietorship of one of those individuals +idolised by architects--men whose overplus of fortune is placed at the +disposal of their eyes, and employed in ministering to the gratification +of those organs. The greater part of the decoration of Torijos dates +from the reign of Ferdinand the Catholic, when it belonged to D. +Gutiere de Cardenas, father of the first duke of Maqueda. The following +story is related respecting the founding of the monastery by his wife +Teresa Enriquez. + +This lady resided, when at Toledo, in a mansion, the ruins of which +still exist, on the opposite side of the street to the monastery of San +Juan de los Reyes, of which I sent you a description in a former letter. +Being warmly attached to religious observances, (for she went by the +name of Teresa la Santa,) and animated with an enthusiastic fervour +towards everything which appertained to the splendid establishment in +front of her residence, she had discovered a position, from which a view +could be obtained, overlooking the principal scene of the religious +ceremonies of the Franciscans. She there caused a window to be +constructed, splendidly ornamented in the Arab style, and kneeling on a +rich _prie-dieu_, she united her daily devotions with those of the +_frailes_. + +No small sensation was caused by this proceeding, most perceptible +probably within the monastery, on the discovery being made by the +brethren of the addition to their holy fraternity. The cardinal became +alarmed, and intimated to Doña Teresa that the window was +ill-placed,--that it admitted too much light in a wrong direction; that, +in short, it must disappear. The veto of the all-powerful Ximenes de +Cisneros, already regarded as the dispenser of the royal frowns and +favours, could not be resisted. The window was blocked up; but the +interference was replied to in terms pointed with pious pique and holy +revenge. The lady declared verbally to the prelate that she had no need +of his convent, for she would found a more splendid one at Torijos. This +threat, immediately put in execution, produced the building I mentioned +above, the ruin of which is all that now remains. + +Of the inhabited portions the external walls alone remain. The cloister +is almost entire, and the church has only lost its roof. The rich +tracery surrounding the doorways, and the sculpture in all parts of the +interior, consisting chiefly of repetitions of the founder's armorial +bearings--in imitation or satire of the profusion of similar ornament in +San Juan de los Reyes--are entire, and appear as though they had been +recently executed. The church is designed after the plan of San Juan, +but the style of its ornament is much more elegant. The cloister is, +however, very inferior to that of Toledo, and the whole establishment on +a smaller scale. + +Every traveller in search of the picturesque knows in how great a degree +his satisfaction has been increased whenever the meeting with a scene +deserving of his admiration assumes the nature of a discovery. For this +reason, the chapters of tourists should never be perused before a +journey--independently of their possessing more interest subsequently to +an acquaintance having been made with the country described. Strictly +speaking written tours are intended for those who stay at home. + +But the most favourable first view of a highly admirable building or +landscape, is the one you obtain after the perusal of tours and +descriptions of the country, in none of which any notice is taken of +that particular object or scene. The village of Torijos is approached +under these advantageous circumstances. Every step is a surprise, owing +partly to the above cause, and partly to one's being inured to the +almost universal dreariness and ugliness of the villages and small towns +of this part of Spain. The appearance under these circumstances of a +beautiful Gothic cross and fountain, of an original and uncommon design, +outside the walls of the place, and the open tracery of the tall windows +of the ruined monastery at the other side of a green meadow, creates an +agreeable surprise, and adds considerably to the pleasure which would be +derived from the same objects, had expectation been already feeding on +their beauties. Imagine, then, the discovery, after leaving behind these +monuments, (sufficient for the immortality of a score of Castilian +villages,) of the façade of the principal church, consisting of one of +the richest and most exquisite specimens of Gothic decoration in Spain; +and, a street further on, of a second ornamental portal of a different +sort, but Gothic likewise, giving access to a half Arab palace. + +The Count of Altamira is the proprietor of this place, but neither he +nor any of his family have inhabited the edifice for several years, and +it is allowed to go to decay. Some of the _artesonado_ ceilings, more +especially that of the chapel in form of a cupola, admit the light +through the joinings of the gilded woodwork. A large hall on the +first-floor, which formed the anteroom to a suite of inner apartments, +decorated in the Arab style, has been taken possession of by the _haute +volée_ of Torijos for their public ball-room. A tribune for musicians is +placed against one of the end walls, and adorned with paper festoons. A +placard, inscribed with the word _galop_, was visible in front of the +seat of the leader of the band, indicating that the Torijos balls +terminate with that lively dance. There was no furniture in that nor any +other part of the house, with the exception of an _entresol_ inhabited +by the count's steward. This person no sooner learned that I was an +Englishman, than he commenced setting in the best possible light the +advantages the premises possessed for the establishment of every sort of +manufactory. + +It appears the proprietor is anxious to dispose of the building; and as +all the English pass here for manufacturers, owing to the principal +articles of common use, introduced by smugglers, being English, the +worthy factotum had instantly made up his mind that I was the purchaser +sent by Providence to take the old edifice off his master's hands. He is +evidently either promised a bonus on the success of his efforts to sell, +or he wished to pass with the property; for his idea produced a degree +of zeal most useful towards the satisfaction of my curiosity, and +without which his patience would have been exhausted before I had +completed the view of the building. One peculiarity of the rooms +consists in the ceilings--that is, the ornamental ones--being nearly all +either domes, or interiors of truncated pyramids. There is only one +flat. It is ornamented with the shell of the arms of the Cardenas +family--each of the hundreds of little square compartments having one in +its centre. The staircase is adorned with beautiful Gothic tracery. + + + + +LETTER XIV. + +VALLADOLID. SAN PABLO. COLLEGE OF SAN GREGORIO. ROUTE BY SARAGOZA. + + +Tolosa. + +I should have sent you an account of my excursion to Valladolid at the +time it took place, but was prevented by the shortness of my stay and +the hurry of my departure from Madrid, which immediately followed. I +preserved, however, memoranda of the limited explorations which were to +be made during a flying visit of three days, and will now give you the +benefit of them, such as they are; as also of my experience of the +public travelling in that direction. You will recommend your friends, +who may visit this land of adventure, and are careful at the same time +of their personal comforts, to wait the introduction of railroads, +before attempting this excursion, when you hear that I met with three +upsets in one night, and was afforded, in all, nearly five hours' +leisure for contemplating the effect of moonlight upon the sleeping +mules and an upside-down carriage! + +The town of Valladolid contains monuments of much interest, although +none of great antiquity. The greater number date from the sixteenth and +seventeenth centuries, and form a chain, illustrative of the progress of +architecture in this country, subsequently to the abandonment of the +Gothic style. This style is, however, worthily represented by two +edifices, placed in juxtaposition, and ornamented each with a façade of +extraordinary richness. I will content myself with the endeavour to give +you some idea of these two buildings, which, although belonging to a +style so common in England and France, are totally unlike all the Gothic +specimens I am acquainted with in those countries. + +[Illustration: FAÇADE OF SAN PABLO.] + +The largest of the two is the monastery of San Pablo. It was a +foundation of much magnificence, and the building has sustained very +little injury, owing to its having, immediately on the expulsion of the +monks, been applied to other uses, instead of being deserted and left to +decay. It is now a Presidio, or central prison for condemned +malefactors. The cloister is a superb quadrangle, of the pointed style +of the end of the fourteenth century, and is the usual resort of the +prisoners, who are grouped so thickly over its pavement, that it is with +difficulty one passes between them, without adding to the clanking of +chains as their wearers change their posture to make way. The façade of +the church is enclosed between two small octagon towers without +ornament, like a picture in a frame. Within these all is sculpture. The +door-way is formed of a triple concentric arch, flanked by rows of +statues, all of which are enclosed within another arch, which extends +across the whole width, from tower to tower. Over this there is a +circular window, surrounded with armorial escutcheons, and the remainder +of the façade is covered with groups of figures in compartments, up to +the summit, a height of about a hundred and thirty feet, where there is +a pediment ornamented with an immense armorial shield and lions rampant +as supporters, and the whole is surmounted by a cross. + +The church was erected by the celebrated Torquemada, who was a monk in +the establishment. Doña Maria, Queen of Sancho the Fourth, although +mentioned as the founder of the monastery, only completed a small +portion of the edifice compared to what was subsequently added. A +handsome tomb by Pompeyo Leoni, is seen in the church. It is that of Don +Francisco de Sandoval, Duke of Lerma, and his wife. The woodwork of the +stalls is by Ferrara. It is adorned with fluted Doric columns, and is +composed of walnut, ebony, box and cedar. The superb façade of this +church and its sumptuous tracery, had well nigh been the cause of a +misunderstanding between the representative of the Spanish Government +and myself. To obtain admission to the interior of the building, which I +was told had become national property, I addressed my humble request in +writing to the _gefe politico_, or governor of the province, resident at +Valladolid. I left the note at his official residence, and was +requested to return at an hour appointed, when I was to obtain an +audience. The functions of a _gefe politico_ answer to those of no +provincial functionary in England, or any other constitutional state--he +has more authority even than a Préfet in France. He represents the +monarchical power, with this difference, that he is uncontrolled by +parliament within the limits of his province. Although not charged with +the military administration, he can direct and dispose of the armed +force; besides being a sort of local home minister and police +magistrate; in fact, the factotum or _âme damnée_ of the Cromwell of the +moment, with whom he is in direct and constant communication on the +affairs of his district. + +I was at Valladolid during the regency of Espartero, when the cue given +to these functionaries, relative to the _surveillance_ of foreigners was +very anti-French, and favourable to England. Now in the eyes of a +_gens-d'armes_ every one is a thief until he can bring proof to the +contrary, just as by the jurisprudence of certain continental countries, +every accused is presumed criminal--just as every one who comes to a Jew +is presumed by him to have old clothes to sell, or money to borrow. +Thus, owing to the nature of the duties of the Governor of Valladolid, +every foreigner who met his eye, was a Frenchman, and an _intrigant_, +until he should prove the reverse. + +Not being aware of this at the time, I had drawn up my petition in +French. On my return for the answer, my reception was any thing but +encouraging. The excessive politeness of the Spaniard was totally lost +sight of, and I perceived a moody-looking, motionless official, seated +at a desk, with his hat resting on his eyebrows, and apparently studying +a newspaper. I stood in the middle of the room for two or three minutes +unnoticed; after which, deigning to lift his head, the personage +inquired in a gruff tone, why I did not open my cloak. I was not as yet +acquainted with the Spanish custom of drawing the end of the cloak from +off the left shoulder, on entering a room. I therefore only half +understood the question, and, being determined, at whatever price, to +see San Pablo, I took off my cloak, laid it on a chair, and returned to +face the official. "I took the liberty of requesting your permission to +view the ancient monastery of San Pablo."--"And, pray, what is your +reason for wishing to see San Pablo?"--"Curiosity."--"Oh, that is all, +is it!"--"I own likewise, that, had I found that the interior +corresponded, in point of architectural merit, with the façade, I might +have presumed to wish to sketch it, and carry away the drawing in my +portmanteau."--"Oh, no doubt--very great merit. You are a +Frenchman?"--"I beg your pardon, only an Englishman."--"You! an +Englishman!!" No answer. "And pray, from what part of England do you +come?" I declined the county, parish, and house. + +These English expressions, which I had expected would come upon his ear, +with the same familiarity as if they had been Ethiopian or Chinese, +produced a sudden revolution in my favour. The Solomon became +immediately sensible of the extreme tact he had been displaying. +Addressing me in perfect English, he proceeded to throw the blame of my +brutal reception on the unfortunate state of his country. "All the +French," he said, "who come here, come with the intention of intriguing +and doing us harm. You wrote to me in French, and that was the cause of +my error. The monastery is now a prison; I will give you an order to +view it, but you will not find it an agreeable scene, it is full of +criminals in chains." And he proceeded to prepare the order. + +Not having recovered the compliment of being taken for a conspirator; +nor admiring the civilisation of the governor of a province, who +supposed that all the thirty-four millions of French, must be +_intrigants_, I received his civilities in silence, took the order, and +my departure. The most curious part of the affair was, that I had no +passport at the time, having lost it on the road. Had my suspicious +interrogator ascertained this before making the discovery that I was +English, I should inevitably have been treated to more of San Pablo than +I desired, or than would have been required for drawing it in detail. + +The adjoining building is smaller, and with less pretension to +magnificence is filled with details far more elaborate and curious. The +Gothic architecture, like the Greek, assumed as a base and principle of +decoration the imitation of the supposed primitive abodes of rudest +invention. The Greek version of the idea is characterised by all the +grace and finished elegance peculiar to its inventors; while the same +principle in the hands of the framers of Gothic architecture, gave birth +to a style less pure and less refined; but bolder, more true to its +origin, and capable of more varied application. In both cases may be +traced the imitation of the trunks of trees; but it is only in the +Gothic style that the branches are added, and that instances are found +of the representation of the knots and the bark. In this architecture, +the caverns of the interior of mountains are evidently intended by the +deep, multiplied, and diminishing arches, which form the entrances of +cathedrals; and the rugged exterior of the rocky mass, which might +enclose such a primæval abode, is imaged in the uneven and pinnacled +walls. + +[Illustration: FAÇADE OF SAN GREGORIO, VALLADOLID.] + +The façade of the college of San Gregorio, adjoining San Pablo, +furnishes an example of the Gothic decoration brought back to its +starting point. The tree is here in its state of nature; and contributes +its trunk, branches, leaves, and its handfuls of twigs bound together. A +grove is represented, composed of strippling stems, the branches of some +of which, united and bound together, curve over, and form a broad arch, +which encloses the door-way. At each side is a row of hairy savages, +each holding in one hand a club resting on the ground, and in the other +an armorial shield. The intervals of the sculpture are covered with +tracery, representing entwined twigs, like basket-work. Over the door is +a stone fourteen feet long by three in height, covered with +_fleurs-de-lis_ on a ground of wicker-work, producing the effect of +muslin. Immediately over the arch is a large flower-pot, in which is +planted a pomegranate tree. Its branches spread on either side and bear +fruit, besides a quantity of little Cupids, which cling to them in all +directions. In the upper part they enclose a large armorial escutcheon, +with lions for supporters. The arms are those of the founder of the +college, Alonzo de Burgos, Bishop of Palencia. On either side of this +design, and separated respectively by steins of slight trees, are +compartments containing armed warriors in niches, and armorial shields. +All the ornaments I have enumerated cover the façade up to its summit, +along which project entwined branches and sticks, represented as broken +off at different lengths. + +[Illustration: COURT OF SAN GREGORIO. VALLADOLID.] + +The court of this edifice is as elaborately ornamented as the façade, +but it was executed at a much later period, and belongs to the +renaissance. The pillars are extremely elegant and uncommon. The doorway +of the library is well worthy of notice; also that of the refectory. +The college of San Gregorio was, in its day, the most distinguished in +Spain. Such was the reputation it had acquired, that the being announced +as having studied there was a sufficient certificate for the proficiency +of a professor in science and erudition. It is still a college, but no +longer enjoys the same exclusive renown. In the centre of the chapel is +the tomb of the founder, covered with excellent sculpture, representing +the four virtues, and the figures of three saints and the Virgin. It is +surrounded by a balustrade ornamented with elaborate carving. Berruguete +is supposed to have been the sculptor, but in the uncertainty which +exists on the subject, it would not be difficult to make a better guess, +as it is very superior to all the works I have seen attributed to that +artist. At the foot of the statue of the bishop is the following short +inscription, "Operibus credite." To this prelate was due the façade of +San Pablo; he was a Dominican monk at Burgos, where he founded several +public works. He became confessor, chief chaplain, and preacher to +Isabel the Catholic: afterwards Bishop of Cordova; and was ultimately +translated to the see of Palencia. He received the sobriquet of Fray +Mortero, as some say from the form of his face, added to the +unpopularity which he shared with the two other favorites of Ferdinand +and Isabella,--the Duke of Maqueda, and Cardinal Ximenes, with whom he +figured in a popular triplet which at that period circulated throughout +Spain, + + Cardenas, el Cardenal, + Con el padre Fray Mortero, + Fraen el reyno al retortero. + +which may be freely translated thus: + + What with his Grace the Cardinal, + With Cardenas, and Father Mortar,-- + Spain calls aloud for quarter! quarter! + +The concise inscription seen on the tomb, was probably meant as an +answer to this satire, and to the injurious opinion generally received +respecting his character. + +I returned from Toledo by way of Madrid and Saragoza. The diligence +track from Toledo to Madrid was in a worse state than at the time of my +arrival: a circumstance by no means surprising, since what with the wear +and tear of carts and carriages, aided by that of the elements, and +unopposed by human labour, it must deteriorate gradually until it +becomes impassable. Since my last visit to the Museo the equestrian +portrait of Charles the Fifth by Titian has been restored. It was in so +degraded a condition that the lower half, containing the foreground and +the horses' legs, presented scarcely a distinguishable object. It has +been handled with care and talent, and, in its present position in the +centre of the gallery, it now disputes the palm with the Spasimo, and is +worth the journey to Madrid, were there nothing else to be seen there. I +paid another visit to the Saint Elizabeth in the Academy, and to the +Museum of Natural History, contained in the upper floor of the same +building. This gallery boasts the possession of an unique curiosity; the +entire skeleton of a Megatherion strides over the well-furnished tables +of one of the largest rooms. I believe an idea of this gigantic animal +can nowhere else be formed. The head must have measured about the +dimensions of an elephant's body. + +From Castile into Aragon the descent is continual, and the difference of +climate is easily perceptible. Vineyards here climb the mountains, and +the plains abound with olive-grounds, which are literally forests, and +in which the plants attain to the growth of those of Andalucia. In +corresponding proportion to the improving country, complaints are heard +of its population. Murders and robberies form the subject of +conversations; and certain towns are selected as more especially +_mal-composées_, for the headquarters of strong bodies of _guardia +civile_; without which precaution travelling would here be attended with +no small peril. This state of things is attributed partly to the +disorganising effects of the recent civil war, which raged with +peculiar violence in this province. The same causes have operated less +strongly in the adjoining Basque provinces, from their having to act on +a population of a different character,--colder, more industrious, and +more pacifically disposed, and without the desperate sternness and +vindictive temper of the Aragonese. + +The inhabitants of this province differ in costume and appearance from +the rest of the Spaniards. Immediately on setting foot on the Aragonese +territory, you are struck by the view of some peasant at the road-side: +his black broad-brimmed hat,--waistcoat, breeches, and stockings all of +the same hue, varied only by the broad _faja_, or sash of purple, make +his tall erect figure almost pass for that of a Presbyterian clergyman, +cultivating his Highland garden. The natives of Aragon have not the +vivacity and polished talkativeness of the Andalucian and other +Spaniards; they are reserved, slow, and less prompt to engage in +conversation, and often abrupt and blunt in their replies. These +qualities are not, however, carried so far as to silence the continual +chatter of the interior of a Spanish diligence. Spanish travelling opens +the sluices of communicativeness even of an Aragonese, as it would those +of the denizens of a first class vehicle of a Great Western train, were +they exposed during a short time to its vicissitudes. + +However philosophers may explain the phenomenon, it is certain that the +talkativeness of travellers augments in an inverse ratio to their +comforts. The Spaniards complain of the silence of a French diligence; +while, to a Frenchman, the occupants of the luxurious corners of an +English railroad conveyance, must appear to be afflicted with dumbness. + +Saragoza is one of the least attractive of Spanish towns. Its situation +is as flat and uninteresting as its streets are ugly and monotonous. The +ancient palace of the sovereigns of Aragon is now the Ayuntamiento. It +would form, in the present day, but a sorry residence for a private +individual, although it presents externally a massive and imposing +aspect. Its interior is almost entirely sacrificed to an immense hall, +called now the Lonja. It is a Gothic room, containing two rows of +pillars, supporting a groined ceiling. It is used for numerous +assemblies, elections, and sometimes for the carnival balls. The ancient +Cathedral of La Seu is a gothic edifice, of great beauty internally; but +the natives are still prouder of the more modern church called Nuestra +Señora del Pilar,--an immense building in the Italian style, erected for +the accommodation of a statue of the Virgin found on the spot, standing +on a pillar. This image is the object of peculiar veneration. + +After leaving Saragoza you are soon in the Basque provinces. The first +considerable town is Tudela in Navarre; and here we were strongly +impressed with the unbusinesslike nature of the Spaniard. This people, +thoroughly good-natured and indefatigable in rendering a service, when +the necessity arises for application to occupations of daily routine +appear to exercise less intelligence than some other nations. It is +probably owing to this cause that at Madrid the anterooms of the Foreign +Office, situated in the palace, are, at four in the afternoon, the scene +of much novelty and animation. In a town measuring no more than a mile +and a half in each direction, the inexperienced stranger usually puts +off to the last day of his stay the business of procuring his passport, +and he is taken by surprise on finding it to be the most busy day of +all. Little did he expect that the four or five _visas_ will not be +obtained in less than forty-eight hours: and he pays for his place in +the diligence or mail (always paid in advance) several days before. It +is consequently worth while to attend in person at the Secretary of +State's office, in search of one's passport, in order to witness the +scene. + +The hour for the delivery of these inevitable documents, coincides with +the shutting up for the day of all the embassies: so that those which +require the subsequent _visa_ of an ambassador, have to wait twenty-four +hours. Hence the victims of official indifference, finding themselves +disappointed of their departure, and minus the value of a place in the +mail, give vent to their dissatisfaction in a variety of languages, +forming a singular contrast to the phlegmatic and _impassible_ porters +and ushers, accustomed to the daily repetition of similar scenes. Some, +rendered unjust by adversity, loudly accuse the government of complicity +with the hotel-keepers. I saw a Frenchman whose case was cruel. His +passport had been prepared at his embassy, and as he was only going to +France, there were no more formalities necessary, but the visa of the +police, and that of the foreign office. All was done but the last, and +he was directed to call at four o'clock. His place was retained in that +evening's mail, and being a mercantile traveller, both time and cash +were of importance to him. On applying at the appointed hour, his +passport was returned to him without the _visa_, because the French +Secretary had, in a fit of absence, written Cadiz, instead of +Bordeaux--he was to wait a day to get the mistake rectified. + +These inconveniences were surpassed by that to which the passengers of +our diligence were subjected at Tudela. Imagine yourself ensconced in a +corner of the Exeter mail (when it existed) and on arriving at Taunton, +or any intermediate town, being informed that an unforeseen circumstance +rendered it necessary to remain there twenty-four hours, instead of +proceeding in the usual manner. On this announcement being made at +Tudela, I inquired what had happened, and learned that a diligence, +which usually met ours, and the mules of which were to take us on, was +detained a day at Tolosa, a hundred miles off. Rather than send a boy to +the next stage to bring the team of mules, which had nothing to do, a +dozen travellers had to wait until the better fortunes of the previous +vehicle should restore it to its natural course. + +As if this contretems was not sufficient, we were subjected to the most +galling species of tyranny, weighing on the dearest of human privileges, +I mean that which the proprietor of a shilling,--zwanziger, franc, or +pezeta,--feels that he possesses of demanding to be fed. We had left +Saragoza at nine in the morning, and had arrived without stoppages at +six. A plentiful dinner, smoking on the table of the _comedor_, might +have produced a temporary forgetfulness of our sorrows: but no +entreaties could prevail on the hostess to lay the table-cloth. It was +usual for the joint supper of the two coaches to take place at nine, and +not an instant sooner should we eat. Weighed down by this complication +of miseries, we sat, a disconsolate party, round the _brasero_, until at +about eight our spirits began to rise at the sight of a table-cloth; and +during half an hour, the occasional entrance of a waiting woman, with +the different articles for the table, kept our hopes buoyed up, and our +heads in motion towards the door, each time it opened to give entrance, +now to a vinegar cruet, now to a salt-cellar. + +At length an angelic figure actually bore in a large dish containing a +quantity of vegetables, occasioning a cry of joy to re-echo through our +end of the room. She placed it on a side-board and retired. Again the +door opened, when to our utter dismay, another apparition moved towards +the dish, took it up and carried it away; shutting the door carefully +behind her. This was the best thing that could have occurred; since it +produced a sudden outburst of mirth, which accompanied us to the table, +now speedily adorned with the materials of a plentiful repast. + +The next town to Tudela, is the gay and elegant little fortress of +Pamplona, from which place an easy day's journey, through a tract of +superb mountain scenery, brings you to Tolosa, the last resting-place on +the Spanish side. + + + + +PART II. + +SEVILLE. + + + + +LETTER XV. + +JOURNEY TO SEVILLE. CHARACTER OF THE SPANIARDS. VALLEY OF THE RHONE. + + +Marseille. + +In order to reach the south of Spain, the longest route is that which, +passing through France, leads by Bayonne to the centre of the northern +frontier of the Peninsula, which it then traverses from end to end. It +is not the longest in actual distance; but in regard to time, and to +fatigue, and (for all who do not travel by Diligence), by far the +longest, with regard to expense. Another route, longer, it is true, in +distance, but shorter with respect to all these other considerations, is +that by Lyons and Marseille; from either of which places, the journey +may be made entirely by steam. + +The shortest of all, and in every respect, is that by the Gibraltar +mail, which leaves London and Falmouth once a week. This is a quicker +journey than that through France, even for an inhabitant of France, +supposing him resident at Paris, and to proceed to England _viâ le +Hâvre_. But there is an objection to this route for a tourist. Desirous +of visiting foreign scenes, he will find it too essentially an English +journey--direct, sure, and horribly business-like and monotonous. You +touch, it is true, at Lisbon, where during a few hours, you may escape +from the beef and Stilton cheese, if not from the Port wine; and where +you may enjoy the view of some fine scenery; but all the rest is +straight-forward, desperate paddling night and day; with the additional +objection, that being surrounded by English faces, living on English +fare, and listening to English voices, the object of the traveller--that +of quitting England--is not attained; since he cannot be said to have +left that country, until he finds himself quarrelling with his rapacious +boatman on the pier of the glittering Cadiz. + +Although this arrangement may possess the merit of the magic transition +from England to Andalucia, which, it must be allowed, is a great +one--many will prefer being disembarked in France; looking forward, +since there is a time for all things, to a still more welcome +disembarkation on England's white shores, when the recollected +vicissitudes of travel shall have disposed them to appreciate more than +ever her comforts and civilization, and to be more forgiving to her +defects; and, should they not be acquainted with the banks of the Rhone +below Lyons, adopting that equally commodious and infinitely more varied +course. + +In fact, there are few who will not agree with me in pronouncing this +the best way, for the tourist, of approaching Spain. It is not every +one, who will not consider the gratifications which the inland territory +of the Peninsula may offer to his curiosity too dearly purchased by the +inconveniences inseparable from the journey. Add to this the superiority +of the maritime provinces, with scarcely any exception, in point of +climate, civilization, and attractions of every sort. Valencia, +Barcelona, Malaga, and Cadiz are more agreeable places of residence, and +possess more resources than even Madrid; but their chief advantage is a +difference of climate almost incredible, from the limited distance which +separates them from the centre of the Peninsula. The Andalucian coast +enjoys one of the best climates in the world; while the Castiles, +Aragon, and La Mancha can hardly be said to possess the average +advantages in that respect; owing to the extremes of cold and heat, +which characterize their summer and winter seasons, and which, during +autumn and spring, are continually alternating in rapid transition. + +Andalucia unites in a greater degree than the other maritime provinces, +the advantages which constitute their superiority over the rest of +Spain. It does more, for it presents to the stranger a combination of +the principal features of interest, which render the Peninsula more +especially attractive to the lover of travel. It is, in fact, to Spain +what Paris is to France; Moscow and Petersburg to Russia. England, +Italy, and Germany are not fit subjects for illustrating the comparison; +their characteristic features of attraction and interest being +disseminated more generally throughout all their provinces or states. +Whoever wishes to find Spain herself, unalloyed, in her own character +and costume, and in her best point of view, should disembark in +Andalucia. + +There, unlike the Castiles, and the still more northern provinces, in +which only the earth and air remain Spanish, and those not the best +Spanish--where all the picturesque and original qualities that +distinguish the population, are fast fading away--the upper classes in +their manners and costumes, and the Radicals in their politics, striving +to become French--there, on the contrary, all is natural and national in +its half-Arab nationality: and certainly nature and nationality have +given proof of taste in selecting for their last refuge, the most +delicious of regions; where earth and heaven have done their utmost to +form an abode, worthy of the most beautiful of the human, as well as the +brute creation. + +I will not pause to inquire whether the reproach be justly addressed by +the other Spaniards, to the inhabitants of this province, of indolence +and love of pleasure, and of a disposition to deceitfulness, concealed +beneath the gay courtesy of their manners; it would, indeed, be a +surprising, a miraculous exception to the universal system of +compensations that we recognise as governing the world, had not this +people some prominent defect, or were they not exposed to some peculiar +element of suffering, to counterbalance in a degree the especial and +exclusive gifts heaped upon them. By what other means could their +perfect happiness be interfered with? Let us, then, allow them their +defects--the necessary shade in so brilliant a picture--defects which, +in reducing their felicity to its due level, are easily fathomed, and +their consequences guarded against, by sojourners amongst them, in whose +eyes their peculiar graces, and the charm of their manner of life, find +none the less favour from their being subject to the universal law of +humanity. They cannot be better painted in a few words, than by the +sketch, drawn by the witty and graceful Lantier, from the inhabitants +of Miletus. "Les Milesiens," he says, "sont aimables. Ils emportent, +peut-être, sur les Athéniens" (read "Castillans") "par leur politesse, +leur aménité, et les agrémens de leur esprit. On leur reproche avec +raison cette facilité--cette mollesse de mÅ“urs, qui prend quelquefois +l'air de la licence. Tout enchante les sens dans ce séjour fortuné--la +pureté de l'air--la beauté des femmes--enfin leur musique--leurs danses, +leurs jeux--tout inspire la volupté, et pénêtre l'âme d'une langueur +délicieuse. Les Zéphirs ne s'y agitent que pour repandre au loin +l'esprit des fleurs et des plantes, et embaumer l'air de leurs suaves +odeurs." + +This passage is, word for word, so exactly applicable to the Andalucians +and their land, that it is difficult to imagine another people to have +sat for the portrait, nor to a more talented painter. It is a pity that +the author I quote, is a rarity in modern libraries: owing, perhaps, to +his descriptions being at times rather warm, or, as his compatriots +would say, _un peu regence_. + +In Spain, the country of proverbs, they are very fond of summing up, by +the aid of a few epithets, the distinctive character of each province. +As bad qualities frequently predominate in these estimates, it is of +course usual for the individual, who undertakes the instruction of a +foreigner in this department of knowledge, to omit the mention of his +own province. After all, the defects attributed to the inhabitants of +one portion of a country by those of another, are not to be taken for +granted without considerable reservation; allowance must be made for +rivalry and jealousies. Almost every country affords examples of these +wholesale accusations laid to the charge of particular counties or +divisions of territory. Thus the character usually attributed in Spain +to the Andalucians, is that of a people lively, gay, of extreme polish +and amiability of manners, but false and treacherous. The Galicians are +said to be stupid and heavy, but remarkably honest; the Catalonians +courageous but quarrelsome, _mauvais coucheurs_. No doubt in some of +these instances, the general impression may be borne out to a certain +extent, by some particular class of the denizens of the province alluded +to; but such distinctions are rarely perceptible among the educated +classes. It is perhaps less easy in Spain than elsewhere, to establish +these classifications at all successfully. Contradictions will be met +with at every step, calculated to shake their infallibility. To our eye, +as foreigners, there are sufficient peculiarities belonging to the +nation universally, and respecting which our knowledge is far from being +complete, without attempting to classify a greater or smaller list of +subdivisions, the appreciation of which would require a prolonged +residence in the country. + +Spain is looked upon by the greater number of strangers as a land +delivered over to depredation, and highly insecure. In fact, it is +surprising that such should not be the fate of a country in which +instruction is limited, and where, as I myself have witnessed, servants +may be known to be in the daily practice of stealing without their +dismissal being by any means a necessary result. It is surprising, that +in the absence of any strong natural objection to theft, any honesty +should exist in the presence of temptation; yet I know no country where +there is more, if I may form an opinion from the individuals of whom I +have had an opportunity of judging. However, as an instance of the +contradictions one meets with, the following event was represented as +having taken place in one of the provinces in which I had received the +favourable impression above-mentioned. + +A ci-devant colonel, just arrived in Madrid, related the fact to me one +evening, on which, as chance would have it, I found him at supper. +Immediately on my entering the room he commenced complaining of the lack +of silver articles of necessity for the table, and accounted for it in +the following manner. He had recently arrived with his family from a +provincial town, in which he had filled a government situation. Shortly +before his departure he had invited all his friends to a leave-taking +repast; and after the departure of his guests nearly two dozen articles +of plate were missing. "In packing up," I observed, "no doubt some +dishonest domestic--" "No, no," he interrupted, "they were all pocketed +by my guests." + +That the man in office should have conciliated the attachment of all his +acquaintances to such a degree, as that all should conceive +simultaneously the idea of preserving a _souvenir_ of his person, and +that in so delicate and unostentatious a manner,--was not possible. As, +therefore, I still retained my impression of the honesty of the lower +classes, and as the sufferer appeared to treat the occurrence as one by +no means extraordinary, I came to the conclusion, that--either Spanish +integrity, unlike that of other nations, must rise in an inverse ratio +to men's fortunes and stations; or that the author of the anecdote had +been tempted, by the desire of masking the (perhaps unavoidable) +deficiencies in his supper service, to have recourse to his inventive +talent, at the expense of his absent friends' reputation. + +I believe it must be allowed that with respect to the disregard of the +rights of proprietorship, of which the lower classes are accused, there +are sufficient instances on record to counterbalance, in some degree, +my personal experience; but there is this to be urged in favour of that +class of culprits, where such are met with, that their mode of operation +is far more manly and courageous than that of the depredators of some +other climes--by which means they obtain also the full reputation of +their misdeeds. There may scarcely be said to be anything mean or +degrading in their manner of thieving: and their system is itself a +proof that they see no sin in it. They take to the mountains, and +declare open war against those whom they consider the unjust +monopolizers of wealth. + +Instances of this sort are no doubt frequent in Spain; in Toledo they +relate that, some years since, the passes of Estremadura were occupied +by one of the most formidable and best organized of these bands, under +the orders of a female. Various versions were given of this woman's +history; but the one most accredited accounted in the following manner +for her having adopted the profession of freebooter. A young lady of +rank had disappeared from her family residence, leaving no trace by +which to guide conjecture as to her fate. It was therefore presumed she +had been kidnapped. The event, however, had already long ceased to be a +subject of conversation in the district, when three or four years after, +a traveller, who had escaped from an attack of banditti, announced the +fact of their being commanded by a woman. Although well disguised, her +voice, and delicate figure had betrayed her sex. The fact was +subsequently confirmed by positive discoveries; and, at length, +confiding in the alteration time and her mode of life had produced in +her appearance, she ceased to make a mystery of the circumstance, and +headed the attacks, mounted usually on a large black horse. Her age and +beauty coinciding with the description given of the young countess who +had disappeared some years previously, gave rise to the supposition of +their identity. The band has been since dispersed, and many of them +captured; but their chief has contrived to escape, and it is probable +the truth respecting her may never be divulged. + +It is said she at times exercised more pitiless cruelties than are +usually practised by the male chiefs of the regular banditti; and that, +after such acts,--as though conscience-stricken,--she would, by way of +compensation, allow parties to pass unmolested. + +From such instances as these a portion of the Spanish population must be +considered amenable to the charge brought against them; but there are +peculiarities of a different stamp, which mark the Spaniards in +general, and are more deserving of notice in a summary of the national +characteristic qualities. It is impossible, for instance, not to be +struck by the intelligence and tact, independent of cultivation, which +pervade all classes. Whether the denizens of these southern climes are +indebted to the purity of their atmosphere, for this gift of rapid +perception, in which they surpass our northern organizations, or to +whatever cause they may owe it; the fact leads to involuntary +speculation on what might have been the results, in a country so +distinguished, besides, by its natural advantages, had the Arab +supremacy lasted until our days. At a period when education was +generally held in no estimation in Europe, the first care of almost +every sovereign of that race was usually directed to the establishment, +or improvement, of the public schools, in which the sciences and +languages were taught at the royal expense. No town being unprovided +with its schools, it is difficult to imagine to what degree of +superiority over the rest of Europe the continuation of such a system +would have raised a people so gifted as to be capable of supplying, by +natural intelligence, the almost universal absence of information and +culture. + +You continually meet with such instances of uncultivated intelligence as +the following. I was occupied in sketching in a retired part of the +environs of Madrid, when a ragged, half-naked boy, not more than ten or +eleven years of age, and employed in watching sheep, having to pass near +me, stopped to examine my work. He remained for nearly a quarter of an +hour perfectly still, making no movement except that of his eyes, which +continually travelled from the paper to the landscape, and back from +that to the paper. At length, going away, he exclaimed, "Que paciencia, +Dios mio!" + +The following is an example of the absence of cultivation, where it +might have been expected to exist. A student leaving the university of +Toledo, at the age of twenty-seven, told me he had studied there eleven +years, and had that day received his diploma of barrister, which, when +sent to Madrid, where it would be backed by the sanction of the +minister, would authorise him to practise his profession in any town +throughout Spain. In the course of the same conversation, he asked me +whether Russia was not situated in the Mediterranean, and whether +England did not form a portion of that country. + +Tact and good manners are so universal among the lower classes, that a +more familiar intercourse than we are accustomed to, can be allowed +between persons of different ranks. Those of the highest class are seen, +during a journey, dining at the same table with their servants; and on +all other occasions entering into conversation with them. This +intercourse of good nature and good understanding, universally existing +between superiors and inferiors, and which is never known to degenerate +into familiarity, would preserve Spain a long time from revolutions of a +popular origin--were she left to herself. The Spaniard of the lowest +station has as considerable an idea of his personal consequence as a +marquis, and maintains with his equals all the forms of high breeding. +If you stop to listen to the discussions of a knot of ragged children +playing at marbles, you will hear them address each other by the title +of Señor. + +The urbanity and polish which prevails throughout all classes is +genuine, and the result of good-nature. This is proved by their +readiness to render all sorts of services as soon as they are acquainted +with you, and even before; and _that_ notwithstanding their suspicion +and dislike of strangers, a disposition for which they have ample cause. +I don't mean to include services which might incur pecuniary outlay; it +would be something like requesting the loan of the Highlander's +inexpressibles. Although even of this a remarkable instance has fallen +under my observation,--the capability existing,--but they will spare no +trouble nor time: doubling the value of the obligation by the graceful +and earnest manner of rendering it. + +Should your reception by a Spaniard be marked by coldness, it is +generally to be accounted for by a very excusable feeling. The Spaniard +is usually deeply preoccupied by the unfortunate state of his country. +This subject of continual reflection operating on a character singularly +proud, but which is at the same time marked by a large share of +modesty,--qualities by no means incompatible,--occasions him a sensation +when in presence of a foreigner nearly approaching to suffering. He +feels a profound veneration for the former glories of his land, and +admiration of its natural superiority; but he is distrustful of his +modern compatriots, of whom he has no great opinion. His anxiety is, +therefore, extreme with regard to the judgment which a Frenchman or +Englishman may have formed respecting his countrymen and country: and he +is not at his ease until satisfied on that point; fearing that the +backward state of material civilization may be attributed by them to +hopeless defects in the national character, and diminish their respect +for his country. He is restored to immediate peace of mind by a delicate +compliment, easily introduced, on the ancient grandeur of Spain, or the +eternal splendour of her skies and soil, and especially by an expression +of disapproval of the influence which foreign governments seem desirous +of arrogating to themselves over her political destinies. + +Should the stranger delay the application of some such soothing balm, he +will not hesitate to provoke it, by ingeniously leading the conversation +in the direction he wishes, and then heaping abuse and censure on his +compatriots. + +The interference of foreign governments in their politics is, in fact, +one of the consequences of the present national inferiority, the most +galling to their feelings. This is accounted for by the high +independence, which is one of the principal features of their character, +and is observable in the most insignificant events of their daily life. +The practice which prevails in some countries, of meddling each with his +(and even _her_) neighbour's concerns, and of heaping vituperation where +a man's conduct or opinions differ from his who speaks, is one of the +most repugnant to the Spanish nature. If a Spaniard hears such a +conversation, he stares vacantly, as though he comprehended nothing; and +the natural expression traceable on not a few countenances and attitudes +may be translated, "I don't interfere in your affairs, pray don't +trouble yourself about mine." + +It is curious to trace this in their favourite sayings, or proverbs +(_refrans_), by which the national peculiarities of character are +admirably depicted. Of these no people possess so complete a collection. +The following is one which expresses the feeling to which I allude: + + El Marques de Santa Cruz hizó + Un palacio en el Viso: + Porque pudó, y porque quisó. + +or, translated, + + What could induce Sir Santa Cruz to + Build a house the Viso close to? + --He had the money, and he chose to. + +I place, in the translation, the edifice close to the Viso, instead of +upon it, as in the original text. I doubt whether any apology is +necessary for this poetical licence, by which the intention of the +proverb undergoes no alteration. It is true, a house may be close to a +hill without being erected upon it; but if, as in this instance, it is +on the top of the hill, it is most certainly close to it likewise. + +The submission of the Spaniards to the despotism of etiquette and custom +in trifles, does not (otherwise than apparently) constitute a +contradiction to this independence of character. However that may be, +the breach of all other laws meets with easier pardon, than that of the +laws of custom. This code is made up of an infinity of minute +observances, many of which escape the notice of a foreigner, until +accustomed by degrees to the manners of those who surround him. He will +not, for instance, discover, until he has made himself some few +temporary enemies, that no greater insult can be offered to a person of +rank, or in authority, than saluting him in a cloak _embozado_--the +extremity thrown over the shoulder.--A similar neglect is not pardoned +either by the fair sex. The minutest peculiarities in dress are +observed, and if at all discordant with the received mode of the day, +incur universal blame. The situation of a stranger is, in fact, at first +scarcely agreeable in a country in which the smallest divergence from +established customs attracts general attention and criticism. This does +not, however, interfere with the ready good-nature and disposition to +oblige met with, as I said before, on all occasions. + +In some instances the attachment to external forms operates +advantageously. Such is that of the picturesque practice prevailing in +many of the provinces, of assuming the quality of the _Beata_. In +Toledo, certain peculiarities in the toilette of one of a group of young +ladies attracted my curiosity. She was apparently about seventeen; +pretty, but by no means remarkably so for a Spaniard, and appeared to be +in deep mourning. Whenever, in speaking, a movement of her right hand +and arm lifted up her mantilla, a japanned leather sash was exposed to +view, of about two inches in width, an end of which hanging from the +right side, reached rather lower than the knee. On the right sleeve, +half-way between the shoulder and the elbow, was fixed a small silver +plate, called an _escudo_, and a rosary was worn round her neck. + +I was informed, on inquiry, that she was _una beata_; and being still in +the dark, my informant related her story. He commenced by the inquiry, +whether I had heard of a young man being drowned four months previously +in the Tagus. I replied that I had heard of thirty or forty; for he +referred to the bathing season, during which, as the river is sown with +pits and precipices, and unprovided with humane societies, accidents +occur every day. He then named the victim, of whose death I had in fact +heard. He was a youth of the age of twenty, and the _novio_ (intended) +of the young lady in black. On hearing suddenly, and without +preparation, the fatal news, she had been seized with a profuse vomiting +of blood, and had continued dangerously ill during several weeks. She +was now convalescent, and had made her appearance in society for the +first time. + +My informant added, on my repeating the inquiry respecting the costume, +that it is the custom for a young lady, on recovering from a serious +illness, to offer herself to the _Virgen de los dolores_; the external +sign of the vow consisting in the adoption of a dress similar to that +worn by the Virgin in the churches. The obligation assumed lasts +generally during a year; although some retain the dress for the +remainder of their life. Examples are known of this practice among the +other sex; in which case the costume is that of a Franciscan friar; but +the _beato_ becomes the object of ridicule. + +Among the forms of society to which especial importance is attached are +the ceremonies and duration of mourning for relations. The friends of +the nearest relative,--especially if a lady,--of a person newly +deceased, assemble day after day for a considerable time in her house. +All are in full dress of deep mourning; and the victim of sorrow and +society is expected to maintain a continual outpouring of sighs and +tears, while she listens to each consoler in turn. Much importance is +attached to the display of the usual appearances of grief, even when the +circumstances of the case do not necessarily call for it. Happening to +enter a house in which news had been received of the death of a +relative, who resided in another part of Spain, I found the lady of the +house discussing with a friend the form of her new mourning dress. + +Struck by the melancholy expression of her countenance, and the redness +of her eyes, I inquired whether any bad news had been received. My +question gave rise to a renewed flood of tears; "Yes, yes," was the +reply; "I have had terrible news; my poor uncle, who had been afflicted +for years with dropsy, died only six days ago." I expressed my sincere +regret at so sad an event, while she continued her explanations to the +other lady. "I understand," she said, in a voice almost suffocated, +"that this sleeve is no longer to be--drawn in; and the--front, +according to the last--French--fashion,--is at least an inch--shorter." +Taking the opportunity of the first moment of silence, I asked for some +further details respecting this beloved uncle. "It was your Señora +mother's brother, I believe?" "No, no, the husband of my aunt: and +what--do you--think of the--mantilla?" After the reply of the other +visitor to the latter question, I continued,--"But your profound regret, +on occasion of the loss of so amiable a companion, is natural." +"Terrible, sir, yes--my poor uncle!" "Had you seen him shortly before +the sad event?" "Alas! no, sir, I never--saw him but--once in my life; +and--should not now have recognized him--for I--was then--only five +years old." + +The Spaniards are not a dinner-giving nation; obedient, as some suppose, +to their proverb,--which although the effect, may also operate as a +cause,--namely, 'Feasts are given by fools, and partaken of "by wise +men." This proverb, however, paints the national character with less +fidelity than most others; the parsimonious selfishness it implies is +not Spanish. Sufficient reasons exist to account for the rarity of +dinner invitations. + +Although the English are not responsible for the geniality of climate, +which corks up their crystallized souls to be enclosed fog-tight, until +released by a symbolical ceremony of the popping of champagne corks,--it +is not the less true that dinners are their only introductions to +acquaintanceship. Spaniards have corks also, and well worth the trouble +of drawing, as well as all the other _materiel_ of conviviality; but +they despise it, finding the expansion operated by their sunshine more +complete and less laborious. Their sociability no more requires dinner +parties than their aloes hedges do steam-pipes. With the exception of +their ungovernable passion for cold water, their sobriety is extreme; +and this may perhaps unite with a dislike to social ostentation in +resisting the exotic fashion of dinners. But bring a good letter of +introduction to a Spaniard, and you will find a daily place at a +well-supplied table, the frequent occupation of which will give +unmistakable pleasure. + +In such case you are looked for as a daily visitor; not ceremoniously, +but as using the house when in want of a more cheerful home than your +_posada_. Æolus has not yet been appointed here the arbiter of +smiles,[9] and your entrance is always the signal for the same animated +welcome. The only variation will be a good-natured remonstrance, should +your visits have undergone any interruption. + +To return to my route. Aware of the inconvenience of Spanish inland +travelling, and with Seville for my object, I proceeded to Lyon. Nor had +I long to wait for the reward attendant on my choice of route. Getting +on board the steam-packet at six o'clock on an autumn morning, I +experienced at first some discouragement, from the fog, which I had not +reflected was the natural--or rather unnatural--atmosphere of that most +discouraging of all places, a prosperous manufacturing town. No sooner, +however, had we escaped, by the aid of high-pressure steam, from these +deleterious influences, than our way gradually opened before us, rather +dimly at first, but more and more clear as the sun attained height: the +banks of the Rhone having, during this time, been progressing also in +elevation and grandeur, by eight o'clock we were enjoying a rapidly +moving panorama of superb scenery. + +This day's journey turned out unusually auspicious. Owing to some +favourable combination of celestial influences, (although I perceived no +one on board likely to have an astrologer in his pay,) no untoward +accident--so common on this line--befell us. No stoppages--no running +down of barges, nor running foul of bridges--nor bursting of engines. +The stream was neither too shallow, nor too full, so that we were +preserved both from running aground, and from being run away with. Our +boat was the fastest of the six which started at the same time; and one +is never ill-disposed by a speed of eighteen miles an hour, although it +may be acquired at an imminent risk of explosion. + +There is many a day's journey of equal or greater beauty than the +descent of the Rhone; but I know of none which operates a more singular +effect on the senses. It is that of being transported by a leap from the +north to the south of Europe. The Rhone valley, in fine weather, enjoys +a southern climate, while all the region to the north of Lyon is marked +by the characteristics of the more northern provinces. That town itself, +with its smoke, its gloom, and its dirt, maintains itself at the +latitude of Manchester; whose excellent money-making inhabitants, if +thrown in the way of a party of Lyonnais, would scarcely feel themselves +among strangers, so complete would be the similarity of habits and +manners. The transition, therefore, to those wafted down the sunny +valley of the Rhone, is as theatrical as the scenery itself, but with +the agreeable addition of reality. Every surrounding object contributes +to the magic of the change. Taking leave of a bare and treeless country, +and its consequently rough and ungenial climate, which, in its turn, +will necessarily exercise its influence on the character of the +population, you find yourself gliding between vine-clad mountains, not +black and rugged like those of the Rhine, but soft and rosy, and lighted +by a sky, which begins here to assume a southern brilliancy. The +influence of the lighter atmosphere first begins to be felt, expanding +the organs, and filling the frame with a sensation, unknown to more +northern climes, of pleasure derived from mere existence. Then the +language you hear on all sides is new and musical; for the crew of the +steamer is Provençal, and their _patois_ falls on the ear with something +approaching the soft accent of Italy; while their expressive eyes, +sunburnt faces, and a certain mixture of animation and languor--the +exact counterpart of the phlegmatic industry of the north, complete the +scene, with which they are in perfect harmony. + +_A propos_ of harmony, when the sailors' dinner hour arrived, they were +summoned by an air of Rossini, played on a bugle; the performer--one of +their number--having first thrown himself flat on the deck, in the +attitude of a Turk about to receive the bastinado, and then raising his +chest, by the aid of his two elbows, to the height required for the +inflation of the instrument. + +Nor is this leap from north to south so purely imaginary, since the boat +Sirius, aided by the furious current, actually paddled at the rate of +from seventeen to eighteen miles an hour; and we reached Avignon at +sunset, about five o'clock. The distance being calculated, allowing for +the windings of the river, will verify the rate maintained during the +day. Notwithstanding the odious nature of comparisons, I could not help +forming that between this river and the Rhine, and giving the preference +to the first. The bold though gloomy precipices of the Rhine yield, in +point of charm, to the more open expanse of the Rhone valley, and the +larger scale of the scenery, especially when the far more brilliant +lighting-up is considered. Nor does the Rhone yield to its rival, in +regard to the picturesque form and position of its castles and other +buildings; while its greater width, and handsome bridges, add an +additional feature. + +The best scene of the day, and a fit climax for its termination, was the +approach to Avignon at sunset,--a superb Claude. A turn of the river +placed the castle--an immense mass crowning the city, and presenting an +irregular outline--directly between us and the sun, the sky doing away, +by its brightness, with all the details of the landscape. The principal +objects were, the broad expanse of water, and the mass of deep purple, +tracing its dark but soft outline on the blaze of gold at its back. On +turning to look in the opposite direction, a scene equally striking +presented itself. The mountains between which we had been winding during +the last half of the day, are, from this point of view, ranged in an +immense semicircle, extending round half the horizon, and at that moment +were tinged by the sun with a bright rose colour, while they scarcely +appeared at half their actual distance. It looked like the final scene +of an aërial ballet, when a semicircle is formed by the rosy sylphs who +have figured during the representation. + +After the hurly burly of debarkation at Avignon, and forcing our way +through the army of luggage porters--a ferocious race, notorious, at +this place, for the energy, amounting often to violence, with which they +urge the acceptance of their kind offices--the picturesque look of the +place, and the necessary hour of waiting for dinner, led me to a scene, +which I accepted as a satisfactory greeting on my arrival in the land +of the troubadours. A group of half a dozen labourers, returned from +their day's work, were lolling in every variety of attitude, on some +large stones placed in front of the _château_. They were singing--and +with perfect precision of _ensemble_--each his part of the chorus. At +the conclusion of every _morceau_, the whole party made the façade of +the ancient palace echo with peals of laughter; after which they all +talked at once, until they had agreed on the choice of the succeeding +air. + +The castle of Avignon--ancient residence of the Popes, shelters now a +different sort of inmates. It serves for barracks for a regiment of +infantry. At this moment the lamplighter had completed his rounds in the +interior, and given to each of the innumerable windows an undue +importance in the architectural effect of the mass. Such is the +irregularity of their distribution over this vast façade--or such it +appeared to be then, for I have not seen it by daylight--as to give them +the appearance of having been thrown at it by handfuls, and fixed +themselves each at its first point of contact with the wall. + +Or by way of compensation for the extravagant supposition of so large a +hand, we can suppose the edifice diminished, and resembling with its +jagged outline, a ragged black cloak, which, having been stretched out, +to serve as a mark for rifle-shooters, would admit the light through +openings not less symmetrically distributed than these windows. + +Between Avignon and Marseille, by the land route, the only spot of +interest is Aix. It is a well placed little town; although, in the +summer, its position must procure for it rather too much warmth. There +are no remains of king Réné's palace; nor could I learn that any +souvenir of him was extant, with the exception of a statue, which +represents the jovial old king of the _trouvères_ in the character of +Bacchus. This figure ornaments a hot fountain, situated at the head of +the wide street, planted with trees, by which the town is entered. + + + + +LETTER XVI. + +VOYAGE TO GIBRALTAR. + + +Cadiz. + +I have just returned from a visit to the signal-tower--the highest +look-out in Cadiz; from which is seen a panorama equalled by few in +Europe. The Atlantic, and its coast down to Trafalgar Cape--the mountain +distances of the Ronda--and Medina Sidonia on its sugar-loaf rock, like +an advanced sentinel--all Cadiz, with its hundreds of white +Belvideres--and the bright blue bay, decked with glittering white towns, +and looking (but with more sparkling glow) like an enormous turquoise +set round with pearls. But let not, I entreat you, these magic +words--Cadiz--Andalucia--raise your expectations unduly; lest they be +disappointed, on rinding that I fail in doing justice to this charming +country. With regard to this town, not only would it be a task beyond my +powers to paint its bright aspect and to give you a sufficiently glowing +description of its pleasures. It is not even my intention to partake of +these--being bent on accomplishing my principal object--the exploration +of the monuments of Seville. However let us not anticipate. You ought to +have had news of me from Gibraltar, where I made a much longer stay than +I had intended, owing to an unexpected meeting with an old friend. + +The fact is, I put off writing until I should again be in movement, +hoping that my letters might thus acquire greater interest. I will +resume my journey from France, in which country we parted. + +The steam-packets leave Marseille for the south of Spain every tenth +day; and I happened to arrive a day or two after one of the departures. +Rather than wait eight days, therefore, I agreed for my passage on board +a trader bound for Gibraltar; by which arrangement, as the captain +assured me that the voyage would only occupy five days, I was to be at +my journey's end before the departure of the Phénicien, as the +steam-packet was called. The latter, moreover, made no progress +excepting during the night, in order to afford the passengers an +opportunity of passing each day in some town; and being anxious to +arrive at Seville, I should not have liked the delays thus occasioned. I +do not, however, recommend the adoption of my plan; for the five days, +as it turned out, became twenty-four, and the Phénicien arrived at Cadiz +long before I reached Gibraltar. + +The captain's prognostic of course supposed a favourable voyage; and I +was wrong in reckoning on this, particularly at the time of year, and in +the Mediterranean. I was wrong, also, in confiding in my Provençal +captain, who, in addition to various other bad qualities, turned out to +be the most inept blockhead to whom ever were entrusted lives and +cargoes. + +My fellow-passengers consisted of a Marseille merchant, who possessed a +trading establishment at Gibraltar; a young French officer, on leave of +absence to visit his mother, who was Spanish; and a Moorish traveller, +proceeding homeward to Tetuan. From certain hints dropped by the +merchant, who was well acquainted with the passage, we soon learned the +probable character of our captain, as he belonged to a race not very +favourably spoken of by those whose goods and persons they were in the +habit of conveying; and these predictions being soon partially confirmed +by the man's incivility, we began to look upon him as our common enemy. +One of the accusations brought against his class was, a disposition to +reduce the supply of provisions within undue limits. This, however, we +could not lay to his charge, as the adverse winds rendered necessary an +extreme prudence in our daily consumption. My principal anxiety arose +from want of confidence in the capacity of the man for the performance +of his duties as a seaman. This anxiety was grounded on various symptoms +sufficiently striking to attract the notice even of a landsman; and more +particularly on a scene, during which his presence of mind, if mind he +possessed, totally deserted him. + +We had passed several days off the Balearic Islands--or rather on and +off--for each morning we issued from behind Ivica, and returned at night +to take shelter under its cliffs; ours being the only vessel of several +performing the same passage restrained by fear from attempting any +progress during these nights. The reason of this we learned +subsequently. At length, when we did risk an advance, we chose the worst +moment of all: the breeze becoming a gale, and almost a head-wind, from +having been less unfavourable. Whatever may now have been our anxiety, +we could easily discover that the author of our misfortune was a prey to +more terror than ourselves. + +Against this wind we proceeded, gaining about a hundred yards an hour, +during five days; at the end of which it changed slightly, and allowed +us to reach the entrance of the channel; that is, we had doubled the +Cape de Gata, and were off the south coast of the peninsula, nearly +opposite Almeria, and in the direct line of all the vessels entering the +Mediterranean; which, as they are sometimes delayed in expectation of a +favourable wind for passing the Straits of Gibraltar, were now bearing +down in great numbers. At this crisis the gale, which had all along +continued to be violent, became once more almost directly adverse, and +increased in fury. + +Our gallant captain's features always assumed towards evening a more +serious expression. A faint tinge of green was observed to replace the +yellow of his usual complexion, and he passed the nights on deck, as +unapproachable as a hyena--by the way, also a most cowardly animal. At +length one day as evening approached, the wind was almost doing its +worst, and we went to bed tossed about as if in a walnut-shell--lulled +by an incessant roaring, as it were, of parks of Perkin's artillery. + +It being essential to keep a good look-out, and to show a light +occasionally, in order to avoid being run down--the lantern--unable to +live on deck, from the water as well as the wind, which passed through +the rigging--was confided to the passengers, with a recommendation, by +no means likely to be neglected, to keep it in good trim, and to hand +it up with promptitude when called for. + +At about twelve o'clock, sure enough, the call was heard, in the +somewhat agitated tones of the captain. The passenger, whose business it +was, for we took the watch each in his turn--immediately jumped up and +handed up the lantern. Thinking this sufficient, we remained as we were; +but in less than a minute, it was brought back extinguished, and thrown +down into the cabin. Immediately after a general view holloa was audible +above the roar of the storm, and the mate's voice was heard at the top +of our staircase, begging us to get up as we were going to be run down. + +We now lost no time in making our way to the deck; no one speaking a +word, but each waiting for his turn to mount. Being furthest from the +staircase, or rather ladder, I arrived the last. On reaching the deck, I +was met by about a ton of salt water, which appeared to have mistaken me +for a wicket, as it came in as solid a mass, and with about the same +impulse as a cricket ball. Finding I was not to be dashed back again +down stairs, it took the opportunity of half filling the cabin, the door +of which I had not thought of shutting. On recovering my breath and +reopening my eyes, I discerned, by aid of the white bed-apparel of my +fellow passengers, a dim crowd, pressed together at the bow of the +vessel, consisting of all the inhabitants of the frail tenement, +excepting the steersman and myself. I rushed forward; but finding my +voice insufficient to add any effect to the cry which had been set up, +to give notice to the crew of the approaching vessel, I made for the +side, which I saw, by the position of the group, was threatened with the +expected contact; and catching at a rope ladder, placed myself on the +top of the bulwarks, resolved on trying a jump as the only chance of +escape in case of meeting. + +There was now time to examine our situation perfectly well. I looked +towards the stern, and could see that the helm was not deserted: but it +was of no avail to save us from the danger; since, sailing as near the +wind as we could, as far as I understood the subsequent explanation of +the sailors, we could not change our direction on a sudden, otherwise +than by turning a sort of right-about-face. We went on, therefore, +trusting that the other crew would hear the cry, and discover our +position in time. The night being extremely dark, and the sea running +high, the approaching vessel was scarcely visible to us when first +pointed out by the sailors; still less should I have looked forward to +its threatening us with any danger; but the eye of experience had not +been deceived, and from my perch I was soon able to discover, as each +passage over the summit of a wave brought the dark mass against the sky, +that its approach was rapid, and directed with unerring precision, so as +to cross our course at the fatal moment. She was scudding before the +gale, with almost all her sails set, and consequently, on striking our +ship, nothing could save us from an instantaneous founder. + +At each successive appearance the mass became larger and blacker; but +the cry of our crew, in which I now joined, never ceased. At length we +were only separated by the ascent of one wave, at the summit of which +was balanced the huge bulk of our antagonist, while we were far below +the level of her keel--but her steersman had heard the cry; for at the +moment when certainly no hope of saving--at least our ship, remained to +any of us, we saw the other swerve as she descended--and after +approaching to within half her length of our starboard bow, she glided +by at the distance of a yard from where I was standing. + +I now drew a deep breath before I jumped down on to the deck; after +which, beginning to perceive that I was as wet as if we had been run +down, I was hastening to the cabin, when my progress was stopped by the +captain, who, without perceiving any one, was stamping up and down the +centre of the vessel, and actually tearing his hair with both his hands. +I paused to observe this tragic performance, which shortly gave place to +an indistinct and much interrupted speech, in which, in the intervals +left by all the oaths as yet invented in the French and Languedoc +tongues, there could be distinguished dark threats of vengeance, +addressed to the captain of the large brig, whom he was to discover +without fail on his return to Marseille. + +All the passengers now descended to the cabin, and having stripped and +rolled myself in my cloak turned inside out, I threw myself on my couch. +We were now, in spite of recent experience, provided with a fresh +lighted lantern, to be produced on the next call. This we took care +still to look to, although we hardly expected more than one such chance +in one night. + +It was past two, and we had scarcely left off discussing our narrow +escape, when another rapid and significant demand for the lantern +announced a second peril. On this occasion I took my time, for I had +reflected on the odds, which were immense, against our being a second +time so exactly in any one's way, where there was room for the whole +navigation of the world to pass abreast. Nor could I suspect any of my +fellow-passengers of being the unlucky Jonas of our misfortunes; +although the Moor was looked upon by some of the sailors with a +suspicious eye, for not consenting to partake of a leg of chicken, if +the animal had been killed and cooked by any other hand than his own, +and for the mysterious formalities they accused him of observing in +killing his poultry; such as turning his face in a particular direction, +and requiring the blood to flow in a particular manner--on failure of +which last requisite, he threw the fowl overboard. These things alarmed +the sailors, but helped, on the contrary, to encourage me; as I thought +the man's being possessed of a conscience and religious scruples, +rather, if any thing, an additional safeguard for us. + +This time, therefore, I drew on my boots and trowsers; and, wrapped in +my cloak, proceeded in company with the Moor, who had taken it as +leisurely as myself, to join the party on deck. They had kept the +lantern in a safe position until the moment it would have the best +chance of taking effect, a proper precaution, as it was likely to be so +short-lived. And at the moment I arrived the order was being given to +shew it ahead. A sailor took it, and before he could reach the bow of +the vessel, a wave broke over him and washed his lantern fairly into the +sea. Upon this the captain said not a word, but running to the helm, +took it in hand, and turned the ship right round, presenting her stern +to the wind, and to the approaching vessel,--which we now soon lost +sight of, as we were not a slow sailing craft in a fair wind. Having +performed this masterly feat, and given orders that no change should be +made in any respect, he went to bed; muttering as he left the deck +various indistinct sounds between his teeth. The next morning we had +undone nearly all our six day's work, and before evening of the +following day, had returned to within sight of Cape St. Martin near +Valencia. + +It was now a fortnight since we had quitted Marseille, and we were +nearly half-way to our place of destination; but Neptune took pity on +us, and having given the usual scolding to Eolus, we were allowed to +resume our course, although not at as good a rate as we could have +wished. The tempest had ceased, and by means of a feeble but fair wind +which succeeded, we regained in three days and nights almost all our +lost way, and were on the point of doubling the Cape Gata. Here we +remained stationary in a dead calm during another three days, after +which an almost imperceptible movement in the air in the wished-for +direction bore us to within sight of Gibraltar. + +This progress along the southern coast lasted three days more, and +introduced me to the climate of Andalucia. At the end of November it was +still a splendid summer--but with just sufficient air to prevent our +suffering from the heat. The blue Mediterranean at length vindicated her +fair fame, and proved that one of her smiles had the power of throwing +oblivion over all the harm of which she was capable during her moments +of fretfulness. As you will easily imagine, I passed these delicious +days, and nearly the entire nights on deck. Our view consisted of the +magnificent precipices which terminate, at the shore, the Alpuxarras +chain of mountains. These are coloured with the various tints peculiar +to the ores and marbles of which they are formed; and now showed us all +their details, although we never approached within twenty-five miles off +shore. The purity of the atmosphere added to their great elevation, gave +them the appearance of being only four or five miles distant. The only +means of proving the illusion consisted in directing the telescope along +the line of apparent demarcation between the sea and the rock, when the +positions of the different towns situated on the shore were indicated +only by the tops of their towers. Among others, the tower of Malaga +Cathedral appeared to rise solitarily from the water, the church and +town being hidden by the convexity of the sea's surface. + +With the bright blue sea for a foreground, varied by continually passing +sails, these superb cliffs formed the second plan of the picture; while +over them towered the Granada mountains of the Sierra Nevada, cutting +their gigantic outlines of glittering snow out of the dark blue of the +sky, at a distance of twenty leagues. The evenings more particularly +possessed a charm, difficult to be understood by the thousands of our +fellow creatures, unable to kill that fragment of time without the aid +of constellations of wax-lights, and sparkling toilettes,--not to +mention the bright sparks which conversation sometimes, but not always, +sprinkles o'er the scene. Now I do not pretend to speak with disrespect +of _soirées_, nor even of balls or ra-outes, as our neighbours say; +Polka forfend I should blaspheme her deity, depreciate her loudly +laudable energies, or apostrophize her strangely muscular hamstrings! I +only maintain that a night passed at sea, off the southern Spanish coast +in fine weather, does not yield to the best of nights. + +The observation of the land, of the passing sails, and the management of +our own, and the various phenomena of sea and sky, having gradually +yielded to sunset and twilight--and these in their turn leaving the +vessel to its solitude, conversation became amusing between people of +such different origin, habits, and ideas, brought together by chance, +drawn nearer to each other by the force of circumstances, and by having +partaken of the same buffetings. The Moor would then offer a cup of his +coffee, or rather, according to the Oriental custom, a thimbleful of his +quintessence of that exquisite berry. Our French ensign was a tolerable +musician, and was easily prevailed on to unpack his cornet-à -piston, and +to astonish the solitude of the night, and the denizens of the deep, by +the execution of the favourite airs of Auber and Halevy. Sometimes a +bark too distant to be visible would hail us on hearing these unusual +strains; and faint sounds of applause would arrive as if from wandering +naiads. + +At length one afternoon brought us in sight of Gibraltar. And now, lest +we should arrive without further mishap, our precious Provençal took +care to give us a parting proof of his incapacity,--which however, +thanks to our good fortune, did not bring upon us the annoyance it +threatened. The rock of Gibraltar was before us the whole of the +following day; but there appeared also in sight, somewhat to its left, +and at a much greater distance, a sort of double mountain, apparently +divided from the middle upwards by a wedge-formed cleft. The captain +replied to all questions by describing this object as consisting of two +distinct mountains, which he pronounced to be no others than the two +Pillars of Hercules,--promising us that the next morning we should see +them separated by the entire width of the Straits. + +Far from suspecting the authenticity of this explanation, I innocently +inquired what was the large rock (Gibraltar itself) apparently much +nearer to us. "Oh!" he replied, "it was some promontory on the coast of +Andalucia, the name of which had escaped his memory;" adding that we +steered very slightly to the left of the said rock, because the wind +having increased, and blowing off shore, we could not make Gibraltar +otherwise than by keeping well into the shore, to prevent our being +driven towards Africa. All this about the wind was so true, that had we +preserved to the last the direction we were then following, we must +inevitably have gone to Africa, and added a day and a night to our +voyage. + +The Marseille merchant, who had made the voyage twenty times, listened +to all this; but although very intelligent on most subjects, and more +particularly with regard to the qualities and value of silks and +quincaillerie, his notions of practical geography had not probably +attained any great development, as he appeared perfectly satisfied. I +therefore passed the day and retired that night filled with curiosity +respecting this remarkable promontory, that had escaped the notice of +Arrowsmith and the continental geographers. The following morning, to my +extreme astonishment, the double mountain was still as undivided as +ever, notwithstanding our having approached so near to the great rock as +to distinguish its colour, and the details of its surface. We were still +steering so as to leave it behind us. + +I now began to suspect something was wrong; and getting hold of the +merchant, proceeded to question him closely, recalling to his +recollection the captain's explanation of the previous day, and the +consequent miraculous union of Gibraltar with the mountain of the +monkies, to accomplish which the former must have quitted Europe +subsequently to the publication of the last newspapers we had seen at +Marseille. His replying that he certainly thought the great rock put him +in mind of Gibraltar confirmed my suppositions; and I prevailed upon him +to repeat his opinion to the ignoramus, who was peaceably eating his +breakfast on the bulwarks of the quarter-deck. We went to him instantly, +and on hearing the remark, he merely observed that it was very possible; +and leaving his sausage, quietly proceeded to the helm, which he no more +quitted until we were in the bay at four in the afternoon. We had only +lost about five or six hours by the blunder; but had we continued the +same course another half-hour, we could not possibly have made Gibraltar +that day. + +It was with more than the ordinary excitement of the organ of +travelling,--for if phrenology deserves to be called a science, such an +organ must exist,--that I approached this great Leviathan of the seas; +perhaps, all causes considered, the most remarkable object in Europe. +During the approach the interest is absorbing; and the two or three +hours employed in passing round the extremity of the rock, and +stretching sufficiently far into the Straits, to gain wind and channel +for entering the bay, slipped away more rapidly than many a ten minutes +I could have called to my recollection. The simultaneous view of Europe +and Africa; the eventful positions with which you are surrounded,--Tarifa, +Algeciras, and further on Trafalgar; the very depths beneath you too +shallow for the recollections which crowd into this limited space; +commencing with history so ancient as to have attained the rank of +fable,--and heroes long since promoted to demi-gods; and reaching to the +passage of the injured Florinda, so quickly responded to by that of +Tharig, followed by a hundred Arab fleets. The shipping of all nations +continually diverting the attention from these _souvenirs_; and, +crowning all, the stupendous mass of the now impregnable rock. + +Amidst all this, I could not drive from my thoughts the simple and +patriotic old Spanish historian de Pisa, and the operation to which he +attributes the origin of this mountain. From him may be learned all the +details respecting this work of Hercules; as to which, as well as to the +motives of its fabricator, the poets of antiquity were in the dark. +Hercules had been induced, by the high reputation of Spain, of her +population, and her various natural advantages, to conduct thither an +army for the purpose of taking possession of the country. After having +put his project in execution, he remained in Spain, and enjoyed a long +and prosperous reign. The victory, which gave him possession of the +country, took place at Tarifa; and it was in its commemoration and +honour that before he established the seat of government at Toledo, he +assembled the conquered population, and compelled them to throw stones +into the sea, by which means, in a short time, this monument was +completed. + +Before we set foot on this imperceptible trophy of a league in length by +two thousand feet high the French ensign and myself hailed a steamer as +we passed by her in the offing, and found she was bound for Cadiz, and +we must go on board the following afternoon. On landing, however, my +projects underwent a change, as I told you at the commencement of my +letter. There is not much to be seen at Gibraltar that would interest +you, except indeed the unique aspect and situation of the place. To +military men its details offer much interest. There is a large public +garden on the side of the mountain, between the town, which occupies the +inmost extremity, and the Governor's house near the entrance of the bay. +The batteries constructed in the rock are extremely curious, and +calculated to embarrass an enemy whose object should be to dismount +them. I thought, however, with deference to those conversant with these +subjects, that they were likely to possess an inconvenience--that of +exposing to suffocation the gunners employed in the caverns, out of +which there does not appear to exist sufficient means of escape for the +smoke. + +The most amusing sight in Gibraltar is the principal street, filled, as +it is, with an infinitely varied population. Here you see, crowded +together as in a fair, and distinguished by their various costumes,--the +representatives of Europe, Asia, and Africa,--Arabs, Moors, Italians, +Turks, Greeks, Russians, English, and Spaniards, Jews, and, +occasionally, a holy friar conversing with some Don Basilio, appearing, +in his long cylindrical hat, as if blessed with a skull sufficiently +hard to have entered the side of a tin chimney-top, precipitated upon +it by a gust of wind. + +Among all these a successful guess may here and there be risked at the +identity of the Andalucian leader of banditti, lounging about in search +of useful information. The contrabandistas are likewise in great +plenty. + + + + +LETTER XVII. + +CADIZ. ARRIVAL AT SEVILLE. + + +Seville. + +Cadiz is the last town in Europe I should select for a residence, had I +the misfortune to become blind. One ought to be all eyes there. It is +the prettiest of towns. After this there is no more to be said, with +regard, at least, to its external peculiarities. It possesses no +prominent objects of curiosity. There is, it is true, a tradition +stating it to have possessed a temple dedicated to Hercules; but this +has been washed away by the waves of the ocean, as its rites have been +by the influx of succeeding populations. Nothing can be more remote from +the ideas of the visitor to Cadiz, than the existence of anything +antique; unless it be the inclination to prosecute such researches: the +whole place is so bright and modern looking, and pretty in a manner +peculiar to itself, and unlike any other town,--since, like everything +else in Spain, beauty also has its originality. Nothing can be gayer +than the perspective of one of the straight, narrow streets. On either +side of the blue ribbon of sky, which separates the summits of its lofty +houses, is seen a confusion of balconies, and projecting +box-windows,--all placed irregularly--each house possessing only one or +two, so as not to interfere with each other's view, and some placed on a +lower story, others on a higher; their yellow or green hues relieving +the glittering white of the façades. Nor could anything improve the +elegant effect of the architectural ornaments, consisting of pilasters, +vases, and sculpture beneath the balconies, still less, the animated +faces--the prettiest of all Spain, after those of Malaga--whose owners +shew a preference to the projecting windows, wherever a drawing-room or +boudoir possesses one. + +The pavement of these elegant little streets, is not out of keeping with +the rest. It would be a sacrilege to introduce a cart or carriage into +them. A lady may, and often does, traverse the whole town on foot, on +her way to a ball. It is a town built as if for the celebration of a +continual carnival. Nor does the charge brought against the Gaditanas, +of devotion to pleasure, cause any surprise: were they not, they would +be misplaced in Cadiz. Hither should the victim of spleen and melancholy +direct his steps. Let him choose the season of the carnival. There is +reason to suspect that the advertiser in the Herald had this remedy in +view, when he promised a certain cure to "clergymen and noblemen, who +suffer from blushing and despondency, delusion, thoughts of self-injury, +and groundless fear:" these symptoms being indications of an attack of +that northern epidemy, which takes its name from a class of fallen +angels of a particular hue. + +In Cadiz, in fact, does Carnival--that modern Bacchus of fun, give a +loose to his wildest eccentricities--nor may those who are least +disposed to do homage to the god escape his all-pervading influence. All +laws yield to his, during his three days of Saturnalia. Not the least +eccentric of his code is that one, which authorizes the baptism of every +passenger in a street with the contents of jugs, bestowed from the fair +hands of vigilant angels who soar on the second-floor balconies. The +statute enjoins also the expression of gratitude for these favours, +conveyed with more or less precision of aim, in the form of hen's +eggs--of which there is consequently a scarcity on breakfast-tables on +the mornings of these festive days. At eleven o'clock each night, four +spacious buildings scarcely suffice for the masquerading population. + +But the paddles have been battering for some hours the waters of the +Guadalquivir, and we are approaching Seville, a city given to less +turbulent propensities--where Pleasure assumes a more timid gait, nor +cares to alarm Devotion--a partner with whom she delights, hand in hand, +to tread this marble-paved Paradise. The passage between Cadiz and +Seville, is composed of two hours of sea, and eight or nine of river. +The beautiful bay, and its white towns, with Cadiz itself, looking in +the sunshine like a palace of snow rising out of the sea--have no power +now to rivet the attention, nor to occupy feelings already glowing with +the anticipation of a sail between the banks of the Guadalquivir. A +ridge of hidden rocks lengthens the approach, compelling the pilot to +describe a large semicircle, before he can make the mouth of the river. +This delay is a violent stimulant to one's impatience. At length we have +entered the ancient Betis; and leaving behind the active little town of +St. Lucar, celebrated for its wines, and for those of the neighbouring +Xeres, of which it embarks large quantities--we are gliding between +these famous shores. + +Great, indeed, is the debt they owe to the stirring events that have +immortalized these regions, for they are anything but romantic. Nothing +can be less picturesque;--all the flatness of Holland, without the +cultivation, and the numerous well-peopled villages, which diminish the +monotonous effect. On the right are seen at some distance the wooded +hills of Xeres; but for scores of miles, on the opposite side, all is +either marsh, or half-inundated pasture, with here and there some +thinly-scattered olive trees, and herds of oxen for its sole living +occupants. At a few leagues from Seville, the increased frequency of the +olive grounds--a few villages and convents, and at length the darker +green masses of the orange groves, give rapidly strengthening +indications of approaching civilization; and you are landed a short +distance below the town, to reach which, it is necessary to traverse the +Christina Gardens. The cathedral occupies this southern extremity of the +city; and on your way to the inn, you may make an estimate of the length +of one side of its immense quadrangular enclosure. Immediately beyond +this you are received into the inevitable labyrinth of crooked lanes, +peculiar to an Arab town. + +The steam trip from Cadiz is so easy a day's journey, that no necessity +for repose or refitting interferes with the impatience of those who +arrive to explore the external town. You speedily, therefore, sally +forth, and thread a few of the mazy streets; but without venturing too +far, on account of the evident risk of losing your way. Should you +chance to stumble on the Plaza Mayor,--called Plaza de San +Francisco,--you are at once rewarded by the view of the _ayuntamiento_, +one of the most elegant edifices in Spain: otherwise the extreme +simplicity of the bare, irregular, but monotonous white houses, will +create disappointment--you will stare about in the vain search of the +magnificence, so much extolled, of this semi-Moorish capital, and +discover, that nothing can be plainer, more simple, more ugly, than the +exterior of the Seville habitations. At length, however, some open door, +or iron grille, placed on a line with an inner court, will operate a +sudden change in your ideas, and afford a clue to the mystery. Through +this railing, generally of an elegant form, is discovered a delicious +vista, in which are visible, fountains, white marble colonnades, +pomegranate and sweet lemon-trees, sofas and chairs (if in summer), and +two or three steps of a porcelain staircase. + +You now first appreciate the utility of the more than plain exteriors of +the houses of this town; and you admire an invention, which adds to the +already charming objects, composing the interior of these miniature +palaces, a beauty still greater than that which they actually possess, +lent by the effect of contrast. It is calculated that there are more +than eighty thousand white marble pillars in Seville. For this luxury +the inhabitants are indebted in a great measure to the Romans, whose +town, Italica, seated, in ancient times, on the opposite bank of the +river, four miles above Seville, and since entirely buried, furnished +the Arab architects with a considerable portion of their decorating +materials. + +In a future letter I hope to introduce you to the interior of some of +these abodes, where we shall discover that their inhabitants prove +themselves not unworthy of them, by the perfect taste and conception of +civilized life, with which their mode of existence is regulated. + +[Illustration: HALL OF AMBASSADORS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.] + + + + +LETTER XVIII. + +THE ARABS IN SPAIN. ALCAZAR OF SEVILLE. + + +Seville. + +The chief attraction of this most interesting of the provinces of the +Peninsula, consists in the numerous well preserved remains of Arab art. +The most sumptuous of their palaces are, it is true, no longer in +existence, nor the principal mosques, with the exception of the +metropolitan temple of Cordova: but there remain sufficient specimens to +shew, that their architecture had attained the highest excellence in two +of the principal requisites for excellence in that science--solidity and +beauty. + +The superiority of the Arabs in this branch of science and taste is so +striking, that all other departments of art, as well as the customs and +peculiarities of that race, and the events of their dominion in this +country, become at once the subjects of interest and inquiry. It is +consequently very satisfactory to discover that one can examine almost +face to face that people,--probably the most advanced in science and +civilization that ever set foot in Europe; so little are the traces of +their influence worn away, and so predominant is the portion of it still +discernible in the customs, manners, and race of the population of this +province, and even to a considerable extent in their language. + +There is something so brilliant in the career of the Arab people, as to +justify the interest excited by the romantic and picturesque (if the +expression may be allowed), points of their character and customs. Their +civilization appears to have advanced abreast with their conquests, and +with the same prodigious rapidity; supposing, that is, that previously +to their issuing from their peninsula, they were as backward as +historians state them to have been: a point not sufficiently +established. Sallying forth, under the immediate successors of Mahomet, +they commenced, in obedience to the injunction of their new faith, a +course of conquest unrivalled in rapidity. Their happy physical and +mental organization, enabled them to appropriate whatever was superior +in the arts and customs of the conquered nations; and whatever they +imitated acquired during the process of adaptation, new and more +graceful modifications. It has been asserted that they owed their +civilization to the Greeks; and, certainly, the first subjected +provinces being Greek, their customs could not but receive some +impression from the contact; but it is not probable that the Greeks were +altogether their instructors in civilization. Had such been the case +their language would probably have undergone a change, instead of +continuing totally independent of the Greek, and attaining to greater +richness. They are known to have possessed poets of eminence before the +appearance of Mahomet, consequently before they had any communication +with the Greeks; shortly after the commencement of their intercourse +with them, they shewed a marked superiority over them in geometry, in +astronomy, architecture, and medicine, and it would probably be found, +but for the destruction of so many Arab libraries, that they did not +yield to them in eloquence and poetic genius. + +Established in Spain, they carried the arts of civilization--the useful +no less than the elegant, to the highest perfection. They introduced +principles of agriculture adapted to the peculiarities of the country. +The chief requisite for a country, parched by a cloudless sun, being +water--they put in practice a complete system of irrigation, to which +the Spaniards are still indebted for the extraordinary fertility of +their soil. Many other arts that have since been permitted to dwindle +into insignificance, and some altogether to disappear, were bequeathed +by them. The Morocco preparation of leather is an instance of these +last. + +Their high chivalry, added to their moderation after victory, would have +divested even war of much of its barbarism, had they had to do with a +race less impenetrable, and more susceptible of polish than were the +iron legions of their Gothic antagonists. The persevering and repeated +acts of treachery practised by these, at last drew their civilized +adversaries, forcibly into the commission of acts of a similar +nature--it being frequently necessary in self-defence to adopt the same +weapons as one's enemy. When firmly settled in Spain, the Arabs no +longer appear to have taken the field with a view to conquest. +Abderahman the First, Almansor, and other conquerors, returned from +their victories to repose in their capital; contenting themselves with +founding schools and hospitals to commemorate their successes, without +making them instrumental to the increase of their domination. After this +time campaigns seem frequently to have been undertaken from motives of +emulation, and for the purpose of affording them opportunities for a +display of their prowess, and giving vent to their military ardour. They +considered an irruption on the hostile territory, or an attack on a +town, in the light of a tournament. The Christians, on the contrary, +fought with a view to exterminate, and without ever losing sight of +their main object--the expulsion of the Arabs and Moors from the +Peninsula. It was thus that they ultimately succeeded--a result they +probably would not have attained, had the Moorish leaders been actuated +by similar views, and displayed less forbearance. + +Much of the misapprehension which exists in Europe respecting this race +is attributable to the exaggerations of writers; much more to the +absence of reflection in readers, and to the almost universal practice +of bringing every act related of personages inhabiting remote and +half-known climes, to the test of the only customs and manners with +which we are familiar, and which we consider, for no other reason, +superior to all others--making no allowance for difference of education, +climate, tradition, race. An European, subjected to a similar process of +criticism, on the part of an inhabitant of the East, would certainly not +recognise his own portrait--a new disposition of light bearing upon +peculiarities, the existence of which had hitherto been unsuspected by +their owner; and he would manifest a surprise as unfeigned, as a +Frenchman once expressed in my hearing, on finding himself in a +situation almost parallel. Conversing on the subject of a play, acted +in Paris, in which an Englishman cut a ridiculous figure--a lady present +remarked, that, no doubt, in the London theatres the French were not +spared; upon which the Frenchman I allude to--a person possessed of +superior intelligence--exclaimed: "How could that be, since there was +nothing about a Frenchman that could be laughed at?" + +On reading of a reprehensible act attributed to a Mahometan, some will +brand Mahometanism in general, and of all times and places, with the +commission of the like crimes, placing the event at a distance of a +thousand leagues, or of a thousand years from its real place and date: +forgetting that power has been abused under all religions; and that we +only hear one side of the question with respect to all that relates to +the Oriental races--our information only reaching us through the medium +of writers of different and hostile faith. It is a singular fact that +the popular terror, which so long attached itself to the idea of a +Saracen, and which derived its origin from the conquests of the +Mahometans, has its equivalent in certain Mahometan countries. In some +parts of the empire of Morocco, the idea of a Christian is that of a +ruffian of immense stature and terrific features; calculated to inspire +the utmost fear in the breasts of all who approach him. Such is their +notion of his ferocity, that one of the emperors, Muley Ismael, in order +to terrify his refractory subjects into obedience, was in the habit of +threatening to have them eaten up by the Christians. + +From the inferior value set on human life by the races of the East, we +accuse them of barbarity: forgetting, that, owing to the absence of all +analogy between our origin, races, and education, we are incompetent to +appreciate their feelings, and the motives of their conduct, and have +consequently no right to condemn them. If we abstain from taking our +neighbour's life, we set also a proportionate value on our own: a native +of the East displays, it is true, less veneration for his own species. +Deeply impressed with the dogmas of his religion, which form the guide +of his every day life, the habit of acting up to the doctrines which he +has been taught to believe, diminishes his estimate of the value of +temporal life, whether that of others, or his own, which he exposes on +occasions on which we should not be inclined to do so. He does not take +life for cruelty's sake, nor without provocation. Were he to be +furnished with Arabian accounts of the treatment of a London or Paris +hackney-coach horse, he would think of the noble and friendly animal +which carries him to battle, and turn in disgust from such a page. + +The system practised at Constantinople of nailing to his door-post the +ear of the culprit detected in the employment of false weights, is, no +doubt, very discordant with our customs; but this mode of punishment is +said to be attended with such success, as to do away almost entirely +with the occasion for it. Were it adopted in some other capitals, it +would certainly at first disfigure many a neatly adorned entrance, and +give additional occupation to painters; but the result might possibly be +a more universal observance of the injunction contained in the eighth +commandment. As far as regards the Arabs of Spain, it may be securely +affirmed, that, during the course of their triumphs, and long before +they had attained their highest civilization, no cruelties were +exercised by them, which came near to the barbarity of those practised +subsequently by their Christian adversaries on victims of a different +creed, when in their power. We may instance the example set by St. +Ferdinand, who, it is said, when burning some Moors, piously stirred up +the fire himself in the public place of Palencia. + +It cannot, however, be denied that cases of cruelty have occurred, and +are related in history of the Arabs, although they are rare among those +of Spain; but, if cruel, the Arab never added hypocrisy to his cruelty. +After having ravaged all Andalucia with fire and famine, St. Ferdinand +formed the project of proceeding to Africa the following year, in order +to attack the inhabitants of that country. His death interrupted the +course of these humane projects. Being dropsical, and feeling his end +approaching, he called for his son Alphonso, afterwards his successor, +to whom this prince--cut off in the midst of his thirsty longings for +blood and slaughter--is related to have given "the counsels, which the +sentiments of piety, justice, and love for mankind, with which he was +filled, inspired so great a monarch." + +As for the degenerate modern tribes, descendants of some of the most +civilized of former days, we have witnessed their contest, _pro aris et +focis_, during the last few years, against a sample of the Christians of +to-day: the mode of making war is perfectly similar on both sides. + +It is a no less curious _travers_ of human nature, from its being an +almost universal one--that of which the modern Spaniards afford an +example. They apply the term "barbarians" to the descendants of their +Moorish compatriots, although they themselves have scarcely advanced a +step in civilization since the day that, in the public place of Granada, +Ferdinand the Catholic burned one million five thousand Arab books, +being all he could collect throughout Spain; showing what tremendous +power may be wielded by a single human hand, when applied to the task of +undoing. That King, by a single signature, accomplished an act which may +be considered as equivalent to retarding, by several centuries, the +civilization of a great country,--perhaps, even, to cutting it off from +the only opportunity it was destined to possess, during the present +ages, of arriving at the summit which the more privileged nations are +permitted to attain; while it influenced injuriously the progress of +letters, science, and art throughout Europe. But we will no longer allow +digressions to delay our visit to the Alcazar, where we shall find +visible proof of Arab superiority, at least, in architectural science +and invention. + +Passing to the east of the cathedral through the large open space, on +the left of which is the Archbishop's palace, and on the right the +cathedral and exchange, the embattled outer walls of the Alcazar stop +the view in front; varied here and there with square towers, and +containing in the centre an arched entrance. The present buildings +occupy the south-eastern corner of the ancient enclosure of the royal +residence, which comprised all the remaining space as far as the banks +of the river, passing round the south side of the cathedral, and, in +fact, including it in its precincts--an enclosure of about a mile and +a half in circumference. An old tower, or scrap of wall, indicates here +and there the position of the ancient buildings, the site of which is +now occupied by two or three _plazuelas_, or squares, and several +streets communicating between them. The present palace scarcely covers a +third of the original extent. + +[Illustration: FAÇADE OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.] + +Having passed through the first entrance, you are in a large square, +surrounded with buildings without ornament, and used at present as +government offices. At the opposite side another archway passes under +the buildings, and leads to a second large court. This communicates on +the left with one or two others; one of these is rather ornamental, and +in the Italian style, surrounded by an arcade supported on double +columns, and enclosing a garden sunk considerably below the level of the +ground. This court is approached by a covered passage, leading, as +already mentioned, from the left side of the second large square, the +south side of which--the side opposite to that on which we +entered--consists of the façade and portal of the inner palace of +all;--the Arab ornamental portion, the residence of the royal person. + +At the right-hand extremity of this front is the entrance to the first +floor, approached by a staircase, which occupies part of the building on +that side of the square, and which contains the apartments of the +governor. The staircase is open to the air, and is visible through a +light arcade. The centre portal of this façade is ornamented, from the +ground to the roof, with rich tracery, varied by a band of blue and +white _azulejos_, and terminating in an advancing roof of carved cedar. +Right and left, the rest of the front consists of a plain wall up to the +first floor, on which small arcades, of a graceful design, enclose +retreating balconies and windows. + +Entering through the centre door, a magnificent apartment has been +annihilated by two white partitions, rising from the ground to the +ceiling, and dividing it into three portions, the centre one forming the +passage which leads from the entrance to the principal court. Several of +the apartments are thus injured, owing to the palace being occasionally +used as a temporary lodging for the court. Passing across the degraded +hall, a magnificent embroidered arch--for the carving with which it is +covered more resembles embroidery than any other ornament--gives access +to the great court. + +It is difficult to ascertain what portion of this palace belongs to the +residence of the Moorish Kings, as Pedro the Cruel had a considerable +portion of it rebuilt by Moorish architects in the same style. The still +more recent additions are easily distinguished. One of them, in this +part of the edifice, is a gallery, erected by Charles the Fifth, over +the arcades of the great court. This gallery one would imagine to have +been there placed with a view to demonstrate the superiority of Arab art +over every other. It is conceived in the most elegant Italian style, and +executed in white marble; but, compared with the fairy arcades which +support it, it is clumsiness itself. The court is paved with white +marble slabs, and contains in the centre a small basin of the same +material, of chaste and simple form, once a fountain. The arcades are +supported on pairs of columns, measuring about twelve diameters in +height, and of equal diameter throughout. The capitals are in imitation +of the Corinthian. The entire walls, over and round the arches, are +covered with deep tracery in stucco; the design of which consists of +diamond-shaped compartments, formed by lines descending from the +cornice, and intersecting each other diagonally. These are indented in +small curves, four to each side of the diamond. In each centre is a +shell, surrounded by fanciful ornaments. The same design is repeated on +the inside of the walls, that is, under the arcade, but only on the +outer wall; and this portion of the court is covered with a +richly-ornamented ceiling of Alerce, in the manner called _artesonado_. + +On the opposite side of the court to that on which we entered, another +semicircular arch, of equal richness, leads to a room extending the +whole length of the court, and similar in form to that situated at the +entrance, possessing also an ornamental ceiling, but plainer walls. The +left and right sides of the court are shorter than the others. In the +centre of the left side, a deep alcove is formed in the wall, probably +occupied in former times by a sofa or throne: at present it is empty, +with the exception, in one corner, of a dusty collection of _azulejos_ +fallen from the walls, and exposing to temptation the itching palms of +enthusiasts. At the opposite end a large arch, admirably carved, and +containing some superb old cedar doors, leads to the Hall of +Ambassadors. This apartment is a square of about thirty-three feet, by +nearly sixty in height. It is also called the _media naranja_ +(half-orange), from the form of its ceiling. + +[Illustration: GREAT COURT OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.] + +In the centre of each side is an entrance, that from the court consists +of the arch just mentioned, forming a semicircle with the extremities +prolonged in a parallel direction. Those of the three other sides are +each composed of three arches of the horse-shoe form, or three-quarters +of a circle, and supported by two columns of rare marbles and jasper +surmounted by gilded capitals. The walls are entirely covered with +elegant designs, executed in stucco, the effect of which suffers from +a series of small arches, running round the upper part of the room, +having been deprived of their tracery to make room for the painted heads +(more or less resembling) of the kings of Spain, Goths and their +successors, excepting the Arabs and Moors. This degradation is, however, +forgotten from the moment the eye is directed to the ceiling. + +In the Arab architecture, the ornament usually becomes more choice, as +it occupies a higher elevation; and the richest and most exquisite +labours of the artist are lavished on the ceilings. The designs are +complicated geometrical problems, by means of which the decorators of +that nation of mathematicians and artists attained to a perfection of +ornament unapproached by any other style. From the cornice of this room +rise clusters of diminutive gilded semi-cupolas, commencing by a single +one, upon which two are supported, and multiplying so rapidly as they +rise, some advancing, others retreating, and each resting on a shoulder +of one below, that, by the time they reach the edge of the great cupola, +they appear to be countless. The ornament of this dome consists of +innumerable gilt projecting bands, of about two inches in width; these +intersect each other in an infinite profusion of curves, as they stretch +over the hemispherical space. The artist, who would make a pencil +sketch of this ceiling, should be as deep a geometrician as the +architect who designed it. + +On quitting the Hall of Ambassadors, we arrive at the best part of the +building. Passing through the arcade at the right-hand side, a long +narrow apartment is crossed, which opens on a small court called the +Court of Dolls (Patio de los Muceñas). No description, no painting can +do justice to this exquisite little enclosure. You stand still, gazing +round until your delight changes into astonishment at such an effect +being produced by immoveable walls and a few columns. A space, of about +twenty feet by thirty,--in which ten small pillars, placed at +corresponding but unequal distances, enclose a smaller quadrangle, and +support, over a series of different sized arches, the upper walls,--has +furnished materials to the artist for the attainment of one of the most +successful results in architecture. The Alhambra has nothing equal to +it. Its two large courts surpass, no doubt, in beauty the principal +court of this palace; but, as a whole, this residence, principally from +its being in better preservation and containing more, is superior to +that of Granada, always excepting the advantage derived from the +picturesque site of the latter. The Court of Dolls, at all events, is +unrivalled. + +[Illustration: COURT OF DOLLS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.[10]] + +The architect made here a highly judicious use of some of the best +gleanings from Italica, consisting of a few antique capitals, which, +being separated from their shafts, have been provided with others, +neither made for them, nor even fitted to them. The pillars are small, +and long for their diameter, with the exception of the four which occupy +the angles, which are thicker and all white. The rest are of different +coloured marbles, and all are about six feet in height. The capitals are +of still smaller proportions; so that at the junction they do not cover +the entire top of the shaft. This defect, from what cause it is +difficult to explain, appears to add to their beauty. + +The capitals are exquisitely beautiful. One in particular, apparently +Greek, tinged by antiquity with a slight approach to rose colour, is +shaped, as if carelessly, at the will of the sculptor; and derives from +its irregularly rounded volutes and uneven leaves, an inconceivable +grace. The arches are of various shapes, that is, of three different +shapes and dimensions, and whether more care, or better materials were +employed in the tracery of the walls in this court, or for whatever +other reason, it is in better preservation than the other parts of the +palace. It has the appearance of having been newly executed in hard +white stone. + +Through the Court of Dolls you pass into an inner apartment, to which it +is a worthy introduction. This room has been selected in modern times, +as being the best in the palace, for the experiment of restoring the +ceiling. The operation has been judiciously executed, and produces an +admirable effect. The design of this ceiling is the most tasteful of the +whole collection. Six or seven stars placed at equal distances from each +other, form centres, from which, following the direction of the sides of +their acute angles, depart as many lines; that is, two from each point; +or, supposing the star to have twelve points--twenty-four from each +star: but these lines soon change their directions, and intersecting +each other repeatedly, form innumerable small inclosures of an hexagonal +shape. The lines are gilt. Each hexagonal compartment rises in relief of +about an inch and a half from the surface, and is ornamented with a +flower, painted in brilliant colours on a dark ground. + +The room is twenty-four feet in height by only sixteen wide, and between +sixty and seventy in length. At the two ends, square spaces are +separated from the centre portion by a wall, advancing about two feet +from each side, and supporting an arch, extending across the entire +width. These arches were probably furnished with curtains, which +separated at will the two ends from the principal apartment, and +converted them into sleeping retreats. Their ornaments are still more +choice than those of the centre. With the exception of this room, all +the principal apartments, and the two courts, are decorated from the +ground upwards to a height of about five feet, with the _azulejos_, or +mosaic of porcelain tiles, the colours of which never lose their +brilliancy. + +The first floor is probably an addition made entirely subsequently to +the time of the Moors. It contains several suites of plain white-washed +rooms, and only two ornamental apartments, probably of Don Pedro's time. +These are equal to those on the ground floor with respect to the tracery +of the walls, unfortunately almost filled with white-wash; but their +ceilings are plainer. There is a gallery over the Court of Dolls, of a +different sort from the rest, but scarcely inferior in beauty to any +part of the edifice. The pillars, balustrades, and ceilings, are of +wood. + +One of the last mentioned apartments has an advantage over all the rest +of the palace, derived from its position. It opens on a terrace looking +over the antique gardens,--a view the most charming and original that +can be imagined. This room must be supposed to have been the boudoir of +Maria Padilla,--the object of the earliest and most durable of Pedro's +attachments; whose power over him outlived the influence of all his +future liaisons. It is indeed probable that the taste for this +residence, and the creation of a large portion of its beauties, are to +be attributed to the mistress, rather than to a gloomy and bloodthirsty +king, as Pedro is represented to have been, and whose existence was +totally unsuited to such a residence. In the Court of Dolls the portion +of pavement is pointed out on which his brother Don Fadrique fell, +slaughtered, as some say, by Pedro's own hand,--at all events in his +presence, and by his order. + +This monarch, were his palace not sufficient to immortalize him, would +have a claim to immortality, as having ordered more executions than all +the other monarchs who ever ruled in Spain, added together. It appears +to have been a daily necessity for him; but he derived more than +ordinary satisfaction when an opportunity could be obtained of ordering +an archbishop to the block. The see of Toledo became under him the most +perilous post in the kingdom, next to that of his own relatives: but he +occasionally extended the privilege to other archbishopricks. It is a +relief to meet with a case of almost merited murder in so sanguinary a +list. Such may be termed the adventure of an innocent man, who, seeing +before him a noose which closes upon everything which approaches it, +carefully inserts his neck within the circumference. + +This was the case of a monk, who, hearing that Pedro, during one of his +campaigns, was encamped in a neighbouring village, proceeded thither, +and demanded an audience. His request being immediately granted, no +doubt in the expectation of some valuable information respecting the +enemy's movements, the holy man commenced an edifying discourse, in +which he informed Don Pedro, that the venerabilissimo San Somebody (the +saint of his village) had passed a considerable time with him in his +dream of the previous night: that his object in thus miraculously +waiting upon him was, to request he would go to his Majesty, and tell +him, that, owing to the unpardonable disorders of his life, it was +determined he should lose the approaching battle. It was the unhappy +friar's last sermon; for in less than five minutes he had ceased to +exist. + +It stands to reason, that, owing to the retired habits of this friar, a +certain anecdote had never reached his ear relative to another member of +a religious fraternity. At a period that had not long preceded the event +just related, the misconduct of this sovereign had drawn down upon him +the displeasure of the head of the church.[11] The thunderbolt was +already forged beneath the arches of the Vatican; but a serious +difficulty presented itself. The culprit was likely to turn upon the +hand employed in inflicting the chastisement. At length a young monk, +known to a member of the holy synod as a genius of promise, energetic +and fertile in resources, was made choice of, who unhesitatingly +undertook the mission. He repaired to Seville, and after a few days' +delay, employed in combining his plan of operation, he got into a boat, +furnished with two stout rowers, and allowing the current to waft him +down the Guadalquivir, until he arrived opposite a portion of the bank +known to be the daily resort of the King, he approached the shore, and +waited his opportunity. + +At the accustomed hour the royal cavalcade was seen to approach; when, +standing up in the boat, which was not allowed to touch the shore, he +made signs that he would speak to the party. The monkish costume +commanded respect even from royalty, and Don Pedro reined in his horse. +The monk then inquired whether it would gratify his Majesty to listen to +the news of certain remarkable occurrences that had taken place in the +East, from which part of the world he had just arrived. The King +approached, and ordered him to tell his story: upon which he unrolled +the fatal document, and with all possible rapidity of enunciation read +it from beginning to end. + +Before it was concluded, the King had drawn his sword, and spurred his +horse to the brink of the water; but at his first movement the boat had +pushed off,--the reader still continuing his task,--so that by the time +Pedro found himself completely excommunicated, his rage passing all +bounds, he had dashed into the water, directing a sabre cut, which only +reached the boat's stern. He still, however, spurred furiously on, and +compelled his horse to swim a considerable distance; until, the animal +becoming exhausted, he only regained the shore after being in serious +danger of drowning. It may easily be imagined that the papal messenger, +satisfied with his success, avoided the contact of terra firma, until he +found himself clear of Pedro's dominions. + +Quitting the room--that of Maria Padilla (according to my conjecture) by +the door which leads to the terrace, you look down on a square portion +of ground, partitioned off from the rest by walls, against which +orange-trees are trained like our wall-fruit trees, only so thickly that +no part of the masonry is visible. All the walls in the garden are thus +masked by a depth of about eight inches of leaves evenly clipped. In the +fruit season the effect is admirable. The small square portions next to +the palace thus partitioned off are laid out in flower-beds, separated +by walks of mixed brick and porcelain, all of which communicate with +fountains in the centres. The fountains, simple and destitute of the +usual classical menagerie of marine zoology and gods and goddesses, +whose coöperation is so indispensable in most European gardens to the +propulsion of each curling thread or gushing mass of the cold +element,--derive all their charm from the purity and taste displayed in +their design. One of the most beautiful of them consists merely of a +raised step, covered with _azulejos_, enclosing a space of an hexagonal +form, in the centre of which the water rises from a small block of +corresponding form and materials. The mosaic is continued outside the +step, but covers only a narrow space. + +[Illustration: FOUNTAINS AT THE ALCAZAR.] + +The terrace stretches away to the left as far as the extremity of the +buildings, the façade of which is hollowed out into a series of +semicircular alcoves; there being no doors nor windows, with the +exception of the door of the room through which we issued. The alcoves +are surrounded with seats, and form so many little apartments, untenable +during the summer, as they look to the south, but forming excellent +winter habitations. Arrived at the extremity of the palace front, the +promenade may be continued at the same elevation down another whole side +of the gardens, along a terrace of two stories, which follows the outer +enclosure. This terrace is very ornamental. From the ground up to a +third of its height, its front is clothed with the orange-tree, in the +same manner as the walls already described. Immediately above runs a +rustic story of large projecting stones, which serves as a basement for +the covered gallery, or lower of the two walks. This gallery is closed +on the outside, which is part of the town wall. The front or garden side +is composed of a series of rustic arches, alternately larger and +smaller, formed of rugged stones, such as are used for grottoes, and of +a dark brown colour--partly natural, partly painted. + +The arches are supported by marble columns, or rather fragments of +columns,--all the mutilated antique trunks rummaged out of Italica. For +a shaft of insufficient length a piece is found of the dimensions +required to make up the deficiency, and placed on its top without mortar +or cement. Some of the capitals are extremely curious. Among them almost +every style may be traced, from the Hindoo to the Composite: but no one +is entire, nor matched with any part of the column it was originally +destined to adorn. Over this gallery is the open terrace, which +continues that of the palace side on the same level. The view extends in +all directions, including the gardens and the surrounding country; for +we are here at the extremity of the town. At the furthest end the +edifice widens, and forms an open saloon, surrounded with seats, +glittering with the bright hues of the _azulejos_. + +From these terraces you look down on the portion of the garden in which +the royal arms are represented, formed with myrtle-hedges. Eagles, +lions, castellated towers,--all are accurately delineated. Myrtle-hedges +are also used in all parts of the gardens as borders to the walks. It is +a charming evening's occupation to wander through the different +enclosures of these gardens, which, although not very extensive, are +characterised by so much that is uncommon in their plan and ornaments, +that the lounger is never weary of them. Nor is the visible portion of +their attractions more curious than the hidden sources of amusement +and--ablution, by means of which an uninitiated wanderer over these +china-paved walks, may be unexpectedly, and more than necessarily +refreshed. By means of a handle, concealed--here in the lungs of some +bathing Diana in the recesses of her grotto--here in the hollow of a +harmless looking stone--an entire line of walk is instantaneously +converted into a stage of hydraulics--displaying to the spectator a long +line of embroidery, composed of thousands of silver threads sparkling in +the sunshine, as issuing from unseen apertures in the pavement they +cross each other at a height of a few feet from the ground, forming an +endless variety of graceful curves. Almost all the walks are sown with +these _burladores_, as they are termed. + +A large portion of the grounds consists of an orange-grove, varied with +sweet lemon-trees. The trees are sufficiently near to each other to +afford universal shade, without being so thickly planted as to interfere +with the good-keeping of the grass, nor with the movement of promenading +parties. In the centre of this grove is a beautiful edifice,--a square +pavilion entirely faced, within and without, with the _azulejos_, with +the exception only of the roof. Around it is a colonnade of white +marble, enclosing a space raised two feet above the ground, and +surrounded by a seat of the same mosaic. The interior is occupied by a +table, surrounded with seats. + +The subterranean baths, called the baths of Maria Padilla, are entered +from the palace end of the garden. They extend to a considerable +distance under the palace, and must during the summer heats, have been a +delightfully cool retreat. + +This _alcazar_ is probably the best specimen of a Moorish residence +remaining in Europe. The Alhambra would, no doubt, have surpassed it, +but for the preference accorded by the Emperor, Charles the Fifth, to +its situation over that of Seville: owing to which he contented himself +with building a gallery over the principal court at the latter; while at +Granada, he destroyed a large portion of the old buildings, which he +replaced by an entire Italian palace. At present the ornamented +apartments of the Seville palace are more numerous, and in better +preservation than those of the Alhambra. + +Both, however, would have been thrown into the shade, had any +proportionate traces existed of the palace of Abderahman the Third, in +the environs of Cordova. Unfortunately nothing of this remains but the +description. It is among the few Arab manuscripts which escaped the +colossal _auto-da-fé_ of Ferdinand and Isabella, and would appear too +extravagant to merit belief, but for the known minuteness and accuracy +of the Arab writers, proved by their descriptions of the palaces and +other edifices which remain to afford the test of comparison. + +The immense wealth lavished by these princes, must also be taken into +consideration, and especially by the Caliphs of Cordova, who possessed a +far more extended sway than belonged to the subsequent dynasties of +Seville and Granada. According to a custom prevalent at their court, +rich presents were offered to the sovereign on various occasions. Among +others, governors of provinces, on their nomination, seldom neglected +this practical demonstration of gratitude. This practice is to this day +observed at the court of the Turkish Sultan, and serves to swell the +treasury in no small degree. Abderahman the Third, having granted a +government to the brother of his favourite, Ahmed ben Sayd, the two +brothers joined purses, and offered a present made up of the following +articles--accompanied by delicate and ingenious compliments in verse, +for the composition of which they employed the most popular poet of the +day:--Four hundred pounds weight of pure gold; forty thousand sequins in +ingots of silver; four hundred pounds of aloes; five hundred ounces of +amber; three hundred ounces of camphor; thirty pieces of tissue of gold +and silk; a hundred and ten fine furs of Khorasan; forty-eight +caparisons of gold and silk, woven at Bagdad; four thousand pounds of +silk in balls; thirty Persian carpets; eight hundred suits of armour; a +thousand shields; a hundred thousand arrows; fifteen Arabian, and a +hundred Spanish horses, with their trappings and equipments; sixty young +slaves--forty male, and twenty female. + +The palace near Cordova, erected by this sovereign, was called Azarah +(the Flower) after the name of his favourite mistress. Its materials +consisted entirely of marble and cedar wood; and it contained four +thousand three hundred columns. It was sufficiently spacious to lodge +the whole court, besides a guard of cavalry. The gardens, as was usual +with the Arabs, formed the part of the residence on which were lavished +the greatest treasures of wealth, and the choicest inventions of taste. +The fountains were endless in number and variety. On one of the most +picturesque spots was situated an edifice called the Caliph's Pavilion. +It consisted of a circular gallery of white marble columns with gilded +capitals; in the centre rose a fountain of quicksilver, imitating all +the movements of water, and glittering in the sun with a brightness too +dazzling for the eye to support. Several of the saloons of this palace +were ornamented with fountains. In one, which bore the name of the +Caliph's Saloon, a fountain of jasper contained in the centre a golden +swan of beautiful workmanship--and over it hung from the ceiling a +pearl, which had been sent from Constantinople as a present from the +Greek Emperor to Abderahman. The mosque of this palace surpassed in +riches, although not in size, the Aljama of Cordova. + +These were monuments worthy to have kings and caliphs for architects, +for such they had. There is no doubt that the palace of Azahrah was +planned and designed by the Caliph himself; and the founder of that +dynasty, Abderahman the First, not only designed the magnificent mosque +of Cordova, but presided daily over the progress of its erection. +Possessed, as these sovereigns were, as well as all the well-born +portion of their nation, of a highly cultivated education, the intervals +of leisure, left them by war, were rarely thrown away in idleness. +Abderahman the First was a poet, besides being a mathematician, an +architect, and the first soldier of his time. Some of his writings have +been preserved, and are among the Arab works collected and translated by +Condé into Spanish. The following stanzas, addressed to a palm-tree, +must be, as is always the case, still more beautiful in the original, +although charming in the Spanish. The monarch of the Western Empire, +after having vanquished his enemies, and pacified his dominions,--beloved +by his subjects and by all who approached him, and possessed of the +resources of science to occupy his mind, was nevertheless unhappy. He +preferred his home in Asia to the splendours of an imperial throne in +such a land as Andalucia. He caused a young palm-tree to be brought from +Syria, and planted in a garden formed by him in the environs of Cordova; +and it was his delight to sit in a tower constructed in the garden, and +gaze at his tree. + +It was to this tree he addressed the lines thus translated:-- + + Tu tambien, insigne palma, + Eres aqui forastera. + De Algarbe las dulces auras + Tu pompa halagan y besan. + En fecundo suelo arraigas, + Y al cielo tu cima elevas, + Tristes lagrimas lloraras, + Si qual io sentir pudieras. + + Tu no sientes contratiempos + Como io de suerte aviesa: + A mi de pena y dolor + Continuas lluvias me annegan. + Con mis lagrimas regue + Las palmas que el Forat riega, + Pero las palmas y el rio + Se olvidan de mis penas. + + Cuando mios infaustos hados, + Y de Al. Abas la fiereza + Mi forzaron de dexar + Del alma las dulces prendas; + A ti de mi patria amada + Ningun recuerda ti queda; + Pero io, triste, no puedo + Dexar de llorar por ella. + +It is probable that on the occasion of the surrender of Cordova to +Ferdinand the Third, the Moors destroyed their palace of Azarah, since +they were desirous of acting in a similar manner at Seville, with regard +to Geber's Tower. Perhaps from disgust at the idea that a monument, the +beauty and grandeur of which had inspired them with a sort of affection, +would be, being gazed at, trodden, and possibly disfigured, (as it +turned out) by those whom they looked upon as barbarians, and who would +not appreciate its perfection, they attempted to introduce a clause into +the conditions of the surrender of Seville, stipulating the destruction +of the tower. + +By way of testifying to the accuracy of the opinion they had formed of +their adversaries, Saint Ferdinand was on the point of agreeing to the +clause: when his son, afterwards his successor, Alonso el Sabio, perhaps +the only Christian present, who felt sufficient interest in a square +mass of masonry, to care how the question was decided, energetically +interfered, affirming that a single brick displaced, should be paid with +the lives of the whole population. + +This most perfect scientific monument left by the Arabs, for the +possession of which, after the architect, Europe is indebted to Alonso +the Tenth, we will presently examine, together with the cathedral, which +was afterwards erected, so as to include it in his plan. + + + + +LETTER XIX + +CATHEDRAL OF SEVILLE. + + +Seville. + +We have visited the most beautiful edifice in Seville; we are now +approaching the most magnificent. The native writers, participating +somewhat in the character attributed to the inhabitants of their +province, sometimes called the Gascony of Spain, declare this cathedral +to be the grandest in the world. This is going too far; setting aside +St. Peter's, and the Santa Maria del Fiore, the style of which renders +the comparison more difficult, the Duomo of Milan, of which this +building appears to be an imitation, must be allowed to be superior to +it, externally at least, if not internally. Had they ranked it as the +finest church out of Italy, they would not have been much in error, for +such it probably is. + +No one in approaching, excepting from the west, would imagine it to be a +Gothic edifice. You perceive an immense quadrangular enclosure, filled +apparently with cupolas, towers, pinnacles of all sorts and styles, but +less of the Gothic than any other. These belong to the numerous +accessory buildings, subsequently annexed to the church; such as +sacristies, chapels, chapter-hall, each subsequent erection having been +designed in a different style. The cathedral is inaccessible on the +south side, that which we first reach in coming from the Alcazar. It is +enclosed here within a long Italian façade of about thirty to forty feet +elevation, ornamented by a row of Ionic pilasters, supporting an elegant +frieze and balustrade. We therefore ascend the raised pavement, which, +bounded by a series of antique shafts of columns, surrounds the whole +enclosure; and having passed down the greater part of the east end, find +a small portal close to the Giralda, which admits to the church through +the court of orange-trees. Before we enter, we will look round on this +view, which possesses more of the Moorish character, than that which +awaits us in the interior. Some idea of the general plan of these +buildings will be necessary, in order that you may perfectly understand +our present point of view. + +I mentioned above, that the general enclosure formed a square. This +square, the sides of which face the four points of the compass, is +divided by a straight line into two unequal parts, one being about a +third wider than the other. The direction of the line is east and west; +to the south of it is the cathedral, to the north, the Moorish court of +orange-trees. The Arab Tower, now called the Giralda, stands in the +north-east angle of the cathedral, and the small door, through which we +have just entered, in the south-eastern angle of the court, is close by +it. + +The court is surrounded by buildings; for besides the church on its +south side, a chapel called the Sagrario, runs down the entire western +end. The east side and half the north are occupied by arcades, which +support the library, the gift of the son of Columbus to the cathedral; +and the remaining half side by a sacristy. The buildings of the east and +north sides lean against the old embattled wall on the outside. The +chapel of the Sagrario to the west is in the Italian style. Avenues of +orange-trees, and a marble fountain of a simple but choice design, are +the only objects which occupy the open space. Throughout it reigns an +eternal gloom, maintained by the frowning buttresses and pinnacles of +the cathedral, which overhang it from the south. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, SEVILLE.] + +A small doorway, near to that by which we entered the court, gives +access to the cathedral at all hours. On entering an almost more than +twilight would confuse the surrounding objects, did it immediately +succeed the sunshine of Andalucia; and were not the transition rendered +gradual to the eye by the deep shades of the orange court. As you +advance towards the centre nave, this darkness aids in producing the +effect of immensity, which is the next idea that presents itself. In +fact the enormous elevation and width of the edifice is such as at first +to overpower the imagination, and to deprive you of the faculty of +appreciating its dimensions. It produces a novel species of giddiness +arising from looking upwards. + +To arrive at the intersection of the principal nave and transept, you +traverse two side naves, both about eighty-five feet in height, and +spacious in proportion. The centre nave is a hundred and thirty-two +feet, but rises at the quadrangle, forming its intersection with the +transept about twenty feet higher. The ceiling here, and over the four +surrounding intercolumniations, is ornamented with a groining of +admirable richness. That of the centre quadrangle is here and there +tinged with crimson and orange tints, proceeding from some diminutive +windows placed between the lower and upper ceilings. + +After having sufficiently examined the upper view, the eye wanders over +the immense vacuum of the transept, and rests at length on the bronze +railings which, on the east, separate you from the high-altar, and on +the west from the choir. These are superb. + +That of the Capilla Mayor rises to an elevation of sixty feet, and is +throughout of the most elaborate workmanship. It is the work of a +Dominican monk, who also executed the two pulpits. The choir forms, as +usual, a sort of saloon, which occupies the centre of the church, that +is, in this instance, two of the five intercolumniations which reach +from the transept to the western portal. Passing round it, in the +direction of the western doors, where the view is more open, the plan +and style of the building are more easily distinguished. They are +remarkably simple. The area is a quadrangle of three hundred and +ninety-eight feet by two hundred and ninety-one, and is divided into +five naves by four rows of pillars, all of about sixty feet elevation. +The width of the centre nave and transept is fifty-nine feet, and the +whole is surrounded by chapels. The distance between the pillars, of +which there are only eight in each row, has the effect of generalizing +the view of the whole edifice, and imparting to it a grandeur which is +not obtained in the cathedral of Toledo, of almost equal dimensions; +while the smaller and less gaudily coloured windows shed a more +religious ray, and are preferable to those of Toledo, which, +magnificent in themselves, attract an undue share of the observation, +instead of blending into one perfect composition of architectural +harmony. + +Immediately above the arches of the principal nave and transept, at a +height of about ninety feet, runs a balustrade, the design of which +consists of a series of pointed arches. Above it are the windows, +reaching nearly to the ceiling. They are painted in rather dark tints, +and afford no more than a sort of _demi-jour_, which at the east end +decreases to twilight. Rather more light is admitted towards the western +extremity, from some windows of plain glass, in the lateral chapels, +without which the pictures they contain could not be viewed; but from +this end the high-altar is scarcely discernible. The simple grandeur of +this view loses nothing by the absence of all ornamental detail: the +portion most ornamented is the pavement, composed of a mosaic of the +richest marbles. About half-way between the portals and the choir, are +inserted two or three large slabs, bearing inscriptions; one of them is +to the memory of Christopher Columbus; another to his son. There are no +other details to draw the attention until we visit the chapels, in which +all the treasures of art are dispersed. A few pictures are scattered +here and there around the eastern part of the building; all of them are +good. A large one of Zurbaran, in the north transept, is a master-piece. +It represents St. Jerome, surrounded by an assembly of monks. + +At the west end of the northernmost nave, the first door opens to a vast +church, called the chapel of the Sagrario, already alluded to as forming +the western boundary of the orange-court. It is nearly two hundred feet +in length; in the Italian style; the orders Doric and Ionic, but loaded +with heavy sculpture in the worst taste. After this a series of chapels, +of a style analogous to the body of the edifice, succeed each other, +commencing with that of San Antonio, and continuing all round the +church. Several of them contain beautiful details of ornament, and +handsome tombs. That of the Kings should be mentioned as an exception, +with regard to the architecture, since its style is the _plateresco_. It +contains the tombs of Alonzo the Tenth, and his Queen Beatrix, with +several others. The most beautiful of these chapels is that of Nuestra +Señora la Antigua, situated on the south side, below the transept. It +forms a square of about thirty feet, and rises to an elevation of +upwards of eighty. The walls are divided into stories and compartments, +and covered, as is also the ceiling, with admirable frescos by Martinez +and Rovera. At a side door leading to the sacristy, are two beautiful +columns of _verde antico_. The high-altar is composed of jasper, from +quarries which existed at the distance of a few leagues from Seville. +The statues are by Pedro Cornejo; and there are handsome tombs let into +the lower part of the walls. Four antique chandeliers, one in each +corner, are designed with uncommon grace and originality. From the +summit of a short column rises a silver stem, from different parts of +which spring flat rods of the same metal, so slight as to bend with the +smallest weight: they are of various lengths, and at the extremity of +each waves an elegantly formed lamp. Each of these clusters assumes a +pyramidal form, and produces a charming effect when lighted up on days +of ceremony,--from their harmonizing with the rest of the decorations of +the chapel, no less than from the elegance of their form. + +Some of the chapels of this side, and east of the transept, communicate +with other buildings, erected subsequently to the principal edifice, and +consequently not comprised in its plan, nor analogous to its style. +Thus, after passing through the chapel called Del Mariscal, situated at +the south-east of the apse, you enter an anteroom, which leads to the +chapter-hall. The anteroom is an apartment of handsome proportions, +covered, in the intervals of a row of Ionic pilasters, with a series of +pieces of sculpture in white marble. The hall itself is magnificent. It +is an oval of fifty-seven feet in length, entirely hung with crimson +velvet enriched with gold embroidery. Another of the side chapels leads +to the smaller sacristy. I call it smaller because it is not so large as +that which adjoins the orange-court; but it is the principal of the two. +It is a superb saloon, upwards of seventy feet in length by about sixty +wide, ornamented with a profusion of rich sculpture. The architect was +Juan de Herrera. + +From the floor to a height of about four feet, a spacious wardrobe, +composed of large mahogany drawers, runs down the two longer sides of +the room. These contain probably the richest collection that exists of +gold and silver embroidered velvets and silks,--brocades--lace--scarfs +and mantles ornamented with precious stones: all these are the ornaments +belonging to altars and pulpits; robes, trains, and vestures of +different sorts, worn on occasions of ceremony by the principal +dignitaries. The cathedral of Seville is said to surpass all others in +these ornaments. + +In this sacristy are contained likewise the treasure of gold and silver +vessels, and basins; innumerable crosses, reliquaries, chalices, boxes, +and candlesticks; and, in an upright mahogany case of about twenty feet +elevation, lined with white silk, the front of which opens like a door, +stands the Custodia--a silver ornament about sixteen feet high, +including its base. On the day of the Corpus Christi, the Host is placed +in this Custodia, and carried in procession through Seville. The silver +of which it is composed weighs seven hundred weight. But it must not be +supposed from this circumstance that the ornament has a heavy +appearance. It is a tapering edifice containing four stories, ornamented +by as many orders of architecture. The general form is circular, +diminishing up to the summit, which supports a single statue. Each story +rests on twenty-four columns, most of which are fluted, and all, +together with their capitals, remarkable for their delicacy of finish. +Among these are numerous statues of saints, in whose costumes precious +stones are introduced. In that of the statue of Faith, which stands in +the centre of the lower story, are some of immense value. This ornament +was the work of Juan de Arfe, the Cellini of Spain. + +But the pictures are the richest treasure of this apartment. It is an +epitome of the Cathedral, which may be called a gallery--one of the +richest that exists--of the paintings of Spanish schools: consequently, +according to the opinion of many--one of the best of all galleries. The +pictures are not in great numbers, but they are well adapted to their +situation, being the largest in dimension, and among the most prominent +in value and merit, that have been produced by their respective +painters. + +By the greater portion of spectators, the Spanish artists, of what may +be called the golden age of painting, will always be preferred to the +Italian; because their manner of treating their subject, appeals rather +to the passions than to the understanding. It is the same quality which +renders the Venetian school more popular than the other schools of +Italy; and the Italian music more attractive than the German--Rossini +than Spohr or Beethoven. I do not mean that the preference will be the +result of choice, in an individual who appreciates the two styles +perfectly; but that the difference I allude to renders the works of the +greatest masters of Italy less easily understood. + +With all the intelligence and taste necessary for the appreciation of a +picture of Raffaelle, many will have had a hundred opportunities of +studying such a picture, and will nevertheless have passed it by, +scarcely noticed; merely, because on the first occasion of seeing it, +they have not immediately caught the idea of the artist, nor entered +sufficiently into his feelings to trace the sparks of his inspiration +scattered over the canvass. How many are there too careless to return to +the charge, and thus to acquire the cultivation necessary to enable them +to judge of such works, who the moment a Murillo, or a Zurbaran meets +their view, will gaze on it with delight, for the simple reason, that it +is calculated to strike the intelligence the least cultivated. + +The Spanish artists usually endeavoured to produce an exact imitation of +material nature; while the Italians aimed at, and attained higher +results. The object of the Spaniards being less difficult of attainment, +the perfection with which they imitated nature passes conception. To +that they devoted all the energies of their genius; while you may search +in vain in the best productions of Italy, not excepting the school of +Venice, the one that most resembles the Spanish,--for anything +approaching their success in that respect. By way of an example, in the +Spasimo of Raffaelle, we trace the operations of the mind, as they +pierce through every feature of every countenance, and the attitude of +every limb throughout the grouping of that great master-piece of +expression; from the brutal impatience of the one, and the involuntary +compassion of the other executioner, up to the intensity of maternal +suffering in the Virgin, and the indescribable combination of heaven and +earth, which beams through the unequalled head of the Christ; but there +is no deception to the eye. No one would mistake any of the figures for +reality; nor exclaim that it steps from the canvass; nor does any one +wish for such an effect, or perceive any such deficiency. + +What, on the contrary, was the exclamation of Murillo before Campana's +Descent from the Cross? This master-piece of Pedro de Campana is seen at +the head of the sacristy of the cathedral. It was so favourite a picture +with Murillo, that he used to pass much of his time every day, seated +before it. On one occasion, his presence being required on an affair of +importance, which he had forgotten, his friends found him at his usual +post before the Descent; when, pointing to the figure of the Christ, he +replied to their remonstrances, "I am only waiting until they have taken +him down." + +Although Murillo admired this perfect representation of material nature, +his own works are exceptions, in fact almost the only exceptions, to +this peculiarity of the Spanish masters. He partakes, indeed, of the +qualities of both schools in an eminent degree. In intellectual +expression and delineation of the operations of the mind, he is superior +to all his countrymen, but inferior to the first Italian painters. In +the material imitation of nature, he is superior to the greater number +of the Italians, but inferior to the other principal Spanish artists. +There is, at Madrid, a Christ on the Cross, of his, in which he has +attempted this effect--an effort he ought rather to have despised. The +picture contains no other object than the figure, and the cross of +admirably imitated wood, on a simple black, or rather dark brown +background, representing complete darkness. After sitting a short time +before it, you certainly feel a sort of uncomfortable sensation, caused +by the growing reality of the pale and tormented carcass; but it is not +to be compared to the Descent of Campana. There the whole group is to +the life, and no darkness called in to aid the effect. The drooping body +is exposed to a powerful light, and hangs its leaden weight on the arms +of those who support it, with a reality perfectly startling. + +This picture is placed in the centre of the upper end of the sacristy, +as being considered the best of those therein contained: but it is not +without rivals. The few paintings placed here are first rate; +particularly the portraits of the two archbishops of Seville, San +Leandro, and San Isidore--two of Murillo's most exquisite productions. +Some of the greatest compositions of this painter are contained in the +chapels we have passed in review, where they serve for altar-pieces, +each filling an entire side of a chapel. Of these large pictures, I +think the best on the side we are visiting is the Saint Francis. The +Saint is represented kneeling to a vision of the Virgin. It may +certainly be ranked among Murillo's best efforts in the style he +employed, when treating these celestial subjects, and which has been +called his vaporous manner. To speak correctly, two of his three manners +are employed in this picture, since the Saint is an instance of that +called his warm manner. + +On the opposite or north side of the cathedral, in the first chapel +after passing the door of the Sagrario, is the San Antonio. This is +probably the greatest work of Murillo in the two styles just mentioned, +and certainly the most magnificent picture contained in the cathedral. +On the lower foreground is the Saint, in adoration before the Christ, +who appears in the centre, surrounded by the Heavenly Host. + +No one but Murillo could ever have thus embodied his conception of a +supernatural vision. On sitting down before this canvass, from which, as +it extends across the whole chapel, no other object can draw off the +attention, you speedily yield to the irresistible power of abstraction, +and are lost in an ecstacy, nearly resembling that which the artist has +sought to represent in the countenance and attitude of his Saint. The +eye wanders in a sort of trance through the glorious assemblage of +Heaven. The whole scene looks real: but it is only on taking time to +study the details that you discover the prodigies of talent displayed in +the drawing and finishing of this picture. An angel, suspended in front +of the lower portion of the group, more especially attracts the +attention. One leg is extended towards the spectator, the foreshortening +of which is a marvel of execution. + +Over the San Antonio, as it does not reach to the ceiling, there is a +smaller picture, representing the Baptism of Christ, also by Murillo. In +a chapel at the south-west angle of the church, there are several fine +paintings by Luis de Vargas, one of the founders of the school of +Seville. + +In the choir, the collection of books for the chanting services is worth +seeing. Of these immense folios, enclosed in massive covers, bound with +a profusion of wrought metal mostly silver--may be counted upwards of a +hundred. They are filled with paintings, infinite in minuteness and +beauty. For the performances of the daily services and all duties, +ordinary and extraordinary, within this edifice, more than eight hundred +persons are employed. Five hundred masses are recited each day at the +different altars: all of which taking place during the early part of the +day, an idea may be formed of the business which goes on. Of the six or +seven organs, I have heard three playing at the same time in different +parts of the church; but so widely separated, as by no means to +interfere with each other's harmony. One of them was one of the two +great organs which face each other over the choir. These two play a duet +once a year, on the day of the Corpus. The effect they produce is not so +powerful as that produced at Toledo, but far more beautiful. At Toledo +the two which correspond to these, are assisted on that occasion by a +third, as powerful as both the others united, placed over the portal of +the south transept, at an elevation of about seventy feet from the +ground. + +Among the ceremonies of the cathedral of Seville is one sufficiently +unique to be deserving of notice. _El baile de los seis_ (dance of the +six), is performed by eight youths--probably by six originally--every +evening during the feast of the Conception. It takes place in front of +the high-altar, on which her statue is placed on that occasion. The +service is one of especial solemnity; and, as such, accompanied, +unfortunately as on all such occasions, by an orchestra of violins, to +the exclusion of the organs. The singing commences at four o'clock in +the afternoon, in the choir, and continues until half-past six, when all +move in procession through the great railing, across the transept, and +ascend the flight of steps which lead to the Capilla Mayor. Here they +take their seats according to rank, on benches placed in rows from east +to west, fronting a space which is left open down the centre, in front +of the altar. The orchestra occupies a corner near the railing; and on +the two front benches are seated--four facing four--the eight youths, +dressed in the ancient Spanish costume, all sky blue silk and white +muslin, and holding each his hat, also light blue, with a flowing white +feather. + +The chorus now recommences, but speedily drops; when the orchestra +sounds a beautiful air in the waltz measure. This is played once by the +instruments alone, and joined the second time by the voices of the eight +boys, or youths of the age of sixteen to eighteen; who, after having +accompanied a short time, start to their legs, and continue in the same +strain. At the next reprise they all, as if by word of command, place +their hats on their heads, and one or two minutes after, the chant still +continuing, advance, and meet in the centre, then return each to his +place; advance a second time, and turn round each other, using the waltz +step. + +After singing and dancing for about a quarter of an hour, the voices are +exchanged for the sounds of castagnettes, which they have held all this +time in their hands, and the measure becomes more animated; and thus +they terminate the performance. The same ceremony is repeated each night +of the seven; only varying the air of the waltz, of which they have two. + +This ceremony, now belonging exclusively to the cathedral of Seville, +was originally performed in some other cathedrals; but has been +gradually laid aside in all the others, having been found to occasion +irreverent behaviour among a portion of the spectators. It was +originally introduced among the observances in honour of the anniversary +of the Conception, as a natural manifestation of joy; and such a genuine +Spanish bolero would have been: but the slow time of the music, and the +measured movements, adopted for the purpose of suiting the performance +to the solemnity of the place, have changed the nature of the dance, and +deprived it of everything approaching to cheerfulness. + + + + +LETTER XX. + +SPANISH BEGGARS. HAIRDRESSING. THE GIRALDA. CASA DE PILATOS. +MONASTERIES. ITALICA. + + +Seville. + +Mendicity is one of the Curiosities--and not the least picturesque +one--of this antique country. There should be a Mendicity Society for +its preservation, together with other legacies of the middle ages. An +entertaining book might be filled with its annals and anecdotes. + +Nowhere, I should think, can beggary be a more lucrative calling. The +convents having been the inexhaustible providence of these tribes, on +their suppression the well-born and bred Spaniards consider the charge +to have devolved upon them, in the absence of all possible legislation +on the subject: and few, especially of the fair sex, turn a deaf ear to +the mute eloquence of the open hand. Even a stranger, if possessed of an +ear, resists with difficulty the graceful appeal of the well trained +proficient: _Noble caballero, un ochavito por Dios._--A blind girl made +no request; but exclaimed--"Oh that the Virgin of Carmen may preserve +your sight!" + +The mendicants are classified, and assume every form of external +humanity. Being in the coach-office near the Plaza del Duque, a tall +well-dressed man, dangling a dark kid glove, entered, and, walking up to +the book-keeper, after having carefully closed the door, made some +communication to him in a low voice. The other replied in a similar +tone, and they parted with mutual bows. I was puzzled on the man's +turning to me and observing that the beggars were very annoying in +Seville; but still certain my conjecture could not but be erroneous, I +said "you don't mean to say that your acquaintance"--"Oh, no +acquaintance; I never saw him before: he only came to beg." + +This species of _cavallero_ pauper should by no means be encouraged; he +is not of the picturesque sort. Nowhere do the wretches look their +character better than at Seville; as all admirers of Murillo can +testify, without consulting any other nature than his canvass. But these +consider they confer a sort of obligation on the individual they +condescend to apply to. Nothing can exceed their astonishment and +indignation when refused. Their great highway is the superb polished +mosaic marble of the Cathedral; where they divide the authority with the +embroidered dignitaries of the choir. It is useless to hope for an +instant's leisure for the contemplation of this unique temple, until you +have disposed of its entire population of ragged despots. + +A sort of chivalrous etiquette is observed, in virtue of which a female +chorus is the first to form your escort from pillar to pillar. These +dismissed, you are delivered over to the barefooted Murillos. There are +two modes of escape. The rich man should go in with his two hands filled +with coin, and distribute to all, even to many who will return for a +second contribution before he has done. But if economical, you may +attain the same end, and more permanently, by sacrificing four or five +days to walking up and down the nave, without looking at anything, but +simply undergoing the persecution of the mob. After the fourth visit you +will be left in peace. + +These counsels I am competent to give you from dreadful experience; more +dreadful from my having pursued a middle course. To one barefooted and +rotten-scalped embryo brigand I only gave a two-_quarto_ piece +(halfpenny) about equal in real consequence to twopence in England. If +you have ever seen, in the era of mail coaches, the look of quiet +surprise on the countenance of the well-fed charioteer, who, having, +after the sixth or seventh stage, opened the door, and muttered from +behind his _cache-nez_ the usual "coachman, gen'lemen" received a +long-searched-for deprecatory sixpence from some careful knight with a +false shirt-collar--you have noticed the self-same look, which was +leisurely transferred by the urchin from the piece of copper in the open +palm to my face, and back to the piece of copper. + +Instead, however, of restoring it to me, his indignation seemed to +inspire him with a sudden resolution. He rushed to a kneeling Señorita a +few paces distant, and interrupting her devotions by a pull at the side +of her mantilla, he showed the coin in the open hand, while with the +other he pointed to the culprit. If he meditated revenge, he should have +made another choice, instead of deranging a garment, from the folds of +which a real Andalucian mouth and pair of eyes, turning full on me, +aimed a smile which, I need not inform you, was not dear at two +_quartos_. + +Could such a smile have been natural, and the expression of mere +curiosity, or was it intended for a death-wound, dealt for another's +vengeance? and did the velvet language of those eyes signify a horrible +"Pallas te hoc vulnere," in favour of the ragamuffin I had offended? At +all events, the incident lost him a more munificent remuneration, by +driving me from the spot, and expelling from my head, a project +previously formed, of inviting him to my _fonda_ to be sketched. + +With regard to the oft and still recurring subject of Spanish beauty, +you are hereby warned against giving ear to what may be said by +tourists, who, by way of taking a new view of an old subject, simply +give the lie to their predecessors. It is true, that in the central +provinces, the genuine characteristic Moro-Iberian beauty is rare, and +that there is little of any other sort to replace it; but this is not +the case with Andalucia, where you may arrive fresh from the perusal of +the warm effusions of the most smitten of poets, and find the Houris of +real flesh and blood, by no means overrated. + +One of their peculiar perfections extends to all parts of the Peninsula. +This is the hair; everywhere your eye lights upon some passing specimen +of these unrivalled masses of braided jet; at which not unfrequently +natives of the same sex turn with an exclamation--Que pelo tan hermoso! + +I surprised the other day a village matron, whose toilette, it being a +holiday afternoon, was in progress in no more secluded a _tocador_ than +the middle of the road. The rustic lady's-maid (whether the practice be +more or less fashionable I know not) had placed on a stool, within reach +of her right hand as she stood behind her seated mistress, a jug of +fresh water. This did she lift, just as I approached, up to her mouth, +into which she received as large a portion of its contents as could be +there accommodated; while with her left hand she grasped the extremity +of a mass of silken hair, black as the raven's wing, and an ell in +length. Both hands now, stroking down the mass, spread it out so as to +present a horizontal surface of as large an extent as possible, when, +suddenly, from the inflated cheeks of the abigail, re-issued with a loud +sound the now tepid liquid, and bathed the entire surface, which it +seemed to render, if possible, still more glossy than before. The rest +of the duty of the hands appeared to consist in repeatedly separating +and replacing the handfuls, until the same proceeding was reacted. + +The entrance to the Giralda is outside the cathedral. Before we make the +ascent, we will walk to the extremity of the Moorish enclosure of the +orange-court, along the raised pavement which surrounds the whole. At +the angle there is an antique shaft of granite, higher than the rest of +those placed at equal distances along the edge of the pavement. From +that point the proportions of the tower are seen to advantage, while you +are at the same time sufficiently near to observe the details of the +carving, and of the windows, with their delicately formed columns of +rare marbles; and to lose in a great measure the effect of the +subsequent additions, which surmount and disfigure the work of Geber. + +The Arabian part of the building is a square of about forty-five feet, +and measures in elevation four times its width. The ornaments are not +exactly alike on all the four sides. On the north side (our present +view) the tracery commences at a height of eighty feet, up to which +point the wall of brick is perfectly plain and smooth, with only the +interruption of two windows, placed one above the other in the centre. +The ornament, from its commencement to the summit, is divided into two +lofty stories, surmounted by a third, of half the height of one of the +others. The two first are divided vertically into three parts by narrow +stripes of the plain wall. The centre portions contain two windows in +each story, one over the other, making, with the two in the lower +portion, six altogether, which are at equal distances from each other. +The form of these windows is varied, and in all uncommonly elegant; some +are double, with a marble column supporting their two arches, and all +are ornamented round the arches with beautiful tracery, and furnished +with marble balconies. At one of the balconies, the Muezzin, in +Mahometan times was accustomed to present himself at each of the hours +appointed for prayer, and to pronounce the sentences ordained by that +religion for calling the people. The half-story at the summit is +ornamented with a row of arches, supported by pilasters. + +On the top of the tower were seen originally, four gilded balls of +different sizes, one over the other, diminishing upwards; the iron bar +on which they were fixed, was struck by lightning, and gave way, leaving +the balls to roll over; since which period they were never restored to +their place. + +The additional buildings were not erected until the seventeenth century. +They are not in themselves inelegant, with the exception of the portion +immediately rising from the old tower, and containing the bells. This +portion is of the same width as the tower, and appears to weigh it down +with its heavy effect; on the summit of the whole, at about three +hundred feet from the ground, is a colossal statue of bronze, +representing Faith, holding in one hand a shield, and in the other an +olive-branch. By means of the shield, the statue obeys the movements of +the wind, and thus gives the name of Giralda (weather-cock) to the +tower. + +An interior tower, rather more than twenty feet square, runs up the +whole height of the Moorish portion of the building; between which and +the external walls an easy ascent is contrived on an inclined plane. The +necessity of introducing light throughout the ascent accounts for the +different elevation of the windows and ornaments of the different sides; +but the architect has so managed this difficulty, that no bad effect is +produced in the external view. At the lower part of the tower the ascent +is sufficiently wide to admit of the passage of two men on horseback +abreast; but it becomes narrower as it approaches the summit. Queen +Christina is said to have been drawn up in a small carriage. The walls, +both of the inner and outer tower, increase in thickness as they rise, +and as the ascending plane decreases in width: a plan which appears +opposed to the principle usually adopted by modern architects. + +It is known that Geber was the architect of the Giralda, but no +certainty exists respecting its date. The Spanish antiquarian Don +Rodrigo Caro supposes it to have been erected during the reign of +Benabet Almucamus, King of Seville, shortly before the appearance in +Spain of the Almoravides; but this is no more than a conjecture, founded +on the supposed wealth of that King, who possessed larger states than +his successors, and who paid no tribute to the sovereigns of Castile. + +Immediately over the highest story of the Moorish tower is the belfry. +The bells are suspended on the centre of revolving beams, which traverse +the open arches of the four faces of the tower. They are consequently in +full view, as they throw their somersets and send forth their lively +clatter on a _dia de fiesta_. + +Their effect is very original, and as unlike as possible to the +monotonous and melancholy cadence of an English peal. None of them are +deep-toned nor solemn, but all high and sharp: so that being let loose +in merry disorder, and without tune, they somehow appear to harmonize +with the brilliant skies, just as the descending ding-dong in England +suits the gloom of the northern heavens. Leave Seville, and never shall +their tones steal on your memory without your being transported into a +blaze of bright sunshine. + +In Spain the houses of the grandees are not called palaces, as those of +the same rank in Italy are usually termed. There is not even an +intermediate term, such as mansion,--still less the hall--abbey, or +castle. They have the last, but only applied in cases in which it is +correctly and legitimately applicable. The Arab expression _alcazar_, +composed of the article _al_ and _cazar_, is so like the Spanish _la +casa_ (the house), that, not having at hand a professor of Arabic to +consult, I will risk the assertion that it bore the same meaning; +notwithstanding the opinion of several French writers who translate it +_château_. Chenier, author of the history of Morocco, derives it from +the word Caissar, which he considers synonymous with Cæsar: but this +derivation appears to admit of much doubt, as the word would signify the +Emperor, instead of his residence. Supposing it to signify the house, it +must no doubt have meant the principal, or royal house. At present the +two words are admitted into the Spanish language as one, which is +applied indiscriminately to royal town-residences, whether castles or +not, as well as the term _palacio_. But a private residence of whatever +extent is modestly termed a house. + +In this instance, as in many others, the proud contempt of high-sounding +phraseology is common to Spain and England, where some of the most +palace-like habitations are called Wentworth House, Hatfield House, +Burleigh House: the very porters' lodges being sometimes such edifices +as would claim the title of _château_ in some other countries. But this +same haughty modesty is rather individual than collective, and does not +prevail as applied to towns and cities. In public acts and addresses, +and even in the most homely precautionary warnings placarded at the +corners of streets or promenades, the form used is,--"The constitutional +Alcalde of this heroic and very invincible town of Madrid, or Seville, +forbids, or orders, &c.;" and still more splendid epithets are found for +the nation in general. + +I don't know whether it has occurred to you that this progressive +dereliction of consistency is universal in human nature, although it +assumes a variety of forms. In the present instance modesty commences at +home, as they say charity should. + +By the way, if charity should commence at home, together with the other +affections of the heart, such as patriotism, then did the first Brutus +make a mistake. If, on the contrary, his merit was great in sacrificing +his son to his nation, it follows, that, in causing his entire nation to +be butchered the first time they were guilty of any encroachment on the +rights of the rest of the world, his glory would have increased in the +ratio of one to some millions. + +He either acted on a principle of justice, or preferred the applause of +his compatriots to the affection of his son. If, therefore, an +opportunity was ever afforded him of doing the world the above-mentioned +act of justice at the expense of his countrymen, and he abstained from +it,--it being impossible to suppose a Roman republican capable of a +dereliction of principle--it is clear that he preferred the applause of +his nation to that of the rest of the world; and all becomes a question +of taste. But what, you exclaim, has the first or any other Brutus to do +with Pilate's house, the description of which is preceded by this long +introduction? And was not his murder of his son benevolence itself, +compared to the infliction of these digressions on your patience? + +The Casa de Palatos is a palace belonging to the Duke of Medina CÅ“li. +One of his ancestors is said to have built it in exact imitation of +Pontius Pilate's palace in Jerusalem, and to have obtained possession of +a large quantity of the ornaments and portable furniture belonging to +the ancient building, which, on the completion of his edifice at +Seville, he established, each object in the place corresponding to that +which it originally occupied. + +A lofty wall, filling the side of the small square, called the Plaza de +Pilatos, and surmounted by a balustrade, forms the outer enclosure of +the palace. You enter through a large plain arched doorway, and pass +through a court, containing the porter's house, and other out-buildings +devoid of ornament. A small door on the left leads from this enclosure +to the principal court. Here you might imagine yourself still in the +Alcazar. The ornament is in the same style; only the arcades are +inferior in lightness and beauty. It contains, however, a fountain very +superior to that of the principal court of the Alcazar. + +At the four angles are colossal statues of white marble, representing +deities of the Grecian mythology. They are antique, and of Roman origin. +Under the arcades a series of busts of the Roman emperors, are placed +round the walls; the greater part of them are also antique. On one side +of this court is the chapel, very small, and entirely covered with +Arabesque ornament. At one side is placed erect against the wall a black +cross, said to be a facsimile imitation of that actually carried by our +Saviour, which occupied a similar situation in the palace at Jerusalem. +Its length is about seven feet, and the thickness of the wood about four +inches by two. Opposite to the cross is a Madonna by Raffaelle. As no +light enters the chapel, excepting through a small door, and that placed +under the arcades, and the picture is hung at a considerable height, it +can only be examined by the aid of a ladder, which is kept near it, and +then only very imperfectly. At the time the chapel was habitually used, +it probably contained candles always burning. + +The great staircase is very ornamental and leads to several handsome +suites of rooms. There is a colonnade on one side of the garden, under +which lies a valuable collection of antique busts, columns, capitals, +and fragments of all sorts, "in most admired disorder." The proprietor +never visits this residence, and every part of it is in a very neglected +state. + +Seville lays claim to no less a founder than Hercules. A magnificent +temple dedicated to him is said to have existed on the spot at present +occupied by the parish church of San Nicholas. Near it a statue of the +demigod has been discovered, together with six columns, four of which +are sunk so deeply in the earth that they cannot be brought to light. +The other two are placed on lofty pedestals, and adorn the largest of +the promenades of Seville, that called the Alameda. One of them is +surmounted by the statue mentioned above, and the other by one of Julius +Cæsar. Venus is also stated to have shared with Hercules the devotions +of the Sevillanos. The existence of her worship in ancient times is +placed beyond a doubt by the well authenticated martyrdom of Saints +Justa and Rufina, condemned for refusing to do honour to the rites of +that goddess, and to figure in her processions. + +These two martyrs to the Christian faith have pursued, on various +subsequent occasions, a conduct calculated to afford a degree of +advantage to an adversary, should he presume to accuse them of renegade +propensities. They have manifested themselves determined protectors of +the Arab tower, on every occasion of its being threatened with danger. +Numerous instances are on record; the most remarkable of which, is one +that has given rise to much controversy, and employed in more recent +times the researches of learned men. The tradition states, that, during +an earthquake, which took place in the year 1504, and of which a vivid +description may be found at the end of a book, called the Regla Vieja, +which exists in the archives of the cathedral--the two virgins were seen +to support the tower and prevent it from falling, surrounding it with +their arms, one on each side. It is also related that, on the occasion +of a previous earthquake, that of the year 1396, voices were heard in +the air, articulated by demons, crying, "Throw it down, throw it down;" +and that others replied, "No, we cannot, for those villanous saints, +Justa and Rufina, are guarding it." For these reasons it is usual, in +paintings representing the Giralda, to place the figures of the two +virgin Saints supporting it, one on either side; and a small model thus +supported by images of the two martyrs, executed in wood, is carried in +the principal religious processions. In all these representations, the +figures stand rather taller than the tower. + +The hospital of La Caridad is one of the principal attractions to +strangers at Seville; for in its chapel is contained the picture, which +passes for the master-piece of Murillo. The chapel is narrow and lofty, +and the picture placed as near as possible to the ceiling. A sight of it +can only be obtained at an angle of about twenty degrees. But the aching +of the neck is unheeded during the examination of this superb picture. +It is called Las Aguas, the Waters. Moses has just struck the rock, and +stands in a simple and dignified attitude. In the complete contentment +of his countenance there may be traced a mingled expression of pity and +gratitude, as he looks on the scene which follows his action. The artist +has given proof of consummate talent in the choice and treatment of his +subject; which afforded him a variety of grouping, of expression, and of +attitude, of which few were capable of taking better advantage. + +This picture is a specimen of his natural style, and its success is +considered, and I think justly, superior to that of any other of his +works. The imitation of material nature is here carried to as great +perfection as in many of his paintings; while at the same time nothing +can surpass the poetry of the composition, nor the exquisitely +harmonious grouping of the men and animals. In this last quality, +Murillo is certainly unequalled. He seems also in this instance, to have +reached the utmost limits of art in the expression of the countenances, +throughout the different groups, whether employed in offering silent +thanksgivings, or entirely absorbed in the eager effort to obtain for +their parched lips a draught of the bright liquid. In the feeling +displayed in these instances, and so well represented, there is, it is +true, nothing elevated, but still it is feeling; and its materiality is +amply made amends for, by the chief personage of the scene, in whose +countenance nothing but the sublime can be traced. + +Had Murillo not painted this picture and the Saint Elizabeth of Hungary, +Spanish art must have contented itself with the second rank, and Raphael +would have continued without a rival. These pictures occasion regret +that such genius should have employed itself during a long period, on +works of a different sort. The San Antonio and a few others, were no +doubt productions worthy of the painter of the Aguas, and a hundred or +two others are magnificent paintings; but the time employed on some of +these, and on a still greater number of less prominent merit, would have +been more profitably devoted to the production of two or three which +might have ranked with these giant creations of his talent. + +In viewing either of these compositions, the other speedily becomes +present to the imagination, and forces you to draw a comparison between +them. They have a sort of affinity in their subject as well as in their +style. The sufferers of the St. Elizabeth, occupied with their torments +and their gratitude, answer to those of the Aguas, engrossed also with +almost parallel feelings. The Moses, tranquil and erect in the midst of +the action which surrounds him, is the exact pendant of the majestic +figure and compassionate countenance of the youthful princess, +exercising her saintly charities. These pictures ought to be companions +in the same gallery, were it possible for two such works to find their +way into one and the same apartment. But that would be a consummation as +hopeless as finding St. Peter's and the Duomo of Milan in the same town; +Naples and Seville in one province, a London and a Paris in one country, +an Ariosto and a Byron in the same language. It has more than once +occurred to me, since I have seen these two pictures, that were +Raphael's Spasimo and Transfiguration placed on one side of a room, and +these two on the other, and the choice offered me which pair I would +possess, I should never be able to come to a decision. + +Another large picture by Murillo, the multiplying of the Loaves in the +Desert, is suspended opposite the Aguas, and at the same elevation. On +attempting to examine it, you are forcibly reminded by certain acute +sensations in the region of the neck, of the unnatural position it has +so long maintained, and you leave this picture, together with two +others, placed near the entrance of the chapel, for a subsequent visit. + +In the church of the Faubourg Triana, on the right hand after passing +the bridge, are some excellent pictures, particularly a Conception by +Murillo. The multitude of paintings left by this artist is incredible, +when to all those scattered through Spain, France, and England, are +added those preserved in this his native town. Almost all the good +houses in Seville contain collections of pictures; and all the +collections have their Murillos. There are no fewer than sixteen in the +gallery of the Canon, Don Manuel Cepero; but this is the largest of the +private collections, and the best, as it ought to be, since it is +contained in Murillo's house. It is the residence occupied by him during +the latter part of his life, and in which he died. Its dimensions and +distribution are handsome. At the back of it there is a garden of +limited extent, but in which not an inch of space is thrown away. Where +there remains no room for choice flowers and orange trees, the walls are +painted to prolong the illusion. The Canon possesses also several good +paintings by Italian masters. I counted likewise four Rembrandts, and +two of Rubens. Among the other private collections, that of the Alcalde +Don Pedro Garcia is one of the richest; it contains a Santa Barbara of +Cano, an exquisite picture. A Saint Joseph by Murillo, in the collection +of the French Consul (a native of Seville) is admirable. + +In most of the churches there is sufficient of this sort of attraction +to make them worth a visit. In the convents nothing is left; in fact +they no longer exist as convents. There may be one or two remaining in +Seville, but I did not hear of them. The monastery of Jeronimites, and +the Chartreuse--both situated in the environs--were the most +considerable religious establishments of Seville. They are converted, +one into a school, and the other into a porcelain manufactory. This +last, the Chartreuse, contains in its church and refectory, plentiful +traces of its former magnificence. An Englishman has purchased the +monastery with three or four acres of ground, containing the immediate +dependencies; and he is occupied with the labours which necessarily +precede its appearance in its new character, replacing the butteries, +kitchens, storehouses, and cells, by rows of pudding-shaped +baking-houses. + +He has, however, spared the chapel, which is to continue in its former +state. All the stalls, the altar, and other immoveable furniture, remain +as he found them. The pictures and statues had of course been +previously removed. The woodwork is inimitable--the best I have seen in +Spain; it would be impossible in painting to represent with more +delicacy, the very texture of the drapery, the very veins of the hands, +and hair of the beards--of figures of a quarter the natural dimensions. +You are filled with astonishment, that the infinite patience necessary +for this mechanical labour should have accompanied the genius which +conceived and executed the incomparable figures and heads. The +refectory, of which the ceiling is the principal ornament, is to be the +great show-room for the display of the china. The fortunate manufacturer +inhabits, with his family, the prior's residence--one of the most +elegant habitations in the world: surrounding a court, which contains of +course its white marble fountain and colonnades: and he is in treaty for +the purchase of the orange-grove, the park of the monastery. This +pleasure-ground is ornamented here and there with Kiosks, from which are +obtained views of Seville, and the intervening Guadalquivir. + +On the confiscation of this monastery, several magnificent pictures +disappeared, a few of which have since been placed in the cathedral. Two +alabaster monuments, belonging to the family of Medina Cæli, were also +removed; they are placed in a church at present under repair. They are +erect, and fit into the wall; measuring about forty feet in height. +Their upper portion is adorned with several well-executed small statues. + +The other convent--that dedicated to S. Geronimo, is situated on the +opposite side of the river, about a mile higher up. It is not so +beautiful as the Cartuja, but on a grander scale. The principal court is +magnificent; it is surrounded with upper and lower arcades, respectively +of the Ionic and Doric orders: the apartments and church are of +corresponding extent; but have either been deprived of their ornaments, +or were originally but sparingly decorated. A ci-devant governor of +Seville--a general officer, very distinguished as a linguist, has turned +schoolmaster, and taken up his abode here. The day of my visit happened +to be the general's birthday, and a scene of much festivity presented +itself. The schoolmaster's successor in his former post at Seville, had +arrived, attended by the band of a cavalry regiment; and the great court +having been converted into a ball-room, the marble arcades were made to +ring with the thrilling cadences of the hautbois and clarionette--by way +of a fitting afterpiece to the tragic chants of former days. + +The relatives and friends of the students were present, so that the +youthful dancers were well-provided with partners. The performances were +French quadrilles, English hornpipes, German waltzes, Russian mazurkas, +and Spanish fandangos. I had arrived too late for the first part of the +entertainment, which consisted of a bull-fight, for which a temporary +arena had been enclosed. The bulls were what are called _novillos_--that +is, scarcely more than calves; as the full-grown animals would have been +more than a match for their juvenile antagonists. + +The ruins of the Roman city of Italica, to which I have already alluded, +are situated four miles from Seville in ascending the river--and on the +opposite bank. The whole town is underground, with the exception of a +few houses in the part in which excavations have been made, and of the +amphitheatre which occupies an eminence. No notice was taken in modern +times of the existence of this buried town, until towards the end of the +last century, when the remains of the amphitheatre, the only portion of +the ruins which were visible, drew the attention of travellers: and the +authorities of Seville received orders to commence excavating. The +search yielded a large quantity of valuable remains; a temple was +discovered, in the neighbourhood of which were found several statues and +capitals of columns. A choice was made of the objects in the best state +of preservation, which were forwarded to Madrid in order to form a +museum. Large quantities of coins were also sent, and collections of +household utensils, and ornaments. The Arabs, who did not consider these +Roman relics worthy objects of antiquarian research, nevertheless had +either discovered and laid open a large portion of the town, or were +themselves its destroyers. From it they extracted the large quantities +of marble columns and slabs with which Seville is filled. The mutilated +statues, together with several funereal monuments, found in later times, +and not considered deserving of the journey to Madrid, have been +deposited in a large room in the Alcazar of Seville, where they are now +exhibited. + +No record exists of the foundation of Italica. Its annals are traced to +the time of Scipio Africanus, who, on the completion of his conquest of +Spain, and the final expulsion of the Carthaginians, finding himself +embarrassed by the number of wounded and sick among his troops, +established them in this town under the protection of a garrison. He +gave to the town its name of Italica,[12] its previous name being +Sancius: the real situation of Italica has been the subject of much +controversy. Like the Grecian cities, which claimed each to be the +birthplace of Homer, several of the towns in the neighbourhood of +Seville are candidates for the honour of being representatives of the +ancient Italica; but ample proof exists of the identity of these ruins +with that city.[13] The Historia general, written by Alonso el Sabio, +book 1., chap, XV., speaks of Italica as a place of much importance in +ancient times, in allusion to the invasion of a people called the +Almunizes. He adds, in the antiquated Spanish of his time, "Las nuevas +fueron por todas las tierras de como aquellas gentes avian ganado a +España, e todos los de las islas quel oyeron crecieron les corazones por +fazer otro tal, e ayuntaron muy grandes navios, e vinieronse para +España, e entraron por cuatro partes. Los que entraron por Cadiz +vinieron Guadalquibir arriba, e llegaron a Italica e los de la villa +salieron e lidiaron con ellos, e los de fuera entraron con ellos de +vuelta por medio de la villa, e mataron los a todos, e ganaron la +villa." It is not clear what invasion is here alluded to. + +The town of Italica was one of the six or seven in these provinces which +possessed the title of _municipia_; a superior one to that of _colonia_, +from its involving the privilege of retaining its ancient laws and +customs, while on the colonies those of Rome were imposed. It was among +the cities which sheltered some of the earliest converts to +Christianity. Its first bishop was the martyr Saint Geruncio, put to +death in prison. The prison, being considered sanctified, from its +containing the saint's remains, became subsequently the resort of pious +votaries from all parts of the province. In the Mozarabic ritual there +is a hymn for the day of this saint, one of the stanzas of which fixes +the epoque of his life and martyrdom, at that of the apostles.[14] + +The centurion Cornelius, mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles, as +converted by the preaching of St. Peter, was, it is said, a native of +this city, and commanded a cohort raised in his native place. + +The date of the destruction of Italica, is as uncertain as that of its +origin. The fact of its existence during almost the entire period of the +Gothic dominion, is established, by the presence of its bishops being +recorded at the different councils. It is conjectured that its +destruction was the work of the Arabs, who were no sooner in possession +of Seville, than they considered it imprudent to allow so large a town +to be in the hands of enemies in their immediate neighbourhood. This +supposition of Spanish antiquaries seems hazarded without sufficient +reflection; since, in the first place, had the occupants of Italica +occasioned the Arabs any uneasiness, nothing was easier than to occupy +the place themselves; and secondly, the ruins bear strong symptoms of +having been reduced to their present state by some convulsion of nature, +rather than by human agency: not to mention the coins discovered in +large quantities, which would not have been neglected by human +destroyers. It is not likely that the destruction of so considerable a +place by the conquerors of the province, at the time they were too few +to defend it, would have been overlooked by their historians--who make +no allusion to the event. + +The present appearance is that of a green undulating hill, which no one +would imagine to be composed of the remains of streets, palaces, +temples, and market-places. The upper portion only of the amphitheatre +remains above-ground. Its form is slightly oval, nearly approaching to a +circle. The greatest diameter is three hundred and twenty-five feet. It +has twenty rows of seats, half of which are buried; each seat is two +feet and a half in depth, and two in height. Part of the Podium remains; +and enough of the entrance, to distinguish that it consisted of three +large arches. It was constructed with Roman solidity. Nothing less than +an earthquake could have toppled over the masses of masonry, which +appear in their confusion like solid rocks. A very small portion of the +ruins has been explored: and part of that, for want of being +sufficiently cleared out, is again buried in earth, and the work is +discontinued. The objects now above-ground, consist of five or six +tessalated floors, two of which have been considered of sufficient value +to be walled in, and locked up, but without being roofed. + +These ruins are well worth a visit, although the road to them from +Seville, bears terrible symptoms of having been constructed before +Macadam's day; perhaps even before that of the Scipios. + +At the distance of a few hundred yards from the nearest portion of the +ruined town is situated the village of Santi-ponce, in which is the +convent of S. Isidoro, of the order of St. Jerome. The church contains +the tombs of Don Alonzo Perez de Guzman, surnamed the Good, and of his +wife Doña Maria Alonzo Coronel, founders of the ducal house of Medina +Sidonia. This family obtained from Ferdinand the Fourth, a grant of +Santi-ponce and old Seville (Italica), with the district, and temporal +and spiritual jurisdiction. Don Sancho had already rewarded the services +and tried fidelity of Perez de Guzman by presenting him with the town of +Medina Sidonia. An anecdote is told of him worthy of a Roman republican. +Being governor of Tarifa under Sancho the Fourth, he had to defend the +town against the Infant, Don Juan, who had revolted against his brother. +This prince, learning that a child of Guzman was in his power, being at +nurse in the environs of the town, sent for it; and, presenting himself +before the walls, declared to the governor that he would kill the child, +if the town were not immediately surrendered. Guzman replied by drawing +his sword, and throwing it down to the prince, who had the barbarity to +order the infant to be murdered before his father's eyes. + + + + +LETTER XXI. + +PRIVATE HOUSES, AND LOCAL CUSTOMS IN SEVILLE. + + +Seville. + +The greater number of private houses are situated in an interminable +labyrinth of winding streets, between the Calle de la Sierpe, and Plaza +de San Francisco and the city wall, which connects the Aqueduct of +Carmona with the Alcazar. It is the South-eastern half of the city. To +the west of the Calle de la Sierpe there are also a few streets +containing private residences, but they are not in so large a +proportion. Some of the most elegant are, however, on this side; which +being less Moorish and more modern, is less chary of its attractions, +and allows a part of its decoration to enliven the external façades; +while its spacious doorways frequently open to the view of the passer-by +a gay perspective of gardens and courts. + +The sunny balcony, crowded with a crimson forest of cactuses, is not +more attractive to the sight, than the more mysterious vista beneath +it, of retreating colonnades, mingled with orange and pomegranate trees, +through which the murmur of the fountain is scarcely audible. Few cities +present more charms to the wanderer than one in which the houses offer a +combination so luxurious as is met with in the greater number of those +of Seville. The cool summer rooms opening into the court, in which the +drawing-room furniture is arranged on all sides of a fountain, +plentifully supplied from the aqueduct of Carmona: and, on the upper +floor, the winter apartments, chosen from their being better lighted, +for the deposit of a collection of pictures and these almost always +excellent,--and opening to the gallery; to which, during this season, +the furniture having been removed from below, is placed, together with +the work frames and portable musical instruments, on the side exposed to +the sun. One sees these houses and their amiable and happy-looking +inhabitants, and imagines there is no life to be compared to it. Yet the +experiment may be made, and fail to answer the expectations of the +stranger, who, confident in his discovery of the road to happiness, may +have pitched his tent in the midst of these bewitching regions. + +Can it be fatality--or is it essential in human nature, to find ever the +least felicity there, where it looks for the greatest? The experiment, +I say, was made. An Englishman, possessing every advantage of taste, +talent, and wealth, took up his residence here, resolved to devote the +remainder of his days to the peaceable enjoyments of a literary and +social life. Thanks to his literary propensities, we are enabled to +judge of the result of the trial. In a book published by the person to +whom I allude, we find that no one could be less satisfied with his lot. +Seville and the Sevillanos meet with no mercy at his hands, and must, if +we may judge by his dislike of them, have rendered his life a burden. + +This, however, is a single example, and insufficient to deter others +from the attempt. It may be that this individual had not entered fully +into the spirit of Andalucian existence. Every detail of life being here +adapted to the place and its customs and climate, no custom can be erred +against with impunity--that is, without the forfeit of some +corresponding advantage. + +Seville presents two so different aspects during the two opposite +seasons of the year, that to be well understood it should be visited at +both. During the winter, the existence does not materially differ from +that of the inhabitants of most other European towns; excepting that the +intercourse of society is subjected to less formality. Cards of +invitation are rarely made use of; and you are not, consequently, +exposed to the annoyance of seeing and hearing your house invaded by a +dense crowd, on a night you have appointed a month before, without any +possibility of foreseeing whether you would be disposed or not on that +particular night to undergo such a toil. These crowds are, I believe, +unheard of in Seville; but those who are pleased in each other's +society, know where to find each other; and without waiting for +invitations, small circles are formed every evening, from which all +crushing, fatigue, and intense dressing are excluded. + +The winter is also a more advantageous season for the stranger, who +would be totally debarred by the summer heats from the activity +necessary for the satisfaction of his curiosity, in visiting the objects +of interest contained in and around Seville. On the other hand, the +summer season offers to his contemplation the successful attainment of a +mode of existence suited to the burning climate; a problem found to be +solved but in few instances. The first and most essential arrangement +appears to be the turning night into day, and _vice versâ_, as far as +regards society and all locomotion. No one leaves his house until long +after sunset, and visiting commences some hours later. The morning being +consequently the time for repose, and the breakfast hour nevertheless +remaining the same all the year round, the _siesta_ is very essential, +and is judiciously placed between the dinner, which terminates at four, +and the hour for movement--nine, when the Sevillano, refreshed by three +or four hours sleep, and a fresh toilette, is infinitely better disposed +for the evening's amusements than the denizen of more northern climes, +who rises at that or a later hour from the chief repast of the day, and +is put _en train_ by the less natural and less durable stimulants of the +table. + +This mode of life presents other numerous advantages. A very prominent +one is the inviolable division of time between society and solitude. We +suppose the hour for rising eight,--immediately after the +chocolate,--that of breakfast eleven. The intervening hours are +solitary, and are frequently divided between the pillow and the +toilette; while they are sometimes devoted to more useful occupations, +and added to by earlier risers. From the family meeting at breakfast +until the dinner hour, three, the time may be employed in business, +reading, in fact, in every one's habitual pursuits. No intrusion is to +be feared. No accursed idler lounges in to interrupt with his +compliments, or gossip, your letter to your lawyer, or, if you are a +lawyer yourself, that to your client; nor is the conscience of +scrupulous porters burdened with the mendacious "not at home." + +These hours are sacred, and guaranteed by the very air, which renders +the streets impassable, but leaves the cool court protected from the +sun's ray by the _toldo_, (canvas awning spread at a level with the +roof, and which is reefed up at night like a sail,) and refreshed by its +ever-murmuring fountain and cool marble pavement, to the peaceable +enjoyment of its owners. The female portion of the family are thus +enabled to devote themselves to household occupations, or to their +favourite employments, without having to undergo, until the second +getting up in the evening, the fever of a complete toilette, which +would, during the day, be insupportable. The time thus devoted to +society, is amply sufficient; as it may be prolonged, as each party +feels inclined, from an hour or two after sunset, until the returning +rays drive all back to their cool retreat. + +The night of the festival of St. John is, in Seville, sacred, from +remote time, to amusement and festivity. During the five or six hours of +darkness accorded by the Midsummer sun, the banks of the Guadalquivir +echo the gay melodious laugh, which enlivens the animated buzz of the +crowd; and the morning ray gilds the upper windows of the deserted +houses before their doors are opened to the supper-craving population. +The rite practised on this occasion is marked by a simplicity +altogether antique. The youth of Seville, that is the masculine +portion, have provided themselves with small boxes, containing a sort of +sugar-plum of exquisite flavour. One of these is held between the finger +and thumb of the _cavallero_, from the moment he sets foot on the +promenade. On the approach of a party of ladies he endeavours to +distinguish, as far off as the gloom permits, the features or dress of +an already selected object of preference; or, if still free to make a +selection, some countenance possessed of sufficient attraction to +determine his choice. On discovering the owner of either of these +requisites, he watches a favourable opportunity, and approaching the +lady, offers the bonbon. + +The _señorita_--of course unmarried--thus selected, is obliged to accept +the compliment if properly offered, as well as the arm of the +_cavallero_ during the rest of the night; and, on arriving at her house, +he receives from her parents, or chaperon, as the case may be, an +invitation to supper. Should the lady be desirous of avoiding the +compliment, of the approach of which she is usually aware, she must +exercise her ingenuity in putting obstacles in the way of the attempt. +In this effort many are successful, since the peculiar mode of +proceeding, obligatory on those who make the offer, affords certain +facilities. The condition is not binding on the fair object of the +compliment, unless the lips receive the bonbon immediately from the +finger and thumb of the cavalier. This is a source of no small amusement +to the _señoritas_ at the expense of strangers from other provinces of +Spain. Conscious of being the object of preference of some young +beginner, or stranger uninitiated in the mysteries of the rite--and who, +let it be understood, does not happen to be an object of preference with +them--they will afford him every facility of approach, and on receiving +the present in the hand, will repulse without mercy the luckless wight, +whose retiring steps are accompanied by peals of laughter from all the +party. + +The month of June is likewise distinguished by the procession of the +Corpus Christi. On this occasion all the principal streets are protected +from the sun by canvas awnings; and from the windows of every house +draperies are suspended, the materials of which are more or less rich +according to the means of their respective proprietors. From an early +hour of the morning, ushered in by sunshine and the gay orchestra of the +Giralda bells, the vast marble pavement of the cathedral begins to +disappear beneath the momentarily increasing crowd. Here all classes are +mingled; but the most conspicuous are the arrivals from the surrounding +villages, distinguished by their more sunburnt complexions and the showy +colours of their costume, contrasted with the uniformly dark tints of +the attire of the Sevillanos. + +Here are seen also in great numbers, accompanied by their relatives, the +gay _cigarreras_, whose acquaintance we shall presently make in the +_fabrica de tabaco_. The instinctive coquetry discernible, no less in +the studied reserve of their looks than in the smart step and faultless +nicety of costume, indicates how easy would be the transition to the +quality of the still more _piquant_ but somewhat less moral _maja_. The +black satin, low-quartered shoe is of a different material; but the +snow-white stocking, and dark green skirt the same--and the black-velvet +bordered mantilla is the identical one, which was held tight to the +chin, when passing, the evening before, under the city walls on the +return from the manufactory to the faubourg at the other extremity of +Seville. + +The procession, headed by a band of music, and accompanied by the +dignitaries of the diocese, and civil authorities of the province, +bearing _cierges_, winds through the principal streets, and re-enters +the church to the sound of the two magnificent organs, never heard in +unison except on this anniversary. The exterior of the principal portal +is ornamented on this occasion with a sort of curtain, which is said to +contain upwards of three thousand yards of crimson velvet, bordered with +gold lace. The columns of the centre nave are also completely attired +from top to bottom with coverings of the same material. The value of the +velvet employed, is stated at nearly ten thousand pounds. + +Christmas-day is also solemnized at Seville, with much zeal; but the +manner of doing it honour presents more of novelty than splendour. At +the early hour of seven the parish churches are completely filled. The +organ pours forth, from that time until the termination of the service, +an uninterrupted succession of airs, called _seguidillas_, from the +dance to which they are adapted. On the gallery, which adjoins the +organ-loft of each church, are established five or six muscular youths, +selected for their untiring activity. They are provided each with a +tambourine, and their duty consists in drawing from it as much, and as +varied sound as it will render without coming to pieces. With this view +they enter upon the amiable contest, and try, during three or four +hours, which of their number, employing hands, knees, feet, and elbows +in succession, can produce the most racking intonations. On the pavement +immediately below, there is generally a group, composed of the friends +of the performers, as may be discerned from the smiles of intelligence +directed upwards and downwards. Some of these appear, from the animated +signs of approbation and encouragement, with which they reward each more +than usually violent concussion, to be backers of favourite heroes. +During all this time one or two priests are engaged before the altar in +the performance of a series of noiseless ceremonies; and the pavement of +the body of the church is pressed by the knees of a dense crowd of +devotees. + +The propensity to robbery and assassination, attributed by several +tourists to the population of this country, has been much exaggerated. +The imagination of the stranger is usually so worked upon by these +accounts, as to induce him never to set foot outside the walls of +whatever city he inhabits, without being well armed. As far as regards +the environs of Seville, this precaution is superfluous. They may be +traversed in all directions, at all events within walking distance, or +to the extent of a moderate ride, without risk. Far from exercising +violence, the peasants never fail, in passing, to greet the stranger +with a respectful salutation. But I cannot be guarantee for other towns +or environs which I have not visited. It is certain that equal security +does not exist nearer the coast, on the frequented roads which +communicate between San Lucar, Xeres, and Cadiz; nor in the opposite +direction, throughout the mountain passes of the Sierra Morena. But this +state of things is far from being universal. + +I would much prefer passing a night on a country road in the +neighbourhood of Seville, to threading the maze of streets, which form +the south-eastern portion of the town, mentioned above as containing the +greater number of the residences of private families. This quarter is +not without its perils. In fact, if dark deeds are practised, no +situation could possibly be better suited to them. These Arab streets +wind, and twist, and turn back on themselves like a serpent in pain. +Every ten yards presents a hiding-place. There is just sufficient +lighting up at night to prevent your distinguishing whether the street +is clear or not: and the ground-floors of the houses, in the winter +season, are universally deserted. + +An effectual warning was afforded me, almost immediately on my arrival +at Seville, against frequenting this portion of the town without +precaution after nightfall. An acquaintance, a young Sevillano, who had +been my daily companion during the first five or six days which followed +my arrival, was in the habit of frequenting with assiduity, some of the +above-mentioned streets. He inhabited one of them, and was continually +drawn by potent attraction towards two others. In one, in particular, +he followed a practice, the imprudence of which, in more than one +respect, as he was much my junior, I had already pointed out to him. A +lady, as you have already conjectured, resided in the house, in +question. My friend, like many of his compatriots, "sighed to many;" but +he loved this one; and she was precisely the one that "could ne'er be +his." She allowed him, however, a harmless rendezvous, separated from +all danger, as she thought, by the distance from the ground to the +balcony, situated on the first-floor. The lady being married, and +regular visiting being only possible at formal intervals, these +interviews had by degrees alarmingly, as appeared to me, increased in +frequency and duration; until at length during two hours each evening, +my acquaintance poured forth in a subdued tone, calculated to reach only +the fair form which bent over the balcony, his tender complaints. + +The youth of these climes are communicative on subjects which so deeply +interest their feelings; and whether willing or not, one is often +admitted to share their secrets at the commencement of an acquaintance. +It was thus that I had had an opportunity of lecturing my friend on the +various dangers attending the practice in which he was persisting, and +of recommending him--the best advice of all being, of course, +useless--to revive the more prudent custom of by-gone times, and if he +must offer nightly incense to the object of his fire, to adopt the mode +sanctioned by Count Almaviva, and entrust his vows to the mercenary +eloquence of choristers and catgut--to anything--or anybody, provided it +be done by proxy. My warning was vain; but the mischief did not befall +him exactly in the manner I had contemplated. + +His cousin opened my door while I was breakfasting, and informed me that +L---- was in the house of Don G---- A----, and in bed, having received a +wound the previous night from some robbers; and that he wished to see +me. I found him in a house, into which I had already been introduced, +being one of those he most frequented. A bed had been prepared in the +drawing-room, all the window-shutters of which were closed, and he was +lying there, surrounded by the family of his host, to whom was added his +sister. As he was unable to speak above a whisper, I was given the seat +by the bedside, while he related to me his adventure. + +He had just quitted the street of the balcony at about nine o'clock, and +was approaching the house we were now in, when, on turning a corner, he +was attacked by three ruffians, one of whom demanded his money in the +usual terms, "Your purse, or your life!" while, before he had time to +reply, but was endeavouring to pass on, a second faced him, and stabbed +him in the breast through his cloak. He then ran forward, followed by +the three, down the street, into the house, and up the staircase; the +robbers not quitting the pursuit until he rang the bell on the +first-floor. The surgeon had been immediately called, and had pronounced +him wounded within--not an inch, but the tenth part of an inch--of his +life; for the steel had penetrated to within that distance of his heart. + +My first impression was that the robbers were acting a part, and had +been hired to get rid of him,--otherwise what were the utility of +stabbing him, when they might have rifled his pockets without such +necessity? But this he assured me could not be the case, as the person +most likely to fall under such suspicion, was incapable of employing +similar means; adding, that that was the usual mode of committing +robberies in Seville. I left him, after having assured him how much I +envied his good fortune; seeing that he was in no danger, and only +condemned to pass a week or two in the society of charming women, all +zealously employed in nursing him--for such was the truth--one of the +young ladies being supposed, and I fear with justice, to be the object +of his addresses. + +The ungrateful wretch convinced me by his reply (as we conversed in +French, and were not understood by those present) that his greatest +torment was impatience to escape from his confinement, in order to see +or write to the other fair one. + +At the end of a week he was sufficiently recovered to be removed to the +house of his family. From certain hints, dropped during a conversation +which took place more than a month after the event, it is to be feared +that the knife of the assassin, in approaching so near to the heart of +his intended victim, succeeded, by some mysterious electric +transmission, in inflicting a positive wound on that of the lady of the +balcony. + +I afterwards learned that it was usual for those who inhabited or +frequented this part of Seville, and indeed all other parts, excepting +the few principal thoroughfares and streets containing the shops and +cafés, to carry arms after nightfall; and in shaking hands with an +acquaintance, I have sometimes perceived a naked sword-blade half +visible among the folds of his cloak. These perils only exist in the +winter, and not in all winters; only in those during which provisions +increase in price beyond the average, and the season is more than +usually rigorous: the poor being thus exposed to more than the +accustomed privations. + +There are towns in which assassination and robbery are marked by more +audacity than is their habitual character in this part of Andalucia. Of +these, Malaga is said to be one of the worst, although perhaps the most +favoured spot in Europe, with respect to natural advantages. An instance +of daring ruffianism occurred there this winter. A person of +consideration in the town had been found in the street stabbed and +robbed. His friends, being possessed of much influence, and disposing, +no doubt, of other weighty inducements to action, the police was aroused +to unusual activity; the murderer was arrested, and brought before the +Alcalde primero. A summary mode of jurisprudence was put in practice, +and the culprit was ordered for execution on the following day. On being +led from the presence of the court, he turned to the Alcalde, and +addressing him with vehemence, threatened him with certain death, in the +event of the sentence being put in execution. The Alcalde, although +doubtless not entirely free from anxiety, was, by the threat itself, the +more forcibly bound to carry into effect the judgment he had pronounced. +The execution, therefore, took place at the appointed hour. The +following morning, the dead body of the Alcalde was found in a street +adjoining that in which he resided. + + + + +LETTER XXII. + +INQUISITION. COLLEGE OF SAN TELMO. CIGAR MANUFACTORY. BULL CIRCUS. +EXCHANGE. AYUNTAMIENTO. + + +Seville. + +In the faubourg of Triana, separated from the town by the river, may be +distinguished remains of the ancient castle, which became the +headquarters of the Inquisition, on its first creation, in 1482. That +body was, however, shortly afterwards, compelled to evacuate the +building, by a great inundation of the Guadalquivir, which occurred in +the year 1626. It then moved into the town, and, from that period to the +close of its functions, occupied an edifice situated in the parish of +Saint Mark. Its jurisdiction did not extend beyond Andalucia. The entire +body was composed of the following official persons:--three inquisitors, +a judge of the fisc, a chief Alguazil, a receiver, (of fines,) five +secretaries, ten counsellors, eighty qualifiers, one advocate of the +fisc, one alcayde of the prison, one messenger, ten honest persons, two +surgeons, and one porter. For the City of Seville, one hundred +familiars: for the entire district, the commissaries, notaries, and +familiars, amounted to four thousand. The ten honest persons cut but a +sorry figure in so long a list. Do they not tempt you to parody Prince +Hal's exclamation "Monstrous! but one halfpenny-worth of bread to this +intolerable deal of sack?" + +The Inquisition of Seville is of an earlier date than that of Toledo, +and was the first established in Spain. It was likewise the most +distinguished by the rigour of its sentences. The actual horrors of the +inquisitorial vaults were, I imagine, in general much exaggerated. A few +instances of severity, accompanied by a mystery, skilfully designed to +magnify its effect, was sufficient to set on fire the inflammable +imaginations of these sunny regions, and to spread universal terror. It +was on finding these means insufficient for the extirpation of religious +dissent, that, at length, executions were decreed by wholesale. Rather +than give credit to the voluminous list of the secret cruelties, which +were supposed by many to be exercised by the midnight tribunals, and +which could have no adequate object, since a conversion brought about by +such means could not, when known, profit the cause. I think it probable +that all acts of severity were made as public as possible, in order to +employ the terror they inspired as a means of swelling the ranks of +Catholicism. + +My opinion is in some measure backed by what occurred at Toledo. On the +Inquisition of that city being dislodged from its palace,--now the seat +of the provincial administration,--it was expected that the exploration +of the subterraneous range of apartments, known to be extensive, would +bring to light a whole Apocalypse of horrors; and all who had interest +enough to obtain admission, pressed in crowds to be present at the +opening. The disappointment was immense on finding not a single piece of +iron, not the shadow of a skeleton, not a square inch of bloodstain. +Each individual, however, during the permanence of these tribunals, +lived in awe of their power; and the daily actions of thousands were +influenced by the fear of becoming the victims of their cruelties, +whether real or imaginary. + +The terror which surrounded the persons of their agents invested them +with a moral power, which frequently rendered them careless of the +precaution of physical force in cases where it would have appeared to be +a necessary instrument in the execution of their designs. This +confidence was once well-nigh fatal to two zealous defenders of the +faith. The Archbishop of Toledo, subsequently Cardinal Ximenes de +Cisneros being on a visit at the residence of his brother of the see of +Granada, it occurred to them during an after-dinner conversation that, +could they accomplish the immediate conversion of the few thousands of +Moors remaining in Granada, it would be the means of rendering a signal +service to the Catholic Roman Apostolic religion. + +Inflamed with a sudden ardour, and rendered doubly fearless of results +by the excellence of the archiepiscopal repast, they resolved that the +project should be put in execution that very evening. + +Ever since the Conquest of Granada, a portion of the city had been +appropriated to the Moors who thought proper to remain; and who received +on that occasion the solemn assurance that no molestation would be +offered to their persons or property, nor impediment thrown in the way +of their worship. Their part of the town was called the Albaycin, and +was separated from the rest by a valley. It contained some twenty to +thirty thousand peaceably disposed inhabitants. + +The two enterprising archbishops, their plan being matured (although +insufficiently, as will appear) repaired to a house bordering on the +Moorish quarter; and, calling together all the Familiars of the +Inquisition who could be met with on the spur of the occasion, divided +them into parties, each of a certain force, and dispatched them on +their errand, which was, to enter the houses of the infidels, and to +intimate to the principal families the behest of the prelates, requiring +them by break of day, to abjure the errors of their creed, and to +undergo the ceremony of baptism. + +But in order that so meritorious a work should meet with the least +possible delay, all the children under a certain age were to be conveyed +instantaneously to the house occupied by the Archbishops, in order that +they might be baptised at once. + +The agents opened the campaign, and had already made away with a certain +number of terrified infants, whose souls were destined to be saved thus +unceremoniously, when the alarm began to spread; and, at the moment when +the two dignitaries, impatient to commence operations, were inquiring +for the first batch of unfledged heretics, an unexpected confusion of +sounds was heard to proceed simultaneously from all sides of the house, +and to increase rapidly in clearness and energy: and some of the +attendants, entering, with alarm depicted on their countenances, +announced that a few hundred armed Moors had surrounded the house, and +were searching for an entrance. + +It now, for the first time, occurred to the confederates, that +difficulties might possibly attend the execution of their project; and +their ardour having had nearly time to cool, Archbishop Ximenes, a +personage by no means wanting in prudence and energy, during his moments +of reason, employed the first instants of the siege in taking what +precautions the circumstances admitted. He next proceeded to indite a +hasty line, destined for the sovereigns Ferdinand and Isabella, who were +journeying in the province, to inform them of his situation, and request +immediate assistance. A black slave was selected to be the bearer of the +letter: but, thinking to inspire him with greater promptitude and zeal, +an attendant thrust into his hand a purse of money together with the +document. + +The effect of this was the opposite to that which was intended. The +negro treated himself at every house of entertainment on his road; +until, before he had half accomplished his journey, he was totally +incapacitated for further progress. This circumstance could not, +however, influence the fate of the besieged prelates; who would have had +time to give complete satisfaction to the offended Moors before the King +could receive the intelligence. Fortunately for them, the news had +reached the governor of Granada, a general officer in whose religious +zeal they had not had sufficient confidence to induce them to apply to +him for aid in the emergency. That officer, on hearing the state of +things, sent for a body of troops stationed at a neighbouring village, +to whose commander he gave orders to place a guard, for the protection +at the same time of the churchmen from violent treatment, and of the +Moors from every sort of molestation. This adventure of the Archbishop +drew upon him the temporary displeasure of the Court. + +[Illustration: PORTAL OF SAN TELMO, SEVILLE.] + +The public buildings of Seville are on as grand a scale as those of some +of the principal capitals of Europe. The college of San Telmo, fronting +the Christina-gardens, is composed of two large quadrangles, behind a +façade of five or six hundred feet in length, the centre of which is +ornamented by a portal of very elaborate execution in the _plateresco_ +style. The architect, Matias de Figueroa, has literally crammed the +three stories with carved columns, inscriptions, balconies, statues +single and grouped, arches, medallions, wreaths, friezes. Without +subjecting it to criticism on the score of purity, to which it makes no +pretension, it certainly is rich in its general effect, and one of the +best specimens of its style. This college was founded for the +instruction of marine cadets, and for that reason named after S. Telmo, +who is adopted by the mariners for their patron and advocate, as Santa +Barbara is by the land artillery. He was a Dominican friar, and is +recorded to have exercised miraculous influence on the elements, and +thereby to have preserved the lives of a boatful of sailors, when on the +point of destruction. The gardens in front of this building are situated +between the river and the town walls. They are laid out in flower beds +and walks. In the centre is a raised platform of granite, forming a +long square of about an acre or more in extent, surrounded with a seat +of white marble. It is entered at each end by an ascent of two or three +steps. This is called the Salon, and on Sundays and Feast-days is the +resort of the society of Seville. In the winter the hour of the +promenade is from one to three o'clock; in the summer, the hours which +intervene between sunset and supper. During winter as well as summer, +the scent of the flowers of the surrounding gardens fills the Salon, +than which it is difficult to imagine a more charming promenade. + +The cigar manufactory is also situated outside the walls. It is a modern +edifice of enormous dimensions, and not inelegant. In one of the rooms +between two and three hundred _cigareras_, girls employed in rolling +cigars, are seen at work, and heard likewise; for, such a Babel of +voices never met mortal ear, although familiar with the music of the +best furnished rookeries. The leaden roof, which covers the whole +establishment, furnishes a promenade of several acres. + +I am anxious to return to the interior of Seville, in order to introduce +you to the Lonja; but we must not omit the Plaza de los Toros, (bull +circus,) situated likewise outside the walls, and in view of the river. +It is said to be the handsomest in Spain, as well as the largest. In +fact it ought to be the best, as belonging to the principal city of the +especial province of _toreadores_. It is approached by the gate nearest +to the cathedral, and which deserves notice, being the handsomest gate +of Seville. The principal entrance to the Plaza is on the opposite side +from the town, where the building presents a large portion of a circle, +ornamented with plain arches round the upper story. This upper portion +extends only round a third part of the circus, which is the extent of +the part completed with boxes and galleries, containing the higher class +seats. All the remainder consists of an uniform series of retreating +rows of seats, in the manner of an amphitheatre, sufficient for the +accommodation of an immense multitude. These rows of seats are continued +round the whole circus: but those beneath the upper building are not +accessible to the same class of spectators as the others--the price of +the place being different. This is regulated by the position with regard +to the sun, the shaded seats being the dearest. The upper story consists +of an elegant gallery, ornamented with a colonnade, in the centre of +which the box of the president is surmounted by a handsomely decorated +arch. + +The circus, measured from the outside, is about two hundred and fifty +feet in diameter. Those who are desirous of witnessing to what lengths +human enthusiasm may be carried, should see a representation in this +Plaza. With seven prime bulls from La Ronda, and a quadrille of Seville +_toreros_--the enormous circumference as full as it can hold, (as it +always is,) it is one of the most curious sights that can be met with. + +The origin of this amusement is not easy to be ascertained. It was +undoubtedly in vogue among the Spanish Arabs, and probably originated in +the time of the Goths, on the falling off of the representations of the +Roman amphitheatres for want of a sufficient supply of wild beasts. In +times not very remote, it had become principally an amateur performance, +and the _toreros_ were men of rank, who made choice of this arena, +subsequently to the falling into disuse of the lists, in order to +exhibit their daring and dexterity before the objects of their flame. +The science is still studied by the greater part of the Spanish youth; +just as, in England, the custom is maintained of receiving instruction +in pugilism; but an amateur is rarely seen in these days to figure in a +public arena. + +The intense interest which absorbs the feelings of those present at +these representations, affords a faint notion of what must have been the +attractions of a Roman circus, in which combats were sustained by +hundreds of wild beasts. In the bull-fight--sustained by a single +animal, the interest would not probably be excited by the mere contest +for life which takes place between the man and the brute, and of which +the ultimate result is foreseen. It would, on the contrary, often yield +to the disgust produced by the needless massacre of the horses; were it +not that the graceful performance of the _toreros_, and their elegant +costume, so well calculated to set off the symmetry of their form, first +draws the attention, which, once fixed, is gradually absorbed by the +progress of the contest, and at length irresistibly won by the variety +of unforeseen incidents which follow in rapid succession. + +Frequenters of theatres have been seen to fall asleep during the most +stirring scene of a melodrame; and a continual murmur of conversation +usually forms a running accompaniment to the voices of opera singers; +but no one was ever detected slumbering in a _plaza de toros_; nor is a +remark uttered that does not relate to the performance. This difference +may probably be explained by the superior attraction of the _imprévu_. +In the playhouse not only is the event known beforehand, but also every +incident by which it is preceded; whereas, throughout a _corrida de +toros_ nothing can be foreseen. No one knows, during the present minute, +whether the next will give birth to the direst of tragedies, or to the +most exhilarating farce. + +At Madrid the representations are inferior to those at Seville. They are +able, it is true, to procure as fierce bulls; but they are brought from +a considerable distance, and are much more expensive. The principal +inferiority consists in the men, who at Madrid are wanting in the +rapidity of eye, and careless courage of the Andaluz. On the entrance of +a bull on the arena, whose attitude gives promise of an animated course, +almost all the Madrid _toreros_, (I have seen all,) will, at his first +onset, disappear simultaneously over the _barrera_. The _barrera_ is the +enclosure of stout planks, strengthened by posts, which separates the +performers from the spectators. It is about six feet in height. At a +height of three feet a projecting ledge runs round the whole, upon +which, in vaulting over, the _toreador_ places his foot. Behind this +enclosure an open space of four feet in width is left, and serves as a +refuge for those who are hard pressed. Very different is the graceful +and careless attitude with which the Andaluz awaits the approach of the +infuriated brute, and quietly springs aside with a flourish of his +mantle of silk, while he knows there are others at hand to draw off the +animal's attention. + +With the exception of the _Toros_ the public amusements of Seville are +limited to the balls at the Lonja during the Carnival, and to the opera. +The opera varies its own pleasures, while it distributes its favours +between the two western capitals of the province. From midsummer to +midwinter Cadiz receives her share of melody, and the remaining six +months are bestowed on Seville. Xeres has, I believe, a company to +itself, supplied by a different _impresario_. + +The Rossi is an excellent _primera dama_, although wanting in animation; +and Comfortini is by no means a bad tenor. The second tenor, Tosi, is +said to be ambitious of displaying his somewhat exaggerated attitudes on +the boards of the Haymarket. There is a deficiency of _ensemble_, since +the severe discipline necessary for obtaining that result does not +accord with the genius of the place--or perhaps an unexceptionable +_maestro de capella_ is too expensive a luxury to suit the Seville +purses. However this may be, the easy inhabitants, who hear the same +opera frequently six times in a week, and would hear it seven times had +not the performers a holiday on Saturday--may be taken grievous +liberties with before they utter a complaint. They, in fact, look upon +the performance chiefly as an excuse for resorting to this their +habitual lounge. + +The Barbiere di Seviglia should, however, be witnessed here by every +amateur. It is only here that justice is done to the _libretto_ of +Rossini's masterpiece. Figaro becomes a real barber, and scorns all +velvets and finery; and Almaviva leaves his court-dress at home, and +takes a good _capa_ of _paño pardo_ for his nocturnal excursions. The +scenery represents the actual streets of Seville. Local customs are +introduced, and local expressions interspersed in the Italian dialogue. +On this occasion one spirit animates boxes, lunetas, orchestra, and +stage. At the opening note of the first melody the allegro, passing like +electricity from the corner of the page through the eye, brain, and arm +of the leader, appears as though it spirted like wildfire from the +extremity of his bow over stage, boxes, stalls, and galleries, lighting +up in an instant all eyes with animation and pleasure. + +In the scene of old Bartolo's discomfiture the melodies of the _maestro_ +are totally extinguished beneath the din of overturned tables and +chairs, and cracking furniture; and the joyous exclamations of the +entire assembly, unite with the jibes of the actors, and seem to pursue +the poor old guardian with one overwhelming peal of derision. + +But it is only in this one instance that representations come off in +such a manner. On the contrary, the company exhibit habitually all the +aristocratic _nonchalance_ of larger capitals. Their business there is +society. It is there that _les affaires de cÅ“ur_ hold their Royal +Exchange; and observation, conjecture, and speculation,--but usually +without ill-nature,--sufficiently occupy those who are not actors in +this general by-play. The youth of these climes do not put in practice +the same arts of concealment and reserve as are adopted in colder +cities; but each, unconscious of evil, makes for the box of his +_enamorata_; or, if that is impossible, for the nearest vacant +situation. Advise, therefore, any friend who may intend visiting +Seville, not hastily to pay his visit of curiosity to the opera, but to +wait, if possible, until offered a seat by some _habituée_ in her box. +This _Senora_ may possibly not have any _affaire_ of her own on hand; in +fact the married ladies of course form an exception, if not in all +cases, at least as far as regards such undisguised manifestations of +preference:--in this case she will take delight in putting him _au fait_ +of all those that are going forward. + +If in a conversable humour she will do more. Commencing with the +nearest, or the most conspicuous of the performers in these mute dramas, +she will relate to him the vicissitudes of the respective histories up +to the time then present, and the probabilities which each case may +suggest for the future. Thus your friend, instead of having sacrificed +an entire evening to the dubious amusement of following the plot of a +single opera, which may have been a bad one, or interpreted by bad +actors, will return to rest with some score of plots and romances +filling all the corners of his memory--all possessing the zest of +reality and actuality, as he will have contemplated the heroes and +heroines in their mortal shape, and clothed in indisputable _capas_ and +_mantillas_; besides, another advantage which these romances will +possess over all the popular and standard novels--that of omitting the +most insipid chapter of all, the one containing the _dénouement_. + +There only remain two public buildings worthy of notice; but they are +such as to rank among the most remarkable of Spain. The Lonja (Exchange) +was erected during the reign of Philip the Second, in the year 1583, by +Juan de Herrera. At this period the excesses committed in all parts of +Spain by the architects, no longer restrained by rule of any sort, had +brought about a salutary effect, after a sufficiently lengthened surfeit +of extravagance. Herrera took the lead in the reaction, and followed the +more correct models of art. + +Among the authors of some of the most lamentable specimens of aberration +of style scattered throughout Spain, are found several names high in +rank among the painters of the best period. These artists, desirous of +emulating some of the great masters of Italy, who had attained equal +superiority in architecture, painting, and sculpture, risked their +reputation in these different pursuits with greater confidence than just +appreciation of their peculiar genius. At the head of them was Alonzo +Cano, one of the most distinguished painters of the schools of +Andalucia; and who has been called the Guido of Spain. He may certainly +lay a more legitimate claim to that title than to that of the Michael +Angelo of Spain, accorded to him by some of the less judicious of his +admirers for no other reason than that of his combining the three above +mentioned arts. + +His paintings are characterized by a peculiar delicacy of manner, +correct drawing, and exquisite finish. The sickly paleness of his flesh +is sometimes unpleasing, and his personages are gainers by the addition +of drapery, in the arrangement of which he approaches to the excellence +of the best Italian schools. The life of this artist was varied by more +adventure than usually falls to the lot of those of his profession. His +talent as a painter had already become celebrated while he was still a +monk, having taken the vows very early in life. He had been from the +first an enemy to the subordination of the cloister, and at length a +series of irregularities led to his expulsion from his monastery. + +Alonzo was not, however, the original inventor of this eccentric style. +A Roman architect, Francisco Borromini, the rival of Bernini, and of +whom it was said, that he was the first of his time in elevation of +genius, and the last in the employment of it,--is supposed to have first +introduced it. Followers and imitators of these sprung up in great +numbers, and Spain was speedily inundated with extravagancies: façades, +moulded into more sinuosities than a labyrinth,--cornices, multiplying +their angles like a saw, murderously amputated columns, and +broken-backed pediments. Juan de Herrera was not, probably, possessed of +more talent than the Roman; but of what he had he made a better use. His +reputation was beginning to make rapid progress when he was selected, on +the death of Juan Baptista de Toledo, to continue the Escorial. His task +there was not the simple one of continuing the unfinished pile according +to the plans already traced. + +The religious fervor of Philip the Second was on the ascent, and during +the progress of the building he had resolved to double the number of +monks, for whom accommodation had been provided by the original plan. To +meet this necessity, Herrera raised the buildings to double their +intended elevation. His completion of this immense work, rendered more +difficult than it would have been had the original design been his own, +or even had that of his predecessor been persisted in (for various +other modifications were commanded, especially with regard to the plan +of the church,) fully established his fame; and the edifice would +probably have gained, had Philip not, at the last moment, yielded to a +new caprice, and called in another artist (the architect of the famous +country-house of the Viso) to erect the great staircase. + +The object of Herrera, traceable in all his works, was the +re-establishment of antique art in all its purity. In cathedrals success +was more difficult of attainment than in civil edifices; but the effort +is easily discerned, striving against the difficulties inseparable from +the system, which applies to the purposes of one creed the principles of +art invented for ministering to other forms. His cathedral of Valladolid +is an instance of this: the most unsuccessful portion of which (the +tower) has fallen before the completion of the edifice. Should the works +ever be continued, this would be a most fortunate circumstance, were it +not that the future builders are sure to persist in the same course, and +to disfigure the pile with another similar excrescence, in contempt of +symmetry and rule. + +The Lonja of Seville is a structure so perfect as to bid defiance to +criticism. It might have been built by Vitruvius. The general plan is a +quadrangle, enclosing a court surrounded by an arcade. There are two +stories, ornamented externally by pilasters. The order is Tuscan, both +above and below. The court, staircase, and various apartments, are +decorated with a profusion of the rarest marbles. The whole is a +specimen, almost unique, of chaste elegance and massive solidity. In +this edifice, the resort of wealthy traders during the period of the +colonial prosperity of Spain, are contained, among the archives, the +original despatches of Columbus: and, it is also said, those of Cortez +and Pizarro. + +The Ayuntamiento, or Town Hall, is an edifice of another sort. It is of +the _plateresco_ epoch. But Seville, having been apparently preserved by +especial favour from the introduction of specimens of bad taste; it is a +building of extreme beauty. The façade is divided into two unequal +parts. The smaller of the two is covered with sculpture, and contains an +open porch or vestibule, decorated throughout with a profusion of +ornament. I could not learn the name of the artist to whom these +sculptures are attributed, but they are worthy of the chisel of John of +Bologna. The other portion of the front is without ornament from the +ground to the first story, along the whole extent of which runs a series +of open arches supported by columns. These columns and arches are models +of lightness and grace. + +The Ayuntamiento is situated in the Plaza de San Francisco; from one +extremity of which a street leads to the cathedral: at the other +commences the principal street of Seville, called the Calle de la +Sierpe. Here are all the best shops, and the principle cafés. It leads +also to the post-office, to the opera, and to the Plaza del Duque, so +called from its containing the house of the Duke of Medina Sidonia; but +it possesses, likewise, two other ducal residences, besides others of +almost equal pretension. These mansions are scarcely ever occupied by +their proprietors. It is a small irregularly formed place, and its ducal +habitations, whatever they may be internally, by no means improve its +appearance. + +A few streets further on is the Alameda. This is a place magnificent in +extent, but possessing no architectural merit. Its principal ornament is +an avenue of elms, of about half a mile in length, at the head of which +are placed the two antique columns and statues of the temple of +Hercules. At the further extremity, on the left, is the church of the +Jesuits, closed since the revolution. + + +THE END. + +LONDON: + +Printed by S. & J. BENTLEY, WILSON, and FLEY, + +Bangor House, Shoe Lane. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[1] The very polite individual alluded to no longer fills the post of +Consul at Bayonne. + +[2] The following inscriptions are placed at the feet of the respective +statues: + +"Aqui yace el muy Ilustre Señor Don Pedro Hernandez de Velasco, +Condestable de Castilla, Señor del estado, y gran casa de Velasco, hijo +de Don Pedro Hernandez de Velasco, y de Doña Beatriz Manrique, Condes de +Haro. Murio de setenta y siete años, anno de mil cuatro cientos y +noventa y dos, siendo solo Virey de estos reynos por los Reyes +Catolicos." + +"Aqui yace la muy Ilustre Señora Doña Mencia de Mendoza, Condesa de +Haro, muger del Condestable Don Pedro Hernandez de Velasco, hija de Don +Inigo Lopez de Mendoza, y de Doña Catalina de Figueroa, Marqueses de +Santillana. Murio de setenta y nueve annos, anno de mil y quiniento." + +[3] The above woodcut may, it is hoped, serve as a guide to future +travellers in their search for this head, of which it has no pretension +to give an adequate idea. + +[4] It will be seen that this letter was written shortly after the +Queen's return to Spain, and previous to the publication of her +marriage. + +[5] It is probable that this threat, supposing it real, may have +assisted in determining the Queen's resolution, since executed, of +publishing the marriage. + +[6] The crown was valued in Cadiz at a hundred and sixty thousand +pounds, of which the emerald, which supports the cross, represents forty +thousand. + +[7] She is of a wood, whether artificially or naturally, of a tint +between the darkest mahogany and ebony. + +[8] The Author has in every instance made use of the word Gothic, in +preference to the employment of any sort of periphrasis; considering +that the chief intention of a name is, not that its application should +accord with its derivation, but rather that it should present to all who +know it, or have dictionaries, an identical meaning, in order that the +idea of the individual employing it may be speedily caught. Now the word +Gothic having always been applied to this architecture, it is +comprehended. A dismounted highwayman is termed a pad. The oblong area +in the centre of Madrid is called a door. "What's in a name?" + +[9] + + "Who does a kindness is not therefore kind.-- + Perhaps the wind has shifted from the East."--POPE. + +[10] Feeling his powers as a draughtsman inadequate to do justice to +this court, the author has inserted the above sketch merely to show the +general architectural design. + +[11] He had put to death the "Master of St. Bernard," a title of those +days possessed by the chief of that order appointed by the Pope. It was +Urbano V, who, on the occasion of this act, resented at the same time +various other offences. + +[12] The above is gathered from the following passage of Appianus +Alexandrinus. "Relicto, utpote pacata regione, valido præsidio, Scipio +milites omnes vulneribus debiles in unam urbem compulit, quam ab Italiâ +Italicam nominavit, claram natalibus Trajani et Adriani, qui posteris +temporibus Romanum imperium tenuere." + +Elius Sparcianus, in the life of Adrian, says, "Origo imperatoris +Adriani vetustior a Picentibus, posterior ab Hispaniensibus manat; +siquidem Adriâ ortos majores suos apud Italicam, Scipionum temporibus +resedisse in libris vitæ suæ Adrianus ipse commemorat." + +[13] No other town is so placed as to accord with the description given +by Pliny, who passes it on the right bank of the river, and arrives at +Seville lower down on the left: "Italica et a lævâ Hispalis colonia +cognomine Romulensis." + +Lucas de Tuy, who wrote four centuries back, says, "Italica est Hispalis +Antigua." + +[14] + + Hic fertur Apostolico + Vates fulsisse tempore: + Et prædicasse supremum + Patrem potentis filii. + + + +Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber: + +Alonza Cano=>Alonzo Cano (1) + +Abderrahman=>Abderahman (1) + +Andalusia=>Andalucia (1) + + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Pictureque Antiquities of Spain;, by +Nathaniel Armstrong Wells + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PICTUREQUE ANTIQUITIES *** + +***** This file should be named 32821-0.txt or 32821-0.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/3/2/8/2/32821/ + +Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team +at http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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Donations are accepted in a number of other +ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. +To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate + + +Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. + +Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm +concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared +with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project +Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. + + +Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S. +unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily +keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. + + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + + http://www.gutenberg.org + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, +including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary +Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to +subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. diff --git a/32821-0.zip b/32821-0.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6c2b907 --- /dev/null +++ b/32821-0.zip diff --git a/32821-8.txt b/32821-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5e60e67 --- /dev/null +++ b/32821-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9765 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Picturesque Antiquities of Spain, by +Nathaniel Armstrong Wells + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Picturesque Antiquities of Spain; + Described in a series of letters, with illustrations + representing Moorish palaces, cathedrals, and other + monuments of art, contained in the cities of Burgos, + Valladolid, Toledo, and Seville. + +Author: Nathaniel Armstrong Wells + +Release Date: June 15, 2010 [EBook #32821] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PICTURESQUE ANTIQUITIES *** + + + + +Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team +at http:://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + + +[Illustration: CHAPEL OF SAN ISIDRO, + +IN THE CHURCH OF SAN ANDRES, MADRID.] + + + + +THE + +PICTURESQUE ANTIQUITIES + +OF + +SPAIN; + +DESCRIBED IN A SERIES OF LETTERS, + +WITH ILLUSTRATIONS, + +REPRESENTING MOORISH PALACES, CATHEDRALS, AND OTHER MONUMENTS OF ART, + +CONTAINED IN THE CITIES OF + +BURGOS, VALLADOLID, TOLEDO, AND SEVILLE. + +BY + +NATHANIEL ARMSTRONG WELLS. + +LONDON: + +RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET, + +Publisher in Ordinary to Her Majesty. + +M.DCCC.XLVI. + +LONDON: + +Printed by S. & J. BENTLEY, WILSON, and FLEY, Bangor House, Shoe Lane. + + + + +PREFACE. + + +The author of the following letters is aware that his publication would +have possessed greater utility, had the architectural descriptions been +more minute. He ventures to hope, however, that this imperfection may be +in some measure balanced by the more extended sphere opened to whatever +information it may contain. + +The absence of many technical expressions, especially those which enter +into a detailed description of almost all Gothic buildings, and the +employment of which was forbidden by the occasion, may tend to +facilitate the satisfaction of popular curiosity respecting Spanish art: +the more so from the circumstance that the most intelligent in such +subjects are scarcely sufficiently agreed on the application of +technical terms, to allow of the compilation of a standard vocabulary. +His ambition will be more than satisfied, should his past, and perhaps +future researches, succeed, in some degree, in pioneering the path for a +more scientific pen. + +Should this work fall into the hands of any reader, whose expectations +of entertainment may have been encouraged by the announcement of another +Spanish tour, but who may feel but moderate enthusiasm for the artistic +and monumental glories of the Peninsula, an explanation is due to him, +exonerative of the author from much of the responsibility attached to +the matter-of-fact tone of his descriptions. It is no less his nature +than it was his wish to paint what he saw as he saw it. Unfortunately +his visits to Spain took place after the accomplishment of the +revolution, the hardest blows of which were aimed at her church. The +confiscation of the ecclesiastical revenues has necessarily stripped the +processions and other ceremonies of their former splendour, and by +suppressing what constituted one of their chief attractions to the +native population, transferred the interest of the lover of the +picturesque from the bright colours of animated grouping, to the dead +background of stone and marble they have left. + +In studying, however, to preserve this strict accuracy in all that +related to the principal subject of his correspondence, his aim was to +enliven it by the introduction of any incidents worthy of notice which +came under his observation. In this object he hopes he may have +succeeded. + +One more remark is necessary. The letters from Seville, which form the +second of the two parts into which the volume is divided, although +placed last in order of succession, date in reality from an earlier +period than the rest; and even from a different tour, as will appear +from the description of the route. They were addressed to various +individuals, whereas those forming the first part were all written to +the same person. They are thus placed with a view to geographical order +and clearness, and to a sort of unity, which appeared advisable in the +subject of a volume. The two excursions having been separated by an +interval of three years, should alterations have taken place during that +period in the places described, the above circumstance not being borne +in mind might lead to an appearance of chronological inaccuracy in the +descriptions, although there is not much probability of the existence of +such changes. + +LONDON. _December 1845._ + + + + +CONTENTS. + + + PAGE + +PART I. + + +LETTER I. + +TO MRS. C----R 1 + +LETTER II. + +ROUTE TO SPAIN THROUGH FRANCE 9 + +LETTER III. + +THE BASQUE PROVINCES 15 + +LETTER IV. + +ARRIVAL AT BURGOS. CATHEDRAL. 28 + +LETTER V. + +TOMB OF THE CID. CITADEL. 52 + +LETTER VI. + +CARTUJA DE MIRAFLORES. CONVENT OF LAS HUELGAS. 70 + +LETTER VII. + +ROUTE TO MADRID. MUSEO. 78 + +LETTER VIII. + +PICTURESQUE POSITION OF TOLEDO. FLORINDA. 103 + +LETTER IX. + +CATHEDRAL OF TOLEDO 121 + +LETTER X. + +CAFES. WEDDING CEREMONY. CATHEDRAL CONTINUED. ALCAZAR HOSPITAL +OF SANTA CRUZ. CONVENT OF LA CONCEPTION. MYSTERIOUS CAVERN. +CONVENT OF SANTA FE, OR OF SANTIAGO. SONS-IN-LAW OF THE CID. 143 + +LETTER XI. + +STREETS OF TOLEDO. EL AMA DE CASA. MONASTERY OF SAN JUAN DE +LOS REYES. PALACE OF DON HURTADO DE MENDOZA. 172 + +LETTER XII. + +ARAB MONUMENTS. PICTURES. THE PRINCESS GALIANA. ENVIRONS. 195 + +LETTER XIII. + +CASTLES OF ALMONACID, GUADAMUR, MONTALBAN, AND ESCALONA. +TORRIJOS. 214 + +LETTER XIV. + +VALLADOLID. SAN PABLO. COLLEGE OF SAN GREGORIO. ROUTE BY +SARAGOZA. 240 + +PART II.--SEVILLE. + + +LETTER XV. + +JOURNEY TO SEVILLE. CHARACTER OF THE SPANIARDS. VALLEY OF +THE RHONE. 259 + +LETTER XVI. + +VOYAGE TO GIBRALTAR 288 + +LETTER XVII. + +CADIZ. ARRIVAL AT SEVILLE. 308 + +LETTER XVIII. + +THE ARABS IN SPAIN. ALCAZAR OF SEVILLE. 315 + +LETTER XIX. + +CATHEDRAL OF SEVILLE 350 + +LETTER XX. + +SPANISH BEGGARS. HAIRDRESSING. THE GIRALDA. CASA DE PILATOS. +MONASTERIES. ITALICA. 369 + +LETTER XXI. + +PRIVATE HOUSES, AND LOCAL CUSTOMS IN SEVILLE 399 + +LETTER XXII. + +INQUISITION. COLLEGE OF SAN TELMO. CIGAR MANUFACTORY. BULL +CIRCUS. EXCHANGE. AYUNTAMIENTO. 416 + +FOOTNOTES + + + + +ENGRAVED PLATES. + + + PAGE + +CHAPEL OF SAN ISIDRO, MADRID To face Title. + +TRANSEPT OF CATHEDRAL, BURGOS 38 + +INTERIOR OF THE CHURCH OF MIRAFLOR ES 72 + +VIEW OF TOLEDO 106 + +INTERIOR OF CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO 140 + +FAÇADE OF SAN GREGORIO, VALLADOLID 248 + +HALL OF AMBASSADORS, DO. 315 + +FAÇADE OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE 325 + +GREAT COURT OF DO. 328 + +INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, SEVILLE 353 + + +WOOD ENGRAVINGS. + +ARCO DE SANTA MARIA. BURGOS. 30 + +INTERIOR OF THE CHOIR, CATHEDRAL OF BURGOS 33 + +SCULPTURE IN THE APSE, DO. DO. 40 + +HEAD OF ST. FRANCIS 48 + +FOUNTAIN OF SANTA MARIA, BURGOS 69 + +ITALIAN GALLERY AT THE MUSEO, MADRID 94 + +FLORINDA'S BATH, TOLEDO 112 + +APSE OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO 129 + +COSTUME OF A MILITARY NUN, SANTA FE, TOLEDO 165 + +CHURCH OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES, DO. 179 + +CLOISTER OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES, DO. 182 + +INTERIOR OF SANTA MARIA LA BLANCA, DO. 196 + +INTERIOR OF CHRISTO DE LA LUZ, DO. 201 + +CASTLE OF GUADAMUR. ENVIRONS OF DO. 226 + +FAÇADE OF SAN PABLO. VALLADOLID 242 + +COURT OF SAN GREGORIO. VALLADOLID 249 + +COURT OF DOLLS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE 331 + +FOUNTAINS AT THE ALCAZAR 339 + +PORTAL OF SAN TELMO, SEVILLE 422 + + + + +PICTURESQUE ANTIQUITIES + +OF + +SPAIN. + + + + +LETTER I. + +TO MRS. C---- R. + + +Rue de Richelieu. + +You perceived at a glance the satisfaction you caused me, when, on +receiving my temporary adieus, you requested me to send you some account +of my travels in Spain. Had it not been so, you had not been in +possession, on that day, of your usual penetration. Indeed, you no doubt +foresaw it; aware that, next to the pleasure of acquiring ocular +information respecting the peculiar objects which interest an +individual, there is no greater one than that of communicating to a +spirit, animated by congenial tastes, the results of his explorations. +You must have foreseen, that, with my recollections of the pleasure I +had derived from our excursions in one of the most interesting regions +of France, during which I was witness to the intelligence and rapidity +of perception you displayed in the appreciation of the monuments of the +Middle Ages, the opportunity of committing to paper the impressions I +should receive in a country so rich in those treasures, with a view to +your information, would give an additional interest to my tour, as well +as encouragement in surmounting the obstacles to be met with among a +people not yet broken in to the curiosity of tourists. + +You professed also, with a modesty always becoming to talent and worth, +a complete ignorance respecting Spain: adding, that you would be +grateful for every sort of information; and that you were anxious to be +enlightened on the subject not only of the monuments and fine arts, but +also of the history of that country, of which you had never had an +opportunity of informing yourself; summing up by the enumeration of the +three names of the Cid, Charles the Fifth, and Roderic the Goth, the +entire amount of your acquaintance with the leading characters of +Spanish history. + +Indeed, the ignorance you profess with some exaggeration, is more or +less general in our country; nor is it surprising that such should be +the case. Spain has been in modern times in the background of European +progress. The thousand inconveniences of its routes and inns have +deterred the most enterprising from making it a place of resort; and +while a hundred less interesting scenes of travel, such as Baden-Baden, +Bohemia, sporting adventures in Norway, or winterings in St. Petersburg, +have claimed your attention during the reposes of quadrilles, and +substantiated the conversation of several of your morning visitors, +Spain has been unnoticed and unknown--laid on the shelf with the Arabian +Nights--considered a sort of fabulous country, which it would be +charming to know, but with which there would never be a chance of +forming an acquaintance; and you have contented yourself with a sort of +general information respecting it, derived from a few romances and +poems. You are intimate with Boabdil and the wars of Granada, but to +those events is limited your knowledge of its ancient history; and the +reigns of Charles the Fifth and Philip the Second, with the addition of +some confused visions, in which _autos-da-fé_ and dungeons contrast in a +rather gloomy background with laughing majas, whirling their +castagnettes to the soft cadences of guitars, fill up the remaining +space allotted to Spain in your recollections. + +It would be a task full of interest for me--possessed, as I shall +probably be, of ample opportunities for its accomplishment--to draw up +for your information a summary of the leading events of Spanish +history; connecting them by the chain of reigns of the successive +sovereigns; and thus to press into a limited compass a sort of abstract +of the annals of this extraordinary nation: but I am deterred by the +certainty that such an attempt, by me, would fail of its intended +object. The events, thus slurred over, would have the effect of whetting +the appetite for knowledge, which they would not satisfy; and the +interminable lists of monarchs, of successions, usurpations, alliances +and intermarriages, rendered doubly intricate by the continual +recurrence of the same names, without sufficient details to +particularise each--a chaos of outlines without the necessary shading to +bring out the figures from the canvass--would not only set at defiance +the clearest memory, but would be a trial which I would not for worlds +impose upon your patience. No history is more attractive than that of +Spain; and those works which exist upon the subject, although all, more +or less, sullied with inaccuracies, and most of them infected with +prejudice, and immersed in superstitious delusion, are still well worth +your perusal; but it would lead me out of my depth, were I to undertake +in my correspondence more than an occasional historical quotation, when +required by the interest attached to any monument which it may fall to +my lot to describe. + +Were I not to transmit to you a conscientious and faithful account of +all that I shall see, I should be guilty of cruelty; and that the more +base, from the certain impunity that must attend it. I say this, from +the impossibility of your ever undertaking the same journey, and +consequently of your ever being able to compare my portraits with their +originals. In fact, the incompatibility of your nature, and that of the +Spanish climate, must ever be present to me, who, during the vivifying +heats of the late very bearable _canicule_, in your French château--so +constructed as to perform the functions of an atmospheric sieve, by +separating the wind, which rushed through its doors and windows, +judiciously placed in parallels for the purpose, from the warmer +sunshine without--was witness, nevertheless, to your unaffected +distress, when you protested against any lofty, oak-panelled room being +sat or reclined in by more than one human being at a time, lest it +should be over-heated; placing thus an obstacle in the way of +conversation, in which to shine is your especial province, by rendering +it necessary to converse through various open doors; while, were an +additional testimony necessary to prove the sincerity of your +sufferings, your favourite of favourites, Caliph, repulsed and +uncaressed, hung his silken ears, as he solemnly retreated to coil +himself on a distant rug, and voted the dog-days a misnomer. + +Nor were you contented with your atmosphere, until, the season of +insects and _al-fresco_ suppers being long left behind, and the autumnal +equinox having peremptorily closed the doors and windows, fitted, alas! +by a carpenter who flourished in the reign of Louis the Fourteenth, so +plentiful a supply of air was afforded by the handy-works of the said +carpenter, that the Chinese screen had some difficulty in maintaining +its post, and the flames of the well-furnished elm-fire ascended with a +roar that would have shamed many a cataract of the rival element. Not +but that I would willingly forego the opportunity of sending you +erroneous information, in exchange for your presence in that country; +and for your assistance in comprehending the nature of a people +apparently composed of such contradictory ingredients. You might +probably succeed in fathoming the hidden springs of character, which +give birth to a crowd of anomalies difficult to explain. You would +discover by what mystery of organization a people, subject to the +influence of violent passions, combine an abject subjection to the forms +of etiquette, carried to its extreme in every-day life, with occasional +outbreaks of adventure and romance worthy of the days of Orlando and +Rodomonte; and account for a nation exchanging a costume which combines +utility with grace, for one inferior in both respects. Inventors of +whatever is most fascinating in dances and music--you would discover the +motive which induces them to abandon both, but principally the first, +which they replace by the French _rigodon_, or dancing-made-easy, and +adapted to youth, manhood, and all stages of paralysis; and, possessing +the cathedrals of Leon, Burgos, and Seville, to denounce Gothic +architecture as barbarous, and to brand it with the contemptuous +denomination of "crested masonry." + +Should my mono-(--monument-) mania run riot, and over-describe, +over-taxing even your passion for that branch of art, be assured--and to +this promise you may always look back for consolation and +encouragement--that I will not write you a history of the recent, or any +previous Spanish revolution, _apropos_ of the first sentry-box I meet +with, even though its form be that of a Lilliputian brick castle. Nor +shall my first glimpse of a matador occasion you a list of bull-fights, +voluminous enough to line the circumference of the _barrera_. No +Diligence shall be waylaid, nor in my presence shall any ladies' fingers +be amputated, the quicker to secure her rings, if I can possibly avoid +it; and, as far as depends on me, I shall arrive in a whole skin at each +journey's end, and without poisoning you or myself with garlick, unless +the new Cortes pass a law for denying to the stranger all other sorts of +aliment. + +I have resolved, by a process of reasoning which I need not at present +impart to you, and in virtue of a permission which I have little doubt +of your granting, to publish my part of our correspondence. I think that +neither of us will be a loser by this plan, however conceited I may +appear to you for saying so. Yourself, in the first place, must be a +gainer by the perusal of descriptions, on which, from their being +prepared for the ordeal of a less indulgent eye, greater care will +necessarily be expended: the public may benefit in obtaining +information, which shall be at all events accurate, relative to subjects +as yet inadequately appreciated by those they are the most likely to +interest: while the chief gainer, in the event of these two ends being +attained, will of course be your devoted and humble correspondent. + + + + +LETTER II. + +ROUTE TO SPAIN THROUGH FRANCE. + + +Bayonne. + +The position of Burgos on the principal line of communication by which +Madrid is approached from the north of Europe; the fact of its being the +first city met with, after crossing the Pyrenees, in which monuments are +found remaining of the former genius and grandeur of the country; and +the name of which calls up the more stirring and eventful epochs of +Spanish history,--render it, notwithstanding its actual distance from +the frontier, a sort of introduction or gateway to Spain--the Spain of +the tourist. + +The most agreeable and least troublesome way of visiting the best parts +of Spain excludes, it is true, this route; for the provinces of the +Peninsula which combine the greater number of requisites for the +enjoyment of life with the most attractive specimens of the picturesque, +whether natural or artificial, are those nearest to the coast, and they +are approached more conveniently by sea. Those, however, who can devote +sufficient time, will be repaid, by a tour in the interior of the +country, for the increase of trouble it may occasion them; and this tour +should precede the visit to the maritime provinces, as it will render +their superior comforts and climate the more acceptable from the +contrast. The scenery of the Pyrenees, and the passing acquaintance +formed with the original and picturesque population of the Basque +provinces, secure the traveller against any danger of ennui throughout +the land-journey between the frontier and the city of Burgos. + +There does not exist the same security throughout the extent of route +which it is necessary to travel in order to reach this frontier. The +approach to Spain across the south-western provinces of France offers +few objects worthy of detaining us on our way to the Peninsula. It is +one of the least interesting of French routes. From Paris you pass +through Orleans and Tours. At Chatellerault--between the latter city and +Poitiers--the inn-door is besieged by women offering knives for sale. It +is everywhere known that cutlery is not one of the departments of French +manufactures which have attained the greatest degree of superiority. A +glance at the specimens offered for our choice while changing horses at +Chatellerault, showed them to be very bad, even for France. + +This did not, however, prevent a multitude of travellers from purchasing +each his knife, nor one of them from laying in a plentiful stock, +stating that he destined a knife for each member of his +family--evidently one of the most numerous in France. I inquired of a +native the explanation of this scene, and whether these knives were +considered superior to those met with in other towns. "Oh no," was the +reply; "but it is usual to buy knives here." I ventured to say I thought +them very bad. "That is of no consequence; because, whenever you have +passed through Chatellerault, every one asks you for a knife made on the +spot." These victims of custom had paid enormous prices for their +acquisitions. + +Poitiers is a crazy old town, but contains one of the most admirable +specimens of the architecture immediately preceding the pointed, or +ogivale, and which the French savans call "the Romane." I allude to the +church called "the Notre Dame de Poitiers." The west front is highly +ornamented, and unites all the peculiar richness with the quaintness and +simplicity of design which characterize that fine old style. I must not +omit the forest of Chatellerault, passed through on leaving that town. +It is famous as the scene of the picnic given to the ladies of the +neighbouring city by the officers of a Polish regiment quartered there, +immediately before the breaking out of the Peninsular war. It is +related that Polish gallantry overstepped etiquette to such a +degree,--and _that_ by premeditation,--as to urge these cavaliers, by +force of bayonet, and sentries, to separate all the husbands, and other +male relatives, from the fairer portion of the guests. The consequences +of such a termination of the festivities may easily be imagined; +Bonaparte, a rigid judge with regard to all divorces except his own, on +receiving the complaint of the insulted town, condemned the officers _en +masse_ to be decimated, and the survivors degraded from their rank. He +relented, however, afterwards, on an understanding that they were to +regain their sullied laurels in the Peninsula; where, in fact, in +consequence of his orders, such opportunities were afforded them, that +scarcely a man in the regiment survived the earliest campaigns. + +The inhabitants of Chatellerault are said to take great offence on being +asked their age, suspecting the inquirer of a malicious calculation. + +The new quarter of Bordeaux is handsome, spacious, and airy. In the +promenade called "La Quinconce," on the bank of the river, a large +insulated edifice, the most monumental in view, is discovered by the +inscription on its front to be an establishment for warm baths. At one +extremity of the principal façade is seen, in sculptured letters, "Bains +des dames;" at the other, "Bains des hommes." At this latter entrance a +handsome staircase leads to the corridor of general communication, on +the unsullied white wall of which the code of discipline of the +establishment, traced in large sable characters, forces itself on the +notice of the visitor. It consists of the following single and rather +singular statute: "Il est expressement défendu aux garçons de permettre +à deux hommes de se servir de la même baignoire." After some reflection +I concluded it to be a measure of precaution with regard to cleanliness, +carried, no doubt, to an extreme at Bordeaux. This town is well +deserving of a few days' halt, should the traveller's object be +amusement, or the pleasures of the table, for which it enjoys a +well-merited reputation. It is a large and handsome city, the second in +France in beauty, and vies with the capital in the elegance of its shops +and principal streets. The theatre is, externally, the finest in France; +and there is, besides the cathedral, and surpassing it in interest and +antiquity, a remarkable Gothic church. + +Of the sixty leagues which separate this town from Bayonne, forty afford +the most perfect example of monotony. One sighs for the Steppes of +Russia. These are the well-known Landes, consisting of uncultivated +sands and morass; now covered league after league with the unvarying +gloom of the pine and cork forests,--now dreary and bare,--but ever +presenting to the wearied eye a wide interminable waste, replete with +melancholy and desolation. It is true, that a day of pouring rain was +not calculated to set off to advantage the qualities of such a region, +and should in strict justice be admitted in evidence before passing +condemnation on the Landes. + + + + +LETTER III. + +THE BASQUE PROVINCES. + + +Burgos. + +It never causes me surprise when I see the efforts made by persons of +limited means to obtain the situation of Consul in a continental town. + +In spite of one's being, as it were, tied to one's residence,--and that +not one's home,--there are advantages which counterbalance the evil. The +place carries with it a certain degree of consequence. One feels oneself +suddenly a man of influence, and a respectable public character. I have +heard one, certainly far from being high on the list of these +functionaries, termed by a humbler inhabitant of his "residence," the +"Premier Consul." + +The income, too, is, it is true, limited; but then one is usually in a +cheap place. In fact, I always envied these favoured individuals. No +calling, however, is without its _déboires_. It seems as if Providence +had decreed that an income cannot be fairly, if agreeably, earned. +Thus, the set-off against the bliss of the consul, is the necessity he +is under of holding out his hand for his fee. I make these remarks, to +introduce to your notice an ingenious method, put in practice--probably +invented--by our consul at Bayonne, for getting over the irksomeness of +this duty. I found him in his _bureau_, pen in hand, and a large sheet +of official-shaped paper before him, half written over. On my passport +being presented for his _visa_, his countenance assumed a painful +expression, in which regret was blended with a sort of tendency to +compassion, and which at first occasioned me a sensation of alarm, +conjuring up in my imagination all the consequences of an irregular +passport--tedious routes to be retraced, time lost, expense incurred, +and suspicion, and even incarceration--infection--death! + +Meanwhile he pointed to the letter he was writing, and, drawing forward +with the other hand a chair, said that he was at that moment +memorializing the Foreign Office on the subject of these visas; that his +pain was extreme at seeing travellers compelled to send or come to his +office, and to lose thus much valuable time; he was likewise concerned +at their having to pay three francs each for so useless a ceremony as +his visa; but he wished it to be remarked, that it was at present a +ceremony quite indispensable; since, only four days back, a gentleman +had been compelled to return from the Spanish frontier (a distance of +seven leagues) in the middle of the night, in consequence of his having +neglected this, as yet, necessary observance.[1] + +Leaving Bayonne by Diligence, although still at some distance from the +frontier, you are already in a Spanish vehicle. The only difference +consists in its being drawn by horses as far as Irun, a few hundred +yards in Spain, at which place they are replaced by a team of mules; but +the _mayoral_ is Spanish from the commencement, as also usually the +greater number of the travellers. From the first view of Spanish ground, +the monotony of the landscape ceases, and gives place to picturesque +scenery. This effect is as sudden as if produced by the whistle of a +scene-shifter. From the brow of a hill the valley of the Bidassoa opens +on the view, the bay on the right, two or three towns in the centre, and +beyond them, stretching to the left, the chain of the Pyrenees. This +opening scene is very satisfactory to the newly arrived traveller, whose +expectations have been rising towards fever-heat as he gradually neared +the object of his dreams--the "renowned romantic land;" the more so, as +he is well prepared, by the Landes of France, to enjoy to the utmost +the variety of scene afforded by the two days of mountain and valley +which separate the frontier from the town of Vitoria. + +The Diligence comes to a halt every afternoon; the day's journey having +commenced at three in the morning. There are three of these days between +Bayonne and Burgos. At Tolosa and Vitoria--the intermediate places of +rest--the system is as follows: Arriving at about four in the afternoon, +an interval is allowed of about two hours, which in a long journey can +always be profitably employed, until the meal, called supper. This is +Homerically plentiful, and varied sufficiently to suit the tastes of all +such as are accustomed to the vicissitudes of travelling. The repast +over, all gradually retire to their sleeping apartments, where they are +undisturbed until two o'clock in the morning. + +At this hour each passenger is furnished with a candle, and requested to +get up; and at a quarter to three the _muchacha_ (chambermaid) +reappears, bearing in her hand a plate, on which, after rubbing his +eyes, the traveller may discover, if it be allowed so to speak, an +imperceptible cup, a _xicara_,--since, having the thing, they have a +name for it, which is of course untranslateable,--of excellent +chocolate, an _azucarillo_ (almost transparent sugar prepared for +instantaneous melting), a glass of water, and a piece of bread. After +partaking of this agreeable refreshment, you have just time left to pay +your bill, fold up your passport, which during the night has remained in +the hands of the police, and to take your seat in the Diligence. + +The towns of the Basque provinces appear not to have been much +maltreated during the Carlist war; not so the villages, most of which +present a melancholy aspect of ruin and desolation. The churches, built +so as to appear more like keeps of castles, have mostly withstood the +shock. The destruction was oftener the result of burning than of +artillery. The lover of the picturesque offers his silent gratitude to +the combatants on both sides, for sparing, although unintentionally, +some of the most charming objects of all Spain. + +Among the most striking of these is Hernani. It is composed of one +street, of the exact required width for the passage of an ordinary +vehicle. This street is a perfect specimen of picturesque originality. +The old façades are mostly emblazoned with the bearings of their ancient +proprietors, sculptured in high relief. On entering the place, the +effect is that of a deep twilight after the broad blaze of the sunny +mountains. This is caused by the almost flat roofs, which advance +considerably beyond the fronts of the houses, and nearly meet in the +centre of the street: the roof of each house is either higher or lower, +or more or less projecting, than its neighbour; and all are supported by +carved woodwork, black from age. The street terminates on the brow of a +hill, and widens at the end, so as to form a small square, one +retreating side of which is occupied by the front of a church covered +with old sculpture; and the diligence, preceded by its long team of +tinkling mules, disappears through the arched gateway of a Gothic +castle. + +In this part of Spain one does not hear the sounds of the guitar; these +commence further on. On Sundays and holydays, the fair of Tolosa, and of +the other Basque towns, flourish their castagnettes to the less romantic +whinings of the violin; but, in traversing the country, the ear is +continually met by a sound less musical, although no less national, than +that of the guitar--a sort of piercing and loud complaint, comparable to +nothing but the screams of those who have "relinquished hope" at Dante's +grim gateway. + +These unearthly accents assail the ear of the traveller long before he +can perceive the object whence they proceed; but, becoming louder and +louder, there will issue from a narrow road, or rather ravine, a +diminutive cart, shut in between two small round tables for wheels. +Their voice proceeds from their junction with the axle, by a +contrivance, the nature of which I did not examine closely enough to +describe. A French tourist expresses much disgust at this custom, which +he attributes to the barbarous state of his neighbours, and their +ignorance of mechanical art; it is, however, much more probable that the +explanation given by the native population is the correct one. According +to this, the wheels are so constructed for the useful purpose of +forewarning all other drivers of the approach of a cart. The utility of +some such invention is evident. The mountain roads are cut to a depth +often of several yards, sometimes scores of yards, (being probably +dried-up beds of streams,) and frequently for a distance of some +furlongs admit of the passage of no more than one of these carts at a +time, notwithstanding their being extremely narrow. The driver, +forewarned at a considerable distance by a sound he cannot mistake, +seeks a wide spot, and there awaits the meeting. + +You need not be told that human experience analysed resolves itself into +a series of disappointments. I beg you to ask yourself, or any of your +acquaintances, whether any person, thing, or event ever turned out to be +exactly, or nearly, such as was expected he, she, or it would be. +According to the disposition of each individual, these component parts +of experience become the bane or the charm of his life. + +This truth may be made, by powerful resolve, the permanent companion of +your reflections, so as to render the expectation of disappointment +stronger than any other expectation. What then? If you know the expected +result will undergo a metamorphosis before it becomes experience, you +will not be disappointed. Only try. For instance,--every one knows the +Spanish character by heart; it is the burden of all literary +productions, which, from the commencement of time, have treated of that +country. A Carlist officer, therefore,--the hopeless martyr in the +Apostolic, aristocratic cause of divine right; the high-souled being, +rushing into the daily, deadly struggle, supported, instead of pay and +solid rations, by his fidelity to his persecuted king;--such a character +is easily figured. The theory of disappointments must here be at fault. +He is a true Spaniard; grave, reserved, dignified. His lofty presence +must impress every assembly with a certain degree of respectful awe.--I +mounted the _coupé_, or _berlina_, of the Diligence, to leave Tolosa, +with a good-looking, fair, well-fed native, with a long falling auburn +moustache. We commenced by bandying civilities as to which should hold +the door while the other ascended. No sooner were we seated than my +companion inquired whether I was military; adding, that he was a Carlist +captain of cavalry returning from a six months' emigration. + +Notwithstanding the complete polish of his manners in addressing me, it +was evident he enjoyed an uncommon exuberance of spirits, even more than +the occasion could call for from the most ardent lover of his country; +and I at first concluded he must have taken the earliest opportunity (it +being four o'clock in the morning) of renewing his long-interrupted +acquaintance with the flask of _aguardiente_: but that this was not the +case was evident afterwards, from the duration of his tremendous +happiness. During the first three or four hours, his tongue gave itself +not an instant's repose. Every incident was a subject of merriment, and, +when tired of talking to me, he would open the front-window and address +the _mayoral_; then roar to the postilion, ten mules ahead; then swear +at the _zagal_ running along the road, or toss his cigar-stump at the +head of some wayfaring peasant-girl. + +Sometimes, all his vocabulary being exhausted, he contented himself with +a loud laugh, long continued; then he would suddenly fall asleep, and, +after bobbing his head for five or six minutes, awake in a convulsion of +laughter, as though his dream was too merry for sleep. Whatever he said +was invariably preceded by two or three oaths, and terminated in the +same manner. The Spanish (perhaps, in this respect, the richest European +language) hardly sufficed for his supply. He therefore selected some of +the more picturesque specimens for more frequent repetition. These, in +default of topics of conversation, sometimes served instead of a fit of +laughter or a nap: and once or twice he hastily lowered the window, and +gave vent to a string of about twenty oaths at the highest pitch of his +lungs; then shut it deliberately, and remained silent for a minute. +During dinner he cut a whole cheese into lumps, with which he stuffed an +unlucky lap-dog, heedless of the entreaties of two fair +fellow-travellers, proprietors of the condemned quadruped. This was a +Carlist warrior! + +The inhabitants of the Basque provinces are a fine race, and taller than +the rest of the Spaniards. The men possess the hardy and robust +appearance common to mountaineers, and the symmetry of form which is +almost universal in Spain, although the difference of race is easily +perceptible. The women are decidedly handsome, although they also are +anything but Spanish-looking; and their beauty is often enhanced by an +erect and dignified air, not usually belonging to peasants, (for I am +only speaking of the lower orders,) and attributable principally to a +very unpeasant-like planting of the head on the neck and shoulders. I +saw several village girls whom nothing but their dress would prevent +from being mistaken for German or English ladies of rank, being moreover +universally blondes. On quitting Vitoria, you leave behind you the +mountains and the pretty faces. + +For us, however, the latter were not entirely lost. There were two in +the Diligence, belonging to the daughters of a Grandee of the first +class, Count de P. These youthful señoritas had taken the opportunity, +rendered particularly well-timed by the revolutions and disorders of +their country, of passing three years in Paris, which they employed in +completing their education, and seeing the wonders of that town, +_soi-disant_ the most civilized in the world; which probably it would +have been, had the old _régime_ not been overthrown. They were now +returning to Madrid, furnished with all the new ideas, and the various +useful and useless accomplishments they had acquired. + +Every one whose lot it may have been to undertake a journey of several +days in a Diligence,--that is, in one and the same,--and who +consequently recollects that trembling and anxious moment during which +he has passed in review the various members of the society of which he +is to be, _nolens volens_, a member; and the feverish interest which +directed his glance of rapid scrutiny towards those in particular of the +said members with whom he was to be exposed to more immediate contact, +and at the mercy of whose birth and education, habits, opinions, +prejudices, qualities, and propensities, his happiness and comfort were +to be placed during so large and uninterrupted a period of his +existence,--will comprehend my gratitude to these fair _émigrées_, whose +lively conversation shortened the length of each day, adding to the +charms of the magnificent scenery by the opportunity they afforded of a +congenial interchange of impressions. Although we did not occupy the +same compartment of the carriage, their party requiring the entire +interior and _rotonde_, we always renewed acquaintance when a prolonged +ascent afforded an opportunity of liberating our limbs from their +confinement. + +The two daily repasts also would have offered no charm, save that of the +Basque _cuisine_,--which, although cleanly and solid, is not perfectly +_cordon bleu_,--but for the entertaining conversation of my fair +fellow-travellers, who had treasured up in their memory the best sayings +and doings of Arnal, and the other Listons and Yateses of the French +capital, which, seasoned with a slight Spanish accent, were +indescribably _piquants_ and original. My regret was sincere on our +respective routes diverging at Burgos; for they proceeded by the direct +line over the Somo sierra to Madrid, while I take the longer road by the +Guadarramas, in order to visit Valladolid. I shall not consequently make +acquaintance with the northern approach to Madrid, unless I return +thither a second time; as to that of my fellow-travellers, I should be +too fortunate were it to be renewed during my short stay in their +capital. + + + + +LETTER IV. + +ARRIVAL AT BURGOS. CATHEDRAL. + + +Burgos. + +The chain of the Lower Pyrenees, after the ascent from the French side, +and a two days' journey of alternate mountain and valley, terminates on +the Spanish side at almost its highest level. A gentle descent leads to +the plain of Vitoria; and, after leaving behind the fresh-looking, +well-farmed environs of that town, there remains a rather monotonous +day's journey across the bare plains of Castile, only varied by the +passage through a gorge of about a mile in extent, called the Pass of +Pancorbo, throughout which the road is flanked on either side by a +perpendicular rock of from six to eight hundred feet elevation. The +ancient capital of Castile is visible from a considerable distance, when +approached in this direction; being easily recognised by the spires of +its cathedral, and by the citadel placed on an eminence, which forms a +link of a chain of hills crossing the route at this spot. + +The extent of Burgos bears a very inadequate proportion to the idea +formed of it by strangers, derived from its former importance and +renown. It is composed of five or six narrow streets, winding round the +back of an irregularly shaped colonnaded plaza. The whole occupies a +narrow space, comprised between the river Arlançon, and the almost +circular hill of scarcely a mile in circumference, (on which stands the +citadel) and covers altogether about double the extent of Windsor +Castle. + +The city has received a sort of modern facing, consisting of a row of +regularly built white houses, which turn their backs to the Plaza, and +front the river; uniting at one extremity with an ancient gateway, +which, facing the principal bridge, must originally have stood slightly +in advance of the town, to which it formed a very characteristic +entrance. It is a quadrangular edifice, pierced with a low semicircular +arch. The arch is flanked on the river front by small circular turrets, +and surmounted by seven niches, containing statues of magistrates, +kings, and heroes; while over these, in a centre niche, stands a +semicolossal statue of the Virgin, from which the monument derives its +title of "Arco de Santa Maria." Another arch, but totally simple, +situated at the other extremity of the new buildings, faces another +bridge; and this, with that of Santa Maria, and a third, placed halfway +between them, leading to the Plaza, form the three entrances to the city +on the river side. + +[Illustration: ARCO DE SANTA MARIA.] + +The dimensions of this, and many other Spanish towns, must not be +adopted as a base for estimating their amount of population. Irun, at +the frontier of France, stands on a little hill, the surface of which +would scarcely suffice for a country-house, with its surrounding +offices and gardens: it contains, nevertheless, four or five thousand +inhabitants, and comprises a good-sized market-place and handsome +town-hall, besides several streets. Nor does this close packing render +the Spanish towns less healthy than our straggling cities, planned with +a view to circulation and purity of atmosphere, although the difference +of climate would seem to recommend to each of the two countries the +system pursued by the other. The humidity of the atmosphere in England +would be the principal obstacle to cleanliness and salubrity, had the +towns a more compact mode of construction; whilst in Spain, on the +contrary, this system is advantageous as a protection against the +excessive power of the summer sun, which would render our wide +streets--bordered by houses too low to afford complete shade--not only +almost impassable, but uninhabitable. + +The Plaza of Burgos (entitled "de la Constitucion," or "de Isabel II.," +or "del Duque de la Victoria," or otherwise, according to the government +of the day,) has always been the resort of commerce. The projecting +first-floors being supported by square pillars, a sort of bazaar is +formed under them, which includes all the shop population of the city, +and forms an agreeable lounge during wet or too sunny weather. +Throughout the remainder of the town, with the exception of the modern +row of buildings above mentioned, almost all the houses are entered +through Gothic doorways, surmounted by armorial bearings sculptured in +stone, which, together with their ornamental inner courts and +staircases, testify to their having sheltered the chivalry of Old +Castile. The Cathedral, although by no means large, appears to fill half +the town; and considering that, in addition to its conspicuous and +inviting aspect, it is the principal remaining monument of the ancient +wealth and grandeur of the province, and one of the most beautiful +edifices in Europe, I will lose no time in giving you a description of +it. + +This edifice, or at least the greater portion of it, dates from the +thirteenth century. The first stone was laid by Saint Ferdinand, on the +20th of July 1221. Ferdinand had just been proclaimed king by his mother +Doña Berenguela, who had invested him with his sword at the royal +convent of the Huelgas, about a mile distant from Burgos. Don Mauricio, +Bishop of Burgos, blessed the armour as the youthful king girded it, +and, three days subsequently to the ceremony, he united him to the +Princess Beatrice, in the church of the same convent. This bishop +assisted in laying the first stone of the cathedral, and presided over +the construction of the entire body of the building, including half of +the two principal towers. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE CHOIR.] + +His tomb may be seen at the back of the Choir. From the date of the +building its style may at once be recognised, allowing for a difference +which existed between England and the Continent, the latter being +somewhat in advance. The original edifice must have been a very perfect +and admirable specimen of the pointed architecture of its time in all +its purity. As it is, unfortunately, (as the antiquary would say, and, I +should add, the mere man of taste, were it not that tastes are various, +and that the proverb says they are all in nature,) the centre of the +building, forming the intersection of the transept and nave, owing to +some defect in the original construction, fell in just at the period +during which regular architecture began to waver, and the style called +in France the "Renaissance" was making its appearance. An architect of +talent, Felipe de Borgoña, hurried from Toledo, where he was employed in +carving the stalls of the choir, to furnish a plan for the centre tower. +He, however, only carried the work to half the height of the four +cylindrical piers which support it. He was followed by several others +before the termination of the work; and Juan de Herrera, the architect +of the Escorial, is said to have completed it. In this design are +displayed infinite talent and imagination; but the artist could not +alter the taste of the age. It is more than probable that he would have +kept to the pure style of his model, but for the prevailing fashion of +his time. Taken by itself, the tower is, both externally and internally, +admirable, from the elegance of its form, and the richness of its +details; but it jars with the rest of the building. + +Placing this tower in the background, we will now repair to the west +front. Here nothing is required to be added, or taken away, to afford +the eye a feast as perfect as grace, symmetry, grandeur, and lightness, +all combined, are capable of producing. Nothing can exceed the beauty of +this front taken as a whole. You have probably seen an excellent view of +it in one of Roberts's annuals. The artists of Burgos complain of an +alteration, made some fifty years back by the local ecclesiastical +authorities, nobody knows for what reason. They caused a magnificent +portal to be removed, to make way for a very simple one, totally +destitute of the usual sculptured depth of arch within arch, and of the +profusion of statuary, which are said to have adorned the original +entrance. This, however, has not produced a bad result in the view of +the whole front. Commencing by solidity and simplicity at its base, the +pile only becomes ornamental at the first story, where rows of small +trefoil arches are carved round the buttresses; while in the +intermediate spaces are an oriel window in an ornamental arch, and two +narrow double arches. The third compartment, where the towers first rise +above the body of the church, offers a still richer display of ornament. +The two towers are here connected by a screen, which masks the roof, +raising the apparent body of the façade an additional story. This +screen is very beautiful, being composed of two ogival windows in the +richest style, with eight statues occupying the intervals of their lower +mullions. A fourth story, equally rich, terminates the towers, on the +summits of which are placed the two spires. + +These are all that can be wished for the completion of such a whole. +They are, I imagine, not only unmatched, but unapproached by any others, +in symmetry, lightness, and beauty of design. The spire of Strasburg is +the only one I am acquainted with that may be allowed to enter into the +comparison. It is much larger, placed at nearly double the elevation, +and looks as light as one of these; but the symmetry of its outline is +defective, being uneven, and producing the effect of steps. And then it +is alone, and the absence of a companion gives the façade an unfinished +appearance. For these reasons I prefer the spires of Burgos. Their form +is hexagonal; they are entirely hollow, and unsupported internally. The +six sides are carved _à jour_, the design forming nine horizontal +divisions, each division presenting a different ornament on each of its +six sides. At the termination of these divisions, each pyramid is +surrounded near the summit by a projecting gallery with balustrades. +These appear to bind and keep together each airy fabric, which, +everywhere transparent, looks as though it required some such +restraint, to prevent its being instantaneously scattered by the winds. + +On examining the interior of one of these spires, it is a subject of +surprise that they could have been so constructed as to be durable. +Instead of walls, you are surrounded by a succession of little +balustrades, one over the other, converging towards the summit. The +space enclosed is exposed to all the winds, and the thickness of the +stones so slight as to have required their being bound together with +iron cramps. At a distance of a mile these spires appear as transparent +as nets. + +On entering the church by the western doors, the view is interrupted, as +is usual in Spain, by a screen, which, crossing the principal nave at +the third or fourth pillar, forms the western limit of the choir; the +eastern boundary being the west side of the transept, where there is an +iron railing. The space between the opposite side of the transept and +the apse is the _capilla mayor_ (chief chapel), in which is placed the +high altar. There are two lower lateral naves, from east to west, and +beyond them a series of chapels. The transept has no lateral naves. Some +of the chapels are richly ornamented. The first or westernmost, on the +north side, in particular, would be in itself a magnificent church. It +is called the "Chapel of Santa Tecla." Its dimensions are ninety-six +feet in length, by sixty-three in width, and sixty high. The ceiling, +and different altars, are covered with a dazzling profusion of gilded +sculpture. The ceiling, in particular, is entirely hidden beneath the +innumerable figures and ornaments of every sort of form, although of +questionable taste, which the ravings of the extravagant style, called +in Spain "Churriguesco" (after the architect who brought it into +fashion), could invent. + +The next chapel--that of Santa Ana--is not so large, but designed in far +better taste. It is Gothic, and dates from the fifteenth century. Here +are some beautiful tombs, particularly that of the founder of the +chapel. But the most attractive object is a picture, placed at an +elevation which renders difficult the appreciation of its merits without +the aid of a glass,--a Holy Family, by Andrea del Sarto. It is an +admirable picture; possessing all the grace and simplicity, combined +with the fineness of execution, of that artist. The chapel immediately +opposite (on the south side) contains some handsome tombs, and another +picture, representing the Virgin, attributed by the cicerone of the +place to Michael Angelo. We next arrive at the newer part, or centre of +the building, where four cylindrical piers of about twelve feet +diameter, with octagonal bases, form a quadrangle, and support the +centre tower, designed by Felipe de Borgoña. These pillars are +connected with each other by magnificent wrought brass railings, which +give entrance respectively, westward to the choir,--on the east to the +sanctuary, or capilla mayor,--and north and south to the two ends of the +transept. Above is seen the interior of the tower, covered with a +profusion of ornament, but discordant with every other object within +view. + +[Illustration: _W.F. Starling, sc._ + +TRANSEPT OF THE CATHEDRAL, BURGOS.] + +The high altar at the back of the great chapel is also the work of +Herrera. It is composed of a series of rows of saints and apostles, +superposed one over the other, until they reach the roof. All are placed +in niches adorned with gilding, of which only partial traces remain. The +material of the whole is wood. Returning to either side-nave, a few +smaller chapels on the outside, and opposite them the railings of the +sanctuary, conduct us to the back of the high altar, opposite which is +the eastern chapel, called "of the Duke de Frias," or "Capilla del +Condestable." + +[Illustration: SCULPTURE IN THE APSE.] + +All this part of the edifice--I mean, from the transept eastward--is +admirable, both with regard to detail and to general effect. The pillars +are carved all round into niches, containing statues or groups; and the +intervals between the six last, turning round the apse, are occupied by +excellent designs, sculptured in a hard white stone. The subjects are, +the Agony in the Garden, Jesus bearing the Cross, the Crucifixion, the +Resurrection, and the Ascension. The centre piece, representing the +Crucifixion, is the most striking. The upper part contains the three +sufferers in front; and in the background a variety of buildings, trees, +and other smaller objects, supposed to be at a great distance. In the +foreground of the lower part are seen the officers and soldiers employed +in the execution; a group of females, with St. John supporting the +Virgin, and a few spectators. The costumes, the expression, the symmetry +of the figures, all contribute to the excellence of this piece of +sculpture. It would be difficult to surpass the exquisite grace +displayed in the attitudes, and flow of the drapery, of the female +group; and the Herculean limbs of the right-hand robber, as he writhes +in his torments, and seems ready to snap the cords which retain his feet +and arms,--the figure projecting in its entire contour from the surface +of the background,--present an admirable model of corporeal expression +and anatomical detail. + +In clearing the space to make room for these sculptures, the artist had +to remove the tomb of a bishop, whose career, if the ancient _chronique_ +is to be depended on, must have been rather singular. The information, +it must be owned, bears the appearance of having been transmitted by +some contemporary annalist, whose impartiality may have perhaps been +biassed by some of the numerous incitements which operate upon +courtiers. + +Don Pedro Fernandez de Frias, Cardinal of Spain, Bishop of Osma and +Cuenca, was, it is affirmed, of low parentage, of base and licentious +habits of life, and of a covetous and niggardly disposition. These +defects, however, by no means diminished the high favour he enjoyed at +the successive courts of Henry the Third and Juan the Second. The Bishop +of Segovia, Don Juan de Tordesillas, happened by an unlucky coincidence +to visit Burgos during his residence there. The characters of the two +prelates were not of a nature to harmonise in the smallest degree, and, +being thrown necessarily much in each other's way, they gave loose +occasionally to expressions more than bordering on the irreverent. It +was on one of these occasions, that, the eloquence of the Cardinal +Bishop here interred being at default, a lacquey of his followers came +to his assistance, and being provided with a _palo_, or staff, inflicted +on the rival dignitary certain arguments _ad humeros_--in fact, gave the +Bishop of Segovia a severe drubbing. The Cardinal was on this occasion +compelled to retire to Italy. + +Turning our backs to the centre piece of sculpture last described, we +enter the Capilla del Condestable through a superb bronze railing. In +these railings the Cathedral of Burgos rivals that of Seville, +compensating by number for the superior size and height of those +contained in the latter church. That of the chapel we are now entering +entirely fills the entrance arch, a height of about forty feet; the +helmet of a mounted knight in full armour, intended to represent St. +Andrew, which crowns its summit, nearly touching the keystone of the +arch. This chapel must be noticed in detail. Occupying at the extremity +of the church a position answering to that of Henry the Seventh's +Chapel at Westminster Abbey, it forms a tower of itself, which on the +outside harmonises with peculiar felicity with the three others, and +contributes to the apparent grandeur and real beauty of the exterior +view. The interior is magnificent, although its plan and style, being +entirely different from those of Henry the Seventh's Chapel, prevent the +comparison from going further. Its form is octagonal, measuring about +fifty feet in diameter, by rather more than a hundred in height. Its +style florid Gothic of the fourteenth century. The effect of its first +view is enhanced by its being filled, unlike the rest of the church, +with a blaze of light introduced through two rows of windows in the +upper part. + +Two of the sides are furnished with recesses, which form lesser chapels, +and in one of which there is a fine organ. Between the centre of the +pavement and the principal altar, a large square block of mixed marble +covers the remains of the founders of the chapel, and bears on its +surface their recumbent figures executed in great perfection.[2] This +is the finest tomb in the cathedral. The embroidery of the cushions, the +ornaments on the count's armour, the gloves of the countess, are among +the details which merit particular notice amidst the beautiful execution +of the whole. The high altar of this chapel does not accord with the +general effect, being designed in the style of the _renascimiento_. In +the centre of it is nevertheless fixed a treasure that would compensate +for worse defects. A small circular medallion represents the Virgin and +Child, in an attitude very similar to that of the Madonna della +Seggiola, executed on porphyry. This delicious little work, of about +nine inches in diameter, forms the centre of attraction, and is the most +precious ornament of the chapel. On the right hand, near the altar, a +small doorway admits to the sacristy. + +This contains several relics of the founders. A small portable altar of +ivory, forming the base of a crucifix of about eighteen inches in +height, is an exquisite model of delicate workmanship. Here also has +been treasured up a picture, behind a glass, and in a sort of wooden +case; a bequest likewise of the founders. Unfortunately they neglected +to impart the name of its author. The nebulous sort of uncertainty thus +made to surround this relic has magnified its merits, which might +otherwise perhaps not have claimed particular notice, to the most +colossal dimensions. They scarcely at last know what to say of it. At +the period of my first visit to Burgos, it was a Leonardo da Vinci; but, +after a lapse of two years, the same sacristan informed me that it was +uncertain whether the painting was executed by Raffaelle or Leonardo, +although it was generally supposed to be by Raffaelle; and a notice, +published since, gives the authority of an anonymous connaisseur, who +asserts it to be far superior to Raffaelle's "Perle." It is now +consequently decided that it cannot be a Leonardo, and is scarcely bad +enough for a Raffaelle. + +Without venturing _tantas componere lites_, I may be allowed to give my +impression, on an inspection as complete as the studied darkness of the +apartment, added to the glass and wooden case, would permit. It is a +half-figure of the Magdalene. The execution is very elaborate and highly +finished, but there are evident defects in the drawing. In colouring and +manner it certainly reminds you of da Vinci--of one of whose works it +may probably be a copy; but, whatever it is, it is easy to discover that +it is _not_ a Raffaelle. + +This chapel does not occupy the precise centre of the apse. A line drawn +from the middle of the western door through the nave would divide it +into two unequal parts, passing at a distance of nearly two yards from +its centre. An examination of the ground externally gives no clue to the +cause of this irregularity, by which the external symmetry of the +edifice is rendered imperfect, although in an almost imperceptible +degree; it must therefore be accounted for by the situation of the +adjoining parochial chapel, of more ancient construction, with which it +was not allowable to interfere, and by the unwillingness of the founder +to diminish the scale on which his chapel was planned. + +Before we leave the Chapel del Condestable, one of its ceremonies +deserves particular mention. I allude to the _missa de los carneros_ +(sheep-mass). At early mass on All Souls day, a feast celebrated in this +chapel with extraordinary pomp, six sheep are introduced, and made to +stand on a large block of unpolished marble, which has been left lying +close to the tombs, almost in the centre of the chapel; near the six +sheep are placed as many inflated skins of pigs, resembling those +usually filled with the wine of the country; to these is added the +quantity of bread produced from four bushels of wheat: and all remain in +view during the performance of high mass. At the conclusion of the final +response, the sheep are removed from their pedestal, and make for the +chapel-gates, through which they issue; and urged by the voice of their +driver, the peculiar shrill whistle of Spanish shepherds, and by the +more material argument of the staff, proceed down the entire length of +the cathedral to the music of the aforesaid whistle, accompanied by +their own bleatings and bells, until they vanish through the great +western portal. + +Returning to the transepts, we find two objects worthy of notice. The +cathedral having been erected on uneven ground, rising rapidly from +south to north, the entrance to the north transept opens at an elevation +of nearly thirty feet from the pavement. To reach this door there is an +ornamental staircase, of a sort of white stone, richly carved in the +_renaissance_ style. This door is never open, a circumstance which +causes no inconvenience; the steps being so steep as to render them less +useful than ornamental, as long as any other exit exists. + +A beautifully carved old door, of a wood become perfectly black, +although not so originally, gives access to the cloister from the east +side of the south transept. The interior of the arch which surmounts it +is filled with sculpture. A plain moulding runs round the top, at the +left-hand commencement of which is carved a head of the natural size, +clothed in a cowl. + +[Illustration: HEAD OF SAINT FRANCIS.][3] + +The attention is instantly rivetted by this head: it is not merely a +masterpiece of execution. Added to the exquisite beauty and delicate +moulding of the upper part of the face, the artist has succeeded in +giving to the mouth an almost superhuman expression. This feature, in +spite of a profusion of hair which almost covers it, lives and speaks. A +smile, in which a barely perceptible but irresistible and, as it were, +innate bitterness of satire and disdain modifies a wish of benevolence, +unites with the piercing expression of the eyes in lighting up the stone +with a degree of intellect which I had thought beyond the reach of +sculpture until I saw this head. Tradition asserts it to be a portrait +of Saint Francis, who was at Burgos at the period of the completion of +the cathedral; and who, being in the habit of examining the progress of +the works, afforded unconsciously a study to the sculptor. + +The two sacristies are entered from the cloister: one of them contains +the portraits of all the bishops and archbishops of Burgos. +Communicating with this last is a room destined for the reception of +useless lumber and broken ornaments. Here the cicerone directs your +attention to an old half-rotten oaken chest, fixed against the wall at a +considerable height. This relic is the famous Coffre del Cid, the +self-same piece of furniture immortalised in the anecdote related of the +hero respecting the loan of money obtained on security of the supposed +treasure it enclosed. The lender of the money, satisfied by the weight +of the trunk, and the chivalrous honour of its proprietor, never saw +its contents until shown them by the latter on the repayment of the +loan: they were then discovered to consist of stones and fragments of +old iron. + +One is disappointed on finding in this cathedral no more durable +_souvenir_ of the Cid than his rat-corroded wardrobe. His remains are +preserved in the chapel of the Ayuntamiento; thither we will +consequently bend our steps, not forgetting to enjoy, as we leave the +church, a long gaze at its elegant and symmetrical proportions. It may +be called an unique model of beauty of its particular sort, especially +when contemplated without being drawn into comparison with other +edifices of a different class. Catalani is said, on hearing Sontag's +performance, to have remarked that she was "la première de son genre, +mais que son genre n'était pas le premier." Could the cathedral of +Seville see that of Burgos, it would probably pronounce a similar +judgment on its smaller rival. + +The profusion of ornament, the perfection of symmetry, the completeness +of finish, produce an instantaneous impression that nothing is wanting +in this charming edifice; but any one who should happen to have +previously seen that of Seville cannot, after the first moments of +enthusiasm, escape the comparison which forces itself on him, and which +is not in favour of this cathedral. It is elegant, but deficient in +grandeur; beautiful, but wanting in majesty. The stern and grand +simplicity of the one, thrown into the scales against the light, airy, +and diminutive, though graceful beauty of the other, recalls the +contrast drawn by Milton between our first parents; a contrast which, +applied to these churches, must be considered favourable to the more +majestic, however the balance of preference may turn in the poem. + + + + +LETTER V. + +TOMB OF THE CID. CITADEL. + + +Burgos. + +The Ayuntamiento, or Town-hall, presents one façade to the river, and +the other to the Plaza Mayor, being built over the archway which forms +the already mentioned entrance to the central portion of the city. The +building, like other town-halls, possesses an airy staircase, a large +public room, and a few other apartments, used for the various details of +administration; but nothing remarkable until you arrive at a handsomely +ornamented saloon, furnished with a canopied seat fronting a row of +arm-chairs. This is the room in which the municipal body hold their +juntas. It contains several portraits: two or three of kings, suspended +opposite to an equal number of queens; the two likenesses of the +celebrated judges Nuño Rasura and Lain Calvo, near which are seen the +simple square oaken chairs from within the angular and hard embrace of +which they administered the laws and government of Castile; a +full-length of Fernan Gonzalez; and lastly, one of the Cid. + +Owing to the singularity of this last portrait, it is the first to +attract attention. The hero is represented in the most extraordinary of +attitudes: the head is thrown back, and the face turned towards one +side; the legs in a sort of studied posture; a drawn sword is in the +right hand, the point somewhat raised. The general expression is that of +a comic actor attempting an attitude of mock-heroic impertinence; and is +probably the result of an unattained object in the mind of the artist, +of producing that of fearless independence. + +Beyond this apartment is the Chapel, a plain, not large room, containing +but two objects besides its very simple altar, with its, almost black, +silver candlesticks. Over the altar is a Conception, by Murillo; and, in +the centre of the chapel, a highly polished and neatly ornamented +funereal urn, composed of walnut-wood, contains the remains of the Cid: +the urn stands on a pedestal. On its two ends in letters of gold, are +inscriptions, stating its contents, and the date of its application to +its present purpose. I was told that the bones were contained in a +leaden box, but that a glass one was being prepared, which, on opening +the lid of the urn, would afford a view of the actual dust of the +warrior. + +The remains of the Cid have only recently been conveyed to Burgos from +the monastery of San Pedro de Cardenas, about four miles distant. They +had been preserved there ever since his funeral, which took place in the +presence of King Alonzo the Sixth, and the two Kings, sons-in-law of the +hero, as soon as the body arrived from Valencia. + +This monastic retreat, if dependence may be placed on the testimony of +the Cerberus of the Alcalde,--the cicerone (when duly propitiated) of +the municipal edifice,--did not turn out to be altogether a place of +repose to the warrior. According to this worthy, an amusing interpreter +of the popular local traditions, the exploits performed subsequently to +the hero's interment were such as almost to throw a shadow over those he +enacted during his mortal existence. One specimen will suffice. Some +twenty thousand individuals, including the monks of all the neighbouring +monasteries, were assembled in the church of San Pedro, and were +listening to a sermon on the occasion of the annual festival in honour +of the patron saint. Guided by curiosity, a Moor entered the church and +mingled with the crowd. After remaining during a short time motionless, +he approached a pillar, against which was suspended a portrait of the +Cid, for the purpose of examining the picture. Suddenly the figure was +seen by all present, whose testimony subsequently established the fact, +to grasp with the right hand the hilt of its sword, and to uncover a few +inches of the naked blade. The Moor instantly fell flat on the pavement, +and was found to be lifeless. + +You would be surprised at the difficulty of forming even here, in the +midst of the scenes of his exploits, a definite idea of this Hercules of +the Middle Ages. For those who are satisfied with the orthodox histories +of the monks, he is without defects--a simple unsophisticated demi-god. +But there have been Mahometan historians of Spain. These are universally +acknowledged to have treated of all that concerned themselves with +complete accuracy and impartiality; and, when this happens, it should +seem to be the best criterion, in the absence of other proof, of their +faithful delineation of others' portraits. + +However that may be, here is an instance which will give you an idea of +the various readings of the Cid's history. + +Mariana relates, that an Arab expedition, headed by five kings (as he +terms them) of the adjoining states, being signalized as having passed +the mountains of Oca, and being occupied in committing depredations on +the Christian territory, Rodrigo suddenly took the field, recovered all +the booty, and made all five kings prisoners. All this being done by +himself and his own retainers. The kings he released after signing a +treaty, according to which they agreed to pay him an annual tribute. It +happened, that on the occasion of the first payment of this, Rodrigo was +at Zamora, whither he had accompanied the King of Castile; and he took +an opportunity of receiving the Arab messengers in presence of the +court. This was at least uncommon. The messengers addressed him by the +appellation of Syd (sir) as they handed over the money. Ferdinand, +delighted with the prowess of his courtier, expressed on this occasion +the desire that he should retain the title of Syd. + +This anecdote undergoes, in the hands of the Arab writers, a curious +metamorphosis. According to them, the expression Syd was employed, not +by tributary kings, but by certain chiefs of that creed whose pay the +Catholic hero was receiving in return for aid lent against the +Christians of Aragon. + +They attribute, moreover, to this mirror of chivalry, on the surrender +of Valencia, a conduct by no means heroic--not to say worthy a +highwayman. He accepted, as they relate, the pay of the Emyr of Valencia +to protect the city against the Almoravides, who at that period were +extending their conquests all over Moorish Spain. The Cid was repulsed, +and the town taken. After this defeat he shut himself up in a castle, +since called the Peña del Cid (Rock of the Cid), and there waited his +opportunity. On the departure of the conquerors from the city, in which +they left an insufficient garrison, he hastened down at the head of his +campeadores, and speedily retook Valencia. + +The Cadi, Ahmed ben Djahhaf, left in command of the place, had, however, +only surrendered on faith of a capitulation couched in the most +favourable terms. It was even stipulated that he should retain his post +of governor; but no sooner was the Cid master of the place than he +caused the old man to be arrested and put to the torture, in order to +discover from him the situation of a treasure supposed to be concealed +in the Alcazar; after which, finding he would not speak, or had nothing +to reveal, he had him burned on the public place. + +The Citadel of Burgos, at present an insignificant fortress, was +formerly a place of considerable importance, and commanded the +surrounding country; especially on the side on which the town--placed at +the foot of the eminence--lay beneath its immediate protection, and +could listen unscathed to the whizzing of the deadly missiles of war as +they passed over its roofs. During the various wars of which Castile has +been the theatre at different periods, this citadel has, from its +important position, occupied the main attention of contending armies; +and, from forming a constant _point-de-mire_ to attacking troops, has +finally been almost annihilated. The principal portion of the present +buildings is of a modern date, but, although garrisoned, the fortress +cannot be said to be restored. + +The extent of the town was greater than at present, and included a +portion of the declivity which exists between the present houses and the +walls of the fortress. At the two extremities of the town-side of the +hill, immediately above the level of the highest-placed houses now +existing, two Arab gate-ways give access through the ancient town-walls, +which ascended the hill from the bottom. Between these there exists a +sort of flat natural terrace, above the town, and running along its +whole length, on to which some of the streets open. On this narrow level +stood formerly a part, probably the best part, of the city, which has +shared the fate of its protecting fortress; but, not being rebuilt, it +is now an empty space,--or would be so, but for the recent erection of a +cemetery, placed at about half the distance between the two extremities. + +Before, however, the lapse of years had worn away the last surviving +recollections of these localities, some worshipper of by-gone glory +succeeded in discovering, on the now grass-grown space, the situations +once occupied by the respective abodes of the Cid and of Fernan +Gonzalez. On these spots monuments have been erected. That of Gonzalez +is a handsome arch, the piers supporting which are each faced with two +pillars of the Doric order on either side; above the cornice there is a +balustrade, over which four small obelisks correspond with the +respective pillars. The arch is surmounted by a sort of pedestal, on +which is carved an inscription, stating the object of the monument. +There is nothing on the top of the pedestal, which appears to have been +intended for the reception of a statue. + +The monument in memory of the Cid is more simple. It consists of three +small pyramids in a row, supported on low bases or pedestals; that in +the centre higher than the other two, but not exceeding (inclusive of +the base) twenty feet from the ground. On the lower part of the centre +stone is carved an appropriate inscription, abounding in ellipsis, after +the manner usually adopted in Spain. + +It is not surprising that these monuments, together with the memory of +the events brought about by the men in whose honour they have been +erected, should be fast hastening to a level with the desolation +immediately surrounding them. The present political circumstances of +Spain are not calculated to favour the retrospection of by-gone glories. +Scarcely is time allowed--so rapidly are executed the transmutations of +the modern political diorama--for examining the events, or even for +recovery from the shock, of each succeeding revolution; nor force +remaining to the exhausted organs of admiration or of horror, to be +exercised on almost forgotten acts, since those performed before the +eyes of the living generation have equalled or surpassed them in +violence and energy. The arch of Fernan Gonzalez, if not speedily +restored, (which is not to be expected,) runs the risk, from its +elevation and want of solidity, of being the first of the two monuments +to crumble to dust; a circumstance which, although not destitute of an +appearance of justice,--from the fact of the hero it records having +figured on an earlier page of Castilian annals,--would nevertheless +occasion regret to those who prefer history to romance, and who estimate +essential services rendered to the state, as superior to mere individual +_éclat_, however brilliant. + +You will not probably object to the remainder of this letter being +monopolized by this founder of the independence of Castile; the less so, +from the circumstance of the near connection existing between his +parentage and that of the city we are visiting, and which owes to him so +much of its celebrity. Should you not be in a humour to be lectured on +history, you are at all events forewarned, and may wait for the next +despatch. + +Unlike many of the principal towns of the Peninsula, which content +themselves with no more modern descent than from Nebuchadnezzar or +Hercules, Burgos modestly accepts a paternity within the domain of +probability. A German, Nuño Belchides, married, in the reign of Alonzo +the Great, King of Oviedo, a daughter of the second Count of Castile, +Don Diego Porcellos. This noble prevailed on his father-in-law to +assemble the inhabitants of the numerous villages dispersed over the +central part of the province, and to found a city, to which he gave the +German name of "city" with a Spanish termination. It was Don Fruela +III., King of Leon, whose acts of injustice and cruelty caused so +violent an exasperation, that the nobles of Castile, of whom there +existed several of a rank little inferior to that of the titular Count +of the province, threw up their allegiance, and selected two of their +own body, Nuño Rasura and Lain Calvo, to whom they intrusted the supreme +authority, investing them with the modest title of Judges, by way of a +check, lest at any future time they should be tempted, upon the strength +of a higher distinction, to make encroachments on the common liberties. + +The first of the two judges, Nuño Rasura, was the son of the +above-mentioned Nuño Belchides and his wife, Sulla Bella (daughter of +Diego Porcellos), and grandfather of Fernan Gonzalez. His son Gonzalo +Nuño, Fernan's father, succeeded on his death to the dignity of Judge of +Castile, and became extremely popular, owing to his affability, and +winning urbanity of deportment in his public character. He established +an academy in his palace for the education of the sons of the nobles, +who were instructed under his own superintendence in all the +accomplishments which could render them distinguished in peace or in +war. The maternal grandfather of Fernan Gonzalez was Nuño Fernandez, one +of the Counts of Castile who were treacherously seized and put to death +by Don Ordoño, King of Leon. The young Count of Castile is described as +having been a model of elegance. To singular personal beauty he added an +unmatched proficiency in all the exercises then in vogue, principally in +arms and equitation. These accomplishments, being added to much +affability and good-nature, won him the affections of the young nobles, +who strove to imitate his perfections, while they enjoyed the +festivities of his palace. + +It appears that, notwithstanding the rebellion, and appointment of +Judges, Castile had subsequently professed allegiance to the Kings of +Leon; for a second revolt was organized in the reign of Don Ramiro, at +the head of which we find Fernan Gonzalez. On this occasion, feeling +themselves too feeble to resist the royal troops, the rebels had +recourse to a Moorish chief, Aecipha. The King, however, speedily drove +the Moors across the frontier, and succeeded in capturing the principal +revolters. After a short period these were released, on the sole +condition of taking the oath of allegiance; and the peace was +subsequently sealed by the marriage of a daughter of Gonzalez with Don +Ordoño, eldest son of Ramiro, and heir to the kingdom. + +The Count of Castile was, however, too powerful a vassal to continue +long on peaceable terms with a sovereign, an alliance with whose family +had more than ever smoothed the progressive ascent of his pretensions. +Soon after the accession of his son-in-law Don Ordoño, he entered into +an alliance against him with the King of Navarre. This declaration of +hostility was followed by the divorce of Fernan's daughter by the King, +who immediately entered into a second wedlock. The successor of this +monarch, Don Sancho, surnamed the Fat, was indebted for a large portion +of his misfortunes and vicissitudes to the hostility of the Count of +Castile. Don Ordoño, the pretender to his throne, son of Alonzo surnamed +the Monk, with the aid of Gonzalez, whose daughter Urraca, the +repudiated widow of the former sovereign, he married, took easy +possession of the kingdom, driving Don Sancho for shelter to the court +of his uncle the then King of Navarre. It is worth mentioning, that King +Sancho took the opportunity of his temporary expulsion from his states, +to visit the court of Abderahman at Cordova, and consult the Arab +physicians, whose reputation for skill in the removal of obesity had +extended over all Spain. History relates that the treatment they +employed was successful, and that Don Sancho, on reascending his throne, +had undergone so complete a reduction as to be destitute of all claims +to his previously acquired _sobriquet_. + +All these events, and the intervals which separated them, fill a +considerable space of time; and the establishment of the exact dates +would be a very difficult, if not an impossible, undertaking. Various +wars were carried on during this time by Gonzalez, and alliances formed +and dissolved. Several more or less successful campaigns are recorded +against the Moors of Saragoza, and of other neighbouring states. The +alliance with Navarre had not been durable. In 959 Don Garcia, King of +that country, fought a battle with Fernan Gonzalez, by whom he was taken +prisoner, and detained in Burgos thirteen months. The conquest of the +independence of Castile is related in the following manner. + +In the year 958, the Cortes of the kingdom were assembled at Leon, +whence the King forwarded a special invitation to the Count of Castile, +requiring his attendance, and that of the Grandees of the province, for +"deliberation on affairs of high importance to the state." Gonzalez, +although suspicious of the intentions of the sovereign, unable to devise +a suitable pretext for absenting himself, repaired to Leon, attended by +a considerable _cortége_ of nobles. The King went forth to receive him; +and it is related, that refusing to accept a present, offered by +Gonzalez, of a horse and a falcon, both of great value, a price was +agreed on; with the condition that, in case the King should not pay the +money on the day named in the agreement, for each successive day that +should intervene until the payment, the sum should be doubled. Nothing +extraordinary took place during the remainder of the visit; and the +Count, on his return to Burgos, married Doña Sancha, sister of the King +of Navarre. + +It is probable that some treachery had been intended against Gonzalez, +similar to that put in execution on a like occasion previous to his +birth, when the Counts of Castile were seized and put to death in their +prison; for, not long after, a second invitation was accepted by the +Count, who was now received in a very different manner. On his kneeling +to kiss the King's hand, Don Sancho burst forth with a volley of +reproaches, and, repulsing him with fury, gave orders for his immediate +imprisonment. It is doubtful what fate was reserved for him by the +hatred of the Queen-mother, who had instigated the King to the act of +treachery, in liquidation of an ancient personal debt of vengeance of +her own, had not the Countess of Castile, Doña Sancha, undertaken his +liberation. + +Upon receiving the news of her husband's imprisonment, she allowed a +short period to elapse, in order to mature her plan, and at the same +time lull suspicion of her intentions. She then repaired to Leon, on +pretext of a pilgrimage to Santiago, on the route to which place Leon is +situated. She was received by King Sancho with distinguished honours, +and obtained permission to visit her husband, and to pass a night in his +prison. The following morning, Gonzalez, taking advantage of early +twilight, passed the prison-doors in disguise of the Countess, and, +mounting a horse which was in readiness, escaped to Castile. + +This exploit of Doña Sancha does not belong to the days of romance and +chivalry alone: it reminds us of the still more difficult task, +accomplished by the beautiful Winifred, Countess of Nithisdale, who, +eight centuries later, effected the escape of the rebel Earl, her +husband, from the Tower, in a precisely similar manner; thus rescuing +him from the tragic fate of his friends and fellow-prisoners, the Lords +Derwentwater and Kenmure. + +Doña Sancha obtained her liberty without difficulty, being even +complimented by the King on her heroism, and provided with a brilliant +escort on her return to Castile. Gonzalez contented himself with +claiming the price agreed upon for the horse and falcon; and--the King +not seeming inclined to liquidate the debt, which, owing to the long +delay, amounted already to an enormous sum, or looking upon it as a +pretext for hostility, the absence of which would not prevent the Count +of Castile, in his then state of exasperation, from having recourse to +arms--passed the frontier of Leon at the head of an army, and, laying +waste the country, approached gradually nearer to the capital. At length +Don Sancho sent his treasurer to clear up the account, but it was found +that the debt exceeded the whole amount of the royal treasure; upon +which Gonzalez claimed and obtained, on condition of the withdrawal of +his troops, a formal definitive grant of Castile, without reservation, +to himself and his descendants. + +Before we quit Burgos for its environs, one more edifice requires our +notice. It is a fountain, occupying the centre of the space which faces +the principal front of the cathedral. This little antique monument +charms, by the quaint symmetry of its design and proportions, and +perhaps even by the terribly mutilated state of the four fragments of +Cupids, which, riding on the necks of the same number of animals so +maltreated as to render impossible the discovery of their race, form +projecting angles, and support the basin on their shoulders. Four +mermaids, holding up their tails, so as not to interfere with the +operations of the Cupids, ornament the sides of the basin, which are +provided with small apertures for the escape of the water; the top being +covered by a flat circular stone, carved around its edge. This stone,--a +small, elegantly shaped pedestal, which surmounts it,--and the other +portions already described, are nearly black, probably from antiquity; +but on the pedestal stands a little marble virgin, as white as snow. +This antique figure harmonises by its mutilation with the rest, although +injured in a smaller degree; and at the same time adds to the charm of +the whole, by the contrast of its dazzling whiteness with the dark mass +on which it is supported. The whole is balanced on the capital of a +pillar, of a most original form, which appears immediately above the +surface of a sheet of water enclosed in a large octagonal basin. + +[Illustration: FOUNTAIN OF SANTA MARIA.] + + + + +LETTER VI. + +CARTUJA DE MIRAFLORES. CONVENT OF LAS HUELGAS. + + +Burgos. + +The Chartreuse of Miraflores, situated to the east of the city, half-way +in the direction of the above-mentioned monastery of San Pedro de +Cardeñas, crowns the brow of an eminence, which, clothed with woods +towards its base, slopes gradually until it reaches the river. This spot +is the most picturesque to be found in the environs of Burgos,--a region +little favoured in that respect. The view, extending right and left, +follows the course of the river, until it is bounded on the west by the +town, and on the east by a chain of mountains, a branch of the Sierra of +Oca. Henry the Third, grandfather of Isabel the Catholic, made choice of +this position for the erection of a palace; the only remnant of it now +existing is the church, which has since become the inheritance of the +Carthusian monks, the successors of its royal founder. + +The late revolution, after sparing the throne of Spain, displayed a +certain degree of logic, if not in all its acts, at least in sparing, +likewise, two or three of the religious establishments, under the +protection of which the principal royal mausoleums found shelter and +preservation. The great Chartreuse of Xeres contained probably no such +palladium, for it was among the first of the condemned: its lands and +buildings were confiscated; and its treasures of art, and all portable +riches, dispersed, as likewise its inhabitants, in the direction of all +the winds. + +In England the name of Xeres is only generally known in connection with +one of the principal objects of necessity, which furnish the table of +the _gastronome_; but in Andalucia the name of Xeres de la Frontera +calls up ideas of a different sort. It is dear to the wanderer in Spain, +whose recollections love to repose on its picturesque position, its +sunny skies, its delicious fruits, its amiable and lively population, +and lastly on its once magnificent monastery, and the treasures of art +it contained. The Prior of that monastery has been removed to the +Cartuja of Burgos, where he presides over a community, reduced to four +monks, who subsist almost entirely on charity. This amiable and +gentleman-like individual, in whom the monk has in no degree injured +the man of the world,--although a large estate, abandoned for the +cloister, proved sufficiently the sincerity of his religious +professions,--had well deserved a better fate than to be torn in his old +age from his warm Andalucian retreat, and transplanted to the rudest +spot in the whole Peninsula, placed at an elevation of more than four +thousand feet above the level of the Atlantic, and visited up to the +middle of June by snow-storms. At the moment I am writing, this innocent +victim of reform is extended on a bed of sickness, having only recently +escaped with his life from an attack, during which he was given over. + +This Cartuja possesses more than the historical reminiscences with which +it is connected, to attract the passing tourist. It owes its prolonged +existence to the possession of an admirable work of art,--the tomb of +Juan the Second and his Queen Isabel, which stands immediately in front +of the high altar of the church. This living mass of alabaster, the work +of Gil de Siloë, son of the celebrated Diego, presents in its general +plan the form of a star. It turns one of its points to the altar. Its +mass, or thickness from the ground to the surface, measures about six +feet; and this is consequently the height at which are laid the two +recumbent figures. + +[Illustration: _N. A. Wells. deb._ W. I. Starling, "84" + +INTERIOR OF THE CHURCH OF MIRAFLORES, + +NEAR BURGOS.] + +It is impossible to conceive a work more elaborate than the details of +the costumes of the King and Queen. The imitation of lace and +embroidery, the exquisite delicacy of the hands and features, the +infinitely minute carving of the pillows, the architectural railing by +which the two statues are separated, the groups of sporting lions and +dogs placed against the foot-boards, and the statues of the four +Evangelists, seated at the four points of the star which face the +cardinal points of the compass,--all these attract first the attention +as they occupy the surface; but they are nothing to the profusion of +ornament lavished on the sides. The chisel of the artist has followed +each retreating and advancing angle of the star, filling the innermost +recesses with life and movement. It would be endless to enter into a +detailed enumeration of all this. It is composed of lions and lionesses, +panthers, dogs,--crouching, lying, sitting, rampant, and standing; of +saints, male and female, and personifications of the cardinal virtues. +These figures are represented in every variety of posture,--some +standing on pedestals, and others seated on beautifully wrought +arm-chairs, but all enclosed respectively in the richest Gothic tracery, +and under cover of their respective niches. Were there no other object +of interest at Burgos, this tomb would well repay the traveller for a +halt of a few days, and a country walk. + +At the opposite side of the town may be seen the royal convent of Las +Huelgas; but as the nuns reserve to themselves the greater part of the +church, including the royal tombs, which are said to be very numerous, +no one can penetrate to satisfy his curiosity. It is, however, so +celebrated an establishment, and of such easy access from the town, that +a sight of what portions of the buildings are accessible deserves the +effort of the two hundred yards' walk which separates it from the river +promenade. This Cistercian convent was founded towards the end of the +twelfth century by Alonzo the Eighth,--the same who won the famous +battle of the Navas de Tolosa. It occupies the site of the +pleasure-grounds of a royal retreat, as is indicated by the name itself. +In its origin it was destined for the reception, exclusively, of +princesses of the blood royal. It was consequently designed on a scale +of peculiar splendour. Of the original buildings, however, only +sufficient traces remain to confirm the records of history, but not to +convey an adequate idea of their magnificence. What with the +depredations of time, the vicissitudes of a situation in the midst of +provinces so given to contention, and repeated alterations, it has +evidently, as far as regards the portions to a view of which admission +can be obtained, yielded almost all claims to identity with its ancient +self. + +The entire church, with the exception of a small portion partitioned off +at the extremity, and containing the high altar, is appropriated to the +nuns, and fitted up as a choir. It is very large; the length, of which +an estimate may be formed externally, appearing to measure nearly three +hundred feet. It is said this edifice contains the tomb of the founder, +surrounded by forty others of princesses. The entrance to the public +portion consists of a narrow vestibule, in which are several antique +tombs. They are of stone, covered with Gothic sculpture, and appear, +from the richness of their ornaments, to have belonged also to royalty. +They are stowed away, and half built into the wall, as if there had not +been room for their reception. The convent is said to contain handsome +cloisters, courts, chapter-hall, and other state apartments, all of a +construction long subsequent to its foundation. The whole is surrounded +by a complete circle of houses, occupied by its various dependants and +pensioners. These are enclosed from without by a lofty wall, and face +the centre edifice, from which they are separated by a series of large +open areas. Their appearance is that of a small town, surrounding a +cathedral and palace. + +The convent of the Huelgas takes precedence of all others in Spain. The +abbess and her successors were invested by the sovereigns of Leon and +Castile with especial prerogatives, and with a sort of authority over +all convents within those kingdoms. Her possessions were immense, and +she enjoyed the sovereign sway over an extensive district, including +several convents, thirteen towns, and about fifty villages. In many +respects her jurisdiction resembles that of a bishop. The following is +the formula which heads her official acts: + +"We, Doña ..., by the grace of God and of the Holy Apostolic See, Abbess +of the royal monastery of Las Huelgas near to the city of Burgos, order +of the Cister, habit of our father San Bernardo, Mistress, Superior, +Prelate, Mother, and lawful spiritual and temporal Administrator of the +said royal monastery, and its hospital called 'the King's Hospital,' and +of the convents, churches, and hermitages of its filiation, towns and +villages of its jurisdiction, lordship, and vassalage, in virtue of +Apostolic bulls and concessions, with all sorts of jurisdiction, proper, +almost episcopal, _nullius diocesis_, and with royal privileges, since +we exercise both jurisdictions, as is public and notorious," &c. + +The hospital alluded to gives its name to a village, about a quarter of +a mile distant, called "Hospital del Rey." This village is still in a +sort of feudal dependance on the abbess, and is the only remaining +source of revenue to the convent, having been recently restored by a +decree of Queen Isabella; for the royal blood flowing in the veins of +the present abbess had not exempted her convent from the common +confiscation decreed by the revolution. The hospital, situated in the +centre of the village, is a handsome edifice. The whole place is +surrounded by a wall, similar to that which encloses the convent and its +immediate dependances, and the entrance presents a specimen of much +architectural beauty. It forms a small quadrangle, ornamented with an +elegant arcade, and balustrades of an original design. + + + + +LETTER VII. + +ROUTE TO MADRID. MUSEO. + + +Toledo. + +The route from Burgos to Madrid presents few objects of interest. The +country is dreary and little cultivated; indeed, much of it is incapable +of culture. For those who are unaccustomed to Spanish routes, there may, +indeed, be derived some amusement from the inns, of which some very +characteristic specimens lie in their way. The Diligence halts for the +night at the Venta de Juanilla, a solitary edifice situated at the foot +of the last or highest _étage_ of the Somo Sierra, in order to leave the +principal ascent for the cool of early dawn. The building is seen from a +considerable distance, and looks large; but is found, on nearer +approach, to be a straggling edifice of one story only. + +It is a modern inn, and differs in some essential points from the +ancient Spanish _posada_,--perfect specimens of which are met with at +Briviesca and Burgos. In these the vestibule is at the same time a +cow-shed, sheepfold, stable, pigsty,--in fact, a spacious Noah's Ark, in +which are found specimens of all living animals, that is, of all sizes, +down to the most minute; but for the purification of which it would be +requisite that the entire flood should pass within, instead of on its +outside. The original ark, moreover, possessed the advantage of windows, +the absence of which causes no small embarrassment to those who have to +thread so promiscuous a congregation, in order to reach the staircase; +once at the summit of which, it must be allowed, one meets with +cleanliness, and a certain degree of comfort. + +The Venta de Juanilla, on the Somo Sierra, is a newish, clean-looking +habitation, especially the interior, where one meets with an excellent +supper, and may feast the eyes on the sight of a printed card, hanging +on the wall of the dining-room, announcing that luxury of exotic +gastronomy--Champagne--at three crowns a bottle: none were bold enough +that evening to ask for a specimen. + +There is less of the exotic in the bed-room arrangements; in fact, the +building appears to have been constructed by the Diligence proprietors +to meet the immediate necessity of the occasion. The Madrid road being +served by two Diligences, one, leaving the capital, meets at this point, +on its first night, the other, which approaches in the contrary +direction. In consequence of this arrangement, the edifice is provided +with exactly four dormitories,--two male, and two female. + +Nor is this the result of an intention to diminish the numbers quartered +in each male or female apartment; on the contrary, two rooms would have +answered the purpose better than four, but for the inconvenience and +confusion which would have arisen from the denizens of the Diligence +destined to start at a later hour being aroused from their slumbers, and +perhaps induced to depart by mistake, at the signal for calling the +travellers belonging to the earlier conveyance,--the one starting at two +o'clock in the morning, and the other at three. + +On the occasion of my _bivouaque_ in this curious establishment, an +English couple, recently married, happened to be among the number of my +fellow-sufferers; and the lady's report of the adventures of the female +dormitory of our Diligence afforded us sufficient amusement to enliven +the breakfast on the other side of the mountain. It appeared, that, +during the hustling of the males into their enclosure, a fond mother, +moved by Heaven knows what anxious apprehensions, had succeeded in +abstracting from the herd her son, a tender youth of fourteen. Whether +or not she expected to smuggle, without detection, this contraband +article into the female pen we could not determine. If she did, she +reckoned somewhat independently of her host; for on a fellow-traveller +entering in the dark, and groping about for a considerable time in +search of an unoccupied nest, a sudden exclamation aroused the fatigued +sleepers, followed by loud complaints against those who had admitted an +interloper to this holy of holies of feminine promiscuousness, to the +exclusion of one of its lawful occupants. The dispute ran high; but it +must be added to the already numerous proofs of the superior energy +proceeding from aroused maternal feelings, that the intruder was +maintained in his usurped resting-place by his determined parent, +notwithstanding the discontent naturally caused by such a proceeding. + +We have now reached the centre of these provinces, the destinies of +which have offered to Europe so singular an example of political +vicissitude. It is an attractive occupation, in studying the history of +this country, to watch the progress of the state, the ancient capital of +which we have just visited,--a province which, from being probably the +rudest and poorest of the whole Peninsula, became the most influential, +the wealthiest, the focus of power, as it is geographically the centre +of Spain,--and to witness its constantly progressive advance, as it +gradually drew within the range of its influence all the surrounding +states; exemplifying the dogged perseverance of the Spanish character, +which, notwithstanding repeated defeat, undermined the Arab power by +imperceptible advances, and eventually ridded the Peninsula of its +long-established lords. It is interesting to thread the intricate +narrative of intermarriages, treaties, wars, alliances, and successions, +interspersed with deeds of heroic chivalry and of blackest treachery, +composing the annals of the different northern states of Spain; until at +length, the Christian domination having been borne onward by successive +advantages nearly to the extreme southern shores of the Peninsula, a +marriage unites the two principal kingdoms, and leads to the subjection +of all Spain, as at present, under one monarch. + +It is still more attractive to repair subsequently to the country +itself; and from this central, pyramidal summit--elevated by the hand of +Nature to a higher level than the rest of the Peninsula; its bare and +rugged surface exposed to all the less genial influences of the +elements, and crowned by its modern capital, looking down in all +directions, like a feudal castle on the fairer and more fertile regions +subject to its dominion, and for the protection of which it is there +proudly situated,--to take a survey of this extraordinary country, view +the localities immortalized by the eventful passages of its history, and +muse on its still varying destinies. + +Madrid has in fact already experienced threatening symptoms of the +insecurity of this feudal tenure, as it were, in virtue of which it +enjoys the supreme rank. Having no claim to superiority derived from its +commerce, the fertility of its territory, the facility of its means of +communication and intercourse with the other parts of the kingdom or +with foreign states,--nothing, in fact, but its commanding and central +position, and the comparatively recent choice made of it by the +sovereigns for a residence; it has seen itself rivalled, and at length +surpassed in wealth and enterprize, by Barcelona, and its right to be +continued as the seat of government questioned and attacked. Its fall is +probably imminent, should some remedy not be applied before the +intermittent revolutionary fever, which has taken possession of the +country, makes further advances, or puts on chronic symptoms; but its +fate will be shared by the power to which it owes its creation. No +residence in Europe bears a prouder and more monarchical aspect than +Madrid, nor is better suited for the abode of the feudal pomp and +etiquette of the most magnificent--in its day--of European courts: but +riding and country sports have crossed the Channel, and are +endeavouring to take root in France; fresco-painting has invaded +England; in Sicily marble porticoes have been painted to imitate red +bricks; and a Constitutional monarchy is being erected in Spain. +Spaniards are not imitators, and cannot change their nature, although +red bricks should become the materials of Italian _palazzi_, Frenchmen +ride after fox-hounds, and Englishmen be metamorphosed to Michael +Angelos. The Alcazar of Madrid, commanding from its windows thirty miles +of royal domains, including the Escorial and several other royal +residences, is not destined to become the abode of a monarch paid to +receive directions from a loquacious and corrupt house of deputies,--the +utmost result to be obtained from forcing on states a form of government +unsuited to their character. If the Spanish reigning family, after +having settled their quarrel with regard to the succession, (if ever +they do so,) are compelled to accept a (so-called) Constitutional form +of government, with their knowledge of the impossibility of its +successful operation, they will probably endeavour, in imitation of the +highly gifted sovereign of their neighbours, to stifle it, and to +administrate in spite of it; until, either wanting the talent and energy +necessary for the maintenance of this false position, or their subjects, +as may be expected, getting impatient at finding themselves mystified, +a total overthrow will terminate the experiment. + +I am aware of the criticism to which this opinion would be exposed in +many quarters; I already hear the contemptuous upbraidings, similar to +those with which the "exquisite," exulting in an unexceptionable +wardrobe, lashes the culprit whose shoulders are guilty of a coat of the +previous year's fashion. We are told that the tendency of minds, the +progress of intellect, the spirit of the age,--all which, translated +into plain language, mean (if they mean anything) the fashion,--require +that nations should provide themselves each with a new Liberal +government; claiming, in consideration of the fashionable vogue and the +expensive nature of the article, its introduction (unlike other British +manufactures) duty-free. But it ought first to be established, whether +these larger interests of humanity are amenable to the sceptre of so +capricious a ruler as the fashion. It appears to me, that nations should +be allowed to adapt their government to their respective characters, +dispositions, habits of life, and traditions. All these are more +dependant than is supposed by those who possess not the habit of +reflection, on the race, the position, the soil and climate each has +received from nature, which, by the influence they have exercised on +their habits and dispositions, have fitted them each for a form of +constitution equally appropriate to no other people; since no two +nations are similarly circumstanced, not only in all these respects, but +even in any one of them. + +What could be more Liberal than the monarchy of Spain up to the +accession of the Bourbon dynasty? the kings never reigning but by the +consent of their subjects, and on the condition of unvarying respect for +their privileges; but never, when once seated on the throne, checked and +embarrassed in carrying through the measures necessary for the +administration of the state. The monarch was a responsible but a free +monarch until these days, when an attempt is being made to deprive him +both of freedom of action and responsibility--almost of utility, and to +render him a tool in the hands of a constantly varying succession of +needy advocates or military _parvenus_, whom the chances of civil war or +the gift of declamation have placed in the way of disputing the +ministerial salaries, without having been able to furnish either their +hearts with the patriotism, or their heads with the capacity, requisite +for the useful and upright administration of the empire. In Spain, the +advocates of continual change, in most cases in which personal interest +is not their moving spring, hope to arrive ultimately at a republic. +Now, no one more than myself admires the theories of Constitutional +governments, of universal political power and of republicanism: the last +system would be the best of all, were it only for the equality it is to +establish. But how are men to be equalised by the manufacturers of a +government? How are the ignorant and uneducated to be furnished with +legislative capacity, or the poor or unprincipled armed against the +seductions of bribery? It is not, unfortunately, in any one's power to +accomplish these requisite preliminary operations; without the +performance of which, these plausible theories will ever lose their +credit when brought to the test of experiment. How is a republic to be +durable without the previous solution of the problem of the equalisation +of human capacities? In some countries it may be almost attained for a +time; in others, never put in motion for an instant. No one more than +myself abhors tyranny and despotism; but, after hearing and reading all +the charges laid at the door of Absolutism during the last quarter of a +century, I am at a loss to account for the still greater evils and +defects, existing in Constitutional states, having been overlooked in +the comparison. The subject is far less free in France than in the +absolute states of Germany: and other appropriate comparisons might be +made which would bring us still nearer home. I would ask the advocates +for putting in practice a republican form of government, and by way of +comparing the two extremes, whether all the harm the Emperors of Russia +have ever done, or are likely to do until the end of the +world,--according to whatever sect the date of that event be +calculated,--will not knock under to one week of the exploits of the +French republicans of the last century? And if we carry on the +observation to the consequences of that revolution, until we arrive at +the decimation of that fine country under the military despotism which +was necessarily its offspring, we shall not find my argument weakened. + +I entreat your pardon for this political digression, which I am as happy +to terminate as yourself. I will only add, that, should the period be +arrived for the Spanish empire to undergo the lot of all human +things--decline and dissolution, it has no right to complain, having had +its day; but, should that moment be still distant, let us hope to see +that country, so highly favoured by Nature, once more prosperous under +the institutions which raised her to the highest level of power and +prosperity. + +Meanwhile, the elements of discord still exist in a simmering state +close to the brim of the cauldron, and a mere spark will suffice at any +moment to make them bubble over. The inhabitants of Madrid are in +hourly expectation of this spark; and not without reason, if the +_on-dits_ which circulate there, and reach to the neighbouring towns, +are deserving of credit. Queen Christina, on her road from Paris to +resume virtually, if not nominally, the government, conceived the +imprudent idea of taking Rome in her way. It is said that she confessed +to the Pope, who, in the solemn exercise of his authority as +representative of the Deity, declared to her that Spain would never +regain tranquillity until the possessions of the clergy should be +restored to them. + +Whatever else may have passed during the interview is not stated; but a +deep impression was produced on the conscience of the Queen, to which is +attributed the change in her appearance evident to those who may happen +to have seen her a few months since in Paris. This short space of time +has produced on her features the effect of years. She has lost her +_embonpoint_, and acquired in its place paleness and wrinkles. She is +firmly resolved to carry out the views of the Pope. Here, therefore, is +the difficulty. The leading members of her party are among those who +have profited largely by the change of proprietorship which these vast +possessions have undergone: being the framers or abettors of the decree, +they were placed among the nearest for the scramble. In the emptiness of +the national treasury, they consider these acquisitions their sole +reward for the trouble of conducting the revolution, and are prepared to +defend them like tigers. + +When, therefore, Queen Christina proposed her plan[4] to Narvaez, she +met with a flat refusal. He replied, that such a decree would deluge the +country with blood. The following day he was advised to give in his +resignation. This he refused to do, and another interview took place. +The Queen-mother insisted on his acceptance of the embassy to France. He +replied, that he certainly would obey her Majesty's commands; but that, +in that case, she would not be surprised if he published the act of her +marriage with Muños, which was in his power.[5] This would compel +Christina to refund all the income she has received as widow of +Ferdinand the Seventh. The interview ended angrily; and, doubtless, +recalled to Christina's recollection the still higher presumption of the +man, who owed to her the exalted situation from which, on a former +occasion, he levelled his attack on her authority. I am not answerable +for the authenticity of these generally received reports; but they prove +the unsettled state of things, when the determined disposition of the +two opposite parties, and the nearly equal balance of their force, are +taken into consideration. + +I was scarcely housed at Madrid, having only quitted the hotel the +previous day, when the news reached me of the death of one of the fair +and accomplished young Countesses--the companions of my journey from +Bayonne to Burgos. You would scarcely believe possible the regret this +intelligence occasioned me,--more particularly from the peculiar +circumstances of the occurrence. Her father had recently arrived from +France, and the house was filled for the celebration of her birthday; +but she herself was forbidden to join the dinner-party, being scarcely +recovered from a severe attack of small-pox. The father's weakness could +not deny her admission at dessert, and an ice. The following day she was +dead. + +Acquaintances made on the high road advance far more rapidly than those +formed in the usual formal intercourse of society. I can account in no +other way for the tinge of melancholy thrown over the commencement of my +sojourn at Madrid by this event,--befalling a person whose society I had +only enjoyed during three days, and whom I scarcely expected to see +again. + +The modern capital of Spain is an elegant and brilliant city, and a very +agreeable residence; but for the admirer of the picturesque, or the +tourist in search of historical _souvenirs_, it contains few objects of +attraction. The picture-gallery is, however, a splendid exception; and, +being the best in the world, compensates, as you may easily suppose, for +the deficiency peculiar to Madrid in monuments of architectural +interest. + +To put an end to the surprise you will experience at the enumeration of +such a profusion of _chefs d'oeuvre_ of the great masters as is here +found, it is necessary to lose sight of the present political situation +of Spain, and to transport ourselves to the age of painting. At that +time Spain was the most powerful, and especially the most opulent empire +in Europe. Almost all Italy belonged to her; a large portion actually +owning allegiance to her sceptre, and the remainder being subject to her +paramount influence. The familiarity which existed between Charles the +Fifth and Titian is well known; as is likewise the anecdote of the +pencil, picked up and presented by the Emperor to the artist, who had +dropped it. + +The same taste for, and patronage of, painting, continued through the +successive reigns, until the period when painting itself died a natural +death; and anecdotes similar to that of Charles the Fifth are related of +Philip the Fourth and Velasquez. All the works of art thus collected, +and distributed through the different palaces, have been recently +brought together, and placed in an edifice, some time since commenced, +and as yet not entirely completed. Titian was the most favoured of all +the Italian painters, not only with respect to his familiar intercourse +with the Emperor, but also in a professional point of view. The Museo +contains no less than forty of his best productions. Nor is it +surprising that the taste of the monarch, being formed by his +masterpieces, should extend its preference to the rest of the Venetian +school in a greater degree than to the remaining Italian schools. There +are, however, ten pictures by Raffaelle, including the Spasimo, +considered by many to be his greatest work. + +A cause similar to that above named enables us to account for the riches +assembled in the Dutch and Flemish rooms, among which may be counted +more than two hundred pictures of Teniers alone. I should observe, that +I am not answerable for this last calculation; being indebted for my +information to the director, and distinguished artist, Don Jose +Madrazo. There is no catalogue yet drawn up. Rubens has a suite of rooms +almost entirely to himself, besides his just portion of the walls of the +gallery. The Vandykes and Rembrandts are in great profusion. With regard +to the Spanish schools, it may be taken for granted that they are as +well represented as those of the foreign, although partially subject, +nations. The works of Velasquez are the most numerous; which is +accounted for by his situation of painter to the Court, under Philip the +Fourth. There are sixty of his paintings. + +[Illustration: ITALIAN GALLERY AT THE MUSEO, MADRID.] + +The Murillos are almost as numerous, and in his best style: but Seville +has retained the cream of the genius of her most talented offspring; and +even at Madrid, in the collection of the Academy, there is a +Murillo--the Saint Elizabeth--superior to any of those in the great +gallery. It is much to be wished that some artist, gifted with the pen +of a Joshua Reynolds, or even of a Mengs (author of a notice on a small +portion of these paintings), could be found, who would undertake a +complete critical review of this superb gallery. All I presume to say on +the subject is, were the journey ten times longer and more difficult, +the view of the Madrid Museo would not be too dearly purchased. + +Before I left Madrid, I went to the palace, to see the traces of the +conspiracy of the 7th October, remaining on the doors of the Queen's +apartments. You will recollect that the revolt of October 1842 was that +in favour of Christina, when the three officers, Concha, Leon, and +Pezuela, with a battalion, attacked the palace in the night, for the +purpose of carrying off the Queen and her sister. On the failure of the +attempt, owing to its having been prematurely put in execution, the +Brigadier Leon was shot, and the two others escaped. + +It appears that the execution of this officer, unlike the greater number +of these occurrences, caused a strong sensation in Madrid, owing to the +sympathy excited by his popular character, and the impression that he +was the victim of jealousy in the mind of the Regent. The fine speech, +however, attributed to him by some of the newspapers, was not pronounced +by him. His words were very few, and he uttered them in a loud and clear +tone, before giving the word of command to his executioners. This, and +his receiving the fire without turning his back, were the only incidents +worthy of remark. + +One of the two sentries stationed at the door of the Queen's anteroom +when I arrived, happened to have played a conspicuous part on the +eventful night. The Queen was defended by the guard of hallebardiers, +which always mounts guard in the interior of the palace. This sentinel +informed me that he was on guard that night, on the top step of the +staircase, when Leon, followed by a few officers, was seen to come up. +Beyond him and his fellow-sentry there were only two more, who were +posted at the door of the Queen's anteroom, adjoining her sleeping +apartment. This door faces the whole length of the corridor, with which, +at a distance of about twenty yards, the top of the staircase +communicates. In order to shield himself from the fire of the two +sentinels at the Queen's door, Leon grasped my informant by the ribs +right and left, and, raising him from the ground, carried him, like a +mummy, to the corridor; and there, turning sharp to the left, up to the +two sentries, whom he summoned to give him admittance in the name of the +absent Christina. + +On the soldiers' refusal, he gave orders to his battalion to advance, +and a pitched battle took place, which was not ultimately decided until +daybreak--seven hours after. The terror of the little princesses, during +this night, may be imagined. Two bullets penetrated into the bed-room; +and the holes made by about twenty more in the doors of some of the +state apartments communicating with the corridor, are still preserved as +souvenirs of the event. The palace contains some well-painted ceilings +by Mengs, and is worthy of its reputation of one of the finest +residences in Europe. The staircase is superb. It was here that +Napoleon, entering the palace on the occasion of his visit to Madrid, to +install Joseph Buonaparte in his kingdom, stopped on the first landing; +and, placing his hand on one of the white marble lions which crouch on +the balustrades, turned to Joseph, and exclaimed, "Mon frère, vous serez +mieux logé que moi." + +There is no road from Madrid to Toledo. On the occasions of religious +festivities, which are attended by the court, the journey is performed +by way of Aranjuez, from which place a sort of road conducts to the +ancient capital of Spain. There is, however, for those who object to +add so much to the actual distance, a track, known, in all its +sinuosities, throughout its depths and its shallows, around its bays, +promontories, islands, and peninsulas--to the driver of the diligence, +and to the mounted bearer of the mail; both of whom travel on the same +days of the week, in order to furnish reciprocal aid, in case of damage +to either. A twenty-four hours' fall of rain renders this track +impassable by the usual conveyance; a very unusual sort of carriage is +consequently kept in reserve for these occasions, and, as the period of +my journey happened to coincide with an uncommonly aqueous disposition +of the Castilian skies, I was fortunately enabled to witness the less +every day, and more eventful transit, to which this arrangement gave +rise. + +Accordingly at four o'clock on an April morning--an hour later than is +the custom on the road from France to Madrid--I ascended the steps of a +carriage, selected for its lightness, which to those who know anything +of Continental coach-building, conveys a sufficient idea of its probable +solidity. There was not yet sufficient daylight to take a view of this +fabric; but I saw, by the aid of a lantern, my luggage lifted into a +sort of loose net, composed of straw-ropes, and suspended between the +hind wheels in precisely such juxtaposition, as to make the +portmanteaus, bags, &c. bear the same topographic relation to the +vehicle, as the truffles do to a turkey, or the stuffing to a duck. +There was much grumbling about the quantity of my luggage, and some +hints thrown out, relative to the additional perils, suspended over our +heads, or rather, under our seats, in consequence of the coincidence of +the unusual weight, with the bad state of the _road_, as they termed it, +and the acknowledged caducity of the carriage. I really was, in fact, +the only one to blame; for I could not discover, besides my things, more +than two small valises belonging to all the other six passengers +together. + +At length we set off, and at a distance of four miles from Madrid, as +day began to break, we broke down. + +The break-down was neither violent nor dangerous, and was occasioned by +the crash of a hind wheel, while our pace did not exceed a walk: but it +was productive of some amusement, owing to the position, near the corner +of the vehicle which took the greatest fancy to _terra firma_, of a not +over heroic limb of the Castilian law, who had endeavoured to be +facetious ever since our departure, and whose countenance now exhibited +the most grotesque symptoms of real terror. Never, I am convinced, will +those moments be forgotten by that individual, whose vivacity deserted +him for the remainder of the journey; and whose attitude and +expression, as his extended arms failed to recover his centre of gravity +exchanged for the supine, folded-up posture, unavoidable by the occupant +at the lowest corner of a broken-down vehicle,--while his thoughts +wandered to his absent offspring, whose fond smiles awaited him in +Toledo, but to whom perhaps he was not allowed to bid an eternal +adieu--will live likewise in the memory of his fellow-travellers. + +This _dénouement_ of the adventures of the first carriage rendered a +long halt necessary; during which, the postilion returned to Madrid on a +mule, and brought us out a second. This proceeding occupied four hours, +during which some entered a neighbouring _venta_, others remained on the +road, seated on heaps of stones, and all breakfasted on what provisions +they had brought with them, or could procure at the said _venta_. The +sight of the vehicle that now approached, would have been cheaply bought +at the price of twenty up-sets. Don Quixote would have charged it, had +such an apparition suddenly presented itself to his view. It was called +a phaeton, but bore no sort of resemblance to the open carriage known in +England by that name. Its form was remarkable by its length being out of +all proportion to its width,--so much so as to require three +widely-separated windows on each side. These were irregularly placed, +instead of being alike on the two sides, for the door appeared to have +been forgotten until after the completion of the fabric, and to have +taken subsequently the place of a window; which window--pursuant to a +praiseworthy sense of justice--was provided for at the expense of a +portion of deal board, and some uniformity. + +The machine possessed, nevertheless, allowing for its rather exaggerated +length, somewhat of the form of an ancient landau; but the roof +describing a semicircle, gave it the appearance of having been placed +upside down by mistake, in lowering it on to the wheels. Then, with +regard to these wheels, they certainly had nothing very extraordinary +about their appearance, when motionless; but, on being subjected to a +forward or backward impulse, they assumed, respectively, and +independently of each other, such a zigzag movement, as would belong to +a rotatory, locomotive pendulum, should the progress of mechanics ever +attain to so complicated a discovery. Indeed, the machine, in general, +appeared desirous of avoiding the monotony attendant on a +straight-forward movement; the body of the monster, from the groans, +sighs, screams, and other various sounds which accompanied its heaving, +pitching, and rolling exertions, appearing to belong to some unwieldy +and agonised mammoth and to move by its own laborious efforts, instead +of being indebted for its progress to the half-dozen quadrupeds hooked +to its front projections. + +The track along which this interesting production of mechanical art now +conveyed us, bore much resemblance to a river, in the accidents of its +course. Thus we were reminded at frequent intervals, by the suddenly +increased speed of our progress, that we were descending a rapid: at +other times the motion was so vertical, as to announce the passage down +a cataract. These incidents were not objectionable to me, as they +interrupted the monotony of the walking pace, to which we were +condemned; although one or two passengers of rather burly proportions, +seemed not much to enjoy their repetition. However this might be, +assuredly we were none of us sorry to find ourselves at eight o'clock +that evening safely housed at Toledo. + + + + +LETTER VIII. + +PICTURESQUE POSITION OF TOLEDO. FLORINDA. + + +Toledo. + +Every traveller--I don't mean every one who habitually assists in +wearing out roads, whether of stone or iron--nor who travels for +business, nor who seeks to escape from himself--meaning from ennui, (a +vain attempt, by the way, if Horace is to be depended on; since, even +should he travel on horseback, the most exhilarating sort of locomotion, +ennui will contrive to mount and ride pillion)--but every one who +deserves the name of traveller, who travels for travelling sake, for the +pleasure of travelling, knows the intensity of the feeling which impels +his right hand, as he proceeds to open the window-shutter of his +bed-room, on the morning subsequent to his nocturnal arrival in a new +town. + +The windows of the Posada del Miradero at Toledo are so placed as by no +means to diminish the interest of this operation. The shutter being +opened, I found myself looking from a perpendicular elevation of +several hundred feet, on one of the prettiest views you can imagine. The +town was at my back, and the road by which we had arrived, was cut in +the side of the precipice beneath me. In following that direction, the +first object at all prominent was the gate leading to Madrid--a cluster +of half Arab embattled towers and walls, standing somewhat to the left +at the bottom of the descent. These gave issue to the track mentioned in +my journey, and which could now be traced straight in front, to a +considerable distance. + +The ground rises slightly beyond the gates of the town, and preserves a +moderate elevation all across the view, retreating right and left, so as +to offer the convex side of the arc of an immense circle. This formation +gives to the view a valley, extending on either side, shut in on the +left by mountains at a distance of four miles; while to the east it +extends as far as the eye can reach,--some mountains, scarcely +perceptible, crossing it at the horizon. The Tagus advances down the +eastern valley from Aranjuez; which château is in view at the distance +of twenty-eight miles, and approaching with innumerable zigzags to the +foot of the town, suddenly forms a curve, and, dashing into the rocks, +passes round the back of the city, issues again into the western valley, +and, after another sharp turn to the left, resumes the same direction +as before. All this tract of country owes to the waters of the Tagus a +richness of vegetation, and a bright freshness nowhere surpassed. So +much for the distant view. + +To judge of the nearer appearance of the town, I crossed the bridge of +Alcantara, placed at the entrance of the eastern valley, and leading to +Aranjuez. The situation may be described in a few words. Toledo stands +on an eminence nearly circular in its general form. It is a mass of +jagged rock, almost perpendicular on all its sides. The river flows +rather more than half round it, descending from the east, and passing +round its southern side. The left or south bank is of the same +precipitous formation; but, instead of presenting that peculiarity +during only a short distance, it continues so both above and below the +town; while on the opposite side the only high ground is the solitary +mass of rock selected, whether with a view to defence or to +inconvenience, for the position of this ancient city. The Tagus is +crossed by two bridges, one at each extremity of the semi-circle +described by it round the half of the town. These bridges are both +highly picturesque, from their form no less than their situation. They +are raised upon arches of a height so disproportionate to their width, +as to appear like aqueducts; and are provided at each extremity with +towers, all, with one exception, Moorish in their style. The lower +bridge (lower by position, for it is the higher of the two in actual +elevation) bears the name of San Martin, and is traversed by the road to +Estremadura; the other leads to Aranjuez, and is the puente de +Alcantara. We are now standing on this last, having passed under the +Arab archway of its tower. + +Its width is just sufficient for the passage of two vehicles abreast, +and it is covered with flag-paving. The river flows sixty feet below. At +the back of the tower which faces you, at the opposite end of the +bridge, rises a rock, almost isolated from the rest of the cliff, and on +its top the half-ruined towers and walls of a Moorish castle. On the +left hand extends the valley, through which the river approaches in a +broad mass. The road to Aranjuez follows the same direction, after +having first disappeared round the base of the rock just mentioned, and +is bordered with rose-trees, and occasional groups of limes, which +separate it from the portions set apart for pedestrians. On the right +hand the river (still looking from the bridge) is suddenly pressed in +between precipices, becomes narrow, and at the distance of a few hundred +yards, forms a noisy cascade. + +[Illustration: VIEW OF TOLEDO] + +Still looking in that direction, the left bank--a rocky precipice, as I +mentioned before--curves round and soon hurries it out of sight. The +lower part of the opposite or town bank is ornamented, close to the +cascade, with a picturesque ruin, on which you look down from your +position. This consists of three stories of arches, standing partly in +the water. Above and behind them rise a few larger buildings, almost +perpendicularly over each other, and the summit is crowned with the +colossal quadrangular mass of the Alcazar. + +The ruinous arches just mentioned, are the remains of a building erected +by a speculator, who had conceived a plan for raising water to the +Alcazar by means of wheels, furnished with jars, according to the custom +of this part of Spain. The arrangement is simple; the jars, being +attached round a perpendicular wheel, successively fill with water, as +each arrives at the bottom, and empty themselves, on reaching the +summit, into any receptacle placed so as to receive their contents. The +speculator, having to operate on a colossal scale, intended probably to +super-pose wheel over wheel, and to establish reservoirs at different +elevations, as it would scarcely be possible to work a wheel of such +dimensions as to carry jars to the height required (more than three +hundred feet), even though furnished with ropes, which are made to turn +round the wheel and descend below it. + +Crossing the bridge, the road quits the river, or rather is left for a +certain space by it, until it meets it at the distance of a mile. This +road is a favourite promenade of the inhabitants, and deservedly so. On +each side, for the distance of a mile, it is bordered by hedges of +magnificent rose-trees. These hedges are double on both sides, enclosing +walks for the promenaders on foot. Behind those on the outside, the +colours are varied by the pale green of the olive-tree; and over them +occasional clusters of lime-trees, mingled with the acacia and laburnum, +furnish shade, in case of an excess of sunshine. This promenade, flanked +on one side by the hills, and on the other, by the highly cultivated +plain, in parts of which the Tagus is seen occasionally to peep through +its wooded banks, is most delicious during the rose season. I should +especially recommend the visitor of Toledo to repair to it during the +first hour after sunrise, when thronged with birds, which are here +almost tame, and fill the air with their music; and also in the evening, +when frequented by the mantilla-hooded fair of the city. + +There is, however, notwithstanding the beauty and gay appearance of this +profusion of roses, a singular effect produced by their situation. +Usually seen surrounded by other flowers or by well-kept grass or earth, +they do not look quite themselves on the side on which they rest their +bushy foundations on a dusty road, covered with deep ruts. The fish out +of water forms a hackneyed, not to say a dried up, comparison; but we +can compare the rather pallid and unnatural appearance of these plants +to that of a bevy of ladies, who, tired of the monotony of a ball-room +in Grosvenor Place, should resolve, precisely at the crisis when +candle-light is more than ever required for their rather suffering +complexions, to compel their partners to lead them, at sunrise, a +galopade down Tattersall's yard. The roses, thus misplaced, are +nevertheless roses, and cease not to be fair, in spite of their unusual +_entourage_, and to contribute to the beauty and novelty of this +picturesque promenade. + +Amongst the variety of harmless weaknesses by which human imagination, +and consequently human locomotion are influenced, I look upon one of the +most irresistible (if such an epithet be applicable to a weakness) to be +that fractional component part of the cravings of antiquarianism, which +urges some persons in the search after, and rewards their labours on the +discovery of, the locality supposed to be the birthscene of some great +historical event, however insignificant in other respects, or even +however loathsome its actual state may be to the outward senses. Thus, +when, in Normandy, the worthy and probably waggish majordomo of the +crumbling old castle of Falaise, directs your attention to the window +from which Duke Robert caught the first glance of the ankle of William +the Conqueror's mother,--as she pursued her professional labours, and +polluted with her soapsuds the silver brook a quarter of a mile below +him,--and suddenly yielded his soul to its irresistible beauty: +notwithstanding the impossibility of the thing, many, and I confess +myself one, are too delighted with the window, and the rivulet, and the +majordomo, and the--God knows what!--perhaps with the very +impossibility--to allow themselves a moment's sceptical or sarcastic +feeling on the subject. + +I should mention that my visit to Falaise happening to take place +shortly after the passage of the King of the French on a tour through +his western provinces, the aforesaid cicerone pointed out a highly +suspicious-looking inscription, being the initials of the monarch, +carefully engraved in the stone; which he informed me had been cut by +Louis Philippe, on the occasion of his visit at midnight to the room of +Duke Robert; but of which I took the liberty of suspecting himself of +being the sculptor, during some idle moment,--fond as he probably was of +contemplating the innocently expressive countenances of his satisfied +visitors. + +Actuated by the feeling I have attempted to describe, one of my first +inquiries at Toledo related to the well-known story of Florinda and her +bath, so fatal to the Gothic sway in Spain. I was immediately directed +to the spot, on which is seen a square tower, pierced by arched openings +through its two opposite sides, and on a third side by a similar but +smaller aperture. The four walls alone remain, and the whole is +uncovered. This symmetrical-looking edifice, well built and composed of +large stones, measures about sixteen feet square, and from forty to +fifty in elevation, and stands on the edge of the river, on the town +side, about a hundred yards below the western bridge--that called after +Saint Martin--at the precise point at which the river quits the town, +and its north bank ceases to be precipitous. + +The extreme point of the termination of the high ground is immediately +over the building, and is covered with the ruins of King Roderick's +palace, the outer walls of which descend to the water, and are +terminated by a small roundtower within a few yards of the quadrangular +edifice. The edifice is called the Baño de la Cava, meaning Florinda's +bath, although the native popular tradition, losing sight of the events +of the history, has metamorphosed the heroine of the spot into a Moorish +princess. + +In fact, the rocky precipice terminates at this spot,--the last piece +of rock forming part of the foundation of the square tower, immediately +beyond which is a gently descending sand-bank most convenient and +tempting to bathers. This circumstance, added to the situation of +Roderick's residence, immediately above the scene, was delightfully +corroborative of the tradition; and proved sufficiently, had all +investigation ceased there, the identity of the spot with the scene of +the anecdote. Owing to an excess of curiosity a new discovery threw a +doubt over the whole affair. + +[Illustration: FLORINDA'S BATH.] + +A bridge is too public a thoroughfare to allow of bathing to be +practised in its immediate neighbourhood: and, in fact, the erection of +the neighbouring one of St. Martin is of much later date than the events +of the history in question. Fatal curiosity, however, led me to the back +of the building,--the very bath of Florinda,--where it was impossible +not to discover, even to conviction, that it, the square tower itself, +had formerly been the entrance of a bridge. This is proved by the ruins +of two piers, which appear above the water,--one near to the shore on +which I was standing, the other near to the opposite bank, and both +forming a line with the square tower on looking through its two opposite +arches. The tower possesses other peculiarities which, compared with +those belonging to the bridges actually in existence, fully confirm the +supposition. + +Now, although the tradition has christened the spot Baño de la Cava, +which expression is translated "bath of the prostitute," it is certain +that Florinda was the daughter of Count Julian, governor of the Spanish +possessions in Africa, and a personage of sufficient rank and influence +to obtain a hearing at the court of the Arab Caliph, or at all events of +his viceroy in Africa, and to conceive the idea of calling a foreign +army to execute his private vengeance. It is therefore extremely +improbable that the daughter of such a person should have been seen to +measure and compare the proportions of her legs with those of her +companions in the immediate vicinity of a bridge, necessarily the most +frequented of thoroughfares. + +I confess I left the spot filled with disappointment. In vain I +reflected that after all the fact is fact--that the sensual Roderick may +certainly have spied from behind a window-lattice the frolics of some +ladies at their bath; and that, wherever his _espionage_ took place, he +may for that purpose have intentionally procured himself a place of +concealment, and have formed the resolution of possessing one of them. +In fact, it was a matter of indifference to me whether the circumstance +had occurred or not, provided I should ascertain its whereabouts, +supposing it real, instead of merely discovering the spot on which it +did not take place. + +Having thus convicted the generally received tradition of deceit,--at +least, in one of its parts,--it became an object to discover some other +version of the story, which might tally in a more satisfactory manner +with present existing proofs. The Arab historians deny the invasion to +have been brought about by any such occurrence; but Mariana, copied by +more recent writers, has either discovered or compiled a very plausible +story, clear in its details, only erroneous in respect of the heroine's +name, which he makes out to be Cava. From this version the bath is +entirely excluded. + +According to the custom in Gothic Spain, the sons of the nobles received +their education in the royal palace, and on attaining the age of +manhood, they formed an escort round the sovereign on all expeditions, +whether to the field or the chase. Their daughters were likewise +entrusted to the care of royalty, and attended the person of the Queen, +after having completed their education and instruction in the +accomplishments suited to their sex, under her superintendence. When +these noble damsels could number sufficient summers, their hands were +bestowed according to the royal selection. + +Among the attendants of Queen Egilona, was a daughter of Count Julian, +possessed of extreme beauty. Florinda, while playing with her companions +in a garden, situated on the banks of the Tagus, and overlooked by a +tower, which contained a portion of Don Rodrigo's apartments, exposed to +view, more than accorded either with etiquette or with her intention, +the symmetry of her form. King Rodrigo, who, favoured by the concealment +of a window-blind, had been watching the whole scene, became suddenly +enamoured of her, and resolved to obtain a return of his passion; but, +after finding every effort useless, and his object unattainable, he at +length employed violence. + +Every circumstance of this story is corroborated, as far as is possible +in the present time, by the position of the localities, the known +customs of the period, and the character of King Roderick. But the +historian Mariana, to show the minuteness and triumph of research, on +which he has founded his relation, quotes the young lady's own version +of the affair; in fact, no less interesting a document than her letter +to her father, then in Africa, disclosing the insult offered to the +family. The following is the translation of this portentous dispatch. A +_billet-doux_ pregnant with greater events never issued from the boudoir +of beauty and innocence. + +"Would to Heaven, my lord and father!--Would to Heaven the earth had +closed over me, before it fell to my lot to write these lines, and with +such grievous news to cause you sadness and perpetual regret! How many +are the tears that flow while I am writing, these blots and erasures are +witnesses. And yet if I do not immediately, I shall cause a suspicion +that not only the body has been polluted, but the soul likewise blotted +and stained with perpetual infamy. Would I could foresee a term to our +misery!--Who but yourself shall find a remedy for our misfortunes? Shall +we delay, until time brings to light that which is now a secret, and +the affront we have received entail on us a shame more intolerable than +death itself? I blush to write that which I am bound to divulge. O +wretched and miserable fate! In a word, your daughter--your blood, that +of the kingly line of the Goths, has suffered from King Rodrigo,--to +whose care, alas! she was entrusted like the sheep to the wolf,--a most +wicked and cruel affront. It is for you, if you are worthy the name of a +man, to cause the sweet draught of our ruin to become a deadly poison to +his life; nor to leave unpunished the mockery and insult he has cast on +our line and on our house." + +Don Julian, who, as some say, was of royal descent, and a relative, not +far removed, of Roderick--was possessed of qualities no less marked by +daring than artifice. His plans well digested, he committed his +government in Africa to the charge of a deputy, and repaired to the +court at Toledo. There he made it his business to advance in credit and +favour until the moment should arrive for action. His first step was, by +means of false alarms of attacks meditated on the northern frontier, to +get rid of the principal part of the disposable forces in that +direction. Meanwhile he caused a letter from his Countess, who remained +in Africa, to be forwarded to the King, in which, on the plea of serious +illness, she urgently entreats the royal permission for the departure +of Florinda to Ceuta. It is related that the profligate Rodrigo +consented to the journey with so much the better grace, that possession +had divested the attractions of his victim of all further hold of his +passions, already under the dominion of new allurements. + +There is a gate at Malaga, giving issue towards the sea-shore, which +bears to this day the name of Gate of the Cava: through it she is said +to have passed on embarking for Africa. + +With regard to the name "la Cava" given to the gate and to the bath, I +am disposed to prefer the popular notion to the assertion of Mariana, +that it was her name. It is a natural supposition that the anecdote of +the affair of Toledo, spread among the Arabs, who, for centuries after +this period, were the depositaries of the annals and traditions of the +Peninsula,--should have become tinted with a colour derived from their +customs and ideas. Now it would be difficult to persuade an Arab that +the circumstances of the story in question could befall a virtuous +female, surrounded with the thousand precautions peculiar to an oriental +court. If we add to this the contemptuous tone assumed by them towards +those of the hostile creed--a tone that must have suited in an especial +degree with their way of thinking on the subject of female deportment +among the Christians, which they look upon as totally devoid of +delicacy and reserve--the epithet applied to Florinda is easily +accounted for. But to return to the story. + +It only now remained for Don Julian to determine the Caliph's viceroy in +Africa in favour of the invasion. Repairing to his court, he obtained an +audience, in which he painted to the Prince, in such eloquent terms, the +natural and artificial wealth of the Spanish peninsula, the facility of +the enterprise, owing to the absence of the principal part of the +disposable hostile force, and the unpopularity of King Rodrigo, that an +expedition was immediately ordered; which, although at first prudently +limited to a small troop under Tharig, led to the conquest, in a few +campaigns, of the whole Peninsula. + +Mingled with the ruins of Roderick's palace are seen at present those of +the monastery of Saint Augustin, subsequently erected on the same site: +but on the side facing the river, the ancient wall and turrets, almost +confounded with the rock, on which they were built, have outlived the +more recent erections, or perhaps have not been interfered with by them. +Immediately beyond the portion of these walls, beneath which is seen the +Baño de la Cava, they turn, together with the brink of the precipice, +abruptly to the north, forming a right angle with the river bank: this +part faces the western _vega_ or valley, and looks down on the site of +the ancient palace gardens, which occupied the first low ground. They +extended as far as the chapel of Santa Leocadia. The ground is now +traversed by the road to the celebrated sword-blade manufactory, +situated on the bank of the river, half a mile lower down. With the +exception of the inmates of that establishment, the only human beings +who frequent the spot are the votaries on their way to the shrine of +Santa Leocadia, and the convicts of a neighbouring _Presidio_ in search +of water from the river. + + + + +LETTER IX. + +CATHEDRAL OF TOLEDO. + + +Toledo. + +Every successive æra of civilization, with the concomitant religion on +which it has been founded, and from which it has taken its peculiar +mould, has, after maintaining its ground with more or less lustre, and +throughout a greater or smaller duration, arrived at its inevitable +period of decline and overthrow. + +In ceasing, however, to live, and to fill society far and wide with its +enlightening influence,--in exchanging its erect attitude for the +prostrate one consequent on its fall,--seldom has a creed, which has +long held possession of the most enlightened intellects of our race for +the time being, undergone an entire extinction, so as to disappear +altogether from the face of the earth, and leave no trace of its +existence. The influence of the soil, formation, and climate of the +region, in the bosom of which such civilization has had its birth, on +the dispositions and faculties of the race which has become its +depositary, has always set its peculiar mark on its monuments, whether +civil, military, or religious, but especially the last; which monuments, +surviving the reign of the power to which they owe their existence, +prolong and sanctify its memory, while they stand, erect and silent, +over its grave; and furnish valuable information and benefit to those +future generations sufficiently enlightened to consult them. + +If this theory of successions and vicissitudes be consonant (which +probably no one will deny) with the march of events on the surface of +this our planet, then do the circumstances of the present situation +invest, as far as regards Spain, those relics of human genius and human +enthusiasm, the venerable temples of her declining faith, with an +interest beyond that which they have possessed at any period since their +foundation. It is impossible to have paid any attention to the events of +the last few years, without having received the conviction that the +reign of Christianity is here fast approaching,--not the commencement, +but the termination of its decline. Spaniards will never do things by +halves; and will probably prefer the entire overthrow of ancient customs +to the system pursued in France, of propping up, by government +enactments and salaries, a tottering edifice of external forms, long +since divested of its foundation of public belief. + +To speak correctly, the decline of religious supremacy in Spain is by no +means recent. It was coeval with that of the arts, and of the political +grandeur of the country. The gradual cessation of the vast gifts and +endowments for the erection of the religious establishments was a +symptom of devotional enthusiasm having passed its zenith. Had not this +occurred nearly three centuries back, Madrid would not have wanted a +Cathedral. Nothing could ever have tended more directly to compromise +the durability of Christianity in Spain, than the final expulsion or +extermination of the Moors and Jews. Had Torquemada and a few others +possessed heads as clear and calculating as their hearts were resolute +and inexorable--a knowledge of human nature as profound as their +ambition of divine honours was exalted, they would have taken care not +entirely to deprive the Church of food for its passions and energies. +They would not have devoured all their heretics at a single meal, but +would have exercised more _ménagement_ and less voracity. They would +have foreseen that by burning a few hundred Jews and Arabs less each +year, nourishment would remain to animate the declamations of preachers, +and the energies of the faithful; without which the fatal effects of +sloth and indifference must inevitably take root in the imaginations, +and eventually undermine their lofty fabric. + +The decline was, however, so gradual as to exercise no perceptible +influence on the general conduct of the population, by whom forms were +still observed, churches filled, and acts of devotion unceasingly +accomplished. A variety of causes (into a description of which it is not +my object, nor would it be your wish, that I should enter, but of which +one of the most influential has been the importation of foreign +ideas--as well through natural channels, as by special and interested +exertions) has precipitated the _dénouement_ of this long-commenced +revolution; and that with so headlong a rapidity, that, in that Spain +which surpassed all other nations in bigoted attachment to religious +rites, the confiscation of all the possessions of the Church, under a +promise (not to be performed) of salaries for a certain number of +ecclesiastics, insufficient for the continuation of the ancient +ceremonies, is received by the population with indifference! The +Cathedral of Toledo, deprived of the greater number of its +functionaries,--including its archbishop and fifty-six of its sixty +canons, and no longer possessing, out of an income of hundreds of +thousands sterling, a treasure sufficient for providing brooms and +sweepers for its pavement,--will, in perhaps not much more than another +year, if the predictions of the inhabitants be verified, be finally +closed to public worship. + +The same interest, therefore, which surrounded the Arab monuments three +centuries since, and the Roman edifices of Spain in the fifth century, +attaches itself now to the Christian temples; which, at this crisis, +offer themselves to the tourist in the sad but attractive gloom of +approaching death; since depriving them of the pomp and observances +which filled their tall arcades with animation, is equivalent to +separating a soul from a body. He will explore them and examine their +ceremonies with all the eagerness and perseverance of a last +opportunity,--he will wander untired through the mysterious twilight of +their arched recesses, and muse on the riches lavished around him to so +little purpose, and on the hopes of those who entrusted their memories +to the guardianship of so frail and transient a depositary. The tones of +their giant though melodious voices, as, sent from a thousand brazen +throats, they roll through the vaulted space the dirge of their +approaching fate, will fill him with sadness; and the ray that streams +upon him from each crimson and blue _rosace_ will fix itself on his +memory, kindling around it an inextinguishable warmth, as though he had +witnessed the smile of a departing saint. + +I had read of Toledo being in possession of the finest church in +Spain,--and _that_ in the book of a tourist, whose visit to this town +follows immediately that to Seville. Begging pardon of the clever and +entertaining writer to whom I allude, the Cathedral of Toledo strikes me +as far from being the finest in Spain; nor would it be the finest in +France, nor in England, nor in other countries that might be enumerated, +could it be transported to either. It is large; but in this respect it +yields to that of Seville. What its other claims to pre-eminence may be, +it is difficult to discover. It is true that its interior presents a +specimen of the simple and grand pointed style of its period. This being +put in execution on a large scale, would render it an imposing and a +beautiful edifice, but for a subsequent addition, which, to render +justice to the architect, he certainly never could have contemplated. +The noble pillars, towering to a height of sixty feet, have been +clothed, together with their capitals, in a magnificent coat of +whitewash! Without having witnessed such a desecration in this or some +similar edifice, it is impossible to conceive the deadening effect it +produces on the feeling of admiration such a building ought to excite. +An inscription in distinct and large characters, over the southernmost +of the three western doors, after recording the conquest of Granada by +the Catholic Kings, as Ferdinand and Isabella are here termed, the +expulsion of the Jews, and the completion of the Cathedral, brands with +this act of barbarism one Don Francisco Fernandez de Cuença, _obrero +mayor_ (almost a Dean) of the Cathedral in the year 1493. + +There is, however, a moment of each day when the tall arcades vindicate +their outraged majesty. "La nuit tous les chats sont gris," says the +proverb. I therefore proceeded at the approach of twilight (all access +at a later hour being prohibited) to see whether its application would +extend to this church. This is, in fact, the hour, just before the +closing of the doors, at which it should be visited. Darkness has +assumed his empire within these walls long before the stirring labyrinth +without has had warning of his approach. No colours nor gildings (the +latter being rather injudiciously distributed) are visible--nothing but +a superb range of beautifully painted windows; and the columns only +trace their dim outline a little less black against the deep gloom of +the rest of the building. At this hour, could it last, it would be +impossible to tire of wandering through this forest of magnificent +stems, of which the branches are only seen to spring, and immediately +lose themselves beneath the glories of the coloured transparencies +rendered doubly brilliant by their contrast with the gloom of all below +them. The principal merit, in fact, of this edifice, consists in its +windows. That of the purity of its general style deserves also to be +allowed; but with some reserve in the appreciation of the accessory +points of the design. It depended, for instance, on the judgment of the +architect, to diminish or to increase the number of columns which +separate the different naves, and by their unnecessary abundance he has +impaired the grandeur of the general effect. + +The interior dimensions are as follows:--Length, including a moderately +sized chapel at the eastern extremity, three hundred and fifty English +feet; width, throughout, one hundred and seventy-four feet; height of +the principal nave and transept, about one hundred and twenty feet. The +width is divided into five naves; those at the outside rising to about +two-thirds of the height of the two next adjoining; and these to about +half that of the centre nave. An entire side of a chapel opening out of +the southernmost nave, is ornamented in the Arab style--having been +executed by a Moorish artist at the same period as the rest; and not (as +might be conjectured) having belonged to the mosque, which occupied the +same site previously to the erection of the present cathedral. This +small chapel would be a beautiful specimen of the Arab ornament in +stucco, but for several coats of whitewash it has received. An arched +recess occupies the centre, and is called the Tomb of the Alguazil. A +handsome doorway in the same style is seen in the anteroom of the +Chapter-saloon. + +[Illustration: APSE OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO.] + +Facing the entrance to the centre or extreme eastern chapel, that of San +Ildefonzo, the back of the high altar, or, as it is vulgarly called, the +Trascoro, is--not adorned, would it were possible not to say +disfigured, by an immense mass of sculpture called the Transparente. It +is not easy to imagine the reason of this altar-piece having received +its name, for it is not more transparent than any other mountain--never +was witnessed so lamentable a mis-application of riches and labour! Some +of the marble was brought from Carrara; the rest is not of a very good +white, and being thus exposed to an unfavourable contrast, adds to the +displeasing effect of the unwieldy forms which enter into the +composition of this huge blunder of art--this pile of masses on masses +of ugliness. At the sight of a large spherical form rising abruptly from +the surface of some shaft of a pillar, you step back, and discover that +it forms part of the posteriors of a corpulent cherub, as large as the +column itself, which he has thus unmercifully annihilated, in order to +save himself the trouble of passing a few inches to the left or right. +But it is needless to notice the details of this piece of sculpture, +which being the largest, and occupying the most conspicuous position in +the whole church, forcibly attracts the attention which, but for that +circumstance, one would rather bestow in another direction. + +It is a relief to take one's station on the shining mahogany benches +adjoining the wall of the opposite chapel of San Ildefonzo; and to +contemplate its chaste style and graceful proportions, and the handsome +tombs which occupy its octagonally divided walls. The piece of sculpture +in marble, placed over the principal altar, is undeserving of its +conspicuous situation. It represents the Vision of San Ildefonzo, to +which we shall shortly have occasion to direct our attention. + +The adjoining chapel, as we proceed towards the northernmost nave, that +of Santiago, or more generally called after its founder, Don Alvaro de +Luna, is still finer. It is larger and loftier, and of a more ornamental +design. It presents five sides of an octagon: the three remaining sides +turning inwards to suit the form of the apse. This Alvaro de Luna, the +Lord Essex of Juan the Second, having by the high favour he enjoyed in +the intimacy of the monarch, given umbrage to the courtiers, was put to +death by the King, who gave credit to the charges falsely brought +against him. Don Juan, however, who did not long survive his friend, had +justice done to his remains. Being found innocent by a posthumous trial +at Valladolid, his body was conveyed with great pomp to Toledo, and +placed in the centre of his chapel. The tomb of his Countess stands +close to his own; and in the niches of the surrounding walls, those of +his most distinguished relatives, one of whom, on the right of the +altar, is represented in complete armour, with a turban on his head. The +treasures bestowed on this favourite, flowed plentifully into the +Cathedral of Toledo. Besides his chapel, the finest of all--the +elaborately executed enclosure of the sanctuary, is one of his gifts: +his arms are there recognised, frequently recurring among the various +designs of the external tracery. + +A narrow passage, leading from the apse between the chapel of Don +Alvaro, and the entrance to the sacristy, communicates with the chapel +of the kings. After passing through a simply designed anteroom of more +recent date, the eye reposes with pleasure on a small interior in the +pointed style of the latest period--of proportions, perhaps, not the +less graceful from their being rather narrow for the length. Two richly +ornamented arches, stretching across the interior, divide it into three +parts, in the first of which is seen a gallery containing an elaborately +wrought gilded confessional. The walls of the two other divisions are +divided into six parts; the chapel having been constructed and endowed +by Juan the First, for the reception of six monuments: those of himself +and his Queen Isabella; those of his father Henry the Second, (natural +son of Alonzo the Eleventh, and who dethroned and killed with his own +hand his half-brother, Pedro the cruel,) and Doña Juana his wife; and +those of Henry the Third, and Doña Catalina his wife. + +Returning to the interior of the apse, and continuing in the direction +of the north side, another small passage and anteroom lead to the +principal sacristy, which communicates with the next chapel, called the +Sagrario, and composed of three apartments. The great sacristy contains +some good paintings, particularly the ceiling by Giordano--a modern tomb +of the late archbishop, Cardinal de Bourbon, and a series of narrow +doors, within which are recesses. The first of these contains the crown +and bracelets of the Virgin of the Sagrario: in four others are +preserved magnificent ornaments of silver, representing emblematically +the four quarters of the globe. Each quarter is personified by a figure +invested with the attributes which characterize the region she +represents, seated on a large silver globe, on the front of which is +traced the quarter represented. The globe is supported by figures of +animals. In the last of these recesses is seen the sword of Alonzo the +Sixth, who won Toledo from the Moors. It is small, and unornamented, +except by a hilt of embossed silver, on which the arms are repeated four +times. In the smaller sacristy within are several good pictures, but not +so remarkable as to prevent their being eclipsed by the splendid robe +of the Virgin of the neighbouring Sagrario, here exhibited, extended +flat on a semicircular board, such being the form of the garment. + +No one knows the value of this treasure. During the Peninsular War, the +archbishop, in order to spare the French Generals too great a +temptation, conveyed it, together with whatever else deserved the +precaution, to Cadiz. It is embroidered almost entirely with pearls on a +tissue of silver; but none of the silver is visible without separating +the pearls, diamonds, &c., with the fingers. Most of the larger pearls +possess the irregular sort of beaten shape often observed in the best +specimens. Some are enormous. Numbers of diamonds, rubies, and other +stones are admitted in the upper part, to vary and enliven the effect of +the different designs of the embroidery. In another case is extended the +front-piece, worn together with the robe, which is open in front. The +robe sits nearly in the fashion of a lady's cloak, but perfectly stiff, +and widening as it descends, so much as to make the figure assume the +appearance of a triangle, of which the base is longer than the two other +sides. The opening in front corresponds with the outline of the two +sides, being wider below than above, although not in as great a degree. +This opening is occupied by the front-piece, which is much smaller than +the robe, but still more valuable, being principally worked in +brilliants. It contains also every variety of precious stones, +introduced as their colours may happen to accord with the design. + +In addition to these is shown the dress of the Bambino, similar in +materials to the two others; but the pearls and diamonds more equally +distributed. + +But the marvel of this costume is the crown. This ornament adds to the +splendour of its materials, the most exquisite and elaborate +workmanship. It would require hours to appreciate the labour and taste +displayed in all its details. Marshal Soult, could he but see it, would +order masses for the soul of the prelate who spared him such a +temptation. The diamonds, especially those which compose a cross +surmounting the centre, are of the purest water, and of immense size. +But in the midst of the dazzling and harmonious intricacy of this gem of +all colours, there is a centre of attraction, which took my fancy more +than the rest. Immediately under the centre ball, an immense spherical +emerald, which supports the diamond cross, is a small bird suspended on +a hook within the crown. All the parts of this bird are composed of +white enamel, except the body, around which the wings, legs, neck, and +head, are attached, and which consists of a pearl of an oval form, about +the size of a sparrow's egg. The movement of the statue during a +procession, keeps the bird (hanging from its hook) in constant +agitation, and produces the effect of a living bird enclosed in a cage +of precious stones.[6] + +A pair of bracelets, possessing no less magnificence than the crown, but +rather too heavy and bulky to be graceful, are suspended in the same +recess, and worn on the same occasions. + +It should not be forgotten, as a proof of the judgment shown in the +choice of ornaments, which, as far as regards the front, consist +principally of diamonds, that the complexion of the Virgin of the +Sagrario, is more than dark--in fact, quite black.[7] The innermost of +the three apartments forming the chapel of the Sagrario is called the +Ochavo, and is the deposit of a collection of relics of all kinds. It is +an octagon, surmounted at an elevation of more than double its diameter +by a dome ornamented with excellent painting. The walls are faced with +the best Spanish marbles. Each of the eight sides contains an open +recess reaching to the first cornice--an elevation of about twenty-five +feet; and in these recesses are contained all the valuable relics +belonging to the cathedral;--a rich display of silver statues, +reliquaries, coffins, chests, and crosses of gold and silver, some +containing jewels of great value. A silver statue of Saint Ferdinand +wearing a golden crown is among the objects most worthy of remark; also +a cross containing a portion of the true cross, presented to the +cathedral by St. Louis. This and several other relics, such as a phial +containing the Virgin's milk, a portion of our Saviour's purple garment, +&c., were presented to the cathedral by St. Louis on his return from the +east, and are here preserved, together with the letter in his own +hand-writing, which accompanied them. + +The Virgin of the Sagrario receives by far the greatest share of +devotion brought to the numerous shrines of this vast temple, even +greater than that offered at the high altar. More masses are performed +at her altar than at all the others added together. The aisles facing +her antechapel are constantly filled with a crowd of kneeling votaries. +She stands in the second enclosure, turning her back to the Ochavo. An +iron railing separates her apartment from the first chapel, which is +usually open to the aisles. She stands consequently in full view, +magnificently robed in a _fac simile_ imitation of her pearl dress, the +original being only worn on one or two occasions during the year. + +The interior of the Capilla Mayor, is ornamented with several rows of +statues, and some handsome funereal monuments, forming together a sort +of transparent wall of sculpture on each of its sides. In the midst of a +series of mitred archbishops, and coroneted princes, the figure of a +peasant occupies one of the most conspicuous positions. It stands on the +left side, as you face the High Altar, and about twenty feet from the +pavement. This statue represents a celebrated historical personage. +Alonzo the Eighth, when penetrating across the Sierra Morena into +Andalucia, in search of the Moorish army under the King of Morocco, +Mahomed ben Jacob, was in danger of losing the fruit of his exertions, +in bringing together the forces of the Kings of Aragon and Navarre, +together with numerous other confederates. He had led the combined army +into a defile, in which he would have had to receive the attack of the +Moor at an insuperable disadvantage. The hostile forces occupied a +height called the Puerto del Miradal. + +It was at the moment that retreat was the subject of deliberation, that +a peasant presented himself, and offered to guide the army out of the +pass. Having assured himself of the man's sincerity, Alonzo put himself +under his conduct, and was led to the summit of the mountain, where he +found himself on the border of an immense plain. This decided the great +victory of las Navas de Tolosa gained over the Moors on the 16th of +July, 1212. Alonzo ordered a statue of the peasant to be placed in this +cathedral. He is represented in a costume not unlike that of an ancient +Roman rustic, a sort of tunic reaching to the knees, and his face is +covered with a profuse beard. + +The interior of the choir is the work of Felipe de Borgoña, and +Berruguete; the latter having been employed, after the death of Felipe +de Borgoña, in 1548, in continuing the sculptures. The entire south side +was left for him to complete; after which he added a group in marble, +representing the Transfiguration, placed rather injudiciously, since it +out-tops the screen or back of the choir; thus presenting to the view of +those who enter from the western or grand entrance, and who are more +likely to have come with the intention of viewing the ornaments, than +the canons who are seated in the choir--the back of the subject, or +rather, forms which represent no subject whatever. There is a Virgin on +a pedestal in the centre of the eastern end of the choir, turning her +back to the bronze railing which separates it from the transept. This +statue has occupied its present position ever since the erection of the +cathedral; and it is probable would long since have quitted it, but for +a still greater inconvenience consequent on its removal. The attempt was +recently made, when a mass of water issued with much violence from +beneath the pedestal, and putting to flight the canons who were +assembled to preside at the operation, instantly inundated the whole +church. The virgin occupies probably the site of the fountain which must +have been the centre of the court, at the period of the existence of the +mosque. However that may be, the spot is the exact centre of the present +edifice. + +At the two eastern angles of the quadrangle, formed by the intersection +of the transept and principal nave, close to the railing of the capilla +mayor are two pulpits of bronze, excellently wrought; supported on short +pillars of rare marbles. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO.] + +A tall pyramidal Gothic edifice[8] of gilded and painted wood, rising to +the full height of the ceiling, stands in front of a column of the +second nave from the north side. All its sides are open, and furnished +with bronze railings, through which is seen an altar, raised on three or +four steps. In the centre of the altar is inserted a marble slab--a +highly prized relic, being the stone on which the Virgin placed her foot +on the occasion of her appearing in the cathedral in _propriâ personâ_ +to the Archbishop San Ildefonzo. This peculiar favour bestowed on the +saint--and a robe with which she invested him with her own hands, were +bestowed, according to the historian Mariana, in recompense of his zeal +in opposing the doctrine of the two Frenchmen, Pelagio and Helvidio, +whose writings and preachings tended to shake the belief in the +virginity of the Saviour's mother. The occurrence is thus described: + +"The night immediately preceding the feast of the Annunciation, the +archbishop entered the church, surrounded by several of the clergy. As +they entered, the cathedral appeared filled with a brilliant light. +Those who accompanied the saint, overcome with terror, turned and fled. +Remaining alone, he advanced to the foot of the high altar, and fell on +his knees; when, on the chair from which it was his custom to deliver +his exhortations to the people,--clothed in more than human +majesty--appeared the mother of Christ, who addressed him in the +following words:--'This gift, brought from Heaven, shall be the reward +of the virginity which thou hast preserved in thy body, joined with +purity of mind, and ardour of faith; and for having defended our +virginity.' + +"Having thus spoken, she placed on him, with her own hands, a robe, +which she commanded him to wear on the celebration of her festivals, and +those of her Son." + +The representations of this scene, from which is derived the claim of +superior sanctity assumed by this cathedral, are multiplied both in +marble and on canvas in all parts of the edifice, as well as in almost +all the churches of Toledo. In most cases, the execution of them has +been intrusted to unskilful hands. The best specimen is that executed in +marble over the small altar I have just noticed. It is remarkable for +the graceful and good-humoured expression of the Virgin, and the easy, +almost merry, demeanour of her celestial attendants. + +The marble box which contains the Host is let into the altar-piece, of +which it appears to form a part of the surface, only projecting slightly +as its sides are convex. Turning on a pivot, it presents four different +fronts, each representing, in well executed relief, a different scene in +the Virgin's life. + + + + +LETTER X. + +CAFÉS. WEDDING CEREMONY. CATHEDRAL CONTINUED. ALCAZAR HOSPITAL OF SANTA +CRUZ. CONVENT OF LA CONCEPTION. MYSTERIOUS CAVERN. CONVENT OF SANTA FE, +OR OF SANTIAGO. SONS-IN-LAW OF THE CID. + + +Toledo. + +One of the first contrasts between this and other countries, which +forces itself on the observation, is the amalgamation of the different +classes of society in public places of resort. The grandee is far too +sure of his personal importance and consideration, to entertain any fear +of its being diminished by contact with those of inferior rank; and the +peasant is far too proud to importune his superiors by any indiscreet +efforts at familiarity. + +At Burgos I found the _Gefe politico_, or governor of the province, +sipping his lemonade in the evening at the _café_; his elbow brushing +the back of a mayoral of a diligence, and surrounded by an assemblage of +all classes of the male inhabitants of the town. These cafés are curious +establishments; they are divided into two classes--the Café, properly +so called, and the Botilleria--in which tea and coffee are not usually +called for, but all the other refreshments of the café; such as +_helados_ (frozen beverages of all sorts), _sorbetes_ (ices), liqueurs, +wines, etc. These latter are the resort, in some towns, of both sexes, +and indeed the cafés also in a less degree. But the etiquette in these +things differs in the different provinces. + +At Madrid, where foreign customs first penetrate, ladies are rarely seen +in these resorts; by which they are considerable losers. No doubt, were +the attractions of French cafés sufficiently powerful, your sex would +not have withered them, by their disdain, into the uncivilized dens +which they are. You are not of course invited by the billiard tables, or +by the allurements of black coffee and cognac; but were the waiters to +set before you a tumbler of frozen lemonade after a July evening's dusty +walk, you would speedily bring such habits into fashion. + +Much as the refreshments of Spanish cafés have been celebrated, their +fame is surpassed by the reality. It is only when you have panted +through a southern summer's day, and breathed an atmosphere of fire, +that you are disposed to receive the illustration of the full sense of +the word refreshment; and it is then they hand you a brobdignag goblet, +brim full of frozen orange-water or lemonade, or snow-white +orgeat--which, from the imperceptible inroads made by the teaspoon on +its closing-up surface, appears likely to last you the whole night. +These and other similar luxuries, including the ices, at which those of +a Grange or Tortoni would melt with jealousy, are plentiful in second +and third-rate towns, and rank among the necessaries of life, rather +than as objects of indulgence. They are of course cheap, or it would not +answer. + +The poor apply to the distributors of iced barley-water, who carry about +a sort of cask, strapped between their shoulders, and containing ice in +the centre, to maintain the frigidity of the beverage. By lowering and +advancing the left shoulder, the vendor pours the contents of the cask +through a small neck or pipe into the glasses, which he carries in a +flat basket with cellaret partitions. A tumbler of this costs a +halfpenny; its imbibing occupies two or three minutes, and assuages for +hours the sufferings of the thirstiest palate. + +At Madrid, the cafés have each its political colour; except that called +del Principe, after the adjoining theatre. In this, politics are less +characterised, literature having here taken up her quarters. It is +probable that she is a less profitable customer, being habitually less +thirsty. Accordingly, on putting your head into the door, you see a +saloon far more brilliantly lighted up than the others; but the +peripatetic doctrines seem to prevail. Few persons are seated at the +tables; and instead of the more profitable wear and tear of broken +glasses, the proprietor probably finds substituted a thankless annual +item for worn out floors. In the same street there is a club; but this +is an exotic importation and on the exclusive plan, not quite of London, +but of the Paris _cercles_. + +In the cafés of Toledo, on the days of _fiesta_, the fair sex +predominates, especially in summer. The great resort is, however, the +Zocodover, from nine to ten in the evening. This little irregularly +formed _plaza_ is crowded like an assembly-room, and possesses its rows +of trees, although a respectable oak would almost fill it. + +A soirée has occasionally been known to be given in Toledo, but it is an +occurrence of much rarity, and mostly occasioned by some unusual +event,--the arrival of a public singer, or, still more unusual, a newly +made fortune. The other evening I was admitted to one, the pretext for +which was a wedding. This ceremony takes place at the residence of the +bride, and although a subsequent formality is necessary in the Church, +its delay does not defer the validity of the union, nor its +consummation. The wedding-day arrived, the families and friends of both +parties assemble at eight in the evening. + +The bride was distinguishable by a white veil or _mantilla_ in the +middle seat of a sofa, between her mother and sister, who rose to +receive the guests. A narrow table had been dressed up into a temporary +altar, and furnished with a crucifix and candles. All the party being +arrived, a priest left his chair, and entered an adjoining room to robe; +on his reappearance the company rose and flocked round the bride and +bridegroom, who stood together before the priest, doing penance each +with a long wax-light in the right hand, held in a muslin handkerchief. + +The ceremony lasts about ten minutes without any change of posture. The +priest departs to unrobe; the miserable bride and blushing bridegroom +receive felicitations; and all resume their seats, and look at each +other. + +Presently chocolate was handed round, and an attempt at conversational +murmur commenced, afterwards ices. And now the minister took a formal +leave of the company, after complimenting the bride. Two or three other +holy men, obedient to the signal, carried out their interminable hats +before them: when a sudden revolution broke out. At the closing of the +door on the hindmost ecclesiastic the bridegroom rushed to the altar, +and grasping with one hand the crucifix, and with the other two of the +candlesticks, ran to the apartment that had assumed the character of +vestry, and deposited them there, followed by officious friends bearing +the remaining articles, until every awe-compelling symbol had +disappeared. One or two guitars were extracted from their hiding-places +under sofas, and sent forth careless but lively preludes. The men stood +up and circulated; the women talked and laughed; a quadrille was +speedily formed, and concluded; waltzing followed, and forfeits, and +whatever you like, and--"the arrangements were on a scale of costly +magnificence, and the festivities were prolonged, &c." + +But these events are rare in Toledo. The every-day amusements consist in +an infamous theatre, and the promenade; this is only on Saints' days; +but these are almost every day. On six or seven occasions in the year, +these promenades are absolute events, and much looked forward to. It is +necessary to inquire which is the promenade patronised by the saint of +the great day, whoever he is, and take your place in the tide, for no +one absents himself. + +Dresses for these celebrations are things pre-meditated; and the effect +produced, and all the little events and rencontres of the day form for +each belle, thrilling subjects of retrospection. _Mantillas_ may be +trimmed, and innocent plots woven for these occasions, without danger of +disappointment by clouds or storms; and instead of the Virgin being +implored that the sun may shine, who never disappoints them, she is +sometimes requested to inspire some ruse for a momentary escape from his +too searching effulgence. + +Here may fair foreigners feast their eyes on fawn-coloured _majos_, +whose every step (although no more exalted beings than butchers, +postilions, horsedealers, and such like) would be envied by Antinous and +Apollo. I should advise no veils, nor winkings, nor blinkings on these +occasions, but eyes wide open--for never more (the Pyrenees once +repassed) will their orbits expand to the forms and costumes of +blackguards half so beautiful. + +But these are subjects slightly unsuited to the interior of the +cathedral, of our presence in which we are evidently forgetful. The +Mozarabic Chapel, founded by Cardinal Ximenes de Cisneros, is situated +under the southern tower, and contains a Virgin and Child executed in +Mosaic, and a curious old fresco painting, representing the battle of +Oran, at which the Cardinal was victorious over the Arabs. This chapel +is set apart for the performance of the Mozarabic ritual, still retained +by a portion of the population of Toledo, and the exercise of which was +continued in several churches, until the closing of some of them at the +recent revolution. + +The Arab conquerors of Spain exercised towards the religion of the +country, the most complete and liberal tolerance. All who preferred +remaining in the conquered towns to flight and exile, were allowed to +retain a sufficient number of places of worship for the free exercise of +their religion. On the subsequent introduction of the Italian missal, +those who retained the ancient gothic forms were called Mozarabes (mixti +Arabes, according to some, from their service being the same as that in +use during the co-existence together of the two creeds). A more probable +origin is attributed to the expression by some antiquaries, who derive +it from Muza, the name of the Moorish general. The mass of the +Christians who had taken refuge in the Asturias, applied the term to +their brethren, who preferred accepting from the Arabs what they +considered a degrading tolerance. The following singular mode of +decision was adopted for the purpose of settling the question between +the two missals. + +The King, Alonzo the Sixth, the Archbishop Don Bernardo, and the court, +were among the advocates of the new missal, which, being adopted in +Rome, they were very desirous of establishing on the occasion of the +restoration of the Christian supremacy at Toledo. The mass of the +people were attached to their ancient forms. It was resolved that the +question should be decided by an appeal to a sort of neutral power; and +Mars was selected, probably on account of his being a person +disinterested in the affair. A champion was chosen by each party, and a +day appointed for settling the difference by single combat. Accordingly, +the court, the clergy, and the people being assembled, the +representatives of the two missals took their station, lance in rest, +and on the appointed signal spurred to the encounter. The ancient missal +was approved of by the warlike god; but the King and his party were +dissatisfied with the result, and resolved on another trial. A large +fire was lighted in the principal plaza, and the two missals were thrown +into it. + +Again the ancient forms conquered, the rival parchment having caught the +flame and being drawn out in a blaze. The populace now commenced a cry +of triumph; but, to their great disappointment, the King, in his quality +of umpire, pronounced a judgment which he might as easily have put in +execution before the trials: namely, that considering that the Roman +Missal, although on fire, was not consumed, they were both equally +agreeable to the deity--they should therefore both be preserved, and +that some of the more ancient churches should continue the exercise of +the Mozarabic service, while the Roman ritual should be established in +the metropolitan temple, and in the greater number of the parishes. + +Before we leave the cathedral, the cloister claims our attention. It is +a spacious and handsome quadrangle, inclosing a garden. The eastern wall +is adorned with excellent frescos of comparatively modern date, and all +bearing the same signature--Francisco Bayeu. There are seven subjects on +that side, being the number of intervals corresponding with the arcades, +and three more continuing down another side. The best are two, taken +from the history of Saint Casilda; and three from that of San Eugenio, +first archbishop of Toledo, martyrised in France. The arcades on the +east side are shut in by large pieces of sail-cloth, in order to protect +the paintings against the sun's rays. + +The library of manuscripts belonging to this cathedral is distinguished +rather by the quality than the quantity of its contents. It is +approached by a staircase communicating with the cloister, and is a +handsome room. It contains a copy of the Talmud on the papyrus leaves, +and in the Coptic dialect. The following are also among its treasures: +The Book of Esther in Hebrew, on a single piece of parchment; two +bibles of the seventh century, one of which belonged to St. Isidore; the +missal used by Charles the Fifth in the monastery of Yuste; the poems of +Dante, manuscript of the poet's time, with illustrations; the laws of +Alonso the Tenth (surnamed the wise), and a volume of his poetical +works, with the music opposite those intended to be sung: two ancient +Chinese volumes, one on botany, the other on natural history, both +illustrated. + +The next edifice I visited was the Alcazar, the largest and most +conspicuous building in Toledo. I expected to find there some Arab and +Roman remains, having so read in more than one tour. It was not until +some time after my visit that I obtained the information that the +Moorish palace occupied a different site. The present comparatively +modern building is principally of two epochs. On the east is the +original portion erected by Alonzo the Sixth. The entire north and south +fronts are probably additions of Philip the Second. The whole partakes +of a divided character between castle and palace: it is not remarkable +for any architectural merit, possessing neither beauty as a palace, nor +solidity as a fortress; and having been occupied as a military position +during the war of the succession, and more recently in that of +independence, its being already a ruin, before its modern appearance +would seem to legitimize such a state, causes no surprise. But its +position is superb. Occupying the most elevated point of the town, it +far exceeds the whole by the immense height of its walls, and commands +an admirable view of the surrounding country. The only object deserving +notice in this ruin is a colossal staircase, which occupies an entire +side of the court,--a length of about two hundred and fifty feet,--and +is ornamented by a light and elegant colonnade. This edifice ceased to +be a palace on the final establishment of the court at Madrid, and after +some time became the manufactory whence issued the famous silk and +velvet brocades, the fabrication of which has now ceased, but with which +Toledo formerly supplied the wardrobes of the court, and the +well-garnished sacristies of Spain's wealthiest cathedrals. + +Descending from the Alcazar through the Plaza de Zocodover, and thence +towards the bridge of Alcantara, a few yards from the Plaza bring us in +view of the façade of the Hospital of Santa Cruz, or "de los niños +expositos,"--foundling hospital. The institution owes its origin to the +Archbishop, Don Pedro Gonzalez de Mendoza, called the Great Cardinal of +Spain. Although death prevented his witnessing the execution of his +project, his fortune, administered by his next relatives and +executors,--the Queen Isabella, and the Duke of Infantado,--was +employed in the erection of the buildings, and in the endowment of the +establishment. The plans and conditions were not even drawn up until +after the Cardinal's death; and they were never entirely put in +execution. The church consists of one nave, of a length out of all +proportion to its width and elevation. It was to have been crossed by +another of the same proportions, with the exception of the elevation, +which was to have been eighty feet in both. This combined with the +length--about three hundred and fifty feet, as is seen in the existing +nave,--would have rendered the edifice one of the most extraordinary in +existence. The altar was to have stood in the centre of the intersection +of the two naves. As it is, the long bare interior looks as though it +had been destined for a picture gallery or library, but rather for the +latter from the low-coved roof of cedar, and from the inadequate +distribution of light. To the left of the altar is seen a portrait of +the founder; and on the opposite side, about a hundred feet further down +the nave, a large Adoration,--a superior painting, especially with +regard to the colouring: the author unknown. + +There are two large courts surrounded by arcades: one of them is a model +of lightness and beauty, and contains in one of its angles an admirably +ornamented staircase. The architect of the Santa Cruz was Enrique Egas, +who also built the celebrated hospital of the same name at Valladolid. +He designed the whole according to the style then introduced, after the +pointed style had been abandoned, and which in Spain received vulgarly +the appellation of Plateresco, from the ornaments resembling the +embossing of a silversmith. It is also confounded with the Renacimiento. +The Plateresco style, from the too great liberty it afforded the +architect, of setting aside the classic models, and following his own +inventions, has produced in Spain, more than in any other country, (from +there being at that period more wealth devoted to the construction of +public monuments there than elsewhere,) the evil effects resulting from +ill-guided and unrestrained powers of imagination. Fortunately, however, +a few architects existed whose more correct taste kept them within some +bounds; and who, in deserting the old models, replaced them by a style, +if less pure, yet by no means inelegant. The architect Egas appears to +have partaken of both natures at different moments; for, while his court +above-mentioned is a specimen of consummate grace and good taste, the +entrance front of the building is one of the bad examples of the style +of the period. + +The establishment covers a large space, about half the extent occupied +by the double palace of the Arab kings of Toledo. The remainder of the +site contains two convents,--that of Santiago, and that of the +Conception. The hospital was conducted formerly on a scale proportionate +to the extent of its accommodation; but it is now no more than a +reminiscence; the revenues having probably been incorporated in the +recent registrations of national property. The number of inmates at +present enjoying the benefits of the foundation amounts to fourteen +only. + +The Convent of la Conception adjoins the hospital of Santa Cruz. From +the exterior are seen two churches, placed in close parallel contact, +and each composed of a single nave. Both are evidently very ancient, one +being in the Arab style; but the form of the other renders it probable +that it is the more ancient of the two. You are disappointed after being +shown this last, on being informed that the Moorish portion is forbidden +ground, being appropriated by the nuns to their private use, and +possessing no communication with the adjoining edifice, but a curtained +grating, through which its secluded inmates assist at religious +services. In the public church, a singular ornament figures on a +conspicuous part of the wall near the entrance; it is the carcass of a +large crocodile, fixed high enough to be out of reach, although no one +would be likely to purloin so unwieldy a curiosity. We are told the +animal frequented the neighbourhood of Toledo; where, under cover of the +pine forests, which formerly extended far over this mountainous region, +its existence had long filled with terror the few travellers whom their +mercantile pursuits compelled to pass within its accustomed haunts: that +at length a knight (it was in the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella) +clothed in a full suit of armour, rode forth from Toledo, fully resolved +to try conclusions with the monster, in order if possible to immortalize +his name throughout the surrounding regions, by ridding them of so dire +a scourge. The battle took place, and victory declaring for the knight, +whose name unfortunately does not figure in the legend,--he assembled +the peasants, and had his enemy's carcass borne in triumph to Toledo, +where he made a present of it to the convent. + +While on the subject of traditions, it is worth while adverting to a +cavern, the entrance of which exists in this part of the town; and which +is said to extend to a distance of eight miles, passing under the Tagus. +It is related that somewhat less than a century back, the government +ordered this cavern to be explored; but the exploring party was met at +the commencement of the descent by so violent a gust of wind, as to +extinguish all the torches, and the courage of the explorers, for the +attempt was never resumed. The failure by no means contributed to +diminish the mysterious qualities attributed to the cavern, on the +subject of which the wildest notions are currently entertained. + +A worthy and excellent native of Toledo, to whose antiquarian enthusiasm +(a quality doubly valuable here from its scarcity) I am indebted for +some information and much entertainment, undertook one day to enlighten +me with regard to the origin of this subterranean curiosity. Commencing +by warning my credulity against the innumerable fables current on the +subject, and which only resembled each other in their absurdity and +impossibility, he added, "The real fact is this,--the cavern is the work +of Hercules, who excavated it for the accommodation of the assemblies of +the people, whom he instructed in the elements of magic." + +The convent of Santiago, or of Santa Fé, or of Las monjas santiagistas, +or Las cavalleras, occupies the portion of the ancient Moorish alcazar, +remaining from the site of the two last-mentioned buildings. It is built +round two courts, one of which is divided into planted parterres, +intersected with brick-paved walks. The architecture of this first court +is very simple; it consists of a plain arcade of semicircular arches +supported on square piers, and a repetition of the same on the first +story. From this court opens the parlour of the Commendadora or abbess, +and the choir, which forms a continuation of the public chapel. There is +also under the arcade a folding door, which, when opened exhibits a +collection of small pictures attached to it, as on the leaves of an +album, and others suspended against the portion of wall it encloses. The +centre painting of these last represents the Mater dolorosa weeping over +the dead body of her Son. It has much of the manner of Alonzo Cano, and +is an admirable painting, more especially the dead body: the superior, +however, did not know the name of the artist. She complained bitterly of +the loss of a first-rate picture of the Divino Morales, which formerly +occupied the place of her little collection, and which was taken +possession of by Marshal Soult. + +The second court is highly ornamental owing to the elegance of its +architecture, and its magnificent proportions; it is a long quadrangle; +the pillars below are very lofty, and support the gallery above without +intermediate arches. They are not of a pure design, the shafts being too +long for their diameter: in other respects they imitate the Tuscan +order. Those of the arcade above are Ionic; but the effect here is +destroyed by walls and windows, which have been constructed in their +intervals, for the purpose of converting the open gallery into a warmer +corridor. The walls below are clothed to the height of about four feet +with the _azulejos_, or porcelain mosaic, of the sort originally +employed by the Arabs, and from which the ornament took its name, being +blue and white, without any other colour. + +Opening from this court is the Sala Capitular a handsome saloon used on +occasions of elections of the Commendadora, or other solemnities, which +do not take place in the church. It contains a portrait of the sister of +St. Ferdinand,--a member of the community; and a curious picture of St. +Iago leading to victory the christian army of Don Ramiro the First. In +fulfilment of a promise made to the king the night preceding the battle +of Albayde, the apostle, according to the historians, led the army in +person, mounted on a milk-white charger, which cantered along at a +sufficient elevation over the heads of the combatants, to be visible to +all; thus inspiring, simultaneously, his _protégés_ with confidence, and +the Moors with terror. From that victory the Spanish war-cry of Santiago +is said to derive its origin. + +The buildings on the north side of the large court stand on the brink of +a perpendicular rock, overhanging the _faubourg_ on the Madrid side of +Toledo, and commanding right and left the luxuriant _vega_, to an extent +of from forty to fifty miles. Over the highest story of this portion of +the building, and forming a continuation of the rock, a Belvidere has +been constructed, the roof of which is supported by piers, leaving all +the sides open: it forms a promenade of about a hundred feet in length, +by twenty-five in width. + +The regulations of this convent are much less strict than those observed +by all other religious communities. It would not otherwise have been +possible to obtain permission to visit the establishment in detail. The +_monjas cavalleras_ (knight-nuns) of the military order of Santiago, +take the white veil only, and not the black. If a nun inherits a +property, she obtains permission from the council of military orders, +sitting at Madrid, to absent herself from the convent for the purpose of +transacting all necessary business. The same permission may be obtained +in cases of illness. In taking the vows there is no prostration beneath +the veil. The novice crosses her hands in a kneeling posture, and takes +the oath on the Gospel. One is struck by something invincibly puzzling +in this amalgamation of military regulation with religious hierarchy and +female seclusion. They call themselves knights; their abbess, commander. +The king, as Grand Master of the military orders (since Ferdinand the +Fifth) of Calatrava, Alcantara, and Santiago, is their recognised chief; +and whenever military mass is required to be performed, the troops march +into their chapel to beat of drum. + +I was even assured that these recluses are not obliged to refuse a hand +offered for a waltz, if it belongs to an arm having an epaulette at its +other extremity; and that such scenes are known to occur in the presence +of the commandress herself. + +Our party, formed for the visit to this convent, having been presented +to the superior, she gave directions to a nun to show us every part of +the establishment. This sister, who, we were told, bore the title and +rank of serjeantess (sargenta), possessed the remains of great beauty, +and her (probably) forty summers had not injured her commanding and +graceful figure. No sooner had she ushered us into the choir than she +left us for an instant, and returned with her mantle of ceremony,--the +costume in which they take the vow, and in which they appear on all +occasions of solemnity. It was with evident satisfaction that she +performed this part of her duties of cicerone; nor was it to be wondered +at. No costume could have been invented better calculated to set off her +natural advantages. It is composed of a sort of white serge, and +appears to have no seam. Attached round the shoulders it sweeps the +ground with a train of four or five feet. A cross of scarlet cloth, +bound with dark brown edges, and of a graceful form, figures on the +portion which covers the left arm from the shoulder to the elbow. The +white cap, gathered all over into minute plaits, rises into two parallel +ridges, which passing over to the back of the head, imitate the form of +a helmet. Two large lappets descend to the shoulders and complete the +costume, which is entirely white, with the exception of the cross. In +walking round the choir to display to us the effect of this dress, the +fair _santiagista_ was a model of majesty and grace. + +To judge from her replies to our questions, it would appear that the +system of softening the severity of monastic seclusion, and of partial +and occasional communication with the beings of the outer world, instead +of producing more contentment in the minds of the recluses, may possibly +tend to unsettle them, and render them more dissatisfied with their lot. +When asked how long she had inhabited the convent, she replied with an +unrestrained and most pathetic inflation of the chest, more eloquent +than the loudest complaint--"A very long time; nearly twenty years." The +white mantle, she told us, was an object the sight of which always gave +birth to serious reflections; since it was destined not even to quit her +after death, but to serve also for her shroud. + +[Illustration: COSTUME OF A MILITARY NUN.] + +The nun's choir is entirely separated from the public chapel, with the +exception of two gratings, which admit to the latter the sound of the +organ, and through which the nuns have a better view of the church than +the public can obtain of the choir, this being less lighted, and on a +lower level. Near the choir a small oratory of no greater dimensions +than about seven feet square, appears to be the only remains extant of +the Arab buildings, which occupied the site. The ceiling is +hemispherical, and ornamented in the Arab style; and one of the walls +contains a niche surrounded by Arab tracery. I should mention likewise a +fountain in the garden, which bears a similar character. + +These nuns live less in community with each other than those of other +convents; in fact, their life resembles in many respects that of +independent single ladies. Each inhabits her own suite of apartments, +and keeps her own servant. Her solitary repasts are prepared in her own +separate kitchen, and at the hour chosen by herself. Once a-year only, +on the occasion of the festival of the patron Apostle, the community +assembles at dinner. The common refectory is at present let to +strangers, together with other portions of the convent. The novice who +wishes to enter this convent must be of good family, (proof of noble +descent being demanded up to grand-fathers and grandmothers inclusive) +and possessed of property. Of the entrance of the present _commendadora_ +into the convent thirty years since, a romantic story is related. She +belongs to a family of rank in the province of La Mancha,--and it is +worth mentioning, that she recollects Espartero's father, who, as she +states, served a neighbouring family in the capacity of cowherd. + +A match, _de convenance_, had been arranged for her by her parents, on +the accomplishment of which they insisted the more rigidly from her +being known to entertain an attachment, the object of which was +disapproved. No resistance being of any avail, the wedding-day was +named; and she was taken to Toledo for the purpose of making the +necessary purchases for the occasion. It so happened that she was +received by a relative, a member of the community of Santiagistas; and +whether she confided her pains to the bosom of this relative, and +yielded to her persuasions--nuns being usually given to proselytism; or +perhaps acting on the impulse of the moment; she declared on the morning +after her arrival her resolution never to quit the convent; preferring, +as she resolutely affirmed, an entire life of seclusion, to an union +with a man she detested. Instead, therefore, of the wedding dresses, a +_manton capitular_ was the only ornament purchased. + +The property of this establishment remaining for the most part in +possession of the respective original possessors, and not forming a +common stock, the conscientious scruples of the revolution made an +exception in its favour, owing to which it is not reduced to so +destitute a condition as that of the other unclosed convents. The nuns +of San Clemente--the principal convent of Toledo, and of which the +abbess alone possessed private property, are reduced to a life of much +privation, as are also those of all the other convents. Some obtain +presents in return for objects of manual industry, such as dolls' +chairs, and other similar toys. Those of San Clemente had, and still +have, a reputation for superior skill in confectionary. A specimen of +their talent, of which I had an opportunity of judging in the house of a +friend of the abbess, appeared to me to warrant the full extent of their +culinary fame. They do not, however, exercise this art for gain. At San +Clemente, and no doubt at all the others, the new government--besides +the confiscation of all rents and possessions in money and land--seized +the provisions of corn and fruits which they found on searching the +attics of the building. + +Immediately below the ruined modern Alcazar, and facing the Expositos, +is seen a vast quadrangular building, each front of which presents from +twenty to thirty windows on a floor. It is without ornament, and is +entered by a square doorway, which leads to an interior court. It is now +an inn, called Fonda de la Caridad, but was originally the residence of +the Cid, who built it simultaneously with the erection of the Alcazar, +by Alonzo the Sixth, shortly after the taking of the town; Ruy Diaz +being at that time in high favour, and recently appointed first Alcalde +of Toledo, and governor of the palace. It was on the occasion of the +first cortez held in this town, that the hero demanded a formal audience +of Alonzo, in which he claimed justice against his two sons-in-law, the +counts of Carrion. + +These were two brothers, who had married the two Countesses of Bivar. On +the occasion of the double marriage, a brilliant party had assembled at +the Cid's residence, where all sorts of festivities had succeeded each +other. The two bridegrooms, finding themselves, during their presence in +this knightly circle, in positions calculated to test their mettle, +instead of proving themselves, by a display of unequalled valour and +skill, to be worthy of the choice by which they had been distinguished, +gave frequent proofs of deficiency in both qualities; and, long before +the breaking up of the party, their cowardice had drawn upon them +unequivocal signs of contempt from many of the company, including even +their host. Obliged to dissimulate their vexation as long as they +remained at the château of the Cid, they concerted a plan of vengeance +to be put in execution on their departure. + +They took formal leave, and departed with their brides for their +estate, followed by a brilliant suite. No sooner, however, had they +reached the first town, than, inventing a pretext, they despatched all +the attendants by a different route, and proceeded on their journey, +only accompanied by their wives. Towards evening the road brought them +to a forest, which appeared to offer facilities for putting their +project in execution. Here they quitted the highway, and sought a +retired situation. + +It happened that an attendant of the Countesses, surprised at the +determination of the party to divide routes, had been led by curiosity +to follow them unobserved. This follower, after having waited some time +for their return to the high-road, penetrated into the midst of the +wood, in order to discover the cause of the delay. He found the two +brides lying on the ground, almost without clothing, and covered with +blood, and learned that they had just been left by their husbands, who +had been scourging them almost to death. + +It was against the perpetrators of this outrage that the Cid pleaded for +justice. A certain number of nobles were selected by Alonzo, and +directed to give a decision after hearing the accusation and the +defence. The offence being proved, the Counts had nothing to urge in +extenuation, and judgment was pronounced. All the sums of money, +treasures, gold and silver vases and goblets, and precious stones, +given by the Cid with his daughters as their dowry, to be restored; and +(at the request of Ruy Diaz) the two Counts of Carrion, and their uncle, +who had advised them to commit the act, were condemned to enter the +lists against three of the followers of the Cid. The last decision was +momentarily evaded by the Counts; who urged, that, having come to Toledo +to be present at the cortez, they were unprovided with the necessary +accoutrements. The King, however, insisted that they should not escape +so mild a punishment, and repaired himself to Carrion, where he +witnessed the combat, in which, it is needless to add, the culprits came +off second best. The marriages being, at the same time, declared null, +the Cid's daughters were shortly afterwards married a second time; the +eldest, Doña Elvira, to Don Ramiro, son of Sancho, King of Navarre; and +the younger, Doña Sol, to Don Pedro, hereditary Prince of Aragon. + + + + +LETTER XI. + +STREETS OF TOLEDO. EL AMA DE CASA. MONASTERY OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES. +PALACE OF DON HURTADO DE MENDOZA. + + +Toledo. + +We will now hasten to the opposite extremity of the city, where the +monastery of San Juan de los Reyes lays claim to especial interest. But +I already hear you cry for mercy, and exclaim against these endless +convents and monasteries; the staircases, courts, and corridors of which +cause more fatigue to your imagination, than to the limbs of those who, +however laboriously, explore their infinite details. Infinite they are, +literally, in Toledo; where the churches, the greater number of which +belong to convents, are not seen, as elsewhere, scattered singly among +the masses of the habitations, but are frequently to be found in +clusters of three or four, whether united by the same walls, or facing +each other at the two sides of a street. It may, perhaps, afford you a +short relief to pick your way over the somewhat rugged pavement of a +few of the Toledo streets, and take a survey of the exterior town, which +our present destination requires us to traverse in its entire extent. I +must inform you that, for the success of this enterprise, the stranger +stands in absolute need of a pilot, without whose assistance his +embarrassments would be endless. + +Toledo scarcely boasts a street in which two vehicles could meet and +continue their route. Most are impassable for a single cart; and, in +more than one, I have found it impossible to carry an open umbrella. +Such being the prevailing width of the streets, their tortuous direction +causes a more serious inconvenience. He who has attempted the task of +Theseus, in the mazes of some modern garden labyrinth, will comprehend +the almost inevitable consequence of relying on his own wits for finding +his way about Toledo,--namely, the discovery that he has returned to his +point of departure at the moment he imagined that half the town +separated him from it. This result is the more favoured by the +similarity of the streets and houses. No such thing as a land-mark. All +the convents are alike. You recollect at a particular turning, having +observed a Moorish tower; consequently, at the end of the day, the sight +of the Moorish tower leads you on, buoyed up by doubly elevated +spirits, in the required direction, most anxious to bring the tiring +excursion to a close: but this tower leads you to the opposite extremity +of the city to that you seek, for there are half a dozen Moorish towers, +all alike, or with but a trifling difference in their construction. + +Nor is this obstacle to solitary exploration unaccompanied by another +inconvenience. I allude to the continual ascents and descents. The +surface of the mountain on which Toledo is built, appears to have been +ploughed by a hundred earthquakes, so cut and hacked is it, to the +exclusion of the smallest extent of level ground. To carry a railroad +across it, would require an uninterrupted succession of alternate +viaducts and tunnels. In consequence of this peculiarity, the losing +one's way occasions much fatigue. To do justice to the inhabitants, an +almost universal cleanliness pervades the town,--an excellence the +attainment of which is not easy in a city so constructed, and which +gives a favourable impression of the population. It is one of the towns +in which is proved the possibility of carrying on a successful war +against the vermin for which the Peninsula has acquired so bad a +reputation, by means of cleanliness maintained in the houses. + +In the house I inhabited on my arrival, I had suspected for some days an +unusual neglect in the duties of the housemaid, to whose department it +belonged to sweep the _esteras_ or matting, which serve for carpets, +from the circumstance of my having been visited by one or two unwelcome +tormentors. I ventured a gentle remonstrance to the _ama_ (landlady), +stating my reasons for the suspicion I entertained. It happened that on +the previous day I had mentioned my having been shown over the +Archbishop's palace. This she had not forgotten; for with a superb +coolness, scarcely to be met with out of Spain, she replied, "Fleas! oh, +no! sir! we have none here,--you must have brought them with you from +the Palace." Satisfied, however, with having maintained her dignity of +landlady, she took care to have the nuisance removed. + +This _ama_, as may be already judged, was a curiosity. In the first +place, she was a dwarf. The Spaniards are not, generally speaking, a +more diminutive race than the other inhabitants of Southern Europe: but +when a Spaniard, especially a woman, takes it into her head to be small, +they go beyond other nations. Nowhere are seen such prodigies of +exiguity. The lady was, moreover, deformed, one of her legs describing a +triangle, which compelled her in walking to imitate the sidelong +progress of a crab. Possessed of these peculiarities she had attained, +as spinster, that very uncertain age called by some "certain," but +agreed by all to be nearer the end than the commencement of life. + +Although not an exception, with regard to temper, to the generality of +those whose fate it is to endure such a complication of ills, she +nevertheless on frequent occasions gave way to much amiability, and +especially to much volubility of discourse. She was not without a tinge +of sentimentality; and when seated, fan in hand, and the _mantilla +puesta_, on one of the chairs shorn of almost their entire legs, which +were to be found in all parts of the house,--she made by no means a bad +half-length representation of a fine lady. + +She had apparently experienced some of the sorrows and disappointments +incident to humanity; and on such occasions had frequently, no doubt, +formed the resolution of increasing, although in a trifling degree, some +religious sisterhood, of which establishments she had so plentiful a +choice in her native city; but, whether on a nearer approach, she had +considered the veil an unbecoming costume, or her resolution had failed +her on the brink of the living tomb, the project had not as yet taken +effect. The turn, however, thus given to her reflections and inquiries, +had perfected in her a branch of knowledge highly useful to strangers +who might be thrown in her way. She was a limping encyclopedia of the +convents and monasteries of Toledo; and could announce each morning, +with the precision of an almanack, the name of the saint of the day,--in +what church or convent he was especially fêted, and at what hour the +ceremony would take place. She was likewise _au fait_ of the foundation, +ancient and modern annals, and peculiarities of every sort which belong +to every religious establishment of the many scores existing in Toledo. +Her administration of the household affairs was admirably organized +owing to her energetic activity. Her love of cleanliness would +frequently induce her to take the sweeping department into her own +hands--a circumstance which was sure to render the operation doubly +successful, for the brooms, which in Toledo are not provided with +handles or broomsticks, were exactly of a length suited to her stature. +Before we take leave of her, here is one more of her original replies. + +I complained to her at breakfast that the eggs were not as fresh as +usual; and, suiting the action to the word, approached the egg-cup +containing the opened one so near to her, that the organs of sight and +smell could not but testify to the justice of my _reclamation_. +Shrugging her shoulders, until they almost reached the level of the +table--and with much contempt depicted on her countenance: "How could it +be otherwise?" she exclaimed, "the egg was taken a quarter of an hour +ago from under the hen; but you have broken it at the wrong end." + +The monastery called San Juan de los Reyes, was founded by Ferdinand and +Isabella, on their return from the conquest of Granada, and given to a +fraternity of Franciscan friars. An inscription to this effect in gothic +characters runs round the cloister walls, where it forms a sort of +frieze, in a line with the capitals of the semi-columns. The inhabited +part of the establishment is in a state of complete ruin, having been +destroyed by the French during the Peninsular War. The cloisters are, +likewise, in a semi-ruinous state: the part best preserved being the +church; although that was not entirely spared, as may be supposed from +its having been used as cavalry stables. + +The choice of a situation for the erection of this convent was perfect +in the then flourishing state of Toledo; and, even now, its picturesque +position lends a charm to the melancholy and deserted remains still +visible of its grandeur and beauty. It stands on the brow of the cliff, +commanding the termination of the chasm already described as commencing +at the bridge of Alcantara. It commands, therefore, the ruins of +Roderick's palace, placed a few hundred yards further on, and on a lower +level; still lower the picturesque bridge of St. Martin, striding to +the opposite cliff, over arches of ninety feet elevation, and the lovely +_vega_ which stretches to the west. + +[Illustration: CHURCH OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES.] + +This monastery was one of the most favoured amongst the numerous royal +endowments of that period. It is said that its foundation was the result +of a vow pronounced by Ferdinand and the Queen before the taking of +Granada. In addition to the scale of magnificence adopted throughout the +entire plan, the royal founders, on its completion, bestowed a highly +venerated donation--the collection of chains taken from the limbs of the +Christian captives, rescued by them from the dungeons of the Alhambra. +They are suspended on the outside walls of the two sides of the +north-eastern angle of the church, and are made to form a frieze, being +placed in couples crossing each other at an acute angle; while those +that remained are suspended vertically in rows by fours or fives, in the +intervals of the pilastres. + +The interior of the church is still sufficiently entire to give some +idea of its original splendour. Its dimensions are rather more than two +hundred feet in length, by eighty in width, and as many in +height--excepting over the intersection of the nave and transept, where +the ceiling rises to a hundred and eight feet. These dimensions are +exclusive of three recesses on either side, forming chapels open to the +nave, there being no lateral naves or aisles. The style of the whole is +very ornamental; but the east end is adorned with an unusual profusion +of sculpture. The transept is separated from the eastern extremity of +the building, by a space no greater than would suffice for one of the +arches; and its ends form the lines, which being prolonged, constitute +the backs of the chapels. The royal arms, supported by spread eagles, +are repeated five times on each end-wall; separated respectively by +statues of saints in their niches, and surmounted by a profusion of rich +tracery. These subjects entirely cover the walls to a height of about +forty feet, at which elevation another inscription in honour of the +founders runs round the whole interior. The transepts not being formed +by open arches, the sides afford space for a repetition of the same +ornament, until at their junction with the nave they are terminated by +two half-piers covered with tracery, and surmounted by semi-octagonal +balconies, beneath which the initials of Ferdinand and Isabella, made to +assume a fancy shape, and surmounted by coronets, are introduced with +singularly graceful effect. + +But the chief attraction of this ruin is the cloister. A small +quadrangle is surrounded by an ogival or pointed arcade, enriched with +all the ornament that style is capable of receiving. It encloses a +garden, which, seen through the airy-web of the surrounding tracery, +must have produced in this sunny region a charming effect. At present, +one side being in ruins and unroofed, its communication with the other +three has been interrupted; and, whether or not in the idea of +preserving the other sides from the infection, their arches have been +closed nearly to the top by thin plaister walls. Whatever may have been +the motive of this arrangement, it answers the useful purpose of +concealing from the view a gallery which surmounts the cloister, the +arches of which would neutralize the souvenirs created by the rest of +the scene, since they announce a far different epoch of art, by the +grievous backsliding of taste evinced in their angular form and uncouth +proportions. + +[Illustration: CLOISTER OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES, TOLEDO.] + +Until the destruction of the monastery by the French, the number of +monks was very considerable; and in consequence of the unusual +privileges accorded to their body, had become the objects of especial +veneration. A curious proof of this still exists in the form of a +printed paper, pasted on one of the doors in the interior of the church, +and no doubt preserved carefully by the fifteen or sixteen brothers, who +continued after the dispersion of the rest to inhabit the few +apartments, which, by their situation over the cloister, had escaped the +flames; and who were only finally compelled to evacuate their retreat on +the occasion of the general convent crusade of the late revolution. It +is an announcement of indulgences, of which the following is the opening +paragraph:-- + +"Indulgence and days of pardon to be gained by kissing the robe of the +brothers of San Francisco. + +"All the faithful gain, for each time that they kiss the aforesaid holy +robe with devotion of heart, two thousand and seventy-five days of +Indulgence. Further than this, whosoever of the faithful shall kiss the +aforesaid holy robe devoutly, gains each time eight thousand one hundred +days of pardon. The which urges to the exercise of this devotion the +Princes, Kings, Emperors, Bishops, and highest dignitaries of the +Church, and the monks of other religious orders; and even those of the +same order gain the same, according to the doctrine of Lantusca, who +writes, 'Videant religiosi quantum thesaurum portent secum.' Since those +who with hearts filled with lowliness and love, bend the knees to kiss +the precious garment, which opens to so many souls the entrance to +Heaven, leading them aside from the paths of perdition, with trembling +and terror of the entire hosts of hell, are doubtless those who gain the +above-mentioned Indulgences, &c." + +Cardinal Ximenes had assumed the habit of this monastery before his +nomination to the see of Toledo. + +Among the numerous relics of the ancient prosperity of this ruinous +corner of Toledo, are seen the walls of the palace of Don Juan Hurtado +de Mendoza. To them were confided the secret murmurings of Charles the +Fifth's vexation, when, elated with his Italian successes--lord of the +greatest empire of Christendom, and flattered by the magnificent +hospitality of the Genoese, he only resorted hither to be bearded by his +Spanish vassals, and to hear his request for supplies unceremoniously +refused. Although monarch of nearly half Europe, and, better still, of +Mexico and Peru, that sovereign appears to have undergone the torments +of a constantly defective exchequer. + +His armies were not numerous for such an empire, and yet they were +frequently in revolt for arrears of pay. Could at that time the inventor +of a constitution on the modern principle have presented himself to +Charles, with what treasures would he not have rewarded him? On his +arrival in Spain, in the autumn of 1538, the emperor convoked the cortez +in Toledo, "for the purpose of deliberation on the most grave and urgent +causes, which obliged him to request of his faithful vassals an +inconsiderable contribution, and of receiving the assurance of the +desire with which he was animated, of diminishing their burdens as soon +as circumstances should enable him to do so." All assembled on the +appointed day--the prelates, the grandees, the knights, the deputies of +cities and towns. The opening session took place in the great salon of +the house of Don Juan Hurtado de Mendoza, Count of Melita, in which the +emperor had taken up his abode; and two apartments in the convent of San +Juan de los Reyes, were prepared for the remaining meetings--one for the +ecclesiastical body, presided by the Cardinal de Tavera, archbishop of +Toledo, accompanied by Fray Garcia de Loaysa, cardinal, and confessor of +the emperor, afterwards Archbishop of Seville--the other for the lay +members of the cortez. + +Although an adept at dissimulation, what must have been the impatience +of Charles, while under the necessity of listening, day after day, to +reports of speeches pronounced by the independent members of his _junta_ +on the subject of his unwelcome proposition, without the consolation of +foreseeing that the supplies would eventually be forthcoming. The +orators did not spare him. The historian, Mariana, gives at full length +the speech of the condestable Don Velasco, Duke of Frias, a grandee +enjoying one of the highest dignities at the court, who commences by +declaring that, "with respect to the Sisa," (tax on provisions, forming +the principal subject of the emperor's demand,) "each of their +lordships, being such persons as they were, would understand better than +himself this business: but what he understood respecting it was, that +nothing could be more contrary to God's service, and that of his +Majesty, and to the good of these kingdoms of Castile, of which they +were natives, and to their honour, than the Sisa;" and, further on, +proposes that a request be made to his Majesty, that he would moderate +his expenditure, which was greater than that of the Catholic kings. + +On an address to this effect being presented to the emperor, he replied, +that "he thanked them for their kind intentions; but that his request +was for present aid, and not for advice respecting the future:" and +finding, at length, that no Sisa was to be obtained, he ordered the +archbishop to dissolve the _junta_, which he did in the following +words:--"Gentlemen,--his Majesty says, that he convoked your lordships' +assembly for the purpose of communicating to you his necessities, and +those of these kingdoms, since it appeared to him that, as they were +general, such also should be the remedy; but seeing all that has been +done, it appears to him that there is no need of detaining your +lordships, but that each of you may go to his house, or whither he may +think proper." + +It must be confessed that the grandees, who had on this occasion +complained of Charles's foreign expeditions, and neglect of his Spanish +dominions, did not pursue the system best calculated to reconcile him to +a residence among them. Instead of taking advantage of the opportunities +afforded by social intercourse, for making amends for the repulse he had +suffered from the cortez, they appeared desirous of rendering the amount +of humiliation which awaited him in Spain a counterpoise to his triumphs +in his other dominions. On the close of the above-mentioned session, a +tournament was celebrated in the _vega_ of Toledo. On arriving at the +lists, an _alguacil_ of the court, whose duty it was to clear the way +on the emperor's approach--seeing the Duke de l'Infantado in the way, +requested him to move on, and on his refusal struck his horse with his +staff. The duke drew his sword and cut open the officer's head. In the +midst of the disturbance occasioned by the incident, the _alcalde_ +Ronquillo came up, and attempted to arrest the duke in the emperor's +name--when the constable, Duke de Frias, who had just ridden to the +scene of bustle, reining in his horse, exclaimed, "I, in virtue of my +office, am chief minister of justice in these kingdoms, and the duke is, +therefore, my prisoner;" and addressing himself to the alcalde: "know +better another time, on what persons you may presume to exercise your +authority." The duke left the ground in company of the last speaker, and +was followed by all the nobles present, leaving the emperor entirely +unaccompanied. It appears that no notice was taken by Charles of this +insult; his manner towards the Duke of Infantado on the following day +being marked by peculiar condescension, and all compensation to the +wounded _alguacil_ left to the duke's generosity. + +The personal qualities of this prince, as a monarch, appear to have been +overrated in some degree in his own day; but far more so by subsequent +writers. The brilliancy of his reign, and the homage which surrounded +his person were due to the immense extent of his dominions; and would +never have belonged to him, any more than the states of which he was in +possession, had their attainment depended in any degree on the exercise +of his individual energies. When in the prime of youth, possessed of +repeated opportunities of distinguishing himself at the head of his +armies, he kept aloof, leaving the entire conduct of the war to his +generals. His rival, Francis the First, wounded at Pavia in endeavouring +to rally his flying troops, and at length taken prisoner while half +crushed beneath his dead horse, was greater--as he stood before the +hostile general, his tall figure covered with earth and blood--than the +absent emperor, who was waiting at Valladolid for the news of the war. + +Nor were the qualities of the statesman more conspicuous than those of +the warrior on this occasion. Having received the intelligence of his +victory, and of the capture of his illustrious prisoner, he took no +measures--gave no orders. To his general every thing was left; and when +the captive King was, at his own request, conveyed some time after to +Spain, the astonished emperor had received no previous notice of his +coming. He allowed himself to be out-manoeuvred in the treaty for the +liberation of his prisoner; and when Francis broke the pledge he had +given for the restitution of Burgundy, he took no steps to enforce the +execution of the stipulations; and he ultimately gave up the two French +princes, who remained in his power as hostages, in return for a sum of +money. + +Far from maintaining the superiority in European councils due to his +extensive dominions, the Italian republics were only prevented with the +greatest difficulty, and by the continual presence of armies, from +repeatedly declaring for France: and even the popes, to whom he paid +continual court, manifested the small estimation in which they held his +influence by constantly deserting his cause in favour of Francis,--the +cause of the champion of Christianity in favour of the ally of the +Infidel, and _that_ frequently in defiance of good faith; shewing how +little they feared the consequences of the imperial displeasure. + +If these facts fail in affording testimony to his energy and capacity, +still less does his character shine in consistency. He professed an +unceasing ardour in the cause of Christianity; offering to the French +king the renunciation of his rights, and a release from that monarch's +obligations to him, on condition of his joining him in an expedition +against the Infidels; but when he found himself at the head of an +immense army under the walls of Vienna, he sat still and allowed +Solyman to carry off at his leisure the spoils of the principal towns of +Hungary. + +When at length he made up his mind to take the field, he selected, as +most worthy of the exercise of his prowess, the triumph over the pirate +Barbarossa and his African hordes: the most important result of the +campaign being the occupation of Tunis, (where in his zealous burnings +for Christianity he installed a Mahometan sovereign,) and the wanton +destruction by his soldiers of a splendid library of valuable +manuscripts. + +We have seen how little his Spanish subjects allowed themselves to be +dazzled by the splendours of his vast authority, and history informs us +how far he was from conceiving the resolution of reducing them to +obedience by any measures savouring of energetic demonstration. The +irreverence to his person he calmly pocketed, and the deficiences in his +exchequer were supplied by means of redoubled pressure on his less +refractory Flemings. He submitted to the breach of faith of Francis of +France, and to the disrespect of his Castilian vassals; but, on the +burghers of the city of Ghent being heard to give utterance to +expressions of discontent at the immoderate liberties taken with their +purse-strings, he quits Madrid in a towering rage, crosses France at +the risk of his liberty, and enters his helpless burg at the head of a +German army, darting on all sides frowns of imperial wrath, each +prophetic of a bloody execution. + +Aware of the preparations of Francis for attacking his dominions +simultaneously in three different directions, he took insufficient or +rather no measures to oppose him, but turning his back, embarked for +Algiers, where he believed laurels to be as cheap as at Tunis. There, +however, he lost one half of his armament, destroyed by the elements; +and the remainder narrowly escaping a similar fate, and being dispersed +in all directions, he returned in time to witness the unopposed +execution of the plans of his French enemy. What measures are his on +such an emergency? Does he call together the contingents of the German +States? Unite the different corps serving in Lombardy and +Savoy,--dispatch an order to the viceroy of Naples to march for the +north of Italy; and having completed his combinations, cross the +Pyrenees at the head of a Spanish army, and give the law to his far +weaker antagonist? No! nothing that could lead to an encounter with the +French king accorded with his policy, as it has been called, but more +probably with his disposition. He quits Spain, it is true, and using all +diligence, travels round France, but not too near it, and arrives in +Flanders. Here he puts himself at the head of his Germans, and +marches--against the Duke of Cleves! who had formed an alliance with his +principal enemy. + +Seeing the emperor thus engaged, Francis completes a successful +campaign, taking possession of Luxembourg and other towns. At length the +sovereign of half Europe, having received news of the landing of an +English army in Picardy, resolves to venture a demonstration against +France. He therefore traverses Lorraine at the head of eighty thousand +troops, and makes himself master of Luneville: after which, hearing that +Francis had despatched his best troops to oppose Henry the Eighth, and +was waiting for himself, as the less dangerous foe, with an army of half +the strength of his own, and composed of recruits, he makes up his mind +to advance in the direction of Paris. After a fortnight's march he finds +himself in presence of the French king, to whom he sends _proposals of +peace_! + +These being rejected, he continues his march; when a messenger from +Francis announces his consent to treat. Under these circumstances, does +he require the cession of Burgundy, according to the terms of the +unexecuted treaty of Madrid? Does he even stipulate for any advantage, +for any equality? No! he agrees, on the contrary, to cede Flanders to +the French, under colour of a dowry with his daughter the Infanta Maria, +who was to be married to the Duke of Orleans; or else Milan, with his +niece the daughter of the King of the Romans; and he beats a retreat +with his immense army, as if taking the benefit of a capitulation. + +There is something in the result of this French campaign which appears +to explain much of Charles's previous conduct; and shows that in many +instances he was actuated by personal fear of his gallant rival. On this +occasion he did not hesitate to desert the King of England, who had no +doubt calculated on his coöperation, as much as Charles had depended on +the diversion created by the British army. The more one reflects on the +passages of this emperor's history, the less one is surprised at his +resolution to abdicate. He gave in this a proof of his appreciation of +his real character, which undoubtedly fitted him rather for a life of +ease and retirement, than for the arduous duties of supreme power. + + + + +LETTER XII. + +ARAB MONUMENTS. PICTURES. THE PRINCESS GALIANA. ENVIRONS. + + +Toledo. + +Returning along the edge of the cliff, a very short space separates the +extreme walls of the ruined monastery of Ferdinand and Isabella, from an +edifice of much greater antiquity, although not yet a ruin. Its exterior +as you approach, is more than simple. It is not even a neatly +constructed building; but such a pile of rough looking mud and stone, +as, on the continent, announces sometimes a barn, or granary of a +farming establishment _mal monté._ A high central portion runs from end +to end, from either side of which, at about four-fifths of its height, +project lower roofs of brownish-red tiles. The old square rotten door is +in exact keeping with all this exterior, and contributes its share to +the surprise experienced on entering, when you discover, on a level with +the eye, distributed over a spacious quadrangular area, a forest of +elaborately carved capitals, surmounting octagon-shaped pillars, and +supporting innumerable horse-shoe arches, scattered in apparent +confusion. All these as you advance down a flight of steps, fall into +rank, and you speedily find yourself in the centre of an oriental temple +in all its symmetry. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF SANTA MARIA LA BLANCA, TOLEDO.] + +The principal light entering from the western extremity, you do not at +first perceive that three of the five naves terminate at the opposite +end, by half domes of more modern invention. These have since been +almost built out, and do not form a part of the general view,--not in +consequence of a decree of a committee of fine arts, but for the +convenience of the intendant of the province, who selected the edifice, +as long as it remained sufficiently weather-proof for such a purpose, +for a magazine of government stores. There is no record of the antiquity +of this church, supposed to be the most ancient in Toledo: at all +events, it is the most ancient of those constructed by the Arabs. It was +originally a synagogue, and received the above mentioned half cupolas on +its conversion to a Catholic church; since which period it has been +known by its present title of Santa Maria la Blanca. + +A few hundred yards further on, following the same direction, is the +church called the Transito, also in the oriental style, but on a +different plan: a large quadrangular room, from about ninety to a +hundred feet in length, by forty in width, and about seventy high, +without arches or columns, ornamented with Arab tracery in stucco, on +the upper part of the walls, and by a handsome cedar roof. A cement of a +different colour from the rest runs round the lowest portion of the +walls, up to about breast high; no doubt filling the space formerly +occupied by the azulejos. Some remains of these still decorate the +seats, which are attached to the walls at the two sides of the altar. +The building is in excellent preservation, and until lately was used as +a church of the Mozarabic sect. The ornaments are remarkable for the +exquisite beauty of their design, and are uninjured, excepting by the +eternal whitewash, the monomania of modern Spanish decorators. + +The Jews were the primitive occupants of this elegant temple also. +Samuel Levi, treasurer and favourite of Pedro the Cruel (who +subsequently transferred his affection from the person of his faithful +servant to the enormous wealth, amassed under so indulgent a prince, and +seized a pretext for ordering his execution) was the founder of this +synagogue. The inauguration was accompanied by extraordinary pomp. The +treasurer being, from his paramount position at the court of Castile, +the most influential personage of his tribe, the leading members of +Judaism flocked from all parts of Europe to Toledo to be present on the +occasion, and a deputation from Jerusalem brought earth of the Holy +Land, which was laid down throughout the whole interior before the +placing of the pavement. + +A very different origin, more suited to believers in miracles, is +attributed to this church by the present titular sacristan. This +Quasimodo of the fabric, a simple and worthy functionary, enjoys a +sinecure, except, it is to be feared, with regard to salary. Although, +however, no duties confine him to his post, his attachment to the +edifice prevents his ever being found further from it than the porch; +under the cool shelter of which, as he leans against the wall, he +fabricates and consumes the friendly _cigarito_. When questioned with an +appearance of interest on the subject of the building, he replies with +unrestrained delight. Its foundation he attributes to Noah, fixing the +date at seventeen hundred years back; but without adding any particulars +relative to this miraculous visit paid to Toledo, by the ghost of the +patriarch. + +As is the case with all other ecclesiastical edifices closed pursuant to +the recent decrees, this building may become the property of any one, +who would offer a sufficient price, not according to the real value, but +to that to which such objects are reduced by the great number in the +market. Several other churches are simply closed and left unguarded; but +the antiquarian sacristan above mentioned, is placed here on account of +the existence of a room in which are contained the archives of the +knights of Calatrava and Alcantara, until recently its proprietors. No +reparations, however, are ordered; and there is many an enthusiast in +archæological research who, should such an edifice fall under his +notice, would, no doubt, rescue it from its now imminent fate. It is not +only a monument admirable for the details of the ornaments, the best of +its sort to be met with north of Andalucia, but it forms a valuable link +in the chain of architectural history. It is the first ecclesiastical +edifice of its style recorded as having set the example of an open area, +destitute of columns and arcades. + +At the distance of a few hundred yards from this building, a portion of +the precipice is pointed out, to which was given in former times the +name of the Tarpeian rock. It was the spot selected by the Jewish +authorities, (who enjoyed in Toledo, under the Kings of Castile, the +right of separate jurisdiction in their tribe,) for the execution of +their criminals. It is a perpendicular rock, but with an intermediate +sloping space between its base and the Tagus. + +One of the most curious of the Arab monuments of Toledo, is the church +called the Christo de la Luz, formerly a mosque. It is extremely small; +a square of about twenty feet; and is divided by four pillars into three +naves, connected with each other, and with the surrounding walls, by +twelve arches. This disposition produces in the ceiling nine square +compartments, which rise each to a considerable height, enclosed by +walls from the tops of the arches upwards. Each small square ceiling is +coved and ornamented with high angular ribs, rising from the cornice and +intersecting each other, so as to form a different combination in each +of the nine. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF CHRISTO DE LA LUZ. TOLEDO.] + +The principal remaining Arab buildings are, the beautiful gate called +Puerta del Sol; part of the town walls with their towers; the parochial +church of San Roman; the tower of the church of St. Thomas; and two or +three other similar towers. Several private houses contain single rooms +of the same architecture, more or less ornamental. The most considerable +of these is situated opposite the church of San Roman, and belongs to a +family residing at Talavera. They have quitted the house in Toledo, +which is in a ruinous state. The Moorish saloon is a fine room of about +sixty feet in length by upwards of forty high, and beautifully +ornamented. The Artesonado roof of cedar lets in already, in more than +one part, light and water; and half the remainder of the house has +fallen. + +The good pictures in Toledo are not very plentiful. It is said some of +the convents possessed good collections, which were seized, together +with all their other property. Many of these are to be seen in the +gallery called the Museo Nacional, at Madrid. Others have been sold. +Those of the cathedral have not been removed; but they are not numerous: +among them is a St. Francisco, by Zurbaran; and a still more beautiful +work of Alonzo del Arco, a St. Joseph bearing the Infant. It is in a +marble frame fixed in the wall, and too high to be properly viewed: but +the superiority of the colouring can be appreciated, and the excellence +of the head of the saint. In the smaller sacristy are two pictures in +Bassano's style, and some copies from Raphael, Rubens, and others. At +the head of the great sacristy, there is a large work of Domenico +Theotocopuli, commonly called El Greco, (the head of the school of +Toledo) which I prefer much to the famous Funeral of the Count Orgaz, in +the church of Santo Tonie, which, according to some, passes for his +masterpiece. In the first are traits of drawing, which forcibly call to +mind the style of the best masters of the Roman school, and prove the +obligation he was under to the instructions of his master Michel Angelo. +The subject is the Calvary. The soldiery fill the back ground. On the +right hand the foreground is occupied by an executioner preparing the +cross, and on the left, by the group of females. The erect figure of the +Christ is the principal object, and occupies the centre, somewhat +removed from the front. This is certainly a fine picture; the +composition is good, and the drawing admirable, but the colouring of the +Greco is always unpleasing. + +In the Funeral of Count Orgaz it is insufferably false; nor, in fact, is +it easy to conjecture to what sort of merit this picture owes its +celebrity. It possesses neither that of conception, nor that of +composition, nor of expression: least of all that of colouring. All that +can be said in its favour is, that the row of heads extending from one +end of the canvass to the other, across the centre, are correct +portraits of personages of note, who figured in the history of the +epoch. The worst part of all is, the Heaven of the upper plan of the +picture, into which the soul of the Count has the bad taste to apply for +admission. This was, in fact, one of the works which gave occasion to +the saying of a critic of a contemporary school, who declared that the +Glorias (heavenly visions) of the Greco looked like Infernos, and his +Infernos like Glorias. + +In the Transito there is an Adoration, a charming picture, apparently by +Rembrandt. There are here and there good pictures among the other +churches, but none very remarkable. In general, the most attractive +objects are the old picture-frames, and other gilded ornaments and wood +carvings. All these, in the taste of the commencement of the last +century and earlier, which is at present so much in request, are in such +profusion, as would draw tears of admiration from the eyes of a Parisian +upholsterer, and showers of bank notes from the purses of furniture +collectors. + +You will not, I am sure, by this time, object to our quitting Toledo, +and making a short excursion in its environs. I shall therefore request +you to accompany me to the ruins of a Moorish palace, on the banks of +the Tagus, a mile distant from the town, called the Palacio de Galiana. +The Princess Galiana was the daughter of Galafre, one of the earlier +Arab Kings of Toledo. The widely extended fame of her beauty, is said to +have fired the imagination of Charles, son of Pepin, King of France, who +resolved to throw himself at her feet as a suitor, and forthwith +repaired to Toledo. However glowing the terms in which report had +represented her charms, he found them surpassed by the reality; but a +prince of a neighbouring state had forestalled him in his suit. This +obstacle did not, however, deter him from persisting in his resolution. +He forthwith challenged his rival to mortal combat; and, clearing his +road to the hand of the princess with the point of his lance, married +her, and carried her back with him to Paris. + +The attachment of her father to this princess is said to have been such +from her earliest childhood, that he gave himself up entirely to this +affection--devoting all his wealth to the gratification of her caprices. +The Arab palace, now no longer in existence, took its name from hers, in +consequence of a new one having been erected for her by her father, +adjoining his own, at a period at which she had scarcely grown out of +childhood. The two residences being occupied by succeeding princes as +one, received the appellation of los Palacios, (the Palaces) of Galiana. + +In addition to her town residence, she soon after had the other palace +constructed about a mile from Toledo. To arrive at the ruins, we pass +the bridge of Alcantara, and follow the rose-tree promenade. From this a +path on the left-hand leads to the spot across a field in garden-like +cultivation. The selection made by the Arab princess of this situation, +proves her to have possessed, in addition to her beauty, a consummate +taste and intelligence of rural life. + +The Tagus--a name, by the way, more deserving of poetic fame than many a +more widely echoed stream--in this spot, as if conscious of the pains he +must shortly undergo, while dashing through the deep and narrow chasm +through which he must force a passage around Toledo, seems to linger, +desirous of putting off the fated storm. His course becomes more +circuitous as he approaches; and indulging in a hundred irregularities +of form, he plays round several small thickly wooded islands, +penetrating with innumerable eddies and back currents, into flowery +nooks and recesses; while here and there he spreads out in a wide sheet +his apparently motionless waters, as if seeking to sleep away the +remainder of his days on these green and luxurious banks. + +In the midst of this delicious region, which recalls to the recollection +some of the more favoured spots in England, but which, with the addition +of the Spanish climate in early summer, is superior to them all, was +placed the palace. The valley for a considerable distance still bears +the name of the Garden of the King,--Huerta del Rey. The site of part of +the pleasure grounds immediately adjoining the river, is left wild, and +covered with woods; and the remainder is converted into a farm in the +highest state of cultivation. The ruin consists of three sides of a not +very large quadrangle; the massive walls of which are pierced with two +stories of arched windows. The remainder of the edifice was doubtless +less solid, and has entirely disappeared. + +Many a tale of romance would be gathered--many a stirring scene +recorded, could so precious a document be brought to light as a +chronicle drawn up by some St. Simon of the Court of Toledo, who had +recorded the daily events of which this retreat was the theatre, during +the time it served as a residence for several successive sovereigns. But +in this land words have always been fewer than deeds, and records are +the rarest sort of subsisting monuments. One anecdote, however, is +transmitted, of which this spot was the scene, in the time of the last +but one of the Moorish princes who reigned at Toledo, before its +surrender to Alonzo the Sixth. + +Alonzo was himself one of the actors on the occasion. In early life he +had been deprived by his brother Sancho, King of Castile, of the portion +of the kingdoms which fell to his share by the will of his father, +Ferdinand the First. On his expulsion from his inheritance he took +refuge at the court of the Arab king of Toledo, by whom he was received +with every mark of favour which could have been lavished on a friend. +The Moor (for the family then reigning was not Arab, although the two +races are constantly confounded in Spanish histories) gave him a palace, +and settled on him splendid revenues, to be continued during the time he +should think fit to accept his hospitality. He even sent invitations to +all the friends and followers of his guest, in order that he might be +surrounded with his own court. + +Alonzo, touched by this delicate hospitality, attached himself warmly to +his host; his friendship for whom (I believe a solitary instance in +those times among the sovereigns in Spain) lasted until the death of the +latter. The youthful exile, thus handsomely treated, passed much of his +time in the society of his royal protector. + +On one occasion, the court being at the country palace of Galiana, the +king and his attendants were reclining in the cool shade of the garden, +and Alonzo at a short distance, apparently asleep. The king, pointing to +the town, which towered on its precipice immediately in front of the +party, was expatiating on the strength of its position. All agreed that +it was impregnable; until a brother of the monarch observed, that there +was one mode of warfare against which it would not hold out: and he +proceeded to explain his plan, which consisted of an annual devastation +of the valley of the Tagus at the time of harvest, to be executed by an +invading army, which might be disbanded during the winter months. This +system, he maintained, would inevitably reduce the city by famine to the +necessity of a surrender. + +No sooner was the last phrase uttered, than all present in an instant +struck by the same thought, turned towards the sleeper; and the greater +number, filled with suspicion respecting the reality of his slumbers, +addressed significant looks to the king, the intention of which could +not be mistaken, and which boded no good to Alonzo. Whatever might have +been the feelings of the Moor at this moment, he took no further notice +of the incident, and allowed his guest to terminate his nap when he +thought proper. + +When the death of Sancho took place before Zamora, Alonzo was still at +Toledo. The intelligence being conveyed to him by a confidential +messenger from his sister, he lost no time in taking leave of his host, +who wished him success with every demonstration of friendship, and +repairing to Burgos. There, after some hesitation, the nobles consented +to his investiture with the sovereignty. During his brilliant reign he +resisted several tempting opportunities of breaking with his Moorish +ally and former host, and thus adding to his dominions,--and preserved +his friendship and loyalty unstained. After the death of the Moorish +king, he, however, speedily fell out with his successor. War was +declared on both sides, and it was resolved to attack Toledo. The well +known result was, the taking of the town after seven years, the time +mentioned in the garden of Galiana, and by means of the annually +repeated devastation of the Vega, according to the plan imagined and +described in the above mentioned conversation. + +Returning by the Rose-tree Walk, immediately on approaching the bridge, +an advanced portion of the cliff which bounds the road on the left +detaches itself from the rest towards the summit, which rises in a +circular form. On it stands the Castle of San Servando, one of the most +picturesque of the Arab remains existing in this part of Spain. The +origin of this fort is uncertain. Some attribute it to the Romans, and +consider the Moorish windows and ornaments to be subsequent additions, +from their being constructed with bricks instead of the same stone as +the rest of the walls. But this is not a sufficient reason, since the +same peculiarity exists in all the Arab edifices in Toledo. In fact, the +reason is evident. The hard black sort of stone used for the walls, +would almost have defied the chisel which should have attempted to +fashion its surface into the delicate forms required by the Arab mode of +decorating. This argument, therefore, being set aside--remains the +masonry, which is more likely from its appearance to be Gothic or Arab, +than Roman. + +It is probably entirely Arab. It encloses a quadrangular space of about +a quarter of an acre, and is a ruin; but the walls and towers are almost +entire. There are three small towers, that is of small diameter, but +lofty; and two larger, one of which is circular: the other is a +parallelogram terminating by a semicircle at one of its extremities. +This tower has lost apparently about a third of its elevation. Their +walls are so perfectly constructed as to appear externally like solid +rocks smoothed and rounded. Each larger tower contains two rectangular +brick projections, in which are small elegantly-arched openings for +windows. + +The edifice was thoroughly repaired by Don Pedro Tenorio, archbishop of +Toledo; the same who built the bridge of San Martin. It has since played +its part in numberless wars, and was at length reduced to a ruin during +the insurrection headed by Juan de Padilla, at the commencement of +Charles the Fifth's reign. + +During the Peninsular war of the present century, the old battlements +echoed once more with the sounds of warfare. It was occupied by a body +of French, who repaired a portion of the masonry at the summits of the +towers, and erected a low wall along the whole length of the Toledo +side. They were able, from their position, to batter the Alcazar, which +is immediately opposite, but on a higher level; and to command the +bridge of Alcantara, and road to Aranjuez. + +In the other valley which extends to the west of Toledo exist the +remains of a circus for chariot races, generally supposed, at first +sight, to be Roman. They present, in fact, every characteristic of a +Roman work. The rough interior masonry is all that remains; and that +only rising to a height of from three to four feet from the ground, with +the exception of a single arch. The earth mingled with ruins, has +apparently filled up much of the interior, and surrounding the exterior +simultaneously, has only left visible the upper portion of the edifice. +The end which is in the best preservation is of a semicircular form. +From it the sides run in parallel directions, and lose themselves in the +ruins of a more recently erected convent. They are traceable to a length +of more than four hundred yards. The width is two hundred and ninety +feet within the building, at the present elevation of the ground, and +three hundred and twenty feet on the outside, which appears to have +consisted of a series of arches. There are also remains of an +amphitheatre adjoining the semicircular end of the stadium. + +There being no indication of the Romans having at any period planted any +considerable establishment at Toledo, in fact no author but Livy having +noticed the place, and he but slightly; the antiquaries have sought for +the origin of these monuments among Gothic traditions; and it is +believed by them, that they were erected during the early part of the +sixth century, by Theudio, a Gothic King, who manifested much attachment +to Roman customs. + + + + +LETTER XIII. + +CASTLES OF ALMONACID, GUADAMUR, MONTALBAN, AND ESCALONA. TORRIJOS. + + +Toledo. + +I met this morning with an entertaining scene, in a quarter in which it +might be the least looked for. The archiepiscopal palace contains an +excellent library, which has always been open to the public. Although +the revenues of the see are now withdrawn, and the palace is vacant, the +books remain on the shelves, and the head librarian, a _racionero_ of +the cathedral, has the good nature to throw open the rooms from eleven +to twelve, on all days of labour, (as those are called on which no saint +is celebrated,) although he no longer enjoys a salary, nor the means of +providing a single attendant to see to what passes in the different +apartments. + +I was occupied this morning in the _racionero's_ room, when he received +a visit from two French tourists, both persons of notoriety; one being +a member of the chamber of deputies, and one of the leaders of the +republican party; and the other, I believe, also in the chamber, but +principally known as a writer of political pamphlets, in which the +French reigning family, and the powers that be are lashed with +unwearying severity. The first mentioned personage commenced the +conversation in Spanish, which the other did not speak: but on hearing +the librarian make an observation in French, the pamphleteer took up the +argument in his own language, and nearly in the following terms. + +"As this gentleman understands French, I will explain to him the object +of my tour," and addressing himself to the Spaniard, he continued--"I +find it a relief, in the midst of my arduous political duties, to make +an occasional excursion in a foreign country, and thus to enlarge the +sphere of my usefulness, by promoting the cause of humanity in the +various localities I visit. It is thus that I have recently passed +through Andalucia, and have recommended, and, I doubt not, successfully, +to the principal personages possessed of influence in its numerous +cities, the establishment of all sorts of useful institutions. I am now +in Toledo, animated with the same zeal. I have obtained an introduction +to you, Sir, understanding that you are an individual possessed of +considerable influence, and enjoying unbounded means of carrying out +the projects, which, I doubt not, you will agree with me in considering +essential to the well being and improvement, both moral and material, of +your ancient locality." + +During this exordium, the Spaniard, who happens to be possessed of a +vivacity, unusual in his countrymen, and a sort of impatience of manner, +had endeavoured more than once to obtain a hearing. At length he +replied, that he feared it would not be in his power to carry out the +views which Monsieur did him the honour to communicate to him, owing to +the absence of sufficient resources at his disposal, whether for public +purposes, or in his individual and private capacity. + +The Frenchman was not, however, to be so easily discouraged. "This, +Sir," he replied, "is the result of your modesty; but I am persuaded +that I have only to make my objects understood, in order to obtain their +complete execution. For instance, one of the most insignificant in +expense, but of infinite utility, is this: it would be a source of much +gratification to me, if you would have the most conspicuous spots +throughout Toledo ornamented with statues, representing, with greater or +less resemblance, all the personages, distinguished from various causes +in the history of Spain, to whom Toledo has given birth. These works I +should wish to be entrusted to artists of acknowledged talent, and"--he +was proceeding with constantly increasing rapidity of enunciation, when +the exhausted librarian's patience being at an end, he interrupted the +torrent. "However grateful the city of Toledo and myself must be for +your interest and advice, I am grieved to repeat that my anxiety to +comply with your wishes is totally powerless. We are without funds; and +I, for my own part, can assure you that I am _sans le sou_. Do me the +favour to name any service of a less expensive nature, and I shall +rejoice in proving to you my entire devotion. Excuse my _impolitesse_. I +am called for in the next room. I kiss your hand." It is needless, in +fact the attempt would baffle human intelligence, to conjecture what the +real object of these very liberal and very political gentlemen might be, +in honouring all parts of Spain with their visit. + +The more distant environs of Toledo, principally towards the south and +south-east, are remarkable for a profusion of ruined castles. Supposing +a circle drawn at a distance of thirty miles from Toledo as its centre, +and divided, as it would be, by the Tagus, descending from east to west, +into two equal parts, the southern half, and the western portion of the +other, are so plentifully strewed with these fortresses, that, in many +instances, five or six are visible from the same point of view. + +A chain of low mountains crosses the southern portion of the semicircle, +in a parallel line with the Tagus. Some of its branches advance into +this region, and terminate in detached peaks, which have afforded to the +aristocracy of former times favourable positions for their strongholds; +and a still greater number of proprietors, not being possessed of the +same advantages of site, were compelled to confide in the solidity of +their walls and turrets, which they constructed in the plain, usually +adjoining the villages or towns inhabited by their vassals. The greater +number of these edifices are of a date subsequent to the surrender of +Toledo to the Christians, and were erected on the distribution of the +different towns and estates among the nobility, on their being +successively evacuated by their Moorish proprietors. The Count of +Fuensalida, Duke of Frias, is the most considerable landed proprietor on +this side of Toledo, and several of the ruined castles have descended to +him. + +I will not fatigue you by the enumeration of all these remains, of which +but a few are remarkable for picturesque qualities, and still fewer for +the possession of historical interest, as far as can be known at +present. One of them, situated ten miles to the south-east of Toledo, +and visible from its immediate neighbourhood, attracts notice owing to +its striking position. Occupying the summit of a conical hill, which +stands alone on the plain, and placed at four times the elevation of +Windsor Castle, you expect to find it connected with the history of some +knightly Peveril of the Peak, but learn with surprise that it was the +stronghold of the Archbishops of Toledo; and was erected by Don Pedro +Tenorio, the same prelate who rebuilt the bridge of San Martin, and +repaired the Moorish castle of San Servando. + +Before you ascend the peak, you pass through the village of Almonacid, +from which the castle takes its name, and which, unlike that more +recently erected pile, is completely Arab in aspect. All the houses are +entered through back courts, and present no difference of appearance, +whether shops, taverns, _posadas_, or private residences. After tying my +horse in the stable of the posada, and giving him his meal of barley, +which he had carried in the _alforjas_ (travelling bags) suspended +behind the saddle, I took my own provisions out of the opposite +receptacle, and established myself before the kitchen fire. + +On my asking for wine, the hostess requested I would furnish her with +two _quartos_ (one halfpenny) with which she purchased me a pint, at the +tavern next door. The host of the posada, who was seated next me, and a +friend at the opposite corner of the fire-place, favoured me, during my +meal, with their reminiscences of a battle fought here, during the +Peninsular war. They had not heard of the English having taken any part +in the quarrel, with the exception of the old woman, who recollected +perfectly the name of Wellington, and pronounced it as perfectly, but +thought he had been a Spanish general. They described the battle as a +hard fought one, and won by the French, who marched up the hill with +fixed bayonets, as the old host, almost blind, described by assuming the +attitude of a soldier jogging up a hill, and dislodged the Spanish +garrison from the castle. + +I could have willingly passed a week in this village, so exciting are +the remains of Arab manners to the curiosity. The name of the place had +already raised my expectations, but the blind landlord of the posada +unconsciously won my attachment from the first moment. No sooner was I +seated, than, leaning towards me, and patting my arm to draw my +attention, he pointed to his two eyes. At first I was at a loss to +understand him; but soon discovered that he was desirous of knowing +whether I was sufficiently versed in the mysteries of Esculapius, to +prescribe for the relief of his suffering organs. To this trait he soon +added one still more characteristic, by actually speaking of Toledo, by +its Moorish appellation Tolaite. Had he worn a turban, sat cross-legged +and offered me coffee and a pipe, I should not have been more taken by +surprise, than by this Arab expression assailing the ear, in the heart +of Spain, ten miles from the town itself, in which the name had probably +not been uttered for three or four centuries. + +The builder of the castle of Almonacid must have placed more confidence +in the difficulties of approach, than in the solidity of his structure. +The walls are partly of stone, and partly of _tapia_, or earth. There +only remain, the exterior wall, enclosing an area of about sixty to +seventy yards in diameter, and of a pentagonal form; and, in the centre, +the keep, a quadrangular tower, somewhat higher than the rest of the +buildings. There are no traces of living apartments. At each of the five +angles of the outer wall, is a small tower, and others in the centres of +some of the fronts; those looking to the west are circular, the rest +square. The nearer view of this ruin causes disappointment, as it +appears to have been a slovenly and hasty construction: but, at a +distance, its effect is highly picturesque. + +The castle of Montalban is situated to the south-west of Toledo, at a +distance of six Spanish leagues. It resembles, in size and importance, +some of the largest English castles; and justifies thus far the +tradition preserved here, of its having for a short period, served for a +royal prison--Juan the Second being said to have been confined there by +his exasperated favourite, Don Alvaro de Luna. This story is not, +however, confirmed by historians, several of whom I have vainly +consulted, for the purpose of discovering it. Ferreras mentions the +castle, or rather the town, which lies at a distance of two leagues +(eight miles) from it, as having belonged to the queen of Juan the +Second; who, he states, was deprived of it, against her will, in favour +of Don Alvaro, and another place given her in exchange. On the +confiscation of the favourite's possessions, previous to his +decapitation, it reverted to the crown; and there is no further notice +taken of it in the history, until the Emperor Charles the Fifth, confers +on its then proprietor the title of Count. This personage was Don Alonzo +Tellez Giron, third in descent from Juan Pacheco, Duke of Escalona, who +had erected Montalban into a separate fief, in favour of one of his sons +and his descendants, on the singular condition of the family name +undergoing a change, on each successive descent. The alternate lords +were to bear the names respectively of Giron and Pacheco. The first +Count of Montalban married a daughter of D. Ladron de Guevara, +proprietor, _à propos_ of castles, of that of Guevara, in the +neighbourhood of Vitoria, constructed in an extremely singular form. The +centre tower appears intended to imitate the castles of a chess-board. +It is situated on the southern declivity of the chain of mountains, a +branch of the Pyrenees, which separates the province of Guipuscoa from +those of Navarre and Alava. + +On the opposite descent of the chain another fortress existed in remote +times. Both were strongholds of robbers, whose descendants derived their +family name, Ladron (robber) from their ancestors' profession. In a +document signed by D. Garcia Ramirez, King of Navarre in 1135, D. Ladron +de Guevara, governor of Alava, figures among the grandees of the +kingdom; the descendants were afterwards called lords of Oñate, and the +castle is at present the property of the Count de Oñate, a grandee of +the first class. From its occupying a point _stratégique_ of +considerable importance, commanding the plain of Alava, and the high +road as it enters the valley of Borunda, it has been in recent times +occupied by the Carlists, and fortified. + +Montalban belongs at present to the Count of Fuensalida. It is +completely ruinous, but the outer wall is almost entire; and one of two +lofty piles of building, in the form of bastions, which flanked the +entrance, is in sufficient preservation to allow the apartments to be +recognised. Their floors were at a height of about eighty feet from the +ground; and the mass of masonry which supported them, is pierced by an +immense gothic arch reaching to the rooms. The opposite corresponding +mass remains also with its arch; but the upper part which contained +rooms, no longer exists. On this, the entrance side, the approach is +almost level, and the defence consisted of a narrow and shallow moat; +but the three other sides, the fortress being of a quadrangular form, +look down into a deep ravine, through which a river, issuing from the +left, passes down two sides of the castle, and makes for the valley of +the Tagus, which river is seen at a distance of five or six miles. + +The precipice at the furthest side descends perpendicularly, and is +composed of rocks in the wildest form. The river below leaps from rock +to rock, and foams through a bed so tormented, that, although owing to +its depth of at least five hundred feet from the foundations of the +castle, it looks almost like a thread, it sends up a roar not less loud +than that of the breakers under Shakspeare's Cliff. The valley, opening +for its passage, gives to the view, first, the Tagus, on the opposite +bank of which lies the town of Montalban, dependant on the lords of the +castle; beyond it an extensive plain, dotted with castles and towns, +most of them on the road from Madrid to Talavera; and at the horizon the +Sierra del Duque, coated with snow from about half its height upwards. +The extent of the view is about sixty miles. + +The outer enceinte of the castle of Montalban encloses a space of five +or six acres in extent, in which no buildings remain, with the exception +of the picturesque ruin of a small chapel in the centre. Like almost all +other residences possessed of scenery sufficiently precipitous, this +castle boasts its lover's leap. A projection of wall is pointed out, +looking over the most perpendicular portion of the ravine, to which a +tradition is attached, deprived by time of all tangible distinctness, if +ever it possessed any. The title given to the spot in this instance is +"The Leap of the Moorish Girl," Despeñadera de la Mora. The position +will probably bear no comparison with the Leucadian promontory; nor is +it equal to the Peña de los Enamorados, near Antequera, in Andalucia, +immortal likewise in the annals of passion, and of which the authentic +story is preserved. Of those in our country I could name one--but I will +not, though few know it better--nor is it the meanest of its tribe. But +with these exceptions I know of none among the numerous plagiarisms of +the famous lover's leap of antiquity that offers to despair in search of +the picturesque more attractions than the Despeñadera of Montalban. + +[Illustration: CASTLE OF GUADAMUR.] + +The best preserved castle of these environs, and the handsomest +building, is that of Guadamur. It is not large, but it is impossible for +a residence-fortress to be more complete, and more compact. It is +composed of three enclosures, one within the other, and forms a +quadrangle, with the addition of a lofty and massive tower, projecting +from one of the angles. The centre, or inner quadrangle, is about half +the height of the tower, and has, at its three remaining angles, and at +the centre of each front, an elegant circular turret. This portion of +the edifice formed a commodious and handsome residence. It was divided +into two stories, with vaulted ceilings,--the lower apartments being +probably set apart for the offices of attendants, and places of +confinement for prisoners: in the centre of the upper story was a +diminutive open court, supported by the vaults of the ground-floor, and +into which a series of elegantly proportioned rooms opened on all sides. +Although the greater part of the vaults and interior walls are fallen +in, the rooms are all to be traced, and inscriptions in the old Gothic +letter run round the walls of some of the apartments. A second enclosure +rises to about two-thirds of the elevation of the inner quadrangle, and +is provided with corresponding turrets; but the proportions of these are +more spacious, and their construction and ornament more massive. Beyond +this are the exterior defences rising out of the moat, and very little +above the surrounding ground. + +Viewed from without, nothing indicates that this edifice is a ruin. Over +the entrance are the arms of the Counts of Fuensalida. It is supposed by +many that this castle was erected by Garcilaso de la Vega, grandfather +of the "Prince of Spanish poets," as the celebrated bard of Toledo is +entitled. Others maintain its founder to have been Pedro Lopez de +Ayala, first Count of Fuensalida. This latter story is the more probable +one; since, besides its being confirmed by the armorial shield above +mentioned, it has been adopted by Haro in his Nobiliario, a work drawn +up with care and research, in which Garcilaso de la Vega is stated to +have purchased some towns from the family of Ayala,--among others +Cuerva, in the near neighbourhood, but not Guadamur. + +The Ayalas were descended from the house of Haro, lords of Biscay. +Several of them had held high offices at the Court of Castile. The +grandfather of the founder of the castle had been High Chancellor of +Castile, and Great Chamberlain of Juan the First; and his father, the +first lord of Fuensalida, was High Steward, and first Alcalde of Toledo. +He lost an eye at the siege of Antequera,--taken from the Moors by +Ferdinand, afterwards King of Aragon, in the year 1410, and thus +acquired the surname of the One-eyed. To him Juan II. first granted the +faculty of converting his possessions into hereditary fiefs: "Because," +according to one of the clauses of the act, "it was just that the houses +of the grandees should remain entire in their state for the eldest son; +and in order that the eldest sons of the grandees might be maintained in +the estates of their predecessors, that the name and memory of the +grandees of the kingdom might not be lost, and that the hereditary +possessions and houses, and the generations of the sons of grandees +might be preserved." + +It was Pedro Lopez de Ayala, son of the one-eyed lord of Fuensalida +created Count by Enrique the Fourth, that built the castle. He was a +great favourite with the king, and his constant companion, +notwithstanding his being afflicted with deafness--a bad defect in a +courtier, and which procured him also a surname. He succeeded his father +in his different dignities. His loyalty did not keep pace with his +obligations to Henry the Fourth; for, being first Alcalde of Toledo, he +made no effort to prevent that town from joining the party of the Prince +Alonzo, who pretended to his brother's crown; but he was recalled to his +allegiance by the devoted exertions of his wife. + +This lady was Doña Maria de Silva, a daughter of Alonzo Tenorio de +Silva, Adelantado of Cazorla. On the breaking out of the rebellion of +Toledo, she agreed with her brother Pedro de Silva, Bishop of Badajos, +to send a joint letter to the king, in which they pressed him to come to +Toledo in disguise. Enrique the Fourth approved of the plan; and +arriving in the night, accompanied by a single attendant, was received +by the bishop at his residence in the convent of San Pedro Martir. +Notwithstanding the darkness, he had been recognised by a servant of +Marshal Payo de Ribera, a partisan of Prince Alonzo. This noble, +immediately on learning the king's arrival, joined with the Alcalde, who +had not been let into the secret by his wife, and called the citizens to +arms by sounding the great bell of the cathedral. A crowd was speedily +assembled at the king's lodging, who would have been immediately made +prisoner, but for his attendant Fernando de Ribadenegra, who succeeded, +single handed, in repulsing a party who had forced an entrance. + +At this crisis the disloyal magistrate became alarmed, and sent his two +sons, Pedro de Ayala, and Alonzo de Silva, accompanied by Perafande +Ribera, son of the above-mentioned marshal, to entreat the king to quit +the town. Henry consented; and at midnight left the convent, accompanied +by the three youths. He had ridden sixteen leagues that day, and his +horses being exhausted with fatigue, he requested the two sons of Ayala +to lend him theirs. They did so, and accompanied him on foot as far as +the city gates, where he left them, and set off for Madrid. + +In order to pacify the people, Pedro Lopez ordered his brother-in-law, +the bishop, to quit the town, and he repaired to the Huerta del Rey, a +country-house in the environs. On arriving at Olias the king sent the +two brothers, in recompense of their good service, a deed of gift of +seventy thousand _maravedis_ of annual revenue. + +The grief of Maria de Silva at the failure of her project was such as +almost to deprive her of her reason, and added to the eloquence of her +entreaties to win over her husband to the king's interests. He now, +therefore, exerted himself to gain the principal citizens, and succeeded +so completely, that within three days from the departure of Enrique the +Fourth, he was enabled to recall the Bishop of Badajos to Toledo, and to +banish in his stead the Marshal de Payo and his son, who retired to +their estates. Unanimous was now the cry of "Viva Enrique Quarto, y +Mueren los rebeldes!" and the following day, a Sunday, the king +re-entered Toledo in the midst of the general joy and festivity, and +preceded directly to the residence of the Alcalde, in order to thank his +wife for her loyal efforts. A lodging was there in readiness to receive +him, which he occupied during his stay in Toledo. Pedro Lopez de Ayala +received on the king's return to Madrid the title of Count of his town +of Fuensalida, and shortly afterwards, at Medina del Campo, a grant of +the towns of Casaruvias del monte, Chocas, and Arroyomolinos. + +The town and castle of Escalona are situated at eight leagues, or +thirty-two miles, to the east of Toledo. It is one of the towns, about +a dozen in number, the foundation of which is attributed by the Count de +Mora, in his history of Toledo, to the Jews. He fixes the date at about +five centuries before the Christian era, when a large number of +Israelites, to whom Cyrus, king of Babylon, had granted their liberty, +arrived in Spain under the guidance of a Captain Pirrus, and fixed +themselves principally in and around Toledo. He also states that the +synagogue of Toledo--since called Santa Maria la Blanca--was erected by +them. The name given by them to Escalona was Ascalon. The neighbouring +Maqueda was another of their towns, and was called Mazeda. It was +created a duchy by Ferdinand and Isabella in favour of their courtier +Cardenas. I cannot learn the date of the castle of Escalona. Alonzo the +Sixth won the town from the Moors; and it is probable that the castle +was erected, at least in part, by Diego and Domingo Alvarez, two +brothers, to whom he granted the place. After their death it reverted to +the crown of Castile, and continued to be royal property until Juan II. +gave it to his favourite Don Alvaro de Luna. + +This grandee was known to have amassed great treasures in the castle; +and on the confiscation of his possessions at the period of his final +disgrace, the king marched an army to take possession of the fortress; +but the countess held out successfully, and obliged the royal troops to +raise the siege. On a second attempt, made after Don Alvaro's execution, +his widow considered she had no further object in maintaining it, and +lost no time in coming to terms. The conditions of the surrender were, +that the treasure should be divided into three equal parts, one for the +king, another for herself, and the third for her son. The son was +likewise allowed to inherit the castle, and by the marriage of his +daughter, it came into the possession of the Marquis of Villena, D. +Lopez Pacheco, created Duke of Escalona by Henry the Fourth. The family +of Fellez Giron, proprietors of Montalban, were descendants of this +duke. At present the castle of Escalona belongs to the Duke of Ossuna. +It is not only the most considerable of the numerous ruins disposed over +the territory of Toledo, but one of the most interesting historical +relics of Spain, having filled an important place in the annals of +several of the most stirring periods. The unfortunate Blanche, Queen of +Pedro the Cruel, was its inmate during several years; as also her rival, +Maria de Padilla, at a subsequent period. + +The best excursion from Toledo in point of architectural interest, is +that to Torijos, a small town situated rather to the left of the direct +road to Escalona, and five leagues distant. Immediately before arriving +there, the castle of Barciense is met with, situated on an eminence +which commands an admirable view, extending south and west to a +semi-circle of mountains, composed of the Sierra del Duque, and the +chain called the mountains of Toledo, and for a foreground looking down +on a perfect forest of olive-grounds, surrounding the town of Torijos, +two miles distant. The ruin of Barciense consists of a lofty square +tower, and the outer walls of a quadrangle. There is nothing worth +notice, with the exception of a bas-relief, which occupies all the upper +half of the tower on the east side. It consists of a solitary lion +rampant; probably the largest crest ever emblazoned. The Dukes of +Infantado were proprietors of this castle. + +The little town of Torijos contains a Gothic, or rather semi-Moorish +palace, two Gothic churches, an ancient picturesque gateway, and the +ruins of a magnificent monastery. It is one of those towns here and +there met with on the Continent, which, at a favourable crisis of the +arts, have fallen to the proprietorship of one of those individuals +idolised by architects--men whose overplus of fortune is placed at the +disposal of their eyes, and employed in ministering to the gratification +of those organs. The greater part of the decoration of Torijos dates +from the reign of Ferdinand the Catholic, when it belonged to D. +Gutiere de Cardenas, father of the first duke of Maqueda. The following +story is related respecting the founding of the monastery by his wife +Teresa Enriquez. + +This lady resided, when at Toledo, in a mansion, the ruins of which +still exist, on the opposite side of the street to the monastery of San +Juan de los Reyes, of which I sent you a description in a former letter. +Being warmly attached to religious observances, (for she went by the +name of Teresa la Santa,) and animated with an enthusiastic fervour +towards everything which appertained to the splendid establishment in +front of her residence, she had discovered a position, from which a view +could be obtained, overlooking the principal scene of the religious +ceremonies of the Franciscans. She there caused a window to be +constructed, splendidly ornamented in the Arab style, and kneeling on a +rich _prie-dieu_, she united her daily devotions with those of the +_frailes_. + +No small sensation was caused by this proceeding, most perceptible +probably within the monastery, on the discovery being made by the +brethren of the addition to their holy fraternity. The cardinal became +alarmed, and intimated to Doña Teresa that the window was +ill-placed,--that it admitted too much light in a wrong direction; that, +in short, it must disappear. The veto of the all-powerful Ximenes de +Cisneros, already regarded as the dispenser of the royal frowns and +favours, could not be resisted. The window was blocked up; but the +interference was replied to in terms pointed with pious pique and holy +revenge. The lady declared verbally to the prelate that she had no need +of his convent, for she would found a more splendid one at Torijos. This +threat, immediately put in execution, produced the building I mentioned +above, the ruin of which is all that now remains. + +Of the inhabited portions the external walls alone remain. The cloister +is almost entire, and the church has only lost its roof. The rich +tracery surrounding the doorways, and the sculpture in all parts of the +interior, consisting chiefly of repetitions of the founder's armorial +bearings--in imitation or satire of the profusion of similar ornament in +San Juan de los Reyes--are entire, and appear as though they had been +recently executed. The church is designed after the plan of San Juan, +but the style of its ornament is much more elegant. The cloister is, +however, very inferior to that of Toledo, and the whole establishment on +a smaller scale. + +Every traveller in search of the picturesque knows in how great a degree +his satisfaction has been increased whenever the meeting with a scene +deserving of his admiration assumes the nature of a discovery. For this +reason, the chapters of tourists should never be perused before a +journey--independently of their possessing more interest subsequently to +an acquaintance having been made with the country described. Strictly +speaking written tours are intended for those who stay at home. + +But the most favourable first view of a highly admirable building or +landscape, is the one you obtain after the perusal of tours and +descriptions of the country, in none of which any notice is taken of +that particular object or scene. The village of Torijos is approached +under these advantageous circumstances. Every step is a surprise, owing +partly to the above cause, and partly to one's being inured to the +almost universal dreariness and ugliness of the villages and small towns +of this part of Spain. The appearance under these circumstances of a +beautiful Gothic cross and fountain, of an original and uncommon design, +outside the walls of the place, and the open tracery of the tall windows +of the ruined monastery at the other side of a green meadow, creates an +agreeable surprise, and adds considerably to the pleasure which would be +derived from the same objects, had expectation been already feeding on +their beauties. Imagine, then, the discovery, after leaving behind these +monuments, (sufficient for the immortality of a score of Castilian +villages,) of the façade of the principal church, consisting of one of +the richest and most exquisite specimens of Gothic decoration in Spain; +and, a street further on, of a second ornamental portal of a different +sort, but Gothic likewise, giving access to a half Arab palace. + +The Count of Altamira is the proprietor of this place, but neither he +nor any of his family have inhabited the edifice for several years, and +it is allowed to go to decay. Some of the _artesonado_ ceilings, more +especially that of the chapel in form of a cupola, admit the light +through the joinings of the gilded woodwork. A large hall on the +first-floor, which formed the anteroom to a suite of inner apartments, +decorated in the Arab style, has been taken possession of by the _haute +volée_ of Torijos for their public ball-room. A tribune for musicians is +placed against one of the end walls, and adorned with paper festoons. A +placard, inscribed with the word _galop_, was visible in front of the +seat of the leader of the band, indicating that the Torijos balls +terminate with that lively dance. There was no furniture in that nor any +other part of the house, with the exception of an _entresol_ inhabited +by the count's steward. This person no sooner learned that I was an +Englishman, than he commenced setting in the best possible light the +advantages the premises possessed for the establishment of every sort of +manufactory. + +It appears the proprietor is anxious to dispose of the building; and as +all the English pass here for manufacturers, owing to the principal +articles of common use, introduced by smugglers, being English, the +worthy factotum had instantly made up his mind that I was the purchaser +sent by Providence to take the old edifice off his master's hands. He is +evidently either promised a bonus on the success of his efforts to sell, +or he wished to pass with the property; for his idea produced a degree +of zeal most useful towards the satisfaction of my curiosity, and +without which his patience would have been exhausted before I had +completed the view of the building. One peculiarity of the rooms +consists in the ceilings--that is, the ornamental ones--being nearly all +either domes, or interiors of truncated pyramids. There is only one +flat. It is ornamented with the shell of the arms of the Cardenas +family--each of the hundreds of little square compartments having one in +its centre. The staircase is adorned with beautiful Gothic tracery. + + + + +LETTER XIV. + +VALLADOLID. SAN PABLO. COLLEGE OF SAN GREGORIO. ROUTE BY SARAGOZA. + + +Tolosa. + +I should have sent you an account of my excursion to Valladolid at the +time it took place, but was prevented by the shortness of my stay and +the hurry of my departure from Madrid, which immediately followed. I +preserved, however, memoranda of the limited explorations which were to +be made during a flying visit of three days, and will now give you the +benefit of them, such as they are; as also of my experience of the +public travelling in that direction. You will recommend your friends, +who may visit this land of adventure, and are careful at the same time +of their personal comforts, to wait the introduction of railroads, +before attempting this excursion, when you hear that I met with three +upsets in one night, and was afforded, in all, nearly five hours' +leisure for contemplating the effect of moonlight upon the sleeping +mules and an upside-down carriage! + +The town of Valladolid contains monuments of much interest, although +none of great antiquity. The greater number date from the sixteenth and +seventeenth centuries, and form a chain, illustrative of the progress of +architecture in this country, subsequently to the abandonment of the +Gothic style. This style is, however, worthily represented by two +edifices, placed in juxtaposition, and ornamented each with a façade of +extraordinary richness. I will content myself with the endeavour to give +you some idea of these two buildings, which, although belonging to a +style so common in England and France, are totally unlike all the Gothic +specimens I am acquainted with in those countries. + +[Illustration: FAÇADE OF SAN PABLO.] + +The largest of the two is the monastery of San Pablo. It was a +foundation of much magnificence, and the building has sustained very +little injury, owing to its having, immediately on the expulsion of the +monks, been applied to other uses, instead of being deserted and left to +decay. It is now a Presidio, or central prison for condemned +malefactors. The cloister is a superb quadrangle, of the pointed style +of the end of the fourteenth century, and is the usual resort of the +prisoners, who are grouped so thickly over its pavement, that it is with +difficulty one passes between them, without adding to the clanking of +chains as their wearers change their posture to make way. The façade of +the church is enclosed between two small octagon towers without +ornament, like a picture in a frame. Within these all is sculpture. The +door-way is formed of a triple concentric arch, flanked by rows of +statues, all of which are enclosed within another arch, which extends +across the whole width, from tower to tower. Over this there is a +circular window, surrounded with armorial escutcheons, and the remainder +of the façade is covered with groups of figures in compartments, up to +the summit, a height of about a hundred and thirty feet, where there is +a pediment ornamented with an immense armorial shield and lions rampant +as supporters, and the whole is surmounted by a cross. + +The church was erected by the celebrated Torquemada, who was a monk in +the establishment. Doña Maria, Queen of Sancho the Fourth, although +mentioned as the founder of the monastery, only completed a small +portion of the edifice compared to what was subsequently added. A +handsome tomb by Pompeyo Leoni, is seen in the church. It is that of Don +Francisco de Sandoval, Duke of Lerma, and his wife. The woodwork of the +stalls is by Ferrara. It is adorned with fluted Doric columns, and is +composed of walnut, ebony, box and cedar. The superb façade of this +church and its sumptuous tracery, had well nigh been the cause of a +misunderstanding between the representative of the Spanish Government +and myself. To obtain admission to the interior of the building, which I +was told had become national property, I addressed my humble request in +writing to the _gefe politico_, or governor of the province, resident at +Valladolid. I left the note at his official residence, and was +requested to return at an hour appointed, when I was to obtain an +audience. The functions of a _gefe politico_ answer to those of no +provincial functionary in England, or any other constitutional state--he +has more authority even than a Préfet in France. He represents the +monarchical power, with this difference, that he is uncontrolled by +parliament within the limits of his province. Although not charged with +the military administration, he can direct and dispose of the armed +force; besides being a sort of local home minister and police +magistrate; in fact, the factotum or _âme damnée_ of the Cromwell of the +moment, with whom he is in direct and constant communication on the +affairs of his district. + +I was at Valladolid during the regency of Espartero, when the cue given +to these functionaries, relative to the _surveillance_ of foreigners was +very anti-French, and favourable to England. Now in the eyes of a +_gens-d'armes_ every one is a thief until he can bring proof to the +contrary, just as by the jurisprudence of certain continental countries, +every accused is presumed criminal--just as every one who comes to a Jew +is presumed by him to have old clothes to sell, or money to borrow. +Thus, owing to the nature of the duties of the Governor of Valladolid, +every foreigner who met his eye, was a Frenchman, and an _intrigant_, +until he should prove the reverse. + +Not being aware of this at the time, I had drawn up my petition in +French. On my return for the answer, my reception was any thing but +encouraging. The excessive politeness of the Spaniard was totally lost +sight of, and I perceived a moody-looking, motionless official, seated +at a desk, with his hat resting on his eyebrows, and apparently studying +a newspaper. I stood in the middle of the room for two or three minutes +unnoticed; after which, deigning to lift his head, the personage +inquired in a gruff tone, why I did not open my cloak. I was not as yet +acquainted with the Spanish custom of drawing the end of the cloak from +off the left shoulder, on entering a room. I therefore only half +understood the question, and, being determined, at whatever price, to +see San Pablo, I took off my cloak, laid it on a chair, and returned to +face the official. "I took the liberty of requesting your permission to +view the ancient monastery of San Pablo."--"And, pray, what is your +reason for wishing to see San Pablo?"--"Curiosity."--"Oh, that is all, +is it!"--"I own likewise, that, had I found that the interior +corresponded, in point of architectural merit, with the façade, I might +have presumed to wish to sketch it, and carry away the drawing in my +portmanteau."--"Oh, no doubt--very great merit. You are a +Frenchman?"--"I beg your pardon, only an Englishman."--"You! an +Englishman!!" No answer. "And pray, from what part of England do you +come?" I declined the county, parish, and house. + +These English expressions, which I had expected would come upon his ear, +with the same familiarity as if they had been Ethiopian or Chinese, +produced a sudden revolution in my favour. The Solomon became +immediately sensible of the extreme tact he had been displaying. +Addressing me in perfect English, he proceeded to throw the blame of my +brutal reception on the unfortunate state of his country. "All the +French," he said, "who come here, come with the intention of intriguing +and doing us harm. You wrote to me in French, and that was the cause of +my error. The monastery is now a prison; I will give you an order to +view it, but you will not find it an agreeable scene, it is full of +criminals in chains." And he proceeded to prepare the order. + +Not having recovered the compliment of being taken for a conspirator; +nor admiring the civilisation of the governor of a province, who +supposed that all the thirty-four millions of French, must be +_intrigants_, I received his civilities in silence, took the order, and +my departure. The most curious part of the affair was, that I had no +passport at the time, having lost it on the road. Had my suspicious +interrogator ascertained this before making the discovery that I was +English, I should inevitably have been treated to more of San Pablo than +I desired, or than would have been required for drawing it in detail. + +The adjoining building is smaller, and with less pretension to +magnificence is filled with details far more elaborate and curious. The +Gothic architecture, like the Greek, assumed as a base and principle of +decoration the imitation of the supposed primitive abodes of rudest +invention. The Greek version of the idea is characterised by all the +grace and finished elegance peculiar to its inventors; while the same +principle in the hands of the framers of Gothic architecture, gave birth +to a style less pure and less refined; but bolder, more true to its +origin, and capable of more varied application. In both cases may be +traced the imitation of the trunks of trees; but it is only in the +Gothic style that the branches are added, and that instances are found +of the representation of the knots and the bark. In this architecture, +the caverns of the interior of mountains are evidently intended by the +deep, multiplied, and diminishing arches, which form the entrances of +cathedrals; and the rugged exterior of the rocky mass, which might +enclose such a primæval abode, is imaged in the uneven and pinnacled +walls. + +[Illustration: FAÇADE OF SAN GREGORIO, VALLADOLID.] + +The façade of the college of San Gregorio, adjoining San Pablo, +furnishes an example of the Gothic decoration brought back to its +starting point. The tree is here in its state of nature; and contributes +its trunk, branches, leaves, and its handfuls of twigs bound together. A +grove is represented, composed of strippling stems, the branches of some +of which, united and bound together, curve over, and form a broad arch, +which encloses the door-way. At each side is a row of hairy savages, +each holding in one hand a club resting on the ground, and in the other +an armorial shield. The intervals of the sculpture are covered with +tracery, representing entwined twigs, like basket-work. Over the door is +a stone fourteen feet long by three in height, covered with +_fleurs-de-lis_ on a ground of wicker-work, producing the effect of +muslin. Immediately over the arch is a large flower-pot, in which is +planted a pomegranate tree. Its branches spread on either side and bear +fruit, besides a quantity of little Cupids, which cling to them in all +directions. In the upper part they enclose a large armorial escutcheon, +with lions for supporters. The arms are those of the founder of the +college, Alonzo de Burgos, Bishop of Palencia. On either side of this +design, and separated respectively by steins of slight trees, are +compartments containing armed warriors in niches, and armorial shields. +All the ornaments I have enumerated cover the façade up to its summit, +along which project entwined branches and sticks, represented as broken +off at different lengths. + +[Illustration: COURT OF SAN GREGORIO. VALLADOLID.] + +The court of this edifice is as elaborately ornamented as the façade, +but it was executed at a much later period, and belongs to the +renaissance. The pillars are extremely elegant and uncommon. The doorway +of the library is well worthy of notice; also that of the refectory. +The college of San Gregorio was, in its day, the most distinguished in +Spain. Such was the reputation it had acquired, that the being announced +as having studied there was a sufficient certificate for the proficiency +of a professor in science and erudition. It is still a college, but no +longer enjoys the same exclusive renown. In the centre of the chapel is +the tomb of the founder, covered with excellent sculpture, representing +the four virtues, and the figures of three saints and the Virgin. It is +surrounded by a balustrade ornamented with elaborate carving. Berruguete +is supposed to have been the sculptor, but in the uncertainty which +exists on the subject, it would not be difficult to make a better guess, +as it is very superior to all the works I have seen attributed to that +artist. At the foot of the statue of the bishop is the following short +inscription, "Operibus credite." To this prelate was due the façade of +San Pablo; he was a Dominican monk at Burgos, where he founded several +public works. He became confessor, chief chaplain, and preacher to +Isabel the Catholic: afterwards Bishop of Cordova; and was ultimately +translated to the see of Palencia. He received the sobriquet of Fray +Mortero, as some say from the form of his face, added to the +unpopularity which he shared with the two other favorites of Ferdinand +and Isabella,--the Duke of Maqueda, and Cardinal Ximenes, with whom he +figured in a popular triplet which at that period circulated throughout +Spain, + + Cardenas, el Cardenal, + Con el padre Fray Mortero, + Fraen el reyno al retortero. + +which may be freely translated thus: + + What with his Grace the Cardinal, + With Cardenas, and Father Mortar,-- + Spain calls aloud for quarter! quarter! + +The concise inscription seen on the tomb, was probably meant as an +answer to this satire, and to the injurious opinion generally received +respecting his character. + +I returned from Toledo by way of Madrid and Saragoza. The diligence +track from Toledo to Madrid was in a worse state than at the time of my +arrival: a circumstance by no means surprising, since what with the wear +and tear of carts and carriages, aided by that of the elements, and +unopposed by human labour, it must deteriorate gradually until it +becomes impassable. Since my last visit to the Museo the equestrian +portrait of Charles the Fifth by Titian has been restored. It was in so +degraded a condition that the lower half, containing the foreground and +the horses' legs, presented scarcely a distinguishable object. It has +been handled with care and talent, and, in its present position in the +centre of the gallery, it now disputes the palm with the Spasimo, and is +worth the journey to Madrid, were there nothing else to be seen there. I +paid another visit to the Saint Elizabeth in the Academy, and to the +Museum of Natural History, contained in the upper floor of the same +building. This gallery boasts the possession of an unique curiosity; the +entire skeleton of a Megatherion strides over the well-furnished tables +of one of the largest rooms. I believe an idea of this gigantic animal +can nowhere else be formed. The head must have measured about the +dimensions of an elephant's body. + +From Castile into Aragon the descent is continual, and the difference of +climate is easily perceptible. Vineyards here climb the mountains, and +the plains abound with olive-grounds, which are literally forests, and +in which the plants attain to the growth of those of Andalucia. In +corresponding proportion to the improving country, complaints are heard +of its population. Murders and robberies form the subject of +conversations; and certain towns are selected as more especially +_mal-composées_, for the headquarters of strong bodies of _guardia +civile_; without which precaution travelling would here be attended with +no small peril. This state of things is attributed partly to the +disorganising effects of the recent civil war, which raged with +peculiar violence in this province. The same causes have operated less +strongly in the adjoining Basque provinces, from their having to act on +a population of a different character,--colder, more industrious, and +more pacifically disposed, and without the desperate sternness and +vindictive temper of the Aragonese. + +The inhabitants of this province differ in costume and appearance from +the rest of the Spaniards. Immediately on setting foot on the Aragonese +territory, you are struck by the view of some peasant at the road-side: +his black broad-brimmed hat,--waistcoat, breeches, and stockings all of +the same hue, varied only by the broad _faja_, or sash of purple, make +his tall erect figure almost pass for that of a Presbyterian clergyman, +cultivating his Highland garden. The natives of Aragon have not the +vivacity and polished talkativeness of the Andalucian and other +Spaniards; they are reserved, slow, and less prompt to engage in +conversation, and often abrupt and blunt in their replies. These +qualities are not, however, carried so far as to silence the continual +chatter of the interior of a Spanish diligence. Spanish travelling opens +the sluices of communicativeness even of an Aragonese, as it would those +of the denizens of a first class vehicle of a Great Western train, were +they exposed during a short time to its vicissitudes. + +However philosophers may explain the phenomenon, it is certain that the +talkativeness of travellers augments in an inverse ratio to their +comforts. The Spaniards complain of the silence of a French diligence; +while, to a Frenchman, the occupants of the luxurious corners of an +English railroad conveyance, must appear to be afflicted with dumbness. + +Saragoza is one of the least attractive of Spanish towns. Its situation +is as flat and uninteresting as its streets are ugly and monotonous. The +ancient palace of the sovereigns of Aragon is now the Ayuntamiento. It +would form, in the present day, but a sorry residence for a private +individual, although it presents externally a massive and imposing +aspect. Its interior is almost entirely sacrificed to an immense hall, +called now the Lonja. It is a Gothic room, containing two rows of +pillars, supporting a groined ceiling. It is used for numerous +assemblies, elections, and sometimes for the carnival balls. The ancient +Cathedral of La Seu is a gothic edifice, of great beauty internally; but +the natives are still prouder of the more modern church called Nuestra +Señora del Pilar,--an immense building in the Italian style, erected for +the accommodation of a statue of the Virgin found on the spot, standing +on a pillar. This image is the object of peculiar veneration. + +After leaving Saragoza you are soon in the Basque provinces. The first +considerable town is Tudela in Navarre; and here we were strongly +impressed with the unbusinesslike nature of the Spaniard. This people, +thoroughly good-natured and indefatigable in rendering a service, when +the necessity arises for application to occupations of daily routine +appear to exercise less intelligence than some other nations. It is +probably owing to this cause that at Madrid the anterooms of the Foreign +Office, situated in the palace, are, at four in the afternoon, the scene +of much novelty and animation. In a town measuring no more than a mile +and a half in each direction, the inexperienced stranger usually puts +off to the last day of his stay the business of procuring his passport, +and he is taken by surprise on finding it to be the most busy day of +all. Little did he expect that the four or five _visas_ will not be +obtained in less than forty-eight hours: and he pays for his place in +the diligence or mail (always paid in advance) several days before. It +is consequently worth while to attend in person at the Secretary of +State's office, in search of one's passport, in order to witness the +scene. + +The hour for the delivery of these inevitable documents, coincides with +the shutting up for the day of all the embassies: so that those which +require the subsequent _visa_ of an ambassador, have to wait twenty-four +hours. Hence the victims of official indifference, finding themselves +disappointed of their departure, and minus the value of a place in the +mail, give vent to their dissatisfaction in a variety of languages, +forming a singular contrast to the phlegmatic and _impassible_ porters +and ushers, accustomed to the daily repetition of similar scenes. Some, +rendered unjust by adversity, loudly accuse the government of complicity +with the hotel-keepers. I saw a Frenchman whose case was cruel. His +passport had been prepared at his embassy, and as he was only going to +France, there were no more formalities necessary, but the visa of the +police, and that of the foreign office. All was done but the last, and +he was directed to call at four o'clock. His place was retained in that +evening's mail, and being a mercantile traveller, both time and cash +were of importance to him. On applying at the appointed hour, his +passport was returned to him without the _visa_, because the French +Secretary had, in a fit of absence, written Cadiz, instead of +Bordeaux--he was to wait a day to get the mistake rectified. + +These inconveniences were surpassed by that to which the passengers of +our diligence were subjected at Tudela. Imagine yourself ensconced in a +corner of the Exeter mail (when it existed) and on arriving at Taunton, +or any intermediate town, being informed that an unforeseen circumstance +rendered it necessary to remain there twenty-four hours, instead of +proceeding in the usual manner. On this announcement being made at +Tudela, I inquired what had happened, and learned that a diligence, +which usually met ours, and the mules of which were to take us on, was +detained a day at Tolosa, a hundred miles off. Rather than send a boy to +the next stage to bring the team of mules, which had nothing to do, a +dozen travellers had to wait until the better fortunes of the previous +vehicle should restore it to its natural course. + +As if this contretems was not sufficient, we were subjected to the most +galling species of tyranny, weighing on the dearest of human privileges, +I mean that which the proprietor of a shilling,--zwanziger, franc, or +pezeta,--feels that he possesses of demanding to be fed. We had left +Saragoza at nine in the morning, and had arrived without stoppages at +six. A plentiful dinner, smoking on the table of the _comedor_, might +have produced a temporary forgetfulness of our sorrows: but no +entreaties could prevail on the hostess to lay the table-cloth. It was +usual for the joint supper of the two coaches to take place at nine, and +not an instant sooner should we eat. Weighed down by this complication +of miseries, we sat, a disconsolate party, round the _brasero_, until at +about eight our spirits began to rise at the sight of a table-cloth; and +during half an hour, the occasional entrance of a waiting woman, with +the different articles for the table, kept our hopes buoyed up, and our +heads in motion towards the door, each time it opened to give entrance, +now to a vinegar cruet, now to a salt-cellar. + +At length an angelic figure actually bore in a large dish containing a +quantity of vegetables, occasioning a cry of joy to re-echo through our +end of the room. She placed it on a side-board and retired. Again the +door opened, when to our utter dismay, another apparition moved towards +the dish, took it up and carried it away; shutting the door carefully +behind her. This was the best thing that could have occurred; since it +produced a sudden outburst of mirth, which accompanied us to the table, +now speedily adorned with the materials of a plentiful repast. + +The next town to Tudela, is the gay and elegant little fortress of +Pamplona, from which place an easy day's journey, through a tract of +superb mountain scenery, brings you to Tolosa, the last resting-place on +the Spanish side. + + + + +PART II. + +SEVILLE. + + + + +LETTER XV. + +JOURNEY TO SEVILLE. CHARACTER OF THE SPANIARDS. VALLEY OF THE RHONE. + + +Marseille. + +In order to reach the south of Spain, the longest route is that which, +passing through France, leads by Bayonne to the centre of the northern +frontier of the Peninsula, which it then traverses from end to end. It +is not the longest in actual distance; but in regard to time, and to +fatigue, and (for all who do not travel by Diligence), by far the +longest, with regard to expense. Another route, longer, it is true, in +distance, but shorter with respect to all these other considerations, is +that by Lyons and Marseille; from either of which places, the journey +may be made entirely by steam. + +The shortest of all, and in every respect, is that by the Gibraltar +mail, which leaves London and Falmouth once a week. This is a quicker +journey than that through France, even for an inhabitant of France, +supposing him resident at Paris, and to proceed to England _viâ le +Hâvre_. But there is an objection to this route for a tourist. Desirous +of visiting foreign scenes, he will find it too essentially an English +journey--direct, sure, and horribly business-like and monotonous. You +touch, it is true, at Lisbon, where during a few hours, you may escape +from the beef and Stilton cheese, if not from the Port wine; and where +you may enjoy the view of some fine scenery; but all the rest is +straight-forward, desperate paddling night and day; with the additional +objection, that being surrounded by English faces, living on English +fare, and listening to English voices, the object of the traveller--that +of quitting England--is not attained; since he cannot be said to have +left that country, until he finds himself quarrelling with his rapacious +boatman on the pier of the glittering Cadiz. + +Although this arrangement may possess the merit of the magic transition +from England to Andalucia, which, it must be allowed, is a great +one--many will prefer being disembarked in France; looking forward, +since there is a time for all things, to a still more welcome +disembarkation on England's white shores, when the recollected +vicissitudes of travel shall have disposed them to appreciate more than +ever her comforts and civilization, and to be more forgiving to her +defects; and, should they not be acquainted with the banks of the Rhone +below Lyons, adopting that equally commodious and infinitely more varied +course. + +In fact, there are few who will not agree with me in pronouncing this +the best way, for the tourist, of approaching Spain. It is not every +one, who will not consider the gratifications which the inland territory +of the Peninsula may offer to his curiosity too dearly purchased by the +inconveniences inseparable from the journey. Add to this the superiority +of the maritime provinces, with scarcely any exception, in point of +climate, civilization, and attractions of every sort. Valencia, +Barcelona, Malaga, and Cadiz are more agreeable places of residence, and +possess more resources than even Madrid; but their chief advantage is a +difference of climate almost incredible, from the limited distance which +separates them from the centre of the Peninsula. The Andalucian coast +enjoys one of the best climates in the world; while the Castiles, +Aragon, and La Mancha can hardly be said to possess the average +advantages in that respect; owing to the extremes of cold and heat, +which characterize their summer and winter seasons, and which, during +autumn and spring, are continually alternating in rapid transition. + +Andalucia unites in a greater degree than the other maritime provinces, +the advantages which constitute their superiority over the rest of +Spain. It does more, for it presents to the stranger a combination of +the principal features of interest, which render the Peninsula more +especially attractive to the lover of travel. It is, in fact, to Spain +what Paris is to France; Moscow and Petersburg to Russia. England, +Italy, and Germany are not fit subjects for illustrating the comparison; +their characteristic features of attraction and interest being +disseminated more generally throughout all their provinces or states. +Whoever wishes to find Spain herself, unalloyed, in her own character +and costume, and in her best point of view, should disembark in +Andalucia. + +There, unlike the Castiles, and the still more northern provinces, in +which only the earth and air remain Spanish, and those not the best +Spanish--where all the picturesque and original qualities that +distinguish the population, are fast fading away--the upper classes in +their manners and costumes, and the Radicals in their politics, striving +to become French--there, on the contrary, all is natural and national in +its half-Arab nationality: and certainly nature and nationality have +given proof of taste in selecting for their last refuge, the most +delicious of regions; where earth and heaven have done their utmost to +form an abode, worthy of the most beautiful of the human, as well as the +brute creation. + +I will not pause to inquire whether the reproach be justly addressed by +the other Spaniards, to the inhabitants of this province, of indolence +and love of pleasure, and of a disposition to deceitfulness, concealed +beneath the gay courtesy of their manners; it would, indeed, be a +surprising, a miraculous exception to the universal system of +compensations that we recognise as governing the world, had not this +people some prominent defect, or were they not exposed to some peculiar +element of suffering, to counterbalance in a degree the especial and +exclusive gifts heaped upon them. By what other means could their +perfect happiness be interfered with? Let us, then, allow them their +defects--the necessary shade in so brilliant a picture--defects which, +in reducing their felicity to its due level, are easily fathomed, and +their consequences guarded against, by sojourners amongst them, in whose +eyes their peculiar graces, and the charm of their manner of life, find +none the less favour from their being subject to the universal law of +humanity. They cannot be better painted in a few words, than by the +sketch, drawn by the witty and graceful Lantier, from the inhabitants +of Miletus. "Les Milesiens," he says, "sont aimables. Ils emportent, +peut-être, sur les Athéniens" (read "Castillans") "par leur politesse, +leur aménité, et les agrémens de leur esprit. On leur reproche avec +raison cette facilité--cette mollesse de moeurs, qui prend quelquefois +l'air de la licence. Tout enchante les sens dans ce séjour fortuné--la +pureté de l'air--la beauté des femmes--enfin leur musique--leurs danses, +leurs jeux--tout inspire la volupté, et pénêtre l'âme d'une langueur +délicieuse. Les Zéphirs ne s'y agitent que pour repandre au loin +l'esprit des fleurs et des plantes, et embaumer l'air de leurs suaves +odeurs." + +This passage is, word for word, so exactly applicable to the Andalucians +and their land, that it is difficult to imagine another people to have +sat for the portrait, nor to a more talented painter. It is a pity that +the author I quote, is a rarity in modern libraries: owing, perhaps, to +his descriptions being at times rather warm, or, as his compatriots +would say, _un peu regence_. + +In Spain, the country of proverbs, they are very fond of summing up, by +the aid of a few epithets, the distinctive character of each province. +As bad qualities frequently predominate in these estimates, it is of +course usual for the individual, who undertakes the instruction of a +foreigner in this department of knowledge, to omit the mention of his +own province. After all, the defects attributed to the inhabitants of +one portion of a country by those of another, are not to be taken for +granted without considerable reservation; allowance must be made for +rivalry and jealousies. Almost every country affords examples of these +wholesale accusations laid to the charge of particular counties or +divisions of territory. Thus the character usually attributed in Spain +to the Andalucians, is that of a people lively, gay, of extreme polish +and amiability of manners, but false and treacherous. The Galicians are +said to be stupid and heavy, but remarkably honest; the Catalonians +courageous but quarrelsome, _mauvais coucheurs_. No doubt in some of +these instances, the general impression may be borne out to a certain +extent, by some particular class of the denizens of the province alluded +to; but such distinctions are rarely perceptible among the educated +classes. It is perhaps less easy in Spain than elsewhere, to establish +these classifications at all successfully. Contradictions will be met +with at every step, calculated to shake their infallibility. To our eye, +as foreigners, there are sufficient peculiarities belonging to the +nation universally, and respecting which our knowledge is far from being +complete, without attempting to classify a greater or smaller list of +subdivisions, the appreciation of which would require a prolonged +residence in the country. + +Spain is looked upon by the greater number of strangers as a land +delivered over to depredation, and highly insecure. In fact, it is +surprising that such should not be the fate of a country in which +instruction is limited, and where, as I myself have witnessed, servants +may be known to be in the daily practice of stealing without their +dismissal being by any means a necessary result. It is surprising, that +in the absence of any strong natural objection to theft, any honesty +should exist in the presence of temptation; yet I know no country where +there is more, if I may form an opinion from the individuals of whom I +have had an opportunity of judging. However, as an instance of the +contradictions one meets with, the following event was represented as +having taken place in one of the provinces in which I had received the +favourable impression above-mentioned. + +A ci-devant colonel, just arrived in Madrid, related the fact to me one +evening, on which, as chance would have it, I found him at supper. +Immediately on my entering the room he commenced complaining of the lack +of silver articles of necessity for the table, and accounted for it in +the following manner. He had recently arrived with his family from a +provincial town, in which he had filled a government situation. Shortly +before his departure he had invited all his friends to a leave-taking +repast; and after the departure of his guests nearly two dozen articles +of plate were missing. "In packing up," I observed, "no doubt some +dishonest domestic--" "No, no," he interrupted, "they were all pocketed +by my guests." + +That the man in office should have conciliated the attachment of all his +acquaintances to such a degree, as that all should conceive +simultaneously the idea of preserving a _souvenir_ of his person, and +that in so delicate and unostentatious a manner,--was not possible. As, +therefore, I still retained my impression of the honesty of the lower +classes, and as the sufferer appeared to treat the occurrence as one by +no means extraordinary, I came to the conclusion, that--either Spanish +integrity, unlike that of other nations, must rise in an inverse ratio +to men's fortunes and stations; or that the author of the anecdote had +been tempted, by the desire of masking the (perhaps unavoidable) +deficiencies in his supper service, to have recourse to his inventive +talent, at the expense of his absent friends' reputation. + +I believe it must be allowed that with respect to the disregard of the +rights of proprietorship, of which the lower classes are accused, there +are sufficient instances on record to counterbalance, in some degree, +my personal experience; but there is this to be urged in favour of that +class of culprits, where such are met with, that their mode of operation +is far more manly and courageous than that of the depredators of some +other climes--by which means they obtain also the full reputation of +their misdeeds. There may scarcely be said to be anything mean or +degrading in their manner of thieving: and their system is itself a +proof that they see no sin in it. They take to the mountains, and +declare open war against those whom they consider the unjust +monopolizers of wealth. + +Instances of this sort are no doubt frequent in Spain; in Toledo they +relate that, some years since, the passes of Estremadura were occupied +by one of the most formidable and best organized of these bands, under +the orders of a female. Various versions were given of this woman's +history; but the one most accredited accounted in the following manner +for her having adopted the profession of freebooter. A young lady of +rank had disappeared from her family residence, leaving no trace by +which to guide conjecture as to her fate. It was therefore presumed she +had been kidnapped. The event, however, had already long ceased to be a +subject of conversation in the district, when three or four years after, +a traveller, who had escaped from an attack of banditti, announced the +fact of their being commanded by a woman. Although well disguised, her +voice, and delicate figure had betrayed her sex. The fact was +subsequently confirmed by positive discoveries; and, at length, +confiding in the alteration time and her mode of life had produced in +her appearance, she ceased to make a mystery of the circumstance, and +headed the attacks, mounted usually on a large black horse. Her age and +beauty coinciding with the description given of the young countess who +had disappeared some years previously, gave rise to the supposition of +their identity. The band has been since dispersed, and many of them +captured; but their chief has contrived to escape, and it is probable +the truth respecting her may never be divulged. + +It is said she at times exercised more pitiless cruelties than are +usually practised by the male chiefs of the regular banditti; and that, +after such acts,--as though conscience-stricken,--she would, by way of +compensation, allow parties to pass unmolested. + +From such instances as these a portion of the Spanish population must be +considered amenable to the charge brought against them; but there are +peculiarities of a different stamp, which mark the Spaniards in +general, and are more deserving of notice in a summary of the national +characteristic qualities. It is impossible, for instance, not to be +struck by the intelligence and tact, independent of cultivation, which +pervade all classes. Whether the denizens of these southern climes are +indebted to the purity of their atmosphere, for this gift of rapid +perception, in which they surpass our northern organizations, or to +whatever cause they may owe it; the fact leads to involuntary +speculation on what might have been the results, in a country so +distinguished, besides, by its natural advantages, had the Arab +supremacy lasted until our days. At a period when education was +generally held in no estimation in Europe, the first care of almost +every sovereign of that race was usually directed to the establishment, +or improvement, of the public schools, in which the sciences and +languages were taught at the royal expense. No town being unprovided +with its schools, it is difficult to imagine to what degree of +superiority over the rest of Europe the continuation of such a system +would have raised a people so gifted as to be capable of supplying, by +natural intelligence, the almost universal absence of information and +culture. + +You continually meet with such instances of uncultivated intelligence as +the following. I was occupied in sketching in a retired part of the +environs of Madrid, when a ragged, half-naked boy, not more than ten or +eleven years of age, and employed in watching sheep, having to pass near +me, stopped to examine my work. He remained for nearly a quarter of an +hour perfectly still, making no movement except that of his eyes, which +continually travelled from the paper to the landscape, and back from +that to the paper. At length, going away, he exclaimed, "Que paciencia, +Dios mio!" + +The following is an example of the absence of cultivation, where it +might have been expected to exist. A student leaving the university of +Toledo, at the age of twenty-seven, told me he had studied there eleven +years, and had that day received his diploma of barrister, which, when +sent to Madrid, where it would be backed by the sanction of the +minister, would authorise him to practise his profession in any town +throughout Spain. In the course of the same conversation, he asked me +whether Russia was not situated in the Mediterranean, and whether +England did not form a portion of that country. + +Tact and good manners are so universal among the lower classes, that a +more familiar intercourse than we are accustomed to, can be allowed +between persons of different ranks. Those of the highest class are seen, +during a journey, dining at the same table with their servants; and on +all other occasions entering into conversation with them. This +intercourse of good nature and good understanding, universally existing +between superiors and inferiors, and which is never known to degenerate +into familiarity, would preserve Spain a long time from revolutions of a +popular origin--were she left to herself. The Spaniard of the lowest +station has as considerable an idea of his personal consequence as a +marquis, and maintains with his equals all the forms of high breeding. +If you stop to listen to the discussions of a knot of ragged children +playing at marbles, you will hear them address each other by the title +of Señor. + +The urbanity and polish which prevails throughout all classes is +genuine, and the result of good-nature. This is proved by their +readiness to render all sorts of services as soon as they are acquainted +with you, and even before; and _that_ notwithstanding their suspicion +and dislike of strangers, a disposition for which they have ample cause. +I don't mean to include services which might incur pecuniary outlay; it +would be something like requesting the loan of the Highlander's +inexpressibles. Although even of this a remarkable instance has fallen +under my observation,--the capability existing,--but they will spare no +trouble nor time: doubling the value of the obligation by the graceful +and earnest manner of rendering it. + +Should your reception by a Spaniard be marked by coldness, it is +generally to be accounted for by a very excusable feeling. The Spaniard +is usually deeply preoccupied by the unfortunate state of his country. +This subject of continual reflection operating on a character singularly +proud, but which is at the same time marked by a large share of +modesty,--qualities by no means incompatible,--occasions him a sensation +when in presence of a foreigner nearly approaching to suffering. He +feels a profound veneration for the former glories of his land, and +admiration of its natural superiority; but he is distrustful of his +modern compatriots, of whom he has no great opinion. His anxiety is, +therefore, extreme with regard to the judgment which a Frenchman or +Englishman may have formed respecting his countrymen and country: and he +is not at his ease until satisfied on that point; fearing that the +backward state of material civilization may be attributed by them to +hopeless defects in the national character, and diminish their respect +for his country. He is restored to immediate peace of mind by a delicate +compliment, easily introduced, on the ancient grandeur of Spain, or the +eternal splendour of her skies and soil, and especially by an expression +of disapproval of the influence which foreign governments seem desirous +of arrogating to themselves over her political destinies. + +Should the stranger delay the application of some such soothing balm, he +will not hesitate to provoke it, by ingeniously leading the conversation +in the direction he wishes, and then heaping abuse and censure on his +compatriots. + +The interference of foreign governments in their politics is, in fact, +one of the consequences of the present national inferiority, the most +galling to their feelings. This is accounted for by the high +independence, which is one of the principal features of their character, +and is observable in the most insignificant events of their daily life. +The practice which prevails in some countries, of meddling each with his +(and even _her_) neighbour's concerns, and of heaping vituperation where +a man's conduct or opinions differ from his who speaks, is one of the +most repugnant to the Spanish nature. If a Spaniard hears such a +conversation, he stares vacantly, as though he comprehended nothing; and +the natural expression traceable on not a few countenances and attitudes +may be translated, "I don't interfere in your affairs, pray don't +trouble yourself about mine." + +It is curious to trace this in their favourite sayings, or proverbs +(_refrans_), by which the national peculiarities of character are +admirably depicted. Of these no people possess so complete a collection. +The following is one which expresses the feeling to which I allude: + + El Marques de Santa Cruz hizó + Un palacio en el Viso: + Porque pudó, y porque quisó. + +or, translated, + + What could induce Sir Santa Cruz to + Build a house the Viso close to? + --He had the money, and he chose to. + +I place, in the translation, the edifice close to the Viso, instead of +upon it, as in the original text. I doubt whether any apology is +necessary for this poetical licence, by which the intention of the +proverb undergoes no alteration. It is true, a house may be close to a +hill without being erected upon it; but if, as in this instance, it is +on the top of the hill, it is most certainly close to it likewise. + +The submission of the Spaniards to the despotism of etiquette and custom +in trifles, does not (otherwise than apparently) constitute a +contradiction to this independence of character. However that may be, +the breach of all other laws meets with easier pardon, than that of the +laws of custom. This code is made up of an infinity of minute +observances, many of which escape the notice of a foreigner, until +accustomed by degrees to the manners of those who surround him. He will +not, for instance, discover, until he has made himself some few +temporary enemies, that no greater insult can be offered to a person of +rank, or in authority, than saluting him in a cloak _embozado_--the +extremity thrown over the shoulder.--A similar neglect is not pardoned +either by the fair sex. The minutest peculiarities in dress are +observed, and if at all discordant with the received mode of the day, +incur universal blame. The situation of a stranger is, in fact, at first +scarcely agreeable in a country in which the smallest divergence from +established customs attracts general attention and criticism. This does +not, however, interfere with the ready good-nature and disposition to +oblige met with, as I said before, on all occasions. + +In some instances the attachment to external forms operates +advantageously. Such is that of the picturesque practice prevailing in +many of the provinces, of assuming the quality of the _Beata_. In +Toledo, certain peculiarities in the toilette of one of a group of young +ladies attracted my curiosity. She was apparently about seventeen; +pretty, but by no means remarkably so for a Spaniard, and appeared to be +in deep mourning. Whenever, in speaking, a movement of her right hand +and arm lifted up her mantilla, a japanned leather sash was exposed to +view, of about two inches in width, an end of which hanging from the +right side, reached rather lower than the knee. On the right sleeve, +half-way between the shoulder and the elbow, was fixed a small silver +plate, called an _escudo_, and a rosary was worn round her neck. + +I was informed, on inquiry, that she was _una beata_; and being still in +the dark, my informant related her story. He commenced by the inquiry, +whether I had heard of a young man being drowned four months previously +in the Tagus. I replied that I had heard of thirty or forty; for he +referred to the bathing season, during which, as the river is sown with +pits and precipices, and unprovided with humane societies, accidents +occur every day. He then named the victim, of whose death I had in fact +heard. He was a youth of the age of twenty, and the _novio_ (intended) +of the young lady in black. On hearing suddenly, and without +preparation, the fatal news, she had been seized with a profuse vomiting +of blood, and had continued dangerously ill during several weeks. She +was now convalescent, and had made her appearance in society for the +first time. + +My informant added, on my repeating the inquiry respecting the costume, +that it is the custom for a young lady, on recovering from a serious +illness, to offer herself to the _Virgen de los dolores_; the external +sign of the vow consisting in the adoption of a dress similar to that +worn by the Virgin in the churches. The obligation assumed lasts +generally during a year; although some retain the dress for the +remainder of their life. Examples are known of this practice among the +other sex; in which case the costume is that of a Franciscan friar; but +the _beato_ becomes the object of ridicule. + +Among the forms of society to which especial importance is attached are +the ceremonies and duration of mourning for relations. The friends of +the nearest relative,--especially if a lady,--of a person newly +deceased, assemble day after day for a considerable time in her house. +All are in full dress of deep mourning; and the victim of sorrow and +society is expected to maintain a continual outpouring of sighs and +tears, while she listens to each consoler in turn. Much importance is +attached to the display of the usual appearances of grief, even when the +circumstances of the case do not necessarily call for it. Happening to +enter a house in which news had been received of the death of a +relative, who resided in another part of Spain, I found the lady of the +house discussing with a friend the form of her new mourning dress. + +Struck by the melancholy expression of her countenance, and the redness +of her eyes, I inquired whether any bad news had been received. My +question gave rise to a renewed flood of tears; "Yes, yes," was the +reply; "I have had terrible news; my poor uncle, who had been afflicted +for years with dropsy, died only six days ago." I expressed my sincere +regret at so sad an event, while she continued her explanations to the +other lady. "I understand," she said, in a voice almost suffocated, +"that this sleeve is no longer to be--drawn in; and the--front, +according to the last--French--fashion,--is at least an inch--shorter." +Taking the opportunity of the first moment of silence, I asked for some +further details respecting this beloved uncle. "It was your Señora +mother's brother, I believe?" "No, no, the husband of my aunt: and +what--do you--think of the--mantilla?" After the reply of the other +visitor to the latter question, I continued,--"But your profound regret, +on occasion of the loss of so amiable a companion, is natural." +"Terrible, sir, yes--my poor uncle!" "Had you seen him shortly before +the sad event?" "Alas! no, sir, I never--saw him but--once in my life; +and--should not now have recognized him--for I--was then--only five +years old." + +The Spaniards are not a dinner-giving nation; obedient, as some suppose, +to their proverb,--which although the effect, may also operate as a +cause,--namely, 'Feasts are given by fools, and partaken of "by wise +men." This proverb, however, paints the national character with less +fidelity than most others; the parsimonious selfishness it implies is +not Spanish. Sufficient reasons exist to account for the rarity of +dinner invitations. + +Although the English are not responsible for the geniality of climate, +which corks up their crystallized souls to be enclosed fog-tight, until +released by a symbolical ceremony of the popping of champagne corks,--it +is not the less true that dinners are their only introductions to +acquaintanceship. Spaniards have corks also, and well worth the trouble +of drawing, as well as all the other _materiel_ of conviviality; but +they despise it, finding the expansion operated by their sunshine more +complete and less laborious. Their sociability no more requires dinner +parties than their aloes hedges do steam-pipes. With the exception of +their ungovernable passion for cold water, their sobriety is extreme; +and this may perhaps unite with a dislike to social ostentation in +resisting the exotic fashion of dinners. But bring a good letter of +introduction to a Spaniard, and you will find a daily place at a +well-supplied table, the frequent occupation of which will give +unmistakable pleasure. + +In such case you are looked for as a daily visitor; not ceremoniously, +but as using the house when in want of a more cheerful home than your +_posada_. Æolus has not yet been appointed here the arbiter of +smiles,[9] and your entrance is always the signal for the same animated +welcome. The only variation will be a good-natured remonstrance, should +your visits have undergone any interruption. + +To return to my route. Aware of the inconvenience of Spanish inland +travelling, and with Seville for my object, I proceeded to Lyon. Nor had +I long to wait for the reward attendant on my choice of route. Getting +on board the steam-packet at six o'clock on an autumn morning, I +experienced at first some discouragement, from the fog, which I had not +reflected was the natural--or rather unnatural--atmosphere of that most +discouraging of all places, a prosperous manufacturing town. No sooner, +however, had we escaped, by the aid of high-pressure steam, from these +deleterious influences, than our way gradually opened before us, rather +dimly at first, but more and more clear as the sun attained height: the +banks of the Rhone having, during this time, been progressing also in +elevation and grandeur, by eight o'clock we were enjoying a rapidly +moving panorama of superb scenery. + +This day's journey turned out unusually auspicious. Owing to some +favourable combination of celestial influences, (although I perceived no +one on board likely to have an astrologer in his pay,) no untoward +accident--so common on this line--befell us. No stoppages--no running +down of barges, nor running foul of bridges--nor bursting of engines. +The stream was neither too shallow, nor too full, so that we were +preserved both from running aground, and from being run away with. Our +boat was the fastest of the six which started at the same time; and one +is never ill-disposed by a speed of eighteen miles an hour, although it +may be acquired at an imminent risk of explosion. + +There is many a day's journey of equal or greater beauty than the +descent of the Rhone; but I know of none which operates a more singular +effect on the senses. It is that of being transported by a leap from the +north to the south of Europe. The Rhone valley, in fine weather, enjoys +a southern climate, while all the region to the north of Lyon is marked +by the characteristics of the more northern provinces. That town itself, +with its smoke, its gloom, and its dirt, maintains itself at the +latitude of Manchester; whose excellent money-making inhabitants, if +thrown in the way of a party of Lyonnais, would scarcely feel themselves +among strangers, so complete would be the similarity of habits and +manners. The transition, therefore, to those wafted down the sunny +valley of the Rhone, is as theatrical as the scenery itself, but with +the agreeable addition of reality. Every surrounding object contributes +to the magic of the change. Taking leave of a bare and treeless country, +and its consequently rough and ungenial climate, which, in its turn, +will necessarily exercise its influence on the character of the +population, you find yourself gliding between vine-clad mountains, not +black and rugged like those of the Rhine, but soft and rosy, and lighted +by a sky, which begins here to assume a southern brilliancy. The +influence of the lighter atmosphere first begins to be felt, expanding +the organs, and filling the frame with a sensation, unknown to more +northern climes, of pleasure derived from mere existence. Then the +language you hear on all sides is new and musical; for the crew of the +steamer is Provençal, and their _patois_ falls on the ear with something +approaching the soft accent of Italy; while their expressive eyes, +sunburnt faces, and a certain mixture of animation and languor--the +exact counterpart of the phlegmatic industry of the north, complete the +scene, with which they are in perfect harmony. + +_A propos_ of harmony, when the sailors' dinner hour arrived, they were +summoned by an air of Rossini, played on a bugle; the performer--one of +their number--having first thrown himself flat on the deck, in the +attitude of a Turk about to receive the bastinado, and then raising his +chest, by the aid of his two elbows, to the height required for the +inflation of the instrument. + +Nor is this leap from north to south so purely imaginary, since the boat +Sirius, aided by the furious current, actually paddled at the rate of +from seventeen to eighteen miles an hour; and we reached Avignon at +sunset, about five o'clock. The distance being calculated, allowing for +the windings of the river, will verify the rate maintained during the +day. Notwithstanding the odious nature of comparisons, I could not help +forming that between this river and the Rhine, and giving the preference +to the first. The bold though gloomy precipices of the Rhine yield, in +point of charm, to the more open expanse of the Rhone valley, and the +larger scale of the scenery, especially when the far more brilliant +lighting-up is considered. Nor does the Rhone yield to its rival, in +regard to the picturesque form and position of its castles and other +buildings; while its greater width, and handsome bridges, add an +additional feature. + +The best scene of the day, and a fit climax for its termination, was the +approach to Avignon at sunset,--a superb Claude. A turn of the river +placed the castle--an immense mass crowning the city, and presenting an +irregular outline--directly between us and the sun, the sky doing away, +by its brightness, with all the details of the landscape. The principal +objects were, the broad expanse of water, and the mass of deep purple, +tracing its dark but soft outline on the blaze of gold at its back. On +turning to look in the opposite direction, a scene equally striking +presented itself. The mountains between which we had been winding during +the last half of the day, are, from this point of view, ranged in an +immense semicircle, extending round half the horizon, and at that moment +were tinged by the sun with a bright rose colour, while they scarcely +appeared at half their actual distance. It looked like the final scene +of an aërial ballet, when a semicircle is formed by the rosy sylphs who +have figured during the representation. + +After the hurly burly of debarkation at Avignon, and forcing our way +through the army of luggage porters--a ferocious race, notorious, at +this place, for the energy, amounting often to violence, with which they +urge the acceptance of their kind offices--the picturesque look of the +place, and the necessary hour of waiting for dinner, led me to a scene, +which I accepted as a satisfactory greeting on my arrival in the land +of the troubadours. A group of half a dozen labourers, returned from +their day's work, were lolling in every variety of attitude, on some +large stones placed in front of the _château_. They were singing--and +with perfect precision of _ensemble_--each his part of the chorus. At +the conclusion of every _morceau_, the whole party made the façade of +the ancient palace echo with peals of laughter; after which they all +talked at once, until they had agreed on the choice of the succeeding +air. + +The castle of Avignon--ancient residence of the Popes, shelters now a +different sort of inmates. It serves for barracks for a regiment of +infantry. At this moment the lamplighter had completed his rounds in the +interior, and given to each of the innumerable windows an undue +importance in the architectural effect of the mass. Such is the +irregularity of their distribution over this vast façade--or such it +appeared to be then, for I have not seen it by daylight--as to give them +the appearance of having been thrown at it by handfuls, and fixed +themselves each at its first point of contact with the wall. + +Or by way of compensation for the extravagant supposition of so large a +hand, we can suppose the edifice diminished, and resembling with its +jagged outline, a ragged black cloak, which, having been stretched out, +to serve as a mark for rifle-shooters, would admit the light through +openings not less symmetrically distributed than these windows. + +Between Avignon and Marseille, by the land route, the only spot of +interest is Aix. It is a well placed little town; although, in the +summer, its position must procure for it rather too much warmth. There +are no remains of king Réné's palace; nor could I learn that any +souvenir of him was extant, with the exception of a statue, which +represents the jovial old king of the _trouvères_ in the character of +Bacchus. This figure ornaments a hot fountain, situated at the head of +the wide street, planted with trees, by which the town is entered. + + + + +LETTER XVI. + +VOYAGE TO GIBRALTAR. + + +Cadiz. + +I have just returned from a visit to the signal-tower--the highest +look-out in Cadiz; from which is seen a panorama equalled by few in +Europe. The Atlantic, and its coast down to Trafalgar Cape--the mountain +distances of the Ronda--and Medina Sidonia on its sugar-loaf rock, like +an advanced sentinel--all Cadiz, with its hundreds of white +Belvideres--and the bright blue bay, decked with glittering white towns, +and looking (but with more sparkling glow) like an enormous turquoise +set round with pearls. But let not, I entreat you, these magic +words--Cadiz--Andalucia--raise your expectations unduly; lest they be +disappointed, on rinding that I fail in doing justice to this charming +country. With regard to this town, not only would it be a task beyond my +powers to paint its bright aspect and to give you a sufficiently glowing +description of its pleasures. It is not even my intention to partake of +these--being bent on accomplishing my principal object--the exploration +of the monuments of Seville. However let us not anticipate. You ought to +have had news of me from Gibraltar, where I made a much longer stay than +I had intended, owing to an unexpected meeting with an old friend. + +The fact is, I put off writing until I should again be in movement, +hoping that my letters might thus acquire greater interest. I will +resume my journey from France, in which country we parted. + +The steam-packets leave Marseille for the south of Spain every tenth +day; and I happened to arrive a day or two after one of the departures. +Rather than wait eight days, therefore, I agreed for my passage on board +a trader bound for Gibraltar; by which arrangement, as the captain +assured me that the voyage would only occupy five days, I was to be at +my journey's end before the departure of the Phénicien, as the +steam-packet was called. The latter, moreover, made no progress +excepting during the night, in order to afford the passengers an +opportunity of passing each day in some town; and being anxious to +arrive at Seville, I should not have liked the delays thus occasioned. I +do not, however, recommend the adoption of my plan; for the five days, +as it turned out, became twenty-four, and the Phénicien arrived at Cadiz +long before I reached Gibraltar. + +The captain's prognostic of course supposed a favourable voyage; and I +was wrong in reckoning on this, particularly at the time of year, and in +the Mediterranean. I was wrong, also, in confiding in my Provençal +captain, who, in addition to various other bad qualities, turned out to +be the most inept blockhead to whom ever were entrusted lives and +cargoes. + +My fellow-passengers consisted of a Marseille merchant, who possessed a +trading establishment at Gibraltar; a young French officer, on leave of +absence to visit his mother, who was Spanish; and a Moorish traveller, +proceeding homeward to Tetuan. From certain hints dropped by the +merchant, who was well acquainted with the passage, we soon learned the +probable character of our captain, as he belonged to a race not very +favourably spoken of by those whose goods and persons they were in the +habit of conveying; and these predictions being soon partially confirmed +by the man's incivility, we began to look upon him as our common enemy. +One of the accusations brought against his class was, a disposition to +reduce the supply of provisions within undue limits. This, however, we +could not lay to his charge, as the adverse winds rendered necessary an +extreme prudence in our daily consumption. My principal anxiety arose +from want of confidence in the capacity of the man for the performance +of his duties as a seaman. This anxiety was grounded on various symptoms +sufficiently striking to attract the notice even of a landsman; and more +particularly on a scene, during which his presence of mind, if mind he +possessed, totally deserted him. + +We had passed several days off the Balearic Islands--or rather on and +off--for each morning we issued from behind Ivica, and returned at night +to take shelter under its cliffs; ours being the only vessel of several +performing the same passage restrained by fear from attempting any +progress during these nights. The reason of this we learned +subsequently. At length, when we did risk an advance, we chose the worst +moment of all: the breeze becoming a gale, and almost a head-wind, from +having been less unfavourable. Whatever may now have been our anxiety, +we could easily discover that the author of our misfortune was a prey to +more terror than ourselves. + +Against this wind we proceeded, gaining about a hundred yards an hour, +during five days; at the end of which it changed slightly, and allowed +us to reach the entrance of the channel; that is, we had doubled the +Cape de Gata, and were off the south coast of the peninsula, nearly +opposite Almeria, and in the direct line of all the vessels entering the +Mediterranean; which, as they are sometimes delayed in expectation of a +favourable wind for passing the Straits of Gibraltar, were now bearing +down in great numbers. At this crisis the gale, which had all along +continued to be violent, became once more almost directly adverse, and +increased in fury. + +Our gallant captain's features always assumed towards evening a more +serious expression. A faint tinge of green was observed to replace the +yellow of his usual complexion, and he passed the nights on deck, as +unapproachable as a hyena--by the way, also a most cowardly animal. At +length one day as evening approached, the wind was almost doing its +worst, and we went to bed tossed about as if in a walnut-shell--lulled +by an incessant roaring, as it were, of parks of Perkin's artillery. + +It being essential to keep a good look-out, and to show a light +occasionally, in order to avoid being run down--the lantern--unable to +live on deck, from the water as well as the wind, which passed through +the rigging--was confided to the passengers, with a recommendation, by +no means likely to be neglected, to keep it in good trim, and to hand +it up with promptitude when called for. + +At about twelve o'clock, sure enough, the call was heard, in the +somewhat agitated tones of the captain. The passenger, whose business it +was, for we took the watch each in his turn--immediately jumped up and +handed up the lantern. Thinking this sufficient, we remained as we were; +but in less than a minute, it was brought back extinguished, and thrown +down into the cabin. Immediately after a general view holloa was audible +above the roar of the storm, and the mate's voice was heard at the top +of our staircase, begging us to get up as we were going to be run down. + +We now lost no time in making our way to the deck; no one speaking a +word, but each waiting for his turn to mount. Being furthest from the +staircase, or rather ladder, I arrived the last. On reaching the deck, I +was met by about a ton of salt water, which appeared to have mistaken me +for a wicket, as it came in as solid a mass, and with about the same +impulse as a cricket ball. Finding I was not to be dashed back again +down stairs, it took the opportunity of half filling the cabin, the door +of which I had not thought of shutting. On recovering my breath and +reopening my eyes, I discerned, by aid of the white bed-apparel of my +fellow passengers, a dim crowd, pressed together at the bow of the +vessel, consisting of all the inhabitants of the frail tenement, +excepting the steersman and myself. I rushed forward; but finding my +voice insufficient to add any effect to the cry which had been set up, +to give notice to the crew of the approaching vessel, I made for the +side, which I saw, by the position of the group, was threatened with the +expected contact; and catching at a rope ladder, placed myself on the +top of the bulwarks, resolved on trying a jump as the only chance of +escape in case of meeting. + +There was now time to examine our situation perfectly well. I looked +towards the stern, and could see that the helm was not deserted: but it +was of no avail to save us from the danger; since, sailing as near the +wind as we could, as far as I understood the subsequent explanation of +the sailors, we could not change our direction on a sudden, otherwise +than by turning a sort of right-about-face. We went on, therefore, +trusting that the other crew would hear the cry, and discover our +position in time. The night being extremely dark, and the sea running +high, the approaching vessel was scarcely visible to us when first +pointed out by the sailors; still less should I have looked forward to +its threatening us with any danger; but the eye of experience had not +been deceived, and from my perch I was soon able to discover, as each +passage over the summit of a wave brought the dark mass against the sky, +that its approach was rapid, and directed with unerring precision, so as +to cross our course at the fatal moment. She was scudding before the +gale, with almost all her sails set, and consequently, on striking our +ship, nothing could save us from an instantaneous founder. + +At each successive appearance the mass became larger and blacker; but +the cry of our crew, in which I now joined, never ceased. At length we +were only separated by the ascent of one wave, at the summit of which +was balanced the huge bulk of our antagonist, while we were far below +the level of her keel--but her steersman had heard the cry; for at the +moment when certainly no hope of saving--at least our ship, remained to +any of us, we saw the other swerve as she descended--and after +approaching to within half her length of our starboard bow, she glided +by at the distance of a yard from where I was standing. + +I now drew a deep breath before I jumped down on to the deck; after +which, beginning to perceive that I was as wet as if we had been run +down, I was hastening to the cabin, when my progress was stopped by the +captain, who, without perceiving any one, was stamping up and down the +centre of the vessel, and actually tearing his hair with both his hands. +I paused to observe this tragic performance, which shortly gave place to +an indistinct and much interrupted speech, in which, in the intervals +left by all the oaths as yet invented in the French and Languedoc +tongues, there could be distinguished dark threats of vengeance, +addressed to the captain of the large brig, whom he was to discover +without fail on his return to Marseille. + +All the passengers now descended to the cabin, and having stripped and +rolled myself in my cloak turned inside out, I threw myself on my couch. +We were now, in spite of recent experience, provided with a fresh +lighted lantern, to be produced on the next call. This we took care +still to look to, although we hardly expected more than one such chance +in one night. + +It was past two, and we had scarcely left off discussing our narrow +escape, when another rapid and significant demand for the lantern +announced a second peril. On this occasion I took my time, for I had +reflected on the odds, which were immense, against our being a second +time so exactly in any one's way, where there was room for the whole +navigation of the world to pass abreast. Nor could I suspect any of my +fellow-passengers of being the unlucky Jonas of our misfortunes; +although the Moor was looked upon by some of the sailors with a +suspicious eye, for not consenting to partake of a leg of chicken, if +the animal had been killed and cooked by any other hand than his own, +and for the mysterious formalities they accused him of observing in +killing his poultry; such as turning his face in a particular direction, +and requiring the blood to flow in a particular manner--on failure of +which last requisite, he threw the fowl overboard. These things alarmed +the sailors, but helped, on the contrary, to encourage me; as I thought +the man's being possessed of a conscience and religious scruples, +rather, if any thing, an additional safeguard for us. + +This time, therefore, I drew on my boots and trowsers; and, wrapped in +my cloak, proceeded in company with the Moor, who had taken it as +leisurely as myself, to join the party on deck. They had kept the +lantern in a safe position until the moment it would have the best +chance of taking effect, a proper precaution, as it was likely to be so +short-lived. And at the moment I arrived the order was being given to +shew it ahead. A sailor took it, and before he could reach the bow of +the vessel, a wave broke over him and washed his lantern fairly into the +sea. Upon this the captain said not a word, but running to the helm, +took it in hand, and turned the ship right round, presenting her stern +to the wind, and to the approaching vessel,--which we now soon lost +sight of, as we were not a slow sailing craft in a fair wind. Having +performed this masterly feat, and given orders that no change should be +made in any respect, he went to bed; muttering as he left the deck +various indistinct sounds between his teeth. The next morning we had +undone nearly all our six day's work, and before evening of the +following day, had returned to within sight of Cape St. Martin near +Valencia. + +It was now a fortnight since we had quitted Marseille, and we were +nearly half-way to our place of destination; but Neptune took pity on +us, and having given the usual scolding to Eolus, we were allowed to +resume our course, although not at as good a rate as we could have +wished. The tempest had ceased, and by means of a feeble but fair wind +which succeeded, we regained in three days and nights almost all our +lost way, and were on the point of doubling the Cape Gata. Here we +remained stationary in a dead calm during another three days, after +which an almost imperceptible movement in the air in the wished-for +direction bore us to within sight of Gibraltar. + +This progress along the southern coast lasted three days more, and +introduced me to the climate of Andalucia. At the end of November it was +still a splendid summer--but with just sufficient air to prevent our +suffering from the heat. The blue Mediterranean at length vindicated her +fair fame, and proved that one of her smiles had the power of throwing +oblivion over all the harm of which she was capable during her moments +of fretfulness. As you will easily imagine, I passed these delicious +days, and nearly the entire nights on deck. Our view consisted of the +magnificent precipices which terminate, at the shore, the Alpuxarras +chain of mountains. These are coloured with the various tints peculiar +to the ores and marbles of which they are formed; and now showed us all +their details, although we never approached within twenty-five miles off +shore. The purity of the atmosphere added to their great elevation, gave +them the appearance of being only four or five miles distant. The only +means of proving the illusion consisted in directing the telescope along +the line of apparent demarcation between the sea and the rock, when the +positions of the different towns situated on the shore were indicated +only by the tops of their towers. Among others, the tower of Malaga +Cathedral appeared to rise solitarily from the water, the church and +town being hidden by the convexity of the sea's surface. + +With the bright blue sea for a foreground, varied by continually passing +sails, these superb cliffs formed the second plan of the picture; while +over them towered the Granada mountains of the Sierra Nevada, cutting +their gigantic outlines of glittering snow out of the dark blue of the +sky, at a distance of twenty leagues. The evenings more particularly +possessed a charm, difficult to be understood by the thousands of our +fellow creatures, unable to kill that fragment of time without the aid +of constellations of wax-lights, and sparkling toilettes,--not to +mention the bright sparks which conversation sometimes, but not always, +sprinkles o'er the scene. Now I do not pretend to speak with disrespect +of _soirées_, nor even of balls or ra-outes, as our neighbours say; +Polka forfend I should blaspheme her deity, depreciate her loudly +laudable energies, or apostrophize her strangely muscular hamstrings! I +only maintain that a night passed at sea, off the southern Spanish coast +in fine weather, does not yield to the best of nights. + +The observation of the land, of the passing sails, and the management of +our own, and the various phenomena of sea and sky, having gradually +yielded to sunset and twilight--and these in their turn leaving the +vessel to its solitude, conversation became amusing between people of +such different origin, habits, and ideas, brought together by chance, +drawn nearer to each other by the force of circumstances, and by having +partaken of the same buffetings. The Moor would then offer a cup of his +coffee, or rather, according to the Oriental custom, a thimbleful of his +quintessence of that exquisite berry. Our French ensign was a tolerable +musician, and was easily prevailed on to unpack his cornet-à-piston, and +to astonish the solitude of the night, and the denizens of the deep, by +the execution of the favourite airs of Auber and Halevy. Sometimes a +bark too distant to be visible would hail us on hearing these unusual +strains; and faint sounds of applause would arrive as if from wandering +naiads. + +At length one afternoon brought us in sight of Gibraltar. And now, lest +we should arrive without further mishap, our precious Provençal took +care to give us a parting proof of his incapacity,--which however, +thanks to our good fortune, did not bring upon us the annoyance it +threatened. The rock of Gibraltar was before us the whole of the +following day; but there appeared also in sight, somewhat to its left, +and at a much greater distance, a sort of double mountain, apparently +divided from the middle upwards by a wedge-formed cleft. The captain +replied to all questions by describing this object as consisting of two +distinct mountains, which he pronounced to be no others than the two +Pillars of Hercules,--promising us that the next morning we should see +them separated by the entire width of the Straits. + +Far from suspecting the authenticity of this explanation, I innocently +inquired what was the large rock (Gibraltar itself) apparently much +nearer to us. "Oh!" he replied, "it was some promontory on the coast of +Andalucia, the name of which had escaped his memory;" adding that we +steered very slightly to the left of the said rock, because the wind +having increased, and blowing off shore, we could not make Gibraltar +otherwise than by keeping well into the shore, to prevent our being +driven towards Africa. All this about the wind was so true, that had we +preserved to the last the direction we were then following, we must +inevitably have gone to Africa, and added a day and a night to our +voyage. + +The Marseille merchant, who had made the voyage twenty times, listened +to all this; but although very intelligent on most subjects, and more +particularly with regard to the qualities and value of silks and +quincaillerie, his notions of practical geography had not probably +attained any great development, as he appeared perfectly satisfied. I +therefore passed the day and retired that night filled with curiosity +respecting this remarkable promontory, that had escaped the notice of +Arrowsmith and the continental geographers. The following morning, to my +extreme astonishment, the double mountain was still as undivided as +ever, notwithstanding our having approached so near to the great rock as +to distinguish its colour, and the details of its surface. We were still +steering so as to leave it behind us. + +I now began to suspect something was wrong; and getting hold of the +merchant, proceeded to question him closely, recalling to his +recollection the captain's explanation of the previous day, and the +consequent miraculous union of Gibraltar with the mountain of the +monkies, to accomplish which the former must have quitted Europe +subsequently to the publication of the last newspapers we had seen at +Marseille. His replying that he certainly thought the great rock put him +in mind of Gibraltar confirmed my suppositions; and I prevailed upon him +to repeat his opinion to the ignoramus, who was peaceably eating his +breakfast on the bulwarks of the quarter-deck. We went to him instantly, +and on hearing the remark, he merely observed that it was very possible; +and leaving his sausage, quietly proceeded to the helm, which he no more +quitted until we were in the bay at four in the afternoon. We had only +lost about five or six hours by the blunder; but had we continued the +same course another half-hour, we could not possibly have made Gibraltar +that day. + +It was with more than the ordinary excitement of the organ of +travelling,--for if phrenology deserves to be called a science, such an +organ must exist,--that I approached this great Leviathan of the seas; +perhaps, all causes considered, the most remarkable object in Europe. +During the approach the interest is absorbing; and the two or three +hours employed in passing round the extremity of the rock, and +stretching sufficiently far into the Straits, to gain wind and channel +for entering the bay, slipped away more rapidly than many a ten minutes +I could have called to my recollection. The simultaneous view of Europe +and Africa; the eventful positions with which you are surrounded,--Tarifa, +Algeciras, and further on Trafalgar; the very depths beneath you too +shallow for the recollections which crowd into this limited space; +commencing with history so ancient as to have attained the rank of +fable,--and heroes long since promoted to demi-gods; and reaching to the +passage of the injured Florinda, so quickly responded to by that of +Tharig, followed by a hundred Arab fleets. The shipping of all nations +continually diverting the attention from these _souvenirs_; and, +crowning all, the stupendous mass of the now impregnable rock. + +Amidst all this, I could not drive from my thoughts the simple and +patriotic old Spanish historian de Pisa, and the operation to which he +attributes the origin of this mountain. From him may be learned all the +details respecting this work of Hercules; as to which, as well as to the +motives of its fabricator, the poets of antiquity were in the dark. +Hercules had been induced, by the high reputation of Spain, of her +population, and her various natural advantages, to conduct thither an +army for the purpose of taking possession of the country. After having +put his project in execution, he remained in Spain, and enjoyed a long +and prosperous reign. The victory, which gave him possession of the +country, took place at Tarifa; and it was in its commemoration and +honour that before he established the seat of government at Toledo, he +assembled the conquered population, and compelled them to throw stones +into the sea, by which means, in a short time, this monument was +completed. + +Before we set foot on this imperceptible trophy of a league in length by +two thousand feet high the French ensign and myself hailed a steamer as +we passed by her in the offing, and found she was bound for Cadiz, and +we must go on board the following afternoon. On landing, however, my +projects underwent a change, as I told you at the commencement of my +letter. There is not much to be seen at Gibraltar that would interest +you, except indeed the unique aspect and situation of the place. To +military men its details offer much interest. There is a large public +garden on the side of the mountain, between the town, which occupies the +inmost extremity, and the Governor's house near the entrance of the bay. +The batteries constructed in the rock are extremely curious, and +calculated to embarrass an enemy whose object should be to dismount +them. I thought, however, with deference to those conversant with these +subjects, that they were likely to possess an inconvenience--that of +exposing to suffocation the gunners employed in the caverns, out of +which there does not appear to exist sufficient means of escape for the +smoke. + +The most amusing sight in Gibraltar is the principal street, filled, as +it is, with an infinitely varied population. Here you see, crowded +together as in a fair, and distinguished by their various costumes,--the +representatives of Europe, Asia, and Africa,--Arabs, Moors, Italians, +Turks, Greeks, Russians, English, and Spaniards, Jews, and, +occasionally, a holy friar conversing with some Don Basilio, appearing, +in his long cylindrical hat, as if blessed with a skull sufficiently +hard to have entered the side of a tin chimney-top, precipitated upon +it by a gust of wind. + +Among all these a successful guess may here and there be risked at the +identity of the Andalucian leader of banditti, lounging about in search +of useful information. The contrabandistas are likewise in great +plenty. + + + + +LETTER XVII. + +CADIZ. ARRIVAL AT SEVILLE. + + +Seville. + +Cadiz is the last town in Europe I should select for a residence, had I +the misfortune to become blind. One ought to be all eyes there. It is +the prettiest of towns. After this there is no more to be said, with +regard, at least, to its external peculiarities. It possesses no +prominent objects of curiosity. There is, it is true, a tradition +stating it to have possessed a temple dedicated to Hercules; but this +has been washed away by the waves of the ocean, as its rites have been +by the influx of succeeding populations. Nothing can be more remote from +the ideas of the visitor to Cadiz, than the existence of anything +antique; unless it be the inclination to prosecute such researches: the +whole place is so bright and modern looking, and pretty in a manner +peculiar to itself, and unlike any other town,--since, like everything +else in Spain, beauty also has its originality. Nothing can be gayer +than the perspective of one of the straight, narrow streets. On either +side of the blue ribbon of sky, which separates the summits of its lofty +houses, is seen a confusion of balconies, and projecting +box-windows,--all placed irregularly--each house possessing only one or +two, so as not to interfere with each other's view, and some placed on a +lower story, others on a higher; their yellow or green hues relieving +the glittering white of the façades. Nor could anything improve the +elegant effect of the architectural ornaments, consisting of pilasters, +vases, and sculpture beneath the balconies, still less, the animated +faces--the prettiest of all Spain, after those of Malaga--whose owners +shew a preference to the projecting windows, wherever a drawing-room or +boudoir possesses one. + +The pavement of these elegant little streets, is not out of keeping with +the rest. It would be a sacrilege to introduce a cart or carriage into +them. A lady may, and often does, traverse the whole town on foot, on +her way to a ball. It is a town built as if for the celebration of a +continual carnival. Nor does the charge brought against the Gaditanas, +of devotion to pleasure, cause any surprise: were they not, they would +be misplaced in Cadiz. Hither should the victim of spleen and melancholy +direct his steps. Let him choose the season of the carnival. There is +reason to suspect that the advertiser in the Herald had this remedy in +view, when he promised a certain cure to "clergymen and noblemen, who +suffer from blushing and despondency, delusion, thoughts of self-injury, +and groundless fear:" these symptoms being indications of an attack of +that northern epidemy, which takes its name from a class of fallen +angels of a particular hue. + +In Cadiz, in fact, does Carnival--that modern Bacchus of fun, give a +loose to his wildest eccentricities--nor may those who are least +disposed to do homage to the god escape his all-pervading influence. All +laws yield to his, during his three days of Saturnalia. Not the least +eccentric of his code is that one, which authorizes the baptism of every +passenger in a street with the contents of jugs, bestowed from the fair +hands of vigilant angels who soar on the second-floor balconies. The +statute enjoins also the expression of gratitude for these favours, +conveyed with more or less precision of aim, in the form of hen's +eggs--of which there is consequently a scarcity on breakfast-tables on +the mornings of these festive days. At eleven o'clock each night, four +spacious buildings scarcely suffice for the masquerading population. + +But the paddles have been battering for some hours the waters of the +Guadalquivir, and we are approaching Seville, a city given to less +turbulent propensities--where Pleasure assumes a more timid gait, nor +cares to alarm Devotion--a partner with whom she delights, hand in hand, +to tread this marble-paved Paradise. The passage between Cadiz and +Seville, is composed of two hours of sea, and eight or nine of river. +The beautiful bay, and its white towns, with Cadiz itself, looking in +the sunshine like a palace of snow rising out of the sea--have no power +now to rivet the attention, nor to occupy feelings already glowing with +the anticipation of a sail between the banks of the Guadalquivir. A +ridge of hidden rocks lengthens the approach, compelling the pilot to +describe a large semicircle, before he can make the mouth of the river. +This delay is a violent stimulant to one's impatience. At length we have +entered the ancient Betis; and leaving behind the active little town of +St. Lucar, celebrated for its wines, and for those of the neighbouring +Xeres, of which it embarks large quantities--we are gliding between +these famous shores. + +Great, indeed, is the debt they owe to the stirring events that have +immortalized these regions, for they are anything but romantic. Nothing +can be less picturesque;--all the flatness of Holland, without the +cultivation, and the numerous well-peopled villages, which diminish the +monotonous effect. On the right are seen at some distance the wooded +hills of Xeres; but for scores of miles, on the opposite side, all is +either marsh, or half-inundated pasture, with here and there some +thinly-scattered olive trees, and herds of oxen for its sole living +occupants. At a few leagues from Seville, the increased frequency of the +olive grounds--a few villages and convents, and at length the darker +green masses of the orange groves, give rapidly strengthening +indications of approaching civilization; and you are landed a short +distance below the town, to reach which, it is necessary to traverse the +Christina Gardens. The cathedral occupies this southern extremity of the +city; and on your way to the inn, you may make an estimate of the length +of one side of its immense quadrangular enclosure. Immediately beyond +this you are received into the inevitable labyrinth of crooked lanes, +peculiar to an Arab town. + +The steam trip from Cadiz is so easy a day's journey, that no necessity +for repose or refitting interferes with the impatience of those who +arrive to explore the external town. You speedily, therefore, sally +forth, and thread a few of the mazy streets; but without venturing too +far, on account of the evident risk of losing your way. Should you +chance to stumble on the Plaza Mayor,--called Plaza de San +Francisco,--you are at once rewarded by the view of the _ayuntamiento_, +one of the most elegant edifices in Spain: otherwise the extreme +simplicity of the bare, irregular, but monotonous white houses, will +create disappointment--you will stare about in the vain search of the +magnificence, so much extolled, of this semi-Moorish capital, and +discover, that nothing can be plainer, more simple, more ugly, than the +exterior of the Seville habitations. At length, however, some open door, +or iron grille, placed on a line with an inner court, will operate a +sudden change in your ideas, and afford a clue to the mystery. Through +this railing, generally of an elegant form, is discovered a delicious +vista, in which are visible, fountains, white marble colonnades, +pomegranate and sweet lemon-trees, sofas and chairs (if in summer), and +two or three steps of a porcelain staircase. + +You now first appreciate the utility of the more than plain exteriors of +the houses of this town; and you admire an invention, which adds to the +already charming objects, composing the interior of these miniature +palaces, a beauty still greater than that which they actually possess, +lent by the effect of contrast. It is calculated that there are more +than eighty thousand white marble pillars in Seville. For this luxury +the inhabitants are indebted in a great measure to the Romans, whose +town, Italica, seated, in ancient times, on the opposite bank of the +river, four miles above Seville, and since entirely buried, furnished +the Arab architects with a considerable portion of their decorating +materials. + +In a future letter I hope to introduce you to the interior of some of +these abodes, where we shall discover that their inhabitants prove +themselves not unworthy of them, by the perfect taste and conception of +civilized life, with which their mode of existence is regulated. + +[Illustration: HALL OF AMBASSADORS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.] + + + + +LETTER XVIII. + +THE ARABS IN SPAIN. ALCAZAR OF SEVILLE. + + +Seville. + +The chief attraction of this most interesting of the provinces of the +Peninsula, consists in the numerous well preserved remains of Arab art. +The most sumptuous of their palaces are, it is true, no longer in +existence, nor the principal mosques, with the exception of the +metropolitan temple of Cordova: but there remain sufficient specimens to +shew, that their architecture had attained the highest excellence in two +of the principal requisites for excellence in that science--solidity and +beauty. + +The superiority of the Arabs in this branch of science and taste is so +striking, that all other departments of art, as well as the customs and +peculiarities of that race, and the events of their dominion in this +country, become at once the subjects of interest and inquiry. It is +consequently very satisfactory to discover that one can examine almost +face to face that people,--probably the most advanced in science and +civilization that ever set foot in Europe; so little are the traces of +their influence worn away, and so predominant is the portion of it still +discernible in the customs, manners, and race of the population of this +province, and even to a considerable extent in their language. + +There is something so brilliant in the career of the Arab people, as to +justify the interest excited by the romantic and picturesque (if the +expression may be allowed), points of their character and customs. Their +civilization appears to have advanced abreast with their conquests, and +with the same prodigious rapidity; supposing, that is, that previously +to their issuing from their peninsula, they were as backward as +historians state them to have been: a point not sufficiently +established. Sallying forth, under the immediate successors of Mahomet, +they commenced, in obedience to the injunction of their new faith, a +course of conquest unrivalled in rapidity. Their happy physical and +mental organization, enabled them to appropriate whatever was superior +in the arts and customs of the conquered nations; and whatever they +imitated acquired during the process of adaptation, new and more +graceful modifications. It has been asserted that they owed their +civilization to the Greeks; and, certainly, the first subjected +provinces being Greek, their customs could not but receive some +impression from the contact; but it is not probable that the Greeks were +altogether their instructors in civilization. Had such been the case +their language would probably have undergone a change, instead of +continuing totally independent of the Greek, and attaining to greater +richness. They are known to have possessed poets of eminence before the +appearance of Mahomet, consequently before they had any communication +with the Greeks; shortly after the commencement of their intercourse +with them, they shewed a marked superiority over them in geometry, in +astronomy, architecture, and medicine, and it would probably be found, +but for the destruction of so many Arab libraries, that they did not +yield to them in eloquence and poetic genius. + +Established in Spain, they carried the arts of civilization--the useful +no less than the elegant, to the highest perfection. They introduced +principles of agriculture adapted to the peculiarities of the country. +The chief requisite for a country, parched by a cloudless sun, being +water--they put in practice a complete system of irrigation, to which +the Spaniards are still indebted for the extraordinary fertility of +their soil. Many other arts that have since been permitted to dwindle +into insignificance, and some altogether to disappear, were bequeathed +by them. The Morocco preparation of leather is an instance of these +last. + +Their high chivalry, added to their moderation after victory, would have +divested even war of much of its barbarism, had they had to do with a +race less impenetrable, and more susceptible of polish than were the +iron legions of their Gothic antagonists. The persevering and repeated +acts of treachery practised by these, at last drew their civilized +adversaries, forcibly into the commission of acts of a similar +nature--it being frequently necessary in self-defence to adopt the same +weapons as one's enemy. When firmly settled in Spain, the Arabs no +longer appear to have taken the field with a view to conquest. +Abderahman the First, Almansor, and other conquerors, returned from +their victories to repose in their capital; contenting themselves with +founding schools and hospitals to commemorate their successes, without +making them instrumental to the increase of their domination. After this +time campaigns seem frequently to have been undertaken from motives of +emulation, and for the purpose of affording them opportunities for a +display of their prowess, and giving vent to their military ardour. They +considered an irruption on the hostile territory, or an attack on a +town, in the light of a tournament. The Christians, on the contrary, +fought with a view to exterminate, and without ever losing sight of +their main object--the expulsion of the Arabs and Moors from the +Peninsula. It was thus that they ultimately succeeded--a result they +probably would not have attained, had the Moorish leaders been actuated +by similar views, and displayed less forbearance. + +Much of the misapprehension which exists in Europe respecting this race +is attributable to the exaggerations of writers; much more to the +absence of reflection in readers, and to the almost universal practice +of bringing every act related of personages inhabiting remote and +half-known climes, to the test of the only customs and manners with +which we are familiar, and which we consider, for no other reason, +superior to all others--making no allowance for difference of education, +climate, tradition, race. An European, subjected to a similar process of +criticism, on the part of an inhabitant of the East, would certainly not +recognise his own portrait--a new disposition of light bearing upon +peculiarities, the existence of which had hitherto been unsuspected by +their owner; and he would manifest a surprise as unfeigned, as a +Frenchman once expressed in my hearing, on finding himself in a +situation almost parallel. Conversing on the subject of a play, acted +in Paris, in which an Englishman cut a ridiculous figure--a lady present +remarked, that, no doubt, in the London theatres the French were not +spared; upon which the Frenchman I allude to--a person possessed of +superior intelligence--exclaimed: "How could that be, since there was +nothing about a Frenchman that could be laughed at?" + +On reading of a reprehensible act attributed to a Mahometan, some will +brand Mahometanism in general, and of all times and places, with the +commission of the like crimes, placing the event at a distance of a +thousand leagues, or of a thousand years from its real place and date: +forgetting that power has been abused under all religions; and that we +only hear one side of the question with respect to all that relates to +the Oriental races--our information only reaching us through the medium +of writers of different and hostile faith. It is a singular fact that +the popular terror, which so long attached itself to the idea of a +Saracen, and which derived its origin from the conquests of the +Mahometans, has its equivalent in certain Mahometan countries. In some +parts of the empire of Morocco, the idea of a Christian is that of a +ruffian of immense stature and terrific features; calculated to inspire +the utmost fear in the breasts of all who approach him. Such is their +notion of his ferocity, that one of the emperors, Muley Ismael, in order +to terrify his refractory subjects into obedience, was in the habit of +threatening to have them eaten up by the Christians. + +From the inferior value set on human life by the races of the East, we +accuse them of barbarity: forgetting, that, owing to the absence of all +analogy between our origin, races, and education, we are incompetent to +appreciate their feelings, and the motives of their conduct, and have +consequently no right to condemn them. If we abstain from taking our +neighbour's life, we set also a proportionate value on our own: a native +of the East displays, it is true, less veneration for his own species. +Deeply impressed with the dogmas of his religion, which form the guide +of his every day life, the habit of acting up to the doctrines which he +has been taught to believe, diminishes his estimate of the value of +temporal life, whether that of others, or his own, which he exposes on +occasions on which we should not be inclined to do so. He does not take +life for cruelty's sake, nor without provocation. Were he to be +furnished with Arabian accounts of the treatment of a London or Paris +hackney-coach horse, he would think of the noble and friendly animal +which carries him to battle, and turn in disgust from such a page. + +The system practised at Constantinople of nailing to his door-post the +ear of the culprit detected in the employment of false weights, is, no +doubt, very discordant with our customs; but this mode of punishment is +said to be attended with such success, as to do away almost entirely +with the occasion for it. Were it adopted in some other capitals, it +would certainly at first disfigure many a neatly adorned entrance, and +give additional occupation to painters; but the result might possibly be +a more universal observance of the injunction contained in the eighth +commandment. As far as regards the Arabs of Spain, it may be securely +affirmed, that, during the course of their triumphs, and long before +they had attained their highest civilization, no cruelties were +exercised by them, which came near to the barbarity of those practised +subsequently by their Christian adversaries on victims of a different +creed, when in their power. We may instance the example set by St. +Ferdinand, who, it is said, when burning some Moors, piously stirred up +the fire himself in the public place of Palencia. + +It cannot, however, be denied that cases of cruelty have occurred, and +are related in history of the Arabs, although they are rare among those +of Spain; but, if cruel, the Arab never added hypocrisy to his cruelty. +After having ravaged all Andalucia with fire and famine, St. Ferdinand +formed the project of proceeding to Africa the following year, in order +to attack the inhabitants of that country. His death interrupted the +course of these humane projects. Being dropsical, and feeling his end +approaching, he called for his son Alphonso, afterwards his successor, +to whom this prince--cut off in the midst of his thirsty longings for +blood and slaughter--is related to have given "the counsels, which the +sentiments of piety, justice, and love for mankind, with which he was +filled, inspired so great a monarch." + +As for the degenerate modern tribes, descendants of some of the most +civilized of former days, we have witnessed their contest, _pro aris et +focis_, during the last few years, against a sample of the Christians of +to-day: the mode of making war is perfectly similar on both sides. + +It is a no less curious _travers_ of human nature, from its being an +almost universal one--that of which the modern Spaniards afford an +example. They apply the term "barbarians" to the descendants of their +Moorish compatriots, although they themselves have scarcely advanced a +step in civilization since the day that, in the public place of Granada, +Ferdinand the Catholic burned one million five thousand Arab books, +being all he could collect throughout Spain; showing what tremendous +power may be wielded by a single human hand, when applied to the task of +undoing. That King, by a single signature, accomplished an act which may +be considered as equivalent to retarding, by several centuries, the +civilization of a great country,--perhaps, even, to cutting it off from +the only opportunity it was destined to possess, during the present +ages, of arriving at the summit which the more privileged nations are +permitted to attain; while it influenced injuriously the progress of +letters, science, and art throughout Europe. But we will no longer allow +digressions to delay our visit to the Alcazar, where we shall find +visible proof of Arab superiority, at least, in architectural science +and invention. + +Passing to the east of the cathedral through the large open space, on +the left of which is the Archbishop's palace, and on the right the +cathedral and exchange, the embattled outer walls of the Alcazar stop +the view in front; varied here and there with square towers, and +containing in the centre an arched entrance. The present buildings +occupy the south-eastern corner of the ancient enclosure of the royal +residence, which comprised all the remaining space as far as the banks +of the river, passing round the south side of the cathedral, and, in +fact, including it in its precincts--an enclosure of about a mile and +a half in circumference. An old tower, or scrap of wall, indicates here +and there the position of the ancient buildings, the site of which is +now occupied by two or three _plazuelas_, or squares, and several +streets communicating between them. The present palace scarcely covers a +third of the original extent. + +[Illustration: FAÇADE OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.] + +Having passed through the first entrance, you are in a large square, +surrounded with buildings without ornament, and used at present as +government offices. At the opposite side another archway passes under +the buildings, and leads to a second large court. This communicates on +the left with one or two others; one of these is rather ornamental, and +in the Italian style, surrounded by an arcade supported on double +columns, and enclosing a garden sunk considerably below the level of the +ground. This court is approached by a covered passage, leading, as +already mentioned, from the left side of the second large square, the +south side of which--the side opposite to that on which we +entered--consists of the façade and portal of the inner palace of +all;--the Arab ornamental portion, the residence of the royal person. + +At the right-hand extremity of this front is the entrance to the first +floor, approached by a staircase, which occupies part of the building on +that side of the square, and which contains the apartments of the +governor. The staircase is open to the air, and is visible through a +light arcade. The centre portal of this façade is ornamented, from the +ground to the roof, with rich tracery, varied by a band of blue and +white _azulejos_, and terminating in an advancing roof of carved cedar. +Right and left, the rest of the front consists of a plain wall up to the +first floor, on which small arcades, of a graceful design, enclose +retreating balconies and windows. + +Entering through the centre door, a magnificent apartment has been +annihilated by two white partitions, rising from the ground to the +ceiling, and dividing it into three portions, the centre one forming the +passage which leads from the entrance to the principal court. Several of +the apartments are thus injured, owing to the palace being occasionally +used as a temporary lodging for the court. Passing across the degraded +hall, a magnificent embroidered arch--for the carving with which it is +covered more resembles embroidery than any other ornament--gives access +to the great court. + +It is difficult to ascertain what portion of this palace belongs to the +residence of the Moorish Kings, as Pedro the Cruel had a considerable +portion of it rebuilt by Moorish architects in the same style. The still +more recent additions are easily distinguished. One of them, in this +part of the edifice, is a gallery, erected by Charles the Fifth, over +the arcades of the great court. This gallery one would imagine to have +been there placed with a view to demonstrate the superiority of Arab art +over every other. It is conceived in the most elegant Italian style, and +executed in white marble; but, compared with the fairy arcades which +support it, it is clumsiness itself. The court is paved with white +marble slabs, and contains in the centre a small basin of the same +material, of chaste and simple form, once a fountain. The arcades are +supported on pairs of columns, measuring about twelve diameters in +height, and of equal diameter throughout. The capitals are in imitation +of the Corinthian. The entire walls, over and round the arches, are +covered with deep tracery in stucco; the design of which consists of +diamond-shaped compartments, formed by lines descending from the +cornice, and intersecting each other diagonally. These are indented in +small curves, four to each side of the diamond. In each centre is a +shell, surrounded by fanciful ornaments. The same design is repeated on +the inside of the walls, that is, under the arcade, but only on the +outer wall; and this portion of the court is covered with a +richly-ornamented ceiling of Alerce, in the manner called _artesonado_. + +On the opposite side of the court to that on which we entered, another +semicircular arch, of equal richness, leads to a room extending the +whole length of the court, and similar in form to that situated at the +entrance, possessing also an ornamental ceiling, but plainer walls. The +left and right sides of the court are shorter than the others. In the +centre of the left side, a deep alcove is formed in the wall, probably +occupied in former times by a sofa or throne: at present it is empty, +with the exception, in one corner, of a dusty collection of _azulejos_ +fallen from the walls, and exposing to temptation the itching palms of +enthusiasts. At the opposite end a large arch, admirably carved, and +containing some superb old cedar doors, leads to the Hall of +Ambassadors. This apartment is a square of about thirty-three feet, by +nearly sixty in height. It is also called the _media naranja_ +(half-orange), from the form of its ceiling. + +[Illustration: GREAT COURT OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.] + +In the centre of each side is an entrance, that from the court consists +of the arch just mentioned, forming a semicircle with the extremities +prolonged in a parallel direction. Those of the three other sides are +each composed of three arches of the horse-shoe form, or three-quarters +of a circle, and supported by two columns of rare marbles and jasper +surmounted by gilded capitals. The walls are entirely covered with +elegant designs, executed in stucco, the effect of which suffers from +a series of small arches, running round the upper part of the room, +having been deprived of their tracery to make room for the painted heads +(more or less resembling) of the kings of Spain, Goths and their +successors, excepting the Arabs and Moors. This degradation is, however, +forgotten from the moment the eye is directed to the ceiling. + +In the Arab architecture, the ornament usually becomes more choice, as +it occupies a higher elevation; and the richest and most exquisite +labours of the artist are lavished on the ceilings. The designs are +complicated geometrical problems, by means of which the decorators of +that nation of mathematicians and artists attained to a perfection of +ornament unapproached by any other style. From the cornice of this room +rise clusters of diminutive gilded semi-cupolas, commencing by a single +one, upon which two are supported, and multiplying so rapidly as they +rise, some advancing, others retreating, and each resting on a shoulder +of one below, that, by the time they reach the edge of the great cupola, +they appear to be countless. The ornament of this dome consists of +innumerable gilt projecting bands, of about two inches in width; these +intersect each other in an infinite profusion of curves, as they stretch +over the hemispherical space. The artist, who would make a pencil +sketch of this ceiling, should be as deep a geometrician as the +architect who designed it. + +On quitting the Hall of Ambassadors, we arrive at the best part of the +building. Passing through the arcade at the right-hand side, a long +narrow apartment is crossed, which opens on a small court called the +Court of Dolls (Patio de los Muceñas). No description, no painting can +do justice to this exquisite little enclosure. You stand still, gazing +round until your delight changes into astonishment at such an effect +being produced by immoveable walls and a few columns. A space, of about +twenty feet by thirty,--in which ten small pillars, placed at +corresponding but unequal distances, enclose a smaller quadrangle, and +support, over a series of different sized arches, the upper walls,--has +furnished materials to the artist for the attainment of one of the most +successful results in architecture. The Alhambra has nothing equal to +it. Its two large courts surpass, no doubt, in beauty the principal +court of this palace; but, as a whole, this residence, principally from +its being in better preservation and containing more, is superior to +that of Granada, always excepting the advantage derived from the +picturesque site of the latter. The Court of Dolls, at all events, is +unrivalled. + +[Illustration: COURT OF DOLLS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.[10]] + +The architect made here a highly judicious use of some of the best +gleanings from Italica, consisting of a few antique capitals, which, +being separated from their shafts, have been provided with others, +neither made for them, nor even fitted to them. The pillars are small, +and long for their diameter, with the exception of the four which occupy +the angles, which are thicker and all white. The rest are of different +coloured marbles, and all are about six feet in height. The capitals are +of still smaller proportions; so that at the junction they do not cover +the entire top of the shaft. This defect, from what cause it is +difficult to explain, appears to add to their beauty. + +The capitals are exquisitely beautiful. One in particular, apparently +Greek, tinged by antiquity with a slight approach to rose colour, is +shaped, as if carelessly, at the will of the sculptor; and derives from +its irregularly rounded volutes and uneven leaves, an inconceivable +grace. The arches are of various shapes, that is, of three different +shapes and dimensions, and whether more care, or better materials were +employed in the tracery of the walls in this court, or for whatever +other reason, it is in better preservation than the other parts of the +palace. It has the appearance of having been newly executed in hard +white stone. + +Through the Court of Dolls you pass into an inner apartment, to which it +is a worthy introduction. This room has been selected in modern times, +as being the best in the palace, for the experiment of restoring the +ceiling. The operation has been judiciously executed, and produces an +admirable effect. The design of this ceiling is the most tasteful of the +whole collection. Six or seven stars placed at equal distances from each +other, form centres, from which, following the direction of the sides of +their acute angles, depart as many lines; that is, two from each point; +or, supposing the star to have twelve points--twenty-four from each +star: but these lines soon change their directions, and intersecting +each other repeatedly, form innumerable small inclosures of an hexagonal +shape. The lines are gilt. Each hexagonal compartment rises in relief of +about an inch and a half from the surface, and is ornamented with a +flower, painted in brilliant colours on a dark ground. + +The room is twenty-four feet in height by only sixteen wide, and between +sixty and seventy in length. At the two ends, square spaces are +separated from the centre portion by a wall, advancing about two feet +from each side, and supporting an arch, extending across the entire +width. These arches were probably furnished with curtains, which +separated at will the two ends from the principal apartment, and +converted them into sleeping retreats. Their ornaments are still more +choice than those of the centre. With the exception of this room, all +the principal apartments, and the two courts, are decorated from the +ground upwards to a height of about five feet, with the _azulejos_, or +mosaic of porcelain tiles, the colours of which never lose their +brilliancy. + +The first floor is probably an addition made entirely subsequently to +the time of the Moors. It contains several suites of plain white-washed +rooms, and only two ornamental apartments, probably of Don Pedro's time. +These are equal to those on the ground floor with respect to the tracery +of the walls, unfortunately almost filled with white-wash; but their +ceilings are plainer. There is a gallery over the Court of Dolls, of a +different sort from the rest, but scarcely inferior in beauty to any +part of the edifice. The pillars, balustrades, and ceilings, are of +wood. + +One of the last mentioned apartments has an advantage over all the rest +of the palace, derived from its position. It opens on a terrace looking +over the antique gardens,--a view the most charming and original that +can be imagined. This room must be supposed to have been the boudoir of +Maria Padilla,--the object of the earliest and most durable of Pedro's +attachments; whose power over him outlived the influence of all his +future liaisons. It is indeed probable that the taste for this +residence, and the creation of a large portion of its beauties, are to +be attributed to the mistress, rather than to a gloomy and bloodthirsty +king, as Pedro is represented to have been, and whose existence was +totally unsuited to such a residence. In the Court of Dolls the portion +of pavement is pointed out on which his brother Don Fadrique fell, +slaughtered, as some say, by Pedro's own hand,--at all events in his +presence, and by his order. + +This monarch, were his palace not sufficient to immortalize him, would +have a claim to immortality, as having ordered more executions than all +the other monarchs who ever ruled in Spain, added together. It appears +to have been a daily necessity for him; but he derived more than +ordinary satisfaction when an opportunity could be obtained of ordering +an archbishop to the block. The see of Toledo became under him the most +perilous post in the kingdom, next to that of his own relatives: but he +occasionally extended the privilege to other archbishopricks. It is a +relief to meet with a case of almost merited murder in so sanguinary a +list. Such may be termed the adventure of an innocent man, who, seeing +before him a noose which closes upon everything which approaches it, +carefully inserts his neck within the circumference. + +This was the case of a monk, who, hearing that Pedro, during one of his +campaigns, was encamped in a neighbouring village, proceeded thither, +and demanded an audience. His request being immediately granted, no +doubt in the expectation of some valuable information respecting the +enemy's movements, the holy man commenced an edifying discourse, in +which he informed Don Pedro, that the venerabilissimo San Somebody (the +saint of his village) had passed a considerable time with him in his +dream of the previous night: that his object in thus miraculously +waiting upon him was, to request he would go to his Majesty, and tell +him, that, owing to the unpardonable disorders of his life, it was +determined he should lose the approaching battle. It was the unhappy +friar's last sermon; for in less than five minutes he had ceased to +exist. + +It stands to reason, that, owing to the retired habits of this friar, a +certain anecdote had never reached his ear relative to another member of +a religious fraternity. At a period that had not long preceded the event +just related, the misconduct of this sovereign had drawn down upon him +the displeasure of the head of the church.[11] The thunderbolt was +already forged beneath the arches of the Vatican; but a serious +difficulty presented itself. The culprit was likely to turn upon the +hand employed in inflicting the chastisement. At length a young monk, +known to a member of the holy synod as a genius of promise, energetic +and fertile in resources, was made choice of, who unhesitatingly +undertook the mission. He repaired to Seville, and after a few days' +delay, employed in combining his plan of operation, he got into a boat, +furnished with two stout rowers, and allowing the current to waft him +down the Guadalquivir, until he arrived opposite a portion of the bank +known to be the daily resort of the King, he approached the shore, and +waited his opportunity. + +At the accustomed hour the royal cavalcade was seen to approach; when, +standing up in the boat, which was not allowed to touch the shore, he +made signs that he would speak to the party. The monkish costume +commanded respect even from royalty, and Don Pedro reined in his horse. +The monk then inquired whether it would gratify his Majesty to listen to +the news of certain remarkable occurrences that had taken place in the +East, from which part of the world he had just arrived. The King +approached, and ordered him to tell his story: upon which he unrolled +the fatal document, and with all possible rapidity of enunciation read +it from beginning to end. + +Before it was concluded, the King had drawn his sword, and spurred his +horse to the brink of the water; but at his first movement the boat had +pushed off,--the reader still continuing his task,--so that by the time +Pedro found himself completely excommunicated, his rage passing all +bounds, he had dashed into the water, directing a sabre cut, which only +reached the boat's stern. He still, however, spurred furiously on, and +compelled his horse to swim a considerable distance; until, the animal +becoming exhausted, he only regained the shore after being in serious +danger of drowning. It may easily be imagined that the papal messenger, +satisfied with his success, avoided the contact of terra firma, until he +found himself clear of Pedro's dominions. + +Quitting the room--that of Maria Padilla (according to my conjecture) by +the door which leads to the terrace, you look down on a square portion +of ground, partitioned off from the rest by walls, against which +orange-trees are trained like our wall-fruit trees, only so thickly that +no part of the masonry is visible. All the walls in the garden are thus +masked by a depth of about eight inches of leaves evenly clipped. In the +fruit season the effect is admirable. The small square portions next to +the palace thus partitioned off are laid out in flower-beds, separated +by walks of mixed brick and porcelain, all of which communicate with +fountains in the centres. The fountains, simple and destitute of the +usual classical menagerie of marine zoology and gods and goddesses, +whose coöperation is so indispensable in most European gardens to the +propulsion of each curling thread or gushing mass of the cold +element,--derive all their charm from the purity and taste displayed in +their design. One of the most beautiful of them consists merely of a +raised step, covered with _azulejos_, enclosing a space of an hexagonal +form, in the centre of which the water rises from a small block of +corresponding form and materials. The mosaic is continued outside the +step, but covers only a narrow space. + +[Illustration: FOUNTAINS AT THE ALCAZAR.] + +The terrace stretches away to the left as far as the extremity of the +buildings, the façade of which is hollowed out into a series of +semicircular alcoves; there being no doors nor windows, with the +exception of the door of the room through which we issued. The alcoves +are surrounded with seats, and form so many little apartments, untenable +during the summer, as they look to the south, but forming excellent +winter habitations. Arrived at the extremity of the palace front, the +promenade may be continued at the same elevation down another whole side +of the gardens, along a terrace of two stories, which follows the outer +enclosure. This terrace is very ornamental. From the ground up to a +third of its height, its front is clothed with the orange-tree, in the +same manner as the walls already described. Immediately above runs a +rustic story of large projecting stones, which serves as a basement for +the covered gallery, or lower of the two walks. This gallery is closed +on the outside, which is part of the town wall. The front or garden side +is composed of a series of rustic arches, alternately larger and +smaller, formed of rugged stones, such as are used for grottoes, and of +a dark brown colour--partly natural, partly painted. + +The arches are supported by marble columns, or rather fragments of +columns,--all the mutilated antique trunks rummaged out of Italica. For +a shaft of insufficient length a piece is found of the dimensions +required to make up the deficiency, and placed on its top without mortar +or cement. Some of the capitals are extremely curious. Among them almost +every style may be traced, from the Hindoo to the Composite: but no one +is entire, nor matched with any part of the column it was originally +destined to adorn. Over this gallery is the open terrace, which +continues that of the palace side on the same level. The view extends in +all directions, including the gardens and the surrounding country; for +we are here at the extremity of the town. At the furthest end the +edifice widens, and forms an open saloon, surrounded with seats, +glittering with the bright hues of the _azulejos_. + +From these terraces you look down on the portion of the garden in which +the royal arms are represented, formed with myrtle-hedges. Eagles, +lions, castellated towers,--all are accurately delineated. Myrtle-hedges +are also used in all parts of the gardens as borders to the walks. It is +a charming evening's occupation to wander through the different +enclosures of these gardens, which, although not very extensive, are +characterised by so much that is uncommon in their plan and ornaments, +that the lounger is never weary of them. Nor is the visible portion of +their attractions more curious than the hidden sources of amusement +and--ablution, by means of which an uninitiated wanderer over these +china-paved walks, may be unexpectedly, and more than necessarily +refreshed. By means of a handle, concealed--here in the lungs of some +bathing Diana in the recesses of her grotto--here in the hollow of a +harmless looking stone--an entire line of walk is instantaneously +converted into a stage of hydraulics--displaying to the spectator a long +line of embroidery, composed of thousands of silver threads sparkling in +the sunshine, as issuing from unseen apertures in the pavement they +cross each other at a height of a few feet from the ground, forming an +endless variety of graceful curves. Almost all the walks are sown with +these _burladores_, as they are termed. + +A large portion of the grounds consists of an orange-grove, varied with +sweet lemon-trees. The trees are sufficiently near to each other to +afford universal shade, without being so thickly planted as to interfere +with the good-keeping of the grass, nor with the movement of promenading +parties. In the centre of this grove is a beautiful edifice,--a square +pavilion entirely faced, within and without, with the _azulejos_, with +the exception only of the roof. Around it is a colonnade of white +marble, enclosing a space raised two feet above the ground, and +surrounded by a seat of the same mosaic. The interior is occupied by a +table, surrounded with seats. + +The subterranean baths, called the baths of Maria Padilla, are entered +from the palace end of the garden. They extend to a considerable +distance under the palace, and must during the summer heats, have been a +delightfully cool retreat. + +This _alcazar_ is probably the best specimen of a Moorish residence +remaining in Europe. The Alhambra would, no doubt, have surpassed it, +but for the preference accorded by the Emperor, Charles the Fifth, to +its situation over that of Seville: owing to which he contented himself +with building a gallery over the principal court at the latter; while at +Granada, he destroyed a large portion of the old buildings, which he +replaced by an entire Italian palace. At present the ornamented +apartments of the Seville palace are more numerous, and in better +preservation than those of the Alhambra. + +Both, however, would have been thrown into the shade, had any +proportionate traces existed of the palace of Abderahman the Third, in +the environs of Cordova. Unfortunately nothing of this remains but the +description. It is among the few Arab manuscripts which escaped the +colossal _auto-da-fé_ of Ferdinand and Isabella, and would appear too +extravagant to merit belief, but for the known minuteness and accuracy +of the Arab writers, proved by their descriptions of the palaces and +other edifices which remain to afford the test of comparison. + +The immense wealth lavished by these princes, must also be taken into +consideration, and especially by the Caliphs of Cordova, who possessed a +far more extended sway than belonged to the subsequent dynasties of +Seville and Granada. According to a custom prevalent at their court, +rich presents were offered to the sovereign on various occasions. Among +others, governors of provinces, on their nomination, seldom neglected +this practical demonstration of gratitude. This practice is to this day +observed at the court of the Turkish Sultan, and serves to swell the +treasury in no small degree. Abderahman the Third, having granted a +government to the brother of his favourite, Ahmed ben Sayd, the two +brothers joined purses, and offered a present made up of the following +articles--accompanied by delicate and ingenious compliments in verse, +for the composition of which they employed the most popular poet of the +day:--Four hundred pounds weight of pure gold; forty thousand sequins in +ingots of silver; four hundred pounds of aloes; five hundred ounces of +amber; three hundred ounces of camphor; thirty pieces of tissue of gold +and silk; a hundred and ten fine furs of Khorasan; forty-eight +caparisons of gold and silk, woven at Bagdad; four thousand pounds of +silk in balls; thirty Persian carpets; eight hundred suits of armour; a +thousand shields; a hundred thousand arrows; fifteen Arabian, and a +hundred Spanish horses, with their trappings and equipments; sixty young +slaves--forty male, and twenty female. + +The palace near Cordova, erected by this sovereign, was called Azarah +(the Flower) after the name of his favourite mistress. Its materials +consisted entirely of marble and cedar wood; and it contained four +thousand three hundred columns. It was sufficiently spacious to lodge +the whole court, besides a guard of cavalry. The gardens, as was usual +with the Arabs, formed the part of the residence on which were lavished +the greatest treasures of wealth, and the choicest inventions of taste. +The fountains were endless in number and variety. On one of the most +picturesque spots was situated an edifice called the Caliph's Pavilion. +It consisted of a circular gallery of white marble columns with gilded +capitals; in the centre rose a fountain of quicksilver, imitating all +the movements of water, and glittering in the sun with a brightness too +dazzling for the eye to support. Several of the saloons of this palace +were ornamented with fountains. In one, which bore the name of the +Caliph's Saloon, a fountain of jasper contained in the centre a golden +swan of beautiful workmanship--and over it hung from the ceiling a +pearl, which had been sent from Constantinople as a present from the +Greek Emperor to Abderahman. The mosque of this palace surpassed in +riches, although not in size, the Aljama of Cordova. + +These were monuments worthy to have kings and caliphs for architects, +for such they had. There is no doubt that the palace of Azahrah was +planned and designed by the Caliph himself; and the founder of that +dynasty, Abderahman the First, not only designed the magnificent mosque +of Cordova, but presided daily over the progress of its erection. +Possessed, as these sovereigns were, as well as all the well-born +portion of their nation, of a highly cultivated education, the intervals +of leisure, left them by war, were rarely thrown away in idleness. +Abderahman the First was a poet, besides being a mathematician, an +architect, and the first soldier of his time. Some of his writings have +been preserved, and are among the Arab works collected and translated by +Condé into Spanish. The following stanzas, addressed to a palm-tree, +must be, as is always the case, still more beautiful in the original, +although charming in the Spanish. The monarch of the Western Empire, +after having vanquished his enemies, and pacified his dominions,--beloved +by his subjects and by all who approached him, and possessed of the +resources of science to occupy his mind, was nevertheless unhappy. He +preferred his home in Asia to the splendours of an imperial throne in +such a land as Andalucia. He caused a young palm-tree to be brought from +Syria, and planted in a garden formed by him in the environs of Cordova; +and it was his delight to sit in a tower constructed in the garden, and +gaze at his tree. + +It was to this tree he addressed the lines thus translated:-- + + Tu tambien, insigne palma, + Eres aqui forastera. + De Algarbe las dulces auras + Tu pompa halagan y besan. + En fecundo suelo arraigas, + Y al cielo tu cima elevas, + Tristes lagrimas lloraras, + Si qual io sentir pudieras. + + Tu no sientes contratiempos + Como io de suerte aviesa: + A mi de pena y dolor + Continuas lluvias me annegan. + Con mis lagrimas regue + Las palmas que el Forat riega, + Pero las palmas y el rio + Se olvidan de mis penas. + + Cuando mios infaustos hados, + Y de Al. Abas la fiereza + Mi forzaron de dexar + Del alma las dulces prendas; + A ti de mi patria amada + Ningun recuerda ti queda; + Pero io, triste, no puedo + Dexar de llorar por ella. + +It is probable that on the occasion of the surrender of Cordova to +Ferdinand the Third, the Moors destroyed their palace of Azarah, since +they were desirous of acting in a similar manner at Seville, with regard +to Geber's Tower. Perhaps from disgust at the idea that a monument, the +beauty and grandeur of which had inspired them with a sort of affection, +would be, being gazed at, trodden, and possibly disfigured, (as it +turned out) by those whom they looked upon as barbarians, and who would +not appreciate its perfection, they attempted to introduce a clause into +the conditions of the surrender of Seville, stipulating the destruction +of the tower. + +By way of testifying to the accuracy of the opinion they had formed of +their adversaries, Saint Ferdinand was on the point of agreeing to the +clause: when his son, afterwards his successor, Alonso el Sabio, perhaps +the only Christian present, who felt sufficient interest in a square +mass of masonry, to care how the question was decided, energetically +interfered, affirming that a single brick displaced, should be paid with +the lives of the whole population. + +This most perfect scientific monument left by the Arabs, for the +possession of which, after the architect, Europe is indebted to Alonso +the Tenth, we will presently examine, together with the cathedral, which +was afterwards erected, so as to include it in his plan. + + + + +LETTER XIX + +CATHEDRAL OF SEVILLE. + + +Seville. + +We have visited the most beautiful edifice in Seville; we are now +approaching the most magnificent. The native writers, participating +somewhat in the character attributed to the inhabitants of their +province, sometimes called the Gascony of Spain, declare this cathedral +to be the grandest in the world. This is going too far; setting aside +St. Peter's, and the Santa Maria del Fiore, the style of which renders +the comparison more difficult, the Duomo of Milan, of which this +building appears to be an imitation, must be allowed to be superior to +it, externally at least, if not internally. Had they ranked it as the +finest church out of Italy, they would not have been much in error, for +such it probably is. + +No one in approaching, excepting from the west, would imagine it to be a +Gothic edifice. You perceive an immense quadrangular enclosure, filled +apparently with cupolas, towers, pinnacles of all sorts and styles, but +less of the Gothic than any other. These belong to the numerous +accessory buildings, subsequently annexed to the church; such as +sacristies, chapels, chapter-hall, each subsequent erection having been +designed in a different style. The cathedral is inaccessible on the +south side, that which we first reach in coming from the Alcazar. It is +enclosed here within a long Italian façade of about thirty to forty feet +elevation, ornamented by a row of Ionic pilasters, supporting an elegant +frieze and balustrade. We therefore ascend the raised pavement, which, +bounded by a series of antique shafts of columns, surrounds the whole +enclosure; and having passed down the greater part of the east end, find +a small portal close to the Giralda, which admits to the church through +the court of orange-trees. Before we enter, we will look round on this +view, which possesses more of the Moorish character, than that which +awaits us in the interior. Some idea of the general plan of these +buildings will be necessary, in order that you may perfectly understand +our present point of view. + +I mentioned above, that the general enclosure formed a square. This +square, the sides of which face the four points of the compass, is +divided by a straight line into two unequal parts, one being about a +third wider than the other. The direction of the line is east and west; +to the south of it is the cathedral, to the north, the Moorish court of +orange-trees. The Arab Tower, now called the Giralda, stands in the +north-east angle of the cathedral, and the small door, through which we +have just entered, in the south-eastern angle of the court, is close by +it. + +The court is surrounded by buildings; for besides the church on its +south side, a chapel called the Sagrario, runs down the entire western +end. The east side and half the north are occupied by arcades, which +support the library, the gift of the son of Columbus to the cathedral; +and the remaining half side by a sacristy. The buildings of the east and +north sides lean against the old embattled wall on the outside. The +chapel of the Sagrario to the west is in the Italian style. Avenues of +orange-trees, and a marble fountain of a simple but choice design, are +the only objects which occupy the open space. Throughout it reigns an +eternal gloom, maintained by the frowning buttresses and pinnacles of +the cathedral, which overhang it from the south. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, SEVILLE.] + +A small doorway, near to that by which we entered the court, gives +access to the cathedral at all hours. On entering an almost more than +twilight would confuse the surrounding objects, did it immediately +succeed the sunshine of Andalucia; and were not the transition rendered +gradual to the eye by the deep shades of the orange court. As you +advance towards the centre nave, this darkness aids in producing the +effect of immensity, which is the next idea that presents itself. In +fact the enormous elevation and width of the edifice is such as at first +to overpower the imagination, and to deprive you of the faculty of +appreciating its dimensions. It produces a novel species of giddiness +arising from looking upwards. + +To arrive at the intersection of the principal nave and transept, you +traverse two side naves, both about eighty-five feet in height, and +spacious in proportion. The centre nave is a hundred and thirty-two +feet, but rises at the quadrangle, forming its intersection with the +transept about twenty feet higher. The ceiling here, and over the four +surrounding intercolumniations, is ornamented with a groining of +admirable richness. That of the centre quadrangle is here and there +tinged with crimson and orange tints, proceeding from some diminutive +windows placed between the lower and upper ceilings. + +After having sufficiently examined the upper view, the eye wanders over +the immense vacuum of the transept, and rests at length on the bronze +railings which, on the east, separate you from the high-altar, and on +the west from the choir. These are superb. + +That of the Capilla Mayor rises to an elevation of sixty feet, and is +throughout of the most elaborate workmanship. It is the work of a +Dominican monk, who also executed the two pulpits. The choir forms, as +usual, a sort of saloon, which occupies the centre of the church, that +is, in this instance, two of the five intercolumniations which reach +from the transept to the western portal. Passing round it, in the +direction of the western doors, where the view is more open, the plan +and style of the building are more easily distinguished. They are +remarkably simple. The area is a quadrangle of three hundred and +ninety-eight feet by two hundred and ninety-one, and is divided into +five naves by four rows of pillars, all of about sixty feet elevation. +The width of the centre nave and transept is fifty-nine feet, and the +whole is surrounded by chapels. The distance between the pillars, of +which there are only eight in each row, has the effect of generalizing +the view of the whole edifice, and imparting to it a grandeur which is +not obtained in the cathedral of Toledo, of almost equal dimensions; +while the smaller and less gaudily coloured windows shed a more +religious ray, and are preferable to those of Toledo, which, +magnificent in themselves, attract an undue share of the observation, +instead of blending into one perfect composition of architectural +harmony. + +Immediately above the arches of the principal nave and transept, at a +height of about ninety feet, runs a balustrade, the design of which +consists of a series of pointed arches. Above it are the windows, +reaching nearly to the ceiling. They are painted in rather dark tints, +and afford no more than a sort of _demi-jour_, which at the east end +decreases to twilight. Rather more light is admitted towards the western +extremity, from some windows of plain glass, in the lateral chapels, +without which the pictures they contain could not be viewed; but from +this end the high-altar is scarcely discernible. The simple grandeur of +this view loses nothing by the absence of all ornamental detail: the +portion most ornamented is the pavement, composed of a mosaic of the +richest marbles. About half-way between the portals and the choir, are +inserted two or three large slabs, bearing inscriptions; one of them is +to the memory of Christopher Columbus; another to his son. There are no +other details to draw the attention until we visit the chapels, in which +all the treasures of art are dispersed. A few pictures are scattered +here and there around the eastern part of the building; all of them are +good. A large one of Zurbaran, in the north transept, is a master-piece. +It represents St. Jerome, surrounded by an assembly of monks. + +At the west end of the northernmost nave, the first door opens to a vast +church, called the chapel of the Sagrario, already alluded to as forming +the western boundary of the orange-court. It is nearly two hundred feet +in length; in the Italian style; the orders Doric and Ionic, but loaded +with heavy sculpture in the worst taste. After this a series of chapels, +of a style analogous to the body of the edifice, succeed each other, +commencing with that of San Antonio, and continuing all round the +church. Several of them contain beautiful details of ornament, and +handsome tombs. That of the Kings should be mentioned as an exception, +with regard to the architecture, since its style is the _plateresco_. It +contains the tombs of Alonzo the Tenth, and his Queen Beatrix, with +several others. The most beautiful of these chapels is that of Nuestra +Señora la Antigua, situated on the south side, below the transept. It +forms a square of about thirty feet, and rises to an elevation of +upwards of eighty. The walls are divided into stories and compartments, +and covered, as is also the ceiling, with admirable frescos by Martinez +and Rovera. At a side door leading to the sacristy, are two beautiful +columns of _verde antico_. The high-altar is composed of jasper, from +quarries which existed at the distance of a few leagues from Seville. +The statues are by Pedro Cornejo; and there are handsome tombs let into +the lower part of the walls. Four antique chandeliers, one in each +corner, are designed with uncommon grace and originality. From the +summit of a short column rises a silver stem, from different parts of +which spring flat rods of the same metal, so slight as to bend with the +smallest weight: they are of various lengths, and at the extremity of +each waves an elegantly formed lamp. Each of these clusters assumes a +pyramidal form, and produces a charming effect when lighted up on days +of ceremony,--from their harmonizing with the rest of the decorations of +the chapel, no less than from the elegance of their form. + +Some of the chapels of this side, and east of the transept, communicate +with other buildings, erected subsequently to the principal edifice, and +consequently not comprised in its plan, nor analogous to its style. +Thus, after passing through the chapel called Del Mariscal, situated at +the south-east of the apse, you enter an anteroom, which leads to the +chapter-hall. The anteroom is an apartment of handsome proportions, +covered, in the intervals of a row of Ionic pilasters, with a series of +pieces of sculpture in white marble. The hall itself is magnificent. It +is an oval of fifty-seven feet in length, entirely hung with crimson +velvet enriched with gold embroidery. Another of the side chapels leads +to the smaller sacristy. I call it smaller because it is not so large as +that which adjoins the orange-court; but it is the principal of the two. +It is a superb saloon, upwards of seventy feet in length by about sixty +wide, ornamented with a profusion of rich sculpture. The architect was +Juan de Herrera. + +From the floor to a height of about four feet, a spacious wardrobe, +composed of large mahogany drawers, runs down the two longer sides of +the room. These contain probably the richest collection that exists of +gold and silver embroidered velvets and silks,--brocades--lace--scarfs +and mantles ornamented with precious stones: all these are the ornaments +belonging to altars and pulpits; robes, trains, and vestures of +different sorts, worn on occasions of ceremony by the principal +dignitaries. The cathedral of Seville is said to surpass all others in +these ornaments. + +In this sacristy are contained likewise the treasure of gold and silver +vessels, and basins; innumerable crosses, reliquaries, chalices, boxes, +and candlesticks; and, in an upright mahogany case of about twenty feet +elevation, lined with white silk, the front of which opens like a door, +stands the Custodia--a silver ornament about sixteen feet high, +including its base. On the day of the Corpus Christi, the Host is placed +in this Custodia, and carried in procession through Seville. The silver +of which it is composed weighs seven hundred weight. But it must not be +supposed from this circumstance that the ornament has a heavy +appearance. It is a tapering edifice containing four stories, ornamented +by as many orders of architecture. The general form is circular, +diminishing up to the summit, which supports a single statue. Each story +rests on twenty-four columns, most of which are fluted, and all, +together with their capitals, remarkable for their delicacy of finish. +Among these are numerous statues of saints, in whose costumes precious +stones are introduced. In that of the statue of Faith, which stands in +the centre of the lower story, are some of immense value. This ornament +was the work of Juan de Arfe, the Cellini of Spain. + +But the pictures are the richest treasure of this apartment. It is an +epitome of the Cathedral, which may be called a gallery--one of the +richest that exists--of the paintings of Spanish schools: consequently, +according to the opinion of many--one of the best of all galleries. The +pictures are not in great numbers, but they are well adapted to their +situation, being the largest in dimension, and among the most prominent +in value and merit, that have been produced by their respective +painters. + +By the greater portion of spectators, the Spanish artists, of what may +be called the golden age of painting, will always be preferred to the +Italian; because their manner of treating their subject, appeals rather +to the passions than to the understanding. It is the same quality which +renders the Venetian school more popular than the other schools of +Italy; and the Italian music more attractive than the German--Rossini +than Spohr or Beethoven. I do not mean that the preference will be the +result of choice, in an individual who appreciates the two styles +perfectly; but that the difference I allude to renders the works of the +greatest masters of Italy less easily understood. + +With all the intelligence and taste necessary for the appreciation of a +picture of Raffaelle, many will have had a hundred opportunities of +studying such a picture, and will nevertheless have passed it by, +scarcely noticed; merely, because on the first occasion of seeing it, +they have not immediately caught the idea of the artist, nor entered +sufficiently into his feelings to trace the sparks of his inspiration +scattered over the canvass. How many are there too careless to return to +the charge, and thus to acquire the cultivation necessary to enable them +to judge of such works, who the moment a Murillo, or a Zurbaran meets +their view, will gaze on it with delight, for the simple reason, that it +is calculated to strike the intelligence the least cultivated. + +The Spanish artists usually endeavoured to produce an exact imitation of +material nature; while the Italians aimed at, and attained higher +results. The object of the Spaniards being less difficult of attainment, +the perfection with which they imitated nature passes conception. To +that they devoted all the energies of their genius; while you may search +in vain in the best productions of Italy, not excepting the school of +Venice, the one that most resembles the Spanish,--for anything +approaching their success in that respect. By way of an example, in the +Spasimo of Raffaelle, we trace the operations of the mind, as they +pierce through every feature of every countenance, and the attitude of +every limb throughout the grouping of that great master-piece of +expression; from the brutal impatience of the one, and the involuntary +compassion of the other executioner, up to the intensity of maternal +suffering in the Virgin, and the indescribable combination of heaven and +earth, which beams through the unequalled head of the Christ; but there +is no deception to the eye. No one would mistake any of the figures for +reality; nor exclaim that it steps from the canvass; nor does any one +wish for such an effect, or perceive any such deficiency. + +What, on the contrary, was the exclamation of Murillo before Campana's +Descent from the Cross? This master-piece of Pedro de Campana is seen at +the head of the sacristy of the cathedral. It was so favourite a picture +with Murillo, that he used to pass much of his time every day, seated +before it. On one occasion, his presence being required on an affair of +importance, which he had forgotten, his friends found him at his usual +post before the Descent; when, pointing to the figure of the Christ, he +replied to their remonstrances, "I am only waiting until they have taken +him down." + +Although Murillo admired this perfect representation of material nature, +his own works are exceptions, in fact almost the only exceptions, to +this peculiarity of the Spanish masters. He partakes, indeed, of the +qualities of both schools in an eminent degree. In intellectual +expression and delineation of the operations of the mind, he is superior +to all his countrymen, but inferior to the first Italian painters. In +the material imitation of nature, he is superior to the greater number +of the Italians, but inferior to the other principal Spanish artists. +There is, at Madrid, a Christ on the Cross, of his, in which he has +attempted this effect--an effort he ought rather to have despised. The +picture contains no other object than the figure, and the cross of +admirably imitated wood, on a simple black, or rather dark brown +background, representing complete darkness. After sitting a short time +before it, you certainly feel a sort of uncomfortable sensation, caused +by the growing reality of the pale and tormented carcass; but it is not +to be compared to the Descent of Campana. There the whole group is to +the life, and no darkness called in to aid the effect. The drooping body +is exposed to a powerful light, and hangs its leaden weight on the arms +of those who support it, with a reality perfectly startling. + +This picture is placed in the centre of the upper end of the sacristy, +as being considered the best of those therein contained: but it is not +without rivals. The few paintings placed here are first rate; +particularly the portraits of the two archbishops of Seville, San +Leandro, and San Isidore--two of Murillo's most exquisite productions. +Some of the greatest compositions of this painter are contained in the +chapels we have passed in review, where they serve for altar-pieces, +each filling an entire side of a chapel. Of these large pictures, I +think the best on the side we are visiting is the Saint Francis. The +Saint is represented kneeling to a vision of the Virgin. It may +certainly be ranked among Murillo's best efforts in the style he +employed, when treating these celestial subjects, and which has been +called his vaporous manner. To speak correctly, two of his three manners +are employed in this picture, since the Saint is an instance of that +called his warm manner. + +On the opposite or north side of the cathedral, in the first chapel +after passing the door of the Sagrario, is the San Antonio. This is +probably the greatest work of Murillo in the two styles just mentioned, +and certainly the most magnificent picture contained in the cathedral. +On the lower foreground is the Saint, in adoration before the Christ, +who appears in the centre, surrounded by the Heavenly Host. + +No one but Murillo could ever have thus embodied his conception of a +supernatural vision. On sitting down before this canvass, from which, as +it extends across the whole chapel, no other object can draw off the +attention, you speedily yield to the irresistible power of abstraction, +and are lost in an ecstacy, nearly resembling that which the artist has +sought to represent in the countenance and attitude of his Saint. The +eye wanders in a sort of trance through the glorious assemblage of +Heaven. The whole scene looks real: but it is only on taking time to +study the details that you discover the prodigies of talent displayed in +the drawing and finishing of this picture. An angel, suspended in front +of the lower portion of the group, more especially attracts the +attention. One leg is extended towards the spectator, the foreshortening +of which is a marvel of execution. + +Over the San Antonio, as it does not reach to the ceiling, there is a +smaller picture, representing the Baptism of Christ, also by Murillo. In +a chapel at the south-west angle of the church, there are several fine +paintings by Luis de Vargas, one of the founders of the school of +Seville. + +In the choir, the collection of books for the chanting services is worth +seeing. Of these immense folios, enclosed in massive covers, bound with +a profusion of wrought metal mostly silver--may be counted upwards of a +hundred. They are filled with paintings, infinite in minuteness and +beauty. For the performances of the daily services and all duties, +ordinary and extraordinary, within this edifice, more than eight hundred +persons are employed. Five hundred masses are recited each day at the +different altars: all of which taking place during the early part of the +day, an idea may be formed of the business which goes on. Of the six or +seven organs, I have heard three playing at the same time in different +parts of the church; but so widely separated, as by no means to +interfere with each other's harmony. One of them was one of the two +great organs which face each other over the choir. These two play a duet +once a year, on the day of the Corpus. The effect they produce is not so +powerful as that produced at Toledo, but far more beautiful. At Toledo +the two which correspond to these, are assisted on that occasion by a +third, as powerful as both the others united, placed over the portal of +the south transept, at an elevation of about seventy feet from the +ground. + +Among the ceremonies of the cathedral of Seville is one sufficiently +unique to be deserving of notice. _El baile de los seis_ (dance of the +six), is performed by eight youths--probably by six originally--every +evening during the feast of the Conception. It takes place in front of +the high-altar, on which her statue is placed on that occasion. The +service is one of especial solemnity; and, as such, accompanied, +unfortunately as on all such occasions, by an orchestra of violins, to +the exclusion of the organs. The singing commences at four o'clock in +the afternoon, in the choir, and continues until half-past six, when all +move in procession through the great railing, across the transept, and +ascend the flight of steps which lead to the Capilla Mayor. Here they +take their seats according to rank, on benches placed in rows from east +to west, fronting a space which is left open down the centre, in front +of the altar. The orchestra occupies a corner near the railing; and on +the two front benches are seated--four facing four--the eight youths, +dressed in the ancient Spanish costume, all sky blue silk and white +muslin, and holding each his hat, also light blue, with a flowing white +feather. + +The chorus now recommences, but speedily drops; when the orchestra +sounds a beautiful air in the waltz measure. This is played once by the +instruments alone, and joined the second time by the voices of the eight +boys, or youths of the age of sixteen to eighteen; who, after having +accompanied a short time, start to their legs, and continue in the same +strain. At the next reprise they all, as if by word of command, place +their hats on their heads, and one or two minutes after, the chant still +continuing, advance, and meet in the centre, then return each to his +place; advance a second time, and turn round each other, using the waltz +step. + +After singing and dancing for about a quarter of an hour, the voices are +exchanged for the sounds of castagnettes, which they have held all this +time in their hands, and the measure becomes more animated; and thus +they terminate the performance. The same ceremony is repeated each night +of the seven; only varying the air of the waltz, of which they have two. + +This ceremony, now belonging exclusively to the cathedral of Seville, +was originally performed in some other cathedrals; but has been +gradually laid aside in all the others, having been found to occasion +irreverent behaviour among a portion of the spectators. It was +originally introduced among the observances in honour of the anniversary +of the Conception, as a natural manifestation of joy; and such a genuine +Spanish bolero would have been: but the slow time of the music, and the +measured movements, adopted for the purpose of suiting the performance +to the solemnity of the place, have changed the nature of the dance, and +deprived it of everything approaching to cheerfulness. + + + + +LETTER XX. + +SPANISH BEGGARS. HAIRDRESSING. THE GIRALDA. CASA DE PILATOS. +MONASTERIES. ITALICA. + + +Seville. + +Mendicity is one of the Curiosities--and not the least picturesque +one--of this antique country. There should be a Mendicity Society for +its preservation, together with other legacies of the middle ages. An +entertaining book might be filled with its annals and anecdotes. + +Nowhere, I should think, can beggary be a more lucrative calling. The +convents having been the inexhaustible providence of these tribes, on +their suppression the well-born and bred Spaniards consider the charge +to have devolved upon them, in the absence of all possible legislation +on the subject: and few, especially of the fair sex, turn a deaf ear to +the mute eloquence of the open hand. Even a stranger, if possessed of an +ear, resists with difficulty the graceful appeal of the well trained +proficient: _Noble caballero, un ochavito por Dios._--A blind girl made +no request; but exclaimed--"Oh that the Virgin of Carmen may preserve +your sight!" + +The mendicants are classified, and assume every form of external +humanity. Being in the coach-office near the Plaza del Duque, a tall +well-dressed man, dangling a dark kid glove, entered, and, walking up to +the book-keeper, after having carefully closed the door, made some +communication to him in a low voice. The other replied in a similar +tone, and they parted with mutual bows. I was puzzled on the man's +turning to me and observing that the beggars were very annoying in +Seville; but still certain my conjecture could not but be erroneous, I +said "you don't mean to say that your acquaintance"--"Oh, no +acquaintance; I never saw him before: he only came to beg." + +This species of _cavallero_ pauper should by no means be encouraged; he +is not of the picturesque sort. Nowhere do the wretches look their +character better than at Seville; as all admirers of Murillo can +testify, without consulting any other nature than his canvass. But these +consider they confer a sort of obligation on the individual they +condescend to apply to. Nothing can exceed their astonishment and +indignation when refused. Their great highway is the superb polished +mosaic marble of the Cathedral; where they divide the authority with the +embroidered dignitaries of the choir. It is useless to hope for an +instant's leisure for the contemplation of this unique temple, until you +have disposed of its entire population of ragged despots. + +A sort of chivalrous etiquette is observed, in virtue of which a female +chorus is the first to form your escort from pillar to pillar. These +dismissed, you are delivered over to the barefooted Murillos. There are +two modes of escape. The rich man should go in with his two hands filled +with coin, and distribute to all, even to many who will return for a +second contribution before he has done. But if economical, you may +attain the same end, and more permanently, by sacrificing four or five +days to walking up and down the nave, without looking at anything, but +simply undergoing the persecution of the mob. After the fourth visit you +will be left in peace. + +These counsels I am competent to give you from dreadful experience; more +dreadful from my having pursued a middle course. To one barefooted and +rotten-scalped embryo brigand I only gave a two-_quarto_ piece +(halfpenny) about equal in real consequence to twopence in England. If +you have ever seen, in the era of mail coaches, the look of quiet +surprise on the countenance of the well-fed charioteer, who, having, +after the sixth or seventh stage, opened the door, and muttered from +behind his _cache-nez_ the usual "coachman, gen'lemen" received a +long-searched-for deprecatory sixpence from some careful knight with a +false shirt-collar--you have noticed the self-same look, which was +leisurely transferred by the urchin from the piece of copper in the open +palm to my face, and back to the piece of copper. + +Instead, however, of restoring it to me, his indignation seemed to +inspire him with a sudden resolution. He rushed to a kneeling Señorita a +few paces distant, and interrupting her devotions by a pull at the side +of her mantilla, he showed the coin in the open hand, while with the +other he pointed to the culprit. If he meditated revenge, he should have +made another choice, instead of deranging a garment, from the folds of +which a real Andalucian mouth and pair of eyes, turning full on me, +aimed a smile which, I need not inform you, was not dear at two +_quartos_. + +Could such a smile have been natural, and the expression of mere +curiosity, or was it intended for a death-wound, dealt for another's +vengeance? and did the velvet language of those eyes signify a horrible +"Pallas te hoc vulnere," in favour of the ragamuffin I had offended? At +all events, the incident lost him a more munificent remuneration, by +driving me from the spot, and expelling from my head, a project +previously formed, of inviting him to my _fonda_ to be sketched. + +With regard to the oft and still recurring subject of Spanish beauty, +you are hereby warned against giving ear to what may be said by +tourists, who, by way of taking a new view of an old subject, simply +give the lie to their predecessors. It is true, that in the central +provinces, the genuine characteristic Moro-Iberian beauty is rare, and +that there is little of any other sort to replace it; but this is not +the case with Andalucia, where you may arrive fresh from the perusal of +the warm effusions of the most smitten of poets, and find the Houris of +real flesh and blood, by no means overrated. + +One of their peculiar perfections extends to all parts of the Peninsula. +This is the hair; everywhere your eye lights upon some passing specimen +of these unrivalled masses of braided jet; at which not unfrequently +natives of the same sex turn with an exclamation--Que pelo tan hermoso! + +I surprised the other day a village matron, whose toilette, it being a +holiday afternoon, was in progress in no more secluded a _tocador_ than +the middle of the road. The rustic lady's-maid (whether the practice be +more or less fashionable I know not) had placed on a stool, within reach +of her right hand as she stood behind her seated mistress, a jug of +fresh water. This did she lift, just as I approached, up to her mouth, +into which she received as large a portion of its contents as could be +there accommodated; while with her left hand she grasped the extremity +of a mass of silken hair, black as the raven's wing, and an ell in +length. Both hands now, stroking down the mass, spread it out so as to +present a horizontal surface of as large an extent as possible, when, +suddenly, from the inflated cheeks of the abigail, re-issued with a loud +sound the now tepid liquid, and bathed the entire surface, which it +seemed to render, if possible, still more glossy than before. The rest +of the duty of the hands appeared to consist in repeatedly separating +and replacing the handfuls, until the same proceeding was reacted. + +The entrance to the Giralda is outside the cathedral. Before we make the +ascent, we will walk to the extremity of the Moorish enclosure of the +orange-court, along the raised pavement which surrounds the whole. At +the angle there is an antique shaft of granite, higher than the rest of +those placed at equal distances along the edge of the pavement. From +that point the proportions of the tower are seen to advantage, while you +are at the same time sufficiently near to observe the details of the +carving, and of the windows, with their delicately formed columns of +rare marbles; and to lose in a great measure the effect of the +subsequent additions, which surmount and disfigure the work of Geber. + +The Arabian part of the building is a square of about forty-five feet, +and measures in elevation four times its width. The ornaments are not +exactly alike on all the four sides. On the north side (our present +view) the tracery commences at a height of eighty feet, up to which +point the wall of brick is perfectly plain and smooth, with only the +interruption of two windows, placed one above the other in the centre. +The ornament, from its commencement to the summit, is divided into two +lofty stories, surmounted by a third, of half the height of one of the +others. The two first are divided vertically into three parts by narrow +stripes of the plain wall. The centre portions contain two windows in +each story, one over the other, making, with the two in the lower +portion, six altogether, which are at equal distances from each other. +The form of these windows is varied, and in all uncommonly elegant; some +are double, with a marble column supporting their two arches, and all +are ornamented round the arches with beautiful tracery, and furnished +with marble balconies. At one of the balconies, the Muezzin, in +Mahometan times was accustomed to present himself at each of the hours +appointed for prayer, and to pronounce the sentences ordained by that +religion for calling the people. The half-story at the summit is +ornamented with a row of arches, supported by pilasters. + +On the top of the tower were seen originally, four gilded balls of +different sizes, one over the other, diminishing upwards; the iron bar +on which they were fixed, was struck by lightning, and gave way, leaving +the balls to roll over; since which period they were never restored to +their place. + +The additional buildings were not erected until the seventeenth century. +They are not in themselves inelegant, with the exception of the portion +immediately rising from the old tower, and containing the bells. This +portion is of the same width as the tower, and appears to weigh it down +with its heavy effect; on the summit of the whole, at about three +hundred feet from the ground, is a colossal statue of bronze, +representing Faith, holding in one hand a shield, and in the other an +olive-branch. By means of the shield, the statue obeys the movements of +the wind, and thus gives the name of Giralda (weather-cock) to the +tower. + +An interior tower, rather more than twenty feet square, runs up the +whole height of the Moorish portion of the building; between which and +the external walls an easy ascent is contrived on an inclined plane. The +necessity of introducing light throughout the ascent accounts for the +different elevation of the windows and ornaments of the different sides; +but the architect has so managed this difficulty, that no bad effect is +produced in the external view. At the lower part of the tower the ascent +is sufficiently wide to admit of the passage of two men on horseback +abreast; but it becomes narrower as it approaches the summit. Queen +Christina is said to have been drawn up in a small carriage. The walls, +both of the inner and outer tower, increase in thickness as they rise, +and as the ascending plane decreases in width: a plan which appears +opposed to the principle usually adopted by modern architects. + +It is known that Geber was the architect of the Giralda, but no +certainty exists respecting its date. The Spanish antiquarian Don +Rodrigo Caro supposes it to have been erected during the reign of +Benabet Almucamus, King of Seville, shortly before the appearance in +Spain of the Almoravides; but this is no more than a conjecture, founded +on the supposed wealth of that King, who possessed larger states than +his successors, and who paid no tribute to the sovereigns of Castile. + +Immediately over the highest story of the Moorish tower is the belfry. +The bells are suspended on the centre of revolving beams, which traverse +the open arches of the four faces of the tower. They are consequently in +full view, as they throw their somersets and send forth their lively +clatter on a _dia de fiesta_. + +Their effect is very original, and as unlike as possible to the +monotonous and melancholy cadence of an English peal. None of them are +deep-toned nor solemn, but all high and sharp: so that being let loose +in merry disorder, and without tune, they somehow appear to harmonize +with the brilliant skies, just as the descending ding-dong in England +suits the gloom of the northern heavens. Leave Seville, and never shall +their tones steal on your memory without your being transported into a +blaze of bright sunshine. + +In Spain the houses of the grandees are not called palaces, as those of +the same rank in Italy are usually termed. There is not even an +intermediate term, such as mansion,--still less the hall--abbey, or +castle. They have the last, but only applied in cases in which it is +correctly and legitimately applicable. The Arab expression _alcazar_, +composed of the article _al_ and _cazar_, is so like the Spanish _la +casa_ (the house), that, not having at hand a professor of Arabic to +consult, I will risk the assertion that it bore the same meaning; +notwithstanding the opinion of several French writers who translate it +_château_. Chenier, author of the history of Morocco, derives it from +the word Caissar, which he considers synonymous with Cæsar: but this +derivation appears to admit of much doubt, as the word would signify the +Emperor, instead of his residence. Supposing it to signify the house, it +must no doubt have meant the principal, or royal house. At present the +two words are admitted into the Spanish language as one, which is +applied indiscriminately to royal town-residences, whether castles or +not, as well as the term _palacio_. But a private residence of whatever +extent is modestly termed a house. + +In this instance, as in many others, the proud contempt of high-sounding +phraseology is common to Spain and England, where some of the most +palace-like habitations are called Wentworth House, Hatfield House, +Burleigh House: the very porters' lodges being sometimes such edifices +as would claim the title of _château_ in some other countries. But this +same haughty modesty is rather individual than collective, and does not +prevail as applied to towns and cities. In public acts and addresses, +and even in the most homely precautionary warnings placarded at the +corners of streets or promenades, the form used is,--"The constitutional +Alcalde of this heroic and very invincible town of Madrid, or Seville, +forbids, or orders, &c.;" and still more splendid epithets are found for +the nation in general. + +I don't know whether it has occurred to you that this progressive +dereliction of consistency is universal in human nature, although it +assumes a variety of forms. In the present instance modesty commences at +home, as they say charity should. + +By the way, if charity should commence at home, together with the other +affections of the heart, such as patriotism, then did the first Brutus +make a mistake. If, on the contrary, his merit was great in sacrificing +his son to his nation, it follows, that, in causing his entire nation to +be butchered the first time they were guilty of any encroachment on the +rights of the rest of the world, his glory would have increased in the +ratio of one to some millions. + +He either acted on a principle of justice, or preferred the applause of +his compatriots to the affection of his son. If, therefore, an +opportunity was ever afforded him of doing the world the above-mentioned +act of justice at the expense of his countrymen, and he abstained from +it,--it being impossible to suppose a Roman republican capable of a +dereliction of principle--it is clear that he preferred the applause of +his nation to that of the rest of the world; and all becomes a question +of taste. But what, you exclaim, has the first or any other Brutus to do +with Pilate's house, the description of which is preceded by this long +introduction? And was not his murder of his son benevolence itself, +compared to the infliction of these digressions on your patience? + +The Casa de Palatos is a palace belonging to the Duke of Medina Coeli. +One of his ancestors is said to have built it in exact imitation of +Pontius Pilate's palace in Jerusalem, and to have obtained possession of +a large quantity of the ornaments and portable furniture belonging to +the ancient building, which, on the completion of his edifice at +Seville, he established, each object in the place corresponding to that +which it originally occupied. + +A lofty wall, filling the side of the small square, called the Plaza de +Pilatos, and surmounted by a balustrade, forms the outer enclosure of +the palace. You enter through a large plain arched doorway, and pass +through a court, containing the porter's house, and other out-buildings +devoid of ornament. A small door on the left leads from this enclosure +to the principal court. Here you might imagine yourself still in the +Alcazar. The ornament is in the same style; only the arcades are +inferior in lightness and beauty. It contains, however, a fountain very +superior to that of the principal court of the Alcazar. + +At the four angles are colossal statues of white marble, representing +deities of the Grecian mythology. They are antique, and of Roman origin. +Under the arcades a series of busts of the Roman emperors, are placed +round the walls; the greater part of them are also antique. On one side +of this court is the chapel, very small, and entirely covered with +Arabesque ornament. At one side is placed erect against the wall a black +cross, said to be a facsimile imitation of that actually carried by our +Saviour, which occupied a similar situation in the palace at Jerusalem. +Its length is about seven feet, and the thickness of the wood about four +inches by two. Opposite to the cross is a Madonna by Raffaelle. As no +light enters the chapel, excepting through a small door, and that placed +under the arcades, and the picture is hung at a considerable height, it +can only be examined by the aid of a ladder, which is kept near it, and +then only very imperfectly. At the time the chapel was habitually used, +it probably contained candles always burning. + +The great staircase is very ornamental and leads to several handsome +suites of rooms. There is a colonnade on one side of the garden, under +which lies a valuable collection of antique busts, columns, capitals, +and fragments of all sorts, "in most admired disorder." The proprietor +never visits this residence, and every part of it is in a very neglected +state. + +Seville lays claim to no less a founder than Hercules. A magnificent +temple dedicated to him is said to have existed on the spot at present +occupied by the parish church of San Nicholas. Near it a statue of the +demigod has been discovered, together with six columns, four of which +are sunk so deeply in the earth that they cannot be brought to light. +The other two are placed on lofty pedestals, and adorn the largest of +the promenades of Seville, that called the Alameda. One of them is +surmounted by the statue mentioned above, and the other by one of Julius +Cæsar. Venus is also stated to have shared with Hercules the devotions +of the Sevillanos. The existence of her worship in ancient times is +placed beyond a doubt by the well authenticated martyrdom of Saints +Justa and Rufina, condemned for refusing to do honour to the rites of +that goddess, and to figure in her processions. + +These two martyrs to the Christian faith have pursued, on various +subsequent occasions, a conduct calculated to afford a degree of +advantage to an adversary, should he presume to accuse them of renegade +propensities. They have manifested themselves determined protectors of +the Arab tower, on every occasion of its being threatened with danger. +Numerous instances are on record; the most remarkable of which, is one +that has given rise to much controversy, and employed in more recent +times the researches of learned men. The tradition states, that, during +an earthquake, which took place in the year 1504, and of which a vivid +description may be found at the end of a book, called the Regla Vieja, +which exists in the archives of the cathedral--the two virgins were seen +to support the tower and prevent it from falling, surrounding it with +their arms, one on each side. It is also related that, on the occasion +of a previous earthquake, that of the year 1396, voices were heard in +the air, articulated by demons, crying, "Throw it down, throw it down;" +and that others replied, "No, we cannot, for those villanous saints, +Justa and Rufina, are guarding it." For these reasons it is usual, in +paintings representing the Giralda, to place the figures of the two +virgin Saints supporting it, one on either side; and a small model thus +supported by images of the two martyrs, executed in wood, is carried in +the principal religious processions. In all these representations, the +figures stand rather taller than the tower. + +The hospital of La Caridad is one of the principal attractions to +strangers at Seville; for in its chapel is contained the picture, which +passes for the master-piece of Murillo. The chapel is narrow and lofty, +and the picture placed as near as possible to the ceiling. A sight of it +can only be obtained at an angle of about twenty degrees. But the aching +of the neck is unheeded during the examination of this superb picture. +It is called Las Aguas, the Waters. Moses has just struck the rock, and +stands in a simple and dignified attitude. In the complete contentment +of his countenance there may be traced a mingled expression of pity and +gratitude, as he looks on the scene which follows his action. The artist +has given proof of consummate talent in the choice and treatment of his +subject; which afforded him a variety of grouping, of expression, and of +attitude, of which few were capable of taking better advantage. + +This picture is a specimen of his natural style, and its success is +considered, and I think justly, superior to that of any other of his +works. The imitation of material nature is here carried to as great +perfection as in many of his paintings; while at the same time nothing +can surpass the poetry of the composition, nor the exquisitely +harmonious grouping of the men and animals. In this last quality, +Murillo is certainly unequalled. He seems also in this instance, to have +reached the utmost limits of art in the expression of the countenances, +throughout the different groups, whether employed in offering silent +thanksgivings, or entirely absorbed in the eager effort to obtain for +their parched lips a draught of the bright liquid. In the feeling +displayed in these instances, and so well represented, there is, it is +true, nothing elevated, but still it is feeling; and its materiality is +amply made amends for, by the chief personage of the scene, in whose +countenance nothing but the sublime can be traced. + +Had Murillo not painted this picture and the Saint Elizabeth of Hungary, +Spanish art must have contented itself with the second rank, and Raphael +would have continued without a rival. These pictures occasion regret +that such genius should have employed itself during a long period, on +works of a different sort. The San Antonio and a few others, were no +doubt productions worthy of the painter of the Aguas, and a hundred or +two others are magnificent paintings; but the time employed on some of +these, and on a still greater number of less prominent merit, would have +been more profitably devoted to the production of two or three which +might have ranked with these giant creations of his talent. + +In viewing either of these compositions, the other speedily becomes +present to the imagination, and forces you to draw a comparison between +them. They have a sort of affinity in their subject as well as in their +style. The sufferers of the St. Elizabeth, occupied with their torments +and their gratitude, answer to those of the Aguas, engrossed also with +almost parallel feelings. The Moses, tranquil and erect in the midst of +the action which surrounds him, is the exact pendant of the majestic +figure and compassionate countenance of the youthful princess, +exercising her saintly charities. These pictures ought to be companions +in the same gallery, were it possible for two such works to find their +way into one and the same apartment. But that would be a consummation as +hopeless as finding St. Peter's and the Duomo of Milan in the same town; +Naples and Seville in one province, a London and a Paris in one country, +an Ariosto and a Byron in the same language. It has more than once +occurred to me, since I have seen these two pictures, that were +Raphael's Spasimo and Transfiguration placed on one side of a room, and +these two on the other, and the choice offered me which pair I would +possess, I should never be able to come to a decision. + +Another large picture by Murillo, the multiplying of the Loaves in the +Desert, is suspended opposite the Aguas, and at the same elevation. On +attempting to examine it, you are forcibly reminded by certain acute +sensations in the region of the neck, of the unnatural position it has +so long maintained, and you leave this picture, together with two +others, placed near the entrance of the chapel, for a subsequent visit. + +In the church of the Faubourg Triana, on the right hand after passing +the bridge, are some excellent pictures, particularly a Conception by +Murillo. The multitude of paintings left by this artist is incredible, +when to all those scattered through Spain, France, and England, are +added those preserved in this his native town. Almost all the good +houses in Seville contain collections of pictures; and all the +collections have their Murillos. There are no fewer than sixteen in the +gallery of the Canon, Don Manuel Cepero; but this is the largest of the +private collections, and the best, as it ought to be, since it is +contained in Murillo's house. It is the residence occupied by him during +the latter part of his life, and in which he died. Its dimensions and +distribution are handsome. At the back of it there is a garden of +limited extent, but in which not an inch of space is thrown away. Where +there remains no room for choice flowers and orange trees, the walls are +painted to prolong the illusion. The Canon possesses also several good +paintings by Italian masters. I counted likewise four Rembrandts, and +two of Rubens. Among the other private collections, that of the Alcalde +Don Pedro Garcia is one of the richest; it contains a Santa Barbara of +Cano, an exquisite picture. A Saint Joseph by Murillo, in the collection +of the French Consul (a native of Seville) is admirable. + +In most of the churches there is sufficient of this sort of attraction +to make them worth a visit. In the convents nothing is left; in fact +they no longer exist as convents. There may be one or two remaining in +Seville, but I did not hear of them. The monastery of Jeronimites, and +the Chartreuse--both situated in the environs--were the most +considerable religious establishments of Seville. They are converted, +one into a school, and the other into a porcelain manufactory. This +last, the Chartreuse, contains in its church and refectory, plentiful +traces of its former magnificence. An Englishman has purchased the +monastery with three or four acres of ground, containing the immediate +dependencies; and he is occupied with the labours which necessarily +precede its appearance in its new character, replacing the butteries, +kitchens, storehouses, and cells, by rows of pudding-shaped +baking-houses. + +He has, however, spared the chapel, which is to continue in its former +state. All the stalls, the altar, and other immoveable furniture, remain +as he found them. The pictures and statues had of course been +previously removed. The woodwork is inimitable--the best I have seen in +Spain; it would be impossible in painting to represent with more +delicacy, the very texture of the drapery, the very veins of the hands, +and hair of the beards--of figures of a quarter the natural dimensions. +You are filled with astonishment, that the infinite patience necessary +for this mechanical labour should have accompanied the genius which +conceived and executed the incomparable figures and heads. The +refectory, of which the ceiling is the principal ornament, is to be the +great show-room for the display of the china. The fortunate manufacturer +inhabits, with his family, the prior's residence--one of the most +elegant habitations in the world: surrounding a court, which contains of +course its white marble fountain and colonnades: and he is in treaty for +the purchase of the orange-grove, the park of the monastery. This +pleasure-ground is ornamented here and there with Kiosks, from which are +obtained views of Seville, and the intervening Guadalquivir. + +On the confiscation of this monastery, several magnificent pictures +disappeared, a few of which have since been placed in the cathedral. Two +alabaster monuments, belonging to the family of Medina Cæli, were also +removed; they are placed in a church at present under repair. They are +erect, and fit into the wall; measuring about forty feet in height. +Their upper portion is adorned with several well-executed small statues. + +The other convent--that dedicated to S. Geronimo, is situated on the +opposite side of the river, about a mile higher up. It is not so +beautiful as the Cartuja, but on a grander scale. The principal court is +magnificent; it is surrounded with upper and lower arcades, respectively +of the Ionic and Doric orders: the apartments and church are of +corresponding extent; but have either been deprived of their ornaments, +or were originally but sparingly decorated. A ci-devant governor of +Seville--a general officer, very distinguished as a linguist, has turned +schoolmaster, and taken up his abode here. The day of my visit happened +to be the general's birthday, and a scene of much festivity presented +itself. The schoolmaster's successor in his former post at Seville, had +arrived, attended by the band of a cavalry regiment; and the great court +having been converted into a ball-room, the marble arcades were made to +ring with the thrilling cadences of the hautbois and clarionette--by way +of a fitting afterpiece to the tragic chants of former days. + +The relatives and friends of the students were present, so that the +youthful dancers were well-provided with partners. The performances were +French quadrilles, English hornpipes, German waltzes, Russian mazurkas, +and Spanish fandangos. I had arrived too late for the first part of the +entertainment, which consisted of a bull-fight, for which a temporary +arena had been enclosed. The bulls were what are called _novillos_--that +is, scarcely more than calves; as the full-grown animals would have been +more than a match for their juvenile antagonists. + +The ruins of the Roman city of Italica, to which I have already alluded, +are situated four miles from Seville in ascending the river--and on the +opposite bank. The whole town is underground, with the exception of a +few houses in the part in which excavations have been made, and of the +amphitheatre which occupies an eminence. No notice was taken in modern +times of the existence of this buried town, until towards the end of the +last century, when the remains of the amphitheatre, the only portion of +the ruins which were visible, drew the attention of travellers: and the +authorities of Seville received orders to commence excavating. The +search yielded a large quantity of valuable remains; a temple was +discovered, in the neighbourhood of which were found several statues and +capitals of columns. A choice was made of the objects in the best state +of preservation, which were forwarded to Madrid in order to form a +museum. Large quantities of coins were also sent, and collections of +household utensils, and ornaments. The Arabs, who did not consider these +Roman relics worthy objects of antiquarian research, nevertheless had +either discovered and laid open a large portion of the town, or were +themselves its destroyers. From it they extracted the large quantities +of marble columns and slabs with which Seville is filled. The mutilated +statues, together with several funereal monuments, found in later times, +and not considered deserving of the journey to Madrid, have been +deposited in a large room in the Alcazar of Seville, where they are now +exhibited. + +No record exists of the foundation of Italica. Its annals are traced to +the time of Scipio Africanus, who, on the completion of his conquest of +Spain, and the final expulsion of the Carthaginians, finding himself +embarrassed by the number of wounded and sick among his troops, +established them in this town under the protection of a garrison. He +gave to the town its name of Italica,[12] its previous name being +Sancius: the real situation of Italica has been the subject of much +controversy. Like the Grecian cities, which claimed each to be the +birthplace of Homer, several of the towns in the neighbourhood of +Seville are candidates for the honour of being representatives of the +ancient Italica; but ample proof exists of the identity of these ruins +with that city.[13] The Historia general, written by Alonso el Sabio, +book 1., chap, XV., speaks of Italica as a place of much importance in +ancient times, in allusion to the invasion of a people called the +Almunizes. He adds, in the antiquated Spanish of his time, "Las nuevas +fueron por todas las tierras de como aquellas gentes avian ganado a +España, e todos los de las islas quel oyeron crecieron les corazones por +fazer otro tal, e ayuntaron muy grandes navios, e vinieronse para +España, e entraron por cuatro partes. Los que entraron por Cadiz +vinieron Guadalquibir arriba, e llegaron a Italica e los de la villa +salieron e lidiaron con ellos, e los de fuera entraron con ellos de +vuelta por medio de la villa, e mataron los a todos, e ganaron la +villa." It is not clear what invasion is here alluded to. + +The town of Italica was one of the six or seven in these provinces which +possessed the title of _municipia_; a superior one to that of _colonia_, +from its involving the privilege of retaining its ancient laws and +customs, while on the colonies those of Rome were imposed. It was among +the cities which sheltered some of the earliest converts to +Christianity. Its first bishop was the martyr Saint Geruncio, put to +death in prison. The prison, being considered sanctified, from its +containing the saint's remains, became subsequently the resort of pious +votaries from all parts of the province. In the Mozarabic ritual there +is a hymn for the day of this saint, one of the stanzas of which fixes +the epoque of his life and martyrdom, at that of the apostles.[14] + +The centurion Cornelius, mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles, as +converted by the preaching of St. Peter, was, it is said, a native of +this city, and commanded a cohort raised in his native place. + +The date of the destruction of Italica, is as uncertain as that of its +origin. The fact of its existence during almost the entire period of the +Gothic dominion, is established, by the presence of its bishops being +recorded at the different councils. It is conjectured that its +destruction was the work of the Arabs, who were no sooner in possession +of Seville, than they considered it imprudent to allow so large a town +to be in the hands of enemies in their immediate neighbourhood. This +supposition of Spanish antiquaries seems hazarded without sufficient +reflection; since, in the first place, had the occupants of Italica +occasioned the Arabs any uneasiness, nothing was easier than to occupy +the place themselves; and secondly, the ruins bear strong symptoms of +having been reduced to their present state by some convulsion of nature, +rather than by human agency: not to mention the coins discovered in +large quantities, which would not have been neglected by human +destroyers. It is not likely that the destruction of so considerable a +place by the conquerors of the province, at the time they were too few +to defend it, would have been overlooked by their historians--who make +no allusion to the event. + +The present appearance is that of a green undulating hill, which no one +would imagine to be composed of the remains of streets, palaces, +temples, and market-places. The upper portion only of the amphitheatre +remains above-ground. Its form is slightly oval, nearly approaching to a +circle. The greatest diameter is three hundred and twenty-five feet. It +has twenty rows of seats, half of which are buried; each seat is two +feet and a half in depth, and two in height. Part of the Podium remains; +and enough of the entrance, to distinguish that it consisted of three +large arches. It was constructed with Roman solidity. Nothing less than +an earthquake could have toppled over the masses of masonry, which +appear in their confusion like solid rocks. A very small portion of the +ruins has been explored: and part of that, for want of being +sufficiently cleared out, is again buried in earth, and the work is +discontinued. The objects now above-ground, consist of five or six +tessalated floors, two of which have been considered of sufficient value +to be walled in, and locked up, but without being roofed. + +These ruins are well worth a visit, although the road to them from +Seville, bears terrible symptoms of having been constructed before +Macadam's day; perhaps even before that of the Scipios. + +At the distance of a few hundred yards from the nearest portion of the +ruined town is situated the village of Santi-ponce, in which is the +convent of S. Isidoro, of the order of St. Jerome. The church contains +the tombs of Don Alonzo Perez de Guzman, surnamed the Good, and of his +wife Doña Maria Alonzo Coronel, founders of the ducal house of Medina +Sidonia. This family obtained from Ferdinand the Fourth, a grant of +Santi-ponce and old Seville (Italica), with the district, and temporal +and spiritual jurisdiction. Don Sancho had already rewarded the services +and tried fidelity of Perez de Guzman by presenting him with the town of +Medina Sidonia. An anecdote is told of him worthy of a Roman republican. +Being governor of Tarifa under Sancho the Fourth, he had to defend the +town against the Infant, Don Juan, who had revolted against his brother. +This prince, learning that a child of Guzman was in his power, being at +nurse in the environs of the town, sent for it; and, presenting himself +before the walls, declared to the governor that he would kill the child, +if the town were not immediately surrendered. Guzman replied by drawing +his sword, and throwing it down to the prince, who had the barbarity to +order the infant to be murdered before his father's eyes. + + + + +LETTER XXI. + +PRIVATE HOUSES, AND LOCAL CUSTOMS IN SEVILLE. + + +Seville. + +The greater number of private houses are situated in an interminable +labyrinth of winding streets, between the Calle de la Sierpe, and Plaza +de San Francisco and the city wall, which connects the Aqueduct of +Carmona with the Alcazar. It is the South-eastern half of the city. To +the west of the Calle de la Sierpe there are also a few streets +containing private residences, but they are not in so large a +proportion. Some of the most elegant are, however, on this side; which +being less Moorish and more modern, is less chary of its attractions, +and allows a part of its decoration to enliven the external façades; +while its spacious doorways frequently open to the view of the passer-by +a gay perspective of gardens and courts. + +The sunny balcony, crowded with a crimson forest of cactuses, is not +more attractive to the sight, than the more mysterious vista beneath +it, of retreating colonnades, mingled with orange and pomegranate trees, +through which the murmur of the fountain is scarcely audible. Few cities +present more charms to the wanderer than one in which the houses offer a +combination so luxurious as is met with in the greater number of those +of Seville. The cool summer rooms opening into the court, in which the +drawing-room furniture is arranged on all sides of a fountain, +plentifully supplied from the aqueduct of Carmona: and, on the upper +floor, the winter apartments, chosen from their being better lighted, +for the deposit of a collection of pictures and these almost always +excellent,--and opening to the gallery; to which, during this season, +the furniture having been removed from below, is placed, together with +the work frames and portable musical instruments, on the side exposed to +the sun. One sees these houses and their amiable and happy-looking +inhabitants, and imagines there is no life to be compared to it. Yet the +experiment may be made, and fail to answer the expectations of the +stranger, who, confident in his discovery of the road to happiness, may +have pitched his tent in the midst of these bewitching regions. + +Can it be fatality--or is it essential in human nature, to find ever the +least felicity there, where it looks for the greatest? The experiment, +I say, was made. An Englishman, possessing every advantage of taste, +talent, and wealth, took up his residence here, resolved to devote the +remainder of his days to the peaceable enjoyments of a literary and +social life. Thanks to his literary propensities, we are enabled to +judge of the result of the trial. In a book published by the person to +whom I allude, we find that no one could be less satisfied with his lot. +Seville and the Sevillanos meet with no mercy at his hands, and must, if +we may judge by his dislike of them, have rendered his life a burden. + +This, however, is a single example, and insufficient to deter others +from the attempt. It may be that this individual had not entered fully +into the spirit of Andalucian existence. Every detail of life being here +adapted to the place and its customs and climate, no custom can be erred +against with impunity--that is, without the forfeit of some +corresponding advantage. + +Seville presents two so different aspects during the two opposite +seasons of the year, that to be well understood it should be visited at +both. During the winter, the existence does not materially differ from +that of the inhabitants of most other European towns; excepting that the +intercourse of society is subjected to less formality. Cards of +invitation are rarely made use of; and you are not, consequently, +exposed to the annoyance of seeing and hearing your house invaded by a +dense crowd, on a night you have appointed a month before, without any +possibility of foreseeing whether you would be disposed or not on that +particular night to undergo such a toil. These crowds are, I believe, +unheard of in Seville; but those who are pleased in each other's +society, know where to find each other; and without waiting for +invitations, small circles are formed every evening, from which all +crushing, fatigue, and intense dressing are excluded. + +The winter is also a more advantageous season for the stranger, who +would be totally debarred by the summer heats from the activity +necessary for the satisfaction of his curiosity, in visiting the objects +of interest contained in and around Seville. On the other hand, the +summer season offers to his contemplation the successful attainment of a +mode of existence suited to the burning climate; a problem found to be +solved but in few instances. The first and most essential arrangement +appears to be the turning night into day, and _vice versâ_, as far as +regards society and all locomotion. No one leaves his house until long +after sunset, and visiting commences some hours later. The morning being +consequently the time for repose, and the breakfast hour nevertheless +remaining the same all the year round, the _siesta_ is very essential, +and is judiciously placed between the dinner, which terminates at four, +and the hour for movement--nine, when the Sevillano, refreshed by three +or four hours sleep, and a fresh toilette, is infinitely better disposed +for the evening's amusements than the denizen of more northern climes, +who rises at that or a later hour from the chief repast of the day, and +is put _en train_ by the less natural and less durable stimulants of the +table. + +This mode of life presents other numerous advantages. A very prominent +one is the inviolable division of time between society and solitude. We +suppose the hour for rising eight,--immediately after the +chocolate,--that of breakfast eleven. The intervening hours are +solitary, and are frequently divided between the pillow and the +toilette; while they are sometimes devoted to more useful occupations, +and added to by earlier risers. From the family meeting at breakfast +until the dinner hour, three, the time may be employed in business, +reading, in fact, in every one's habitual pursuits. No intrusion is to +be feared. No accursed idler lounges in to interrupt with his +compliments, or gossip, your letter to your lawyer, or, if you are a +lawyer yourself, that to your client; nor is the conscience of +scrupulous porters burdened with the mendacious "not at home." + +These hours are sacred, and guaranteed by the very air, which renders +the streets impassable, but leaves the cool court protected from the +sun's ray by the _toldo_, (canvas awning spread at a level with the +roof, and which is reefed up at night like a sail,) and refreshed by its +ever-murmuring fountain and cool marble pavement, to the peaceable +enjoyment of its owners. The female portion of the family are thus +enabled to devote themselves to household occupations, or to their +favourite employments, without having to undergo, until the second +getting up in the evening, the fever of a complete toilette, which +would, during the day, be insupportable. The time thus devoted to +society, is amply sufficient; as it may be prolonged, as each party +feels inclined, from an hour or two after sunset, until the returning +rays drive all back to their cool retreat. + +The night of the festival of St. John is, in Seville, sacred, from +remote time, to amusement and festivity. During the five or six hours of +darkness accorded by the Midsummer sun, the banks of the Guadalquivir +echo the gay melodious laugh, which enlivens the animated buzz of the +crowd; and the morning ray gilds the upper windows of the deserted +houses before their doors are opened to the supper-craving population. +The rite practised on this occasion is marked by a simplicity +altogether antique. The youth of Seville, that is the masculine +portion, have provided themselves with small boxes, containing a sort of +sugar-plum of exquisite flavour. One of these is held between the finger +and thumb of the _cavallero_, from the moment he sets foot on the +promenade. On the approach of a party of ladies he endeavours to +distinguish, as far off as the gloom permits, the features or dress of +an already selected object of preference; or, if still free to make a +selection, some countenance possessed of sufficient attraction to +determine his choice. On discovering the owner of either of these +requisites, he watches a favourable opportunity, and approaching the +lady, offers the bonbon. + +The _señorita_--of course unmarried--thus selected, is obliged to accept +the compliment if properly offered, as well as the arm of the +_cavallero_ during the rest of the night; and, on arriving at her house, +he receives from her parents, or chaperon, as the case may be, an +invitation to supper. Should the lady be desirous of avoiding the +compliment, of the approach of which she is usually aware, she must +exercise her ingenuity in putting obstacles in the way of the attempt. +In this effort many are successful, since the peculiar mode of +proceeding, obligatory on those who make the offer, affords certain +facilities. The condition is not binding on the fair object of the +compliment, unless the lips receive the bonbon immediately from the +finger and thumb of the cavalier. This is a source of no small amusement +to the _señoritas_ at the expense of strangers from other provinces of +Spain. Conscious of being the object of preference of some young +beginner, or stranger uninitiated in the mysteries of the rite--and who, +let it be understood, does not happen to be an object of preference with +them--they will afford him every facility of approach, and on receiving +the present in the hand, will repulse without mercy the luckless wight, +whose retiring steps are accompanied by peals of laughter from all the +party. + +The month of June is likewise distinguished by the procession of the +Corpus Christi. On this occasion all the principal streets are protected +from the sun by canvas awnings; and from the windows of every house +draperies are suspended, the materials of which are more or less rich +according to the means of their respective proprietors. From an early +hour of the morning, ushered in by sunshine and the gay orchestra of the +Giralda bells, the vast marble pavement of the cathedral begins to +disappear beneath the momentarily increasing crowd. Here all classes are +mingled; but the most conspicuous are the arrivals from the surrounding +villages, distinguished by their more sunburnt complexions and the showy +colours of their costume, contrasted with the uniformly dark tints of +the attire of the Sevillanos. + +Here are seen also in great numbers, accompanied by their relatives, the +gay _cigarreras_, whose acquaintance we shall presently make in the +_fabrica de tabaco_. The instinctive coquetry discernible, no less in +the studied reserve of their looks than in the smart step and faultless +nicety of costume, indicates how easy would be the transition to the +quality of the still more _piquant_ but somewhat less moral _maja_. The +black satin, low-quartered shoe is of a different material; but the +snow-white stocking, and dark green skirt the same--and the black-velvet +bordered mantilla is the identical one, which was held tight to the +chin, when passing, the evening before, under the city walls on the +return from the manufactory to the faubourg at the other extremity of +Seville. + +The procession, headed by a band of music, and accompanied by the +dignitaries of the diocese, and civil authorities of the province, +bearing _cierges_, winds through the principal streets, and re-enters +the church to the sound of the two magnificent organs, never heard in +unison except on this anniversary. The exterior of the principal portal +is ornamented on this occasion with a sort of curtain, which is said to +contain upwards of three thousand yards of crimson velvet, bordered with +gold lace. The columns of the centre nave are also completely attired +from top to bottom with coverings of the same material. The value of the +velvet employed, is stated at nearly ten thousand pounds. + +Christmas-day is also solemnized at Seville, with much zeal; but the +manner of doing it honour presents more of novelty than splendour. At +the early hour of seven the parish churches are completely filled. The +organ pours forth, from that time until the termination of the service, +an uninterrupted succession of airs, called _seguidillas_, from the +dance to which they are adapted. On the gallery, which adjoins the +organ-loft of each church, are established five or six muscular youths, +selected for their untiring activity. They are provided each with a +tambourine, and their duty consists in drawing from it as much, and as +varied sound as it will render without coming to pieces. With this view +they enter upon the amiable contest, and try, during three or four +hours, which of their number, employing hands, knees, feet, and elbows +in succession, can produce the most racking intonations. On the pavement +immediately below, there is generally a group, composed of the friends +of the performers, as may be discerned from the smiles of intelligence +directed upwards and downwards. Some of these appear, from the animated +signs of approbation and encouragement, with which they reward each more +than usually violent concussion, to be backers of favourite heroes. +During all this time one or two priests are engaged before the altar in +the performance of a series of noiseless ceremonies; and the pavement of +the body of the church is pressed by the knees of a dense crowd of +devotees. + +The propensity to robbery and assassination, attributed by several +tourists to the population of this country, has been much exaggerated. +The imagination of the stranger is usually so worked upon by these +accounts, as to induce him never to set foot outside the walls of +whatever city he inhabits, without being well armed. As far as regards +the environs of Seville, this precaution is superfluous. They may be +traversed in all directions, at all events within walking distance, or +to the extent of a moderate ride, without risk. Far from exercising +violence, the peasants never fail, in passing, to greet the stranger +with a respectful salutation. But I cannot be guarantee for other towns +or environs which I have not visited. It is certain that equal security +does not exist nearer the coast, on the frequented roads which +communicate between San Lucar, Xeres, and Cadiz; nor in the opposite +direction, throughout the mountain passes of the Sierra Morena. But this +state of things is far from being universal. + +I would much prefer passing a night on a country road in the +neighbourhood of Seville, to threading the maze of streets, which form +the south-eastern portion of the town, mentioned above as containing the +greater number of the residences of private families. This quarter is +not without its perils. In fact, if dark deeds are practised, no +situation could possibly be better suited to them. These Arab streets +wind, and twist, and turn back on themselves like a serpent in pain. +Every ten yards presents a hiding-place. There is just sufficient +lighting up at night to prevent your distinguishing whether the street +is clear or not: and the ground-floors of the houses, in the winter +season, are universally deserted. + +An effectual warning was afforded me, almost immediately on my arrival +at Seville, against frequenting this portion of the town without +precaution after nightfall. An acquaintance, a young Sevillano, who had +been my daily companion during the first five or six days which followed +my arrival, was in the habit of frequenting with assiduity, some of the +above-mentioned streets. He inhabited one of them, and was continually +drawn by potent attraction towards two others. In one, in particular, +he followed a practice, the imprudence of which, in more than one +respect, as he was much my junior, I had already pointed out to him. A +lady, as you have already conjectured, resided in the house, in +question. My friend, like many of his compatriots, "sighed to many;" but +he loved this one; and she was precisely the one that "could ne'er be +his." She allowed him, however, a harmless rendezvous, separated from +all danger, as she thought, by the distance from the ground to the +balcony, situated on the first-floor. The lady being married, and +regular visiting being only possible at formal intervals, these +interviews had by degrees alarmingly, as appeared to me, increased in +frequency and duration; until at length during two hours each evening, +my acquaintance poured forth in a subdued tone, calculated to reach only +the fair form which bent over the balcony, his tender complaints. + +The youth of these climes are communicative on subjects which so deeply +interest their feelings; and whether willing or not, one is often +admitted to share their secrets at the commencement of an acquaintance. +It was thus that I had had an opportunity of lecturing my friend on the +various dangers attending the practice in which he was persisting, and +of recommending him--the best advice of all being, of course, +useless--to revive the more prudent custom of by-gone times, and if he +must offer nightly incense to the object of his fire, to adopt the mode +sanctioned by Count Almaviva, and entrust his vows to the mercenary +eloquence of choristers and catgut--to anything--or anybody, provided it +be done by proxy. My warning was vain; but the mischief did not befall +him exactly in the manner I had contemplated. + +His cousin opened my door while I was breakfasting, and informed me that +L---- was in the house of Don G---- A----, and in bed, having received a +wound the previous night from some robbers; and that he wished to see +me. I found him in a house, into which I had already been introduced, +being one of those he most frequented. A bed had been prepared in the +drawing-room, all the window-shutters of which were closed, and he was +lying there, surrounded by the family of his host, to whom was added his +sister. As he was unable to speak above a whisper, I was given the seat +by the bedside, while he related to me his adventure. + +He had just quitted the street of the balcony at about nine o'clock, and +was approaching the house we were now in, when, on turning a corner, he +was attacked by three ruffians, one of whom demanded his money in the +usual terms, "Your purse, or your life!" while, before he had time to +reply, but was endeavouring to pass on, a second faced him, and stabbed +him in the breast through his cloak. He then ran forward, followed by +the three, down the street, into the house, and up the staircase; the +robbers not quitting the pursuit until he rang the bell on the +first-floor. The surgeon had been immediately called, and had pronounced +him wounded within--not an inch, but the tenth part of an inch--of his +life; for the steel had penetrated to within that distance of his heart. + +My first impression was that the robbers were acting a part, and had +been hired to get rid of him,--otherwise what were the utility of +stabbing him, when they might have rifled his pockets without such +necessity? But this he assured me could not be the case, as the person +most likely to fall under such suspicion, was incapable of employing +similar means; adding, that that was the usual mode of committing +robberies in Seville. I left him, after having assured him how much I +envied his good fortune; seeing that he was in no danger, and only +condemned to pass a week or two in the society of charming women, all +zealously employed in nursing him--for such was the truth--one of the +young ladies being supposed, and I fear with justice, to be the object +of his addresses. + +The ungrateful wretch convinced me by his reply (as we conversed in +French, and were not understood by those present) that his greatest +torment was impatience to escape from his confinement, in order to see +or write to the other fair one. + +At the end of a week he was sufficiently recovered to be removed to the +house of his family. From certain hints, dropped during a conversation +which took place more than a month after the event, it is to be feared +that the knife of the assassin, in approaching so near to the heart of +his intended victim, succeeded, by some mysterious electric +transmission, in inflicting a positive wound on that of the lady of the +balcony. + +I afterwards learned that it was usual for those who inhabited or +frequented this part of Seville, and indeed all other parts, excepting +the few principal thoroughfares and streets containing the shops and +cafés, to carry arms after nightfall; and in shaking hands with an +acquaintance, I have sometimes perceived a naked sword-blade half +visible among the folds of his cloak. These perils only exist in the +winter, and not in all winters; only in those during which provisions +increase in price beyond the average, and the season is more than +usually rigorous: the poor being thus exposed to more than the +accustomed privations. + +There are towns in which assassination and robbery are marked by more +audacity than is their habitual character in this part of Andalucia. Of +these, Malaga is said to be one of the worst, although perhaps the most +favoured spot in Europe, with respect to natural advantages. An instance +of daring ruffianism occurred there this winter. A person of +consideration in the town had been found in the street stabbed and +robbed. His friends, being possessed of much influence, and disposing, +no doubt, of other weighty inducements to action, the police was aroused +to unusual activity; the murderer was arrested, and brought before the +Alcalde primero. A summary mode of jurisprudence was put in practice, +and the culprit was ordered for execution on the following day. On being +led from the presence of the court, he turned to the Alcalde, and +addressing him with vehemence, threatened him with certain death, in the +event of the sentence being put in execution. The Alcalde, although +doubtless not entirely free from anxiety, was, by the threat itself, the +more forcibly bound to carry into effect the judgment he had pronounced. +The execution, therefore, took place at the appointed hour. The +following morning, the dead body of the Alcalde was found in a street +adjoining that in which he resided. + + + + +LETTER XXII. + +INQUISITION. COLLEGE OF SAN TELMO. CIGAR MANUFACTORY. BULL CIRCUS. +EXCHANGE. AYUNTAMIENTO. + + +Seville. + +In the faubourg of Triana, separated from the town by the river, may be +distinguished remains of the ancient castle, which became the +headquarters of the Inquisition, on its first creation, in 1482. That +body was, however, shortly afterwards, compelled to evacuate the +building, by a great inundation of the Guadalquivir, which occurred in +the year 1626. It then moved into the town, and, from that period to the +close of its functions, occupied an edifice situated in the parish of +Saint Mark. Its jurisdiction did not extend beyond Andalucia. The entire +body was composed of the following official persons:--three inquisitors, +a judge of the fisc, a chief Alguazil, a receiver, (of fines,) five +secretaries, ten counsellors, eighty qualifiers, one advocate of the +fisc, one alcayde of the prison, one messenger, ten honest persons, two +surgeons, and one porter. For the City of Seville, one hundred +familiars: for the entire district, the commissaries, notaries, and +familiars, amounted to four thousand. The ten honest persons cut but a +sorry figure in so long a list. Do they not tempt you to parody Prince +Hal's exclamation "Monstrous! but one halfpenny-worth of bread to this +intolerable deal of sack?" + +The Inquisition of Seville is of an earlier date than that of Toledo, +and was the first established in Spain. It was likewise the most +distinguished by the rigour of its sentences. The actual horrors of the +inquisitorial vaults were, I imagine, in general much exaggerated. A few +instances of severity, accompanied by a mystery, skilfully designed to +magnify its effect, was sufficient to set on fire the inflammable +imaginations of these sunny regions, and to spread universal terror. It +was on finding these means insufficient for the extirpation of religious +dissent, that, at length, executions were decreed by wholesale. Rather +than give credit to the voluminous list of the secret cruelties, which +were supposed by many to be exercised by the midnight tribunals, and +which could have no adequate object, since a conversion brought about by +such means could not, when known, profit the cause. I think it probable +that all acts of severity were made as public as possible, in order to +employ the terror they inspired as a means of swelling the ranks of +Catholicism. + +My opinion is in some measure backed by what occurred at Toledo. On the +Inquisition of that city being dislodged from its palace,--now the seat +of the provincial administration,--it was expected that the exploration +of the subterraneous range of apartments, known to be extensive, would +bring to light a whole Apocalypse of horrors; and all who had interest +enough to obtain admission, pressed in crowds to be present at the +opening. The disappointment was immense on finding not a single piece of +iron, not the shadow of a skeleton, not a square inch of bloodstain. +Each individual, however, during the permanence of these tribunals, +lived in awe of their power; and the daily actions of thousands were +influenced by the fear of becoming the victims of their cruelties, +whether real or imaginary. + +The terror which surrounded the persons of their agents invested them +with a moral power, which frequently rendered them careless of the +precaution of physical force in cases where it would have appeared to be +a necessary instrument in the execution of their designs. This +confidence was once well-nigh fatal to two zealous defenders of the +faith. The Archbishop of Toledo, subsequently Cardinal Ximenes de +Cisneros being on a visit at the residence of his brother of the see of +Granada, it occurred to them during an after-dinner conversation that, +could they accomplish the immediate conversion of the few thousands of +Moors remaining in Granada, it would be the means of rendering a signal +service to the Catholic Roman Apostolic religion. + +Inflamed with a sudden ardour, and rendered doubly fearless of results +by the excellence of the archiepiscopal repast, they resolved that the +project should be put in execution that very evening. + +Ever since the Conquest of Granada, a portion of the city had been +appropriated to the Moors who thought proper to remain; and who received +on that occasion the solemn assurance that no molestation would be +offered to their persons or property, nor impediment thrown in the way +of their worship. Their part of the town was called the Albaycin, and +was separated from the rest by a valley. It contained some twenty to +thirty thousand peaceably disposed inhabitants. + +The two enterprising archbishops, their plan being matured (although +insufficiently, as will appear) repaired to a house bordering on the +Moorish quarter; and, calling together all the Familiars of the +Inquisition who could be met with on the spur of the occasion, divided +them into parties, each of a certain force, and dispatched them on +their errand, which was, to enter the houses of the infidels, and to +intimate to the principal families the behest of the prelates, requiring +them by break of day, to abjure the errors of their creed, and to +undergo the ceremony of baptism. + +But in order that so meritorious a work should meet with the least +possible delay, all the children under a certain age were to be conveyed +instantaneously to the house occupied by the Archbishops, in order that +they might be baptised at once. + +The agents opened the campaign, and had already made away with a certain +number of terrified infants, whose souls were destined to be saved thus +unceremoniously, when the alarm began to spread; and, at the moment when +the two dignitaries, impatient to commence operations, were inquiring +for the first batch of unfledged heretics, an unexpected confusion of +sounds was heard to proceed simultaneously from all sides of the house, +and to increase rapidly in clearness and energy: and some of the +attendants, entering, with alarm depicted on their countenances, +announced that a few hundred armed Moors had surrounded the house, and +were searching for an entrance. + +It now, for the first time, occurred to the confederates, that +difficulties might possibly attend the execution of their project; and +their ardour having had nearly time to cool, Archbishop Ximenes, a +personage by no means wanting in prudence and energy, during his moments +of reason, employed the first instants of the siege in taking what +precautions the circumstances admitted. He next proceeded to indite a +hasty line, destined for the sovereigns Ferdinand and Isabella, who were +journeying in the province, to inform them of his situation, and request +immediate assistance. A black slave was selected to be the bearer of the +letter: but, thinking to inspire him with greater promptitude and zeal, +an attendant thrust into his hand a purse of money together with the +document. + +The effect of this was the opposite to that which was intended. The +negro treated himself at every house of entertainment on his road; +until, before he had half accomplished his journey, he was totally +incapacitated for further progress. This circumstance could not, +however, influence the fate of the besieged prelates; who would have had +time to give complete satisfaction to the offended Moors before the King +could receive the intelligence. Fortunately for them, the news had +reached the governor of Granada, a general officer in whose religious +zeal they had not had sufficient confidence to induce them to apply to +him for aid in the emergency. That officer, on hearing the state of +things, sent for a body of troops stationed at a neighbouring village, +to whose commander he gave orders to place a guard, for the protection +at the same time of the churchmen from violent treatment, and of the +Moors from every sort of molestation. This adventure of the Archbishop +drew upon him the temporary displeasure of the Court. + +[Illustration: PORTAL OF SAN TELMO, SEVILLE.] + +The public buildings of Seville are on as grand a scale as those of some +of the principal capitals of Europe. The college of San Telmo, fronting +the Christina-gardens, is composed of two large quadrangles, behind a +façade of five or six hundred feet in length, the centre of which is +ornamented by a portal of very elaborate execution in the _plateresco_ +style. The architect, Matias de Figueroa, has literally crammed the +three stories with carved columns, inscriptions, balconies, statues +single and grouped, arches, medallions, wreaths, friezes. Without +subjecting it to criticism on the score of purity, to which it makes no +pretension, it certainly is rich in its general effect, and one of the +best specimens of its style. This college was founded for the +instruction of marine cadets, and for that reason named after S. Telmo, +who is adopted by the mariners for their patron and advocate, as Santa +Barbara is by the land artillery. He was a Dominican friar, and is +recorded to have exercised miraculous influence on the elements, and +thereby to have preserved the lives of a boatful of sailors, when on the +point of destruction. The gardens in front of this building are situated +between the river and the town walls. They are laid out in flower beds +and walks. In the centre is a raised platform of granite, forming a +long square of about an acre or more in extent, surrounded with a seat +of white marble. It is entered at each end by an ascent of two or three +steps. This is called the Salon, and on Sundays and Feast-days is the +resort of the society of Seville. In the winter the hour of the +promenade is from one to three o'clock; in the summer, the hours which +intervene between sunset and supper. During winter as well as summer, +the scent of the flowers of the surrounding gardens fills the Salon, +than which it is difficult to imagine a more charming promenade. + +The cigar manufactory is also situated outside the walls. It is a modern +edifice of enormous dimensions, and not inelegant. In one of the rooms +between two and three hundred _cigareras_, girls employed in rolling +cigars, are seen at work, and heard likewise; for, such a Babel of +voices never met mortal ear, although familiar with the music of the +best furnished rookeries. The leaden roof, which covers the whole +establishment, furnishes a promenade of several acres. + +I am anxious to return to the interior of Seville, in order to introduce +you to the Lonja; but we must not omit the Plaza de los Toros, (bull +circus,) situated likewise outside the walls, and in view of the river. +It is said to be the handsomest in Spain, as well as the largest. In +fact it ought to be the best, as belonging to the principal city of the +especial province of _toreadores_. It is approached by the gate nearest +to the cathedral, and which deserves notice, being the handsomest gate +of Seville. The principal entrance to the Plaza is on the opposite side +from the town, where the building presents a large portion of a circle, +ornamented with plain arches round the upper story. This upper portion +extends only round a third part of the circus, which is the extent of +the part completed with boxes and galleries, containing the higher class +seats. All the remainder consists of an uniform series of retreating +rows of seats, in the manner of an amphitheatre, sufficient for the +accommodation of an immense multitude. These rows of seats are continued +round the whole circus: but those beneath the upper building are not +accessible to the same class of spectators as the others--the price of +the place being different. This is regulated by the position with regard +to the sun, the shaded seats being the dearest. The upper story consists +of an elegant gallery, ornamented with a colonnade, in the centre of +which the box of the president is surmounted by a handsomely decorated +arch. + +The circus, measured from the outside, is about two hundred and fifty +feet in diameter. Those who are desirous of witnessing to what lengths +human enthusiasm may be carried, should see a representation in this +Plaza. With seven prime bulls from La Ronda, and a quadrille of Seville +_toreros_--the enormous circumference as full as it can hold, (as it +always is,) it is one of the most curious sights that can be met with. + +The origin of this amusement is not easy to be ascertained. It was +undoubtedly in vogue among the Spanish Arabs, and probably originated in +the time of the Goths, on the falling off of the representations of the +Roman amphitheatres for want of a sufficient supply of wild beasts. In +times not very remote, it had become principally an amateur performance, +and the _toreros_ were men of rank, who made choice of this arena, +subsequently to the falling into disuse of the lists, in order to +exhibit their daring and dexterity before the objects of their flame. +The science is still studied by the greater part of the Spanish youth; +just as, in England, the custom is maintained of receiving instruction +in pugilism; but an amateur is rarely seen in these days to figure in a +public arena. + +The intense interest which absorbs the feelings of those present at +these representations, affords a faint notion of what must have been the +attractions of a Roman circus, in which combats were sustained by +hundreds of wild beasts. In the bull-fight--sustained by a single +animal, the interest would not probably be excited by the mere contest +for life which takes place between the man and the brute, and of which +the ultimate result is foreseen. It would, on the contrary, often yield +to the disgust produced by the needless massacre of the horses; were it +not that the graceful performance of the _toreros_, and their elegant +costume, so well calculated to set off the symmetry of their form, first +draws the attention, which, once fixed, is gradually absorbed by the +progress of the contest, and at length irresistibly won by the variety +of unforeseen incidents which follow in rapid succession. + +Frequenters of theatres have been seen to fall asleep during the most +stirring scene of a melodrame; and a continual murmur of conversation +usually forms a running accompaniment to the voices of opera singers; +but no one was ever detected slumbering in a _plaza de toros_; nor is a +remark uttered that does not relate to the performance. This difference +may probably be explained by the superior attraction of the _imprévu_. +In the playhouse not only is the event known beforehand, but also every +incident by which it is preceded; whereas, throughout a _corrida de +toros_ nothing can be foreseen. No one knows, during the present minute, +whether the next will give birth to the direst of tragedies, or to the +most exhilarating farce. + +At Madrid the representations are inferior to those at Seville. They are +able, it is true, to procure as fierce bulls; but they are brought from +a considerable distance, and are much more expensive. The principal +inferiority consists in the men, who at Madrid are wanting in the +rapidity of eye, and careless courage of the Andaluz. On the entrance of +a bull on the arena, whose attitude gives promise of an animated course, +almost all the Madrid _toreros_, (I have seen all,) will, at his first +onset, disappear simultaneously over the _barrera_. The _barrera_ is the +enclosure of stout planks, strengthened by posts, which separates the +performers from the spectators. It is about six feet in height. At a +height of three feet a projecting ledge runs round the whole, upon +which, in vaulting over, the _toreador_ places his foot. Behind this +enclosure an open space of four feet in width is left, and serves as a +refuge for those who are hard pressed. Very different is the graceful +and careless attitude with which the Andaluz awaits the approach of the +infuriated brute, and quietly springs aside with a flourish of his +mantle of silk, while he knows there are others at hand to draw off the +animal's attention. + +With the exception of the _Toros_ the public amusements of Seville are +limited to the balls at the Lonja during the Carnival, and to the opera. +The opera varies its own pleasures, while it distributes its favours +between the two western capitals of the province. From midsummer to +midwinter Cadiz receives her share of melody, and the remaining six +months are bestowed on Seville. Xeres has, I believe, a company to +itself, supplied by a different _impresario_. + +The Rossi is an excellent _primera dama_, although wanting in animation; +and Comfortini is by no means a bad tenor. The second tenor, Tosi, is +said to be ambitious of displaying his somewhat exaggerated attitudes on +the boards of the Haymarket. There is a deficiency of _ensemble_, since +the severe discipline necessary for obtaining that result does not +accord with the genius of the place--or perhaps an unexceptionable +_maestro de capella_ is too expensive a luxury to suit the Seville +purses. However this may be, the easy inhabitants, who hear the same +opera frequently six times in a week, and would hear it seven times had +not the performers a holiday on Saturday--may be taken grievous +liberties with before they utter a complaint. They, in fact, look upon +the performance chiefly as an excuse for resorting to this their +habitual lounge. + +The Barbiere di Seviglia should, however, be witnessed here by every +amateur. It is only here that justice is done to the _libretto_ of +Rossini's masterpiece. Figaro becomes a real barber, and scorns all +velvets and finery; and Almaviva leaves his court-dress at home, and +takes a good _capa_ of _paño pardo_ for his nocturnal excursions. The +scenery represents the actual streets of Seville. Local customs are +introduced, and local expressions interspersed in the Italian dialogue. +On this occasion one spirit animates boxes, lunetas, orchestra, and +stage. At the opening note of the first melody the allegro, passing like +electricity from the corner of the page through the eye, brain, and arm +of the leader, appears as though it spirted like wildfire from the +extremity of his bow over stage, boxes, stalls, and galleries, lighting +up in an instant all eyes with animation and pleasure. + +In the scene of old Bartolo's discomfiture the melodies of the _maestro_ +are totally extinguished beneath the din of overturned tables and +chairs, and cracking furniture; and the joyous exclamations of the +entire assembly, unite with the jibes of the actors, and seem to pursue +the poor old guardian with one overwhelming peal of derision. + +But it is only in this one instance that representations come off in +such a manner. On the contrary, the company exhibit habitually all the +aristocratic _nonchalance_ of larger capitals. Their business there is +society. It is there that _les affaires de coeur_ hold their Royal +Exchange; and observation, conjecture, and speculation,--but usually +without ill-nature,--sufficiently occupy those who are not actors in +this general by-play. The youth of these climes do not put in practice +the same arts of concealment and reserve as are adopted in colder +cities; but each, unconscious of evil, makes for the box of his +_enamorata_; or, if that is impossible, for the nearest vacant +situation. Advise, therefore, any friend who may intend visiting +Seville, not hastily to pay his visit of curiosity to the opera, but to +wait, if possible, until offered a seat by some _habituée_ in her box. +This _Senora_ may possibly not have any _affaire_ of her own on hand; in +fact the married ladies of course form an exception, if not in all +cases, at least as far as regards such undisguised manifestations of +preference:--in this case she will take delight in putting him _au fait_ +of all those that are going forward. + +If in a conversable humour she will do more. Commencing with the +nearest, or the most conspicuous of the performers in these mute dramas, +she will relate to him the vicissitudes of the respective histories up +to the time then present, and the probabilities which each case may +suggest for the future. Thus your friend, instead of having sacrificed +an entire evening to the dubious amusement of following the plot of a +single opera, which may have been a bad one, or interpreted by bad +actors, will return to rest with some score of plots and romances +filling all the corners of his memory--all possessing the zest of +reality and actuality, as he will have contemplated the heroes and +heroines in their mortal shape, and clothed in indisputable _capas_ and +_mantillas_; besides, another advantage which these romances will +possess over all the popular and standard novels--that of omitting the +most insipid chapter of all, the one containing the _dénouement_. + +There only remain two public buildings worthy of notice; but they are +such as to rank among the most remarkable of Spain. The Lonja (Exchange) +was erected during the reign of Philip the Second, in the year 1583, by +Juan de Herrera. At this period the excesses committed in all parts of +Spain by the architects, no longer restrained by rule of any sort, had +brought about a salutary effect, after a sufficiently lengthened surfeit +of extravagance. Herrera took the lead in the reaction, and followed the +more correct models of art. + +Among the authors of some of the most lamentable specimens of aberration +of style scattered throughout Spain, are found several names high in +rank among the painters of the best period. These artists, desirous of +emulating some of the great masters of Italy, who had attained equal +superiority in architecture, painting, and sculpture, risked their +reputation in these different pursuits with greater confidence than just +appreciation of their peculiar genius. At the head of them was Alonzo +Cano, one of the most distinguished painters of the schools of +Andalucia; and who has been called the Guido of Spain. He may certainly +lay a more legitimate claim to that title than to that of the Michael +Angelo of Spain, accorded to him by some of the less judicious of his +admirers for no other reason than that of his combining the three above +mentioned arts. + +His paintings are characterized by a peculiar delicacy of manner, +correct drawing, and exquisite finish. The sickly paleness of his flesh +is sometimes unpleasing, and his personages are gainers by the addition +of drapery, in the arrangement of which he approaches to the excellence +of the best Italian schools. The life of this artist was varied by more +adventure than usually falls to the lot of those of his profession. His +talent as a painter had already become celebrated while he was still a +monk, having taken the vows very early in life. He had been from the +first an enemy to the subordination of the cloister, and at length a +series of irregularities led to his expulsion from his monastery. + +Alonzo was not, however, the original inventor of this eccentric style. +A Roman architect, Francisco Borromini, the rival of Bernini, and of +whom it was said, that he was the first of his time in elevation of +genius, and the last in the employment of it,--is supposed to have first +introduced it. Followers and imitators of these sprung up in great +numbers, and Spain was speedily inundated with extravagancies: façades, +moulded into more sinuosities than a labyrinth,--cornices, multiplying +their angles like a saw, murderously amputated columns, and +broken-backed pediments. Juan de Herrera was not, probably, possessed of +more talent than the Roman; but of what he had he made a better use. His +reputation was beginning to make rapid progress when he was selected, on +the death of Juan Baptista de Toledo, to continue the Escorial. His task +there was not the simple one of continuing the unfinished pile according +to the plans already traced. + +The religious fervor of Philip the Second was on the ascent, and during +the progress of the building he had resolved to double the number of +monks, for whom accommodation had been provided by the original plan. To +meet this necessity, Herrera raised the buildings to double their +intended elevation. His completion of this immense work, rendered more +difficult than it would have been had the original design been his own, +or even had that of his predecessor been persisted in (for various +other modifications were commanded, especially with regard to the plan +of the church,) fully established his fame; and the edifice would +probably have gained, had Philip not, at the last moment, yielded to a +new caprice, and called in another artist (the architect of the famous +country-house of the Viso) to erect the great staircase. + +The object of Herrera, traceable in all his works, was the +re-establishment of antique art in all its purity. In cathedrals success +was more difficult of attainment than in civil edifices; but the effort +is easily discerned, striving against the difficulties inseparable from +the system, which applies to the purposes of one creed the principles of +art invented for ministering to other forms. His cathedral of Valladolid +is an instance of this: the most unsuccessful portion of which (the +tower) has fallen before the completion of the edifice. Should the works +ever be continued, this would be a most fortunate circumstance, were it +not that the future builders are sure to persist in the same course, and +to disfigure the pile with another similar excrescence, in contempt of +symmetry and rule. + +The Lonja of Seville is a structure so perfect as to bid defiance to +criticism. It might have been built by Vitruvius. The general plan is a +quadrangle, enclosing a court surrounded by an arcade. There are two +stories, ornamented externally by pilasters. The order is Tuscan, both +above and below. The court, staircase, and various apartments, are +decorated with a profusion of the rarest marbles. The whole is a +specimen, almost unique, of chaste elegance and massive solidity. In +this edifice, the resort of wealthy traders during the period of the +colonial prosperity of Spain, are contained, among the archives, the +original despatches of Columbus: and, it is also said, those of Cortez +and Pizarro. + +The Ayuntamiento, or Town Hall, is an edifice of another sort. It is of +the _plateresco_ epoch. But Seville, having been apparently preserved by +especial favour from the introduction of specimens of bad taste; it is a +building of extreme beauty. The façade is divided into two unequal +parts. The smaller of the two is covered with sculpture, and contains an +open porch or vestibule, decorated throughout with a profusion of +ornament. I could not learn the name of the artist to whom these +sculptures are attributed, but they are worthy of the chisel of John of +Bologna. The other portion of the front is without ornament from the +ground to the first story, along the whole extent of which runs a series +of open arches supported by columns. These columns and arches are models +of lightness and grace. + +The Ayuntamiento is situated in the Plaza de San Francisco; from one +extremity of which a street leads to the cathedral: at the other +commences the principal street of Seville, called the Calle de la +Sierpe. Here are all the best shops, and the principle cafés. It leads +also to the post-office, to the opera, and to the Plaza del Duque, so +called from its containing the house of the Duke of Medina Sidonia; but +it possesses, likewise, two other ducal residences, besides others of +almost equal pretension. These mansions are scarcely ever occupied by +their proprietors. It is a small irregularly formed place, and its ducal +habitations, whatever they may be internally, by no means improve its +appearance. + +A few streets further on is the Alameda. This is a place magnificent in +extent, but possessing no architectural merit. Its principal ornament is +an avenue of elms, of about half a mile in length, at the head of which +are placed the two antique columns and statues of the temple of +Hercules. At the further extremity, on the left, is the church of the +Jesuits, closed since the revolution. + + +THE END. + +LONDON: + +Printed by S. & J. BENTLEY, WILSON, and FLEY, + +Bangor House, Shoe Lane. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[1] The very polite individual alluded to no longer fills the post of +Consul at Bayonne. + +[2] The following inscriptions are placed at the feet of the respective +statues: + +"Aqui yace el muy Ilustre Señor Don Pedro Hernandez de Velasco, +Condestable de Castilla, Señor del estado, y gran casa de Velasco, hijo +de Don Pedro Hernandez de Velasco, y de Doña Beatriz Manrique, Condes de +Haro. Murio de setenta y siete años, anno de mil cuatro cientos y +noventa y dos, siendo solo Virey de estos reynos por los Reyes +Catolicos." + +"Aqui yace la muy Ilustre Señora Doña Mencia de Mendoza, Condesa de +Haro, muger del Condestable Don Pedro Hernandez de Velasco, hija de Don +Inigo Lopez de Mendoza, y de Doña Catalina de Figueroa, Marqueses de +Santillana. Murio de setenta y nueve annos, anno de mil y quiniento." + +[3] The above woodcut may, it is hoped, serve as a guide to future +travellers in their search for this head, of which it has no pretension +to give an adequate idea. + +[4] It will be seen that this letter was written shortly after the +Queen's return to Spain, and previous to the publication of her +marriage. + +[5] It is probable that this threat, supposing it real, may have +assisted in determining the Queen's resolution, since executed, of +publishing the marriage. + +[6] The crown was valued in Cadiz at a hundred and sixty thousand +pounds, of which the emerald, which supports the cross, represents forty +thousand. + +[7] She is of a wood, whether artificially or naturally, of a tint +between the darkest mahogany and ebony. + +[8] The Author has in every instance made use of the word Gothic, in +preference to the employment of any sort of periphrasis; considering +that the chief intention of a name is, not that its application should +accord with its derivation, but rather that it should present to all who +know it, or have dictionaries, an identical meaning, in order that the +idea of the individual employing it may be speedily caught. Now the word +Gothic having always been applied to this architecture, it is +comprehended. A dismounted highwayman is termed a pad. The oblong area +in the centre of Madrid is called a door. "What's in a name?" + +[9] + + "Who does a kindness is not therefore kind.-- + Perhaps the wind has shifted from the East."--POPE. + +[10] Feeling his powers as a draughtsman inadequate to do justice to +this court, the author has inserted the above sketch merely to show the +general architectural design. + +[11] He had put to death the "Master of St. Bernard," a title of those +days possessed by the chief of that order appointed by the Pope. It was +Urbano V, who, on the occasion of this act, resented at the same time +various other offences. + +[12] The above is gathered from the following passage of Appianus +Alexandrinus. "Relicto, utpote pacata regione, valido præsidio, Scipio +milites omnes vulneribus debiles in unam urbem compulit, quam ab Italiâ +Italicam nominavit, claram natalibus Trajani et Adriani, qui posteris +temporibus Romanum imperium tenuere." + +Elius Sparcianus, in the life of Adrian, says, "Origo imperatoris +Adriani vetustior a Picentibus, posterior ab Hispaniensibus manat; +siquidem Adriâ ortos majores suos apud Italicam, Scipionum temporibus +resedisse in libris vitæ suæ Adrianus ipse commemorat." + +[13] No other town is so placed as to accord with the description given +by Pliny, who passes it on the right bank of the river, and arrives at +Seville lower down on the left: "Italica et a lævâ Hispalis colonia +cognomine Romulensis." + +Lucas de Tuy, who wrote four centuries back, says, "Italica est Hispalis +Antigua." + +[14] + + Hic fertur Apostolico + Vates fulsisse tempore: + Et prædicasse supremum + Patrem potentis filii. + + + +Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber: + +Alonza Cano=>Alonzo Cano (1) + +Abderrahman=>Abderahman (1) + +Andalusia=>Andalucia (1) + + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Picturesque Antiquities of Spain;, by +Nathaniel Armstrong Wells + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PICTURESQUE ANTIQUITIES *** + +***** This file should be named 32821-8.txt or 32821-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/3/2/8/2/32821/ + +Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team +at http:://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Pictureque Antiquities of Spain; + Described in a series of letters, with illustrations + representing Moorish palaces, cathedrals, and other + monuments of art, contained in the cities of Burgos, + Valladolid, Toledo, and Seville. + +Author: Nathaniel Armstrong Wells + +Release Date: June 15, 2010 [EBook #32821] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PICTUREQUE ANTIQUITIES *** + + + + +Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team +at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + +<hr class="full" /> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 368px;"> +<a name="face" id="face"></a> +<a href="images/ill_008_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/cover.jpg" id="coverpage" width="368" height="550" alt="CHAPEL OF SAN ISIDRO, IN THE CHURCH OF SAN ANDRES, MADRID." title="CHAPEL OF SAN ISIDRO, IN THE CHURCH OF SAN ANDRES, MADRID." /></a> +<span class="caption">CHAPEL OF SAN ISIDRO,<br /> +IN THE CHURCH OF SAN ANDRES, MADRID.</span> +</div> + +<p class="c">THE</p> + +<h2>PICTURESQUE ANTIQUITIES</h2> + +<p class="c">OF</p> + +<h1>SPAIN;</h1> + +<p class="c">DESCRIBED IN A SERIES OF LETTERS,</p> + +<p class="c">WITH ILLUSTRATIONS,</p> + +<p class="c">REPRESENTING MOORISH PALACES, CATHEDRALS,<br /> +AND OTHER MONUMENTS OF ART,</p> + +<p class="c smcap">CONTAINED IN THE CITIES OF</p> + +<p class="c">BURGOS, VALLADOLID, TOLEDO, AND SEVILLE.</p> + +<p class="c" >BY<br /> +NATHANIEL ARMSTRONG WELLS.</p> + +<p class="c top15">LONDON:<br />RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET,<br />Publisher in Ordinary to Her Majesty.<br />M.DCCC.XLVI.</p> + +<p class="c top15">LONDON:<br />Printed by <span class="smcap">S. & J. Bentley</span>, <span class="smcap">Wilson</span>, and <span class="smcap">Fley</span>, +Bangor House, Shoe Lane.</p> + +<h3>PREFACE.</h3> + +<hr /> + +<p>The author of the following letters is aware that +his publication would have possessed greater utility, +had the architectural descriptions been more minute. +He ventures to hope, however, that this imperfection +may be in some measure balanced by the +more extended sphere opened to whatever information +it may contain.</p> + +<p>The absence of many technical expressions, especially +those which enter into a detailed description +of almost all Gothic buildings, and the employment +of which was forbidden by the occasion, may tend +to facilitate the satisfaction of popular curiosity +respecting Spanish art: the more so from the circumstance +that the most intelligent in such subjects +are scarcely sufficiently agreed on the application +of technical terms, to allow of the compilation of a +standard vocabulary. His ambition will be more +than satisfied, should his past, and perhaps future +researches, succeed, in some degree, in pioneering +the path for a more scientific pen.</p> + +<p>Should this work fall into the hands of any reader, +whose expectations of entertainment may have +been encouraged by the announcement of another +Spanish tour, but who may feel but moderate enthusiasm +for the artistic and monumental glories +of the Peninsula, an explanation is due to him, +exonerative of the author from much of the responsibility +attached to the matter-of-fact tone of his +descriptions. It is no less his nature than it was +his wish to paint what he saw as he saw it. Unfortunately +his visits to Spain took place after the +accomplishment of the revolution, the hardest blows +of which were aimed at her church. The confiscation +of the ecclesiastical revenues has necessarily +stripped the processions and other ceremonies of +their former splendour, and by suppressing what constituted +one of their chief attractions to the native +population, transferred the interest of the lover of +the picturesque from the bright colours of animated +grouping, to the dead background of stone and +marble they have left.</p> + +<p>In studying, however, to preserve this strict accuracy +in all that related to the principal subject of +his correspondence, his aim was to enliven it by +the introduction of any incidents worthy of notice +which came under his observation. In this object +he hopes he may have succeeded.</p> + +<p>One more remark is necessary. The letters from +Seville, which form the second of the two parts +into which the volume is divided, although placed +last in order of succession, date in reality from +an earlier period than the rest; and even from +a different tour, as will appear from the description +of the route. They were addressed to various +individuals, whereas those forming the first +part were all written to the same person. They +are thus placed with a view to geographical order +and clearness, and to a sort of unity, which appeared +advisable in the subject of a volume. The +two excursions having been separated by an interval +of three years, should alterations have taken place +during that period in the places described, the above +circumstance not being borne in mind might lead to +an appearance of chronological inaccuracy in the +descriptions, although there is not much probability +of the existence of such changes.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">London.</span> <i>December 1845.</i></p> + +<h3>CONTENTS.</h3> + +<hr /> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="toc"> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#PART_I">PART I.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="right" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">page</span></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_I">LETTER I.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">To Mrs. C——r</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_001">1</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_II">LETTER II.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Route To Spain through France</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_009">9</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_III">LETTER III.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Basque Provinces</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_015">15</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_IV">LETTER IV.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Arrival at Burgos.</span> <span class="smcap">Cathedral.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_028">28</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_V">LETTER V.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Tomb of the Cid.</span> <span class="smcap">Citadel.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_052">52</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_VI">LETTER VI.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Cartuja de Miraflores.</span> <span class="smcap">Convent of Las Huelgas.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_070">70</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_VII">LETTER VII.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Route To Madrid.</span> <span class="smcap">Museo.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_078">78</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_VIII">LETTER VIII.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Picturesque Position of Toledo.</span> <span class="smcap">Florinda.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_103">103</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_IX">LETTER IX.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Cathedral of Toledo</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_121">121</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_X">LETTER X.</a></td></tr> + +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Cafes.</span> <span class="smcap">Wedding Ceremony.</span> <span class="smcap">Cathedral Continued.</span> <span class="smcap">Alcazar Hospital +of Santa Cruz.</span><br /><span class="smcap">Convent of La Conception.</span> <span class="smcap">Mysterious Cavern.</span> +<span class="smcap">Convent of Santa Fe, or of Santiago.</span><br /><span class="smcap">Sons-in-law of +the Cid.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_143">143</a></td></tr> + +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_XI">LETTER XI.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Streets of Toledo.</span> <span class="smcap">El Ama de Casa.</span> <span class="smcap">Monastery of San Juan de +Los Reyes.</span><br /><span class="smcap">Palace of Don Hurtado de Mendoza.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_172">172</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_XII">LETTER XII.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Arab Monuments.</span> <span class="smcap">Pictures.</span> <span class="smcap">The Princess Galiana.</span> <span class="smcap">Environs.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_195">195</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_XIII">LETTER XIII.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Castles of Almonacid, Guadamur, Montalban, and Escalona.</span> <span class="smcap">Torrijos.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_214">214</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_XIV">LETTER XIV.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Valladolid.</span> <span class="smcap">San Pablo.</span> <span class="smcap">College of San Gregorio.</span> <span class="smcap">Route By +Saragoza.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_240">240</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#PART_II">PART II.—SEVILLE.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_XV">LETTER XV.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Journey To Seville.</span> <span class="smcap">Character of the Spaniards.</span> <span class="smcap">Valley of +the Rhone.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_259">259</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_XVI">LETTER XVI.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Voyage To Gibraltar</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_288">288</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_XVII">LETTER XVII.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Cadiz.</span> <span class="smcap">Arrival at Seville.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_308">308</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_XVIII">LETTER XVIII.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Arabs in Spain.</span> <span class="smcap">Alcazar of Seville.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_315">315</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_XIX">LETTER XIX.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Cathedral of Seville</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_350">350</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_XX">LETTER XX.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Spanish Beggars.</span> <span class="smcap">Hairdressing.</span> <span class="smcap">The Giralda.</span> <span class="smcap">Casa de Pilatos.</span> +<span class="smcap">Monasteries.</span> <span class="smcap">Italica.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_369">369</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_XXI">LETTER XXI.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Private Houses, and Local Customs in Seville</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_399">399</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="center" colspan="2"><br /><a href="#LETTER_XXII">LETTER XXII.</a></td></tr> +<tr valign="bottom"><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Inquisition.</span> <span class="smcap">College of San Telmo.</span> <span class="smcap">Cigar Manufactory.</span> <span class="smcap">Bull +Circus.</span><br /><span class="smcap">Exchange.</span> <span class="smcap">Ayuntamiento.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_416">416</a></td></tr> +<tr><td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#FOOTNOTES"><br />Footnotes</a></td></tr> +</table> + +<h3>ENGRAVED PLATES.</h3> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="ENGRAVED PLATES"> +<tr><td align="right" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">page</span></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Chapel of San Isidro, Madrid</span></td><td align="left"><a href="#face">To face Title.</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Transept of Cathedral, Burgos</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_038">38</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Interior of the Church of Miraflores</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_072">72</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">View of Toledo</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_106">106</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Interior of Cathedral, Toledo</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_140">140</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Façade of San Gregorio, Valladolid</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_248">248</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Hall of Ambassadors, do.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_315">315</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Façade of the Alcazar, Seville</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_325">325</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Great Court of do.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_328">328</a></td></tr> + +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Interior of the Cathedral, Seville</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_353">353</a></td></tr> +</table> + +<hr /> + +<h3>WOOD ENGRAVINGS.</h3> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="WOOD ENGRAVINGS"> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Arco de Santa Maria.</span> <span class="smcap">Burgos.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_030">30</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Interior of the Choir, Cathedral of Burgos</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_033">33</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Sculpture in the Apse, do. do.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_040">40</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Head of St. Francis</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_048">48</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Fountain of Santa Maria, Burgos</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_069">69</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Italian Gallery at the Museo, Madrid</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_094">94</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Florinda's Bath, Toledo</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_112">112</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Apse of the Cathedral, Toledo</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_129">129</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Costume of a Military Nun, Santa Fe, Toledo</span> </td><td align="right"><a href="#page_165">165</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Church of San Juan de Los Reyes, do.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_179">179</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Cloister of San Juan de Los Reyes, do.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_182">182</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Interior of Santa Maria la Blanca, do.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_196">196</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Interior of Christo de la Luz, do.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_201">201</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Castle of Guadamur.</span> <span class="smcap">Environs of do.</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_226">226</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Façade of San Pablo.</span> <span class="smcap">Valladolid</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_242">242</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Court of San Gregorio.</span> <span class="smcap">Valladolid</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_249">249</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Court of Dolls, Alcazar, Seville</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_331">331</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Fountains at the Alcazar</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_339">339</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Portal of San Telmo, Seville</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_422">422</a></td></tr> +</table> + +<p><a name="page_001" id="page_001"></a></p> + +<h3>PICTURESQUE ANTIQUITIES</h3> + +<p class="c">OF</p> + +<h1 class="spc">SPAIN.</h1> + +<hr /> + +<h3><a name="PART_I" id="PART_I"></a>PART I.</h3> + +<hr /> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_I" id="LETTER_I"></a>LETTER I.</h3> + +<h5>TO MRS. C—— R.</h5> + +<p class="r">Rue de Richelieu.<br /> +</p> + +<p>You perceived at a glance the satisfaction you +caused me, when, on receiving my temporary adieus, +you requested me to send you some account of my +travels in Spain. Had it not been so, you had not +been in possession, on that day, of your usual penetration. +Indeed, you no doubt foresaw it; aware +that, next to the pleasure of acquiring ocular information +respecting the peculiar objects which interest +an individual, there is no greater one than that of +communicating to a spirit, animated by congenial +tastes, the results of his explorations. You must have +foreseen, that, with my recollections of the pleasure +I had derived from our excursions in one of the +most interesting regions of France, during which I +was witness to the intelligence and rapidity of perception<a name="page_002" id="page_002"></a> +you displayed in the appreciation of the monuments +of the Middle Ages, the opportunity of committing +to paper the impressions I should receive in a +country so rich in those treasures, with a view to +your information, would give an additional interest +to my tour, as well as encouragement in surmounting +the obstacles to be met with among a people +not yet broken in to the curiosity of tourists.</p> + +<p>You professed also, with a modesty always becoming +to talent and worth, a complete ignorance respecting +Spain: adding, that you would be grateful +for every sort of information; and that you were +anxious to be enlightened on the subject not only +of the monuments and fine arts, but also of the +history of that country, of which you had never had an +opportunity of informing yourself; summing up by +the enumeration of the three names of the Cid, +Charles the Fifth, and Roderic the Goth, the entire +amount of your acquaintance with the leading +characters of Spanish history.</p> + +<p>Indeed, the ignorance you profess with some +exaggeration, is more or less general in our country; +nor is it surprising that such should be the +case. Spain has been in modern times in the background +of European progress. The thousand inconveniences +of its routes and inns have deterred +the most enterprising from making it a place of<a name="page_003" id="page_003"></a> +resort; and while a hundred less interesting scenes +of travel, such as Baden-Baden, Bohemia, sporting +adventures in Norway, or winterings in St. Petersburg, +have claimed your attention during the reposes +of quadrilles, and substantiated the conversation +of several of your morning visitors, Spain +has been unnoticed and unknown—laid on the +shelf with the Arabian Nights—considered a sort of +fabulous country, which it would be charming to +know, but with which there would never be a +chance of forming an acquaintance; and you have +contented yourself with a sort of general information +respecting it, derived from a few romances and +poems. You are intimate with Boabdil and the +wars of Granada, but to those events is limited +your knowledge of its ancient history; and the +reigns of Charles the Fifth and Philip the Second, +with the addition of some confused visions, in which +<i>autos-da-fé</i> and dungeons contrast in a rather +gloomy background with laughing majas, whirling +their castagnettes to the soft cadences of guitars, +fill up the remaining space allotted to Spain in your +recollections.</p> + +<p>It would be a task full of interest for me—possessed, +as I shall probably be, of ample opportunities +for its accomplishment—to draw up for your information +a summary of the leading events of<a name="page_004" id="page_004"></a> +Spanish history; connecting them by the chain of +reigns of the successive sovereigns; and thus to press +into a limited compass a sort of abstract of the +annals of this extraordinary nation: but I am +deterred by the certainty that such an attempt, by +me, would fail of its intended object. The events, +thus slurred over, would have the effect of whetting +the appetite for knowledge, which they would not +satisfy; and the interminable lists of monarchs, of +successions, usurpations, alliances and intermarriages, +rendered doubly intricate by the continual recurrence +of the same names, without sufficient details to +particularise each—a chaos of outlines without the +necessary shading to bring out the figures from the +canvass—would not only set at defiance the clearest +memory, but would be a trial which I would not +for worlds impose upon your patience. No history +is more attractive than that of Spain; and those +works which exist upon the subject, although all, +more or less, sullied with inaccuracies, and most of +them infected with prejudice, and immersed in superstitious +delusion, are still well worth your perusal; +but it would lead me out of my depth, were I to +undertake in my correspondence more than an occasional +historical quotation, when required by the +interest attached to any monument which it may +fall to my lot to describe.<a name="page_005" id="page_005"></a></p> + +<p>Were I not to transmit to you a conscientious and +faithful account of all that I shall see, I should be +guilty of cruelty; and that the more base, from the +certain impunity that must attend it. I say this, +from the impossibility of your ever undertaking the +same journey, and consequently of your ever being +able to compare my portraits with their originals. +In fact, the incompatibility of your nature, and that +of the Spanish climate, must ever be present to me, +who, during the vivifying heats of the late very bearable +<i>canicule</i>, in your French château—so constructed +as to perform the functions of an atmospheric sieve, +by separating the wind, which rushed through its +doors and windows, judiciously placed in parallels for +the purpose, from the warmer sunshine without—was +witness, nevertheless, to your unaffected distress, +when you protested against any lofty, oak-panelled +room being sat or reclined in by more than one +human being at a time, lest it should be over-heated; +placing thus an obstacle in the way of conversation, +in which to shine is your especial province, by rendering +it necessary to converse through various open +doors; while, were an additional testimony necessary +to prove the sincerity of your sufferings, your favourite +of favourites, Caliph, repulsed and uncaressed, +hung his silken ears, as he solemnly retreated to coil<a name="page_006" id="page_006"></a> +himself on a distant rug, and voted the dog-days a +misnomer.</p> + +<p>Nor were you contented with your atmosphere, +until, the season of insects and <i>al-fresco</i> suppers being +long left behind, and the autumnal equinox having +peremptorily closed the doors and windows, fitted, +alas! by a carpenter who flourished in the reign of +Louis the Fourteenth, so plentiful a supply of air +was afforded by the handy-works of the said carpenter, +that the Chinese screen had some difficulty +in maintaining its post, and the flames of the well-furnished +elm-fire ascended with a roar that +would have shamed many a cataract of the rival +element. Not but that I would willingly forego +the opportunity of sending you erroneous information, +in exchange for your presence in that +country; and for your assistance in comprehending +the nature of a people apparently composed of such +contradictory ingredients. You might probably succeed +in fathoming the hidden springs of character, +which give birth to a crowd of anomalies difficult to +explain. You would discover by what mystery of +organization a people, subject to the influence of +violent passions, combine an abject subjection to the +forms of etiquette, carried to its extreme in every-day +life, with occasional outbreaks of adventure and romance +worthy of the days of Orlando and Rodomonte;<a name="page_007" id="page_007"></a> +and account for a nation exchanging a costume +which combines utility with grace, for one inferior +in both respects. Inventors of whatever is +most fascinating in dances and music—you would +discover the motive which induces them to abandon +both, but principally the first, which they replace +by the French <i>rigodon</i>, or dancing-made-easy, and +adapted to youth, manhood, and all stages of paralysis; +and, possessing the cathedrals of Leon, Burgos, +and Seville, to denounce Gothic architecture as barbarous, +and to brand it with the contemptuous denomination +of "crested masonry."</p> + +<p>Should my mono-(—monument-) mania run riot, +and over-describe, over-taxing even your passion for +that branch of art, be assured—and to this promise +you may always look back for consolation and encouragement—that +I will not write you a history of +the recent, or any previous Spanish revolution, +<i>apropos</i> of the first sentry-box I meet with, even +though its form be that of a Lilliputian brick castle. +Nor shall my first glimpse of a matador occasion you +a list of bull-fights, voluminous enough to line the +circumference of the <i>barrera</i>. No Diligence shall be +waylaid, nor in my presence shall any ladies' fingers +be amputated, the quicker to secure her rings, if I +can possibly avoid it; and, as far as depends on me, +I shall arrive in a whole skin at each journey's end,<a name="page_008" id="page_008"></a> +and without poisoning you or myself with garlick, +unless the new Cortes pass a law for denying to the +stranger all other sorts of aliment.</p> + +<p>I have resolved, by a process of reasoning which I +need not at present impart to you, and in virtue of +a permission which I have little doubt of your granting, +to publish my part of our correspondence. I +think that neither of us will be a loser by this plan, +however conceited I may appear to you for saying so. +Yourself, in the first place, must be a gainer by the +perusal of descriptions, on which, from their being +prepared for the ordeal of a less indulgent eye, +greater care will necessarily be expended: the public +may benefit in obtaining information, which shall +be at all events accurate, relative to subjects as yet +inadequately appreciated by those they are the most +likely to interest: while the chief gainer, in the event +of these two ends being attained, will of course be +your devoted and humble correspondent.<a name="page_009" id="page_009"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_II" id="LETTER_II"></a>LETTER II.</h3> + +<h5>ROUTE TO SPAIN THROUGH FRANCE.</h5> + +<p class="r">Bayonne.<br /> +</p> + +<p>The position of Burgos on the principal line of +communication by which Madrid is approached from +the north of Europe; the fact of its being the first +city met with, after crossing the Pyrenees, in which +monuments are found remaining of the former genius +and grandeur of the country; and the name of which +calls up the more stirring and eventful epochs of +Spanish history,—render it, notwithstanding its actual +distance from the frontier, a sort of introduction or +gateway to Spain—the Spain of the tourist.</p> + +<p>The most agreeable and least troublesome way of +visiting the best parts of Spain excludes, it is true, +this route; for the provinces of the Peninsula which +combine the greater number of requisites for the enjoyment +of life with the most attractive specimens of +the picturesque, whether natural or artificial, are +those nearest to the coast, and they are approached +more conveniently by sea. Those, however, who can<a name="page_010" id="page_010"></a> +devote sufficient time, will be repaid, by a tour in the +interior of the country, for the increase of trouble it +may occasion them; and this tour should precede +the visit to the maritime provinces, as it will render +their superior comforts and climate the more acceptable +from the contrast. The scenery of the Pyrenees, +and the passing acquaintance formed with the +original and picturesque population of the Basque +provinces, secure the traveller against any danger of +ennui throughout the land-journey between the frontier +and the city of Burgos.</p> + +<p>There does not exist the same security throughout +the extent of route which it is necessary to travel in +order to reach this frontier. The approach to Spain +across the south-western provinces of France offers +few objects worthy of detaining us on our way to the +Peninsula. It is one of the least interesting of +French routes. From Paris you pass through Orleans +and Tours. At Chatellerault—between the latter +city and Poitiers—the inn-door is besieged by women +offering knives for sale. It is everywhere known +that cutlery is not one of the departments of French +manufactures which have attained the greatest degree +of superiority. A glance at the specimens offered +for our choice while changing horses at Chatellerault, +showed them to be very bad, even for +France.<a name="page_011" id="page_011"></a></p> + +<p>This did not, however, prevent a multitude of +travellers from purchasing each his knife, nor one of +them from laying in a plentiful stock, stating that +he destined a knife for each member of his family—evidently +one of the most numerous in France. I +inquired of a native the explanation of this scene, +and whether these knives were considered superior +to those met with in other towns. "Oh no," was the +reply; "but it is usual to buy knives here." I ventured +to say I thought them very bad. "That is of +no consequence; because, whenever you have passed +through Chatellerault, every one asks you for a knife +made on the spot." These victims of custom had +paid enormous prices for their acquisitions.</p> + +<p>Poitiers is a crazy old town, but contains one of +the most admirable specimens of the architecture immediately +preceding the pointed, or ogivale, and +which the French savans call "the Romane." I allude +to the church called "the Notre Dame de Poitiers." +The west front is highly ornamented, and unites all +the peculiar richness with the quaintness and simplicity +of design which characterize that fine old +style. I must not omit the forest of Chatellerault, +passed through on leaving that town. It is famous +as the scene of the picnic given to the ladies of the +neighbouring city by the officers of a Polish regiment +quartered there, immediately before the breaking out<a name="page_012" id="page_012"></a> +of the Peninsular war. It is related that Polish +gallantry overstepped etiquette to such a degree,—and +<i>that</i> by premeditation,—as to urge these cavaliers, +by force of bayonet, and sentries, to separate all the +husbands, and other male relatives, from the fairer portion +of the guests. The consequences of such a termination +of the festivities may easily be imagined; Bonaparte, +a rigid judge with regard to all divorces except +his own, on receiving the complaint of the insulted +town, condemned the officers <i>en masse</i> to be decimated, +and the survivors degraded from their rank. He +relented, however, afterwards, on an understanding +that they were to regain their sullied laurels in the +Peninsula; where, in fact, in consequence of his +orders, such opportunities were afforded them, that +scarcely a man in the regiment survived the earliest +campaigns.</p> + +<p>The inhabitants of Chatellerault are said to take +great offence on being asked their age, suspecting the +inquirer of a malicious calculation.</p> + +<p>The new quarter of Bordeaux is handsome, spacious, +and airy. In the promenade called "La Quinconce," +on the bank of the river, a large insulated edifice, +the most monumental in view, is discovered by the +inscription on its front to be an establishment for +warm baths. At one extremity of the principal +façade is seen, in sculptured letters, "Bains des<a name="page_013" id="page_013"></a> +dames;" at the other, "Bains des hommes." At this +latter entrance a handsome staircase leads to the +corridor of general communication, on the unsullied +white wall of which the code of discipline of the +establishment, traced in large sable characters, forces +itself on the notice of the visitor. It consists of the +following single and rather singular statute: "Il est +expressement défendu aux garçons de permettre à +deux hommes de se servir de la même baignoire." +After some reflection I concluded it to be a measure +of precaution with regard to cleanliness, carried, no +doubt, to an extreme at Bordeaux. This town is +well deserving of a few days' halt, should the traveller's +object be amusement, or the pleasures of the +table, for which it enjoys a well-merited reputation. +It is a large and handsome city, the second in France +in beauty, and vies with the capital in the elegance +of its shops and principal streets. The theatre is, +externally, the finest in France; and there is, besides +the cathedral, and surpassing it in interest and antiquity, +a remarkable Gothic church.</p> + +<p>Of the sixty leagues which separate this town from +Bayonne, forty afford the most perfect example of +monotony. One sighs for the Steppes of Russia. +These are the well-known Landes, consisting of uncultivated +sands and morass; now covered league +after league with the unvarying gloom of the pine<a name="page_014" id="page_014"></a> +and cork forests,—now dreary and bare,—but ever +presenting to the wearied eye a wide interminable +waste, replete with melancholy and desolation. It is +true, that a day of pouring rain was not calculated to +set off to advantage the qualities of such a region, +and should in strict justice be admitted in evidence +before passing condemnation on the Landes.<a name="page_015" id="page_015"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_III" id="LETTER_III"></a>LETTER III.</h3> + +<h5>THE BASQUE PROVINCES.</h5> + +<p class="r">Burgos.<br /> +</p> + +<p>It never causes me surprise when I see the efforts +made by persons of limited means to obtain the situation +of Consul in a continental town.</p> + +<p>In spite of one's being, as it were, tied to one's +residence,—and that not one's home,—there are advantages +which counterbalance the evil. The place +carries with it a certain degree of consequence. One +feels oneself suddenly a man of influence, and a +respectable public character. I have heard one, certainly +far from being high on the list of these functionaries, +termed by a humbler inhabitant of his +"residence," the "Premier Consul."</p> + +<p>The income, too, is, it is true, limited; but then +one is usually in a cheap place. In fact, I always +envied these favoured individuals. No calling, however, +is without its <i>déboires</i>. It seems as if Providence +had decreed that an income cannot be fairly,<a name="page_016" id="page_016"></a> +if agreeably, earned. Thus, the set-off against the +bliss of the consul, is the necessity he is under of +holding out his hand for his fee. I make these remarks, +to introduce to your notice an ingenious +method, put in practice—probably invented—by our +consul at Bayonne, for getting over the irksomeness +of this duty. I found him in his <i>bureau</i>, pen in +hand, and a large sheet of official-shaped paper before +him, half written over. On my passport being +presented for his <i>visa</i>, his countenance assumed +a painful expression, in which regret was blended +with a sort of tendency to compassion, and which at +first occasioned me a sensation of alarm, conjuring up +in my imagination all the consequences of an irregular +passport—tedious routes to be retraced, time +lost, expense incurred, and suspicion, and even incarceration—infection—death!</p> + +<p>Meanwhile he pointed to the letter he was writing, +and, drawing forward with the other hand a chair, +said that he was at that moment memorializing the +Foreign Office on the subject of these visas; that his +pain was extreme at seeing travellers compelled to +send or come to his office, and to lose thus much +valuable time; he was likewise concerned at their +having to pay three francs each for so useless a ceremony +as his visa; but he wished it to be remarked, +that it was at present a ceremony quite indispensable;<a name="page_017" id="page_017"></a> +since, only four days back, a gentleman had been +compelled to return from the Spanish frontier (a +distance of seven leagues) in the middle of the night, +in consequence of his having neglected this, as yet, +necessary observance.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p> + +<p>Leaving Bayonne by Diligence, although still at +some distance from the frontier, you are already in a +Spanish vehicle. The only difference consists in its +being drawn by horses as far as Irun, a few hundred +yards in Spain, at which place they are replaced by +a team of mules; but the <i>mayoral</i> is Spanish from +the commencement, as also usually the greater number +of the travellers. From the first view of +Spanish ground, the monotony of the landscape +ceases, and gives place to picturesque scenery. This +effect is as sudden as if produced by the whistle of +a scene-shifter. From the brow of a hill the valley +of the Bidassoa opens on the view, the bay on the +right, two or three towns in the centre, and beyond +them, stretching to the left, the chain of the +Pyrenees. This opening scene is very satisfactory +to the newly arrived traveller, whose expectations +have been rising towards fever-heat as he gradually +neared the object of his dreams—the "renowned +romantic land;" the more so, as he is well prepared,<a name="page_018" id="page_018"></a> +by the Landes of France, to enjoy to the utmost +the variety of scene afforded by the two days of +mountain and valley which separate the frontier +from the town of Vitoria.</p> + +<p>The Diligence comes to a halt every afternoon; +the day's journey having commenced at three in the +morning. There are three of these days between +Bayonne and Burgos. At Tolosa and Vitoria—the +intermediate places of rest—the system is as follows: +Arriving at about four in the afternoon, an interval +is allowed of about two hours, which in a long +journey can always be profitably employed, until the +meal, called supper. This is Homerically plentiful, +and varied sufficiently to suit the tastes of +all such as are accustomed to the vicissitudes of +travelling. The repast over, all gradually retire to +their sleeping apartments, where they are undisturbed +until two o'clock in the morning.</p> + +<p>At this hour each passenger is furnished with a +candle, and requested to get up; and at a quarter to +three the <i>muchacha</i> (chambermaid) reappears, bearing +in her hand a plate, on which, after rubbing his +eyes, the traveller may discover, if it be allowed so +to speak, an imperceptible cup, a <i>xicara</i>,—since, having +the thing, they have a name for it, which is of +course untranslateable,—of excellent chocolate, an +<i>azucarillo</i> (almost transparent sugar prepared for<a name="page_019" id="page_019"></a> +instantaneous melting), a glass of water, and a piece +of bread. After partaking of this agreeable refreshment, +you have just time left to pay your +bill, fold up your passport, which during the night +has remained in the hands of the police, and to +take your seat in the Diligence.</p> + +<p>The towns of the Basque provinces appear not to +have been much maltreated during the Carlist war; +not so the villages, most of which present a melancholy +aspect of ruin and desolation. The churches, +built so as to appear more like keeps of castles, +have mostly withstood the shock. The destruction +was oftener the result of burning than of artillery. +The lover of the picturesque offers his silent gratitude +to the combatants on both sides, for sparing, although +unintentionally, some of the most charming objects +of all Spain.</p> + +<p>Among the most striking of these is Hernani. +It is composed of one street, of the exact required +width for the passage of an ordinary vehicle. This +street is a perfect specimen of picturesque originality. +The old façades are mostly emblazoned with the +bearings of their ancient proprietors, sculptured in +high relief. On entering the place, the effect is +that of a deep twilight after the broad blaze of the +sunny mountains. This is caused by the almost +flat roofs, which advance considerably beyond the<a name="page_020" id="page_020"></a> +fronts of the houses, and nearly meet in the centre +of the street: the roof of each house is either +higher or lower, or more or less projecting, than +its neighbour; and all are supported by carved +woodwork, black from age. The street terminates +on the brow of a hill, and widens at the end, so +as to form a small square, one retreating side of +which is occupied by the front of a church covered +with old sculpture; and the diligence, preceded +by its long team of tinkling mules, disappears +through the arched gateway of a Gothic castle.</p> + +<p>In this part of Spain one does not hear the sounds +of the guitar; these commence further on. On +Sundays and holydays, the fair of Tolosa, and of the +other Basque towns, flourish their castagnettes to +the less romantic whinings of the violin; but, in +traversing the country, the ear is continually met +by a sound less musical, although no less national, +than that of the guitar—a sort of piercing and loud +complaint, comparable to nothing but the screams +of those who have "relinquished hope" at Dante's +grim gateway.</p> + +<p>These unearthly accents assail the ear of the +traveller long before he can perceive the object +whence they proceed; but, becoming louder and +louder, there will issue from a narrow road, or +rather ravine, a diminutive cart, shut in between<a name="page_021" id="page_021"></a> +two small round tables for wheels. Their voice +proceeds from their junction with the axle, by a +contrivance, the nature of which I did not examine +closely enough to describe. A French tourist expresses +much disgust at this custom, which he +attributes to the barbarous state of his neighbours, +and their ignorance of mechanical art; it is, however, +much more probable that the explanation +given by the native population is the correct one. +According to this, the wheels are so constructed +for the useful purpose of forewarning all other +drivers of the approach of a cart. The utility of +some such invention is evident. The mountain +roads are cut to a depth often of several yards, +sometimes scores of yards, (being probably dried-up +beds of streams,) and frequently for a distance of +some furlongs admit of the passage of no more than +one of these carts at a time, notwithstanding their +being extremely narrow. The driver, forewarned +at a considerable distance by a sound he cannot +mistake, seeks a wide spot, and there awaits the +meeting.</p> + +<p>You need not be told that human experience +analysed resolves itself into a series of disappointments. +I beg you to ask yourself, or any of your +acquaintances, whether any person, thing, or event +ever turned out to be exactly, or nearly, such as<a name="page_022" id="page_022"></a> +was expected he, she, or it would be. According +to the disposition of each individual, these component +parts of experience become the bane or +the charm of his life.</p> + +<p>This truth may be made, by powerful resolve, +the permanent companion of your reflections, so as +to render the expectation of disappointment stronger +than any other expectation. What then? If you +know the expected result will undergo a metamorphosis +before it becomes experience, you will not be +disappointed. Only try. For instance,—every one +knows the Spanish character by heart; it is the +burden of all literary productions, which, from the +commencement of time, have treated of that country. +A Carlist officer, therefore,—the hopeless martyr in +the Apostolic, aristocratic cause of divine right; the +high-souled being, rushing into the daily, deadly +struggle, supported, instead of pay and solid rations, +by his fidelity to his persecuted king;—such a +character is easily figured. The theory of disappointments +must here be at fault. He is a true +Spaniard; grave, reserved, dignified. His lofty presence +must impress every assembly with a certain +degree of respectful awe.—I mounted the <i>coupé</i>, +or <i>berlina</i>, of the Diligence, to leave Tolosa, with +a good-looking, fair, well-fed native, with a long +falling auburn moustache. We commenced by bandying<a name="page_023" id="page_023"></a> +civilities as to which should hold the door +while the other ascended. No sooner were we +seated than my companion inquired whether I was +military; adding, that he was a Carlist captain of +cavalry returning from a six months' emigration.</p> + +<p>Notwithstanding the complete polish of his manners +in addressing me, it was evident he enjoyed an +uncommon exuberance of spirits, even more than +the occasion could call for from the most ardent +lover of his country; and I at first concluded he +must have taken the earliest opportunity (it being +four o'clock in the morning) of renewing his long-interrupted +acquaintance with the flask of <i>aguardiente</i>: +but that this was not the case was evident +afterwards, from the duration of his tremendous +happiness. During the first three or four hours, +his tongue gave itself not an instant's repose. +Every incident was a subject of merriment, and, +when tired of talking to me, he would open the +front-window and address the <i>mayoral</i>; then roar +to the postilion, ten mules ahead; then swear +at the <i>zagal</i> running along the road, or toss his +cigar-stump at the head of some wayfaring peasant-girl.</p> + +<p>Sometimes, all his vocabulary being exhausted, +he contented himself with a loud laugh, long continued; +then he would suddenly fall asleep, and,<a name="page_024" id="page_024"></a> +after bobbing his head for five or six minutes, +awake in a convulsion of laughter, as though his +dream was too merry for sleep. Whatever he said +was invariably preceded by two or three oaths, +and terminated in the same manner. The Spanish +(perhaps, in this respect, the richest European +language) hardly sufficed for his supply. He therefore +selected some of the more picturesque specimens +for more frequent repetition. These, in default +of topics of conversation, sometimes served +instead of a fit of laughter or a nap: and once or +twice he hastily lowered the window, and gave +vent to a string of about twenty oaths at the +highest pitch of his lungs; then shut it deliberately, +and remained silent for a minute. During dinner he +cut a whole cheese into lumps, with which he stuffed +an unlucky lap-dog, heedless of the entreaties of two +fair fellow-travellers, proprietors of the condemned +quadruped. This was a Carlist warrior!</p> + +<p>The inhabitants of the Basque provinces are +a fine race, and taller than the rest of the Spaniards. +The men possess the hardy and robust appearance +common to mountaineers, and the symmetry of form +which is almost universal in Spain, although the +difference of race is easily perceptible. The women +are decidedly handsome, although they also are anything +but Spanish-looking; and their beauty is<a name="page_025" id="page_025"></a> +often enhanced by an erect and dignified air, not +usually belonging to peasants, (for I am only speaking +of the lower orders,) and attributable principally to a +very unpeasant-like planting of the head on the neck +and shoulders. I saw several village girls whom +nothing but their dress would prevent from being +mistaken for German or English ladies of rank, +being moreover universally blondes. On quitting +Vitoria, you leave behind you the mountains and +the pretty faces.</p> + +<p>For us, however, the latter were not entirely +lost. There were two in the Diligence, belonging +to the daughters of a Grandee of the first class, +Count de P. These youthful señoritas had taken +the opportunity, rendered particularly well-timed +by the revolutions and disorders of their country, +of passing three years in Paris, which they employed +in completing their education, and seeing +the wonders of that town, <i>soi-disant</i> the most civilized +in the world; which probably it would have been, had +the old <i>régime</i> not been overthrown. They were +now returning to Madrid, furnished with all the +new ideas, and the various useful and useless accomplishments +they had acquired.</p> + +<p>Every one whose lot it may have been to undertake +a journey of several days in a Diligence,—that +is, in one and the same,—and who consequently recollects<a name="page_026" id="page_026"></a> +that trembling and anxious moment during +which he has passed in review the various members +of the society of which he is to be, <i>nolens volens</i>, +a member; and the feverish interest which directed +his glance of rapid scrutiny towards those in particular +of the said members with whom he was to +be exposed to more immediate contact, and at the +mercy of whose birth and education, habits, opinions, +prejudices, qualities, and propensities, his happiness +and comfort were to be placed during so large and +uninterrupted a period of his existence,—will comprehend +my gratitude to these fair <i>émigrées</i>, whose +lively conversation shortened the length of each +day, adding to the charms of the magnificent +scenery by the opportunity they afforded of a congenial +interchange of impressions. Although we did not +occupy the same compartment of the carriage, their +party requiring the entire interior and <i>rotonde</i>, we +always renewed acquaintance when a prolonged +ascent afforded an opportunity of liberating our +limbs from their confinement.</p> + +<p>The two daily repasts also would have offered no +charm, save that of the Basque <i>cuisine</i>,—which, +although cleanly and solid, is not perfectly <i>cordon bleu</i>,—but +for the entertaining conversation of my fair fellow-travellers, +who had treasured up in their memory +the best sayings and doings of Arnal, and the other<a name="page_027" id="page_027"></a> +Listons and Yateses of the French capital, which, +seasoned with a slight Spanish accent, were indescribably +<i>piquants</i> and original. My regret was +sincere on our respective routes diverging at Burgos; +for they proceeded by the direct line over the +Somo sierra to Madrid, while I take the longer road +by the Guadarramas, in order to visit Valladolid. +I shall not consequently make acquaintance with +the northern approach to Madrid, unless I return +thither a second time; as to that of my fellow-travellers, +I should be too fortunate were it to be +renewed during my short stay in their capital.<a name="page_028" id="page_028"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_IV" id="LETTER_IV"></a>LETTER IV.</h3> + +<h5>ARRIVAL AT BURGOS. CATHEDRAL.</h5> + +<p class="r">Burgos.<br /> +</p> + +<p>The chain of the Lower Pyrenees, after the ascent +from the French side, and a two days' journey of +alternate mountain and valley, terminates on the +Spanish side at almost its highest level. A gentle +descent leads to the plain of Vitoria; and, after leaving +behind the fresh-looking, well-farmed environs of +that town, there remains a rather monotonous day's +journey across the bare plains of Castile, only varied +by the passage through a gorge of about a mile in +extent, called the Pass of Pancorbo, throughout which +the road is flanked on either side by a perpendicular +rock of from six to eight hundred feet elevation. +The ancient capital of Castile is visible from a considerable +distance, when approached in this direction; +being easily recognised by the spires of its cathedral, +and by the citadel placed on an eminence, which +forms a link of a chain of hills crossing the route at +this spot.<a name="page_029" id="page_029"></a></p> + +<p>The extent of Burgos bears a very inadequate proportion +to the idea formed of it by strangers, derived +from its former importance and renown. It is composed +of five or six narrow streets, winding round +the back of an irregularly shaped colonnaded plaza. +The whole occupies a narrow space, comprised between +the river Arlançon, and the almost circular +hill of scarcely a mile in circumference, (on which +stands the citadel) and covers altogether about +double the extent of Windsor Castle.</p> + +<p>The city has received a sort of modern facing, +consisting of a row of regularly built white houses, +which turn their backs to the Plaza, and front the +river; uniting at one extremity with an ancient gateway, +which, facing the principal bridge, must originally +have stood slightly in advance of the town, to +which it formed a very characteristic entrance. It is +a quadrangular edifice, pierced with a low semicircular +arch. The arch is flanked on the river front +by small circular turrets, and surmounted by seven +niches, containing statues of magistrates, kings, and +heroes; while over these, in a centre niche, stands a +semicolossal statue of the Virgin, from which the +monument derives its title of "Arco de Santa Maria." +Another arch, but totally simple, situated at the +other extremity of the new buildings, faces another +bridge; and this, with that of Santa Maria, and a<a name="page_030" id="page_030"></a> +third, placed halfway between them, leading to the +Plaza, form the three entrances to the city on the +river side.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 527px;"> +<a href="images/ill_048_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_048_sml.jpg" width="527" height="550" alt="ARCO DE SANTA MARIA." title="ARCO DE SANTA MARIA." /></a> +<span class="caption">ARCO DE SANTA MARIA.</span> +</div> + +<p>The dimensions of this, and many other Spanish +towns, must not be adopted as a base for estimating +their amount of population. Irun, at the frontier +of France, stands on a little hill, the surface of which +would scarcely suffice for a country-house, with its<a name="page_031" id="page_031"></a> +surrounding offices and gardens: it contains, nevertheless, +four or five thousand inhabitants, and comprises +a good-sized market-place and handsome town-hall, +besides several streets. Nor does this close +packing render the Spanish towns less healthy than +our straggling cities, planned with a view to circulation +and purity of atmosphere, although the difference +of climate would seem to recommend to each of +the two countries the system pursued by the other. +The humidity of the atmosphere in England would +be the principal obstacle to cleanliness and salubrity, +had the towns a more compact mode of construction; +whilst in Spain, on the contrary, this system is advantageous +as a protection against the excessive +power of the summer sun, which would render our +wide streets—bordered by houses too low to afford +complete shade—not only almost impassable, but +uninhabitable.</p> + +<p>The Plaza of Burgos (entitled "de la Constitucion," +or "de Isabel II.," or "del Duque de la Victoria," +or otherwise, according to the government of +the day,) has always been the resort of commerce. +The projecting first-floors being supported by square +pillars, a sort of bazaar is formed under them, which +includes all the shop population of the city, and +forms an agreeable lounge during wet or too sunny +weather. Throughout the remainder of the town,<a name="page_032" id="page_032"></a> +with the exception of the modern row of buildings +above mentioned, almost all the houses are entered +through Gothic doorways, surmounted by armorial +bearings sculptured in stone, which, together with +their ornamental inner courts and staircases, testify +to their having sheltered the chivalry of Old Castile. +The Cathedral, although by no means large, appears +to fill half the town; and considering that, in addition +to its conspicuous and inviting aspect, it is the +principal remaining monument of the ancient wealth +and grandeur of the province, and one of the most +beautiful edifices in Europe, I will lose no time in +giving you a description of it.</p> + +<p>This edifice, or at least the greater portion of it, +dates from the thirteenth century. The first stone +was laid by Saint Ferdinand, on the 20th of July +1221. Ferdinand had just been proclaimed king by +his mother Doña Berenguela, who had invested him +with his sword at the royal convent of the Huelgas, +about a mile distant from Burgos. Don Mauricio, +Bishop of Burgos, blessed the armour as the youthful +king girded it, and, three days subsequently to the +ceremony, he united him to the Princess Beatrice, in +the church of the same convent. This bishop assisted +in laying the first stone of the cathedral, and presided +over the construction of the entire body of the +building, including half of the two principal towers.<a name="page_033" id="page_033"></a></p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 375px;"> +<a href="images/ill_051_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_051_sml.jpg" width="375" height="550" alt="INTERIOR OF THE CHOIR." title="INTERIOR OF THE CHOIR." /></a> +<span class="caption">INTERIOR OF THE CHOIR.</span> +</div> + +<p>His tomb may be seen at the back of the Choir. +From the date of the building its style may at once +be recognised, allowing for a difference which existed +between England and the Continent, the latter being +somewhat in advance. The original edifice must have<a name="page_034" id="page_034"></a> +been a very perfect and admirable specimen of the +pointed architecture of its time in all its purity. As +it is, unfortunately, (as the antiquary would say, and, +I should add, the mere man of taste, were it not that +tastes are various, and that the proverb says they +are all in nature,) the centre of the building, forming +the intersection of the transept and nave, owing +to some defect in the original construction, fell +in just at the period during which regular architecture +began to waver, and the style called in France +the "Renaissance" was making its appearance. +An architect of talent, Felipe de Borgoña, hurried +from Toledo, where he was employed in carving +the stalls of the choir, to furnish a plan for the +centre tower. He, however, only carried the work +to half the height of the four cylindrical piers which +support it. He was followed by several others before +the termination of the work; and Juan de Herrera, +the architect of the Escorial, is said to have completed +it. In this design are displayed infinite talent +and imagination; but the artist could not alter the +taste of the age. It is more than probable that he +would have kept to the pure style of his model, but +for the prevailing fashion of his time. Taken by itself, +the tower is, both externally and internally, admirable, +from the elegance of its form, and the richness of +its details; but it jars with the rest of the building.<a name="page_035" id="page_035"></a></p> + +<p>Placing this tower in the background, we will +now repair to the west front. Here nothing is required +to be added, or taken away, to afford the eye +a feast as perfect as grace, symmetry, grandeur, and +lightness, all combined, are capable of producing. +Nothing can exceed the beauty of this front taken +as a whole. You have probably seen an excellent +view of it in one of Roberts's annuals. The artists +of Burgos complain of an alteration, made some fifty +years back by the local ecclesiastical authorities, nobody +knows for what reason. They caused a magnificent +portal to be removed, to make way for a very +simple one, totally destitute of the usual sculptured +depth of arch within arch, and of the profusion of +statuary, which are said to have adorned the original +entrance. This, however, has not produced a bad +result in the view of the whole front. Commencing +by solidity and simplicity at its base, the pile only +becomes ornamental at the first story, where rows of +small trefoil arches are carved round the buttresses; +while in the intermediate spaces are an oriel window +in an ornamental arch, and two narrow double arches. +The third compartment, where the towers first rise +above the body of the church, offers a still richer +display of ornament. The two towers are here connected +by a screen, which masks the roof, raising the +apparent body of the façade an additional story.<a name="page_036" id="page_036"></a> +This screen is very beautiful, being composed of two +ogival windows in the richest style, with eight statues +occupying the intervals of their lower mullions. A +fourth story, equally rich, terminates the towers, on +the summits of which are placed the two spires.</p> + +<p>These are all that can be wished for the completion +of such a whole. They are, I imagine, not +only unmatched, but unapproached by any others, in +symmetry, lightness, and beauty of design. The +spire of Strasburg is the only one I am acquainted +with that may be allowed to enter into the comparison. +It is much larger, placed at nearly double +the elevation, and looks as light as one of these; but +the symmetry of its outline is defective, being uneven, +and producing the effect of steps. And then +it is alone, and the absence of a companion gives the +façade an unfinished appearance. For these reasons +I prefer the spires of Burgos. Their form is hexagonal; +they are entirely hollow, and unsupported internally. +The six sides are carved <i>à jour</i>, the design +forming nine horizontal divisions, each division presenting +a different ornament on each of its six sides. +At the termination of these divisions, each pyramid +is surrounded near the summit by a projecting gallery +with balustrades. These appear to bind and keep +together each airy fabric, which, everywhere transparent, +looks as though it required some such restraint,<a name="page_037" id="page_037"></a> +to prevent its being instantaneously scattered +by the winds.</p> + +<p>On examining the interior of one of these spires, +it is a subject of surprise that they could have been +so constructed as to be durable. Instead of walls, +you are surrounded by a succession of little balustrades, +one over the other, converging towards the +summit. The space enclosed is exposed to all the +winds, and the thickness of the stones so slight as +to have required their being bound together with +iron cramps. At a distance of a mile these spires +appear as transparent as nets.</p> + +<p>On entering the church by the western doors, the +view is interrupted, as is usual in Spain, by a screen, +which, crossing the principal nave at the third or +fourth pillar, forms the western limit of the choir; +the eastern boundary being the west side of the transept, +where there is an iron railing. The space between +the opposite side of the transept and the apse +is the <i>capilla mayor</i> (chief chapel), in which is placed +the high altar. There are two lower lateral naves, +from east to west, and beyond them a series of +chapels. The transept has no lateral naves. Some +of the chapels are richly ornamented. The first or +westernmost, on the north side, in particular, would +be in itself a magnificent church. It is called the +"Chapel of Santa Tecla." Its dimensions are ninety-six +<a name="page_038" id="page_038"></a>feet in length, by sixty-three in width, and sixty +high. The ceiling, and different altars, are covered +with a dazzling profusion of gilded sculpture. The +ceiling, in particular, is entirely hidden beneath the +innumerable figures and ornaments of every sort of +form, although of questionable taste, which the ravings +of the extravagant style, called in Spain "Churriguesco" +(after the architect who brought it into +fashion), could invent.</p> + +<p>The next chapel—that of Santa Ana—is not so +large, but designed in far better taste. It is Gothic, +and dates from the fifteenth century. Here are some +beautiful tombs, particularly that of the founder of +the chapel. But the most attractive object is a picture, +placed at an elevation which renders difficult +the appreciation of its merits without the aid of a +glass,—a Holy Family, by Andrea del Sarto. It is an +admirable picture; possessing all the grace and simplicity, +combined with the fineness of execution, of +that artist. The chapel immediately opposite (on +the south side) contains some handsome tombs, and +another picture, representing the Virgin, attributed +by the cicerone of the place to Michael Angelo. We +next arrive at the newer part, or centre of the building, +where four cylindrical piers of about twelve feet +diameter, with octagonal bases, form a quadrangle, +and support the centre tower, designed by Felipe<a name="page_039" id="page_039"></a> +de Borgoña. These pillars are connected with each +other by magnificent wrought brass railings, which +give entrance respectively, westward to the choir,—on +the east to the sanctuary, or capilla mayor,—and north +and south to the two ends of the transept. Above is +seen the interior of the tower, covered with a profusion +of ornament, but discordant with every other +object within view.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 363px;"> +<a href="images/ill_057_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_057_sml.jpg" width="363" height="550" alt="TRANSEPT OF THE CATHEDRAL, BURGOS." title="TRANSEPT OF THE CATHEDRAL, BURGOS." /></a> +<span class="caption">TRANSEPT OF THE CATHEDRAL, BURGOS.</span> +</div> + +<p>The high altar at the back of the great chapel is +also the work of Herrera. It is composed of a series +of rows of saints and apostles, superposed one over +the other, until they reach the roof. All are placed +in niches adorned with gilding, of which only partial +traces remain. The material of the whole is wood. +Returning to either side-nave, a few smaller chapels +on the outside, and opposite them the railings of the +sanctuary, conduct us to the back of the high altar, +opposite which is the eastern chapel, called "of the +Duke de Frias," or "Capilla del Condestable."</p> + + + +<p>All this part of the edifice—I mean, from the transept +eastward—is admirable, both with regard to +detail and to general effect. The pillars are carved +all round into niches, containing statues or groups; +and the intervals between the six last, turning round +the apse, are occupied by excellent designs, sculptured +in a hard white stone. The subjects are, the Agony +in the Garden, Jesus bearing the Cross, the Crucifixion,<a name="page_040" id="page_040"></a> +the Resurrection, and the Ascension. The +centre piece, representing the Crucifixion, is the most +striking. The upper part contains the three sufferers +in front; and in the background a variety of buildings, +trees, and other smaller objects, supposed to be +at a great distance. In the foreground of the lower +part are seen the officers and soldiers employed in +the execution; a group of females, with St. John +supporting the Virgin, and a few spectators. The +costumes, the expression, the symmetry of the figures,<a name="page_041" id="page_041"></a> +all contribute to the excellence of this piece of sculpture. +It would be difficult to surpass the exquisite +grace displayed in the attitudes, and flow of the +drapery, of the female group; and the Herculean +limbs of the right-hand robber, as he writhes in his +torments, and seems ready to snap the cords which +retain his feet and arms,—the figure projecting in its +entire contour from the surface of the background,—present +an admirable model of corporeal expression +and anatomical detail.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 550px;"> +<a href="images/ill_060_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_060_sml.jpg" width="550" height="441" alt="SCULPTURE IN THE APSE." title="SCULPTURE IN THE APSE." /></a> +<span class="caption">SCULPTURE IN THE APSE.</span> +</div> + +<p>In clearing the space to make room for these +sculptures, the artist had to remove the tomb of a +bishop, whose career, if the ancient <i>chronique</i> is to +be depended on, must have been rather singular. +The information, it must be owned, bears the appearance +of having been transmitted by some contemporary +annalist, whose impartiality may have perhaps +been biassed by some of the numerous incitements +which operate upon courtiers.</p> + +<p>Don Pedro Fernandez de Frias, Cardinal of Spain, +Bishop of Osma and Cuenca, was, it is affirmed, of +low parentage, of base and licentious habits of life, +and of a covetous and niggardly disposition. These +defects, however, by no means diminished the high +favour he enjoyed at the successive courts of Henry +the Third and Juan the Second. The Bishop of +Segovia, Don Juan de Tordesillas, happened by an<a name="page_042" id="page_042"></a> +unlucky coincidence to visit Burgos during his residence +there. The characters of the two prelates +were not of a nature to harmonise in the smallest +degree, and, being thrown necessarily much in each +other's way, they gave loose occasionally to expressions +more than bordering on the irreverent. It was +on one of these occasions, that, the eloquence of the +Cardinal Bishop here interred being at default, a +lacquey of his followers came to his assistance, and +being provided with a <i>palo</i>, or staff, inflicted on the +rival dignitary certain arguments <i>ad humeros</i>—in fact, +gave the Bishop of Segovia a severe drubbing. The +Cardinal was on this occasion compelled to retire to +Italy.</p> + +<p>Turning our backs to the centre piece of sculpture +last described, we enter the Capilla del Condestable +through a superb bronze railing. In these +railings the Cathedral of Burgos rivals that of +Seville, compensating by number for the superior +size and height of those contained in the latter +church. That of the chapel we are now entering +entirely fills the entrance arch, a height of about +forty feet; the helmet of a mounted knight in full +armour, intended to represent St. Andrew, which +crowns its summit, nearly touching the keystone +of the arch. This chapel must be noticed in detail. +Occupying at the extremity of the church a position<a name="page_043" id="page_043"></a> +answering to that of Henry the Seventh's Chapel +at Westminster Abbey, it forms a tower of itself, +which on the outside harmonises with peculiar felicity +with the three others, and contributes to the apparent +grandeur and real beauty of the exterior +view. The interior is magnificent, although its plan +and style, being entirely different from those of +Henry the Seventh's Chapel, prevent the comparison +from going further. Its form is octagonal, measuring +about fifty feet in diameter, by rather more than +a hundred in height. Its style florid Gothic of the +fourteenth century. The effect of its first view is +enhanced by its being filled, unlike the rest of the +church, with a blaze of light introduced through +two rows of windows in the upper part.</p> + +<p>Two of the sides are furnished with recesses, +which form lesser chapels, and in one of which +there is a fine organ. Between the centre of the +pavement and the principal altar, a large square +block of mixed marble covers the remains of the +founders of the chapel, and bears on its surface their +recumbent figures executed in great perfection.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a><a name="page_044" id="page_044"></a> +This is the finest tomb in the cathedral. The embroidery +of the cushions, the ornaments on the +count's armour, the gloves of the countess, are +among the details which merit particular notice +amidst the beautiful execution of the whole. The +high altar of this chapel does not accord with the +general effect, being designed in the style of the +<i>renascimiento</i>. In the centre of it is nevertheless +fixed a treasure that would compensate for worse +defects. A small circular medallion represents the +Virgin and Child, in an attitude very similar to +that of the Madonna della Seggiola, executed on porphyry. +This delicious little work, of about nine +inches in diameter, forms the centre of attraction, +and is the most precious ornament of the chapel. +On the right hand, near the altar, a small doorway +admits to the sacristy.</p> + +<p>This contains several relics of the founders. A +small portable altar of ivory, forming the base of a +crucifix of about eighteen inches in height, is an +exquisite model of delicate workmanship. Here<a name="page_045" id="page_045"></a> +also has been treasured up a picture, behind a glass, +and in a sort of wooden case; a bequest likewise +of the founders. Unfortunately they neglected to +impart the name of its author. The nebulous sort +of uncertainty thus made to surround this relic +has magnified its merits, which might otherwise perhaps +not have claimed particular notice, to the most +colossal dimensions. They scarcely at last know +what to say of it. At the period of my first visit +to Burgos, it was a Leonardo da Vinci; but, after +a lapse of two years, the same sacristan informed +me that it was uncertain whether the painting +was executed by Raffaelle or Leonardo, although +it was generally supposed to be by Raffaelle; and a +notice, published since, gives the authority of an +anonymous connaisseur, who asserts it to be far superior +to Raffaelle's "Perle." It is now consequently +decided that it cannot be a Leonardo, and is scarcely +bad enough for a Raffaelle.</p> + +<p>Without venturing <i>tantas componere lites</i>, I may +be allowed to give my impression, on an inspection as +complete as the studied darkness of the apartment, +added to the glass and wooden case, would permit. +It is a half-figure of the Magdalene. The execution +is very elaborate and highly finished, but +there are evident defects in the drawing. In +colouring and manner it certainly reminds you of<a name="page_046" id="page_046"></a> +da Vinci—of one of whose works it may probably +be a copy; but, whatever it is, it is easy to discover +that it is <i>not</i> a Raffaelle.</p> + +<p>This chapel does not occupy the precise centre +of the apse. A line drawn from the middle of +the western door through the nave would divide it +into two unequal parts, passing at a distance of +nearly two yards from its centre. An examination +of the ground externally gives no clue to the cause +of this irregularity, by which the external symmetry +of the edifice is rendered imperfect, although in +an almost imperceptible degree; it must therefore +be accounted for by the situation of the adjoining +parochial chapel, of more ancient construction, with +which it was not allowable to interfere, and by the +unwillingness of the founder to diminish the scale +on which his chapel was planned.</p> + +<p>Before we leave the Chapel del Condestable, one +of its ceremonies deserves particular mention. I +allude to the <i>missa de los carneros</i> (sheep-mass). +At early mass on All Souls day, a feast celebrated +in this chapel with extraordinary pomp, six sheep +are introduced, and made to stand on a large block +of unpolished marble, which has been left lying +close to the tombs, almost in the centre of the +chapel; near the six sheep are placed as many +inflated skins of pigs, resembling those usually filled<a name="page_047" id="page_047"></a> +with the wine of the country; to these is added +the quantity of bread produced from four bushels +of wheat: and all remain in view during the +performance of high mass. At the conclusion of +the final response, the sheep are removed from their +pedestal, and make for the chapel-gates, through +which they issue; and urged by the voice of their +driver, the peculiar shrill whistle of Spanish shepherds, +and by the more material argument of the +staff, proceed down the entire length of the cathedral +to the music of the aforesaid whistle, accompanied +by their own bleatings and bells, until they vanish +through the great western portal.</p> + +<p>Returning to the transepts, we find two objects +worthy of notice. The cathedral having been erected +on uneven ground, rising rapidly from south to +north, the entrance to the north transept opens +at an elevation of nearly thirty feet from the pavement. +To reach this door there is an ornamental +staircase, of a sort of white stone, richly carved in +the <i>renaissance</i> style. This door is never open, a circumstance +which causes no inconvenience; the steps +being so steep as to render them less useful than +ornamental, as long as any other exit exists.</p> + +<p>A beautifully carved old door, of a wood become +perfectly black, although not so originally, gives +access to the cloister from the east side of the<a name="page_048" id="page_048"></a> +south transept. The interior of the arch which surmounts +it is filled with sculpture. A plain moulding +runs round the top, at the left-hand commencement +of which is carved a head of the natural size, +clothed in a cowl.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 337px;"> +<a href="images/ill_068_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_068_sml.jpg" width="337" height="550" alt="HEAD OF SAINT FRANCIS." title="HEAD OF SAINT FRANCIS." /></a> +<span class="caption">HEAD OF SAINT FRANCIS.</span> +</div><p><a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p> + +<p>The attention is instantly rivetted by this head: +it is not merely a masterpiece of execution. Added +to the exquisite beauty and delicate moulding of +the upper part of the face, the artist has succeeded<a name="page_049" id="page_049"></a> +in giving to the mouth an almost superhuman expression. +This feature, in spite of a profusion of +hair which almost covers it, lives and speaks. A +smile, in which a barely perceptible but irresistible +and, as it were, innate bitterness of satire and disdain +modifies a wish of benevolence, unites with +the piercing expression of the eyes in lighting up +the stone with a degree of intellect which I had +thought beyond the reach of sculpture until I saw +this head. Tradition asserts it to be a portrait of +Saint Francis, who was at Burgos at the period of +the completion of the cathedral; and who, being +in the habit of examining the progress of the works, +afforded unconsciously a study to the sculptor.</p> + +<p>The two sacristies are entered from the cloister: +one of them contains the portraits of all the bishops +and archbishops of Burgos. Communicating with +this last is a room destined for the reception of +useless lumber and broken ornaments. Here the +cicerone directs your attention to an old half-rotten +oaken chest, fixed against the wall at a considerable +height. This relic is the famous Coffre del Cid, the +self-same piece of furniture immortalised in the +anecdote related of the hero respecting the loan of +money obtained on security of the supposed treasure +it enclosed. The lender of the money, satisfied by +the weight of the trunk, and the chivalrous honour<a name="page_050" id="page_050"></a> +of its proprietor, never saw its contents until shown +them by the latter on the repayment of the loan: +they were then discovered to consist of stones and +fragments of old iron.</p> + +<p>One is disappointed on finding in this cathedral +no more durable <i>souvenir</i> of the Cid than his rat-corroded +wardrobe. His remains are preserved in the +chapel of the Ayuntamiento; thither we will consequently +bend our steps, not forgetting to enjoy, as we +leave the church, a long gaze at its elegant and symmetrical +proportions. It may be called an unique model +of beauty of its particular sort, especially when contemplated +without being drawn into comparison with +other edifices of a different class. Catalani is said, +on hearing Sontag's performance, to have remarked +that she was "la première de son genre, mais que +son genre n'était pas le premier." Could the cathedral +of Seville see that of Burgos, it would probably +pronounce a similar judgment on its smaller rival.</p> + +<p>The profusion of ornament, the perfection of +symmetry, the completeness of finish, produce an instantaneous +impression that nothing is wanting in this +charming edifice; but any one who should happen to +have previously seen that of Seville cannot, after the +first moments of enthusiasm, escape the comparison +which forces itself on him, and which is not in +favour of this cathedral. It is elegant, but deficient<a name="page_051" id="page_051"></a> +in grandeur; beautiful, but wanting in majesty. The +stern and grand simplicity of the one, thrown into +the scales against the light, airy, and diminutive, +though graceful beauty of the other, recalls the contrast +drawn by Milton between our first parents; +a contrast which, applied to these churches, must +be considered favourable to the more majestic, however +the balance of preference may turn in the +poem.<a name="page_052" id="page_052"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_V" id="LETTER_V"></a>LETTER V.</h3> + +<h5>TOMB OF THE CID. CITADEL.</h5> + +<p class="r">Burgos.<br /> +</p> + +<p>The Ayuntamiento, or Town-hall, presents one +façade to the river, and the other to the Plaza +Mayor, being built over the archway which forms +the already mentioned entrance to the central portion +of the city. The building, like other town-halls, +possesses an airy staircase, a large public room, +and a few other apartments, used for the various +details of administration; but nothing remarkable +until you arrive at a handsomely ornamented saloon, +furnished with a canopied seat fronting a row of arm-chairs. +This is the room in which the municipal +body hold their juntas. It contains several portraits: +two or three of kings, suspended opposite to an equal +number of queens; the two likenesses of the celebrated +judges Nuño Rasura and Lain Calvo, near +which are seen the simple square oaken chairs from +within the angular and hard embrace of which they +administered the laws and government of Castile;<a name="page_053" id="page_053"></a> +a full-length of Fernan Gonzalez; and lastly, one +of the Cid.</p> + +<p>Owing to the singularity of this last portrait, it +is the first to attract attention. The hero is represented +in the most extraordinary of attitudes: the +head is thrown back, and the face turned towards +one side; the legs in a sort of studied posture; a +drawn sword is in the right hand, the point somewhat +raised. The general expression is that of a +comic actor attempting an attitude of mock-heroic +impertinence; and is probably the result of an unattained +object in the mind of the artist, of producing +that of fearless independence.</p> + +<p>Beyond this apartment is the Chapel, a plain, not +large room, containing but two objects besides its +very simple altar, with its, almost black, silver +candlesticks. Over the altar is a Conception, by +Murillo; and, in the centre of the chapel, a highly +polished and neatly ornamented funereal urn, composed +of walnut-wood, contains the remains of the +Cid: the urn stands on a pedestal. On its two ends +in letters of gold, are inscriptions, stating its contents, +and the date of its application to its present +purpose. I was told that the bones were contained +in a leaden box, but that a glass one was being prepared, +which, on opening the lid of the urn, would +afford a view of the actual dust of the warrior.<a name="page_054" id="page_054"></a></p> + +<p>The remains of the Cid have only recently been +conveyed to Burgos from the monastery of San Pedro +de Cardenas, about four miles distant. They had +been preserved there ever since his funeral, which +took place in the presence of King Alonzo the Sixth, +and the two Kings, sons-in-law of the hero, as soon +as the body arrived from Valencia.</p> + +<p>This monastic retreat, if dependence may be placed +on the testimony of the Cerberus of the Alcalde,—the +cicerone (when duly propitiated) of the municipal +edifice,—did not turn out to be altogether a +place of repose to the warrior. According to this +worthy, an amusing interpreter of the popular local +traditions, the exploits performed subsequently to +the hero's interment were such as almost to throw +a shadow over those he enacted during his mortal +existence. One specimen will suffice. Some twenty +thousand individuals, including the monks of all +the neighbouring monasteries, were assembled in the +church of San Pedro, and were listening to a sermon +on the occasion of the annual festival in honour of +the patron saint. Guided by curiosity, a Moor entered +the church and mingled with the crowd. After +remaining during a short time motionless, he approached +a pillar, against which was suspended a portrait +of the Cid, for the purpose of examining the +picture. Suddenly the figure was seen by all present,<a name="page_055" id="page_055"></a> +whose testimony subsequently established the +fact, to grasp with the right hand the hilt of its +sword, and to uncover a few inches of the naked +blade. The Moor instantly fell flat on the pavement, +and was found to be lifeless.</p> + +<p>You would be surprised at the difficulty of forming +even here, in the midst of the scenes of his +exploits, a definite idea of this Hercules of the Middle +Ages. For those who are satisfied with the orthodox +histories of the monks, he is without defects—a +simple unsophisticated demi-god. But there have +been Mahometan historians of Spain. These are +universally acknowledged to have treated of all that +concerned themselves with complete accuracy and +impartiality; and, when this happens, it should seem +to be the best criterion, in the absence of other proof, +of their faithful delineation of others' portraits.</p> + +<p>However that may be, here is an instance which +will give you an idea of the various readings of the +Cid's history.</p> + +<p>Mariana relates, that an Arab expedition, headed +by five kings (as he terms them) of the adjoining +states, being signalized as having passed the mountains +of Oca, and being occupied in committing depredations +on the Christian territory, Rodrigo suddenly +took the field, recovered all the booty, and +made all five kings prisoners. All this being done<a name="page_056" id="page_056"></a> +by himself and his own retainers. The kings he +released after signing a treaty, according to which +they agreed to pay him an annual tribute. It happened, +that on the occasion of the first payment of +this, Rodrigo was at Zamora, whither he had accompanied +the King of Castile; and he took an opportunity +of receiving the Arab messengers in presence +of the court. This was at least uncommon. The +messengers addressed him by the appellation of Syd +(sir) as they handed over the money. Ferdinand, +delighted with the prowess of his courtier, expressed +on this occasion the desire that he should retain the +title of Syd.</p> + +<p>This anecdote undergoes, in the hands of the Arab +writers, a curious metamorphosis. According to them, +the expression Syd was employed, not by tributary +kings, but by certain chiefs of that creed whose pay +the Catholic hero was receiving in return for aid lent +against the Christians of Aragon.</p> + +<p>They attribute, moreover, to this mirror of chivalry, +on the surrender of Valencia, a conduct by no +means heroic—not to say worthy a highwayman. +He accepted, as they relate, the pay of the Emyr of +Valencia to protect the city against the Almoravides, +who at that period were extending their conquests +all over Moorish Spain. The Cid was repulsed, and +the town taken. After this defeat he shut himself<a name="page_057" id="page_057"></a> +up in a castle, since called the Peña del Cid (Rock +of the Cid), and there waited his opportunity. On +the departure of the conquerors from the city, in +which they left an insufficient garrison, he hastened +down at the head of his campeadores, and speedily +retook Valencia.</p> + +<p>The Cadi, Ahmed ben Djahhaf, left in command +of the place, had, however, only surrendered on +faith of a capitulation couched in the most favourable +terms. It was even stipulated that he should +retain his post of governor; but no sooner was the +Cid master of the place than he caused the old man +to be arrested and put to the torture, in order to +discover from him the situation of a treasure +supposed to be concealed in the Alcazar; after +which, finding he would not speak, or had nothing +to reveal, he had him burned on the public place.</p> + +<p>The Citadel of Burgos, at present an insignificant +fortress, was formerly a place of considerable importance, +and commanded the surrounding country; especially +on the side on which the town—placed at +the foot of the eminence—lay beneath its immediate +protection, and could listen unscathed to the whizzing +of the deadly missiles of war as they passed +over its roofs. During the various wars of which +Castile has been the theatre at different periods, this +citadel has, from its important position, occupied the<a name="page_058" id="page_058"></a> +main attention of contending armies; and, from forming +a constant <i>point-de-mire</i> to attacking troops, has +finally been almost annihilated. The principal portion +of the present buildings is of a modern date, +but, although garrisoned, the fortress cannot be said +to be restored.</p> + +<p>The extent of the town was greater than at present, +and included a portion of the declivity which +exists between the present houses and the walls of +the fortress. At the two extremities of the town-side +of the hill, immediately above the level of the +highest-placed houses now existing, two Arab gate-ways +give access through the ancient town-walls, +which ascended the hill from the bottom. Between +these there exists a sort of flat natural terrace, above +the town, and running along its whole length, on to +which some of the streets open. On this narrow +level stood formerly a part, probably the best part, +of the city, which has shared the fate of its protecting +fortress; but, not being rebuilt, it is now an +empty space,—or would be so, but for the recent +erection of a cemetery, placed at about half the distance +between the two extremities.</p> + +<p>Before, however, the lapse of years had worn away +the last surviving recollections of these localities, +some worshipper of by-gone glory succeeded in discovering, +on the now grass-grown space, the situations<a name="page_059" id="page_059"></a> +once occupied by the respective abodes of the +Cid and of Fernan Gonzalez. On these spots monuments +have been erected. That of Gonzalez is a +handsome arch, the piers supporting which are each +faced with two pillars of the Doric order on either +side; above the cornice there is a balustrade, over +which four small obelisks correspond with the respective +pillars. The arch is surmounted by a sort of +pedestal, on which is carved an inscription, stating +the object of the monument. There is nothing on +the top of the pedestal, which appears to have been +intended for the reception of a statue.</p> + +<p>The monument in memory of the Cid is more +simple. It consists of three small pyramids in a row, +supported on low bases or pedestals; that in the +centre higher than the other two, but not exceeding +(inclusive of the base) twenty feet from the ground. +On the lower part of the centre stone is carved an +appropriate inscription, abounding in ellipsis, after +the manner usually adopted in Spain.</p> + +<p>It is not surprising that these monuments, together +with the memory of the events brought about by the +men in whose honour they have been erected, should +be fast hastening to a level with the desolation immediately +surrounding them. The present political +circumstances of Spain are not calculated to favour +the retrospection of by-gone glories. Scarcely is time<a name="page_060" id="page_060"></a> +allowed—so rapidly are executed the transmutations +of the modern political diorama—for examining the +events, or even for recovery from the shock, of +each succeeding revolution; nor force remaining to +the exhausted organs of admiration or of horror, to be +exercised on almost forgotten acts, since those performed +before the eyes of the living generation +have equalled or surpassed them in violence and +energy. The arch of Fernan Gonzalez, if not +speedily restored, (which is not to be expected,) +runs the risk, from its elevation and want of solidity, +of being the first of the two monuments to crumble +to dust; a circumstance which, although not destitute +of an appearance of justice,—from the fact of +the hero it records having figured on an earlier +page of Castilian annals,—would nevertheless occasion +regret to those who prefer history to romance, and +who estimate essential services rendered to the +state, as superior to mere individual <i>éclat</i>, however +brilliant.</p> + +<p>You will not probably object to the remainder +of this letter being monopolized by this founder +of the independence of Castile; the less so, from +the circumstance of the near connection existing +between his parentage and that of the city we are +visiting, and which owes to him so much of its +celebrity. Should you not be in a humour to be<a name="page_061" id="page_061"></a> +lectured on history, you are at all events forewarned, +and may wait for the next despatch.</p> + +<p>Unlike many of the principal towns of the Peninsula, +which content themselves with no more modern +descent than from Nebuchadnezzar or Hercules, +Burgos modestly accepts a paternity within the +domain of probability. A German, Nuño Belchides, +married, in the reign of Alonzo the Great, King of +Oviedo, a daughter of the second Count of Castile, +Don Diego Porcellos. This noble prevailed on his +father-in-law to assemble the inhabitants of the +numerous villages dispersed over the central part +of the province, and to found a city, to which he +gave the German name of "city" with a Spanish +termination. It was Don Fruela III., King of Leon, +whose acts of injustice and cruelty caused so violent +an exasperation, that the nobles of Castile, of whom +there existed several of a rank little inferior to that +of the titular Count of the province, threw up their +allegiance, and selected two of their own body, Nuño +Rasura and Lain Calvo, to whom they intrusted +the supreme authority, investing them with the +modest title of Judges, by way of a check, lest at +any future time they should be tempted, upon the +strength of a higher distinction, to make encroachments +on the common liberties.</p> + +<p>The first of the two judges, Nuño Rasura, was the<a name="page_062" id="page_062"></a> +son of the above-mentioned Nuño Belchides and +his wife, Sulla Bella (daughter of Diego Porcellos), +and grandfather of Fernan Gonzalez. His son Gonzalo +Nuño, Fernan's father, succeeded on his death +to the dignity of Judge of Castile, and became +extremely popular, owing to his affability, and winning +urbanity of deportment in his public character. +He established an academy in his palace for +the education of the sons of the nobles, who were +instructed under his own superintendence in all +the accomplishments which could render them distinguished +in peace or in war. The maternal +grandfather of Fernan Gonzalez was Nuño Fernandez, +one of the Counts of Castile who were treacherously +seized and put to death by Don Ordoño, +King of Leon. The young Count of Castile is described +as having been a model of elegance. To +singular personal beauty he added an unmatched +proficiency in all the exercises then in vogue, principally +in arms and equitation. These accomplishments, +being added to much affability and good-nature, +won him the affections of the young nobles, +who strove to imitate his perfections, while they +enjoyed the festivities of his palace.</p> + +<p>It appears that, notwithstanding the rebellion, and +appointment of Judges, Castile had subsequently +professed allegiance to the Kings of Leon; for a<a name="page_063" id="page_063"></a> +second revolt was organized in the reign of Don +Ramiro, at the head of which we find Fernan Gonzalez. +On this occasion, feeling themselves too +feeble to resist the royal troops, the rebels had +recourse to a Moorish chief, Aecipha. The King, +however, speedily drove the Moors across the frontier, +and succeeded in capturing the principal revolters. +After a short period these were released, on the sole +condition of taking the oath of allegiance; and +the peace was subsequently sealed by the marriage +of a daughter of Gonzalez with Don Ordoño, eldest +son of Ramiro, and heir to the kingdom.</p> + +<p>The Count of Castile was, however, too powerful a +vassal to continue long on peaceable terms with +a sovereign, an alliance with whose family had +more than ever smoothed the progressive ascent of +his pretensions. Soon after the accession of his +son-in-law Don Ordoño, he entered into an alliance +against him with the King of Navarre. This declaration +of hostility was followed by the divorce +of Fernan's daughter by the King, who immediately +entered into a second wedlock. The successor of +this monarch, Don Sancho, surnamed the Fat, was +indebted for a large portion of his misfortunes and +vicissitudes to the hostility of the Count of Castile. +Don Ordoño, the pretender to his throne, son of +Alonzo surnamed the Monk, with the aid of Gonzalez,<a name="page_064" id="page_064"></a> +whose daughter Urraca, the repudiated widow +of the former sovereign, he married, took easy +possession of the kingdom, driving Don Sancho for +shelter to the court of his uncle the then King of +Navarre. It is worth mentioning, that King Sancho +took the opportunity of his temporary expulsion +from his states, to visit the court of Abderahman +at Cordova, and consult the Arab physicians, +whose reputation for skill in the removal of obesity +had extended over all Spain. History relates that +the treatment they employed was successful, and +that Don Sancho, on reascending his throne, had +undergone so complete a reduction as to be destitute +of all claims to his previously acquired <i>sobriquet</i>.</p> + +<p>All these events, and the intervals which separated +them, fill a considerable space of time; and the establishment +of the exact dates would be a very difficult, +if not an impossible, undertaking. Various wars +were carried on during this time by Gonzalez, and +alliances formed and dissolved. Several more or +less successful campaigns are recorded against the +Moors of Saragoza, and of other neighbouring states. +The alliance with Navarre had not been durable. In +959 Don Garcia, King of that country, fought a +battle with Fernan Gonzalez, by whom he was +taken prisoner, and detained in Burgos thirteen<a name="page_065" id="page_065"></a> +months. The conquest of the independence of +Castile is related in the following manner.</p> + +<p>In the year 958, the Cortes of the kingdom +were assembled at Leon, whence the King forwarded +a special invitation to the Count of Castile, requiring +his attendance, and that of the Grandees of the +province, for "deliberation on affairs of high importance +to the state." Gonzalez, although suspicious +of the intentions of the sovereign, unable +to devise a suitable pretext for absenting himself, +repaired to Leon, attended by a considerable <i>cortége</i> +of nobles. The King went forth to receive him; +and it is related, that refusing to accept a present, +offered by Gonzalez, of a horse and a falcon, both +of great value, a price was agreed on; with the +condition that, in case the King should not pay the +money on the day named in the agreement, for each +successive day that should intervene until the payment, +the sum should be doubled. Nothing extraordinary +took place during the remainder of the visit; +and the Count, on his return to Burgos, married +Doña Sancha, sister of the King of Navarre.</p> + +<p>It is probable that some treachery had been intended +against Gonzalez, similar to that put in +execution on a like occasion previous to his birth, +when the Counts of Castile were seized and put +to death in their prison; for, not long after, a second<a name="page_066" id="page_066"></a> +invitation was accepted by the Count, who was +now received in a very different manner. On his +kneeling to kiss the King's hand, Don Sancho burst +forth with a volley of reproaches, and, repulsing him +with fury, gave orders for his immediate imprisonment. +It is doubtful what fate was reserved for +him by the hatred of the Queen-mother, who had +instigated the King to the act of treachery, in +liquidation of an ancient personal debt of vengeance +of her own, had not the Countess of Castile, +Doña Sancha, undertaken his liberation.</p> + +<p>Upon receiving the news of her husband's imprisonment, +she allowed a short period to elapse, +in order to mature her plan, and at the same +time lull suspicion of her intentions. She then +repaired to Leon, on pretext of a pilgrimage to +Santiago, on the route to which place Leon is +situated. She was received by King Sancho with +distinguished honours, and obtained permission to +visit her husband, and to pass a night in his prison. +The following morning, Gonzalez, taking advantage +of early twilight, passed the prison-doors in disguise +of the Countess, and, mounting a horse which was +in readiness, escaped to Castile.</p> + +<p>This exploit of Doña Sancha does not belong to +the days of romance and chivalry alone: it reminds +us of the still more difficult task, accomplished by<a name="page_067" id="page_067"></a> +the beautiful Winifred, Countess of Nithisdale, who, +eight centuries later, effected the escape of the +rebel Earl, her husband, from the Tower, in a +precisely similar manner; thus rescuing him from +the tragic fate of his friends and fellow-prisoners, +the Lords Derwentwater and Kenmure.</p> + +<p>Doña Sancha obtained her liberty without difficulty, +being even complimented by the King on her +heroism, and provided with a brilliant escort on her +return to Castile. Gonzalez contented himself with +claiming the price agreed upon for the horse and +falcon; and—the King not seeming inclined to liquidate +the debt, which, owing to the long delay, amounted +already to an enormous sum, or looking upon it +as a pretext for hostility, the absence of which would +not prevent the Count of Castile, in his then state +of exasperation, from having recourse to arms—passed +the frontier of Leon at the head of an army, and, +laying waste the country, approached gradually +nearer to the capital. At length Don Sancho sent +his treasurer to clear up the account, but it was +found that the debt exceeded the whole amount of +the royal treasure; upon which Gonzalez claimed +and obtained, on condition of the withdrawal of his +troops, a formal definitive grant of Castile, without +reservation, to himself and his descendants.</p> + +<p>Before we quit Burgos for its environs, one more<a name="page_068" id="page_068"></a> +edifice requires our notice. It is a fountain, occupying +the centre of the space which faces the principal +front of the cathedral. This little antique +monument charms, by the quaint symmetry of its +design and proportions, and perhaps even by the +terribly mutilated state of the four fragments of +Cupids, which, riding on the necks of the same +number of animals so maltreated as to render impossible +the discovery of their race, form projecting +angles, and support the basin on their shoulders. +Four mermaids, holding up their tails, so as not +to interfere with the operations of the Cupids, +ornament the sides of the basin, which are provided +with small apertures for the escape of the water; +the top being covered by a flat circular stone, +carved around its edge. This stone,—a small, elegantly +shaped pedestal, which surmounts it,—and +the other portions already described, are nearly +black, probably from antiquity; but on the pedestal +stands a little marble virgin, as white as snow. +This antique figure harmonises by its mutilation +with the rest, although injured in a smaller degree; +and at the same time adds to the charm of the +whole, by the contrast of its dazzling whiteness +with the dark mass on which it is supported. The +whole is balanced on the capital of a pillar, of a<a name="page_069" id="page_069"></a> +most original form, which appears immediately above +the surface of a sheet of water enclosed in a large +octagonal basin.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 550px;"> +<a href="images/ill_089_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_089_sml.jpg" width="550" height="501" alt="FOUNTAIN OF SANTA MARIA." title="FOUNTAIN OF SANTA MARIA." /></a> +<span class="caption">FOUNTAIN OF SANTA MARIA.</span> +</div> + +<p><a name="page_070" id="page_070"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_VI" id="LETTER_VI"></a>LETTER VI.</h3> + +<h5>CARTUJA DE MIRAFLORES. CONVENT OF LAS HUELGAS.</h5> + +<p class="r">Burgos.<br /> +</p> + +<p>The Chartreuse of Miraflores, situated to the +east of the city, half-way in the direction of the +above-mentioned monastery of San Pedro de Cardeñas, +crowns the brow of an eminence, which, +clothed with woods towards its base, slopes gradually +until it reaches the river. This spot is the most +picturesque to be found in the environs of Burgos,—a +region little favoured in that respect. The view, +extending right and left, follows the course of the +river, until it is bounded on the west by the town, +and on the east by a chain of mountains, a branch +of the Sierra of Oca. Henry the Third, grandfather +of Isabel the Catholic, made choice of this +position for the erection of a palace; the only +remnant of it now existing is the church, which +has since become the inheritance of the Carthusian +monks, the successors of its royal founder.<a name="page_071" id="page_071"></a></p> + +<p>The late revolution, after sparing the throne of +Spain, displayed a certain degree of logic, if not in +all its acts, at least in sparing, likewise, two or +three of the religious establishments, under the protection +of which the principal royal mausoleums +found shelter and preservation. The great Chartreuse +of Xeres contained probably no such palladium, +for it was among the first of the condemned: +its lands and buildings were confiscated; and its +treasures of art, and all portable riches, dispersed, +as likewise its inhabitants, in the direction of all +the winds.</p> + +<p>In England the name of Xeres is only generally +known in connection with one of the principal +objects of necessity, which furnish the table of the +<i>gastronome</i>; but in Andalucia the name of Xeres de +la Frontera calls up ideas of a different sort. It is +dear to the wanderer in Spain, whose recollections +love to repose on its picturesque position, its sunny +skies, its delicious fruits, its amiable and lively +population, and lastly on its once magnificent monastery, +and the treasures of art it contained. The +Prior of that monastery has been removed to the +Cartuja of Burgos, where he presides over a community, +reduced to four monks, who subsist almost +entirely on charity. This amiable and gentleman-like +individual, in whom the monk has in no degree<a name="page_072" id="page_072"></a> +injured the man of the world,—although a large +estate, abandoned for the cloister, proved sufficiently +the sincerity of his religious professions,—had well +deserved a better fate than to be torn in his old age +from his warm Andalucian retreat, and transplanted to +the rudest spot in the whole Peninsula, placed at an +elevation of more than four thousand feet above the +level of the Atlantic, and visited up to the middle of +June by snow-storms. At the moment I am writing, +this innocent victim of reform is extended on a bed +of sickness, having only recently escaped with his +life from an attack, during which he was given +over.</p> + +<p>This Cartuja possesses more than the historical +reminiscences with which it is connected, to attract +the passing tourist. It owes its prolonged existence to +the possession of an admirable work of art,—the tomb +of Juan the Second and his Queen Isabel, which stands +immediately in front of the high altar of the church. +This living mass of alabaster, the work of Gil de Siloë, +son of the celebrated Diego, presents in its general +plan the form of a star. It turns one of its points to +the altar. Its mass, or thickness from the ground +to the surface, measures about six feet; and this is +consequently the height at which are laid the two +recumbent figures.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 354px;"> +<a href="images/ill_093_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_093_sml.jpg" width="354" height="550" alt="N. A. Wells. deb. W. I. Starling, "84" INTERIOR OF THE CHURCH OF MIRAFLORES, NEAR BURGOS." title="N. A. Wells. deb. W. I. Starling, "84" INTERIOR OF THE CHURCH OF MIRAFLORES, NEAR BURGOS." /></a> +<span class="caption">N. A. Wells. deb. W. I. Starling, "84"<br /> +INTERIOR OF THE CHURCH OF MIRAFLORES,<br /> +NEAR BURGOS.</span> +</div> + +<p>It is impossible to conceive a work more elaborate<a name="page_073" id="page_073"></a> +than the details of the costumes of the King and +Queen. The imitation of lace and embroidery, the +exquisite delicacy of the hands and features, the +infinitely minute carving of the pillows, the architectural +railing by which the two statues are separated, +the groups of sporting lions and dogs placed +against the foot-boards, and the statues of the four +Evangelists, seated at the four points of the star +which face the cardinal points of the compass,—all +these attract first the attention as they occupy the +surface; but they are nothing to the profusion of +ornament lavished on the sides. The chisel of the +artist has followed each retreating and advancing +angle of the star, filling the innermost recesses with +life and movement. It would be endless to enter +into a detailed enumeration of all this. It is composed +of lions and lionesses, panthers, dogs,—crouching, +lying, sitting, rampant, and standing; of saints, +male and female, and personifications of the cardinal +virtues. These figures are represented in every +variety of posture,—some standing on pedestals, and +others seated on beautifully wrought arm-chairs, but +all enclosed respectively in the richest Gothic tracery, +and under cover of their respective niches. Were +there no other object of interest at Burgos, this +tomb would well repay the traveller for a halt of a +few days, and a country walk.<a name="page_074" id="page_074"></a></p> + +<p>At the opposite side of the town may be seen the +royal convent of Las Huelgas; but as the nuns reserve +to themselves the greater part of the church, including +the royal tombs, which are said to be very +numerous, no one can penetrate to satisfy his curiosity. +It is, however, so celebrated an establishment, +and of such easy access from the town, that a +sight of what portions of the buildings are accessible +deserves the effort of the two hundred yards' walk +which separates it from the river promenade. This +Cistercian convent was founded towards the end of +the twelfth century by Alonzo the Eighth,—the same +who won the famous battle of the Navas de Tolosa. +It occupies the site of the pleasure-grounds of a royal +retreat, as is indicated by the name itself. In its +origin it was destined for the reception, exclusively, +of princesses of the blood royal. It was consequently +designed on a scale of peculiar splendour. +Of the original buildings, however, only sufficient +traces remain to confirm the records of history, but not +to convey an adequate idea of their magnificence. +What with the depredations of time, the vicissitudes +of a situation in the midst of provinces so given to +contention, and repeated alterations, it has evidently, +as far as regards the portions to a view of which +admission can be obtained, yielded almost all claims +to identity with its ancient self.<a name="page_075" id="page_075"></a></p> + +<p>The entire church, with the exception of a small +portion partitioned off at the extremity, and containing +the high altar, is appropriated to the nuns, and +fitted up as a choir. It is very large; the length, +of which an estimate may be formed externally, +appearing to measure nearly three hundred feet. +It is said this edifice contains the tomb of the +founder, surrounded by forty others of princesses. +The entrance to the public portion consists of a +narrow vestibule, in which are several antique tombs. +They are of stone, covered with Gothic sculpture, and +appear, from the richness of their ornaments, to have +belonged also to royalty. They are stowed away, +and half built into the wall, as if there had not +been room for their reception. The convent is said +to contain handsome cloisters, courts, chapter-hall, +and other state apartments, all of a construction long +subsequent to its foundation. The whole is surrounded +by a complete circle of houses, occupied by +its various dependants and pensioners. These are +enclosed from without by a lofty wall, and face +the centre edifice, from which they are separated by +a series of large open areas. Their appearance is +that of a small town, surrounding a cathedral and +palace.</p> + +<p>The convent of the Huelgas takes precedence of +all others in Spain. The abbess and her successors<a name="page_076" id="page_076"></a> +were invested by the sovereigns of Leon and Castile +with especial prerogatives, and with a sort of authority +over all convents within those kingdoms. +Her possessions were immense, and she enjoyed the +sovereign sway over an extensive district, including +several convents, thirteen towns, and about fifty +villages. In many respects her jurisdiction resembles +that of a bishop. The following is the formula +which heads her official acts:</p> + +<p>"We, Doña ..., by the grace of God and of the +Holy Apostolic See, Abbess of the royal monastery of +Las Huelgas near to the city of Burgos, order of the +Cister, habit of our father San Bernardo, Mistress, +Superior, Prelate, Mother, and lawful spiritual and +temporal Administrator of the said royal monastery, +and its hospital called 'the King's Hospital,' and of the +convents, churches, and hermitages of its filiation, +towns and villages of its jurisdiction, lordship, and +vassalage, in virtue of Apostolic bulls and concessions, +with all sorts of jurisdiction, proper, almost +episcopal, <i>nullius diocesis</i>, and with royal privileges, +since we exercise both jurisdictions, as is public and +notorious," &c.</p> + +<p>The hospital alluded to gives its name to a village, +about a quarter of a mile distant, called "Hospital +del Rey." This village is still in a sort of +feudal dependance on the abbess, and is the only<a name="page_077" id="page_077"></a> +remaining source of revenue to the convent, having +been recently restored by a decree of Queen Isabella; +for the royal blood flowing in the veins of the present +abbess had not exempted her convent from the +common confiscation decreed by the revolution. The +hospital, situated in the centre of the village, is a +handsome edifice. The whole place is surrounded +by a wall, similar to that which encloses the convent +and its immediate dependances, and the entrance presents +a specimen of much architectural beauty. It +forms a small quadrangle, ornamented with an elegant +arcade, and balustrades of an original design.<a name="page_078" id="page_078"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_VII" id="LETTER_VII"></a>LETTER VII.</h3> + +<h5>ROUTE TO MADRID. MUSEO.</h5> + +<p class="r">Toledo.<br /> +</p> + +<p>The route from Burgos to Madrid presents few +objects of interest. The country is dreary and little +cultivated; indeed, much of it is incapable of culture. +For those who are unaccustomed to Spanish routes, +there may, indeed, be derived some amusement from +the inns, of which some very characteristic specimens +lie in their way. The Diligence halts for the night +at the Venta de Juanilla, a solitary edifice situated +at the foot of the last or highest <i>étage</i> of the Somo +Sierra, in order to leave the principal ascent for +the cool of early dawn. The building is seen +from a considerable distance, and looks large; +but is found, on nearer approach, to be a straggling +edifice of one story only.</p> + +<p>It is a modern inn, and differs in some essential +points from the ancient Spanish <i>posada</i>,—perfect +specimens of which are met with at Briviesca and<a name="page_079" id="page_079"></a> +Burgos. In these the vestibule is at the same time a +cow-shed, sheepfold, stable, pigsty,—in fact, a spacious +Noah's Ark, in which are found specimens of all +living animals, that is, of all sizes, down to the most +minute; but for the purification of which it would +be requisite that the entire flood should pass within, +instead of on its outside. The original ark, moreover, +possessed the advantage of windows, the +absence of which causes no small embarrassment +to those who have to thread so promiscuous a +congregation, in order to reach the staircase; once at +the summit of which, it must be allowed, one meets +with cleanliness, and a certain degree of comfort.</p> + +<p>The Venta de Juanilla, on the Somo Sierra, is a +newish, clean-looking habitation, especially the interior, +where one meets with an excellent supper, +and may feast the eyes on the sight of a printed card, +hanging on the wall of the dining-room, announcing +that luxury of exotic gastronomy—Champagne—at +three crowns a bottle: none were bold enough that +evening to ask for a specimen.</p> + +<p>There is less of the exotic in the bed-room arrangements; +in fact, the building appears to have been +constructed by the Diligence proprietors to meet the +immediate necessity of the occasion. The Madrid +road being served by two Diligences, one, leaving +the capital, meets at this point, on its first night, the<a name="page_080" id="page_080"></a> +other, which approaches in the contrary direction. +In consequence of this arrangement, the edifice is +provided with exactly four dormitories,—two male, +and two female.</p> + +<p>Nor is this the result of an intention to diminish +the numbers quartered in each male or female apartment; +on the contrary, two rooms would have answered +the purpose better than four, but for the inconvenience +and confusion which would have arisen +from the denizens of the Diligence destined to start +at a later hour being aroused from their slumbers, +and perhaps induced to depart by mistake, at the +signal for calling the travellers belonging to the +earlier conveyance,—the one starting at two o'clock +in the morning, and the other at three.</p> + +<p>On the occasion of my <i>bivouaque</i> in this curious +establishment, an English couple, recently married, +happened to be among the number of my fellow-sufferers; +and the lady's report of the adventures of +the female dormitory of our Diligence afforded us +sufficient amusement to enliven the breakfast on +the other side of the mountain. It appeared, that, +during the hustling of the males into their enclosure, +a fond mother, moved by Heaven knows what +anxious apprehensions, had succeeded in abstracting +from the herd her son, a tender youth of fourteen. +Whether or not she expected to smuggle, without<a name="page_081" id="page_081"></a> +detection, this contraband article into the female pen +we could not determine. If she did, she reckoned +somewhat independently of her host; for on a fellow-traveller +entering in the dark, and groping about for +a considerable time in search of an unoccupied nest, +a sudden exclamation aroused the fatigued sleepers, +followed by loud complaints against those who had +admitted an interloper to this holy of holies of +feminine promiscuousness, to the exclusion of one +of its lawful occupants. The dispute ran high; but it +must be added to the already numerous proofs of the +superior energy proceeding from aroused maternal +feelings, that the intruder was maintained in his +usurped resting-place by his determined parent, +notwithstanding the discontent naturally caused by +such a proceeding.</p> + +<p>We have now reached the centre of these provinces, +the destinies of which have offered to Europe +so singular an example of political vicissitude. It is +an attractive occupation, in studying the history of +this country, to watch the progress of the state, the +ancient capital of which we have just visited,—a +province which, from being probably the rudest and +poorest of the whole Peninsula, became the most +influential, the wealthiest, the focus of power, as it is +geographically the centre of Spain,—and to witness +its constantly progressive advance, as it gradually<a name="page_082" id="page_082"></a> +drew within the range of its influence all the surrounding +states; exemplifying the dogged perseverance +of the Spanish character, which, notwithstanding +repeated defeat, undermined the Arab +power by imperceptible advances, and eventually +ridded the Peninsula of its long-established lords. +It is interesting to thread the intricate narrative of +intermarriages, treaties, wars, alliances, and successions, +interspersed with deeds of heroic chivalry and +of blackest treachery, composing the annals of +the different northern states of Spain; until at +length, the Christian domination having been borne +onward by successive advantages nearly to the extreme +southern shores of the Peninsula, a marriage +unites the two principal kingdoms, and leads to the +subjection of all Spain, as at present, under one +monarch.</p> + +<p>It is still more attractive to repair subsequently to +the country itself; and from this central, pyramidal +summit—elevated by the hand of Nature to a higher +level than the rest of the Peninsula; its bare and +rugged surface exposed to all the less genial influences +of the elements, and crowned by its modern capital, +looking down in all directions, like a feudal castle +on the fairer and more fertile regions subject to its +dominion, and for the protection of which it is there +proudly situated,—to take a survey of this extraordinary<a name="page_083" id="page_083"></a> +country, view the localities immortalized by +the eventful passages of its history, and muse on its +still varying destinies.</p> + +<p>Madrid has in fact already experienced threatening +symptoms of the insecurity of this feudal tenure, +as it were, in virtue of which it enjoys the supreme +rank. Having no claim to superiority derived from +its commerce, the fertility of its territory, the facility +of its means of communication and intercourse with +the other parts of the kingdom or with foreign states,—nothing, +in fact, but its commanding and central +position, and the comparatively recent choice made of +it by the sovereigns for a residence; it has seen itself +rivalled, and at length surpassed in wealth and enterprize, +by Barcelona, and its right to be continued as +the seat of government questioned and attacked. +Its fall is probably imminent, should some remedy +not be applied before the intermittent revolutionary +fever, which has taken possession of the country, +makes further advances, or puts on chronic symptoms; +but its fate will be shared by the power +to which it owes its creation. No residence in +Europe bears a prouder and more monarchical aspect +than Madrid, nor is better suited for the abode of the +feudal pomp and etiquette of the most magnificent—in +its day—of European courts: but riding and +country sports have crossed the Channel, and are<a name="page_084" id="page_084"></a> +endeavouring to take root in France; fresco-painting +has invaded England; in Sicily marble porticoes +have been painted to imitate red bricks; and a Constitutional +monarchy is being erected in Spain. +Spaniards are not imitators, and cannot change their +nature, although red bricks should become the +materials of Italian <i>palazzi</i>, Frenchmen ride after +fox-hounds, and Englishmen be metamorphosed to +Michael Angelos. The Alcazar of Madrid, commanding +from its windows thirty miles of royal +domains, including the Escorial and several other +royal residences, is not destined to become the +abode of a monarch paid to receive directions from a +loquacious and corrupt house of deputies,—the utmost +result to be obtained from forcing on states a form of +government unsuited to their character. If the +Spanish reigning family, after having settled their +quarrel with regard to the succession, (if ever they +do so,) are compelled to accept a (so-called) Constitutional +form of government, with their knowledge +of the impossibility of its successful operation, they +will probably endeavour, in imitation of the highly +gifted sovereign of their neighbours, to stifle it, and +to administrate in spite of it; until, either wanting +the talent and energy necessary for the maintenance +of this false position, or their subjects, as may be +expected, getting impatient at finding themselves<a name="page_085" id="page_085"></a> +mystified, a total overthrow will terminate the +experiment.</p> + +<p>I am aware of the criticism to which this opinion +would be exposed in many quarters; I already hear +the contemptuous upbraidings, similar to those with +which the "exquisite," exulting in an unexceptionable +wardrobe, lashes the culprit whose shoulders are +guilty of a coat of the previous year's fashion. We +are told that the tendency of minds, the progress +of intellect, the spirit of the age,—all which, translated +into plain language, mean (if they mean anything) +the fashion,—require that nations should provide +themselves each with a new Liberal government; +claiming, in consideration of the fashionable +vogue and the expensive nature of the article, its +introduction (unlike other British manufactures) +duty-free. But it ought first to be established, +whether these larger interests of humanity are amenable +to the sceptre of so capricious a ruler as the +fashion. It appears to me, that nations should be +allowed to adapt their government to their respective +characters, dispositions, habits of life, and traditions. +All these are more dependant than is supposed +by those who possess not the habit of reflection, +on the race, the position, the soil and climate each +has received from nature, which, by the influence +they have exercised on their habits and dispositions,<a name="page_086" id="page_086"></a> +have fitted them each for a form of constitution +equally appropriate to no other people; +since no two nations are similarly circumstanced, +not only in all these respects, but even in any one of +them.</p> + +<p>What could be more Liberal than the monarchy of +Spain up to the accession of the Bourbon dynasty? +the kings never reigning but by the consent of their +subjects, and on the condition of unvarying respect +for their privileges; but never, when once seated on +the throne, checked and embarrassed in carrying +through the measures necessary for the administration +of the state. The monarch was a responsible but a +free monarch until these days, when an attempt is +being made to deprive him both of freedom of action +and responsibility—almost of utility, and to render +him a tool in the hands of a constantly varying succession +of needy advocates or military <i>parvenus</i>, whom +the chances of civil war or the gift of declamation +have placed in the way of disputing the ministerial +salaries, without having been able to furnish either +their hearts with the patriotism, or their heads with +the capacity, requisite for the useful and upright +administration of the empire. In Spain, the advocates +of continual change, in most cases in which +personal interest is not their moving spring, hope +to arrive ultimately at a republic. Now, no one<a name="page_087" id="page_087"></a> +more than myself admires the theories of Constitutional +governments, of universal political power +and of republicanism: the last system would be +the best of all, were it only for the equality it is +to establish. But how are men to be equalised by +the manufacturers of a government? How are the +ignorant and uneducated to be furnished with legislative +capacity, or the poor or unprincipled armed +against the seductions of bribery? It is not, unfortunately, +in any one's power to accomplish these +requisite preliminary operations; without the performance +of which, these plausible theories will ever +lose their credit when brought to the test of experiment. +How is a republic to be durable without +the previous solution of the problem of the equalisation +of human capacities? In some countries +it may be almost attained for a time; in others, +never put in motion for an instant. No one more +than myself abhors tyranny and despotism; but, +after hearing and reading all the charges laid at +the door of Absolutism during the last quarter of +a century, I am at a loss to account for the still +greater evils and defects, existing in Constitutional +states, having been overlooked in the comparison. +The subject is far less free in France than in the +absolute states of Germany: and other appropriate +comparisons might be made which would bring us<a name="page_088" id="page_088"></a> +still nearer home. I would ask the advocates for +putting in practice a republican form of government, +and by way of comparing the two extremes, +whether all the harm the Emperors of Russia have +ever done, or are likely to do until the end of the +world,—according to whatever sect the date of that +event be calculated,—will not knock under to one +week of the exploits of the French republicans of +the last century? And if we carry on the observation +to the consequences of that revolution, until we +arrive at the decimation of that fine country under +the military despotism which was necessarily its offspring, +we shall not find my argument weakened.</p> + +<p>I entreat your pardon for this political digression, +which I am as happy to terminate as yourself. I +will only add, that, should the period be arrived for +the Spanish empire to undergo the lot of all human +things—decline and dissolution, it has no right to +complain, having had its day; but, should that moment +be still distant, let us hope to see that country, +so highly favoured by Nature, once more prosperous +under the institutions which raised her to the highest +level of power and prosperity.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile, the elements of discord still exist in +a simmering state close to the brim of the cauldron, +and a mere spark will suffice at any moment to make +them bubble over. The inhabitants of Madrid are<a name="page_089" id="page_089"></a> +in hourly expectation of this spark; and not without +reason, if the <i>on-dits</i> which circulate there, and reach +to the neighbouring towns, are deserving of credit. +Queen Christina, on her road from Paris to resume +virtually, if not nominally, the government, conceived +the imprudent idea of taking Rome in her +way. It is said that she confessed to the Pope, who, +in the solemn exercise of his authority as representative +of the Deity, declared to her that Spain +would never regain tranquillity until the possessions +of the clergy should be restored to them.</p> + +<p>Whatever else may have passed during the interview +is not stated; but a deep impression was produced +on the conscience of the Queen, to which is +attributed the change in her appearance evident +to those who may happen to have seen her a few +months since in Paris. This short space of time +has produced on her features the effect of years. +She has lost her <i>embonpoint</i>, and acquired in its +place paleness and wrinkles. She is firmly resolved +to carry out the views of the Pope. Here, therefore, +is the difficulty. The leading members of her +party are among those who have profited largely by +the change of proprietorship which these vast possessions +have undergone: being the framers or abettors +of the decree, they were placed among the +nearest for the scramble. In the emptiness of the<a name="page_090" id="page_090"></a> +national treasury, they consider these acquisitions +their sole reward for the trouble of conducting the +revolution, and are prepared to defend them like +tigers.</p> + +<p>When, therefore, Queen Christina proposed her +plan<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> to Narvaez, she met with a flat refusal. He +replied, that such a decree would deluge the country +with blood. The following day he was advised to +give in his resignation. This he refused to do, and +another interview took place. The Queen-mother +insisted on his acceptance of the embassy to France. +He replied, that he certainly would obey her Majesty's +commands; but that, in that case, she would +not be surprised if he published the act of her +marriage with Muños, which was in his power.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> +This would compel Christina to refund all the income +she has received as widow of Ferdinand the +Seventh. The interview ended angrily; and, doubtless, +recalled to Christina's recollection the still +higher presumption of the man, who owed to her +the exalted situation from which, on a former occasion, +he levelled his attack on her authority. I<a name="page_091" id="page_091"></a> +am not answerable for the authenticity of these +generally received reports; but they prove the unsettled +state of things, when the determined disposition +of the two opposite parties, and the nearly +equal balance of their force, are taken into consideration.</p> + +<p>I was scarcely housed at Madrid, having only +quitted the hotel the previous day, when the news +reached me of the death of one of the fair and accomplished +young Countesses—the companions of +my journey from Bayonne to Burgos. You would +scarcely believe possible the regret this intelligence +occasioned me,—more particularly from the peculiar +circumstances of the occurrence. Her father had +recently arrived from France, and the house was +filled for the celebration of her birthday; but she +herself was forbidden to join the dinner-party, +being scarcely recovered from a severe attack of +small-pox. The father's weakness could not deny +her admission at dessert, and an ice. The following +day she was dead.</p> + +<p>Acquaintances made on the high road advance far +more rapidly than those formed in the usual formal +intercourse of society. I can account in no other way +for the tinge of melancholy thrown over the commencement +of my sojourn at Madrid by this event,—befalling +a person whose society I had only enjoyed<a name="page_092" id="page_092"></a> +during three days, and whom I scarcely expected to +see again.</p> + +<p>The modern capital of Spain is an elegant and +brilliant city, and a very agreeable residence; but +for the admirer of the picturesque, or the tourist +in search of historical <i>souvenirs</i>, it contains few +objects of attraction. The picture-gallery is, however, +a splendid exception; and, being the best in the +world, compensates, as you may easily suppose, for +the deficiency peculiar to Madrid in monuments +of architectural interest.</p> + +<p>To put an end to the surprise you will experience +at the enumeration of such a profusion of +<i>chefs d'œuvre</i> of the great masters as is here found, +it is necessary to lose sight of the present political +situation of Spain, and to transport ourselves to the +age of painting. At that time Spain was the most +powerful, and especially the most opulent empire +in Europe. Almost all Italy belonged to her; a +large portion actually owning allegiance to her +sceptre, and the remainder being subject to her paramount +influence. The familiarity which existed +between Charles the Fifth and Titian is well +known; as is likewise the anecdote of the pencil, +picked up and presented by the Emperor to the +artist, who had dropped it.</p> + +<p>The same taste for, and patronage of, painting,<a name="page_093" id="page_093"></a> +continued through the successive reigns, until the +period when painting itself died a natural death; +and anecdotes similar to that of Charles the Fifth +are related of Philip the Fourth and Velasquez. +All the works of art thus collected, and distributed +through the different palaces, have been recently +brought together, and placed in an edifice, some +time since commenced, and as yet not entirely completed. +Titian was the most favoured of all the Italian +painters, not only with respect to his familiar intercourse +with the Emperor, but also in a professional +point of view. The Museo contains no less than +forty of his best productions. Nor is it surprising +that the taste of the monarch, being formed by his +masterpieces, should extend its preference to the +rest of the Venetian school in a greater degree +than to the remaining Italian schools. There are, +however, ten pictures by Raffaelle, including the +Spasimo, considered by many to be his greatest +work.</p> + +<p>A cause similar to that above named enables us +to account for the riches assembled in the Dutch +and Flemish rooms, among which may be counted +more than two hundred pictures of Teniers alone. +I should observe, that I am not answerable for this +last calculation; being indebted for my information +to the director, and distinguished artist, Don Jose<a name="page_094" id="page_094"></a> +Madrazo. There is no catalogue yet drawn up. +Rubens has a suite of rooms almost entirely to +himself, besides his just portion of the walls of the +gallery. The Vandykes and Rembrandts are in great +profusion. With regard to the Spanish schools, it +may be taken for granted that they are as well represented +as those of the foreign, although partially +subject, nations. The works of Velasquez are the +most numerous; which is accounted for by his +situation of painter to the Court, under Philip the +Fourth. There are sixty of his paintings.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 550px;"> +<a href="images/ill_116_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_116_sml.jpg" width="550" height="400" alt="ITALIAN GALLERY AT THE MUSEO, MADRID." title="ITALIAN GALLERY AT THE MUSEO, MADRID." /></a> +<span class="caption">ITALIAN GALLERY AT THE MUSEO, MADRID.</span> +</div><p><a name="page_095" id="page_095"></a></p> + +<p>The Murillos are almost as numerous, and in his +best style: but Seville has retained the cream of +the genius of her most talented offspring; and even +at Madrid, in the collection of the Academy, there +is a Murillo—the Saint Elizabeth—superior to any +of those in the great gallery. It is much to be wished +that some artist, gifted with the pen of a Joshua +Reynolds, or even of a Mengs (author of a notice +on a small portion of these paintings), could be found, +who would undertake a complete critical review of +this superb gallery. All I presume to say on the +subject is, were the journey ten times longer and +more difficult, the view of the Madrid Museo would +not be too dearly purchased.</p> + +<p>Before I left Madrid, I went to the palace, to +see the traces of the conspiracy of the 7th October, +remaining on the doors of the Queen's apartments. +You will recollect that the revolt of October +1842 was that in favour of Christina, when the three +officers, Concha, Leon, and Pezuela, with a battalion, +attacked the palace in the night, for the purpose +of carrying off the Queen and her sister. On the +failure of the attempt, owing to its having been prematurely +put in execution, the Brigadier Leon was +shot, and the two others escaped.</p> + +<p>It appears that the execution of this officer, unlike +the greater number of these occurrences, caused a<a name="page_096" id="page_096"></a> +strong sensation in Madrid, owing to the sympathy +excited by his popular character, and the impression +that he was the victim of jealousy in the mind of the +Regent. The fine speech, however, attributed to him +by some of the newspapers, was not pronounced by +him. His words were very few, and he uttered them +in a loud and clear tone, before giving the word of +command to his executioners. This, and his receiving +the fire without turning his back, were the only +incidents worthy of remark.</p> + +<p>One of the two sentries stationed at the door of +the Queen's anteroom when I arrived, happened to +have played a conspicuous part on the eventful night. +The Queen was defended by the guard of hallebardiers, +which always mounts guard in the interior of +the palace. This sentinel informed me that he was +on guard that night, on the top step of the staircase, +when Leon, followed by a few officers, was seen to +come up. Beyond him and his fellow-sentry there +were only two more, who were posted at the door of +the Queen's anteroom, adjoining her sleeping apartment. +This door faces the whole length of the corridor, +with which, at a distance of about twenty yards, +the top of the staircase communicates. In order to +shield himself from the fire of the two sentinels at +the Queen's door, Leon grasped my informant by +the ribs right and left, and, raising him from the<a name="page_097" id="page_097"></a> +ground, carried him, like a mummy, to the corridor; +and there, turning sharp to the left, up to the two +sentries, whom he summoned to give him admittance +in the name of the absent Christina.</p> + +<p>On the soldiers' refusal, he gave orders to his battalion +to advance, and a pitched battle took place, which +was not ultimately decided until daybreak—seven +hours after. The terror of the little princesses, during +this night, may be imagined. Two bullets penetrated +into the bed-room; and the holes made by +about twenty more in the doors of some of the +state apartments communicating with the corridor, +are still preserved as souvenirs of the event. The +palace contains some well-painted ceilings by Mengs, +and is worthy of its reputation of one of the finest +residences in Europe. The staircase is superb. It +was here that Napoleon, entering the palace on the +occasion of his visit to Madrid, to install Joseph +Buonaparte in his kingdom, stopped on the first +landing; and, placing his hand on one of the white +marble lions which crouch on the balustrades, turned +to Joseph, and exclaimed, "Mon frère, vous serez +mieux logé que moi."</p> + +<p>There is no road from Madrid to Toledo. On the +occasions of religious festivities, which are attended by +the court, the journey is performed by way of Aranjuez, +from which place a sort of road conducts to the ancient<a name="page_098" id="page_098"></a> +capital of Spain. There is, however, for those +who object to add so much to the actual distance, +a track, known, in all its sinuosities, throughout its +depths and its shallows, around its bays, promontories, +islands, and peninsulas—to the driver of the +diligence, and to the mounted bearer of the mail; +both of whom travel on the same days of the week, +in order to furnish reciprocal aid, in case of damage +to either. A twenty-four hours' fall of rain renders +this track impassable by the usual conveyance; a +very unusual sort of carriage is consequently kept in +reserve for these occasions, and, as the period of my +journey happened to coincide with an uncommonly +aqueous disposition of the Castilian skies, I was fortunately +enabled to witness the less every day, and more +eventful transit, to which this arrangement gave rise.</p> + +<p>Accordingly at four o'clock on an April morning—an +hour later than is the custom on the road from +France to Madrid—I ascended the steps of a carriage, +selected for its lightness, which to those who know +anything of Continental coach-building, conveys a +sufficient idea of its probable solidity. There was not +yet sufficient daylight to take a view of this fabric; +but I saw, by the aid of a lantern, my luggage lifted +into a sort of loose net, composed of straw-ropes, and +suspended between the hind wheels in precisely such +juxtaposition, as to make the portmanteaus, bags, &c.<a name="page_099" id="page_099"></a> +bear the same topographic relation to the vehicle, as +the truffles do to a turkey, or the stuffing to a duck. +There was much grumbling about the quantity of my +luggage, and some hints thrown out, relative to the +additional perils, suspended over our heads, or rather, +under our seats, in consequence of the coincidence of +the unusual weight, with the bad state of the <i>road</i>, +as they termed it, and the acknowledged caducity of +the carriage. I really was, in fact, the only one to +blame; for I could not discover, besides my things, +more than two small valises belonging to all the +other six passengers together.</p> + +<p>At length we set off, and at a distance of four +miles from Madrid, as day began to break, we broke +down.</p> + +<p>The break-down was neither violent nor dangerous, +and was occasioned by the crash of a hind wheel, +while our pace did not exceed a walk: but it was +productive of some amusement, owing to the position, +near the corner of the vehicle which took the +greatest fancy to <i>terra firma</i>, of a not over heroic limb +of the Castilian law, who had endeavoured to be facetious +ever since our departure, and whose countenance +now exhibited the most grotesque symptoms of +real terror. Never, I am convinced, will those moments +be forgotten by that individual, whose vivacity +deserted him for the remainder of the journey;<a name="page_100" id="page_100"></a> +and whose attitude and expression, as his extended +arms failed to recover his centre of gravity exchanged +for the supine, folded-up posture, unavoidable +by the occupant at the lowest corner of a broken-down +vehicle,—while his thoughts wandered to his +absent offspring, whose fond smiles awaited him in +Toledo, but to whom perhaps he was not allowed +to bid an eternal adieu—will live likewise in the +memory of his fellow-travellers.</p> + +<p>This <i>dénouement</i> of the adventures of the first carriage +rendered a long halt necessary; during which, +the postilion returned to Madrid on a mule, and +brought us out a second. This proceeding occupied +four hours, during which some entered a neighbouring +<i>venta</i>, others remained on the road, seated on +heaps of stones, and all breakfasted on what provisions +they had brought with them, or could procure +at the said <i>venta</i>. The sight of the vehicle that now +approached, would have been cheaply bought at the +price of twenty up-sets. Don Quixote would have +charged it, had such an apparition suddenly presented +itself to his view. It was called a phaeton, +but bore no sort of resemblance to the open carriage +known in England by that name. Its form +was remarkable by its length being out of all proportion +to its width,—so much so as to require three +widely-separated windows on each side. These were<a name="page_101" id="page_101"></a> +irregularly placed, instead of being alike on the +two sides, for the door appeared to have been forgotten +until after the completion of the fabric, and +to have taken subsequently the place of a window; +which window—pursuant to a praiseworthy sense +of justice—was provided for at the expense of a +portion of deal board, and some uniformity.</p> + +<p>The machine possessed, nevertheless, allowing for +its rather exaggerated length, somewhat of the form +of an ancient landau; but the roof describing a +semicircle, gave it the appearance of having been +placed upside down by mistake, in lowering it on to +the wheels. Then, with regard to these wheels, +they certainly had nothing very extraordinary about +their appearance, when motionless; but, on being +subjected to a forward or backward impulse, they +assumed, respectively, and independently of each +other, such a zigzag movement, as would belong +to a rotatory, locomotive pendulum, should the progress +of mechanics ever attain to so complicated a +discovery. Indeed, the machine, in general, appeared +desirous of avoiding the monotony attendant on +a straight-forward movement; the body of the monster, +from the groans, sighs, screams, and other various +sounds which accompanied its heaving, pitching, and +rolling exertions, appearing to belong to some unwieldy +and agonised mammoth and to move by its<a name="page_102" id="page_102"></a> +own laborious efforts, instead of being indebted for +its progress to the half-dozen quadrupeds hooked to +its front projections.</p> + +<p>The track along which this interesting production +of mechanical art now conveyed us, bore much resemblance +to a river, in the accidents of its course. +Thus we were reminded at frequent intervals, by +the suddenly increased speed of our progress, that +we were descending a rapid: at other times the motion +was so vertical, as to announce the passage down +a cataract. These incidents were not objectionable +to me, as they interrupted the monotony of the walking +pace, to which we were condemned; although one +or two passengers of rather burly proportions, seemed +not much to enjoy their repetition. However this +might be, assuredly we were none of us sorry to find +ourselves at eight o'clock that evening safely housed +at Toledo.<a name="page_103" id="page_103"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_VIII" id="LETTER_VIII"></a>LETTER VIII.</h3> + +<h5>PICTURESQUE POSITION OF TOLEDO. FLORINDA.</h5> + +<p class="r">Toledo.<br /> +</p> + +<p>Every traveller—I don't mean every one who +habitually assists in wearing out roads, whether of +stone or iron—nor who travels for business, nor who +seeks to escape from himself—meaning from ennui, +(a vain attempt, by the way, if Horace is to be depended +on; since, even should he travel on horseback, +the most exhilarating sort of locomotion, ennui will +contrive to mount and ride pillion)—but every one +who deserves the name of traveller, who travels for +travelling sake, for the pleasure of travelling, knows +the intensity of the feeling which impels his right +hand, as he proceeds to open the window-shutter +of his bed-room, on the morning subsequent to his +nocturnal arrival in a new town.</p> + +<p>The windows of the Posada del Miradero at Toledo +are so placed as by no means to diminish the +interest of this operation. The shutter being opened, +I found myself looking from a perpendicular elevation<a name="page_104" id="page_104"></a> +of several hundred feet, on one of the prettiest +views you can imagine. The town was at +my back, and the road by which we had arrived, +was cut in the side of the precipice beneath me. In +following that direction, the first object at all prominent +was the gate leading to Madrid—a cluster of +half Arab embattled towers and walls, standing somewhat +to the left at the bottom of the descent. These +gave issue to the track mentioned in my journey, +and which could now be traced straight in front, +to a considerable distance.</p> + +<p>The ground rises slightly beyond the gates of the +town, and preserves a moderate elevation all across +the view, retreating right and left, so as to offer +the convex side of the arc of an immense circle. This +formation gives to the view a valley, extending on +either side, shut in on the left by mountains +at a distance of four miles; while to the east it extends +as far as the eye can reach,—some mountains, +scarcely perceptible, crossing it at the horizon. The +Tagus advances down the eastern valley from Aranjuez; +which château is in view at the distance of +twenty-eight miles, and approaching with innumerable +zigzags to the foot of the town, suddenly forms a +curve, and, dashing into the rocks, passes round the +back of the city, issues again into the western valley, +and, after another sharp turn to the left, resumes the<a name="page_105" id="page_105"></a> +same direction as before. All this tract of country +owes to the waters of the Tagus a richness of vegetation, +and a bright freshness nowhere surpassed. +So much for the distant view.</p> + +<p>To judge of the nearer appearance of the town, I +crossed the bridge of Alcantara, placed at the entrance +of the eastern valley, and leading to Aranjuez. +The situation may be described in a few words. Toledo +stands on an eminence nearly circular in its +general form. It is a mass of jagged rock, almost +perpendicular on all its sides. The river flows rather +more than half round it, descending from the east, +and passing round its southern side. The left or south +bank is of the same precipitous formation; but, instead +of presenting that peculiarity during only a +short distance, it continues so both above and below +the town; while on the opposite side the only high +ground is the solitary mass of rock selected, whether +with a view to defence or to inconvenience, for the +position of this ancient city. The Tagus is crossed +by two bridges, one at each extremity of the semi-circle +described by it round the half of the town. +These bridges are both highly picturesque, from +their form no less than their situation. They are +raised upon arches of a height so disproportionate +to their width, as to appear like aqueducts; and are +provided at each extremity with towers, all, with one<a name="page_106" id="page_106"></a> +exception, Moorish in their style. The lower bridge +(lower by position, for it is the higher of the two +in actual elevation) bears the name of San Martin, +and is traversed by the road to Estremadura; the +other leads to Aranjuez, and is the puente de Alcantara. +We are now standing on this last, having +passed under the Arab archway of its tower.</p> + +<p>Its width is just sufficient for the passage of two +vehicles abreast, and it is covered with flag-paving. +The river flows sixty feet below. At the back of the +tower which faces you, at the opposite end of the +bridge, rises a rock, almost isolated from the rest of +the cliff, and on its top the half-ruined towers and +walls of a Moorish castle. On the left hand extends +the valley, through which the river approaches in +a broad mass. The road to Aranjuez follows the +same direction, after having first disappeared round +the base of the rock just mentioned, and is bordered +with rose-trees, and occasional groups of limes, which +separate it from the portions set apart for pedestrians. +On the right hand the river (still looking +from the bridge) is suddenly pressed in between +precipices, becomes narrow, and at the distance of +a few hundred yards, forms a noisy cascade.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 550px;"> +<a href="images/ill_129_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_129_sml.jpg" width="550" height="370" alt="VIEW OF TOLEDO" title="VIEW OF TOLEDO" /></a> +<span class="caption">VIEW OF TOLEDO</span> +</div> + +<p>Still looking in that direction, the left bank—a +rocky precipice, as I mentioned before—curves round +and soon hurries it out of sight. The lower part of<a name="page_107" id="page_107"></a> +the opposite or town bank is ornamented, close to +the cascade, with a picturesque ruin, on which you +look down from your position. This consists of three +stories of arches, standing partly in the water. +Above and behind them rise a few larger buildings, +almost perpendicularly over each other, and the summit +is crowned with the colossal quadrangular mass +of the Alcazar.</p> + +<p>The ruinous arches just mentioned, are the remains +of a building erected by a speculator, who had +conceived a plan for raising water to the Alcazar by +means of wheels, furnished with jars, according to the +custom of this part of Spain. The arrangement is +simple; the jars, being attached round a perpendicular +wheel, successively fill with water, as each arrives +at the bottom, and empty themselves, on reaching +the summit, into any receptacle placed so as to receive +their contents. The speculator, having to operate +on a colossal scale, intended probably to super-pose +wheel over wheel, and to establish reservoirs +at different elevations, as it would scarcely be possible +to work a wheel of such dimensions as to carry +jars to the height required (more than three hundred +feet), even though furnished with ropes, which are +made to turn round the wheel and descend below +it.</p> + +<p>Crossing the bridge, the road quits the river, or<a name="page_108" id="page_108"></a> +rather is left for a certain space by it, until it meets +it at the distance of a mile. This road is a favourite +promenade of the inhabitants, and deservedly so. On +each side, for the distance of a mile, it is bordered by +hedges of magnificent rose-trees. These hedges are +double on both sides, enclosing walks for the promenaders +on foot. Behind those on the outside, the +colours are varied by the pale green of the olive-tree; +and over them occasional clusters of lime-trees, +mingled with the acacia and laburnum, furnish shade, +in case of an excess of sunshine. This promenade, +flanked on one side by the hills, and on the other, +by the highly cultivated plain, in parts of which the +Tagus is seen occasionally to peep through its wooded +banks, is most delicious during the rose season. +I should especially recommend the visitor of Toledo +to repair to it during the first hour after sunrise, +when thronged with birds, which are here almost +tame, and fill the air with their music; and also in +the evening, when frequented by the mantilla-hooded +fair of the city.</p> + +<p>There is, however, notwithstanding the beauty and +gay appearance of this profusion of roses, a singular +effect produced by their situation. Usually seen surrounded +by other flowers or by well-kept grass or +earth, they do not look quite themselves on the side +on which they rest their bushy foundations on a<a name="page_109" id="page_109"></a> +dusty road, covered with deep ruts. The fish out of +water forms a hackneyed, not to say a dried up, comparison; +but we can compare the rather pallid and +unnatural appearance of these plants to that of a +bevy of ladies, who, tired of the monotony of a ball-room +in Grosvenor Place, should resolve, precisely +at the crisis when candle-light is more than ever required +for their rather suffering complexions, to compel +their partners to lead them, at sunrise, a galopade +down Tattersall's yard. The roses, thus misplaced, +are nevertheless roses, and cease not to be fair, in +spite of their unusual <i>entourage</i>, and to contribute +to the beauty and novelty of this picturesque promenade.</p> + +<p>Amongst the variety of harmless weaknesses by +which human imagination, and consequently human +locomotion are influenced, I look upon one of the +most irresistible (if such an epithet be applicable +to a weakness) to be that fractional component part +of the cravings of antiquarianism, which urges some +persons in the search after, and rewards their labours +on the discovery of, the locality supposed to be the +birthscene of some great historical event, however +insignificant in other respects, or even however loathsome +its actual state may be to the outward senses. +Thus, when, in Normandy, the worthy and probably +waggish majordomo of the crumbling old castle of<a name="page_110" id="page_110"></a> +Falaise, directs your attention to the window from +which Duke Robert caught the first glance of the +ankle of William the Conqueror's mother,—as she +pursued her professional labours, and polluted with +her soapsuds the silver brook a quarter of a mile +below him,—and suddenly yielded his soul to its irresistible +beauty: notwithstanding the impossibility of +the thing, many, and I confess myself one, are too +delighted with the window, and the rivulet, and the +majordomo, and the—God knows what!—perhaps +with the very impossibility—to allow themselves a +moment's sceptical or sarcastic feeling on the subject.</p> + +<p>I should mention that my visit to Falaise happening +to take place shortly after the passage of the +King of the French on a tour through his western +provinces, the aforesaid cicerone pointed out a highly +suspicious-looking inscription, being the initials of +the monarch, carefully engraved in the stone; which +he informed me had been cut by Louis Philippe, on +the occasion of his visit at midnight to the room +of Duke Robert; but of which I took the liberty +of suspecting himself of being the sculptor, during +some idle moment,—fond as he probably was of contemplating +the innocently expressive countenances +of his satisfied visitors.</p> + +<p>Actuated by the feeling I have attempted to describe, +one of my first inquiries at Toledo related to<a name="page_111" id="page_111"></a> +the well-known story of Florinda and her bath, so +fatal to the Gothic sway in Spain. I was immediately +directed to the spot, on which is seen a square +tower, pierced by arched openings through its two +opposite sides, and on a third side by a similar but +smaller aperture. The four walls alone remain, +and the whole is uncovered. This symmetrical-looking +edifice, well built and composed of large stones, +measures about sixteen feet square, and from forty +to fifty in elevation, and stands on the edge of +the river, on the town side, about a hundred yards +below the western bridge—that called after Saint +Martin—at the precise point at which the river +quits the town, and its north bank ceases to be +precipitous.</p> + +<p>The extreme point of the termination of the high +ground is immediately over the building, and is +covered with the ruins of King Roderick's palace, +the outer walls of which descend to the water, and +are terminated by a small roundtower within a +few yards of the quadrangular edifice. The edifice +is called the Baño de la Cava, meaning Florinda's +bath, although the native popular tradition, +losing sight of the events of the history, has metamorphosed +the heroine of the spot into a Moorish +princess.</p> + +<p>In fact, the rocky precipice terminates at this<a name="page_112" id="page_112"></a> +spot,—the last piece of rock forming part of the foundation +of the square tower, immediately beyond +which is a gently descending sand-bank most convenient +and tempting to bathers. This circumstance, +added to the situation of Roderick's residence, immediately +above the scene, was delightfully corroborative +of the tradition; and proved sufficiently, had +all investigation ceased there, the identity of the spot +with the scene of the anecdote. Owing to an excess +of curiosity a new discovery threw a doubt over the +whole affair.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 423px;"> +<a href="images/ill_136_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_136_sml.jpg" width="423" height="550" alt="FLORINDA'S BATH." title="FLORINDA'S BATH." /></a> +<span class="caption">FLORINDA'S BATH.</span> +</div><p><a name="page_113" id="page_113"></a></p> + +<p>A bridge is too public a thoroughfare to allow +of bathing to be practised in its immediate neighbourhood: +and, in fact, the erection of the neighbouring +one of St. Martin is of much later date +than the events of the history in question. Fatal +curiosity, however, led me to the back of the building,—the +very bath of Florinda,—where it was impossible +not to discover, even to conviction, that it, the square +tower itself, had formerly been the entrance of a +bridge. This is proved by the ruins of two piers, +which appear above the water,—one near to the +shore on which I was standing, the other near to +the opposite bank, and both forming a line with the +square tower on looking through its two opposite +arches. The tower possesses other peculiarities +which, compared with those belonging to the bridges +actually in existence, fully confirm the supposition.</p> + +<p>Now, although the tradition has christened the +spot Baño de la Cava, which expression is translated +"bath of the prostitute," it is certain that Florinda +was the daughter of Count Julian, governor of the +Spanish possessions in Africa, and a personage of +sufficient rank and influence to obtain a hearing +at the court of the Arab Caliph, or at all events +of his viceroy in Africa, and to conceive the idea +of calling a foreign army to execute his private +vengeance. It is therefore extremely improbable that<a name="page_114" id="page_114"></a> +the daughter of such a person should have been +seen to measure and compare the proportions of +her legs with those of her companions in the immediate +vicinity of a bridge, necessarily the most +frequented of thoroughfares.</p> + +<p>I confess I left the spot filled with disappointment. +In vain I reflected that after all the fact +is fact—that the sensual Roderick may certainly +have spied from behind a window-lattice the frolics +of some ladies at their bath; and that, wherever his +<i>espionage</i> took place, he may for that purpose have +intentionally procured himself a place of concealment, +and have formed the resolution of possessing +one of them. In fact, it was a matter of indifference +to me whether the circumstance had occurred or +not, provided I should ascertain its whereabouts, supposing +it real, instead of merely discovering the spot +on which it did not take place.</p> + +<p>Having thus convicted the generally received tradition +of deceit,—at least, in one of its parts,—it became +an object to discover some other version of the +story, which might tally in a more satisfactory manner +with present existing proofs. The Arab historians +deny the invasion to have been brought +about by any such occurrence; but Mariana, copied +by more recent writers, has either discovered or +compiled a very plausible story, clear in its details,<a name="page_115" id="page_115"></a> +only erroneous in respect of the heroine's name, +which he makes out to be Cava. From this version +the bath is entirely excluded.</p> + +<p>According to the custom in Gothic Spain, the sons +of the nobles received their education in the royal +palace, and on attaining the age of manhood, they +formed an escort round the sovereign on all expeditions, +whether to the field or the chase. Their +daughters were likewise entrusted to the care of +royalty, and attended the person of the Queen, after +having completed their education and instruction in +the accomplishments suited to their sex, under her +superintendence. When these noble damsels could +number sufficient summers, their hands were bestowed +according to the royal selection.</p> + +<p>Among the attendants of Queen Egilona, was a +daughter of Count Julian, possessed of extreme +beauty. Florinda, while playing with her companions +in a garden, situated on the banks of the +Tagus, and overlooked by a tower, which contained +a portion of Don Rodrigo's apartments, exposed to +view, more than accorded either with etiquette or +with her intention, the symmetry of her form. King +Rodrigo, who, favoured by the concealment of a window-blind, +had been watching the whole scene, became +suddenly enamoured of her, and resolved to +obtain a return of his passion; but, after finding<a name="page_116" id="page_116"></a> +every effort useless, and his object unattainable, he +at length employed violence.</p> + +<p>Every circumstance of this story is corroborated, +as far as is possible in the present time, by the position +of the localities, the known customs of the +period, and the character of King Roderick. But +the historian Mariana, to show the minuteness and +triumph of research, on which he has founded his +relation, quotes the young lady's own version of +the affair; in fact, no less interesting a document +than her letter to her father, then in Africa, disclosing +the insult offered to the family. The following +is the translation of this portentous dispatch. +A <i>billet-doux</i> pregnant with greater events never +issued from the boudoir of beauty and innocence.</p> + +<p>"Would to Heaven, my lord and father!—Would +to Heaven the earth had closed over me, before it +fell to my lot to write these lines, and with such +grievous news to cause you sadness and perpetual +regret! How many are the tears that flow while +I am writing, these blots and erasures are witnesses. +And yet if I do not immediately, I shall cause a +suspicion that not only the body has been polluted, +but the soul likewise blotted and stained with perpetual +infamy. Would I could foresee a term to +our misery!—Who but yourself shall find a remedy +for our misfortunes? Shall we delay, until time<a name="page_117" id="page_117"></a> +brings to light that which is now a secret, and the +affront we have received entail on us a shame more +intolerable than death itself? I blush to write that +which I am bound to divulge. O wretched and +miserable fate! In a word, your daughter—your +blood, that of the kingly line of the Goths, has +suffered from King Rodrigo,—to whose care, alas! she +was entrusted like the sheep to the wolf,—a most +wicked and cruel affront. It is for you, if you +are worthy the name of a man, to cause the sweet +draught of our ruin to become a deadly poison to +his life; nor to leave unpunished the mockery and +insult he has cast on our line and on our house."</p> + +<p>Don Julian, who, as some say, was of royal descent, +and a relative, not far removed, of Roderick—was +possessed of qualities no less marked by daring than +artifice. His plans well digested, he committed his +government in Africa to the charge of a deputy, and +repaired to the court at Toledo. There he made +it his business to advance in credit and favour until +the moment should arrive for action. His first step +was, by means of false alarms of attacks meditated +on the northern frontier, to get rid of the principal +part of the disposable forces in that direction. Meanwhile +he caused a letter from his Countess, who remained +in Africa, to be forwarded to the King, in +which, on the plea of serious illness, she urgently<a name="page_118" id="page_118"></a> +entreats the royal permission for the departure of +Florinda to Ceuta. It is related that the profligate +Rodrigo consented to the journey with so much the +better grace, that possession had divested the attractions +of his victim of all further hold of his passions, +already under the dominion of new allurements.</p> + +<p>There is a gate at Malaga, giving issue towards +the sea-shore, which bears to this day the name of +Gate of the Cava: through it she is said to have +passed on embarking for Africa.</p> + +<p>With regard to the name "la Cava" given to the +gate and to the bath, I am disposed to prefer the +popular notion to the assertion of Mariana, that it +was her name. It is a natural supposition that the +anecdote of the affair of Toledo, spread among the +Arabs, who, for centuries after this period, were the +depositaries of the annals and traditions of the Peninsula,—should +have become tinted with a colour derived +from their customs and ideas. Now it would +be difficult to persuade an Arab that the circumstances +of the story in question could befall a virtuous +female, surrounded with the thousand precautions +peculiar to an oriental court. If we add to +this the contemptuous tone assumed by them towards +those of the hostile creed—a tone that must have +suited in an especial degree with their way of thinking +on the subject of female deportment among the<a name="page_119" id="page_119"></a> +Christians, which they look upon as totally devoid of +delicacy and reserve—the epithet applied to Florinda +is easily accounted for. But to return to the story.</p> + +<p>It only now remained for Don Julian to determine +the Caliph's viceroy in Africa in favour of the invasion. +Repairing to his court, he obtained an +audience, in which he painted to the Prince, in such +eloquent terms, the natural and artificial wealth +of the Spanish peninsula, the facility of the enterprise, +owing to the absence of the principal part +of the disposable hostile force, and the unpopularity +of King Rodrigo, that an expedition was immediately +ordered; which, although at first prudently +limited to a small troop under Tharig, led to the +conquest, in a few campaigns, of the whole Peninsula.</p> + +<p>Mingled with the ruins of Roderick's palace are +seen at present those of the monastery of Saint +Augustin, subsequently erected on the same site: +but on the side facing the river, the ancient wall +and turrets, almost confounded with the rock, on +which they were built, have outlived the more recent +erections, or perhaps have not been interfered +with by them. Immediately beyond the portion +of these walls, beneath which is seen the Baño de +la Cava, they turn, together with the brink of the +precipice, abruptly to the north, forming a right<a name="page_120" id="page_120"></a> +angle with the river bank: this part faces the western +<i>vega</i> or valley, and looks down on the site of the +ancient palace gardens, which occupied the first low +ground. They extended as far as the chapel of +Santa Leocadia. The ground is now traversed by +the road to the celebrated sword-blade manufactory, +situated on the bank of the river, half a mile lower +down. With the exception of the inmates of that +establishment, the only human beings who frequent +the spot are the votaries on their way to the shrine +of Santa Leocadia, and the convicts of a neighbouring +<i>Presidio</i> in search of water from the river.<a name="page_121" id="page_121"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_IX" id="LETTER_IX"></a>LETTER IX.</h3> + +<h5>CATHEDRAL OF TOLEDO.</h5> + +<p class="r">Toledo.<br /> +</p> + +<p>Every successive æra of civilization, with the concomitant +religion on which it has been founded, +and from which it has taken its peculiar mould, has, +after maintaining its ground with more or less lustre, +and throughout a greater or smaller duration, +arrived at its inevitable period of decline and overthrow.</p> + +<p>In ceasing, however, to live, and to fill society +far and wide with its enlightening influence,—in +exchanging its erect attitude for the prostrate one +consequent on its fall,—seldom has a creed, which has +long held possession of the most enlightened intellects +of our race for the time being, undergone an +entire extinction, so as to disappear altogether from +the face of the earth, and leave no trace of its existence. +The influence of the soil, formation, and +climate of the region, in the bosom of which such<a name="page_122" id="page_122"></a> +civilization has had its birth, on the dispositions +and faculties of the race which has become its depositary, +has always set its peculiar mark on its +monuments, whether civil, military, or religious, +but especially the last; which monuments, surviving +the reign of the power to which they owe their +existence, prolong and sanctify its memory, while +they stand, erect and silent, over its grave; and +furnish valuable information and benefit to those +future generations sufficiently enlightened to consult +them.</p> + +<p>If this theory of successions and vicissitudes be +consonant (which probably no one will deny) with +the march of events on the surface of this our planet, +then do the circumstances of the present situation +invest, as far as regards Spain, those relics of human +genius and human enthusiasm, the venerable temples +of her declining faith, with an interest beyond that +which they have possessed at any period since their +foundation. It is impossible to have paid any attention +to the events of the last few years, without having +received the conviction that the reign of Christianity +is here fast approaching,—not the commencement, +but the termination of its decline. Spaniards will +never do things by halves; and will probably prefer +the entire overthrow of ancient customs to the system +pursued in France, of propping up, by government<a name="page_123" id="page_123"></a> +enactments and salaries, a tottering edifice of external +forms, long since divested of its foundation +of public belief.</p> + +<p>To speak correctly, the decline of religious supremacy +in Spain is by no means recent. It was coeval +with that of the arts, and of the political grandeur +of the country. The gradual cessation of the vast +gifts and endowments for the erection of the religious +establishments was a symptom of devotional +enthusiasm having passed its zenith. Had not this +occurred nearly three centuries back, Madrid would +not have wanted a Cathedral. Nothing could ever +have tended more directly to compromise the durability +of Christianity in Spain, than the final expulsion +or extermination of the Moors and Jews. Had +Torquemada and a few others possessed heads as +clear and calculating as their hearts were resolute and +inexorable—a knowledge of human nature as profound +as their ambition of divine honours was exalted, +they would have taken care not entirely to +deprive the Church of food for its passions and energies. +They would not have devoured all their heretics +at a single meal, but would have exercised more +<i>ménagement</i> and less voracity. They would have +foreseen that by burning a few hundred Jews and +Arabs less each year, nourishment would remain to +animate the declamations of preachers, and the energies<a name="page_124" id="page_124"></a> +of the faithful; without which the fatal effects +of sloth and indifference must inevitably take root +in the imaginations, and eventually undermine their +lofty fabric.</p> + +<p>The decline was, however, so gradual as to exercise +no perceptible influence on the general conduct +of the population, by whom forms were still +observed, churches filled, and acts of devotion unceasingly +accomplished. A variety of causes (into +a description of which it is not my object, nor would +it be your wish, that I should enter, but of which +one of the most influential has been the importation +of foreign ideas—as well through natural channels, +as by special and interested exertions) has precipitated +the <i>dénouement</i> of this long-commenced +revolution; and that with so headlong a rapidity, +that, in that Spain which surpassed all other nations +in bigoted attachment to religious rites, the confiscation +of all the possessions of the Church, under a +promise (not to be performed) of salaries for a certain +number of ecclesiastics, insufficient for the continuation +of the ancient ceremonies, is received by +the population with indifference! The Cathedral +of Toledo, deprived of the greater number of its +functionaries,—including its archbishop and fifty-six +of its sixty canons, and no longer possessing, out of +an income of hundreds of thousands sterling, a treasure<a name="page_125" id="page_125"></a> +sufficient for providing brooms and sweepers +for its pavement,—will, in perhaps not much more +than another year, if the predictions of the inhabitants +be verified, be finally closed to public worship.</p> + +<p>The same interest, therefore, which surrounded +the Arab monuments three centuries since, and the +Roman edifices of Spain in the fifth century, attaches +itself now to the Christian temples; which, at this +crisis, offer themselves to the tourist in the sad but attractive +gloom of approaching death; since depriving +them of the pomp and observances which filled their +tall arcades with animation, is equivalent to separating +a soul from a body. He will explore them and +examine their ceremonies with all the eagerness +and perseverance of a last opportunity,—he will +wander untired through the mysterious twilight +of their arched recesses, and muse on the riches +lavished around him to so little purpose, and on +the hopes of those who entrusted their memories +to the guardianship of so frail and transient a depositary. +The tones of their giant though melodious +voices, as, sent from a thousand brazen throats, +they roll through the vaulted space the dirge of +their approaching fate, will fill him with sadness; +and the ray that streams upon him from each crimson +and blue <i>rosace</i> will fix itself on his memory, kindling<a name="page_126" id="page_126"></a> +around it an inextinguishable warmth, as though +he had witnessed the smile of a departing saint.</p> + +<p>I had read of Toledo being in possession of the +finest church in Spain,—and <i>that</i> in the book of a +tourist, whose visit to this town follows immediately +that to Seville. Begging pardon of the clever and +entertaining writer to whom I allude, the Cathedral +of Toledo strikes me as far from being the +finest in Spain; nor would it be the finest in France, +nor in England, nor in other countries that might +be enumerated, could it be transported to either. +It is large; but in this respect it yields to that +of Seville. What its other claims to pre-eminence +may be, it is difficult to discover. It is true that +its interior presents a specimen of the simple and +grand pointed style of its period. This being put +in execution on a large scale, would render it an +imposing and a beautiful edifice, but for a subsequent +addition, which, to render justice to the architect, +he certainly never could have contemplated. +The noble pillars, towering to a height of sixty feet, +have been clothed, together with their capitals, in +a magnificent coat of whitewash! Without having +witnessed such a desecration in this or some similar +edifice, it is impossible to conceive the deadening +effect it produces on the feeling of admiration such +a building ought to excite. An inscription in distinct<a name="page_127" id="page_127"></a> +and large characters, over the southernmost +of the three western doors, after recording the conquest +of Granada by the Catholic Kings, as Ferdinand +and Isabella are here termed, the expulsion +of the Jews, and the completion of the Cathedral, +brands with this act of barbarism one Don Francisco +Fernandez de Cuença, <i>obrero mayor</i> (almost a Dean) +of the Cathedral in the year 1493.</p> + +<p>There is, however, a moment of each day when +the tall arcades vindicate their outraged majesty. +"La nuit tous les chats sont gris," says the proverb. +I therefore proceeded at the approach of twilight +(all access at a later hour being prohibited) to see +whether its application would extend to this church. +This is, in fact, the hour, just before the closing +of the doors, at which it should be visited. Darkness +has assumed his empire within these walls long +before the stirring labyrinth without has had warning +of his approach. No colours nor gildings (the +latter being rather injudiciously distributed) are +visible—nothing but a superb range of beautifully +painted windows; and the columns only trace their +dim outline a little less black against the deep gloom +of the rest of the building. At this hour, could +it last, it would be impossible to tire of wandering +through this forest of magnificent stems, of which +the branches are only seen to spring, and immediately<a name="page_128" id="page_128"></a> +lose themselves beneath the glories of the +coloured transparencies rendered doubly brilliant +by their contrast with the gloom of all below them. +The principal merit, in fact, of this edifice, consists +in its windows. That of the purity of its +general style deserves also to be allowed; but +with some reserve in the appreciation of the accessory +points of the design. It depended, for +instance, on the judgment of the architect, to +diminish or to increase the number of columns +which separate the different naves, and by their +unnecessary abundance he has impaired the grandeur +of the general effect.</p> + +<p>The interior dimensions are as follows:—Length, +including a moderately sized chapel at the eastern +extremity, three hundred and fifty English feet; +width, throughout, one hundred and seventy-four +feet; height of the principal nave and transept, +about one hundred and twenty feet. The width +is divided into five naves; those at the outside rising +to about two-thirds of the height of the two next +adjoining; and these to about half that of the centre +nave. An entire side of a chapel opening out of +the southernmost nave, is ornamented in the Arab +style—having been executed by a Moorish artist at +the same period as the rest; and not (as might be +conjectured) having belonged to the mosque, which<a name="page_129" id="page_129"></a> +occupied the same site previously to the erection +of the present cathedral. This small chapel would +be a beautiful specimen of the Arab ornament in +stucco, but for several coats of whitewash it has +received. An arched recess occupies the centre, +and is called the Tomb of the Alguazil. A handsome +doorway in the same style is seen in the anteroom +of the Chapter-saloon.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 550px;"> +<a href="images/ill_153_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_153_sml.jpg" width="550" height="424" alt="APSE OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO." title="APSE OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO." /></a> +<span class="caption">APSE OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO.</span> +</div> + +<p>Facing the entrance to the centre or extreme +eastern chapel, that of San Ildefonzo, the back of +the high altar, or, as it is vulgarly called, the Trascoro,<a name="page_130" id="page_130"></a> +is—not adorned, would it were possible not to +say disfigured, by an immense mass of sculpture +called the Transparente. It is not easy to imagine +the reason of this altar-piece having received its +name, for it is not more transparent than any other +mountain—never was witnessed so lamentable a mis-application +of riches and labour! Some of the marble +was brought from Carrara; the rest is not of a +very good white, and being thus exposed to an +unfavourable contrast, adds to the displeasing effect +of the unwieldy forms which enter into the composition +of this huge blunder of art—this pile of masses +on masses of ugliness. At the sight of a large +spherical form rising abruptly from the surface of +some shaft of a pillar, you step back, and discover +that it forms part of the posteriors of a corpulent +cherub, as large as the column itself, which he has +thus unmercifully annihilated, in order to save himself +the trouble of passing a few inches to the left +or right. But it is needless to notice the details +of this piece of sculpture, which being the largest, +and occupying the most conspicuous position in the +whole church, forcibly attracts the attention which, +but for that circumstance, one would rather bestow +in another direction.</p> + +<p>It is a relief to take one's station on the shining +mahogany benches adjoining the wall of the opposite<a name="page_131" id="page_131"></a> +chapel of San Ildefonzo; and to contemplate +its chaste style and graceful proportions, and the +handsome tombs which occupy its octagonally divided +walls. The piece of sculpture in marble, +placed over the principal altar, is undeserving of +its conspicuous situation. It represents the Vision +of San Ildefonzo, to which we shall shortly have +occasion to direct our attention.</p> + +<p>The adjoining chapel, as we proceed towards the +northernmost nave, that of Santiago, or more generally +called after its founder, Don Alvaro de Luna, +is still finer. It is larger and loftier, and of a more +ornamental design. It presents five sides of an octagon: +the three remaining sides turning inwards +to suit the form of the apse. This Alvaro de Luna, +the Lord Essex of Juan the Second, having by +the high favour he enjoyed in the intimacy of the +monarch, given umbrage to the courtiers, was put to +death by the King, who gave credit to the charges +falsely brought against him. Don Juan, however, who +did not long survive his friend, had justice done to his +remains. Being found innocent by a posthumous +trial at Valladolid, his body was conveyed with great +pomp to Toledo, and placed in the centre of his +chapel. The tomb of his Countess stands close to +his own; and in the niches of the surrounding walls, +those of his most distinguished relatives, one of whom,<a name="page_132" id="page_132"></a> +on the right of the altar, is represented in complete +armour, with a turban on his head. The treasures +bestowed on this favourite, flowed plentifully into +the Cathedral of Toledo. Besides his chapel, the +finest of all—the elaborately executed enclosure of +the sanctuary, is one of his gifts: his arms are +there recognised, frequently recurring among the various +designs of the external tracery.</p> + +<p>A narrow passage, leading from the apse between +the chapel of Don Alvaro, and the entrance to the +sacristy, communicates with the chapel of the kings. +After passing through a simply designed anteroom +of more recent date, the eye reposes with pleasure +on a small interior in the pointed style of the latest +period—of proportions, perhaps, not the less graceful +from their being rather narrow for the length. +Two richly ornamented arches, stretching across the +interior, divide it into three parts, in the first of +which is seen a gallery containing an elaborately +wrought gilded confessional. The walls of the two +other divisions are divided into six parts; the chapel +having been constructed and endowed by Juan the +First, for the reception of six monuments: those +of himself and his Queen Isabella; those of his +father Henry the Second, (natural son of Alonzo +the Eleventh, and who dethroned and killed with +his own hand his half-brother, Pedro the cruel,) and<a name="page_133" id="page_133"></a> +Doña Juana his wife; and those of Henry the +Third, and Doña Catalina his wife.</p> + +<p>Returning to the interior of the apse, and continuing +in the direction of the north side, another +small passage and anteroom lead to the principal +sacristy, which communicates with the next chapel, +called the Sagrario, and composed of three apartments. +The great sacristy contains some good paintings, +particularly the ceiling by Giordano—a modern +tomb of the late archbishop, Cardinal de Bourbon, +and a series of narrow doors, within which are recesses. +The first of these contains the crown and +bracelets of the Virgin of the Sagrario: in four +others are preserved magnificent ornaments of silver, +representing emblematically the four quarters of the +globe. Each quarter is personified by a figure invested +with the attributes which characterize the +region she represents, seated on a large silver globe, +on the front of which is traced the quarter represented. +The globe is supported by figures of animals. +In the last of these recesses is seen the sword +of Alonzo the Sixth, who won Toledo from the +Moors. It is small, and unornamented, except by a +hilt of embossed silver, on which the arms are repeated +four times. In the smaller sacristy within +are several good pictures, but not so remarkable as +to prevent their being eclipsed by the splendid robe<a name="page_134" id="page_134"></a> +of the Virgin of the neighbouring Sagrario, here exhibited, +extended flat on a semicircular board, such +being the form of the garment.</p> + +<p>No one knows the value of this treasure. During +the Peninsular War, the archbishop, in order to spare +the French Generals too great a temptation, conveyed +it, together with whatever else deserved the +precaution, to Cadiz. It is embroidered almost entirely +with pearls on a tissue of silver; but none +of the silver is visible without separating the pearls, +diamonds, &c., with the fingers. Most of the larger +pearls possess the irregular sort of beaten shape +often observed in the best specimens. Some are +enormous. Numbers of diamonds, rubies, and other +stones are admitted in the upper part, to vary and +enliven the effect of the different designs of the +embroidery. In another case is extended the front-piece, +worn together with the robe, which is open +in front. The robe sits nearly in the fashion of a +lady's cloak, but perfectly stiff, and widening as it +descends, so much as to make the figure assume the +appearance of a triangle, of which the base is longer +than the two other sides. The opening in front +corresponds with the outline of the two sides, being +wider below than above, although not in as great +a degree. This opening is occupied by the front-piece, which is much smaller than the robe, but<a name="page_135" id="page_135"></a> +still more valuable, being principally worked in brilliants. +It contains also every variety of precious +stones, introduced as their colours may happen to accord +with the design.</p> + +<p>In addition to these is shown the dress of the +Bambino, similar in materials to the two others; but +the pearls and diamonds more equally distributed.</p> + +<p>But the marvel of this costume is the crown. This +ornament adds to the splendour of its materials, the +most exquisite and elaborate workmanship. It would +require hours to appreciate the labour and taste displayed +in all its details. Marshal Soult, could he +but see it, would order masses for the soul of the +prelate who spared him such a temptation. The diamonds, +especially those which compose a cross surmounting +the centre, are of the purest water, and of +immense size. But in the midst of the dazzling and +harmonious intricacy of this gem of all colours, there +is a centre of attraction, which took my fancy more +than the rest. Immediately under the centre ball, +an immense spherical emerald, which supports the +diamond cross, is a small bird suspended on a hook +within the crown. All the parts of this bird +are composed of white enamel, except the body, +around which the wings, legs, neck, and head, are +attached, and which consists of a pearl of an oval +form, about the size of a sparrow's egg. The movement<a name="page_136" id="page_136"></a> +of the statue during a procession, keeps the +bird (hanging from its hook) in constant agitation, +and produces the effect of a living bird enclosed in a +cage of precious stones.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p> + +<p>A pair of bracelets, possessing no less magnificence +than the crown, but rather too heavy and bulky to +be graceful, are suspended in the same recess, and +worn on the same occasions.</p> + +<p>It should not be forgotten, as a proof of the judgment +shown in the choice of ornaments, which, as +far as regards the front, consist principally of diamonds, +that the complexion of the Virgin of the +Sagrario, is more than dark—in fact, quite black.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> +The innermost of the three apartments forming the +chapel of the Sagrario is called the Ochavo, and is +the deposit of a collection of relics of all kinds. It is +an octagon, surmounted at an elevation of more than +double its diameter by a dome ornamented with +excellent painting. The walls are faced with the +best Spanish marbles. Each of the eight sides contains +an open recess reaching to the first cornice—an +elevation of about twenty-five feet; and in these +recesses are contained all the valuable relics belonging<a name="page_137" id="page_137"></a> +to the cathedral;—a rich display of silver statues, +reliquaries, coffins, chests, and crosses of gold and +silver, some containing jewels of great value. A silver +statue of Saint Ferdinand wearing a golden crown +is among the objects most worthy of remark; also +a cross containing a portion of the true cross, presented +to the cathedral by St. Louis. This and +several other relics, such as a phial containing the +Virgin's milk, a portion of our Saviour's purple garment, +&c., were presented to the cathedral by St. +Louis on his return from the east, and are here preserved, +together with the letter in his own hand-writing, +which accompanied them.</p> + +<p>The Virgin of the Sagrario receives by far the +greatest share of devotion brought to the numerous +shrines of this vast temple, even greater than that +offered at the high altar. More masses are performed +at her altar than at all the others added +together. The aisles facing her antechapel are +constantly filled with a crowd of kneeling votaries. +She stands in the second enclosure, turning her back +to the Ochavo. An iron railing separates her apartment +from the first chapel, which is usually open +to the aisles. She stands consequently in full view, +magnificently robed in a <i>fac simile</i> imitation of her +pearl dress, the original being only worn on one or +two occasions during the year.<a name="page_138" id="page_138"></a></p> + +<p>The interior of the Capilla Mayor, is ornamented +with several rows of statues, and some handsome +funereal monuments, forming together a sort of +transparent wall of sculpture on each of its sides. +In the midst of a series of mitred archbishops, and +coroneted princes, the figure of a peasant occupies +one of the most conspicuous positions. It stands +on the left side, as you face the High Altar, and +about twenty feet from the pavement. This statue +represents a celebrated historical personage. Alonzo +the Eighth, when penetrating across the Sierra Morena +into Andalucia, in search of the Moorish army +under the King of Morocco, Mahomed ben Jacob, +was in danger of losing the fruit of his exertions, +in bringing together the forces of the Kings of Aragon +and Navarre, together with numerous other +confederates. He had led the combined army into +a defile, in which he would have had to receive the +attack of the Moor at an insuperable disadvantage. +The hostile forces occupied a height called the +Puerto del Miradal.</p> + +<p>It was at the moment that retreat was the subject +of deliberation, that a peasant presented himself, +and offered to guide the army out of the pass. +Having assured himself of the man's sincerity, +Alonzo put himself under his conduct, and was +led to the summit of the mountain, where he<a name="page_139" id="page_139"></a> +found himself on the border of an immense plain. +This decided the great victory of las Navas de +Tolosa gained over the Moors on the 16th of +July, 1212. Alonzo ordered a statue of the peasant +to be placed in this cathedral. He is represented +in a costume not unlike that of an ancient +Roman rustic, a sort of tunic reaching to the knees, +and his face is covered with a profuse beard.</p> + +<p>The interior of the choir is the work of Felipe +de Borgoña, and Berruguete; the latter having been +employed, after the death of Felipe de Borgoña, in +1548, in continuing the sculptures. The entire +south side was left for him to complete; after which +he added a group in marble, representing the Transfiguration, +placed rather injudiciously, since it out-tops +the screen or back of the choir; thus presenting +to the view of those who enter from the +western or grand entrance, and who are more +likely to have come with the intention of viewing +the ornaments, than the canons who are seated in +the choir—the back of the subject, or rather, forms +which represent no subject whatever. There is a +Virgin on a pedestal in the centre of the eastern +end of the choir, turning her back to the bronze +railing which separates it from the transept. This +statue has occupied its present position ever since +the erection of the cathedral; and it is probable<a name="page_140" id="page_140"></a> +would long since have quitted it, but for a still +greater inconvenience consequent on its removal. +The attempt was recently made, when a mass of +water issued with much violence from beneath the +pedestal, and putting to flight the canons who were +assembled to preside at the operation, instantly +inundated the whole church. The virgin occupies +probably the site of the fountain which must have +been the centre of the court, at the period of the +existence of the mosque. However that may be, +the spot is the exact centre of the present edifice.</p> + +<p>At the two eastern angles of the quadrangle, +formed by the intersection of the transept and +principal nave, close to the railing of the capilla +mayor are two pulpits of bronze, excellently +wrought; supported on short pillars of rare marbles.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 359px;"> +<a href="images/ill_165_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_165_sml.jpg" width="359" height="550" alt="INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO." title="INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO." /></a> +<span class="caption">INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO.</span> +</div> + +<p>A tall pyramidal Gothic edifice<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> of gilded and +painted wood, rising to the full height of the ceiling, +stands in front of a column of the second nave from<a name="page_141" id="page_141"></a> +the north side. All its sides are open, and furnished +with bronze railings, through which is seen an altar, +raised on three or four steps. In the centre of the +altar is inserted a marble slab—a highly prized relic, +being the stone on which the Virgin placed her foot +on the occasion of her appearing in the cathedral +in <i>propriâ personâ</i> to the Archbishop San Ildefonzo. +This peculiar favour bestowed on the saint—and a +robe with which she invested him with her own +hands, were bestowed, according to the historian +Mariana, in recompense of his zeal in opposing the +doctrine of the two Frenchmen, Pelagio and Helvidio, +whose writings and preachings tended to shake +the belief in the virginity of the Saviour's mother. +The occurrence is thus described:</p> + +<p>"The night immediately preceding the feast of +the Annunciation, the archbishop entered the church, +surrounded by several of the clergy. As they entered, +the cathedral appeared filled with a brilliant +light. Those who accompanied the saint, overcome +with terror, turned and fled. Remaining alone, he +advanced to the foot of the high altar, and fell +on his knees; when, on the chair from which it was +his custom to deliver his exhortations to the people,—clothed +in more than human majesty—appeared +the mother of Christ, who addressed him in the +following words:—'This gift, brought from Heaven,<a name="page_142" id="page_142"></a> +shall be the reward of the virginity which thou hast +preserved in thy body, joined with purity of mind, +and ardour of faith; and for having defended our +virginity.'</p> + +<p>"Having thus spoken, she placed on him, with +her own hands, a robe, which she commanded him +to wear on the celebration of her festivals, and +those of her Son."</p> + +<p>The representations of this scene, from which is +derived the claim of superior sanctity assumed by +this cathedral, are multiplied both in marble and on +canvas in all parts of the edifice, as well as in almost +all the churches of Toledo. In most cases, the execution +of them has been intrusted to unskilful +hands. The best specimen is that executed in marble +over the small altar I have just noticed. It is remarkable +for the graceful and good-humoured expression +of the Virgin, and the easy, almost merry, +demeanour of her celestial attendants.</p> + +<p>The marble box which contains the Host is let +into the altar-piece, of which it appears to form +a part of the surface, only projecting slightly as its +sides are convex. Turning on a pivot, it presents +four different fronts, each representing, in well executed +relief, a different scene in the Virgin's life.<a name="page_143" id="page_143"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_X" id="LETTER_X"></a>LETTER X.</h3> + +<h5>CAFÉS. WEDDING CEREMONY. CATHEDRAL CONTINUED. ALCAZAR +HOSPITAL OF SANTA CRUZ. CONVENT OF LA CONCEPTION. +MYSTERIOUS CAVERN. CONVENT OF SANTA FE, OR OF SANTIAGO. +SONS-IN-LAW OF THE CID.</h5> + +<p class="r">Toledo.<br /> +</p> + +<p>One of the first contrasts between this and +other countries, which forces itself on the observation, +is the amalgamation of the different classes +of society in public places of resort. The grandee +is far too sure of his personal importance and consideration, +to entertain any fear of its being +diminished by contact with those of inferior rank; +and the peasant is far too proud to importune +his superiors by any indiscreet efforts at familiarity.</p> + +<p>At Burgos I found the <i>Gefe politico</i>, or governor +of the province, sipping his lemonade in the evening +at the <i>café</i>; his elbow brushing the back of a +mayoral of a diligence, and surrounded by an assemblage +of all classes of the male inhabitants of the +town. These cafés are curious establishments; they<a name="page_144" id="page_144"></a> +are divided into two classes—the Café, properly so +called, and the Botilleria—in which tea and coffee +are not usually called for, but all the other refreshments +of the café; such as <i>helados</i> (frozen beverages +of all sorts), <i>sorbetes</i> (ices), liqueurs, wines, etc. +These latter are the resort, in some towns, of both +sexes, and indeed the cafés also in a less degree. +But the etiquette in these things differs in the +different provinces.</p> + +<p>At Madrid, where foreign customs first penetrate, +ladies are rarely seen in these resorts; by which they +are considerable losers. No doubt, were the attractions +of French cafés sufficiently powerful, your +sex would not have withered them, by their disdain, +into the uncivilized dens which they are. You are +not of course invited by the billiard tables, or by +the allurements of black coffee and cognac; but +were the waiters to set before you a tumbler of +frozen lemonade after a July evening's dusty walk, +you would speedily bring such habits into fashion.</p> + +<p>Much as the refreshments of Spanish cafés have +been celebrated, their fame is surpassed by the +reality. It is only when you have panted through a +southern summer's day, and breathed an atmosphere +of fire, that you are disposed to receive the illustration +of the full sense of the word refreshment; and +it is then they hand you a brobdignag goblet, brim<a name="page_145" id="page_145"></a> +full of frozen orange-water or lemonade, or snow-white +orgeat—which, from the imperceptible inroads +made by the teaspoon on its closing-up surface, +appears likely to last you the whole night. These +and other similar luxuries, including the ices, at +which those of a Grange or Tortoni would melt with +jealousy, are plentiful in second and third-rate +towns, and rank among the necessaries of life, rather +than as objects of indulgence. They are of course +cheap, or it would not answer.</p> + +<p>The poor apply to the distributors of iced barley-water, +who carry about a sort of cask, strapped +between their shoulders, and containing ice in the +centre, to maintain the frigidity of the beverage. +By lowering and advancing the left shoulder, the +vendor pours the contents of the cask through a +small neck or pipe into the glasses, which he carries +in a flat basket with cellaret partitions. A tumbler +of this costs a halfpenny; its imbibing occupies two +or three minutes, and assuages for hours the sufferings +of the thirstiest palate.</p> + +<p>At Madrid, the cafés have each its political +colour; except that called del Principe, after the +adjoining theatre. In this, politics are less characterised, +literature having here taken up her quarters. +It is probable that she is a less profitable customer, +being habitually less thirsty. Accordingly, on putting<a name="page_146" id="page_146"></a> +your head into the door, you see a saloon far +more brilliantly lighted up than the others; but +the peripatetic doctrines seem to prevail. Few persons +are seated at the tables; and instead of the +more profitable wear and tear of broken glasses, +the proprietor probably finds substituted a thankless +annual item for worn out floors. In the same street +there is a club; but this is an exotic importation +and on the exclusive plan, not quite of London, but +of the Paris <i>cercles</i>.</p> + +<p>In the cafés of Toledo, on the days of <i>fiesta</i>, the +fair sex predominates, especially in summer. The +great resort is, however, the Zocodover, from nine +to ten in the evening. This little irregularly +formed <i>plaza</i> is crowded like an assembly-room, +and possesses its rows of trees, although a respectable +oak would almost fill it.</p> + +<p>A soirée has occasionally been known to be given +in Toledo, but it is an occurrence of much rarity, +and mostly occasioned by some unusual event,—the +arrival of a public singer, or, still more unusual, a +newly made fortune. The other evening I was +admitted to one, the pretext for which was a wedding. +This ceremony takes place at the residence of the bride, +and although a subsequent formality is necessary in +the Church, its delay does not defer the validity of +the union, nor its consummation. The wedding-day<a name="page_147" id="page_147"></a> +arrived, the families and friends of both parties +assemble at eight in the evening.</p> + +<p>The bride was distinguishable by a white veil or +<i>mantilla</i> in the middle seat of a sofa, between her +mother and sister, who rose to receive the guests. +A narrow table had been dressed up into a temporary +altar, and furnished with a crucifix and +candles. All the party being arrived, a priest left +his chair, and entered an adjoining room to robe; +on his reappearance the company rose and flocked +round the bride and bridegroom, who stood together +before the priest, doing penance each with a long +wax-light in the right hand, held in a muslin handkerchief.</p> + +<p>The ceremony lasts about ten minutes without any +change of posture. The priest departs to unrobe; +the miserable bride and blushing bridegroom receive +felicitations; and all resume their seats, and look +at each other.</p> + +<p>Presently chocolate was handed round, and an +attempt at conversational murmur commenced, afterwards +ices. And now the minister took a formal +leave of the company, after complimenting the +bride. Two or three other holy men, obedient to +the signal, carried out their interminable hats before +them: when a sudden revolution broke out. At +the closing of the door on the hindmost ecclesiastic<a name="page_148" id="page_148"></a> +the bridegroom rushed to the altar, and grasping +with one hand the crucifix, and with the other two +of the candlesticks, ran to the apartment that had +assumed the character of vestry, and deposited them +there, followed by officious friends bearing the remaining +articles, until every awe-compelling symbol +had disappeared. One or two guitars were extracted +from their hiding-places under sofas, and sent forth +careless but lively preludes. The men stood up and +circulated; the women talked and laughed; a +quadrille was speedily formed, and concluded; waltzing +followed, and forfeits, and whatever you like, +and—"the arrangements were on a scale of costly +magnificence, and the festivities were prolonged, &c."</p> + +<p>But these events are rare in Toledo. The every-day +amusements consist in an infamous theatre, +and the promenade; this is only on Saints' days; +but these are almost every day. On six or seven +occasions in the year, these promenades are absolute +events, and much looked forward to. It is necessary +to inquire which is the promenade patronised by +the saint of the great day, whoever he is, and take +your place in the tide, for no one absents himself.</p> + +<p>Dresses for these celebrations are things pre-meditated; +and the effect produced, and all the +little events and rencontres of the day form for +each belle, thrilling subjects of retrospection. <i>Mantillas<a name="page_149" id="page_149"></a></i> +may be trimmed, and innocent plots woven for +these occasions, without danger of disappointment +by clouds or storms; and instead of the Virgin being +implored that the sun may shine, who never disappoints +them, she is sometimes requested to inspire +some ruse for a momentary escape from his too +searching effulgence.</p> + +<p>Here may fair foreigners feast their eyes on fawn-coloured +<i>majos</i>, whose every step (although no more +exalted beings than butchers, postilions, horsedealers, +and such like) would be envied by Antinous and +Apollo. I should advise no veils, nor winkings, nor +blinkings on these occasions, but eyes wide open—for +never more (the Pyrenees once repassed) will +their orbits expand to the forms and costumes of +blackguards half so beautiful.</p> + +<p>But these are subjects slightly unsuited to the +interior of the cathedral, of our presence in which +we are evidently forgetful. The Mozarabic Chapel, +founded by Cardinal Ximenes de Cisneros, is situated +under the southern tower, and contains a Virgin +and Child executed in Mosaic, and a curious +old fresco painting, representing the battle of Oran, +at which the Cardinal was victorious over the Arabs. +This chapel is set apart for the performance of the +Mozarabic ritual, still retained by a portion of the +population of Toledo, and the exercise of which<a name="page_150" id="page_150"></a> +was continued in several churches, until the closing +of some of them at the recent revolution.</p> + +<p>The Arab conquerors of Spain exercised towards +the religion of the country, the most complete and +liberal tolerance. All who preferred remaining in the +conquered towns to flight and exile, were allowed +to retain a sufficient number of places of worship +for the free exercise of their religion. On the subsequent +introduction of the Italian missal, those +who retained the ancient gothic forms were called +Mozarabes (mixti Arabes, according to some, from +their service being the same as that in use during +the co-existence together of the two creeds). A +more probable origin is attributed to the expression +by some antiquaries, who derive it from Muza, +the name of the Moorish general. The mass of +the Christians who had taken refuge in the Asturias, +applied the term to their brethren, who preferred +accepting from the Arabs what they considered a +degrading tolerance. The following singular mode +of decision was adopted for the purpose of settling +the question between the two missals.</p> + +<p>The King, Alonzo the Sixth, the Archbishop Don +Bernardo, and the court, were among the advocates +of the new missal, which, being adopted in Rome, +they were very desirous of establishing on the occasion +of the restoration of the Christian supremacy<a name="page_151" id="page_151"></a> +at Toledo. The mass of the people were attached +to their ancient forms. It was resolved that the +question should be decided by an appeal to a sort +of neutral power; and Mars was selected, probably +on account of his being a person disinterested +in the affair. A champion was chosen by each +party, and a day appointed for settling the difference +by single combat. Accordingly, the court, +the clergy, and the people being assembled, the +representatives of the two missals took their station, +lance in rest, and on the appointed signal +spurred to the encounter. The ancient missal was +approved of by the warlike god; but the King +and his party were dissatisfied with the result, and +resolved on another trial. A large fire was lighted +in the principal plaza, and the two missals were +thrown into it.</p> + +<p>Again the ancient forms conquered, the rival +parchment having caught the flame and being drawn +out in a blaze. The populace now commenced a +cry of triumph; but, to their great disappointment, +the King, in his quality of umpire, pronounced +a judgment which he might as easily have +put in execution before the trials: namely, that +considering that the Roman Missal, although on +fire, was not consumed, they were both equally +agreeable to the deity—they should therefore both<a name="page_152" id="page_152"></a> +be preserved, and that some of the more ancient +churches should continue the exercise of the Mozarabic +service, while the Roman ritual should be +established in the metropolitan temple, and in the +greater number of the parishes.</p> + +<p>Before we leave the cathedral, the cloister claims +our attention. It is a spacious and handsome quadrangle, +inclosing a garden. The eastern wall is +adorned with excellent frescos of comparatively +modern date, and all bearing the same signature—Francisco +Bayeu. There are seven subjects on +that side, being the number of intervals corresponding +with the arcades, and three more continuing +down another side. The best are two, taken from +the history of Saint Casilda; and three from that +of San Eugenio, first archbishop of Toledo, martyrised +in France. The arcades on the east side +are shut in by large pieces of sail-cloth, in order +to protect the paintings against the sun's rays.</p> + +<p>The library of manuscripts belonging to this +cathedral is distinguished rather by the quality than +the quantity of its contents. It is approached by +a staircase communicating with the cloister, and +is a handsome room. It contains a copy of the +Talmud on the papyrus leaves, and in the Coptic +dialect. The following are also among its treasures: +The Book of Esther in Hebrew, on a single piece of<a name="page_153" id="page_153"></a> +parchment; two bibles of the seventh century, one +of which belonged to St. Isidore; the missal used by +Charles the Fifth in the monastery of Yuste; the +poems of Dante, manuscript of the poet's time, with +illustrations; the laws of Alonso the Tenth (surnamed +the wise), and a volume of his poetical works, +with the music opposite those intended to be sung: +two ancient Chinese volumes, one on botany, the +other on natural history, both illustrated.</p> + +<p>The next edifice I visited was the Alcazar, the +largest and most conspicuous building in Toledo. I +expected to find there some Arab and Roman remains, +having so read in more than one tour. It was not +until some time after my visit that I obtained the +information that the Moorish palace occupied a +different site. The present comparatively modern +building is principally of two epochs. On the east is +the original portion erected by Alonzo the Sixth. The +entire north and south fronts are probably additions +of Philip the Second. The whole partakes of a +divided character between castle and palace: it is not +remarkable for any architectural merit, possessing +neither beauty as a palace, nor solidity as a fortress; +and having been occupied as a military position during +the war of the succession, and more recently in that +of independence, its being already a ruin, before its +modern appearance would seem to legitimize such<a name="page_154" id="page_154"></a> +a state, causes no surprise. But its position is +superb. Occupying the most elevated point of the +town, it far exceeds the whole by the immense height +of its walls, and commands an admirable view of the +surrounding country. The only object deserving +notice in this ruin is a colossal staircase, which +occupies an entire side of the court,—a length of +about two hundred and fifty feet,—and is ornamented +by a light and elegant colonnade. This +edifice ceased to be a palace on the final establishment +of the court at Madrid, and after some time +became the manufactory whence issued the famous +silk and velvet brocades, the fabrication of which has +now ceased, but with which Toledo formerly supplied +the wardrobes of the court, and the well-garnished +sacristies of Spain's wealthiest cathedrals.</p> + +<p>Descending from the Alcazar through the Plaza de +Zocodover, and thence towards the bridge of Alcantara, +a few yards from the Plaza bring us in view of +the façade of the Hospital of Santa Cruz, or "de los +niños expositos,"—foundling hospital. The institution +owes its origin to the Archbishop, Don Pedro +Gonzalez de Mendoza, called the Great Cardinal +of Spain. Although death prevented his witnessing +the execution of his project, his fortune, administered +by his next relatives and executors,—the +Queen Isabella, and the Duke of Infantado,—was<a name="page_155" id="page_155"></a> +employed in the erection of the buildings, and in +the endowment of the establishment. The plans +and conditions were not even drawn up until after +the Cardinal's death; and they were never entirely +put in execution. The church consists of one nave, of +a length out of all proportion to its width and elevation. +It was to have been crossed by another of the +same proportions, with the exception of the elevation, +which was to have been eighty feet in both. This +combined with the length—about three hundred and +fifty feet, as is seen in the existing nave,—would have +rendered the edifice one of the most extraordinary +in existence. The altar was to have stood in the +centre of the intersection of the two naves. As it +is, the long bare interior looks as though it had been +destined for a picture gallery or library, but rather +for the latter from the low-coved roof of cedar, +and from the inadequate distribution of light. To +the left of the altar is seen a portrait of the founder; +and on the opposite side, about a hundred feet further +down the nave, a large Adoration,—a superior +painting, especially with regard to the colouring: the +author unknown.</p> + +<p>There are two large courts surrounded by arcades: +one of them is a model of lightness and beauty, and +contains in one of its angles an admirably ornamented +staircase. The architect of the Santa Cruz<a name="page_156" id="page_156"></a> +was Enrique Egas, who also built the celebrated +hospital of the same name at Valladolid. He designed +the whole according to the style then introduced, +after the pointed style had been abandoned, +and which in Spain received vulgarly the +appellation of Plateresco, from the ornaments resembling +the embossing of a silversmith. It is also +confounded with the Renacimiento. The Plateresco +style, from the too great liberty it afforded the architect, +of setting aside the classic models, and following +his own inventions, has produced in Spain, +more than in any other country, (from there being at +that period more wealth devoted to the construction +of public monuments there than elsewhere,) the evil +effects resulting from ill-guided and unrestrained +powers of imagination. Fortunately, however, a few +architects existed whose more correct taste kept them +within some bounds; and who, in deserting the old +models, replaced them by a style, if less pure, yet by +no means inelegant. The architect Egas appears to +have partaken of both natures at different moments; +for, while his court above-mentioned is a specimen of +consummate grace and good taste, the entrance front +of the building is one of the bad examples of the +style of the period.</p> + +<p>The establishment covers a large space, about half +the extent occupied by the double palace of the<a name="page_157" id="page_157"></a> +Arab kings of Toledo. The remainder of the site +contains two convents,—that of Santiago, and that +of the Conception. The hospital was conducted +formerly on a scale proportionate to the extent of its +accommodation; but it is now no more than a reminiscence; +the revenues having probably been incorporated +in the recent registrations of national property. +The number of inmates at present enjoying +the benefits of the foundation amounts to fourteen +only.</p> + +<p>The Convent of la Conception adjoins the hospital +of Santa Cruz. From the exterior are seen two +churches, placed in close parallel contact, and each +composed of a single nave. Both are evidently +very ancient, one being in the Arab style; but +the form of the other renders it probable that +it is the more ancient of the two. You are disappointed +after being shown this last, on being +informed that the Moorish portion is forbidden +ground, being appropriated by the nuns to +their private use, and possessing no communication +with the adjoining edifice, but a curtained +grating, through which its secluded inmates assist +at religious services. In the public church, +a singular ornament figures on a conspicuous +part of the wall near the entrance; it is the carcass +of a large crocodile, fixed high enough to be<a name="page_158" id="page_158"></a> +out of reach, although no one would be likely to +purloin so unwieldy a curiosity. We are told the +animal frequented the neighbourhood of Toledo; +where, under cover of the pine forests, which formerly +extended far over this mountainous region, +its existence had long filled with terror the few +travellers whom their mercantile pursuits compelled +to pass within its accustomed haunts: that at length +a knight (it was in the reign of Ferdinand and +Isabella) clothed in a full suit of armour, rode forth +from Toledo, fully resolved to try conclusions with +the monster, in order if possible to immortalize his +name throughout the surrounding regions, by ridding +them of so dire a scourge. The battle took place, +and victory declaring for the knight, whose name +unfortunately does not figure in the legend,—he +assembled the peasants, and had his enemy's carcass +borne in triumph to Toledo, where he made a +present of it to the convent.</p> + +<p>While on the subject of traditions, it is worth +while adverting to a cavern, the entrance of which +exists in this part of the town; and which is said to +extend to a distance of eight miles, passing under the +Tagus. It is related that somewhat less than a +century back, the government ordered this cavern +to be explored; but the exploring party was met +at the commencement of the descent by so violent<a name="page_159" id="page_159"></a> +a gust of wind, as to extinguish all the torches, +and the courage of the explorers, for the attempt +was never resumed. The failure by no means contributed +to diminish the mysterious qualities attributed +to the cavern, on the subject of which the +wildest notions are currently entertained.</p> + +<p>A worthy and excellent native of Toledo, to whose +antiquarian enthusiasm (a quality doubly valuable +here from its scarcity) I am indebted for some information +and much entertainment, undertook one +day to enlighten me with regard to the origin of this +subterranean curiosity. Commencing by warning +my credulity against the innumerable fables current +on the subject, and which only resembled each other +in their absurdity and impossibility, he added, "The +real fact is this,—the cavern is the work of Hercules, +who excavated it for the accommodation of the +assemblies of the people, whom he instructed in the +elements of magic."</p> + +<p>The convent of Santiago, or of Santa Fé, or of +Las monjas santiagistas, or Las cavalleras, occupies +the portion of the ancient Moorish alcazar, remaining +from the site of the two last-mentioned buildings. +It is built round two courts, one of which is divided +into planted parterres, intersected with brick-paved +walks. The architecture of this first court is very +simple; it consists of a plain arcade of semicircular<a name="page_160" id="page_160"></a> +arches supported on square piers, and a repetition of +the same on the first story. From this court opens +the parlour of the Commendadora or abbess, and the +choir, which forms a continuation of the public +chapel. There is also under the arcade a folding +door, which, when opened exhibits a collection of +small pictures attached to it, as on the leaves of +an album, and others suspended against the portion +of wall it encloses. The centre painting of these +last represents the Mater dolorosa weeping over the +dead body of her Son. It has much of the manner of +Alonzo Cano, and is an admirable painting, more +especially the dead body: the superior, however, +did not know the name of the artist. She complained +bitterly of the loss of a first-rate picture +of the Divino Morales, which formerly occupied the +place of her little collection, and which was taken +possession of by Marshal Soult.</p> + +<p>The second court is highly ornamental owing to +the elegance of its architecture, and its magnificent +proportions; it is a long quadrangle; the pillars +below are very lofty, and support the gallery above +without intermediate arches. They are not of a pure +design, the shafts being too long for their diameter: +in other respects they imitate the Tuscan order. +Those of the arcade above are Ionic; but the effect +here is destroyed by walls and windows, which have<a name="page_161" id="page_161"></a> +been constructed in their intervals, for the purpose +of converting the open gallery into a warmer +corridor. The walls below are clothed to the height +of about four feet with the <i>azulejos</i>, or porcelain +mosaic, of the sort originally employed by the Arabs, +and from which the ornament took its name, being +blue and white, without any other colour.</p> + +<p>Opening from this court is the Sala Capitular +a handsome saloon used on occasions of elections +of the Commendadora, or other solemnities, which do +not take place in the church. It contains a portrait +of the sister of St. Ferdinand,—a member of the +community; and a curious picture of St. Iago +leading to victory the christian army of Don Ramiro +the First. In fulfilment of a promise made to the +king the night preceding the battle of Albayde, the +apostle, according to the historians, led the army in +person, mounted on a milk-white charger, which +cantered along at a sufficient elevation over the +heads of the combatants, to be visible to all; thus +inspiring, simultaneously, his <i>protégés</i> with confidence, +and the Moors with terror. From that +victory the Spanish war-cry of Santiago is said to +derive its origin.</p> + +<p>The buildings on the north side of the large +court stand on the brink of a perpendicular rock, +overhanging the <i>faubourg</i> on the Madrid side of<a name="page_162" id="page_162"></a> +Toledo, and commanding right and left the luxuriant +<i>vega</i>, to an extent of from forty to fifty miles. Over +the highest story of this portion of the building, and +forming a continuation of the rock, a Belvidere has +been constructed, the roof of which is supported +by piers, leaving all the sides open: it forms a +promenade of about a hundred feet in length, by +twenty-five in width.</p> + +<p>The regulations of this convent are much less +strict than those observed by all other religious +communities. It would not otherwise have been +possible to obtain permission to visit the establishment +in detail. The <i>monjas cavalleras</i> (knight-nuns) +of the military order of Santiago, take the +white veil only, and not the black. If a nun inherits +a property, she obtains permission from the council +of military orders, sitting at Madrid, to absent herself +from the convent for the purpose of transacting all +necessary business. The same permission may be +obtained in cases of illness. In taking the vows +there is no prostration beneath the veil. The novice +crosses her hands in a kneeling posture, and takes +the oath on the Gospel. One is struck by something +invincibly puzzling in this amalgamation of military +regulation with religious hierarchy and female +seclusion. They call themselves knights; their +abbess, commander. The king, as Grand Master<a name="page_163" id="page_163"></a> +of the military orders (since Ferdinand the Fifth) +of Calatrava, Alcantara, and Santiago, is their recognised +chief; and whenever military mass is required +to be performed, the troops march into their chapel +to beat of drum.</p> + +<p>I was even assured that these recluses are not +obliged to refuse a hand offered for a waltz, if it +belongs to an arm having an epaulette at its other +extremity; and that such scenes are known to occur +in the presence of the commandress herself.</p> + +<p>Our party, formed for the visit to this convent, +having been presented to the superior, she gave +directions to a nun to show us every part of the +establishment. This sister, who, we were told, +bore the title and rank of serjeantess (sargenta), +possessed the remains of great beauty, and her +(probably) forty summers had not injured her +commanding and graceful figure. No sooner had +she ushered us into the choir than she left us for an +instant, and returned with her mantle of ceremony,—the +costume in which they take the vow, and in +which they appear on all occasions of solemnity. It +was with evident satisfaction that she performed this +part of her duties of cicerone; nor was it to be +wondered at. No costume could have been invented +better calculated to set off her natural advantages. +It is composed of a sort of white serge, and appears<a name="page_164" id="page_164"></a> +to have no seam. Attached round the shoulders +it sweeps the ground with a train of four or five +feet. A cross of scarlet cloth, bound with dark +brown edges, and of a graceful form, figures on the +portion which covers the left arm from the shoulder +to the elbow. The white cap, gathered all over into +minute plaits, rises into two parallel ridges, which +passing over to the back of the head, imitate the +form of a helmet. Two large lappets descend to the +shoulders and complete the costume, which is entirely +white, with the exception of the cross. In +walking round the choir to display to us the effect of +this dress, the fair <i>santiagista</i> was a model of majesty +and grace.</p> + +<p>To judge from her replies to our questions, it +would appear that the system of softening the +severity of monastic seclusion, and of partial and +occasional communication with the beings of the +outer world, instead of producing more contentment +in the minds of the recluses, may possibly +tend to unsettle them, and render them more dissatisfied +with their lot. When asked how long +she had inhabited the convent, she replied with +an unrestrained and most pathetic inflation of the +chest, more eloquent than the loudest complaint—"A +very long time; nearly twenty years." The +white mantle, she told us, was an object the sight<a name="page_165" id="page_165"></a> +of which always gave birth to serious reflections; +since it was destined not even to quit her after +death, but to serve also for her shroud.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 391px;"> +<a href="images/ill_191_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_191_sml.jpg" width="391" height="550" alt="COSTUME OF A MILITARY NUN." title="COSTUME OF A MILITARY NUN." /></a> +<span class="caption">COSTUME OF A MILITARY NUN.</span> +</div> + +<p>The nun's choir is entirely separated from the +public chapel, with the exception of two gratings, +which admit to the latter the sound of the organ, +and through which the nuns have a better view of +the church than the public can obtain of the choir,<a name="page_166" id="page_166"></a> +this being less lighted, and on a lower level. Near +the choir a small oratory of no greater dimensions +than about seven feet square, appears to be the only +remains extant of the Arab buildings, which occupied +the site. The ceiling is hemispherical, and ornamented +in the Arab style; and one of the walls +contains a niche surrounded by Arab tracery. I +should mention likewise a fountain in the garden, +which bears a similar character.</p> + +<p>These nuns live less in community with each other +than those of other convents; in fact, their life resembles +in many respects that of independent single +ladies. Each inhabits her own suite of apartments, +and keeps her own servant. Her solitary repasts are +prepared in her own separate kitchen, and at the +hour chosen by herself. Once a-year only, on the +occasion of the festival of the patron Apostle, the +community assembles at dinner. The common refectory +is at present let to strangers, together with +other portions of the convent. The novice who +wishes to enter this convent must be of good family, +(proof of noble descent being demanded up to grand-fathers +and grandmothers inclusive) and possessed of +property. Of the entrance of the present <i>commendadora</i> +into the convent thirty years since, a romantic +story is related. She belongs to a family of rank in +the province of La Mancha,—and it is worth mentioning,<a name="page_167" id="page_167"></a> +that she recollects Espartero's father, who, +as she states, served a neighbouring family in the +capacity of cowherd.</p> + +<p>A match, <i>de convenance</i>, had been arranged for her +by her parents, on the accomplishment of which they +insisted the more rigidly from her being known to +entertain an attachment, the object of which was +disapproved. No resistance being of any avail, the +wedding-day was named; and she was taken to +Toledo for the purpose of making the necessary purchases +for the occasion. It so happened that she was +received by a relative, a member of the community +of Santiagistas; and whether she confided her pains +to the bosom of this relative, and yielded to her persuasions—nuns +being usually given to proselytism; +or perhaps acting on the impulse of the moment; +she declared on the morning after her arrival her resolution +never to quit the convent; preferring, as she +resolutely affirmed, an entire life of seclusion, to an +union with a man she detested. Instead, therefore, +of the wedding dresses, a <i>manton capitular</i> was the +only ornament purchased.</p> + +<p>The property of this establishment remaining for +the most part in possession of the respective original +possessors, and not forming a common stock, the +conscientious scruples of the revolution made an +exception in its favour, owing to which it is not<a name="page_168" id="page_168"></a> +reduced to so destitute a condition as that of the +other unclosed convents. The nuns of San Clemente—the +principal convent of Toledo, and of +which the abbess alone possessed private property, +are reduced to a life of much privation, as are also +those of all the other convents. Some obtain presents +in return for objects of manual industry, such +as dolls' chairs, and other similar toys. Those of San +Clemente had, and still have, a reputation for superior +skill in confectionary. A specimen of their +talent, of which I had an opportunity of judging in +the house of a friend of the abbess, appeared to me +to warrant the full extent of their culinary fame. +They do not, however, exercise this art for gain. At +San Clemente, and no doubt at all the others, the +new government—besides the confiscation of all rents +and possessions in money and land—seized the provisions +of corn and fruits which they found on +searching the attics of the building.</p> + +<p>Immediately below the ruined modern Alcazar, +and facing the Expositos, is seen a vast quadrangular +building, each front of which presents from twenty +to thirty windows on a floor. It is without ornament, +and is entered by a square doorway, which +leads to an interior court. It is now an inn, called +Fonda de la Caridad, but was originally the residence +of the Cid, who built it simultaneously with the<a name="page_169" id="page_169"></a> +erection of the Alcazar, by Alonzo the Sixth, shortly +after the taking of the town; Ruy Diaz being at that +time in high favour, and recently appointed first +Alcalde of Toledo, and governor of the palace. It +was on the occasion of the first cortez held in this +town, that the hero demanded a formal audience of +Alonzo, in which he claimed justice against his two +sons-in-law, the counts of Carrion.</p> + +<p>These were two brothers, who had married the +two Countesses of Bivar. On the occasion of the +double marriage, a brilliant party had assembled at +the Cid's residence, where all sorts of festivities had +succeeded each other. The two bridegrooms, finding +themselves, during their presence in this knightly +circle, in positions calculated to test their mettle, +instead of proving themselves, by a display of unequalled +valour and skill, to be worthy of the choice +by which they had been distinguished, gave frequent +proofs of deficiency in both qualities; and, long +before the breaking up of the party, their cowardice +had drawn upon them unequivocal signs of contempt +from many of the company, including even their +host. Obliged to dissimulate their vexation as long +as they remained at the château of the Cid, they +concerted a plan of vengeance to be put in execution +on their departure.</p> + +<p>They took formal leave, and departed with their<a name="page_170" id="page_170"></a> +brides for their estate, followed by a brilliant suite. +No sooner, however, had they reached the first town, +than, inventing a pretext, they despatched all the +attendants by a different route, and proceeded on +their journey, only accompanied by their wives. Towards +evening the road brought them to a forest, +which appeared to offer facilities for putting their +project in execution. Here they quitted the highway, +and sought a retired situation.</p> + +<p>It happened that an attendant of the Countesses, +surprised at the determination of the party to divide +routes, had been led by curiosity to follow +them unobserved. This follower, after having waited +some time for their return to the high-road, penetrated +into the midst of the wood, in order to discover +the cause of the delay. He found the two +brides lying on the ground, almost without clothing, +and covered with blood, and learned that they +had just been left by their husbands, who had been +scourging them almost to death.</p> + +<p>It was against the perpetrators of this outrage +that the Cid pleaded for justice. A certain number +of nobles were selected by Alonzo, and directed to +give a decision after hearing the accusation and the +defence. The offence being proved, the Counts had +nothing to urge in extenuation, and judgment was +pronounced. All the sums of money, treasures,<a name="page_171" id="page_171"></a> +gold and silver vases and goblets, and precious stones, +given by the Cid with his daughters as their dowry, +to be restored; and (at the request of Ruy Diaz) +the two Counts of Carrion, and their uncle, who +had advised them to commit the act, were condemned +to enter the lists against three of the followers +of the Cid. The last decision was momentarily +evaded by the Counts; who urged, that, having +come to Toledo to be present at the cortez, +they were unprovided with the necessary accoutrements. +The King, however, insisted that they +should not escape so mild a punishment, and repaired +himself to Carrion, where he witnessed the +combat, in which, it is needless to add, the culprits +came off second best. The marriages being, at the +same time, declared null, the Cid's daughters were +shortly afterwards married a second time; the eldest, +Doña Elvira, to Don Ramiro, son of Sancho, King +of Navarre; and the younger, Doña Sol, to Don +Pedro, hereditary Prince of Aragon.<a name="page_172" id="page_172"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_XI" id="LETTER_XI"></a>LETTER XI.</h3> + +<h5>STREETS OF TOLEDO. EL AMA DE CASA. MONASTERY OF SAN +JUAN DE LOS REYES. PALACE OF DON HURTADO DE MENDOZA.</h5> + +<p class="r">Toledo.<br /> +</p> + +<p>We will now hasten to the opposite extremity of +the city, where the monastery of San Juan de los +Reyes lays claim to especial interest. But I already +hear you cry for mercy, and exclaim against these +endless convents and monasteries; the staircases, +courts, and corridors of which cause more fatigue +to your imagination, than to the limbs of those who, +however laboriously, explore their infinite details. +Infinite they are, literally, in Toledo; where the +churches, the greater number of which belong to +convents, are not seen, as elsewhere, scattered singly +among the masses of the habitations, but are frequently +to be found in clusters of three or four, +whether united by the same walls, or facing each +other at the two sides of a street. It may, perhaps, +afford you a short relief to pick your way over the<a name="page_173" id="page_173"></a> +somewhat rugged pavement of a few of the Toledo +streets, and take a survey of the exterior town, which +our present destination requires us to traverse in +its entire extent. I must inform you that, for the +success of this enterprise, the stranger stands in +absolute need of a pilot, without whose assistance +his embarrassments would be endless.</p> + +<p>Toledo scarcely boasts a street in which two +vehicles could meet and continue their route. Most +are impassable for a single cart; and, in more than +one, I have found it impossible to carry an open +umbrella. Such being the prevailing width of the +streets, their tortuous direction causes a more serious +inconvenience. He who has attempted the task of +Theseus, in the mazes of some modern garden +labyrinth, will comprehend the almost inevitable +consequence of relying on his own wits for finding +his way about Toledo,—namely, the discovery +that he has returned to his point of departure at +the moment he imagined that half the town separated +him from it. This result is the more favoured +by the similarity of the streets and houses. +No such thing as a land-mark. All the convents +are alike. You recollect at a particular turning, +having observed a Moorish tower; consequently, +at the end of the day, the sight of the Moorish +tower leads you on, buoyed up by doubly elevated<a name="page_174" id="page_174"></a> +spirits, in the required direction, most anxious to +bring the tiring excursion to a close: but this tower +leads you to the opposite extremity of the city to +that you seek, for there are half a dozen Moorish +towers, all alike, or with but a trifling difference +in their construction.</p> + +<p>Nor is this obstacle to solitary exploration unaccompanied +by another inconvenience. I allude to +the continual ascents and descents. The surface of +the mountain on which Toledo is built, appears to +have been ploughed by a hundred earthquakes, so +cut and hacked is it, to the exclusion of the smallest +extent of level ground. To carry a railroad across +it, would require an uninterrupted succession of +alternate viaducts and tunnels. In consequence of +this peculiarity, the losing one's way occasions +much fatigue. To do justice to the inhabitants, +an almost universal cleanliness pervades the town,—an +excellence the attainment of which is not easy +in a city so constructed, and which gives a favourable +impression of the population. It is one of the +towns in which is proved the possibility of carrying +on a successful war against the vermin for which +the Peninsula has acquired so bad a reputation, by +means of cleanliness maintained in the houses.</p> + +<p>In the house I inhabited on my arrival, I had +suspected for some days an unusual neglect in the<a name="page_175" id="page_175"></a> +duties of the housemaid, to whose department it +belonged to sweep the <i>esteras</i> or matting, which +serve for carpets, from the circumstance of my +having been visited by one or two unwelcome tormentors. +I ventured a gentle remonstrance to the +<i>ama</i> (landlady), stating my reasons for the suspicion +I entertained. It happened that on the previous +day I had mentioned my having been shown over +the Archbishop's palace. This she had not forgotten; +for with a superb coolness, scarcely to be +met with out of Spain, she replied, "Fleas! oh, no! +sir! we have none here,—you must have brought +them with you from the Palace." Satisfied, however, +with having maintained her dignity of landlady, +she took care to have the nuisance removed.</p> + +<p>This <i>ama</i>, as may be already judged, was a curiosity. +In the first place, she was a dwarf. The +Spaniards are not, generally speaking, a more diminutive +race than the other inhabitants of Southern +Europe: but when a Spaniard, especially a woman, +takes it into her head to be small, they go beyond +other nations. Nowhere are seen such prodigies of +exiguity. The lady was, moreover, deformed, one of +her legs describing a triangle, which compelled her +in walking to imitate the sidelong progress of a crab. +Possessed of these peculiarities she had attained, as +spinster, that very uncertain age called by some<a name="page_176" id="page_176"></a> +"certain," but agreed by all to be nearer the end +than the commencement of life.</p> + +<p>Although not an exception, with regard to temper, +to the generality of those whose fate it is to endure +such a complication of ills, she nevertheless on +frequent occasions gave way to much amiability, +and especially to much volubility of discourse. She +was not without a tinge of sentimentality; and when +seated, fan in hand, and the <i>mantilla puesta</i>, on +one of the chairs shorn of almost their entire legs, +which were to be found in all parts of the house,—she +made by no means a bad half-length representation +of a fine lady.</p> + +<p>She had apparently experienced some of the +sorrows and disappointments incident to humanity; +and on such occasions had frequently, no doubt, +formed the resolution of increasing, although in +a trifling degree, some religious sisterhood, of which +establishments she had so plentiful a choice in her +native city; but, whether on a nearer approach, +she had considered the veil an unbecoming costume, +or her resolution had failed her on the brink of +the living tomb, the project had not as yet taken +effect. The turn, however, thus given to her reflections +and inquiries, had perfected in her a branch +of knowledge highly useful to strangers who might +be thrown in her way. She was a limping encyclopedia<a name="page_177" id="page_177"></a> +of the convents and monasteries of Toledo; +and could announce each morning, with the precision +of an almanack, the name of the saint of the day,—in +what church or convent he was especially fêted, +and at what hour the ceremony would take place. +She was likewise <i>au fait</i> of the foundation, ancient +and modern annals, and peculiarities of every sort +which belong to every religious establishment of the +many scores existing in Toledo. Her administration +of the household affairs was admirably organized +owing to her energetic activity. Her love of cleanliness +would frequently induce her to take the sweeping +department into her own hands—a circumstance +which was sure to render the operation doubly successful, +for the brooms, which in Toledo are not +provided with handles or broomsticks, were exactly +of a length suited to her stature. Before we take +leave of her, here is one more of her original replies.</p> + +<p>I complained to her at breakfast that the eggs +were not as fresh as usual; and, suiting the action +to the word, approached the egg-cup containing the +opened one so near to her, that the organs of sight +and smell could not but testify to the justice of my +<i>reclamation</i>. Shrugging her shoulders, until they +almost reached the level of the table—and with +much contempt depicted on her countenance: "How +could it be otherwise?" she exclaimed, "the egg<a name="page_178" id="page_178"></a> +was taken a quarter of an hour ago from under +the hen; but you have broken it at the wrong end."</p> + +<p>The monastery called San Juan de los Reyes, was +founded by Ferdinand and Isabella, on their return +from the conquest of Granada, and given to a fraternity +of Franciscan friars. An inscription to this +effect in gothic characters runs round the cloister +walls, where it forms a sort of frieze, in a line with +the capitals of the semi-columns. The inhabited +part of the establishment is in a state of complete +ruin, having been destroyed by the French during +the Peninsular War. The cloisters are, likewise, in +a semi-ruinous state: the part best preserved being +the church; although that was not entirely spared, +as may be supposed from its having been used as +cavalry stables.</p> + +<p>The choice of a situation for the erection of this +convent was perfect in the then flourishing state +of Toledo; and, even now, its picturesque position +lends a charm to the melancholy and deserted remains +still visible of its grandeur and beauty. It +stands on the brow of the cliff, commanding the +termination of the chasm already described as +commencing at the bridge of Alcantara. It commands, +therefore, the ruins of Roderick's palace, +placed a few hundred yards further on, and on a +lower level; still lower the picturesque bridge of<a name="page_179" id="page_179"></a> +St. Martin, striding to the opposite cliff, over arches +of ninety feet elevation, and the lovely <i>vega</i> which +stretches to the west.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 372px;"> +<a href="images/ill_205_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_205_sml.jpg" width="372" height="550" alt="CHURCH OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES." title="CHURCH OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES." /></a> +<span class="caption">CHURCH OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES.</span> +</div> + +<p>This monastery was one of the most favoured +amongst the numerous royal endowments of that +period. It is said that its foundation was the result +of a vow pronounced by Ferdinand and the Queen<a name="page_180" id="page_180"></a> +before the taking of Granada. In addition to the scale +of magnificence adopted throughout the entire plan, +the royal founders, on its completion, bestowed a +highly venerated donation—the collection of chains +taken from the limbs of the Christian captives, rescued +by them from the dungeons of the Alhambra. +They are suspended on the outside walls of the two +sides of the north-eastern angle of the church, and +are made to form a frieze, being placed in couples +crossing each other at an acute angle; while those +that remained are suspended vertically in rows by +fours or fives, in the intervals of the pilastres.</p> + +<p>The interior of the church is still sufficiently +entire to give some idea of its original splendour. +Its dimensions are rather more than two hundred +feet in length, by eighty in width, and as many in +height—excepting over the intersection of the nave +and transept, where the ceiling rises to a hundred +and eight feet. These dimensions are exclusive of +three recesses on either side, forming chapels open +to the nave, there being no lateral naves or aisles. +The style of the whole is very ornamental; but the +east end is adorned with an unusual profusion of +sculpture. The transept is separated from the eastern +extremity of the building, by a space no greater +than would suffice for one of the arches; and its +ends form the lines, which being prolonged, constitute<a name="page_181" id="page_181"></a> +the backs of the chapels. The royal arms, +supported by spread eagles, are repeated five times +on each end-wall; separated respectively by statues +of saints in their niches, and surmounted by a profusion +of rich tracery. These subjects entirely cover +the walls to a height of about forty feet, at which +elevation another inscription in honour of the +founders runs round the whole interior. The transepts +not being formed by open arches, the sides +afford space for a repetition of the same ornament, +until at their junction with the nave they are terminated +by two half-piers covered with tracery, and +surmounted by semi-octagonal balconies, beneath +which the initials of Ferdinand and Isabella, made +to assume a fancy shape, and surmounted by coronets, +are introduced with singularly graceful effect.</p> + +<p>But the chief attraction of this ruin is the cloister. +A small quadrangle is surrounded by an ogival or +pointed arcade, enriched with all the ornament that +style is capable of receiving. It encloses a garden, +which, seen through the airy-web of the surrounding +tracery, must have produced in this sunny region +a charming effect. At present, one side being +in ruins and unroofed, its communication with the +other three has been interrupted; and, whether or +not in the idea of preserving the other sides from +the infection, their arches have been closed nearly<a name="page_182" id="page_182"></a> +to the top by thin plaister walls. Whatever may have +been the motive of this arrangement, it answers +the useful purpose of concealing from the view a +gallery which surmounts the cloister, the arches of +which would neutralize the souvenirs created by the +rest of the scene, since they announce a far different +epoch of art, by the grievous backsliding of +taste evinced in their angular form and uncouth +proportions.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 540px;"> +<a href="images/ill_208_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_208_sml.jpg" width="540" height="550" alt="CLOISTER OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES, TOLEDO." title="CLOISTER OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES, TOLEDO." /></a> +<span class="caption">CLOISTER OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES, TOLEDO.</span> +</div><p><a name="page_183" id="page_183"></a></p> + +<p>Until the destruction of the monastery by the +French, the number of monks was very considerable; +and in consequence of the unusual privileges accorded +to their body, had become the objects of +especial veneration. A curious proof of this still +exists in the form of a printed paper, pasted on one +of the doors in the interior of the church, and no +doubt preserved carefully by the fifteen or sixteen +brothers, who continued after the dispersion of the +rest to inhabit the few apartments, which, by their +situation over the cloister, had escaped the flames; +and who were only finally compelled to evacuate +their retreat on the occasion of the general convent +crusade of the late revolution. It is an announcement +of indulgences, of which the following is the +opening paragraph:—</p> + +<p>"Indulgence and days of pardon to be gained by +kissing the robe of the brothers of San Francisco.</p> + +<p>"All the faithful gain, for each time that they +kiss the aforesaid holy robe with devotion of heart, +two thousand and seventy-five days of Indulgence. +Further than this, whosoever of the faithful shall +kiss the aforesaid holy robe devoutly, gains each time +eight thousand one hundred days of pardon. The +which urges to the exercise of this devotion the +Princes, Kings, Emperors, Bishops, and highest dignitaries +of the Church, and the monks of other religious<a name="page_184" id="page_184"></a> +orders; and even those of the same order +gain the same, according to the doctrine of Lantusca, +who writes, 'Videant religiosi quantum thesaurum +portent secum.' Since those who with hearts +filled with lowliness and love, bend the knees to kiss +the precious garment, which opens to so many souls +the entrance to Heaven, leading them aside from +the paths of perdition, with trembling and terror +of the entire hosts of hell, are doubtless those who +gain the above-mentioned Indulgences, &c."</p> + +<p>Cardinal Ximenes had assumed the habit of this +monastery before his nomination to the see of Toledo.</p> + +<p>Among the numerous relics of the ancient prosperity +of this ruinous corner of Toledo, are seen the +walls of the palace of Don Juan Hurtado de Mendoza. +To them were confided the secret murmurings +of Charles the Fifth's vexation, when, elated +with his Italian successes—lord of the greatest empire +of Christendom, and flattered by the magnificent +hospitality of the Genoese, he only resorted +hither to be bearded by his Spanish vassals, and to +hear his request for supplies unceremoniously refused. +Although monarch of nearly half Europe, +and, better still, of Mexico and Peru, that sovereign +appears to have undergone the torments of a constantly +defective exchequer.<a name="page_185" id="page_185"></a></p> + +<p>His armies were not numerous for such an empire, +and yet they were frequently in revolt for +arrears of pay. Could at that time the inventor of +a constitution on the modern principle have presented +himself to Charles, with what treasures would +he not have rewarded him? On his arrival in Spain, +in the autumn of 1538, the emperor convoked the +cortez in Toledo, "for the purpose of deliberation +on the most grave and urgent causes, which obliged +him to request of his faithful vassals an inconsiderable +contribution, and of receiving the assurance +of the desire with which he was animated, of diminishing +their burdens as soon as circumstances +should enable him to do so." All assembled on the +appointed day—the prelates, the grandees, the +knights, the deputies of cities and towns. The +opening session took place in the great salon of the +house of Don Juan Hurtado de Mendoza, Count +of Melita, in which the emperor had taken up his +abode; and two apartments in the convent of San +Juan de los Reyes, were prepared for the remaining +meetings—one for the ecclesiastical body, presided +by the Cardinal de Tavera, archbishop of Toledo, +accompanied by Fray Garcia de Loaysa, cardinal, +and confessor of the emperor, afterwards Archbishop +of Seville—the other for the lay members of the +cortez.<a name="page_186" id="page_186"></a></p> + +<p>Although an adept at dissimulation, what must +have been the impatience of Charles, while under +the necessity of listening, day after day, to reports +of speeches pronounced by the independent members +of his <i>junta</i> on the subject of his unwelcome +proposition, without the consolation of foreseeing +that the supplies would eventually be forthcoming. +The orators did not spare him. The historian, +Mariana, gives at full length the speech of +the condestable Don Velasco, Duke of Frias, a +grandee enjoying one of the highest dignities at +the court, who commences by declaring that, "with +respect to the Sisa," (tax on provisions, forming the +principal subject of the emperor's demand,) "each +of their lordships, being such persons as they were, +would understand better than himself this business: +but what he understood respecting it was, that +nothing could be more contrary to God's service, +and that of his Majesty, and to the good of these +kingdoms of Castile, of which they were natives, and +to their honour, than the Sisa;" and, further on, proposes +that a request be made to his Majesty, that +he would moderate his expenditure, which was +greater than that of the Catholic kings.</p> + +<p>On an address to this effect being presented to +the emperor, he replied, that "he thanked them +for their kind intentions; but that his request was<a name="page_187" id="page_187"></a> +for present aid, and not for advice respecting the +future:" and finding, at length, that no Sisa was +to be obtained, he ordered the archbishop to dissolve +the <i>junta</i>, which he did in the following +words:—"Gentlemen,—his Majesty says, that he +convoked your lordships' assembly for the purpose +of communicating to you his necessities, and those of +these kingdoms, since it appeared to him that, as they +were general, such also should be the remedy; but +seeing all that has been done, it appears to him +that there is no need of detaining your lordships, +but that each of you may go to his house, or whither +he may think proper."</p> + +<p>It must be confessed that the grandees, who had +on this occasion complained of Charles's foreign +expeditions, and neglect of his Spanish dominions, +did not pursue the system best calculated to reconcile +him to a residence among them. Instead of +taking advantage of the opportunities afforded by +social intercourse, for making amends for the repulse +he had suffered from the cortez, they appeared desirous +of rendering the amount of humiliation which +awaited him in Spain a counterpoise to his triumphs +in his other dominions. On the close of the above-mentioned +session, a tournament was celebrated in +the <i>vega</i> of Toledo. On arriving at the lists, an +<i>alguacil</i> of the court, whose duty it was to clear the<a name="page_188" id="page_188"></a> +way on the emperor's approach—seeing the Duke +de l'Infantado in the way, requested him to move +on, and on his refusal struck his horse with his +staff. The duke drew his sword and cut open the +officer's head. In the midst of the disturbance +occasioned by the incident, the <i>alcalde</i> Ronquillo +came up, and attempted to arrest the duke in the +emperor's name—when the constable, Duke de +Frias, who had just ridden to the scene of bustle, +reining in his horse, exclaimed, "I, in virtue of +my office, am chief minister of justice in these kingdoms, +and the duke is, therefore, my prisoner;" and +addressing himself to the alcalde: "know better +another time, on what persons you may presume +to exercise your authority." The duke left the +ground in company of the last speaker, and was followed +by all the nobles present, leaving the emperor +entirely unaccompanied. It appears that no +notice was taken by Charles of this insult; his manner +towards the Duke of Infantado on the following +day being marked by peculiar condescension, and +all compensation to the wounded <i>alguacil</i> left to +the duke's generosity.</p> + +<p>The personal qualities of this prince, as a monarch, +appear to have been overrated in some degree in his +own day; but far more so by subsequent writers. +The brilliancy of his reign, and the homage which<a name="page_189" id="page_189"></a> +surrounded his person were due to the immense +extent of his dominions; and would never have belonged +to him, any more than the states of which +he was in possession, had their attainment depended +in any degree on the exercise of his individual +energies. When in the prime of youth, possessed +of repeated opportunities of distinguishing himself +at the head of his armies, he kept aloof, leaving the +entire conduct of the war to his generals. His +rival, Francis the First, wounded at Pavia in endeavouring +to rally his flying troops, and at length +taken prisoner while half crushed beneath his dead +horse, was greater—as he stood before the hostile +general, his tall figure covered with earth and blood—than +the absent emperor, who was waiting at +Valladolid for the news of the war.</p> + +<p>Nor were the qualities of the statesman more conspicuous +than those of the warrior on this occasion. +Having received the intelligence of his victory, and +of the capture of his illustrious prisoner, he took +no measures—gave no orders. To his general every +thing was left; and when the captive King was, +at his own request, conveyed some time after to +Spain, the astonished emperor had received no previous +notice of his coming. He allowed himself to +be out-manœuvred in the treaty for the liberation +of his prisoner; and when Francis broke the pledge<a name="page_190" id="page_190"></a> +he had given for the restitution of Burgundy, he +took no steps to enforce the execution of the stipulations; +and he ultimately gave up the two French +princes, who remained in his power as hostages, in +return for a sum of money.</p> + +<p>Far from maintaining the superiority in European +councils due to his extensive dominions, the Italian +republics were only prevented with the greatest +difficulty, and by the continual presence of armies, +from repeatedly declaring for France: and even the +popes, to whom he paid continual court, manifested +the small estimation in which they held his influence +by constantly deserting his cause in favour of +Francis,—the cause of the champion of Christianity +in favour of the ally of the Infidel, and <i>that</i> frequently +in defiance of good faith; shewing how +little they feared the consequences of the imperial +displeasure.</p> + +<p>If these facts fail in affording testimony to his +energy and capacity, still less does his character +shine in consistency. He professed an unceasing +ardour in the cause of Christianity; offering to the +French king the renunciation of his rights, and +a release from that monarch's obligations to him, +on condition of his joining him in an expedition +against the Infidels; but when he found himself +at the head of an immense army under the walls of<a name="page_191" id="page_191"></a> +Vienna, he sat still and allowed Solyman to carry off +at his leisure the spoils of the principal towns of +Hungary.</p> + +<p>When at length he made up his mind to take +the field, he selected, as most worthy of the exercise +of his prowess, the triumph over the pirate Barbarossa +and his African hordes: the most important +result of the campaign being the occupation of +Tunis, (where in his zealous burnings for Christianity +he installed a Mahometan sovereign,) and the +wanton destruction by his soldiers of a splendid +library of valuable manuscripts.</p> + +<p>We have seen how little his Spanish subjects +allowed themselves to be dazzled by the splendours +of his vast authority, and history informs us how far +he was from conceiving the resolution of reducing +them to obedience by any measures savouring of +energetic demonstration. The irreverence to his +person he calmly pocketed, and the deficiences in +his exchequer were supplied by means of redoubled +pressure on his less refractory Flemings. He submitted +to the breach of faith of Francis of France, +and to the disrespect of his Castilian vassals; but, +on the burghers of the city of Ghent being heard to +give utterance to expressions of discontent at the +immoderate liberties taken with their purse-strings, +he quits Madrid in a towering rage, crosses France at<a name="page_192" id="page_192"></a> +the risk of his liberty, and enters his helpless burg +at the head of a German army, darting on all +sides frowns of imperial wrath, each prophetic of a +bloody execution.</p> + +<p>Aware of the preparations of Francis for attacking +his dominions simultaneously in three different +directions, he took insufficient or rather no measures +to oppose him, but turning his back, embarked for +Algiers, where he believed laurels to be as cheap as +at Tunis. There, however, he lost one half of his +armament, destroyed by the elements; and the +remainder narrowly escaping a similar fate, and +being dispersed in all directions, he returned in +time to witness the unopposed execution of the +plans of his French enemy. What measures are his +on such an emergency? Does he call together the +contingents of the German States? Unite the different +corps serving in Lombardy and Savoy,—dispatch +an order to the viceroy of Naples to march for the +north of Italy; and having completed his combinations, +cross the Pyrenees at the head of a Spanish +army, and give the law to his far weaker antagonist? +No! nothing that could lead to an encounter with +the French king accorded with his policy, as it has +been called, but more probably with his disposition. +He quits Spain, it is true, and using all diligence, +travels round France, but not too near it, and arrives<a name="page_193" id="page_193"></a> +in Flanders. Here he puts himself at the head of +his Germans, and marches—against the Duke of +Cleves! who had formed an alliance with his +principal enemy.</p> + +<p>Seeing the emperor thus engaged, Francis completes +a successful campaign, taking possession of +Luxembourg and other towns. At length the +sovereign of half Europe, having received news of +the landing of an English army in Picardy, resolves +to venture a demonstration against France. He +therefore traverses Lorraine at the head of eighty +thousand troops, and makes himself master of Luneville: +after which, hearing that Francis had despatched +his best troops to oppose Henry the Eighth, +and was waiting for himself, as the less dangerous +foe, with an army of half the strength of his own, +and composed of recruits, he makes up his mind to +advance in the direction of Paris. After a fortnight's +march he finds himself in presence of the French +king, to whom he sends <i>proposals of peace</i>!</p> + +<p>These being rejected, he continues his march; +when a messenger from Francis announces his consent +to treat. Under these circumstances, does he +require the cession of Burgundy, according to the +terms of the unexecuted treaty of Madrid? Does +he even stipulate for any advantage, for any equality? +No! he agrees, on the contrary, to cede Flanders<a name="page_194" id="page_194"></a> +to the French, under colour of a dowry with his +daughter the Infanta Maria, who was to be married +to the Duke of Orleans; or else Milan, with his +niece the daughter of the King of the Romans; and +he beats a retreat with his immense army, as if +taking the benefit of a capitulation.</p> + +<p>There is something in the result of this French +campaign which appears to explain much of +Charles's previous conduct; and shows that in +many instances he was actuated by personal fear +of his gallant rival. On this occasion he did not +hesitate to desert the King of England, who had no +doubt calculated on his coöperation, as much as +Charles had depended on the diversion created by +the British army. The more one reflects on the +passages of this emperor's history, the less one is +surprised at his resolution to abdicate. He gave +in this a proof of his appreciation of his real +character, which undoubtedly fitted him rather +for a life of ease and retirement, than for the arduous +duties of supreme power.<a name="page_195" id="page_195"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_XII" id="LETTER_XII"></a>LETTER XII.</h3> + +<h5>ARAB MONUMENTS. PICTURES. THE PRINCESS GALIANA. +ENVIRONS.</h5> + +<p class="r">Toledo.<br /> +</p> + +<p>Returning along the edge of the cliff, a very +short space separates the extreme walls of the ruined +monastery of Ferdinand and Isabella, from an edifice +of much greater antiquity, although not yet a ruin. +Its exterior as you approach, is more than simple. +It is not even a neatly constructed building; +but such a pile of rough looking mud and stone, +as, on the continent, announces sometimes a barn, +or granary of a farming establishment <i>mal monté.</i> +A high central portion runs from end to end, from +either side of which, at about four-fifths of its height, +project lower roofs of brownish-red tiles. The old +square rotten door is in exact keeping with all +this exterior, and contributes its share to the surprise +experienced on entering, when you discover, +on a level with the eye, distributed over a spacious<a name="page_196" id="page_196"></a> +quadrangular area, a forest of elaborately carved capitals, +surmounting octagon-shaped pillars, and supporting +innumerable horse-shoe arches, scattered +in apparent confusion. All these as you advance +down a flight of steps, fall into rank, and you +speedily find yourself in the centre of an oriental +temple in all its symmetry.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 550px;"> +<a href="images/ill_222_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_222_sml.jpg" width="550" height="513" alt="INTERIOR OF SANTA MARIA LA BLANCA, TOLEDO." title="INTERIOR OF SANTA MARIA LA BLANCA, TOLEDO." /></a> +<span class="caption">INTERIOR OF SANTA MARIA LA BLANCA, TOLEDO.</span> +</div> + +<p>The principal light entering from the western +extremity, you do not at first perceive that three +of the five naves terminate at the opposite end, by<a name="page_197" id="page_197"></a> +half domes of more modern invention. These have +since been almost built out, and do not form a part +of the general view,—not in consequence of a decree +of a committee of fine arts, but for the convenience +of the intendant of the province, who selected +the edifice, as long as it remained sufficiently +weather-proof for such a purpose, for a magazine +of government stores. There is no record of the +antiquity of this church, supposed to be the most +ancient in Toledo: at all events, it is the most ancient +of those constructed by the Arabs. It was +originally a synagogue, and received the above mentioned +half cupolas on its conversion to a Catholic +church; since which period it has been known +by its present title of Santa Maria la Blanca.</p> + +<p>A few hundred yards further on, following the +same direction, is the church called the Transito, +also in the oriental style, but on a different plan: +a large quadrangular room, from about ninety to a +hundred feet in length, by forty in width, and about +seventy high, without arches or columns, ornamented +with Arab tracery in stucco, on the upper part +of the walls, and by a handsome cedar roof. A +cement of a different colour from the rest runs round +the lowest portion of the walls, up to about breast +high; no doubt filling the space formerly occupied +by the azulejos. Some remains of these still decorate<a name="page_198" id="page_198"></a> +the seats, which are attached to the walls at +the two sides of the altar. The building is in excellent +preservation, and until lately was used as +a church of the Mozarabic sect. The ornaments +are remarkable for the exquisite beauty of their +design, and are uninjured, excepting by the eternal +whitewash, the monomania of modern Spanish decorators.</p> + +<p>The Jews were the primitive occupants of this +elegant temple also. Samuel Levi, treasurer and +favourite of Pedro the Cruel (who subsequently +transferred his affection from the person of his +faithful servant to the enormous wealth, amassed +under so indulgent a prince, and seized a pretext +for ordering his execution) was the founder of this +synagogue. The inauguration was accompanied by +extraordinary pomp. The treasurer being, from +his paramount position at the court of Castile, the +most influential personage of his tribe, the leading +members of Judaism flocked from all parts of Europe +to Toledo to be present on the occasion, and a +deputation from Jerusalem brought earth of the +Holy Land, which was laid down throughout the +whole interior before the placing of the pavement.</p> + +<p>A very different origin, more suited to believers +in miracles, is attributed to this church by the +present titular sacristan. This Quasimodo of the<a name="page_199" id="page_199"></a> +fabric, a simple and worthy functionary, enjoys a +sinecure, except, it is to be feared, with regard to +salary. Although, however, no duties confine him +to his post, his attachment to the edifice prevents +his ever being found further from it than the porch; +under the cool shelter of which, as he leans against +the wall, he fabricates and consumes the friendly +<i>cigarito</i>. When questioned with an appearance of +interest on the subject of the building, he replies +with unrestrained delight. Its foundation he attributes +to Noah, fixing the date at seventeen +hundred years back; but without adding any particulars +relative to this miraculous visit paid to +Toledo, by the ghost of the patriarch.</p> + +<p>As is the case with all other ecclesiastical edifices +closed pursuant to the recent decrees, this +building may become the property of any one, +who would offer a sufficient price, not according +to the real value, but to that to which such objects +are reduced by the great number in the market. +Several other churches are simply closed and +left unguarded; but the antiquarian sacristan above +mentioned, is placed here on account of the existence +of a room in which are contained the archives +of the knights of Calatrava and Alcantara, until +recently its proprietors. No reparations, however, +are ordered; and there is many an enthusiast in<a name="page_200" id="page_200"></a> +archæological research who, should such an edifice +fall under his notice, would, no doubt, rescue +it from its now imminent fate. It is not only a +monument admirable for the details of the ornaments, +the best of its sort to be met with north +of Andalucia, but it forms a valuable link in the +chain of architectural history. It is the first ecclesiastical +edifice of its style recorded as having +set the example of an open area, destitute of columns +and arcades.</p> + +<p>At the distance of a few hundred yards from this +building, a portion of the precipice is pointed out, +to which was given in former times the name of +the Tarpeian rock. It was the spot selected by +the Jewish authorities, (who enjoyed in Toledo, +under the Kings of Castile, the right of separate +jurisdiction in their tribe,) for the execution of their +criminals. It is a perpendicular rock, but with +an intermediate sloping space between its base and +the Tagus.</p> + +<p>One of the most curious of the Arab monuments +of Toledo, is the church called the Christo de la +Luz, formerly a mosque. It is extremely small; +a square of about twenty feet; and is divided by +four pillars into three naves, connected with each +other, and with the surrounding walls, by twelve +arches. This disposition produces in the ceiling<a name="page_201" id="page_201"></a> +nine square compartments, which rise each to a +considerable height, enclosed by walls from the +tops of the arches upwards. Each small square +ceiling is coved and ornamented with high angular +ribs, rising from the cornice and intersecting +each other, so as to form a different combination +in each of the nine.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 422px;"> +<a href="images/ill_227_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_227_sml.jpg" width="422" height="550" alt="INTERIOR OF CHRISTO DE LA LUZ. TOLEDO." title="INTERIOR OF CHRISTO DE LA LUZ. TOLEDO." /></a> +<span class="caption">INTERIOR OF CHRISTO DE LA LUZ. TOLEDO.</span> +</div> + +<p>The principal remaining Arab buildings are, the<a name="page_202" id="page_202"></a> +beautiful gate called Puerta del Sol; part of the +town walls with their towers; the parochial church +of San Roman; the tower of the church of St. +Thomas; and two or three other similar towers. +Several private houses contain single rooms of the +same architecture, more or less ornamental. The +most considerable of these is situated opposite the +church of San Roman, and belongs to a family residing +at Talavera. They have quitted the house in +Toledo, which is in a ruinous state. The Moorish +saloon is a fine room of about sixty feet in length +by upwards of forty high, and beautifully ornamented. +The Artesonado roof of cedar lets in already, in +more than one part, light and water; and half the +remainder of the house has fallen.</p> + +<p>The good pictures in Toledo are not very plentiful. +It is said some of the convents possessed good +collections, which were seized, together with all +their other property. Many of these are to be +seen in the gallery called the Museo Nacional, at +Madrid. Others have been sold. Those of the +cathedral have not been removed; but they are not +numerous: among them is a St. Francisco, by Zurbaran; +and a still more beautiful work of Alonzo +del Arco, a St. Joseph bearing the Infant. It is +in a marble frame fixed in the wall, and too high +to be properly viewed: but the superiority of the<a name="page_203" id="page_203"></a> +colouring can be appreciated, and the excellence +of the head of the saint. In the smaller sacristy +are two pictures in Bassano's style, and some copies +from Raphael, Rubens, and others. At the head +of the great sacristy, there is a large work of Domenico +Theotocopuli, commonly called El Greco, +(the head of the school of Toledo) which I prefer +much to the famous Funeral of the Count Orgaz, +in the church of Santo Tonie, which, according to +some, passes for his masterpiece. In the first are +traits of drawing, which forcibly call to mind the +style of the best masters of the Roman school, +and prove the obligation he was under to the instructions +of his master Michel Angelo. The subject +is the Calvary. The soldiery fill the back +ground. On the right hand the foreground is occupied +by an executioner preparing the cross, and +on the left, by the group of females. The erect +figure of the Christ is the principal object, and +occupies the centre, somewhat removed from the +front. This is certainly a fine picture; the composition +is good, and the drawing admirable, but +the colouring of the Greco is always unpleasing.</p> + +<p>In the Funeral of Count Orgaz it is insufferably +false; nor, in fact, is it easy to conjecture to what +sort of merit this picture owes its celebrity. It +possesses neither that of conception, nor that of<a name="page_204" id="page_204"></a> +composition, nor of expression: least of all that of +colouring. All that can be said in its favour is, +that the row of heads extending from one end of +the canvass to the other, across the centre, are correct +portraits of personages of note, who figured +in the history of the epoch. The worst part of all +is, the Heaven of the upper plan of the picture, +into which the soul of the Count has the bad taste +to apply for admission. This was, in fact, one of +the works which gave occasion to the saying of a +critic of a contemporary school, who declared that +the Glorias (heavenly visions) of the Greco looked +like Infernos, and his Infernos like Glorias.</p> + +<p>In the Transito there is an Adoration, a charming +picture, apparently by Rembrandt. There are +here and there good pictures among the other +churches, but none very remarkable. In general, +the most attractive objects are the old picture-frames, +and other gilded ornaments and wood carvings. All +these, in the taste of the commencement of the last +century and earlier, which is at present so much +in request, are in such profusion, as would draw tears +of admiration from the eyes of a Parisian upholsterer, +and showers of bank notes from the purses +of furniture collectors.</p> + +<p>You will not, I am sure, by this time, object to +our quitting Toledo, and making a short excursion<a name="page_205" id="page_205"></a> +in its environs. I shall therefore request you +to accompany me to the ruins of a Moorish palace, +on the banks of the Tagus, a mile distant from +the town, called the Palacio de Galiana. The Princess +Galiana was the daughter of Galafre, one of +the earlier Arab Kings of Toledo. The widely +extended fame of her beauty, is said to have fired +the imagination of Charles, son of Pepin, King of +France, who resolved to throw himself at her feet +as a suitor, and forthwith repaired to Toledo. However +glowing the terms in which report had represented +her charms, he found them surpassed by the +reality; but a prince of a neighbouring state had +forestalled him in his suit. This obstacle did not, +however, deter him from persisting in his resolution. +He forthwith challenged his rival to mortal combat; +and, clearing his road to the hand of the princess +with the point of his lance, married her, and carried +her back with him to Paris.</p> + +<p>The attachment of her father to this princess is +said to have been such from her earliest childhood, +that he gave himself up entirely to this affection—devoting +all his wealth to the gratification of her +caprices. The Arab palace, now no longer in existence, +took its name from hers, in consequence of +a new one having been erected for her by her father, +adjoining his own, at a period at which she had<a name="page_206" id="page_206"></a> +scarcely grown out of childhood. The two residences +being occupied by succeeding princes as one, received +the appellation of los Palacios, (the Palaces) of Galiana.</p> + +<p>In addition to her town residence, she soon after +had the other palace constructed about a mile from +Toledo. To arrive at the ruins, we pass the bridge +of Alcantara, and follow the rose-tree promenade. +From this a path on the left-hand leads to the spot +across a field in garden-like cultivation. The selection +made by the Arab princess of this situation, +proves her to have possessed, in addition to her +beauty, a consummate taste and intelligence of rural +life.</p> + +<p>The Tagus—a name, by the way, more deserving +of poetic fame than many a more widely echoed +stream—in this spot, as if conscious of the pains he +must shortly undergo, while dashing through the +deep and narrow chasm through which he must force +a passage around Toledo, seems to linger, desirous of +putting off the fated storm. His course becomes +more circuitous as he approaches; and indulging in +a hundred irregularities of form, he plays round +several small thickly wooded islands, penetrating with +innumerable eddies and back currents, into flowery +nooks and recesses; while here and there he spreads +out in a wide sheet his apparently motionless waters,<a name="page_207" id="page_207"></a> +as if seeking to sleep away the remainder of his days +on these green and luxurious banks.</p> + +<p>In the midst of this delicious region, which recalls +to the recollection some of the more favoured spots +in England, but which, with the addition of the +Spanish climate in early summer, is superior to them +all, was placed the palace. The valley for a considerable +distance still bears the name of the Garden +of the King,—Huerta del Rey. The site of part of +the pleasure grounds immediately adjoining the +river, is left wild, and covered with woods; and the +remainder is converted into a farm in the highest +state of cultivation. The ruin consists of three sides +of a not very large quadrangle; the massive walls of +which are pierced with two stories of arched windows. +The remainder of the edifice was doubtless +less solid, and has entirely disappeared.</p> + +<p>Many a tale of romance would be gathered—many +a stirring scene recorded, could so precious a document +be brought to light as a chronicle drawn up by +some St. Simon of the Court of Toledo, who had +recorded the daily events of which this retreat was +the theatre, during the time it served as a residence +for several successive sovereigns. But in this land +words have always been fewer than deeds, and records +are the rarest sort of subsisting monuments. +One anecdote, however, is transmitted, of which this<a name="page_208" id="page_208"></a> +spot was the scene, in the time of the last but one of +the Moorish princes who reigned at Toledo, before +its surrender to Alonzo the Sixth.</p> + +<p>Alonzo was himself one of the actors on the occasion. +In early life he had been deprived by his +brother Sancho, King of Castile, of the portion of the +kingdoms which fell to his share by the will of his +father, Ferdinand the First. On his expulsion from +his inheritance he took refuge at the court of the +Arab king of Toledo, by whom he was received with +every mark of favour which could have been lavished +on a friend. The Moor (for the family then reigning +was not Arab, although the two races are constantly +confounded in Spanish histories) gave him a palace, +and settled on him splendid revenues, to be continued +during the time he should think fit to accept +his hospitality. He even sent invitations to all the +friends and followers of his guest, in order that he +might be surrounded with his own court.</p> + +<p>Alonzo, touched by this delicate hospitality, attached +himself warmly to his host; his friendship +for whom (I believe a solitary instance in those times +among the sovereigns in Spain) lasted until the death +of the latter. The youthful exile, thus handsomely +treated, passed much of his time in the society of his +royal protector.</p> + +<p>On one occasion, the court being at the country<a name="page_209" id="page_209"></a> +palace of Galiana, the king and his attendants were +reclining in the cool shade of the garden, and Alonzo +at a short distance, apparently asleep. The king, +pointing to the town, which towered on its precipice +immediately in front of the party, was expatiating on +the strength of its position. All agreed that it was +impregnable; until a brother of the monarch observed, +that there was one mode of warfare against +which it would not hold out: and he proceeded to +explain his plan, which consisted of an annual devastation +of the valley of the Tagus at the time of +harvest, to be executed by an invading army, which +might be disbanded during the winter months. This +system, he maintained, would inevitably reduce the +city by famine to the necessity of a surrender.</p> + +<p>No sooner was the last phrase uttered, than all present +in an instant struck by the same thought, turned +towards the sleeper; and the greater number, filled +with suspicion respecting the reality of his slumbers, +addressed significant looks to the king, the intention +of which could not be mistaken, and which boded no +good to Alonzo. Whatever might have been the +feelings of the Moor at this moment, he took no +further notice of the incident, and allowed his guest +to terminate his nap when he thought proper.</p> + +<p>When the death of Sancho took place before +Zamora, Alonzo was still at Toledo. The intelligence<a name="page_210" id="page_210"></a> +being conveyed to him by a confidential messenger +from his sister, he lost no time in taking +leave of his host, who wished him success with +every demonstration of friendship, and repairing to +Burgos. There, after some hesitation, the nobles +consented to his investiture with the sovereignty. +During his brilliant reign he resisted several tempting +opportunities of breaking with his Moorish ally +and former host, and thus adding to his dominions,—and +preserved his friendship and loyalty unstained. +After the death of the Moorish king, he, however, +speedily fell out with his successor. War was declared +on both sides, and it was resolved to attack +Toledo. The well known result was, the taking of +the town after seven years, the time mentioned in +the garden of Galiana, and by means of the annually +repeated devastation of the Vega, according to the +plan imagined and described in the above mentioned +conversation.</p> + +<p>Returning by the Rose-tree Walk, immediately on +approaching the bridge, an advanced portion of the +cliff which bounds the road on the left detaches +itself from the rest towards the summit, which rises +in a circular form. On it stands the Castle of San +Servando, one of the most picturesque of the Arab +remains existing in this part of Spain. The origin +of this fort is uncertain. Some attribute it to the<a name="page_211" id="page_211"></a> +Romans, and consider the Moorish windows and +ornaments to be subsequent additions, from their +being constructed with bricks instead of the same +stone as the rest of the walls. But this is not a sufficient +reason, since the same peculiarity exists in all +the Arab edifices in Toledo. In fact, the reason is +evident. The hard black sort of stone used for the +walls, would almost have defied the chisel which +should have attempted to fashion its surface into the +delicate forms required by the Arab mode of decorating. +This argument, therefore, being set aside—remains +the masonry, which is more likely from its +appearance to be Gothic or Arab, than Roman.</p> + +<p>It is probably entirely Arab. It encloses a quadrangular +space of about a quarter of an acre, and is +a ruin; but the walls and towers are almost entire. +There are three small towers, that is of small +diameter, but lofty; and two larger, one of which +is circular: the other is a parallelogram terminating +by a semicircle at one of its extremities. This tower +has lost apparently about a third of its elevation. +Their walls are so perfectly constructed as to appear +externally like solid rocks smoothed and rounded. +Each larger tower contains two rectangular brick +projections, in which are small elegantly-arched openings +for windows.</p> + +<p>The edifice was thoroughly repaired by Don Pedro<a name="page_212" id="page_212"></a> +Tenorio, archbishop of Toledo; the same who built +the bridge of San Martin. It has since played its +part in numberless wars, and was at length reduced +to a ruin during the insurrection headed by Juan de +Padilla, at the commencement of Charles the Fifth's +reign.</p> + +<p>During the Peninsular war of the present century, +the old battlements echoed once more with +the sounds of warfare. It was occupied by a body +of French, who repaired a portion of the masonry +at the summits of the towers, and erected a low +wall along the whole length of the Toledo side. +They were able, from their position, to batter the +Alcazar, which is immediately opposite, but on a +higher level; and to command the bridge of Alcantara, +and road to Aranjuez.</p> + +<p>In the other valley which extends to the west +of Toledo exist the remains of a circus for chariot +races, generally supposed, at first sight, to be Roman. +They present, in fact, every characteristic of a Roman +work. The rough interior masonry is all that +remains; and that only rising to a height of from +three to four feet from the ground, with the exception +of a single arch. The earth mingled with +ruins, has apparently filled up much of the interior, +and surrounding the exterior simultaneously, has +only left visible the upper portion of the edifice.<a name="page_213" id="page_213"></a> +The end which is in the best preservation is of a +semicircular form. From it the sides run in parallel +directions, and lose themselves in the ruins of a more +recently erected convent. They are traceable to a +length of more than four hundred yards. The +width is two hundred and ninety feet within the +building, at the present elevation of the ground, +and three hundred and twenty feet on the outside, +which appears to have consisted of a series of arches. +There are also remains of an amphitheatre adjoining +the semicircular end of the stadium.</p> + +<p>There being no indication of the Romans having +at any period planted any considerable establishment +at Toledo, in fact no author but Livy +having noticed the place, and he but slightly; the +antiquaries have sought for the origin of these monuments +among Gothic traditions; and it is believed +by them, that they were erected during the early +part of the sixth century, by Theudio, a Gothic +King, who manifested much attachment to Roman +customs.<a name="page_214" id="page_214"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_XIII" id="LETTER_XIII"></a>LETTER XIII.</h3> + +<h5>CASTLES OF ALMONACID, GUADAMUR, MONTALBAN, AND +ESCALONA. TORRIJOS.</h5> + +<p class="r">Toledo.<br /> +</p> + +<p>I met this morning with an entertaining scene, +in a quarter in which it might be the least looked +for. The archiepiscopal palace contains an excellent +library, which has always been open to the +public. Although the revenues of the see are now +withdrawn, and the palace is vacant, the books remain +on the shelves, and the head librarian, a <i>racionero</i> +of the cathedral, has the good nature to throw open +the rooms from eleven to twelve, on all days of +labour, (as those are called on which no saint is celebrated,) +although he no longer enjoys a salary, +nor the means of providing a single attendant to +see to what passes in the different apartments.</p> + +<p>I was occupied this morning in the <i>racionero's</i> +room, when he received a visit from two French +tourists, both persons of notoriety; one being a<a name="page_215" id="page_215"></a> +member of the chamber of deputies, and one of +the leaders of the republican party; and the other, +I believe, also in the chamber, but principally known +as a writer of political pamphlets, in which the +French reigning family, and the powers that be are +lashed with unwearying severity. The first mentioned +personage commenced the conversation in +Spanish, which the other did not speak: but on +hearing the librarian make an observation in French, +the pamphleteer took up the argument in his own +language, and nearly in the following terms.</p> + +<p>"As this gentleman understands French, I will +explain to him the object of my tour," and addressing +himself to the Spaniard, he continued—"I find +it a relief, in the midst of my arduous political +duties, to make an occasional excursion in a foreign +country, and thus to enlarge the sphere of my usefulness, +by promoting the cause of humanity in the +various localities I visit. It is thus that I have +recently passed through Andalucia, and have recommended, +and, I doubt not, successfully, to the principal +personages possessed of influence in its numerous +cities, the establishment of all sorts of useful +institutions. I am now in Toledo, animated +with the same zeal. I have obtained an introduction +to you, Sir, understanding that you are an +individual possessed of considerable influence, and<a name="page_216" id="page_216"></a> +enjoying unbounded means of carrying out the +projects, which, I doubt not, you will agree with +me in considering essential to the well being and +improvement, both moral and material, of your ancient +locality."</p> + +<p>During this exordium, the Spaniard, who happens +to be possessed of a vivacity, unusual in his +countrymen, and a sort of impatience of manner, +had endeavoured more than once to obtain a hearing. +At length he replied, that he feared it would +not be in his power to carry out the views which +Monsieur did him the honour to communicate to +him, owing to the absence of sufficient resources +at his disposal, whether for public purposes, or in +his individual and private capacity.</p> + +<p>The Frenchman was not, however, to be so easily +discouraged. "This, Sir," he replied, "is the result +of your modesty; but I am persuaded that I +have only to make my objects understood, in order +to obtain their complete execution. For instance, +one of the most insignificant in expense, but of +infinite utility, is this: it would be a source of +much gratification to me, if you would have the +most conspicuous spots throughout Toledo ornamented +with statues, representing, with greater or +less resemblance, all the personages, distinguished +from various causes in the history of Spain, to whom<a name="page_217" id="page_217"></a> +Toledo has given birth. These works I should +wish to be entrusted to artists of acknowledged talent, +and"—he was proceeding with constantly increasing +rapidity of enunciation, when the exhausted +librarian's patience being at an end, he interrupted +the torrent. "However grateful the city of Toledo +and myself must be for your interest and advice, +I am grieved to repeat that my anxiety to +comply with your wishes is totally powerless. We +are without funds; and I, for my own part, can +assure you that I am <i>sans le sou</i>. Do me the favour +to name any service of a less expensive nature, and +I shall rejoice in proving to you my entire devotion. +Excuse my <i>impolitesse</i>. I am called for in +the next room. I kiss your hand." It is needless, +in fact the attempt would baffle human intelligence, +to conjecture what the real object of these +very liberal and very political gentlemen might be, +in honouring all parts of Spain with their visit.</p> + +<p>The more distant environs of Toledo, principally +towards the south and south-east, are remarkable +for a profusion of ruined castles. Supposing a circle +drawn at a distance of thirty miles from Toledo +as its centre, and divided, as it would be, by the +Tagus, descending from east to west, into two equal +parts, the southern half, and the western portion +of the other, are so plentifully strewed with these<a name="page_218" id="page_218"></a> +fortresses, that, in many instances, five or six are +visible from the same point of view.</p> + +<p>A chain of low mountains crosses the southern +portion of the semicircle, in a parallel line with +the Tagus. Some of its branches advance into +this region, and terminate in detached peaks, which +have afforded to the aristocracy of former times +favourable positions for their strongholds; and a +still greater number of proprietors, not being possessed +of the same advantages of site, were compelled +to confide in the solidity of their walls and +turrets, which they constructed in the plain, usually +adjoining the villages or towns inhabited by their +vassals. The greater number of these edifices are +of a date subsequent to the surrender of Toledo +to the Christians, and were erected on the distribution +of the different towns and estates among +the nobility, on their being successively evacuated +by their Moorish proprietors. The Count of Fuensalida, +Duke of Frias, is the most considerable landed +proprietor on this side of Toledo, and several +of the ruined castles have descended to him.</p> + +<p>I will not fatigue you by the enumeration of all +these remains, of which but a few are remarkable +for picturesque qualities, and still fewer for the possession +of historical interest, as far as can be known +at present. One of them, situated ten miles to the<a name="page_219" id="page_219"></a> +south-east of Toledo, and visible from its immediate +neighbourhood, attracts notice owing to its striking +position. Occupying the summit of a conical +hill, which stands alone on the plain, and placed +at four times the elevation of Windsor Castle, you +expect to find it connected with the history of some +knightly Peveril of the Peak, but learn with surprise +that it was the stronghold of the Archbishops +of Toledo; and was erected by Don Pedro Tenorio, +the same prelate who rebuilt the bridge of San +Martin, and repaired the Moorish castle of San +Servando.</p> + +<p>Before you ascend the peak, you pass through +the village of Almonacid, from which the castle +takes its name, and which, unlike that more recently +erected pile, is completely Arab in aspect. All the +houses are entered through back courts, and present +no difference of appearance, whether shops, taverns, +<i>posadas</i>, or private residences. After tying my horse +in the stable of the posada, and giving him his meal +of barley, which he had carried in the <i>alforjas</i> (travelling +bags) suspended behind the saddle, I took +my own provisions out of the opposite receptacle, +and established myself before the kitchen fire.</p> + +<p>On my asking for wine, the hostess requested I +would furnish her with two <i>quartos</i> (one halfpenny) +with which she purchased me a pint, at the tavern<a name="page_220" id="page_220"></a> +next door. The host of the posada, who was seated +next me, and a friend at the opposite corner of +the fire-place, favoured me, during my meal, with +their reminiscences of a battle fought here, during +the Peninsular war. They had not heard of the +English having taken any part in the quarrel, with +the exception of the old woman, who recollected +perfectly the name of Wellington, and pronounced +it as perfectly, but thought he had been a Spanish +general. They described the battle as a hard fought +one, and won by the French, who marched up the +hill with fixed bayonets, as the old host, almost blind, +described by assuming the attitude of a soldier jogging +up a hill, and dislodged the Spanish garrison +from the castle.</p> + +<p>I could have willingly passed a week in this village, +so exciting are the remains of Arab manners +to the curiosity. The name of the place had already +raised my expectations, but the blind landlord of +the posada unconsciously won my attachment from +the first moment. No sooner was I seated, than, +leaning towards me, and patting my arm to draw +my attention, he pointed to his two eyes. At first +I was at a loss to understand him; but soon discovered +that he was desirous of knowing whether +I was sufficiently versed in the mysteries of Esculapius, +to prescribe for the relief of his suffering<a name="page_221" id="page_221"></a> +organs. To this trait he soon added one still more +characteristic, by actually speaking of Toledo, by +its Moorish appellation Tolaite. Had he worn a +turban, sat cross-legged and offered me coffee and +a pipe, I should not have been more taken by surprise, +than by this Arab expression assailing the +ear, in the heart of Spain, ten miles from the town +itself, in which the name had probably not been +uttered for three or four centuries.</p> + +<p>The builder of the castle of Almonacid must have +placed more confidence in the difficulties of approach, +than in the solidity of his structure. The +walls are partly of stone, and partly of <i>tapia</i>, or +earth. There only remain, the exterior wall, enclosing +an area of about sixty to seventy yards in +diameter, and of a pentagonal form; and, in the +centre, the keep, a quadrangular tower, somewhat +higher than the rest of the buildings. There are +no traces of living apartments. At each of the five +angles of the outer wall, is a small tower, and others +in the centres of some of the fronts; those looking +to the west are circular, the rest square. The nearer +view of this ruin causes disappointment, as it appears +to have been a slovenly and hasty construction: +but, at a distance, its effect is highly picturesque.</p> + +<p>The castle of Montalban is situated to the south-west<a name="page_222" id="page_222"></a> +of Toledo, at a distance of six Spanish leagues. +It resembles, in size and importance, some of the +largest English castles; and justifies thus far the +tradition preserved here, of its having for a short +period, served for a royal prison—Juan the Second +being said to have been confined there by his exasperated +favourite, Don Alvaro de Luna. This +story is not, however, confirmed by historians, several +of whom I have vainly consulted, for the purpose +of discovering it. Ferreras mentions the castle, or +rather the town, which lies at a distance of two +leagues (eight miles) from it, as having belonged to +the queen of Juan the Second; who, he states, was +deprived of it, against her will, in favour of Don +Alvaro, and another place given her in exchange. +On the confiscation of the favourite's possessions, +previous to his decapitation, it reverted to the crown; +and there is no further notice taken of it in the +history, until the Emperor Charles the Fifth, +confers on its then proprietor the title of Count. +This personage was Don Alonzo Tellez Giron, third +in descent from Juan Pacheco, Duke of Escalona, +who had erected Montalban into a separate fief, in +favour of one of his sons and his descendants, on +the singular condition of the family name undergoing +a change, on each successive descent. The +alternate lords were to bear the names respectively<a name="page_223" id="page_223"></a> +of Giron and Pacheco. The first Count of Montalban +married a daughter of D. Ladron de Guevara, +proprietor, <i>à propos</i> of castles, of that of Guevara, +in the neighbourhood of Vitoria, constructed in an +extremely singular form. The centre tower appears +intended to imitate the castles of a chess-board. It +is situated on the southern declivity of the chain +of mountains, a branch of the Pyrenees, which separates +the province of Guipuscoa from those of Navarre +and Alava.</p> + +<p>On the opposite descent of the chain another fortress +existed in remote times. Both were strongholds +of robbers, whose descendants derived their family +name, Ladron (robber) from their ancestors' profession. +In a document signed by D. Garcia Ramirez, +King of Navarre in 1135, D. Ladron de Guevara, +governor of Alava, figures among the grandees of +the kingdom; the descendants were afterwards called +lords of Oñate, and the castle is at present the property +of the Count de Oñate, a grandee of the first +class. From its occupying a point <i>stratégique</i> of considerable +importance, commanding the plain of Alava, +and the high road as it enters the valley of Borunda, +it has been in recent times occupied by the Carlists, +and fortified.</p> + +<p>Montalban belongs at present to the Count of +Fuensalida. It is completely ruinous, but the outer<a name="page_224" id="page_224"></a> +wall is almost entire; and one of two lofty piles +of building, in the form of bastions, which flanked +the entrance, is in sufficient preservation to allow +the apartments to be recognised. Their floors were +at a height of about eighty feet from the ground; +and the mass of masonry which supported them, +is pierced by an immense gothic arch reaching to +the rooms. The opposite corresponding mass remains +also with its arch; but the upper part which +contained rooms, no longer exists. On this, the entrance +side, the approach is almost level, and the +defence consisted of a narrow and shallow moat; +but the three other sides, the fortress being of a +quadrangular form, look down into a deep ravine, +through which a river, issuing from the left, passes +down two sides of the castle, and makes for the valley +of the Tagus, which river is seen at a distance +of five or six miles.</p> + +<p>The precipice at the furthest side descends perpendicularly, +and is composed of rocks in the wildest +form. The river below leaps from rock to rock, and +foams through a bed so tormented, that, although +owing to its depth of at least five hundred feet from +the foundations of the castle, it looks almost like a +thread, it sends up a roar not less loud than that of +the breakers under Shakspeare's Cliff. The valley, +opening for its passage, gives to the view, first, the<a name="page_225" id="page_225"></a> +Tagus, on the opposite bank of which lies the town +of Montalban, dependant on the lords of the castle; +beyond it an extensive plain, dotted with castles and +towns, most of them on the road from Madrid to +Talavera; and at the horizon the Sierra del Duque, +coated with snow from about half its height upwards. +The extent of the view is about sixty miles.</p> + +<p>The outer enceinte of the castle of Montalban encloses +a space of five or six acres in extent, in which +no buildings remain, with the exception of the picturesque +ruin of a small chapel in the centre. Like +almost all other residences possessed of scenery sufficiently +precipitous, this castle boasts its lover's leap. +A projection of wall is pointed out, looking over the +most perpendicular portion of the ravine, to which a +tradition is attached, deprived by time of all tangible +distinctness, if ever it possessed any. The title given +to the spot in this instance is "The Leap of the +Moorish Girl," Despeñadera de la Mora. The position +will probably bear no comparison with the Leucadian +promontory; nor is it equal to the Peña de +los Enamorados, near Antequera, in Andalucia, immortal +likewise in the annals of passion, and of which +the authentic story is preserved. Of those in our +country I could name one—but I will not, though +few know it better—nor is it the meanest of its tribe. +But with these exceptions I know of none among the<a name="page_226" id="page_226"></a> +numerous plagiarisms of the famous lover's leap of +antiquity that offers to despair in search of the picturesque +more attractions than the Despeñadera of +Montalban.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 550px;"> +<a href="images/ill_252_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_252_sml.jpg" width="550" height="412" alt="CASTLE OF GUADAMUR." title="CASTLE OF GUADAMUR." /></a> +<span class="caption">CASTLE OF GUADAMUR.</span> +</div> + +<p>The best preserved castle of these environs, and +the handsomest building, is that of Guadamur. It is +not large, but it is impossible for a residence-fortress +to be more complete, and more compact. It is composed +of three enclosures, one within the other, and +forms a quadrangle, with the addition of a lofty and +massive tower, projecting from one of the angles. +The centre, or inner quadrangle, is about half the<a name="page_227" id="page_227"></a> +height of the tower, and has, at its three remaining +angles, and at the centre of each front, an elegant +circular turret. This portion of the edifice formed +a commodious and handsome residence. It was divided +into two stories, with vaulted ceilings,—the +lower apartments being probably set apart for the +offices of attendants, and places of confinement for +prisoners: in the centre of the upper story was a +diminutive open court, supported by the vaults of +the ground-floor, and into which a series of elegantly +proportioned rooms opened on all sides. Although +the greater part of the vaults and interior walls are +fallen in, the rooms are all to be traced, and inscriptions +in the old Gothic letter run round the walls of +some of the apartments. A second enclosure rises +to about two-thirds of the elevation of the inner +quadrangle, and is provided with corresponding turrets; +but the proportions of these are more spacious, +and their construction and ornament more massive. +Beyond this are the exterior defences rising out of the +moat, and very little above the surrounding ground.</p> + +<p>Viewed from without, nothing indicates that this +edifice is a ruin. Over the entrance are the arms of +the Counts of Fuensalida. It is supposed by many +that this castle was erected by Garcilaso de la Vega, +grandfather of the "Prince of Spanish poets," as the +celebrated bard of Toledo is entitled. Others maintain<a name="page_228" id="page_228"></a> +its founder to have been Pedro Lopez de Ayala, +first Count of Fuensalida. This latter story is the +more probable one; since, besides its being confirmed +by the armorial shield above mentioned, it has been +adopted by Haro in his Nobiliario, a work drawn up +with care and research, in which Garcilaso de la +Vega is stated to have purchased some towns from +the family of Ayala,—among others Cuerva, in the +near neighbourhood, but not Guadamur.</p> + +<p>The Ayalas were descended from the house of +Haro, lords of Biscay. Several of them had held +high offices at the Court of Castile. The grandfather +of the founder of the castle had been High Chancellor +of Castile, and Great Chamberlain of Juan the +First; and his father, the first lord of Fuensalida, +was High Steward, and first Alcalde of Toledo. He +lost an eye at the siege of Antequera,—taken from +the Moors by Ferdinand, afterwards King of Aragon, +in the year 1410, and thus acquired the surname of +the One-eyed. To him Juan II. first granted the +faculty of converting his possessions into hereditary +fiefs: "Because," according to one of the clauses of +the act, "it was just that the houses of the grandees +should remain entire in their state for the eldest +son; and in order that the eldest sons of the +grandees might be maintained in the estates of +their predecessors, that the name and memory of the<a name="page_229" id="page_229"></a> +grandees of the kingdom might not be lost, and that +the hereditary possessions and houses, and the generations +of the sons of grandees might be preserved."</p> + +<p>It was Pedro Lopez de Ayala, son of the one-eyed +lord of Fuensalida created Count by Enrique the +Fourth, that built the castle. He was a great favourite +with the king, and his constant companion, notwithstanding +his being afflicted with deafness—a bad +defect in a courtier, and which procured him also +a surname. He succeeded his father in his different +dignities. His loyalty did not keep pace with +his obligations to Henry the Fourth; for, being first +Alcalde of Toledo, he made no effort to prevent that +town from joining the party of the Prince Alonzo, who +pretended to his brother's crown; but he was recalled +to his allegiance by the devoted exertions of his wife.</p> + +<p>This lady was Doña Maria de Silva, a daughter of +Alonzo Tenorio de Silva, Adelantado of Cazorla. On +the breaking out of the rebellion of Toledo, she +agreed with her brother Pedro de Silva, Bishop of +Badajos, to send a joint letter to the king, in which +they pressed him to come to Toledo in disguise. +Enrique the Fourth approved of the plan; and +arriving in the night, accompanied by a single attendant, +was received by the bishop at his residence +in the convent of San Pedro Martir. Notwithstanding +the darkness, he had been recognised by a servant<a name="page_230" id="page_230"></a> +of Marshal Payo de Ribera, a partisan of Prince +Alonzo. This noble, immediately on learning the +king's arrival, joined with the Alcalde, who had not +been let into the secret by his wife, and called the +citizens to arms by sounding the great bell of the +cathedral. A crowd was speedily assembled at the +king's lodging, who would have been immediately +made prisoner, but for his attendant Fernando de +Ribadenegra, who succeeded, single handed, in repulsing +a party who had forced an entrance.</p> + +<p>At this crisis the disloyal magistrate became +alarmed, and sent his two sons, Pedro de Ayala, and +Alonzo de Silva, accompanied by Perafande Ribera, +son of the above-mentioned marshal, to entreat the +king to quit the town. Henry consented; and at +midnight left the convent, accompanied by the +three youths. He had ridden sixteen leagues that +day, and his horses being exhausted with fatigue, +he requested the two sons of Ayala to lend him +theirs. They did so, and accompanied him on foot +as far as the city gates, where he left them, and set +off for Madrid.</p> + +<p>In order to pacify the people, Pedro Lopez ordered +his brother-in-law, the bishop, to quit the town, and +he repaired to the Huerta del Rey, a country-house +in the environs. On arriving at Olias the king sent +the two brothers, in recompense of their good service,<a name="page_231" id="page_231"></a> +a deed of gift of seventy thousand <i>maravedis</i> of +annual revenue.</p> + +<p>The grief of Maria de Silva at the failure of her +project was such as almost to deprive her of her +reason, and added to the eloquence of her entreaties +to win over her husband to the king's +interests. He now, therefore, exerted himself to gain +the principal citizens, and succeeded so completely, +that within three days from the departure of Enrique +the Fourth, he was enabled to recall the Bishop of +Badajos to Toledo, and to banish in his stead the +Marshal de Payo and his son, who retired to their +estates. Unanimous was now the cry of "Viva +Enrique Quarto, y Mueren los rebeldes!" and the +following day, a Sunday, the king re-entered Toledo +in the midst of the general joy and festivity, and +preceded directly to the residence of the Alcalde, +in order to thank his wife for her loyal efforts. +A lodging was there in readiness to receive him, +which he occupied during his stay in Toledo. Pedro +Lopez de Ayala received on the king's return to +Madrid the title of Count of his town of Fuensalida, +and shortly afterwards, at Medina del Campo, a grant +of the towns of Casaruvias del monte, Chocas, and +Arroyomolinos.</p> + +<p>The town and castle of Escalona are situated at +eight leagues, or thirty-two miles, to the east of<a name="page_232" id="page_232"></a> +Toledo. It is one of the towns, about a dozen in +number, the foundation of which is attributed by the +Count de Mora, in his history of Toledo, to the Jews. +He fixes the date at about five centuries before the +Christian era, when a large number of Israelites, to +whom Cyrus, king of Babylon, had granted their +liberty, arrived in Spain under the guidance of a +Captain Pirrus, and fixed themselves principally in +and around Toledo. He also states that the synagogue +of Toledo—since called Santa Maria la Blanca—was +erected by them. The name given by them to +Escalona was Ascalon. The neighbouring Maqueda +was another of their towns, and was called Mazeda. +It was created a duchy by Ferdinand and Isabella in +favour of their courtier Cardenas. I cannot learn +the date of the castle of Escalona. Alonzo the Sixth +won the town from the Moors; and it is probable +that the castle was erected, at least in part, by Diego +and Domingo Alvarez, two brothers, to whom he +granted the place. After their death it reverted to +the crown of Castile, and continued to be royal property +until Juan II. gave it to his favourite Don +Alvaro de Luna.</p> + +<p>This grandee was known to have amassed great +treasures in the castle; and on the confiscation of +his possessions at the period of his final disgrace, the +king marched an army to take possession of the<a name="page_233" id="page_233"></a> +fortress; but the countess held out successfully, and +obliged the royal troops to raise the siege. On a +second attempt, made after Don Alvaro's execution, +his widow considered she had no further object in +maintaining it, and lost no time in coming to terms. +The conditions of the surrender were, that the treasure +should be divided into three equal parts, one +for the king, another for herself, and the third for +her son. The son was likewise allowed to inherit the +castle, and by the marriage of his daughter, it came +into the possession of the Marquis of Villena, D. +Lopez Pacheco, created Duke of Escalona by Henry +the Fourth. The family of Fellez Giron, proprietors +of Montalban, were descendants of this duke. At +present the castle of Escalona belongs to the Duke +of Ossuna. It is not only the most considerable of +the numerous ruins disposed over the territory of +Toledo, but one of the most interesting historical +relics of Spain, having filled an important place in +the annals of several of the most stirring periods. +The unfortunate Blanche, Queen of Pedro the Cruel, +was its inmate during several years; as also her rival, +Maria de Padilla, at a subsequent period.</p> + +<p>The best excursion from Toledo in point of architectural +interest, is that to Torijos, a small town +situated rather to the left of the direct road to +Escalona, and five leagues distant. Immediately<a name="page_234" id="page_234"></a> +before arriving there, the castle of Barciense is met +with, situated on an eminence which commands an +admirable view, extending south and west to a semi-circle +of mountains, composed of the Sierra del +Duque, and the chain called the mountains of Toledo, +and for a foreground looking down on a perfect +forest of olive-grounds, surrounding the town of +Torijos, two miles distant. The ruin of Barciense +consists of a lofty square tower, and the outer walls +of a quadrangle. There is nothing worth notice, +with the exception of a bas-relief, which occupies all +the upper half of the tower on the east side. It consists +of a solitary lion rampant; probably the largest +crest ever emblazoned. The Dukes of Infantado +were proprietors of this castle.</p> + +<p>The little town of Torijos contains a Gothic, or +rather semi-Moorish palace, two Gothic churches, an +ancient picturesque gateway, and the ruins of a magnificent +monastery. It is one of those towns here +and there met with on the Continent, which, at a +favourable crisis of the arts, have fallen to the proprietorship +of one of those individuals idolised by +architects—men whose overplus of fortune is placed +at the disposal of their eyes, and employed in ministering +to the gratification of those organs. The +greater part of the decoration of Torijos dates from +the reign of Ferdinand the Catholic, when it belonged<a name="page_235" id="page_235"></a> +to D. Gutiere de Cardenas, father of the first +duke of Maqueda. The following story is related +respecting the founding of the monastery by his +wife Teresa Enriquez.</p> + +<p>This lady resided, when at Toledo, in a mansion, +the ruins of which still exist, on the opposite side of +the street to the monastery of San Juan de los Reyes, +of which I sent you a description in a former letter. +Being warmly attached to religious observances, (for +she went by the name of Teresa la Santa,) and animated +with an enthusiastic fervour towards everything +which appertained to the splendid establishment in +front of her residence, she had discovered a position, +from which a view could be obtained, overlooking +the principal scene of the religious ceremonies of the +Franciscans. She there caused a window to be +constructed, splendidly ornamented in the Arab style, +and kneeling on a rich <i>prie-dieu</i>, she united her daily +devotions with those of the <i>frailes</i>.</p> + +<p>No small sensation was caused by this proceeding, +most perceptible probably within the monastery, on +the discovery being made by the brethren of the +addition to their holy fraternity. The cardinal became +alarmed, and intimated to Doña Teresa that +the window was ill-placed,—that it admitted too much +light in a wrong direction; that, in short, it must +disappear. The veto of the all-powerful Ximenes de<a name="page_236" id="page_236"></a> +Cisneros, already regarded as the dispenser of the +royal frowns and favours, could not be resisted. The +window was blocked up; but the interference was +replied to in terms pointed with pious pique and +holy revenge. The lady declared verbally to the +prelate that she had no need of his convent, for she +would found a more splendid one at Torijos. This +threat, immediately put in execution, produced the +building I mentioned above, the ruin of which is all +that now remains.</p> + +<p>Of the inhabited portions the external walls alone +remain. The cloister is almost entire, and the church +has only lost its roof. The rich tracery surrounding +the doorways, and the sculpture in all parts of the +interior, consisting chiefly of repetitions of the +founder's armorial bearings—in imitation or satire of +the profusion of similar ornament in San Juan de los +Reyes—are entire, and appear as though they had +been recently executed. The church is designed +after the plan of San Juan, but the style of its ornament +is much more elegant. The cloister is, however, +very inferior to that of Toledo, and the whole +establishment on a smaller scale.</p> + +<p>Every traveller in search of the picturesque knows +in how great a degree his satisfaction has been increased +whenever the meeting with a scene deserving +of his admiration assumes the nature of a discovery.<a name="page_237" id="page_237"></a> +For this reason, the chapters of tourists should never +be perused before a journey—independently of their +possessing more interest subsequently to an acquaintance +having been made with the country described. +Strictly speaking written tours are intended +for those who stay at home.</p> + +<p>But the most favourable first view of a highly admirable +building or landscape, is the one you obtain +after the perusal of tours and descriptions of the +country, in none of which any notice is taken of that +particular object or scene. The village of Torijos is +approached under these advantageous circumstances. +Every step is a surprise, owing partly to the above +cause, and partly to one's being inured to the almost +universal dreariness and ugliness of the villages and +small towns of this part of Spain. The appearance +under these circumstances of a beautiful Gothic cross +and fountain, of an original and uncommon design, +outside the walls of the place, and the open tracery +of the tall windows of the ruined monastery at the +other side of a green meadow, creates an agreeable +surprise, and adds considerably to the pleasure which +would be derived from the same objects, had expectation +been already feeding on their beauties. +Imagine, then, the discovery, after leaving behind +these monuments, (sufficient for the immortality of +a score of Castilian villages,) of the façade of the<a name="page_238" id="page_238"></a> +principal church, consisting of one of the richest and +most exquisite specimens of Gothic decoration in +Spain; and, a street further on, of a second ornamental +portal of a different sort, but Gothic likewise, +giving access to a half Arab palace.</p> + +<p>The Count of Altamira is the proprietor of this +place, but neither he nor any of his family have +inhabited the edifice for several years, and it is allowed +to go to decay. Some of the <i>artesonado</i> ceilings, +more especially that of the chapel in form of +a cupola, admit the light through the joinings of the +gilded woodwork. A large hall on the first-floor, +which formed the anteroom to a suite of inner apartments, +decorated in the Arab style, has been taken +possession of by the <i>haute volée</i> of Torijos for their +public ball-room. A tribune for musicians is placed +against one of the end walls, and adorned with paper +festoons. A placard, inscribed with the word <i>galop</i>, +was visible in front of the seat of the leader of the +band, indicating that the Torijos balls terminate with +that lively dance. There was no furniture in that +nor any other part of the house, with the exception +of an <i>entresol</i> inhabited by the count's steward. +This person no sooner learned that I was an Englishman, +than he commenced setting in the best possible +light the advantages the premises possessed for the +establishment of every sort of manufactory.<a name="page_239" id="page_239"></a></p> + +<p>It appears the proprietor is anxious to dispose of +the building; and as all the English pass here for +manufacturers, owing to the principal articles of +common use, introduced by smugglers, being English, +the worthy factotum had instantly made up his +mind that I was the purchaser sent by Providence to +take the old edifice off his master's hands. He is +evidently either promised a bonus on the success of +his efforts to sell, or he wished to pass with the property; +for his idea produced a degree of zeal most +useful towards the satisfaction of my curiosity, and +without which his patience would have been exhausted +before I had completed the view of the building. +One peculiarity of the rooms consists in the +ceilings—that is, the ornamental ones—being nearly +all either domes, or interiors of truncated pyramids. +There is only one flat. It is ornamented with the +shell of the arms of the Cardenas family—each of the +hundreds of little square compartments having one +in its centre. The staircase is adorned with beautiful +Gothic tracery.<a name="page_240" id="page_240"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_XIV" id="LETTER_XIV"></a>LETTER XIV.</h3> + +<h5>VALLADOLID. SAN PABLO. COLLEGE OF SAN GREGORIO. ROUTE +BY SARAGOZA.</h5> + +<p class="r">Tolosa.<br /> +</p> + +<p>I should have sent you an account of my excursion +to Valladolid at the time it took place, but +was prevented by the shortness of my stay and the +hurry of my departure from Madrid, which immediately +followed. I preserved, however, memoranda +of the limited explorations which were to be made +during a flying visit of three days, and will now +give you the benefit of them, such as they are; as +also of my experience of the public travelling in that +direction. You will recommend your friends, who +may visit this land of adventure, and are careful at +the same time of their personal comforts, to wait the +introduction of railroads, before attempting this excursion, +when you hear that I met with three upsets +in one night, and was afforded, in all, nearly five +hours' leisure for contemplating the effect of moonlight +upon the sleeping mules and an upside-down +carriage!<a name="page_241" id="page_241"></a></p> + +<p>The town of Valladolid contains monuments of +much interest, although none of great antiquity. +The greater number date from the sixteenth and +seventeenth centuries, and form a chain, illustrative +of the progress of architecture in this country, subsequently +to the abandonment of the Gothic style. +This style is, however, worthily represented by two +edifices, placed in juxtaposition, and ornamented +each with a façade of extraordinary richness. I will +content myself with the endeavour to give you some +idea of these two buildings, which, although belonging +to a style so common in England and France, +are totally unlike all the Gothic specimens I am +acquainted with in those countries.</p> + +<p>The largest of the two is the monastery of San +Pablo. It was a foundation of much magnificence, +and the building has sustained very little injury, +owing to its having, immediately on the expulsion +of the monks, been applied to other uses, instead +of being deserted and left to decay. It is now a +Presidio, or central prison for condemned malefactors. +The cloister is a superb quadrangle, of the +pointed style of the end of the fourteenth century, +and is the usual resort of the prisoners, who +are grouped so thickly over its pavement, that it +is with difficulty one passes between them, without +adding to the clanking of chains as their wearers<a name="page_242" id="page_242"></a> +change their posture to make way. The façade +of the church is enclosed between two small octagon +towers without ornament, like a picture in a frame. +Within these all is sculpture. The door-way is +formed of a triple concentric arch, flanked by rows +of statues, all of which are enclosed within another +arch, which extends across the whole width, from<a name="page_243" id="page_243"></a> +tower to tower. Over this there is a circular window, +surrounded with armorial escutcheons, and +the remainder of the façade is covered with groups +of figures in compartments, up to the summit, a +height of about a hundred and thirty feet, where +there is a pediment ornamented with an immense +armorial shield and lions rampant as supporters, +and the whole is surmounted by a cross.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 367px;"> +<a href="images/ill_268_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_268_sml.jpg" width="367" height="550" alt="FAÇADE OF SAN PABLO." title="FAÇADE OF SAN PABLO." /></a> +<span class="caption">FAÇADE OF SAN PABLO.</span> +</div> + +<p>The church was erected by the celebrated Torquemada, +who was a monk in the establishment. +Doña Maria, Queen of Sancho the Fourth, although +mentioned as the founder of the monastery, only +completed a small portion of the edifice compared +to what was subsequently added. A handsome tomb +by Pompeyo Leoni, is seen in the church. It is +that of Don Francisco de Sandoval, Duke of Lerma, +and his wife. The woodwork of the stalls is by +Ferrara. It is adorned with fluted Doric columns, +and is composed of walnut, ebony, box and cedar. +The superb façade of this church and its sumptuous +tracery, had well nigh been the cause of a misunderstanding +between the representative of the Spanish +Government and myself. To obtain admission +to the interior of the building, which I was told +had become national property, I addressed my humble +request in writing to the <i>gefe politico</i>, or governor +of the province, resident at Valladolid. I left<a name="page_244" id="page_244"></a> +the note at his official residence, and was requested +to return at an hour appointed, when I was to obtain +an audience. The functions of a <i>gefe politico</i> +answer to those of no provincial functionary in England, +or any other constitutional state—he has more +authority even than a Préfet in France. He represents +the monarchical power, with this difference, +that he is uncontrolled by parliament within the +limits of his province. Although not charged with +the military administration, he can direct and dispose +of the armed force; besides being a sort of local +home minister and police magistrate; in fact, the +factotum or <i>âme damnée</i> of the Cromwell of the +moment, with whom he is in direct and constant +communication on the affairs of his district.</p> + +<p>I was at Valladolid during the regency of Espartero, +when the cue given to these functionaries, +relative to the <i>surveillance</i> of foreigners was very +anti-French, and favourable to England. Now in +the eyes of a <i>gens-d'armes</i> every one is a thief +until he can bring proof to the contrary, just as by +the jurisprudence of certain continental countries, +every accused is presumed criminal—just as every +one who comes to a Jew is presumed by him +to have old clothes to sell, or money to borrow. +Thus, owing to the nature of the duties of the +Governor of Valladolid, every foreigner who met<a name="page_245" id="page_245"></a> +his eye, was a Frenchman, and an <i>intrigant</i>, until +he should prove the reverse.</p> + +<p>Not being aware of this at the time, I had drawn +up my petition in French. On my return for the +answer, my reception was any thing but encouraging. +The excessive politeness of the Spaniard was +totally lost sight of, and I perceived a moody-looking, +motionless official, seated at a desk, with his hat +resting on his eyebrows, and apparently studying a +newspaper. I stood in the middle of the room for +two or three minutes unnoticed; after which, deigning +to lift his head, the personage inquired in a gruff +tone, why I did not open my cloak. I was not as +yet acquainted with the Spanish custom of drawing +the end of the cloak from off the left shoulder, +on entering a room. I therefore only half understood +the question, and, being determined, at whatever +price, to see San Pablo, I took off my cloak, +laid it on a chair, and returned to face the official. +"I took the liberty of requesting your permission to +view the ancient monastery of San Pablo."—"And, +pray, what is your reason for wishing to see San +Pablo?"—"Curiosity."—"Oh, that is all, is it!"—"I +own likewise, that, had I found that the interior +corresponded, in point of architectural merit, with +the façade, I might have presumed to wish to +sketch it, and carry away the drawing in my portmanteau.<a name="page_246" id="page_246"></a>"—"Oh, +no doubt—very great merit. You +are a Frenchman?"—"I beg your pardon, only an +Englishman."—"You! an Englishman!!" No answer. +"And pray, from what part of England do you +come?" I declined the county, parish, and house.</p> + +<p>These English expressions, which I had expected +would come upon his ear, with the same familiarity +as if they had been Ethiopian or Chinese, produced +a sudden revolution in my favour. The Solomon +became immediately sensible of the extreme tact +he had been displaying. Addressing me in perfect +English, he proceeded to throw the blame of my +brutal reception on the unfortunate state of his +country. "All the French," he said, "who come +here, come with the intention of intriguing and doing +us harm. You wrote to me in French, and that +was the cause of my error. The monastery is now +a prison; I will give you an order to view it, but +you will not find it an agreeable scene, it is full of +criminals in chains." And he proceeded to prepare +the order.</p> + +<p>Not having recovered the compliment of being +taken for a conspirator; nor admiring the civilisation +of the governor of a province, who supposed that +all the thirty-four millions of French, must be <i>intrigants</i>, +I received his civilities in silence, took the +order, and my departure. The most curious part<a name="page_247" id="page_247"></a> +of the affair was, that I had no passport at the time, +having lost it on the road. Had my suspicious interrogator +ascertained this before making the discovery +that I was English, I should inevitably have +been treated to more of San Pablo than I desired, +or than would have been required for drawing it in +detail.</p> + +<p>The adjoining building is smaller, and with less +pretension to magnificence is filled with details far +more elaborate and curious. The Gothic architecture, +like the Greek, assumed as a base and principle +of decoration the imitation of the supposed primitive +abodes of rudest invention. The Greek version of +the idea is characterised by all the grace and finished +elegance peculiar to its inventors; while the same +principle in the hands of the framers of Gothic architecture, +gave birth to a style less pure and less refined; +but bolder, more true to its origin, and capable +of more varied application. In both cases may +be traced the imitation of the trunks of trees; but +it is only in the Gothic style that the branches are +added, and that instances are found of the representation +of the knots and the bark. In this architecture, +the caverns of the interior of mountains +are evidently intended by the deep, multiplied, and +diminishing arches, which form the entrances of cathedrals; +and the rugged exterior of the rocky mass,<a name="page_248" id="page_248"></a> +which might enclose such a primæval abode, is +imaged in the uneven and pinnacled walls.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 357px;"> +<a href="images/ill_275_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_275_sml.jpg" width="357" height="550" alt="FAÇADE OF SAN GREGORIO, VALLADOLID." title="FAÇADE OF SAN GREGORIO, VALLADOLID." /></a> +<span class="caption">FAÇADE OF SAN GREGORIO, VALLADOLID.</span> +</div> + +<p>The façade of the college of San Gregorio, adjoining +San Pablo, furnishes an example of the Gothic +decoration brought back to its starting point. The +tree is here in its state of nature; and contributes +its trunk, branches, leaves, and its handfuls of twigs +bound together. A grove is represented, composed +of strippling stems, the branches of some of which, +united and bound together, curve over, and form +a broad arch, which encloses the door-way. At each +side is a row of hairy savages, each holding in one +hand a club resting on the ground, and in the +other an armorial shield. The intervals of the sculpture +are covered with tracery, representing entwined +twigs, like basket-work. Over the door is a stone +fourteen feet long by three in height, covered with +<i>fleurs-de-lis</i> on a ground of wicker-work, producing +the effect of muslin. Immediately over the arch is a +large flower-pot, in which is planted a pomegranate +tree. Its branches spread on either side and bear +fruit, besides a quantity of little Cupids, which cling +to them in all directions. In the upper part they +enclose a large armorial escutcheon, with lions for +supporters. The arms are those of the founder of +the college, Alonzo de Burgos, Bishop of Palencia. +On either side of this design, and separated respectively<a name="page_249" id="page_249"></a> +by steins of slight trees, are compartments +containing armed warriors in niches, and armorial +shields. All the ornaments I have enumerated cover +the façade up to its summit, along which project +entwined branches and sticks, represented as broken +off at different lengths.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 550px;"> +<a href="images/ill_277_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_277_sml.jpg" width="550" height="481" alt="COURT OF SAN GREGORIO. VALLADOLID." title="COURT OF SAN GREGORIO. VALLADOLID." /></a> +<span class="caption">COURT OF SAN GREGORIO. VALLADOLID.</span> +</div> + +<p>The court of this edifice is as elaborately ornamented +as the façade, but it was executed at a much +later period, and belongs to the renaissance. The +pillars are extremely elegant and uncommon. The +doorway of the library is well worthy of notice; also<a name="page_250" id="page_250"></a> +that of the refectory. The college of San Gregorio +was, in its day, the most distinguished in Spain. +Such was the reputation it had acquired, that the +being announced as having studied there was a +sufficient certificate for the proficiency of a professor +in science and erudition. It is still a college, but no +longer enjoys the same exclusive renown. In the +centre of the chapel is the tomb of the founder, +covered with excellent sculpture, representing the +four virtues, and the figures of three saints and the +Virgin. It is surrounded by a balustrade ornamented +with elaborate carving. Berruguete is supposed +to have been the sculptor, but in the uncertainty +which exists on the subject, it would not be +difficult to make a better guess, as it is very superior +to all the works I have seen attributed to that artist. +At the foot of the statue of the bishop is the following +short inscription, "Operibus credite." To this +prelate was due the façade of San Pablo; he was +a Dominican monk at Burgos, where he founded +several public works. He became confessor, chief +chaplain, and preacher to Isabel the Catholic: afterwards +Bishop of Cordova; and was ultimately +translated to the see of Palencia. He received the +sobriquet of Fray Mortero, as some say from the +form of his face, added to the unpopularity which he +shared with the two other favorites of Ferdinand<a name="page_251" id="page_251"></a> +and Isabella,—the Duke of Maqueda, and Cardinal +Ximenes, with whom he figured in a popular triplet +which at that period circulated throughout Spain,</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align="left">Cardenas, el Cardenal,</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Con el padre Fray Mortero,</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Fraen el reyno al retortero.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p class="nind">which may be freely translated thus:</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align="left">What with his Grace the Cardinal,</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">With Cardenas, and Father Mortar,—</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Spain calls aloud for quarter! quarter!</td></tr> +</table> + +<p>The concise inscription seen on the tomb, was +probably meant as an answer to this satire, and to the +injurious opinion generally received respecting his +character.</p> + +<p>I returned from Toledo by way of Madrid and +Saragoza. The diligence track from Toledo to +Madrid was in a worse state than at the time of my +arrival: a circumstance by no means surprising, since +what with the wear and tear of carts and carriages, +aided by that of the elements, and unopposed by +human labour, it must deteriorate gradually until +it becomes impassable. Since my last visit to the +Museo the equestrian portrait of Charles the Fifth +by Titian has been restored. It was in so degraded +a condition that the lower half, containing the foreground +and the horses' legs, presented scarcely a +distinguishable object. It has been handled with<a name="page_252" id="page_252"></a> +care and talent, and, in its present position in the +centre of the gallery, it now disputes the palm with +the Spasimo, and is worth the journey to Madrid, +were there nothing else to be seen there. I paid +another visit to the Saint Elizabeth in the Academy, +and to the Museum of Natural History, contained +in the upper floor of the same building. This gallery +boasts the possession of an unique curiosity; the +entire skeleton of a Megatherion strides over the +well-furnished tables of one of the largest rooms. I +believe an idea of this gigantic animal can nowhere +else be formed. The head must have measured +about the dimensions of an elephant's body.</p> + +<p>From Castile into Aragon the descent is continual, +and the difference of climate is easily perceptible. +Vineyards here climb the mountains, and the plains +abound with olive-grounds, which are literally +forests, and in which the plants attain to the growth +of those of Andalucia. In corresponding proportion +to the improving country, complaints are heard of its +population. Murders and robberies form the subject +of conversations; and certain towns are selected +as more especially <i>mal-composées</i>, for the headquarters +of strong bodies of <i>guardia civile</i>; without +which precaution travelling would here be attended +with no small peril. This state of things is attributed +partly to the disorganising effects of the<a name="page_253" id="page_253"></a> +recent civil war, which raged with peculiar violence +in this province. The same causes have operated +less strongly in the adjoining Basque provinces, from +their having to act on a population of a different +character,—colder, more industrious, and more pacifically +disposed, and without the desperate sternness +and vindictive temper of the Aragonese.</p> + +<p>The inhabitants of this province differ in costume +and appearance from the rest of the Spaniards. Immediately +on setting foot on the Aragonese territory, +you are struck by the view of some peasant at the +road-side: his black broad-brimmed hat,—waistcoat, +breeches, and stockings all of the same hue, +varied only by the broad <i>faja</i>, or sash of purple, +make his tall erect figure almost pass for that of +a Presbyterian clergyman, cultivating his Highland +garden. The natives of Aragon have not the +vivacity and polished talkativeness of the Andalucian +and other Spaniards; they are reserved, slow, and +less prompt to engage in conversation, and often +abrupt and blunt in their replies. These qualities +are not, however, carried so far as to silence the +continual chatter of the interior of a Spanish diligence. +Spanish travelling opens the sluices of communicativeness +even of an Aragonese, as it would those +of the denizens of a first class vehicle of a Great +Western train, were they exposed during a short +time to its vicissitudes.<a name="page_254" id="page_254"></a></p> + +<p>However philosophers may explain the phenomenon, +it is certain that the talkativeness of +travellers augments in an inverse ratio to their +comforts. The Spaniards complain of the silence +of a French diligence; while, to a Frenchman, the +occupants of the luxurious corners of an English +railroad conveyance, must appear to be afflicted with +dumbness.</p> + +<p>Saragoza is one of the least attractive of Spanish +towns. Its situation is as flat and uninteresting +as its streets are ugly and monotonous. The ancient +palace of the sovereigns of Aragon is now the +Ayuntamiento. It would form, in the present day, +but a sorry residence for a private individual, although +it presents externally a massive and imposing +aspect. Its interior is almost entirely sacrificed to an +immense hall, called now the Lonja. It is a Gothic +room, containing two rows of pillars, supporting a +groined ceiling. It is used for numerous assemblies, +elections, and sometimes for the carnival balls. The +ancient Cathedral of La Seu is a gothic edifice, of +great beauty internally; but the natives are still +prouder of the more modern church called Nuestra +Señora del Pilar,—an immense building in the +Italian style, erected for the accommodation of +a statue of the Virgin found on the spot, standing +on a pillar. This image is the object of peculiar +veneration.<a name="page_255" id="page_255"></a></p> + +<p>After leaving Saragoza you are soon in the Basque +provinces. The first considerable town is Tudela in +Navarre; and here we were strongly impressed with +the unbusinesslike nature of the Spaniard. This +people, thoroughly good-natured and indefatigable +in rendering a service, when the necessity arises for +application to occupations of daily routine appear to +exercise less intelligence than some other nations. +It is probably owing to this cause that at Madrid the +anterooms of the Foreign Office, situated in the +palace, are, at four in the afternoon, the scene of +much novelty and animation. In a town measuring +no more than a mile and a half in each direction, +the inexperienced stranger usually puts off to the last +day of his stay the business of procuring his passport, +and he is taken by surprise on finding it to be the +most busy day of all. Little did he expect that the +four or five <i>visas</i> will not be obtained in less than +forty-eight hours: and he pays for his place in +the diligence or mail (always paid in advance) +several days before. It is consequently worth while +to attend in person at the Secretary of State's +office, in search of one's passport, in order to witness +the scene.</p> + +<p>The hour for the delivery of these inevitable +documents, coincides with the shutting up for the +day of all the embassies: so that those which<a name="page_256" id="page_256"></a> +require the subsequent <i>visa</i> of an ambassador, have +to wait twenty-four hours. Hence the victims of +official indifference, finding themselves disappointed of +their departure, and minus the value of a place in the +mail, give vent to their dissatisfaction in a variety +of languages, forming a singular contrast to the +phlegmatic and <i>impassible</i> porters and ushers, accustomed +to the daily repetition of similar scenes. +Some, rendered unjust by adversity, loudly accuse +the government of complicity with the hotel-keepers. +I saw a Frenchman whose case was cruel. His +passport had been prepared at his embassy, and as +he was only going to France, there were no more +formalities necessary, but the visa of the police, and +that of the foreign office. All was done but the +last, and he was directed to call at four o'clock. +His place was retained in that evening's mail, and +being a mercantile traveller, both time and cash were +of importance to him. On applying at the appointed +hour, his passport was returned to him without the +<i>visa</i>, because the French Secretary had, in a fit of +absence, written Cadiz, instead of Bordeaux—he +was to wait a day to get the mistake rectified.</p> + +<p>These inconveniences were surpassed by that to +which the passengers of our diligence were subjected +at Tudela. Imagine yourself ensconced in a corner +of the Exeter mail (when it existed) and on<a name="page_257" id="page_257"></a> +arriving at Taunton, or any intermediate town, +being informed that an unforeseen circumstance rendered +it necessary to remain there twenty-four hours, +instead of proceeding in the usual manner. On +this announcement being made at Tudela, I inquired +what had happened, and learned that a diligence, +which usually met ours, and the mules of which +were to take us on, was detained a day at Tolosa, +a hundred miles off. Rather than send a boy to +the next stage to bring the team of mules, which +had nothing to do, a dozen travellers had to wait +until the better fortunes of the previous vehicle +should restore it to its natural course.</p> + +<p>As if this contretems was not sufficient, we were +subjected to the most galling species of tyranny, +weighing on the dearest of human privileges, I mean +that which the proprietor of a shilling,—zwanziger, +franc, or pezeta,—feels that he possesses of demanding +to be fed. We had left Saragoza at nine in +the morning, and had arrived without stoppages at +six. A plentiful dinner, smoking on the table of the +<i>comedor</i>, might have produced a temporary forgetfulness +of our sorrows: but no entreaties could +prevail on the hostess to lay the table-cloth. It +was usual for the joint supper of the two coaches +to take place at nine, and not an instant sooner +should we eat. Weighed down by this complication<a name="page_258" id="page_258"></a> +of miseries, we sat, a disconsolate party, round +the <i>brasero</i>, until at about eight our spirits began +to rise at the sight of a table-cloth; and during +half an hour, the occasional entrance of a waiting +woman, with the different articles for the table, +kept our hopes buoyed up, and our heads in motion +towards the door, each time it opened to give entrance, +now to a vinegar cruet, now to a salt-cellar.</p> + +<p>At length an angelic figure actually bore in a +large dish containing a quantity of vegetables, occasioning +a cry of joy to re-echo through our end +of the room. She placed it on a side-board and +retired. Again the door opened, when to our utter +dismay, another apparition moved towards the dish, +took it up and carried it away; shutting the door +carefully behind her. This was the best thing +that could have occurred; since it produced a sudden +outburst of mirth, which accompanied us to +the table, now speedily adorned with the materials +of a plentiful repast.</p> + +<p>The next town to Tudela, is the gay and elegant +little fortress of Pamplona, from which place an +easy day's journey, through a tract of superb mountain +scenery, brings you to Tolosa, the last resting-place +on the Spanish side.<a name="page_259" id="page_259"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="PART_II" id="PART_II"></a>PART II.</h3> + +<h5>SEVILLE.</h5> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_XV" id="LETTER_XV"></a>LETTER XV.</h3> + +<h5>JOURNEY TO SEVILLE. CHARACTER OF THE SPANIARDS. VALLEY +OF THE RHONE.</h5> + +<p class="r">Marseille.<br /> +</p> + +<p>In order to reach the south of Spain, the longest +route is that which, passing through France, +leads by Bayonne to the centre of the northern +frontier of the Peninsula, which it then traverses +from end to end. It is not the longest in actual +distance; but in regard to time, and to fatigue, +and (for all who do not travel by Diligence), by far +the longest, with regard to expense. Another route, +longer, it is true, in distance, but shorter with respect +to all these other considerations, is that by Lyons +and Marseille; from either of which places, the +journey may be made entirely by steam.</p> + +<p>The shortest of all, and in every respect, is that +by the Gibraltar mail, which leaves London and +Falmouth once a week. This is a quicker journey<a name="page_260" id="page_260"></a> +than that through France, even for an inhabitant +of France, supposing him resident at Paris, and to +proceed to England <i>viâ le Hâvre</i>. But there is an +objection to this route for a tourist. Desirous of +visiting foreign scenes, he will find it too essentially +an English journey—direct, sure, and horribly business-like +and monotonous. You touch, it is true, +at Lisbon, where during a few hours, you may escape +from the beef and Stilton cheese, if not from +the Port wine; and where you may enjoy the view +of some fine scenery; but all the rest is straight-forward, +desperate paddling night and day; with the +additional objection, that being surrounded by English +faces, living on English fare, and listening to +English voices, the object of the traveller—that of +quitting England—is not attained; since he cannot +be said to have left that country, until he finds +himself quarrelling with his rapacious boatman on +the pier of the glittering Cadiz.</p> + +<p>Although this arrangement may possess the merit +of the magic transition from England to Andalucia, +which, it must be allowed, is a great one—many +will prefer being disembarked in France; looking +forward, since there is a time for all things, to a +still more welcome disembarkation on England's +white shores, when the recollected vicissitudes of +travel shall have disposed them to appreciate more<a name="page_261" id="page_261"></a> +than ever her comforts and civilization, and to be +more forgiving to her defects; and, should they +not be acquainted with the banks of the Rhone +below Lyons, adopting that equally commodious and +infinitely more varied course.</p> + +<p>In fact, there are few who will not agree with +me in pronouncing this the best way, for the tourist, +of approaching Spain. It is not every one, who will +not consider the gratifications which the inland territory +of the Peninsula may offer to his curiosity too +dearly purchased by the inconveniences inseparable +from the journey. Add to this the superiority +of the maritime provinces, with scarcely any exception, +in point of climate, civilization, and attractions +of every sort. Valencia, Barcelona, Malaga, and +Cadiz are more agreeable places of residence, and +possess more resources than even Madrid; but their +chief advantage is a difference of climate almost +incredible, from the limited distance which separates +them from the centre of the Peninsula. The Andalucian +coast enjoys one of the best climates in +the world; while the Castiles, Aragon, and La Mancha +can hardly be said to possess the average advantages +in that respect; owing to the extremes of +cold and heat, which characterize their summer and +winter seasons, and which, during autumn and spring, +are continually alternating in rapid transition.<a name="page_262" id="page_262"></a></p> + +<p>Andalucia unites in a greater degree than the +other maritime provinces, the advantages which constitute +their superiority over the rest of Spain. It +does more, for it presents to the stranger a combination +of the principal features of interest, which +render the Peninsula more especially attractive to +the lover of travel. It is, in fact, to Spain what +Paris is to France; Moscow and Petersburg to Russia. +England, Italy, and Germany are not fit subjects +for illustrating the comparison; their characteristic +features of attraction and interest being disseminated +more generally throughout all their provinces +or states. Whoever wishes to find Spain +herself, unalloyed, in her own character and costume, +and in her best point of view, should disembark +in Andalucia.</p> + +<p>There, unlike the Castiles, and the still more +northern provinces, in which only the earth and +air remain Spanish, and those not the best Spanish—where +all the picturesque and original qualities +that distinguish the population, are fast fading away—the +upper classes in their manners and costumes, +and the Radicals in their politics, striving to become +French—there, on the contrary, all is natural and +national in its half-Arab nationality: and certainly +nature and nationality have given proof of taste +in selecting for their last refuge, the most delicious<a name="page_263" id="page_263"></a> +of regions; where earth and heaven have +done their utmost to form an abode, worthy of +the most beautiful of the human, as well as the +brute creation.</p> + +<p>I will not pause to inquire whether the reproach +be justly addressed by the other Spaniards, to the +inhabitants of this province, of indolence and +love of pleasure, and of a disposition to deceitfulness, +concealed beneath the gay courtesy of their +manners; it would, indeed, be a surprising, a miraculous +exception to the universal system of compensations +that we recognise as governing the world, +had not this people some prominent defect, or were +they not exposed to some peculiar element of suffering, +to counterbalance in a degree the especial and +exclusive gifts heaped upon them. By what other +means could their perfect happiness be interfered +with? Let us, then, allow them their defects—the +necessary shade in so brilliant a picture—defects +which, in reducing their felicity to its due level, +are easily fathomed, and their consequences guarded +against, by sojourners amongst them, in whose eyes +their peculiar graces, and the charm of their manner +of life, find none the less favour from their +being subject to the universal law of humanity. +They cannot be better painted in a few words, than +by the sketch, drawn by the witty and graceful<a name="page_264" id="page_264"></a> +Lantier, from the inhabitants of Miletus. "Les +Milesiens," he says, "sont aimables. Ils emportent, +peut-être, sur les Athéniens" (read "Castillans") +"par leur politesse, leur aménité, et les agrémens +de leur esprit. On leur reproche avec raison cette +facilité—cette mollesse de mœurs, qui prend quelquefois +l'air de la licence. Tout enchante les sens +dans ce séjour fortuné—la pureté de l'air—la beauté +des femmes—enfin leur musique—leurs danses, leurs +jeux—tout inspire la volupté, et pénêtre l'âme d'une +langueur délicieuse. Les Zéphirs ne s'y agitent que +pour repandre au loin l'esprit des fleurs et des +plantes, et embaumer l'air de leurs suaves odeurs."</p> + +<p>This passage is, word for word, so exactly applicable +to the Andalucians and their land, that it is +difficult to imagine another people to have sat for +the portrait, nor to a more talented painter. It is +a pity that the author I quote, is a rarity in modern +libraries: owing, perhaps, to his descriptions being +at times rather warm, or, as his compatriots would +say, <i>un peu regence</i>.</p> + +<p>In Spain, the country of proverbs, they are very +fond of summing up, by the aid of a few epithets, the +distinctive character of each province. As bad qualities +frequently predominate in these estimates, it +is of course usual for the individual, who undertakes +the instruction of a foreigner in this department<a name="page_265" id="page_265"></a> +of knowledge, to omit the mention of his own province. +After all, the defects attributed to the inhabitants +of one portion of a country by those of +another, are not to be taken for granted without +considerable reservation; allowance must be made +for rivalry and jealousies. Almost every country +affords examples of these wholesale accusations laid +to the charge of particular counties or divisions of +territory. Thus the character usually attributed +in Spain to the Andalucians, is that of a people lively, +gay, of extreme polish and amiability of manners, +but false and treacherous. The Galicians are said +to be stupid and heavy, but remarkably honest; the +Catalonians courageous but quarrelsome, <i>mauvais coucheurs</i>. +No doubt in some of these instances, the +general impression may be borne out to a certain +extent, by some particular class of the denizens of the +province alluded to; but such distinctions are rarely +perceptible among the educated classes. It is perhaps +less easy in Spain than elsewhere, to establish +these classifications at all successfully. Contradictions +will be met with at every step, calculated to shake +their infallibility. To our eye, as foreigners, there +are sufficient peculiarities belonging to the nation +universally, and respecting which our knowledge +is far from being complete, without attempting to +classify a greater or smaller list of subdivisions, the<a name="page_266" id="page_266"></a> +appreciation of which would require a prolonged +residence in the country.</p> + +<p>Spain is looked upon by the greater number of +strangers as a land delivered over to depredation, +and highly insecure. In fact, it is surprising that +such should not be the fate of a country in which +instruction is limited, and where, as I myself have +witnessed, servants may be known to be in the +daily practice of stealing without their dismissal +being by any means a necessary result. It is surprising, +that in the absence of any strong natural +objection to theft, any honesty should exist in the +presence of temptation; yet I know no country +where there is more, if I may form an opinion from +the individuals of whom I have had an opportunity +of judging. However, as an instance of the contradictions +one meets with, the following event was +represented as having taken place in one of the +provinces in which I had received the favourable +impression above-mentioned.</p> + +<p>A ci-devant colonel, just arrived in Madrid, related +the fact to me one evening, on which, as chance +would have it, I found him at supper. Immediately +on my entering the room he commenced complaining +of the lack of silver articles of necessity for the table, +and accounted for it in the following manner. He +had recently arrived with his family from a provincial<a name="page_267" id="page_267"></a> +town, in which he had filled a government +situation. Shortly before his departure he had invited +all his friends to a leave-taking repast; and +after the departure of his guests nearly two dozen +articles of plate were missing. "In packing up," +I observed, "no doubt some dishonest domestic—" +"No, no," he interrupted, "they were all pocketed by +my guests."</p> + +<p>That the man in office should have conciliated the +attachment of all his acquaintances to such a degree, +as that all should conceive simultaneously the idea +of preserving a <i>souvenir</i> of his person, and that in so +delicate and unostentatious a manner,—was not possible. +As, therefore, I still retained my impression of +the honesty of the lower classes, and as the sufferer +appeared to treat the occurrence as one by no means +extraordinary, I came to the conclusion, that—either +Spanish integrity, unlike that of other nations, must +rise in an inverse ratio to men's fortunes and +stations; or that the author of the anecdote had been +tempted, by the desire of masking the (perhaps unavoidable) +deficiencies in his supper service, to have +recourse to his inventive talent, at the expense of his +absent friends' reputation.</p> + +<p>I believe it must be allowed that with respect +to the disregard of the rights of proprietorship, of +which the lower classes are accused, there are sufficient<a name="page_268" id="page_268"></a> +instances on record to counterbalance, in some +degree, my personal experience; but there is this to +be urged in favour of that class of culprits, where +such are met with, that their mode of operation is +far more manly and courageous than that of the +depredators of some other climes—by which means +they obtain also the full reputation of their misdeeds. +There may scarcely be said to be anything mean or +degrading in their manner of thieving: and their +system is itself a proof that they see no sin in +it. They take to the mountains, and declare open +war against those whom they consider the unjust +monopolizers of wealth.</p> + +<p>Instances of this sort are no doubt frequent in +Spain; in Toledo they relate that, some years since, +the passes of Estremadura were occupied by one of +the most formidable and best organized of these +bands, under the orders of a female. Various versions +were given of this woman's history; but the one +most accredited accounted in the following manner +for her having adopted the profession of freebooter. +A young lady of rank had disappeared from her +family residence, leaving no trace by which to guide +conjecture as to her fate. It was therefore presumed +she had been kidnapped. The event, however, had +already long ceased to be a subject of conversation +in the district, when three or four years after, a<a name="page_269" id="page_269"></a> +traveller, who had escaped from an attack of banditti, +announced the fact of their being commanded by +a woman. Although well disguised, her voice, and +delicate figure had betrayed her sex. The fact was +subsequently confirmed by positive discoveries; and, +at length, confiding in the alteration time and her +mode of life had produced in her appearance, she +ceased to make a mystery of the circumstance, and +headed the attacks, mounted usually on a large black +horse. Her age and beauty coinciding with the +description given of the young countess who had +disappeared some years previously, gave rise to the +supposition of their identity. The band has been +since dispersed, and many of them captured; but +their chief has contrived to escape, and it is probable +the truth respecting her may never be divulged.</p> + +<p>It is said she at times exercised more pitiless +cruelties than are usually practised by the male +chiefs of the regular banditti; and that, after such +acts,—as though conscience-stricken,—she would, by +way of compensation, allow parties to pass unmolested.</p> + +<p>From such instances as these a portion of the +Spanish population must be considered amenable +to the charge brought against them; but there are +peculiarities of a different stamp, which mark the<a name="page_270" id="page_270"></a> +Spaniards in general, and are more deserving of +notice in a summary of the national characteristic +qualities. It is impossible, for instance, not to be +struck by the intelligence and tact, independent +of cultivation, which pervade all classes. Whether +the denizens of these southern climes are indebted to +the purity of their atmosphere, for this gift of rapid +perception, in which they surpass our northern organizations, +or to whatever cause they may owe it; the +fact leads to involuntary speculation on what might +have been the results, in a country so distinguished, +besides, by its natural advantages, had the Arab supremacy +lasted until our days. At a period when +education was generally held in no estimation in +Europe, the first care of almost every sovereign of +that race was usually directed to the establishment, +or improvement, of the public schools, in which the +sciences and languages were taught at the royal +expense. No town being unprovided with its schools, +it is difficult to imagine to what degree of superiority +over the rest of Europe the continuation of such +a system would have raised a people so gifted as +to be capable of supplying, by natural intelligence, +the almost universal absence of information and +culture.</p> + +<p>You continually meet with such instances of uncultivated +intelligence as the following. I was occupied<a name="page_271" id="page_271"></a> +in sketching in a retired part of the environs of +Madrid, when a ragged, half-naked boy, not more +than ten or eleven years of age, and employed in +watching sheep, having to pass near me, stopped to +examine my work. He remained for nearly a +quarter of an hour perfectly still, making no movement +except that of his eyes, which continually +travelled from the paper to the landscape, and +back from that to the paper. At length, going +away, he exclaimed, "Que paciencia, Dios mio!"</p> + +<p>The following is an example of the absence of +cultivation, where it might have been expected to +exist. A student leaving the university of Toledo, +at the age of twenty-seven, told me he had studied +there eleven years, and had that day received his +diploma of barrister, which, when sent to Madrid, +where it would be backed by the sanction of the +minister, would authorise him to practise his profession +in any town throughout Spain. In the course +of the same conversation, he asked me whether Russia +was not situated in the Mediterranean, and whether +England did not form a portion of that country.</p> + +<p>Tact and good manners are so universal among +the lower classes, that a more familiar intercourse +than we are accustomed to, can be allowed between +persons of different ranks. Those of the highest +class are seen, during a journey, dining at the same<a name="page_272" id="page_272"></a> +table with their servants; and on all other occasions +entering into conversation with them. This intercourse +of good nature and good understanding, +universally existing between superiors and inferiors, +and which is never known to degenerate into +familiarity, would preserve Spain a long time from +revolutions of a popular origin—were she left to +herself. The Spaniard of the lowest station has as +considerable an idea of his personal consequence as a +marquis, and maintains with his equals all the forms +of high breeding. If you stop to listen to the discussions +of a knot of ragged children playing at +marbles, you will hear them address each other by +the title of Señor.</p> + +<p>The urbanity and polish which prevails throughout +all classes is genuine, and the result of good-nature. +This is proved by their readiness to render +all sorts of services as soon as they are acquainted +with you, and even before; and <i>that</i> notwithstanding +their suspicion and dislike of strangers, a disposition +for which they have ample cause. I don't +mean to include services which might incur pecuniary +outlay; it would be something like requesting +the loan of the Highlander's inexpressibles. Although +even of this a remarkable instance has fallen +under my observation,—the capability existing,—but +they will spare no trouble nor time: doubling the<a name="page_273" id="page_273"></a> +value of the obligation by the graceful and earnest +manner of rendering it.</p> + +<p>Should your reception by a Spaniard be marked +by coldness, it is generally to be accounted for by a +very excusable feeling. The Spaniard is usually deeply +preoccupied by the unfortunate state of his country. +This subject of continual reflection operating on a +character singularly proud, but which is at the same +time marked by a large share of modesty,—qualities +by no means incompatible,—occasions him a sensation +when in presence of a foreigner nearly approaching +to suffering. He feels a profound veneration +for the former glories of his land, and admiration +of its natural superiority; but he is distrustful +of his modern compatriots, of whom he has no great +opinion. His anxiety is, therefore, extreme with regard +to the judgment which a Frenchman or Englishman +may have formed respecting his countrymen and +country: and he is not at his ease until satisfied +on that point; fearing that the backward state of +material civilization may be attributed by them to +hopeless defects in the national character, and diminish +their respect for his country. He is restored +to immediate peace of mind by a delicate compliment, +easily introduced, on the ancient grandeur of +Spain, or the eternal splendour of her skies and soil, +and especially by an expression of disapproval of the<a name="page_274" id="page_274"></a> +influence which foreign governments seem desirous of +arrogating to themselves over her political destinies.</p> + +<p>Should the stranger delay the application of some +such soothing balm, he will not hesitate to provoke +it, by ingeniously leading the conversation in the +direction he wishes, and then heaping abuse and +censure on his compatriots.</p> + +<p>The interference of foreign governments in their +politics is, in fact, one of the consequences of the +present national inferiority, the most galling to their +feelings. This is accounted for by the high independence, +which is one of the principal features of +their character, and is observable in the most insignificant +events of their daily life. The practice +which prevails in some countries, of meddling each +with his (and even <i>her</i>) neighbour's concerns, and of +heaping vituperation where a man's conduct or +opinions differ from his who speaks, is one of the +most repugnant to the Spanish nature. If a +Spaniard hears such a conversation, he stares vacantly, +as though he comprehended nothing; and +the natural expression traceable on not a few countenances +and attitudes may be translated, "I don't +interfere in your affairs, pray don't trouble yourself +about mine."</p> + +<p>It is curious to trace this in their favourite sayings, +or proverbs (<i>refrans</i>), by which the national peculiarities<a name="page_275" id="page_275"></a> +of character are admirably depicted. Of +these no people possess so complete a collection. +The following is one which expresses the feeling to +which I allude:</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align="left">El Marques de Santa Cruz hizó</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Un palacio en el Viso:</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Porque pudó, y porque quisó.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p class="nind">or, translated,</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align="left">What could induce Sir Santa Cruz to</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Build a house the Viso close to?</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">—He had the money, and he chose to.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p>I place, in the translation, the edifice close to the +Viso, instead of upon it, as in the original text. I +doubt whether any apology is necessary for this +poetical licence, by which the intention of the +proverb undergoes no alteration. It is true, a house +may be close to a hill without being erected upon +it; but if, as in this instance, it is on the top of the +hill, it is most certainly close to it likewise.</p> + +<p>The submission of the Spaniards to the despotism +of etiquette and custom in trifles, does not (otherwise +than apparently) constitute a contradiction to +this independence of character. However that may +be, the breach of all other laws meets with easier +pardon, than that of the laws of custom. This code +is made up of an infinity of minute observances, +many of which escape the notice of a foreigner, until<a name="page_276" id="page_276"></a> +accustomed by degrees to the manners of those who +surround him. He will not, for instance, discover, until +he has made himself some few temporary enemies, +that no greater insult can be offered to a person of +rank, or in authority, than saluting him in a cloak +<i>embozado</i>—the extremity thrown over the shoulder.—A +similar neglect is not pardoned either by the fair +sex. The minutest peculiarities in dress are observed, +and if at all discordant with the received +mode of the day, incur universal blame. The situation +of a stranger is, in fact, at first scarcely agreeable +in a country in which the smallest divergence from +established customs attracts general attention and +criticism. This does not, however, interfere with the +ready good-nature and disposition to oblige met with, +as I said before, on all occasions.</p> + +<p>In some instances the attachment to external forms +operates advantageously. Such is that of the picturesque +practice prevailing in many of the provinces, +of assuming the quality of the <i>Beata</i>. In Toledo, +certain peculiarities in the toilette of one of a group +of young ladies attracted my curiosity. She was +apparently about seventeen; pretty, but by no means +remarkably so for a Spaniard, and appeared to be +in deep mourning. Whenever, in speaking, a movement +of her right hand and arm lifted up her +mantilla, a japanned leather sash was exposed to<a name="page_277" id="page_277"></a> +view, of about two inches in width, an end of which +hanging from the right side, reached rather lower +than the knee. On the right sleeve, half-way between +the shoulder and the elbow, was fixed a small +silver plate, called an <i>escudo</i>, and a rosary was worn +round her neck.</p> + +<p>I was informed, on inquiry, that she was <i>una +beata</i>; and being still in the dark, my informant +related her story. He commenced by the inquiry, +whether I had heard of a young man being drowned +four months previously in the Tagus. I replied +that I had heard of thirty or forty; for he referred +to the bathing season, during which, as the river is +sown with pits and precipices, and unprovided with +humane societies, accidents occur every day. He +then named the victim, of whose death I had in fact +heard. He was a youth of the age of twenty, and +the <i>novio</i> (intended) of the young lady in black. +On hearing suddenly, and without preparation, the +fatal news, she had been seized with a profuse +vomiting of blood, and had continued dangerously ill +during several weeks. She was now convalescent, and +had made her appearance in society for the first time.</p> + +<p>My informant added, on my repeating the inquiry +respecting the costume, that it is the custom for +a young lady, on recovering from a serious illness, +to offer herself to the <i>Virgen de los dolores</i>; the<a name="page_278" id="page_278"></a> +external sign of the vow consisting in the adoption +of a dress similar to that worn by the Virgin in the +churches. The obligation assumed lasts generally +during a year; although some retain the dress for +the remainder of their life. Examples are known +of this practice among the other sex; in which case +the costume is that of a Franciscan friar; but the +<i>beato</i> becomes the object of ridicule.</p> + +<p>Among the forms of society to which especial importance +is attached are the ceremonies and duration +of mourning for relations. The friends of the nearest +relative,—especially if a lady,—of a person newly +deceased, assemble day after day for a considerable +time in her house. All are in full dress of deep +mourning; and the victim of sorrow and society is +expected to maintain a continual outpouring of sighs +and tears, while she listens to each consoler in turn. +Much importance is attached to the display of the +usual appearances of grief, even when the circumstances +of the case do not necessarily call for it. +Happening to enter a house in which news had been +received of the death of a relative, who resided in +another part of Spain, I found the lady of the +house discussing with a friend the form of her new +mourning dress.</p> + +<p>Struck by the melancholy expression of her countenance, +and the redness of her eyes, I inquired<a name="page_279" id="page_279"></a> +whether any bad news had been received. My +question gave rise to a renewed flood of tears; "Yes, +yes," was the reply; "I have had terrible news; my +poor uncle, who had been afflicted for years with +dropsy, died only six days ago." I expressed my +sincere regret at so sad an event, while she continued +her explanations to the other lady. "I understand," +she said, in a voice almost suffocated, "that this +sleeve is no longer to be—drawn in; and the—front, +according to the last—French—fashion,—is at least +an inch—shorter." Taking the opportunity of the +first moment of silence, I asked for some further +details respecting this beloved uncle. "It was your +Señora mother's brother, I believe?" "No, no, the +husband of my aunt: and what—do you—think of +the—mantilla?" After the reply of the other visitor +to the latter question, I continued,—"But your +profound regret, on occasion of the loss of so amiable +a companion, is natural." "Terrible, sir, yes—my +poor uncle!" "Had you seen him shortly before the +sad event?" "Alas! no, sir, I never—saw him but—once +in my life; and—should not now have recognized +him—for I—was then—only five years old."</p> + +<p>The Spaniards are not a dinner-giving nation; +obedient, as some suppose, to their proverb,—which +although the effect, may also operate as a cause,—namely, +'Feasts are given by fools, and partaken of<a name="page_280" id="page_280"></a> +"by wise men." This proverb, however, paints the +national character with less fidelity than most others; +the parsimonious selfishness it implies is not Spanish. +Sufficient reasons exist to account for the rarity +of dinner invitations.</p> + +<p>Although the English are not responsible for the +geniality of climate, which corks up their crystallized +souls to be enclosed fog-tight, until released by a +symbolical ceremony of the popping of champagne +corks,—it is not the less true that dinners are their +only introductions to acquaintanceship. Spaniards +have corks also, and well worth the trouble of +drawing, as well as all the other <i>materiel</i> of conviviality; +but they despise it, finding the expansion +operated by their sunshine more complete and less +laborious. Their sociability no more requires dinner +parties than their aloes hedges do steam-pipes. +With the exception of their ungovernable passion +for cold water, their sobriety is extreme; and this +may perhaps unite with a dislike to social ostentation +in resisting the exotic fashion of dinners. But bring +a good letter of introduction to a Spaniard, and you +will find a daily place at a well-supplied table, +the frequent occupation of which will give unmistakable +pleasure.</p> + +<p>In such case you are looked for as a daily visitor; +not ceremoniously, but as using the house when in<a name="page_281" id="page_281"></a> +want of a more cheerful home than your <i>posada</i>. +Æolus has not yet been appointed here the arbiter of +smiles,<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> and your entrance is always the signal for +the same animated welcome. The only variation +will be a good-natured remonstrance, should your +visits have undergone any interruption.</p> + +<p>To return to my route. Aware of the inconvenience +of Spanish inland travelling, and with +Seville for my object, I proceeded to Lyon. Nor +had I long to wait for the reward attendant on my +choice of route. Getting on board the steam-packet +at six o'clock on an autumn morning, I experienced +at first some discouragement, from the fog, which +I had not reflected was the natural—or rather unnatural—atmosphere +of that most discouraging of +all places, a prosperous manufacturing town. No +sooner, however, had we escaped, by the aid of high-pressure +steam, from these deleterious influences, than +our way gradually opened before us, rather dimly at +first, but more and more clear as the sun attained +height: the banks of the Rhone having, during this +time, been progressing also in elevation and grandeur, +by eight o'clock we were enjoying a rapidly moving +panorama of superb scenery.</p> + +<p>This day's journey turned out unusually auspicious.<a name="page_282" id="page_282"></a> +Owing to some favourable combination of +celestial influences, (although I perceived no one on +board likely to have an astrologer in his pay,) no +untoward accident—so common on this line—befell +us. No stoppages—no running down of barges, nor +running foul of bridges—nor bursting of engines. +The stream was neither too shallow, nor too full, +so that we were preserved both from running aground, +and from being run away with. Our boat was the +fastest of the six which started at the same time; +and one is never ill-disposed by a speed of eighteen +miles an hour, although it may be acquired at an +imminent risk of explosion.</p> + +<p>There is many a day's journey of equal or greater +beauty than the descent of the Rhone; but I know +of none which operates a more singular effect on the +senses. It is that of being transported by a leap from +the north to the south of Europe. The Rhone +valley, in fine weather, enjoys a southern climate, +while all the region to the north of Lyon is marked +by the characteristics of the more northern provinces. +That town itself, with its smoke, its gloom, +and its dirt, maintains itself at the latitude of Manchester; +whose excellent money-making inhabitants, +if thrown in the way of a party of Lyonnais, would +scarcely feel themselves among strangers, so complete +would be the similarity of habits and manners.<a name="page_283" id="page_283"></a> +The transition, therefore, to those wafted +down the sunny valley of the Rhone, is as theatrical +as the scenery itself, but with the agreeable addition +of reality. Every surrounding object contributes +to the magic of the change. Taking leave +of a bare and treeless country, and its consequently +rough and ungenial climate, which, in its turn, will +necessarily exercise its influence on the character of +the population, you find yourself gliding between +vine-clad mountains, not black and rugged like those +of the Rhine, but soft and rosy, and lighted by a +sky, which begins here to assume a southern brilliancy. +The influence of the lighter atmosphere +first begins to be felt, expanding the organs, and +filling the frame with a sensation, unknown to more +northern climes, of pleasure derived from mere existence. +Then the language you hear on all sides +is new and musical; for the crew of the steamer +is Provençal, and their <i>patois</i> falls on the ear with +something approaching the soft accent of Italy; +while their expressive eyes, sunburnt faces, and a +certain mixture of animation and languor—the exact +counterpart of the phlegmatic industry of the +north, complete the scene, with which they are in +perfect harmony.</p> + +<p><i>A propos</i> of harmony, when the sailors' dinner +hour arrived, they were summoned by an air of<a name="page_284" id="page_284"></a> +Rossini, played on a bugle; the performer—one of +their number—having first thrown himself flat on +the deck, in the attitude of a Turk about to receive +the bastinado, and then raising his chest, by the aid +of his two elbows, to the height required for the +inflation of the instrument.</p> + +<p>Nor is this leap from north to south so purely +imaginary, since the boat Sirius, aided by the furious +current, actually paddled at the rate of from seventeen +to eighteen miles an hour; and we reached +Avignon at sunset, about five o'clock. The distance +being calculated, allowing for the windings +of the river, will verify the rate maintained during +the day. Notwithstanding the odious nature of +comparisons, I could not help forming that between +this river and the Rhine, and giving the preference +to the first. The bold though gloomy precipices +of the Rhine yield, in point of charm, to the more +open expanse of the Rhone valley, and the larger +scale of the scenery, especially when the far more +brilliant lighting-up is considered. Nor does the +Rhone yield to its rival, in regard to the picturesque +form and position of its castles and other +buildings; while its greater width, and handsome +bridges, add an additional feature.</p> + +<p>The best scene of the day, and a fit climax for +its termination, was the approach to Avignon at<a name="page_285" id="page_285"></a> +sunset,—a superb Claude. A turn of the river +placed the castle—an immense mass crowning the +city, and presenting an irregular outline—directly between +us and the sun, the sky doing away, by its brightness, +with all the details of the landscape. The +principal objects were, the broad expanse of water, +and the mass of deep purple, tracing its dark but +soft outline on the blaze of gold at its back. On +turning to look in the opposite direction, a scene +equally striking presented itself. The mountains +between which we had been winding during the +last half of the day, are, from this point of view, +ranged in an immense semicircle, extending round +half the horizon, and at that moment were tinged +by the sun with a bright rose colour, while they +scarcely appeared at half their actual distance. +It looked like the final scene of an aërial ballet, +when a semicircle is formed by the rosy sylphs who +have figured during the representation.</p> + +<p>After the hurly burly of debarkation at Avignon, +and forcing our way through the army of luggage +porters—a ferocious race, notorious, at this place, +for the energy, amounting often to violence, with +which they urge the acceptance of their kind +offices—the picturesque look of the place, and the +necessary hour of waiting for dinner, led me to a +scene, which I accepted as a satisfactory greeting<a name="page_286" id="page_286"></a> +on my arrival in the land of the troubadours. A +group of half a dozen labourers, returned from +their day's work, were lolling in every variety of +attitude, on some large stones placed in front of +the <i>château</i>. They were singing—and with perfect +precision of <i>ensemble</i>—each his part of the chorus. +At the conclusion of every <i>morceau</i>, the whole +party made the façade of the ancient palace echo +with peals of laughter; after which they all talked +at once, until they had agreed on the choice of +the succeeding air.</p> + +<p>The castle of Avignon—ancient residence of +the Popes, shelters now a different sort of inmates. +It serves for barracks for a regiment of infantry. +At this moment the lamplighter had completed +his rounds in the interior, and given to each of +the innumerable windows an undue importance in +the architectural effect of the mass. Such is the +irregularity of their distribution over this vast façade—or +such it appeared to be then, for I have not +seen it by daylight—as to give them the appearance +of having been thrown at it by handfuls, and fixed +themselves each at its first point of contact with +the wall.</p> + +<p>Or by way of compensation for the extravagant +supposition of so large a hand, we can suppose the +edifice diminished, and resembling with its jagged<a name="page_287" id="page_287"></a> +outline, a ragged black cloak, which, having been +stretched out, to serve as a mark for rifle-shooters, +would admit the light through openings not less +symmetrically distributed than these windows.</p> + +<p>Between Avignon and Marseille, by the land +route, the only spot of interest is Aix. It is a well +placed little town; although, in the summer, its +position must procure for it rather too much warmth. +There are no remains of king Réné's palace; nor +could I learn that any souvenir of him was extant, +with the exception of a statue, which represents +the jovial old king of the <i>trouvères</i> in the character +of Bacchus. This figure ornaments a hot fountain, +situated at the head of the wide street, planted +with trees, by which the town is entered.<a name="page_288" id="page_288"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_XVI" id="LETTER_XVI"></a>LETTER XVI.</h3> + +<h5>VOYAGE TO GIBRALTAR.</h5> + +<p class="r">Cadiz.<br /> +</p> + +<p>I have just returned from a visit to the signal-tower—the +highest look-out in Cadiz; from which +is seen a panorama equalled by few in Europe. +The Atlantic, and its coast down to Trafalgar Cape—the +mountain distances of the Ronda—and Medina +Sidonia on its sugar-loaf rock, like an advanced +sentinel—all Cadiz, with its hundreds of white +Belvideres—and the bright blue bay, decked with +glittering white towns, and looking (but with more +sparkling glow) like an enormous turquoise set +round with pearls. But let not, I entreat you, these +magic words—Cadiz—Andalucia—raise your expectations +unduly; lest they be disappointed, on rinding +that I fail in doing justice to this charming country. +With regard to this town, not only would it +be a task beyond my powers to paint its bright +aspect and to give you a sufficiently glowing description<a name="page_289" id="page_289"></a> +of its pleasures. It is not even my intention +to partake of these—being bent on accomplishing +my principal object—the exploration of the monuments +of Seville. However let us not anticipate. +You ought to have had news of me from Gibraltar, +where I made a much longer stay than I had intended, +owing to an unexpected meeting with an old +friend.</p> + +<p>The fact is, I put off writing until I should again +be in movement, hoping that my letters might thus +acquire greater interest. I will resume my journey +from France, in which country we parted.</p> + +<p>The steam-packets leave Marseille for the south +of Spain every tenth day; and I happened to arrive +a day or two after one of the departures. +Rather than wait eight days, therefore, I agreed for +my passage on board a trader bound for Gibraltar; +by which arrangement, as the captain assured me +that the voyage would only occupy five days, I was +to be at my journey's end before the departure of +the Phénicien, as the steam-packet was called. +The latter, moreover, made no progress excepting +during the night, in order to afford the passengers +an opportunity of passing each day in some town; +and being anxious to arrive at Seville, I should not +have liked the delays thus occasioned. I do not, however, +recommend the adoption of my plan; for the<a name="page_290" id="page_290"></a> +five days, as it turned out, became twenty-four, and +the Phénicien arrived at Cadiz long before I reached +Gibraltar.</p> + +<p>The captain's prognostic of course supposed a +favourable voyage; and I was wrong in reckoning on +this, particularly at the time of year, and in the +Mediterranean. I was wrong, also, in confiding in +my Provençal captain, who, in addition to various +other bad qualities, turned out to be the most inept +blockhead to whom ever were entrusted lives and +cargoes.</p> + +<p>My fellow-passengers consisted of a Marseille +merchant, who possessed a trading establishment at +Gibraltar; a young French officer, on leave of absence +to visit his mother, who was Spanish; and +a Moorish traveller, proceeding homeward to Tetuan. +From certain hints dropped by the merchant, +who was well acquainted with the passage, we soon +learned the probable character of our captain, as he +belonged to a race not very favourably spoken of +by those whose goods and persons they were in +the habit of conveying; and these predictions being +soon partially confirmed by the man's incivility, +we began to look upon him as our common +enemy. One of the accusations brought against +his class was, a disposition to reduce the supply +of provisions within undue limits. This, however,<a name="page_291" id="page_291"></a> +we could not lay to his charge, as the adverse +winds rendered necessary an extreme prudence in +our daily consumption. My principal anxiety arose +from want of confidence in the capacity of the +man for the performance of his duties as a seaman. +This anxiety was grounded on various symptoms +sufficiently striking to attract the notice even of a +landsman; and more particularly on a scene, during +which his presence of mind, if mind he possessed, +totally deserted him.</p> + +<p>We had passed several days off the Balearic +Islands—or rather on and off—for each morning +we issued from behind Ivica, and returned at night +to take shelter under its cliffs; ours being the only +vessel of several performing the same passage restrained +by fear from attempting any progress +during these nights. The reason of this we learned +subsequently. At length, when we did risk an +advance, we chose the worst moment of all: the +breeze becoming a gale, and almost a head-wind, +from having been less unfavourable. Whatever +may now have been our anxiety, we could easily +discover that the author of our misfortune was a +prey to more terror than ourselves.</p> + +<p>Against this wind we proceeded, gaining about +a hundred yards an hour, during five days; at the +end of which it changed slightly, and allowed us to<a name="page_292" id="page_292"></a> +reach the entrance of the channel; that is, we had +doubled the Cape de Gata, and were off the south +coast of the peninsula, nearly opposite Almeria, +and in the direct line of all the vessels entering +the Mediterranean; which, as they are sometimes +delayed in expectation of a favourable wind for +passing the Straits of Gibraltar, were now bearing +down in great numbers. At this crisis the gale, +which had all along continued to be violent, became +once more almost directly adverse, and increased in +fury.</p> + +<p>Our gallant captain's features always assumed towards +evening a more serious expression. A faint +tinge of green was observed to replace the yellow +of his usual complexion, and he passed the nights +on deck, as unapproachable as a hyena—by the +way, also a most cowardly animal. At length one +day as evening approached, the wind was almost +doing its worst, and we went to bed tossed about +as if in a walnut-shell—lulled by an incessant roaring, +as it were, of parks of Perkin's artillery.</p> + +<p>It being essential to keep a good look-out, and +to show a light occasionally, in order to avoid +being run down—the lantern—unable to live on +deck, from the water as well as the wind, which +passed through the rigging—was confided to the +passengers, with a recommendation, by no means<a name="page_293" id="page_293"></a> +likely to be neglected, to keep it in good trim, and +to hand it up with promptitude when called for.</p> + +<p>At about twelve o'clock, sure enough, the call was +heard, in the somewhat agitated tones of the captain. +The passenger, whose business it was, for we took +the watch each in his turn—immediately jumped up +and handed up the lantern. Thinking this sufficient, +we remained as we were; but in less than a minute, +it was brought back extinguished, and thrown down +into the cabin. Immediately after a general view +holloa was audible above the roar of the storm, and +the mate's voice was heard at the top of our staircase, +begging us to get up as we were going to +be run down.</p> + +<p>We now lost no time in making our way to the +deck; no one speaking a word, but each waiting +for his turn to mount. Being furthest from the +staircase, or rather ladder, I arrived the last. On +reaching the deck, I was met by about a ton of +salt water, which appeared to have mistaken me +for a wicket, as it came in as solid a mass, and with +about the same impulse as a cricket ball. Finding +I was not to be dashed back again down stairs, it +took the opportunity of half filling the cabin, the +door of which I had not thought of shutting. On +recovering my breath and reopening my eyes, I +discerned, by aid of the white bed-apparel of my<a name="page_294" id="page_294"></a> +fellow passengers, a dim crowd, pressed together +at the bow of the vessel, consisting of all the inhabitants +of the frail tenement, excepting the steersman +and myself. I rushed forward; but finding +my voice insufficient to add any effect to the cry +which had been set up, to give notice to the crew +of the approaching vessel, I made for the side, which +I saw, by the position of the group, was threatened +with the expected contact; and catching at a rope +ladder, placed myself on the top of the bulwarks, +resolved on trying a jump as the only chance of +escape in case of meeting.</p> + +<p>There was now time to examine our situation +perfectly well. I looked towards the stern, and +could see that the helm was not deserted: but it +was of no avail to save us from the danger; since, +sailing as near the wind as we could, as far as I +understood the subsequent explanation of the sailors, +we could not change our direction on a sudden, otherwise +than by turning a sort of right-about-face. We +went on, therefore, trusting that the other crew +would hear the cry, and discover our position in +time. The night being extremely dark, and the sea +running high, the approaching vessel was scarcely +visible to us when first pointed out by the sailors; +still less should I have looked forward to its threatening +us with any danger; but the eye of experience<a name="page_295" id="page_295"></a> +had not been deceived, and from my perch I was +soon able to discover, as each passage over the summit +of a wave brought the dark mass against the sky, +that its approach was rapid, and directed with unerring +precision, so as to cross our course at the fatal +moment. She was scudding before the gale, with +almost all her sails set, and consequently, on striking +our ship, nothing could save us from an instantaneous +founder.</p> + +<p>At each successive appearance the mass became +larger and blacker; but the cry of our crew, in +which I now joined, never ceased. At length we +were only separated by the ascent of one wave, at +the summit of which was balanced the huge bulk of +our antagonist, while we were far below the level of +her keel—but her steersman had heard the cry; for +at the moment when certainly no hope of saving—at +least our ship, remained to any of us, we saw the +other swerve as she descended—and after approaching +to within half her length of our starboard bow, +she glided by at the distance of a yard from where +I was standing.</p> + +<p>I now drew a deep breath before I jumped down +on to the deck; after which, beginning to perceive +that I was as wet as if we had been run down, I +was hastening to the cabin, when my progress was +stopped by the captain, who, without perceiving<a name="page_296" id="page_296"></a> +any one, was stamping up and down the centre of +the vessel, and actually tearing his hair with both +his hands. I paused to observe this tragic performance, +which shortly gave place to an indistinct and +much interrupted speech, in which, in the intervals +left by all the oaths as yet invented in the French +and Languedoc tongues, there could be distinguished +dark threats of vengeance, addressed to the captain +of the large brig, whom he was to discover without +fail on his return to Marseille.</p> + +<p>All the passengers now descended to the cabin, +and having stripped and rolled myself in my cloak +turned inside out, I threw myself on my couch. +We were now, in spite of recent experience, provided +with a fresh lighted lantern, to be produced +on the next call. This we took care still to look to, +although we hardly expected more than one such +chance in one night.</p> + +<p>It was past two, and we had scarcely left off +discussing our narrow escape, when another rapid +and significant demand for the lantern announced +a second peril. On this occasion I took my time, +for I had reflected on the odds, which were immense, +against our being a second time so exactly in any +one's way, where there was room for the whole navigation +of the world to pass abreast. Nor could +I suspect any of my fellow-passengers of being the<a name="page_297" id="page_297"></a> +unlucky Jonas of our misfortunes; although the +Moor was looked upon by some of the sailors with +a suspicious eye, for not consenting to partake of +a leg of chicken, if the animal had been killed +and cooked by any other hand than his own, +and for the mysterious formalities they accused +him of observing in killing his poultry; such as +turning his face in a particular direction, and requiring +the blood to flow in a particular manner—on +failure of which last requisite, he threw the +fowl overboard. These things alarmed the sailors, +but helped, on the contrary, to encourage me; as +I thought the man's being possessed of a conscience +and religious scruples, rather, if any thing, an additional +safeguard for us.</p> + +<p>This time, therefore, I drew on my boots and +trowsers; and, wrapped in my cloak, proceeded in +company with the Moor, who had taken it as leisurely +as myself, to join the party on deck. They +had kept the lantern in a safe position until the +moment it would have the best chance of taking +effect, a proper precaution, as it was likely to be so +short-lived. And at the moment I arrived the order +was being given to shew it ahead. A sailor took +it, and before he could reach the bow of the vessel, +a wave broke over him and washed his lantern +fairly into the sea. Upon this the captain said not<a name="page_298" id="page_298"></a> +a word, but running to the helm, took it in hand, +and turned the ship right round, presenting her stern +to the wind, and to the approaching vessel,—which +we now soon lost sight of, as we were not a slow sailing +craft in a fair wind. Having performed this masterly +feat, and given orders that no change should +be made in any respect, he went to bed; muttering +as he left the deck various indistinct sounds between +his teeth. The next morning we had undone nearly +all our six day's work, and before evening of the +following day, had returned to within sight of +Cape St. Martin near Valencia.</p> + +<p>It was now a fortnight since we had quitted +Marseille, and we were nearly half-way to our place +of destination; but Neptune took pity on us, and +having given the usual scolding to Eolus, we were +allowed to resume our course, although not at as +good a rate as we could have wished. The tempest +had ceased, and by means of a feeble but fair wind +which succeeded, we regained in three days and +nights almost all our lost way, and were on the point +of doubling the Cape Gata. Here we remained +stationary in a dead calm during another three days, +after which an almost imperceptible movement in +the air in the wished-for direction bore us to within +sight of Gibraltar.</p> + +<p>This progress along the southern coast lasted three<a name="page_299" id="page_299"></a> +days more, and introduced me to the climate of Andalucia. +At the end of November it was still a splendid +summer—but with just sufficient air to prevent +our suffering from the heat. The blue Mediterranean +at length vindicated her fair fame, and proved that +one of her smiles had the power of throwing oblivion +over all the harm of which she was capable during her +moments of fretfulness. As you will easily imagine, +I passed these delicious days, and nearly the entire +nights on deck. Our view consisted of the magnificent +precipices which terminate, at the shore, the +Alpuxarras chain of mountains. These are coloured +with the various tints peculiar to the ores and +marbles of which they are formed; and now showed +us all their details, although we never approached +within twenty-five miles off shore. The purity of +the atmosphere added to their great elevation, gave +them the appearance of being only four or five miles +distant. The only means of proving the illusion +consisted in directing the telescope along the line +of apparent demarcation between the sea and the +rock, when the positions of the different towns +situated on the shore were indicated only by the +tops of their towers. Among others, the tower of +Malaga Cathedral appeared to rise solitarily from the +water, the church and town being hidden by the +convexity of the sea's surface.<a name="page_300" id="page_300"></a></p> + +<p>With the bright blue sea for a foreground, varied +by continually passing sails, these superb cliffs +formed the second plan of the picture; while over +them towered the Granada mountains of the Sierra +Nevada, cutting their gigantic outlines of glittering +snow out of the dark blue of the sky, at a distance of +twenty leagues. The evenings more particularly +possessed a charm, difficult to be understood by the +thousands of our fellow creatures, unable to kill that +fragment of time without the aid of constellations +of wax-lights, and sparkling toilettes,—not to mention +the bright sparks which conversation sometimes, +but not always, sprinkles o'er the scene. Now I do +not pretend to speak with disrespect of <i>soirées</i>, nor +even of balls or ra-outes, as our neighbours say; +Polka forfend I should blaspheme her deity, depreciate +her loudly laudable energies, or apostrophize +her strangely muscular hamstrings! I only maintain +that a night passed at sea, off the southern +Spanish coast in fine weather, does not yield to the +best of nights.</p> + +<p>The observation of the land, of the passing sails, +and the management of our own, and the various +phenomena of sea and sky, having gradually yielded +to sunset and twilight—and these in their turn +leaving the vessel to its solitude, conversation became +amusing between people of such different origin,<a name="page_301" id="page_301"></a> +habits, and ideas, brought together by chance, drawn +nearer to each other by the force of circumstances, +and by having partaken of the same buffetings. The +Moor would then offer a cup of his coffee, or rather, +according to the Oriental custom, a thimbleful +of his quintessence of that exquisite berry. Our +French ensign was a tolerable musician, and was +easily prevailed on to unpack his cornet-à-piston, +and to astonish the solitude of the night, and the +denizens of the deep, by the execution of the +favourite airs of Auber and Halevy. Sometimes a +bark too distant to be visible would hail us on +hearing these unusual strains; and faint sounds of +applause would arrive as if from wandering naiads.</p> + +<p>At length one afternoon brought us in sight of +Gibraltar. And now, lest we should arrive without +further mishap, our precious Provençal took care to +give us a parting proof of his incapacity,—which +however, thanks to our good fortune, did not bring +upon us the annoyance it threatened. The rock +of Gibraltar was before us the whole of the following +day; but there appeared also in sight, somewhat to +its left, and at a much greater distance, a sort of +double mountain, apparently divided from the middle +upwards by a wedge-formed cleft. The captain +replied to all questions by describing this object +as consisting of two distinct mountains, which he<a name="page_302" id="page_302"></a> +pronounced to be no others than the two Pillars of +Hercules,—promising us that the next morning we +should see them separated by the entire width of +the Straits.</p> + +<p>Far from suspecting the authenticity of this explanation, +I innocently inquired what was the large +rock (Gibraltar itself) apparently much nearer to us. +"Oh!" he replied, "it was some promontory on the +coast of Andalucia, the name of which had escaped +his memory;" adding that we steered very slightly +to the left of the said rock, because the wind having +increased, and blowing off shore, we could not make +Gibraltar otherwise than by keeping well into the +shore, to prevent our being driven towards Africa. +All this about the wind was so true, that had we +preserved to the last the direction we were then +following, we must inevitably have gone to Africa, +and added a day and a night to our voyage.</p> + +<p>The Marseille merchant, who had made the voyage +twenty times, listened to all this; but although very +intelligent on most subjects, and more particularly +with regard to the qualities and value of silks and +quincaillerie, his notions of practical geography had +not probably attained any great development, as he +appeared perfectly satisfied. I therefore passed the +day and retired that night filled with curiosity +respecting this remarkable promontory, that had<a name="page_303" id="page_303"></a> +escaped the notice of Arrowsmith and the continental +geographers. The following morning, to +my extreme astonishment, the double mountain was +still as undivided as ever, notwithstanding our +having approached so near to the great rock as to +distinguish its colour, and the details of its surface. +We were still steering so as to leave it behind us.</p> + +<p>I now began to suspect something was wrong; and +getting hold of the merchant, proceeded to question +him closely, recalling to his recollection the captain's +explanation of the previous day, and the consequent +miraculous union of Gibraltar with the mountain +of the monkies, to accomplish which the former must +have quitted Europe subsequently to the publication +of the last newspapers we had seen at Marseille. +His replying that he certainly thought the great +rock put him in mind of Gibraltar confirmed my +suppositions; and I prevailed upon him to repeat his +opinion to the ignoramus, who was peaceably eating +his breakfast on the bulwarks of the quarter-deck. +We went to him instantly, and on hearing the remark, +he merely observed that it was very possible; +and leaving his sausage, quietly proceeded to the +helm, which he no more quitted until we were in the +bay at four in the afternoon. We had only lost +about five or six hours by the blunder; but had we<a name="page_304" id="page_304"></a> +continued the same course another half-hour, we +could not possibly have made Gibraltar that day.</p> + +<p>It was with more than the ordinary excitement of +the organ of travelling,—for if phrenology deserves +to be called a science, such an organ must exist,—that +I approached this great Leviathan of the seas; +perhaps, all causes considered, the most remarkable +object in Europe. During the approach the interest +is absorbing; and the two or three hours employed +in passing round the extremity of the rock, and +stretching sufficiently far into the Straits, to gain +wind and channel for entering the bay, slipped away +more rapidly than many a ten minutes I could have +called to my recollection. The simultaneous view of +Europe and Africa; the eventful positions with +which you are surrounded,—Tarifa, Algeciras, and +further on Trafalgar; the very depths beneath you +too shallow for the recollections which crowd into +this limited space; commencing with history so +ancient as to have attained the rank of fable,—and +heroes long since promoted to demi-gods; and reaching +to the passage of the injured Florinda, so quickly +responded to by that of Tharig, followed by a +hundred Arab fleets. The shipping of all nations +continually diverting the attention from these +<i>souvenirs</i>; and, crowning all, the stupendous mass of +the now impregnable rock.<a name="page_305" id="page_305"></a></p> + +<p>Amidst all this, I could not drive from my +thoughts the simple and patriotic old Spanish historian +de Pisa, and the operation to which he attributes +the origin of this mountain. From him may +be learned all the details respecting this work of +Hercules; as to which, as well as to the motives +of its fabricator, the poets of antiquity were in the +dark. Hercules had been induced, by the high +reputation of Spain, of her population, and her various +natural advantages, to conduct thither an army +for the purpose of taking possession of the country. +After having put his project in execution, he remained +in Spain, and enjoyed a long and prosperous +reign. The victory, which gave him possession of the +country, took place at Tarifa; and it was in its +commemoration and honour that before he established +the seat of government at Toledo, he assembled +the conquered population, and compelled them +to throw stones into the sea, by which means, in +a short time, this monument was completed.</p> + +<p>Before we set foot on this imperceptible trophy +of a league in length by two thousand feet high +the French ensign and myself hailed a steamer as +we passed by her in the offing, and found she was +bound for Cadiz, and we must go on board the +following afternoon. On landing, however, my projects +underwent a change, as I told you at the<a name="page_306" id="page_306"></a> +commencement of my letter. There is not much +to be seen at Gibraltar that would interest you, +except indeed the unique aspect and situation of +the place. To military men its details offer much +interest. There is a large public garden on the +side of the mountain, between the town, which +occupies the inmost extremity, and the Governor's +house near the entrance of the bay. The batteries +constructed in the rock are extremely curious, and +calculated to embarrass an enemy whose object +should be to dismount them. I thought, however, +with deference to those conversant with these subjects, +that they were likely to possess an inconvenience—that +of exposing to suffocation the gunners +employed in the caverns, out of which there +does not appear to exist sufficient means of escape +for the smoke.</p> + +<p>The most amusing sight in Gibraltar is the +principal street, filled, as it is, with an infinitely +varied population. Here you see, crowded together +as in a fair, and distinguished by their various costumes,—the +representatives of Europe, Asia, and +Africa,—Arabs, Moors, Italians, Turks, Greeks, Russians, +English, and Spaniards, Jews, and, occasionally, +a holy friar conversing with some Don Basilio, +appearing, in his long cylindrical hat, as if blessed +with a skull sufficiently hard to have entered the side<a name="page_307" id="page_307"></a> +of a tin chimney-top, precipitated upon it by a gust +of wind.</p> + +<p>Among all these a successful guess may here and +there be risked at the identity of the Andalucian +leader of banditti, lounging about in search of useful +information. The contrabandistas are likewise +in great plenty.<a name="page_308" id="page_308"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_XVII" id="LETTER_XVII"></a>LETTER XVII.</h3> + +<h5>CADIZ. ARRIVAL AT SEVILLE.</h5> + +<p class="r">Seville.<br /> +</p> + +<p>Cadiz is the last town in Europe I should select +for a residence, had I the misfortune to become +blind. One ought to be all eyes there. It is the +prettiest of towns. After this there is no more to be +said, with regard, at least, to its external peculiarities. +It possesses no prominent objects of curiosity. +There is, it is true, a tradition stating it to have +possessed a temple dedicated to Hercules; but this +has been washed away by the waves of the ocean, +as its rites have been by the influx of succeeding +populations. Nothing can be more remote from +the ideas of the visitor to Cadiz, than the existence +of anything antique; unless it be the inclination +to prosecute such researches: the whole place is +so bright and modern looking, and pretty in a +manner peculiar to itself, and unlike any other +town,—since, like everything else in Spain, beauty also<a name="page_309" id="page_309"></a> +has its originality. Nothing can be gayer than the +perspective of one of the straight, narrow streets. +On either side of the blue ribbon of sky, which +separates the summits of its lofty houses, is seen +a confusion of balconies, and projecting box-windows,—all +placed irregularly—each house possessing only +one or two, so as not to interfere with each other's +view, and some placed on a lower story, others on +a higher; their yellow or green hues relieving the +glittering white of the façades. Nor could anything +improve the elegant effect of the architectural +ornaments, consisting of pilasters, vases, and +sculpture beneath the balconies, still less, the animated +faces—the prettiest of all Spain, after those of Malaga—whose +owners shew a preference to the projecting +windows, wherever a drawing-room or boudoir possesses +one.</p> + +<p>The pavement of these elegant little streets, is +not out of keeping with the rest. It would be a +sacrilege to introduce a cart or carriage into them. +A lady may, and often does, traverse the whole +town on foot, on her way to a ball. It is a town +built as if for the celebration of a continual carnival. +Nor does the charge brought against the Gaditanas, +of devotion to pleasure, cause any surprise: were +they not, they would be misplaced in Cadiz. Hither +should the victim of spleen and melancholy direct<a name="page_310" id="page_310"></a> +his steps. Let him choose the season of the carnival. +There is reason to suspect that the advertiser in the +Herald had this remedy in view, when he promised a +certain cure to "clergymen and noblemen, who suffer +from blushing and despondency, delusion, thoughts +of self-injury, and groundless fear:" these symptoms +being indications of an attack of that northern +epidemy, which takes its name from a class of +fallen angels of a particular hue.</p> + +<p>In Cadiz, in fact, does Carnival—that modern +Bacchus of fun, give a loose to his wildest eccentricities—nor +may those who are least disposed to do +homage to the god escape his all-pervading influence. +All laws yield to his, during his three days of Saturnalia. +Not the least eccentric of his code is that one, +which authorizes the baptism of every passenger in +a street with the contents of jugs, bestowed from +the fair hands of vigilant angels who soar on the +second-floor balconies. The statute enjoins also +the expression of gratitude for these favours, conveyed +with more or less precision of aim, in the +form of hen's eggs—of which there is consequently +a scarcity on breakfast-tables on the mornings of +these festive days. At eleven o'clock each night, +four spacious buildings scarcely suffice for the masquerading +population.</p> + +<p>But the paddles have been battering for some<a name="page_311" id="page_311"></a> +hours the waters of the Guadalquivir, and we are +approaching Seville, a city given to less turbulent +propensities—where Pleasure assumes a more timid +gait, nor cares to alarm Devotion—a partner with +whom she delights, hand in hand, to tread this +marble-paved Paradise. The passage between Cadiz +and Seville, is composed of two hours of sea, and +eight or nine of river. The beautiful bay, and its +white towns, with Cadiz itself, looking in the +sunshine like a palace of snow rising out of the +sea—have no power now to rivet the attention, nor +to occupy feelings already glowing with the anticipation +of a sail between the banks of the Guadalquivir. +A ridge of hidden rocks lengthens the approach, +compelling the pilot to describe a large semicircle, +before he can make the mouth of the river. This +delay is a violent stimulant to one's impatience. +At length we have entered the ancient Betis; and +leaving behind the active little town of St. Lucar, +celebrated for its wines, and for those of the neighbouring +Xeres, of which it embarks large quantities—we +are gliding between these famous shores.</p> + +<p>Great, indeed, is the debt they owe to the stirring +events that have immortalized these regions, for they +are anything but romantic. Nothing can be less picturesque;—all +the flatness of Holland, without the +cultivation, and the numerous well-peopled villages,<a name="page_312" id="page_312"></a> +which diminish the monotonous effect. On the +right are seen at some distance the wooded hills +of Xeres; but for scores of miles, on the opposite +side, all is either marsh, or half-inundated pasture, +with here and there some thinly-scattered olive +trees, and herds of oxen for its sole living occupants. +At a few leagues from Seville, the increased frequency +of the olive grounds—a few villages and +convents, and at length the darker green masses of +the orange groves, give rapidly strengthening indications +of approaching civilization; and you are +landed a short distance below the town, to reach +which, it is necessary to traverse the Christina +Gardens. The cathedral occupies this southern +extremity of the city; and on your way to the +inn, you may make an estimate of the length of +one side of its immense quadrangular enclosure. +Immediately beyond this you are received into +the inevitable labyrinth of crooked lanes, peculiar +to an Arab town.</p> + +<p>The steam trip from Cadiz is so easy a day's +journey, that no necessity for repose or refitting +interferes with the impatience of those who arrive +to explore the external town. You speedily, therefore, +sally forth, and thread a few of the mazy +streets; but without venturing too far, on account +of the evident risk of losing your way. Should<a name="page_313" id="page_313"></a> +you chance to stumble on the Plaza Mayor,—called +Plaza de San Francisco,—you are at once rewarded +by the view of the <i>ayuntamiento</i>, one of the most +elegant edifices in Spain: otherwise the extreme +simplicity of the bare, irregular, but monotonous +white houses, will create disappointment—you will +stare about in the vain search of the magnificence, +so much extolled, of this semi-Moorish capital, +and discover, that nothing can be plainer, more +simple, more ugly, than the exterior of the Seville +habitations. At length, however, some open door, +or iron grille, placed on a line with an inner court, +will operate a sudden change in your ideas, and +afford a clue to the mystery. Through this railing, +generally of an elegant form, is discovered a delicious +vista, in which are visible, fountains, white +marble colonnades, pomegranate and sweet lemon-trees, +sofas and chairs (if in summer), and two or +three steps of a porcelain staircase.</p> + +<p>You now first appreciate the utility of the more +than plain exteriors of the houses of this town; and +you admire an invention, which adds to the already +charming objects, composing the interior of these +miniature palaces, a beauty still greater than that +which they actually possess, lent by the effect of contrast. +It is calculated that there are more than eighty +thousand white marble pillars in Seville. For this<a name="page_314" id="page_314"></a> +luxury the inhabitants are indebted in a great measure +to the Romans, whose town, Italica, seated, in +ancient times, on the opposite bank of the river, four +miles above Seville, and since entirely buried, furnished +the Arab architects with a considerable portion +of their decorating materials.</p> + +<p>In a future letter I hope to introduce you to the +interior of some of these abodes, where we shall discover +that their inhabitants prove themselves not unworthy +of them, by the perfect taste and conception +of civilized life, with which their mode of existence +is regulated.</p> + +<p><a name="page_315" id="page_315"></a></p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 415px;"> +<a href="images/ill_361_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_361_sml.jpg" width="415" height="550" alt="HALL OF AMBASSADORS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE." title="HALL OF AMBASSADORS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE." /></a> +<span class="caption">HALL OF AMBASSADORS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.</span> +</div> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_XVIII" id="LETTER_XVIII"></a>LETTER XVIII.</h3> + +<h5>THE ARABS IN SPAIN. ALCAZAR OF SEVILLE.</h5> + +<p class="r">Seville.<br /> +</p> + +<p>The chief attraction of this most interesting of +the provinces of the Peninsula, consists in the numerous +well preserved remains of Arab art. The +most sumptuous of their palaces are, it is true, no +longer in existence, nor the principal mosques, with +the exception of the metropolitan temple of Cordova: +but there remain sufficient specimens to shew, +that their architecture had attained the highest +excellence in two of the principal requisites for +excellence in that science—solidity and beauty.</p> + +<p>The superiority of the Arabs in this branch of +science and taste is so striking, that all other departments +of art, as well as the customs and peculiarities +of that race, and the events of their dominion +in this country, become at once the subjects of +interest and inquiry. It is consequently very satisfactory +to discover that one can examine almost<a name="page_316" id="page_316"></a> +face to face that people,—probably the most advanced +in science and civilization that ever set foot in Europe; +so little are the traces of their influence worn +away, and so predominant is the portion of it still +discernible in the customs, manners, and race of the +population of this province, and even to a considerable +extent in their language.</p> + +<p>There is something so brilliant in the career of the +Arab people, as to justify the interest excited by the +romantic and picturesque (if the expression may be +allowed), points of their character and customs. +Their civilization appears to have advanced abreast +with their conquests, and with the same prodigious +rapidity; supposing, that is, that previously to their +issuing from their peninsula, they were as backward +as historians state them to have been: a point +not sufficiently established. Sallying forth, under +the immediate successors of Mahomet, they commenced, +in obedience to the injunction of their new +faith, a course of conquest unrivalled in rapidity. +Their happy physical and mental organization, enabled +them to appropriate whatever was superior +in the arts and customs of the conquered nations; +and whatever they imitated acquired during the +process of adaptation, new and more graceful modifications. +It has been asserted that they owed +their civilization to the Greeks; and, certainly, the<a name="page_317" id="page_317"></a> +first subjected provinces being Greek, their customs +could not but receive some impression from the contact; +but it is not probable that the Greeks were +altogether their instructors in civilization. Had +such been the case their language would probably +have undergone a change, instead of continuing +totally independent of the Greek, and attaining to +greater richness. They are known to have possessed +poets of eminence before the appearance of Mahomet, +consequently before they had any communication +with the Greeks; shortly after the commencement +of their intercourse with them, they +shewed a marked superiority over them in geometry, +in astronomy, architecture, and medicine, and it +would probably be found, but for the destruction +of so many Arab libraries, that they did not yield to +them in eloquence and poetic genius.</p> + +<p>Established in Spain, they carried the arts of +civilization—the useful no less than the elegant, to +the highest perfection. They introduced principles +of agriculture adapted to the peculiarities of the +country. The chief requisite for a country, parched +by a cloudless sun, being water—they put in practice +a complete system of irrigation, to which the +Spaniards are still indebted for the extraordinary +fertility of their soil. Many other arts that have +since been permitted to dwindle into insignificance,<a name="page_318" id="page_318"></a> +and some altogether to disappear, were bequeathed +by them. The Morocco preparation of leather is an +instance of these last.</p> + +<p>Their high chivalry, added to their moderation +after victory, would have divested even war of much +of its barbarism, had they had to do with a race +less impenetrable, and more susceptible of polish +than were the iron legions of their Gothic antagonists. +The persevering and repeated acts of treachery +practised by these, at last drew their civilized +adversaries, forcibly into the commission of acts of +a similar nature—it being frequently necessary in +self-defence to adopt the same weapons as one's +enemy. When firmly settled in Spain, the Arabs +no longer appear to have taken the field with a +view to conquest. Abderahman the First, Almansor, +and other conquerors, returned from their victories +to repose in their capital; contenting themselves +with founding schools and hospitals to commemorate +their successes, without making them instrumental +to the increase of their domination. After this time +campaigns seem frequently to have been undertaken +from motives of emulation, and for the purpose of +affording them opportunities for a display of their +prowess, and giving vent to their military ardour. +They considered an irruption on the hostile territory, +or an attack on a town, in the light of a tournament.<a name="page_319" id="page_319"></a> +The Christians, on the contrary, fought +with a view to exterminate, and without ever losing +sight of their main object—the expulsion of the +Arabs and Moors from the Peninsula. It was thus +that they ultimately succeeded—a result they probably +would not have attained, had the Moorish +leaders been actuated by similar views, and displayed +less forbearance.</p> + +<p>Much of the misapprehension which exists in +Europe respecting this race is attributable to the +exaggerations of writers; much more to the absence +of reflection in readers, and to the almost universal +practice of bringing every act related of personages +inhabiting remote and half-known climes, to +the test of the only customs and manners with +which we are familiar, and which we consider, for +no other reason, superior to all others—making no +allowance for difference of education, climate, tradition, +race. An European, subjected to a similar +process of criticism, on the part of an inhabitant of +the East, would certainly not recognise his own portrait—a +new disposition of light bearing upon peculiarities, +the existence of which had hitherto been +unsuspected by their owner; and he would manifest +a surprise as unfeigned, as a Frenchman once +expressed in my hearing, on finding himself in a +situation almost parallel. Conversing on the subject<a name="page_320" id="page_320"></a> +of a play, acted in Paris, in which an Englishman +cut a ridiculous figure—a lady present remarked, +that, no doubt, in the London theatres the French +were not spared; upon which the Frenchman I +allude to—a person possessed of superior intelligence—exclaimed: +"How could that be, since there +was nothing about a Frenchman that could be +laughed at?"</p> + +<p>On reading of a reprehensible act attributed to a +Mahometan, some will brand Mahometanism in general, +and of all times and places, with the commission +of the like crimes, placing the event at a distance +of a thousand leagues, or of a thousand years +from its real place and date: forgetting that power +has been abused under all religions; and that we +only hear one side of the question with respect to +all that relates to the Oriental races—our information +only reaching us through the medium of writers of +different and hostile faith. It is a singular fact that +the popular terror, which so long attached itself to +the idea of a Saracen, and which derived its origin +from the conquests of the Mahometans, has its +equivalent in certain Mahometan countries. In +some parts of the empire of Morocco, the idea of a +Christian is that of a ruffian of immense stature +and terrific features; calculated to inspire the utmost +fear in the breasts of all who approach him.<a name="page_321" id="page_321"></a> +Such is their notion of his ferocity, that one of the +emperors, Muley Ismael, in order to terrify his +refractory subjects into obedience, was in the habit +of threatening to have them eaten up by the +Christians.</p> + +<p>From the inferior value set on human life by the +races of the East, we accuse them of barbarity: +forgetting, that, owing to the absence of all analogy +between our origin, races, and education, we are incompetent +to appreciate their feelings, and the motives +of their conduct, and have consequently no +right to condemn them. If we abstain from taking +our neighbour's life, we set also a proportionate value +on our own: a native of the East displays, it is +true, less veneration for his own species. Deeply +impressed with the dogmas of his religion, which +form the guide of his every day life, the habit of acting +up to the doctrines which he has been taught to +believe, diminishes his estimate of the value of temporal +life, whether that of others, or his own, which +he exposes on occasions on which we should not be +inclined to do so. He does not take life for cruelty's +sake, nor without provocation. Were he to be furnished +with Arabian accounts of the treatment of a +London or Paris hackney-coach horse, he would +think of the noble and friendly animal which carries +him to battle, and turn in disgust from such a page.<a name="page_322" id="page_322"></a></p> + +<p>The system practised at Constantinople of nailing +to his door-post the ear of the culprit detected in the +employment of false weights, is, no doubt, very discordant +with our customs; but this mode of punishment +is said to be attended with such success, +as to do away almost entirely with the occasion for +it. Were it adopted in some other capitals, it would +certainly at first disfigure many a neatly adorned +entrance, and give additional occupation to painters; +but the result might possibly be a more universal +observance of the injunction contained in the eighth +commandment. As far as regards the Arabs of +Spain, it may be securely affirmed, that, during the +course of their triumphs, and long before they had +attained their highest civilization, no cruelties were +exercised by them, which came near to the barbarity +of those practised subsequently by their Christian +adversaries on victims of a different creed, when in +their power. We may instance the example set by +St. Ferdinand, who, it is said, when burning some +Moors, piously stirred up the fire himself in the +public place of Palencia.</p> + +<p>It cannot, however, be denied that cases of cruelty +have occurred, and are related in history of the +Arabs, although they are rare among those of Spain; +but, if cruel, the Arab never added hypocrisy to his +cruelty. After having ravaged all Andalucia with<a name="page_323" id="page_323"></a> +fire and famine, St. Ferdinand formed the project +of proceeding to Africa the following year, in order +to attack the inhabitants of that country. His death +interrupted the course of these humane projects. +Being dropsical, and feeling his end approaching, +he called for his son Alphonso, afterwards his successor, +to whom this prince—cut off in the midst +of his thirsty longings for blood and slaughter—is +related to have given "the counsels, which the +sentiments of piety, justice, and love for mankind, +with which he was filled, inspired so great a monarch."</p> + +<p>As for the degenerate modern tribes, descendants +of some of the most civilized of former days, we have +witnessed their contest, <i>pro aris et focis</i>, during the +last few years, against a sample of the Christians +of to-day: the mode of making war is perfectly +similar on both sides.</p> + +<p>It is a no less curious <i>travers</i> of human nature, +from its being an almost universal one—that of +which the modern Spaniards afford an example. +They apply the term "barbarians" to the descendants +of their Moorish compatriots, although they +themselves have scarcely advanced a step in civilization +since the day that, in the public place of +Granada, Ferdinand the Catholic burned one million +five thousand Arab books, being all he could collect<a name="page_324" id="page_324"></a> +throughout Spain; showing what tremendous power +may be wielded by a single human hand, when applied +to the task of undoing. That King, by a +single signature, accomplished an act which may be +considered as equivalent to retarding, by several +centuries, the civilization of a great country,—perhaps, +even, to cutting it off from the only opportunity +it was destined to possess, during the present +ages, of arriving at the summit which the more privileged +nations are permitted to attain; while it influenced +injuriously the progress of letters, science, +and art throughout Europe. But we will no longer +allow digressions to delay our visit to the Alcazar, +where we shall find visible proof of Arab superiority, +at least, in architectural science and invention.</p> + +<p>Passing to the east of the cathedral through the +large open space, on the left of which is the Archbishop's +palace, and on the right the cathedral and +exchange, the embattled outer walls of the Alcazar +stop the view in front; varied here and there with +square towers, and containing in the centre an arched +entrance. The present buildings occupy the south-eastern +corner of the ancient enclosure of the royal +residence, which comprised all the remaining space +as far as the banks of the river, passing round the +south side of the cathedral, and, in fact, including +it in its precincts—an enclosure of about a mile<a name="page_325" id="page_325"></a> +and a half in circumference. An old tower, or scrap +of wall, indicates here and there the position of the +ancient buildings, the site of which is now occupied +by two or three <i>plazuelas</i>, or squares, and several +streets communicating between them. The present +palace scarcely covers a third of the original extent.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 550px;"> +<a href="images/ill_354_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_354_sml.jpg" width="550" height="401" alt="FAÇADE OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE." title="FAÇADE OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE." /></a> +<span class="caption">FAÇADE OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.</span> +</div> + +<p>Having passed through the first entrance, you are +in a large square, surrounded with buildings without +ornament, and used at present as government +offices. At the opposite side another archway passes +under the buildings, and leads to a second large +court. This communicates on the left with one or +two others; one of these is rather ornamental, +and in the Italian style, surrounded by an arcade +supported on double columns, and enclosing a garden +sunk considerably below the level of the ground. +This court is approached by a covered passage, leading, +as already mentioned, from the left side of the +second large square, the south side of which—the +side opposite to that on which we entered—consists +of the façade and portal of the inner palace of all;—the +Arab ornamental portion, the residence of +the royal person.</p> + +<p>At the right-hand extremity of this front is the +entrance to the first floor, approached by a staircase, +which occupies part of the building on that side of +the square, and which contains the apartments of<a name="page_326" id="page_326"></a> +the governor. The staircase is open to the air, and +is visible through a light arcade. The centre portal +of this façade is ornamented, from the ground to +the roof, with rich tracery, varied by a band of blue +and white <i>azulejos</i>, and terminating in an advancing +roof of carved cedar. Right and left, the rest of +the front consists of a plain wall up to the first floor, +on which small arcades, of a graceful design, enclose +retreating balconies and windows.</p> + +<p>Entering through the centre door, a magnificent +apartment has been annihilated by two white partitions, +rising from the ground to the ceiling, and +dividing it into three portions, the centre one forming +the passage which leads from the entrance to +the principal court. Several of the apartments are +thus injured, owing to the palace being occasionally +used as a temporary lodging for the court. Passing +across the degraded hall, a magnificent embroidered +arch—for the carving with which it is covered more +resembles embroidery than any other ornament—gives +access to the great court.</p> + +<p>It is difficult to ascertain what portion of this +palace belongs to the residence of the Moorish Kings, +as Pedro the Cruel had a considerable portion of it +rebuilt by Moorish architects in the same style. +The still more recent additions are easily distinguished. +One of them, in this part of the edifice,<a name="page_327" id="page_327"></a> +is a gallery, erected by Charles the Fifth, over the +arcades of the great court. This gallery one would +imagine to have been there placed with a view to +demonstrate the superiority of Arab art over every +other. It is conceived in the most elegant Italian +style, and executed in white marble; but, compared +with the fairy arcades which support it, it is clumsiness +itself. The court is paved with white marble +slabs, and contains in the centre a small basin of +the same material, of chaste and simple form, +once a fountain. The arcades are supported on +pairs of columns, measuring about twelve diameters +in height, and of equal diameter throughout. The +capitals are in imitation of the Corinthian. The +entire walls, over and round the arches, are covered +with deep tracery in stucco; the design of which +consists of diamond-shaped compartments, formed +by lines descending from the cornice, and intersecting +each other diagonally. These are indented in +small curves, four to each side of the diamond. In +each centre is a shell, surrounded by fanciful ornaments. +The same design is repeated on the inside +of the walls, that is, under the arcade, but only on +the outer wall; and this portion of the court is +covered with a richly-ornamented ceiling of Alerce, +in the manner called <i>artesonado</i>.</p> + +<p>On the opposite side of the court to that on which<a name="page_328" id="page_328"></a> +we entered, another semicircular arch, of equal richness, +leads to a room extending the whole length of +the court, and similar in form to that situated at +the entrance, possessing also an ornamental ceiling, +but plainer walls. The left and right sides of the +court are shorter than the others. In the centre +of the left side, a deep alcove is formed in the wall, +probably occupied in former times by a sofa or +throne: at present it is empty, with the exception, +in one corner, of a dusty collection of <i>azulejos</i> fallen +from the walls, and exposing to temptation the itching +palms of enthusiasts. At the opposite end a +large arch, admirably carved, and containing some +superb old cedar doors, leads to the Hall of Ambassadors. +This apartment is a square of about +thirty-three feet, by nearly sixty in height. It is +also called the <i>media naranja</i> (half-orange), from +the form of its ceiling.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 361px;"> +<a href="images/ill_357_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_357_sml.jpg" width="361" height="550" alt="GREAT COURT OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE." title="GREAT COURT OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE." /></a> +<span class="caption">GREAT COURT OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.</span> +</div> + +<p>In the centre of each side is an entrance, that +from the court consists of the arch just mentioned, +forming a semicircle with the extremities prolonged +in a parallel direction. Those of the three other +sides are each composed of three arches of the horse-shoe +form, or three-quarters of a circle, and supported +by two columns of rare marbles and jasper +surmounted by gilded capitals. The walls are entirely +covered with elegant designs, executed in<a name="page_329" id="page_329"></a> +stucco, the effect of which suffers from a series of +small arches, running round the upper part of the +room, having been deprived of their tracery to make +room for the painted heads (more or less resembling) +of the kings of Spain, Goths and their successors, +excepting the Arabs and Moors. This degradation +is, however, forgotten from the moment +the eye is directed to the ceiling.</p> + +<p>In the Arab architecture, the ornament usually +becomes more choice, as it occupies a higher elevation; +and the richest and most exquisite labours of +the artist are lavished on the ceilings. The designs +are complicated geometrical problems, by means of +which the decorators of that nation of mathematicians +and artists attained to a perfection of ornament +unapproached by any other style. From the +cornice of this room rise clusters of diminutive gilded +semi-cupolas, commencing by a single one, upon +which two are supported, and multiplying so rapidly +as they rise, some advancing, others retreating, and +each resting on a shoulder of one below, that, by +the time they reach the edge of the great cupola, +they appear to be countless. The ornament of this +dome consists of innumerable gilt projecting bands, +of about two inches in width; these intersect each +other in an infinite profusion of curves, as they +stretch over the hemispherical space. The artist,<a name="page_330" id="page_330"></a> +who would make a pencil sketch of this ceiling, +should be as deep a geometrician as the architect +who designed it.</p> + +<p>On quitting the Hall of Ambassadors, we arrive +at the best part of the building. Passing through +the arcade at the right-hand side, a long narrow +apartment is crossed, which opens on a small court +called the Court of Dolls (Patio de los Muceñas). +No description, no painting can do justice to this +exquisite little enclosure. You stand still, gazing +round until your delight changes into astonishment +at such an effect being produced by immoveable +walls and a few columns. A space, of about twenty +feet by thirty,—in which ten small pillars, placed +at corresponding but unequal distances, enclose a +smaller quadrangle, and support, over a series of +different sized arches, the upper walls,—has furnished +materials to the artist for the attainment +of one of the most successful results in architecture. +The Alhambra has nothing equal to it. Its two +large courts surpass, no doubt, in beauty the principal +court of this palace; but, as a whole, this residence, +principally from its being in better preservation +and containing more, is superior to that of +Granada, always excepting the advantage derived +from the picturesque site of the latter. The Court +of Dolls, at all events, is unrivalled.<a name="page_331" id="page_331"></a></p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 346px;"> +<a href="images/ill_365_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_365_sml.jpg" width="346" height="550" alt="COURT OF DOLLS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE." title="COURT OF DOLLS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE." /></a> +<span class="caption">COURT OF DOLLS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></span> +</div> + +<p>The architect made here a highly judicious use +of some of the best gleanings from Italica, consisting +of a few antique capitals, which, being separated +from their shafts, have been provided with others, +neither made for them, nor even fitted to them.<a name="page_332" id="page_332"></a> +The pillars are small, and long for their diameter, +with the exception of the four which occupy the +angles, which are thicker and all white. The rest +are of different coloured marbles, and all are about +six feet in height. The capitals are of still smaller +proportions; so that at the junction they do not +cover the entire top of the shaft. This defect, from +what cause it is difficult to explain, appears to add +to their beauty.</p> + +<p>The capitals are exquisitely beautiful. One in +particular, apparently Greek, tinged by antiquity +with a slight approach to rose colour, is shaped, as +if carelessly, at the will of the sculptor; and derives +from its irregularly rounded volutes and uneven +leaves, an inconceivable grace. The arches are of +various shapes, that is, of three different shapes +and dimensions, and whether more care, or better +materials were employed in the tracery of the walls +in this court, or for whatever other reason, it is in +better preservation than the other parts of the palace. +It has the appearance of having been newly executed +in hard white stone.</p> + +<p>Through the Court of Dolls you pass into an +inner apartment, to which it is a worthy introduction. +This room has been selected in modern times, +as being the best in the palace, for the experiment +of restoring the ceiling. The operation has been<a name="page_333" id="page_333"></a> +judiciously executed, and produces an admirable +effect. The design of this ceiling is the most tasteful +of the whole collection. Six or seven stars +placed at equal distances from each other, form +centres, from which, following the direction of the +sides of their acute angles, depart as many lines; +that is, two from each point; or, supposing the star +to have twelve points—twenty-four from each star: +but these lines soon change their directions, and +intersecting each other repeatedly, form innumerable +small inclosures of an hexagonal shape. The lines +are gilt. Each hexagonal compartment rises in +relief of about an inch and a half from the surface, +and is ornamented with a flower, painted in brilliant +colours on a dark ground.</p> + +<p>The room is twenty-four feet in height by only +sixteen wide, and between sixty and seventy in +length. At the two ends, square spaces are separated +from the centre portion by a wall, advancing +about two feet from each side, and supporting an +arch, extending across the entire width. These +arches were probably furnished with curtains, which +separated at will the two ends from the principal +apartment, and converted them into sleeping retreats. +Their ornaments are still more choice than those +of the centre. With the exception of this room, +all the principal apartments, and the two courts, are<a name="page_334" id="page_334"></a> +decorated from the ground upwards to a height of +about five feet, with the <i>azulejos</i>, or mosaic of porcelain +tiles, the colours of which never lose their +brilliancy.</p> + +<p>The first floor is probably an addition made +entirely subsequently to the time of the Moors. +It contains several suites of plain white-washed +rooms, and only two ornamental apartments, probably +of Don Pedro's time. These are equal to those on +the ground floor with respect to the tracery of the +walls, unfortunately almost filled with white-wash; +but their ceilings are plainer. There is a gallery +over the Court of Dolls, of a different sort from the +rest, but scarcely inferior in beauty to any part of +the edifice. The pillars, balustrades, and ceilings, +are of wood.</p> + +<p>One of the last mentioned apartments has an +advantage over all the rest of the palace, derived +from its position. It opens on a terrace looking +over the antique gardens,—a view the most charming +and original that can be imagined. This +room must be supposed to have been the boudoir +of Maria Padilla,—the object of the earliest and +most durable of Pedro's attachments; whose power +over him outlived the influence of all his future +liaisons. It is indeed probable that the taste for +this residence, and the creation of a large portion<a name="page_335" id="page_335"></a> +of its beauties, are to be attributed to the mistress, +rather than to a gloomy and bloodthirsty king, as +Pedro is represented to have been, and whose existence +was totally unsuited to such a residence. +In the Court of Dolls the portion of pavement is +pointed out on which his brother Don Fadrique fell, +slaughtered, as some say, by Pedro's own hand,—at +all events in his presence, and by his order.</p> + +<p>This monarch, were his palace not sufficient to +immortalize him, would have a claim to immortality, +as having ordered more executions than all the other +monarchs who ever ruled in Spain, added together. +It appears to have been a daily necessity for him; +but he derived more than ordinary satisfaction when +an opportunity could be obtained of ordering an +archbishop to the block. The see of Toledo became +under him the most perilous post in the kingdom, +next to that of his own relatives: but he occasionally +extended the privilege to other archbishopricks. +It is a relief to meet with a case of almost merited +murder in so sanguinary a list. Such may be termed +the adventure of an innocent man, who, seeing +before him a noose which closes upon everything +which approaches it, carefully inserts his neck within +the circumference.</p> + +<p>This was the case of a monk, who, hearing that +Pedro, during one of his campaigns, was encamped<a name="page_336" id="page_336"></a> +in a neighbouring village, proceeded thither, and +demanded an audience. His request being immediately +granted, no doubt in the expectation of some +valuable information respecting the enemy's movements, +the holy man commenced an edifying discourse, +in which he informed Don Pedro, that the +venerabilissimo San Somebody (the saint of his village) +had passed a considerable time with him in his +dream of the previous night: that his object in thus +miraculously waiting upon him was, to request he +would go to his Majesty, and tell him, that, owing +to the unpardonable disorders of his life, it was +determined he should lose the approaching battle. +It was the unhappy friar's last sermon; for in +less than five minutes he had ceased to exist.</p> + +<p>It stands to reason, that, owing to the retired +habits of this friar, a certain anecdote had never +reached his ear relative to another member of a +religious fraternity. At a period that had not long +preceded the event just related, the misconduct of +this sovereign had drawn down upon him the displeasure +of the head of the church.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> The thunderbolt +was already forged beneath the arches of<a name="page_337" id="page_337"></a> +the Vatican; but a serious difficulty presented itself. +The culprit was likely to turn upon the hand employed +in inflicting the chastisement. At length +a young monk, known to a member of the holy +synod as a genius of promise, energetic and fertile +in resources, was made choice of, who unhesitatingly +undertook the mission. He repaired to Seville, +and after a few days' delay, employed in +combining his plan of operation, he got into a +boat, furnished with two stout rowers, and allowing +the current to waft him down the Guadalquivir, +until he arrived opposite a portion of the +bank known to be the daily resort of the King, +he approached the shore, and waited his opportunity.</p> + +<p>At the accustomed hour the royal cavalcade was +seen to approach; when, standing up in the boat, +which was not allowed to touch the shore, he made +signs that he would speak to the party. The monkish +costume commanded respect even from royalty, +and Don Pedro reined in his horse. The monk +then inquired whether it would gratify his Majesty +to listen to the news of certain remarkable +occurrences that had taken place in the East, from +which part of the world he had just arrived. The +King approached, and ordered him to tell his story: +upon which he unrolled the fatal document, and<a name="page_338" id="page_338"></a> +with all possible rapidity of enunciation read it from +beginning to end.</p> + +<p>Before it was concluded, the King had drawn his +sword, and spurred his horse to the brink of the +water; but at his first movement the boat had pushed +off,—the reader still continuing his task,—so that +by the time Pedro found himself completely excommunicated, +his rage passing all bounds, he had +dashed into the water, directing a sabre cut, which +only reached the boat's stern. He still, however, +spurred furiously on, and compelled his horse to +swim a considerable distance; until, the animal +becoming exhausted, he only regained the shore +after being in serious danger of drowning. It may +easily be imagined that the papal messenger, satisfied +with his success, avoided the contact of terra +firma, until he found himself clear of Pedro's +dominions.</p> + +<p>Quitting the room—that of Maria Padilla (according +to my conjecture) by the door which leads to +the terrace, you look down on a square portion of +ground, partitioned off from the rest by walls, against +which orange-trees are trained like our wall-fruit +trees, only so thickly that no part of the masonry +is visible. All the walls in the garden are thus +masked by a depth of about eight inches of leaves +evenly clipped. In the fruit season the effect<a name="page_339" id="page_339"></a> +is admirable. The small square portions next +to the palace thus partitioned off are laid out in +flower-beds, separated by walks of mixed brick and +porcelain, all of which communicate with fountains +in the centres. The fountains, simple and destitute +of the usual classical menagerie of marine zoology +and gods and goddesses, whose coöperation is so +indispensable in most European gardens to the +propulsion of each curling thread or gushing mass of +the cold element,—derive all their charm from the +purity and taste displayed in their design. One of +the most beautiful of them consists merely of a +raised step, covered with <i>azulejos</i>, enclosing a space +of an hexagonal form, in the centre of which the +water rises from a small block of corresponding form +and materials. The mosaic is continued outside the +step, but covers only a narrow space.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 550px;"> +<a href="images/ill_373_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_373_sml.jpg" width="550" height="221" alt="FOUNTAINS AT THE ALCAZAR." title="FOUNTAINS AT THE ALCAZAR." /></a> +<span class="caption">FOUNTAINS AT THE ALCAZAR.</span> +</div> + +<p>The terrace stretches away to the left as far as the<a name="page_340" id="page_340"></a> +extremity of the buildings, the façade of which is +hollowed out into a series of semicircular alcoves; +there being no doors nor windows, with the exception +of the door of the room through which we issued. +The alcoves are surrounded with seats, and +form so many little apartments, untenable during +the summer, as they look to the south, but forming +excellent winter habitations. Arrived at the extremity +of the palace front, the promenade may be +continued at the same elevation down another whole +side of the gardens, along a terrace of two stories, +which follows the outer enclosure. This terrace is +very ornamental. From the ground up to a third of +its height, its front is clothed with the orange-tree, +in the same manner as the walls already described. +Immediately above runs a rustic story of large projecting +stones, which serves as a basement for the +covered gallery, or lower of the two walks. This +gallery is closed on the outside, which is part of +the town wall. The front or garden side is composed +of a series of rustic arches, alternately larger +and smaller, formed of rugged stones, such as are +used for grottoes, and of a dark brown colour—partly +natural, partly painted.</p> + +<p>The arches are supported by marble columns, +or rather fragments of columns,—all the mutilated antique +trunks rummaged out of Italica. For a shaft<a name="page_341" id="page_341"></a> +of insufficient length a piece is found of the dimensions +required to make up the deficiency, and placed +on its top without mortar or cement. Some of the +capitals are extremely curious. Among them almost +every style may be traced, from the Hindoo to the +Composite: but no one is entire, nor matched with +any part of the column it was originally destined to +adorn. Over this gallery is the open terrace, which +continues that of the palace side on the same level. +The view extends in all directions, including the +gardens and the surrounding country; for we are +here at the extremity of the town. At the furthest +end the edifice widens, and forms an open saloon, +surrounded with seats, glittering with the bright hues +of the <i>azulejos</i>.</p> + +<p>From these terraces you look down on the portion +of the garden in which the royal arms are represented, +formed with myrtle-hedges. Eagles, lions, castellated +towers,—all are accurately delineated. Myrtle-hedges +are also used in all parts of the gardens as +borders to the walks. It is a charming evening's +occupation to wander through the different enclosures +of these gardens, which, although not very extensive, +are characterised by so much that is uncommon in +their plan and ornaments, that the lounger is never +weary of them. Nor is the visible portion of their +attractions more curious than the hidden sources of<a name="page_342" id="page_342"></a> +amusement and—ablution, by means of which an +uninitiated wanderer over these china-paved walks, +may be unexpectedly, and more than necessarily refreshed. +By means of a handle, concealed—here in +the lungs of some bathing Diana in the recesses of +her grotto—here in the hollow of a harmless looking +stone—an entire line of walk is instantaneously converted +into a stage of hydraulics—displaying to the +spectator a long line of embroidery, composed of thousands +of silver threads sparkling in the sunshine, as +issuing from unseen apertures in the pavement they +cross each other at a height of a few feet from the +ground, forming an endless variety of graceful curves. +Almost all the walks are sown with these <i>burladores</i>, +as they are termed.</p> + +<p>A large portion of the grounds consists of an +orange-grove, varied with sweet lemon-trees. The +trees are sufficiently near to each other to afford +universal shade, without being so thickly planted as +to interfere with the good-keeping of the grass, nor +with the movement of promenading parties. In +the centre of this grove is a beautiful edifice,—a +square pavilion entirely faced, within and without, +with the <i>azulejos</i>, with the exception only of the roof. +Around it is a colonnade of white marble, enclosing +a space raised two feet above the ground, and +surrounded by a seat of the same mosaic. The<a name="page_343" id="page_343"></a> +interior is occupied by a table, surrounded with +seats.</p> + +<p>The subterranean baths, called the baths of Maria +Padilla, are entered from the palace end of the garden. +They extend to a considerable distance under +the palace, and must during the summer heats, have +been a delightfully cool retreat.</p> + +<p>This <i>alcazar</i> is probably the best specimen of a +Moorish residence remaining in Europe. The Alhambra +would, no doubt, have surpassed it, but for +the preference accorded by the Emperor, Charles the +Fifth, to its situation over that of Seville: owing +to which he contented himself with building a +gallery over the principal court at the latter; while +at Granada, he destroyed a large portion of the +old buildings, which he replaced by an entire Italian +palace. At present the ornamented apartments of +the Seville palace are more numerous, and in better +preservation than those of the Alhambra.</p> + +<p>Both, however, would have been thrown into the +shade, had any proportionate traces existed of the +palace of Abderahman the Third, in the environs +of Cordova. Unfortunately nothing of this remains +but the description. It is among the few Arab +manuscripts which escaped the colossal <i>auto-da-fé</i> of +Ferdinand and Isabella, and would appear too +extravagant to merit belief, but for the known<a name="page_344" id="page_344"></a> +minuteness and accuracy of the Arab writers, proved +by their descriptions of the palaces and other +edifices which remain to afford the test of comparison.</p> + +<p>The immense wealth lavished by these princes, +must also be taken into consideration, and especially +by the Caliphs of Cordova, who possessed a far +more extended sway than belonged to the subsequent +dynasties of Seville and Granada. According +to a custom prevalent at their court, rich presents +were offered to the sovereign on various occasions. +Among others, governors of provinces, on their +nomination, seldom neglected this practical demonstration +of gratitude. This practice is to this day +observed at the court of the Turkish Sultan, and +serves to swell the treasury in no small degree. +Abderahman the Third, having granted a government +to the brother of his favourite, Ahmed ben +Sayd, the two brothers joined purses, and offered +a present made up of the following articles—accompanied +by delicate and ingenious compliments +in verse, for the composition of which they employed +the most popular poet of the day:—Four hundred +pounds weight of pure gold; forty thousand sequins +in ingots of silver; four hundred pounds of aloes; +five hundred ounces of amber; three hundred +ounces of camphor; thirty pieces of tissue of gold<a name="page_345" id="page_345"></a> +and silk; a hundred and ten fine furs of Khorasan; +forty-eight caparisons of gold and silk, woven at +Bagdad; four thousand pounds of silk in balls; +thirty Persian carpets; eight hundred suits of armour; +a thousand shields; a hundred thousand +arrows; fifteen Arabian, and a hundred Spanish +horses, with their trappings and equipments; sixty +young slaves—forty male, and twenty female.</p> + +<p>The palace near Cordova, erected by this sovereign, +was called Azarah (the Flower) after the name +of his favourite mistress. Its materials consisted +entirely of marble and cedar wood; and it contained +four thousand three hundred columns. It was +sufficiently spacious to lodge the whole court, besides +a guard of cavalry. The gardens, as was usual with +the Arabs, formed the part of the residence on +which were lavished the greatest treasures of wealth, +and the choicest inventions of taste. The fountains +were endless in number and variety. On one of the +most picturesque spots was situated an edifice called +the Caliph's Pavilion. It consisted of a circular +gallery of white marble columns with gilded capitals; +in the centre rose a fountain of quicksilver, +imitating all the movements of water, and glittering +in the sun with a brightness too dazzling for the +eye to support. Several of the saloons of this palace +were ornamented with fountains. In one, which<a name="page_346" id="page_346"></a> +bore the name of the Caliph's Saloon, a fountain of +jasper contained in the centre a golden swan of +beautiful workmanship—and over it hung from +the ceiling a pearl, which had been sent from Constantinople +as a present from the Greek Emperor +to Abderahman. The mosque of this palace surpassed +in riches, although not in size, the Aljama +of Cordova.</p> + +<p>These were monuments worthy to have kings and +caliphs for architects, for such they had. There is +no doubt that the palace of Azahrah was planned +and designed by the Caliph himself; and the +founder of that dynasty, Abderahman the First, not +only designed the magnificent mosque of Cordova, +but presided daily over the progress of its erection. +Possessed, as these sovereigns were, as well as all +the well-born portion of their nation, of a highly +cultivated education, the intervals of leisure, left +them by war, were rarely thrown away in idleness. +Abderahman the First was a poet, besides being a +mathematician, an architect, and the first soldier of +his time. Some of his writings have been preserved, +and are among the Arab works collected and translated +by Condé into Spanish. The following stanzas, +addressed to a palm-tree, must be, as is always the +case, still more beautiful in the original, although +charming in the Spanish. The monarch of the<a name="page_347" id="page_347"></a> +Western Empire, after having vanquished his enemies, +and pacified his dominions,—beloved by his +subjects and by all who approached him, and possessed +of the resources of science to occupy his mind, was +nevertheless unhappy. He preferred his home in +Asia to the splendours of an imperial throne in such +a land as Andalucia. He caused a young palm-tree +to be brought from Syria, and planted in a garden +formed by him in the environs of Cordova; and it +was his delight to sit in a tower constructed in the +garden, and gaze at his tree.</p> + +<p>It was to this tree he addressed the lines thus +translated:—</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align="left">Tu tambien, insigne palma,</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Eres aqui forastera.</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">De Algarbe las dulces auras</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Tu pompa halagan y besan.</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">En fecundo suelo arraigas,</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Y al cielo tu cima elevas,</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Tristes lagrimas lloraras,</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Si qual io sentir pudieras.</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"> </td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Tu no sientes contratiempos</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Como io de suerte aviesa:</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">A mi de pena y dolor</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Continuas lluvias me annegan.</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Con mis lagrimas regue</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Las palmas que el Forat riega,</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Pero las palmas y el rio</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Se olvidan de mis penas.<a name="page_348" id="page_348"></a></td></tr> +<tr><td align="left"> </td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Cuando mios infaustos hados,</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Y de Al. Abas la fiereza</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Mi forzaron de dexar</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Del alma las dulces prendas;</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">A ti de mi patria amada</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Ningun recuerda ti queda;</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Pero io, triste, no puedo</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Dexar de llorar por ella.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p>It is probable that on the occasion of the surrender +of Cordova to Ferdinand the Third, the +Moors destroyed their palace of Azarah, since they +were desirous of acting in a similar manner at +Seville, with regard to Geber's Tower. Perhaps +from disgust at the idea that a monument, the beauty +and grandeur of which had inspired them with a +sort of affection, would be, being gazed at, trodden, +and possibly disfigured, (as it turned out) by those +whom they looked upon as barbarians, and who would +not appreciate its perfection, they attempted to introduce +a clause into the conditions of the surrender +of Seville, stipulating the destruction of the tower.</p> + +<p>By way of testifying to the accuracy of the +opinion they had formed of their adversaries, Saint +Ferdinand was on the point of agreeing to the +clause: when his son, afterwards his successor, +Alonso el Sabio, perhaps the only Christian present, +who felt sufficient interest in a square mass of +masonry, to care how the question was decided,<a name="page_349" id="page_349"></a> +energetically interfered, affirming that a single +brick displaced, should be paid with the lives of the +whole population.</p> + +<p>This most perfect scientific monument left by +the Arabs, for the possession of which, after the +architect, Europe is indebted to Alonso the Tenth, +we will presently examine, together with the +cathedral, which was afterwards erected, so as to +include it in his plan.<a name="page_350" id="page_350"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_XIX" id="LETTER_XIX"></a>LETTER XIX</h3> + +<h5>CATHEDRAL OF SEVILLE.</h5> + +<p class="r">Seville.<br /> +</p> + +<p>We have visited the most beautiful edifice in +Seville; we are now approaching the most magnificent. +The native writers, participating somewhat +in the character attributed to the inhabitants of their +province, sometimes called the Gascony of Spain, declare +this cathedral to be the grandest in the world. +This is going too far; setting aside St. Peter's, and +the Santa Maria del Fiore, the style of which renders +the comparison more difficult, the Duomo of Milan, +of which this building appears to be an imitation, +must be allowed to be superior to it, externally at +least, if not internally. Had they ranked it as the +finest church out of Italy, they would not have been +much in error, for such it probably is.</p> + +<p>No one in approaching, excepting from the west, +would imagine it to be a Gothic edifice. You perceive +an immense quadrangular enclosure, filled apparently<a name="page_351" id="page_351"></a> +with cupolas, towers, pinnacles of all sorts and styles, +but less of the Gothic than any other. These belong +to the numerous accessory buildings, subsequently +annexed to the church; such as sacristies, chapels, +chapter-hall, each subsequent erection having been +designed in a different style. The cathedral is +inaccessible on the south side, that which we first +reach in coming from the Alcazar. It is enclosed +here within a long Italian façade of about thirty to +forty feet elevation, ornamented by a row of Ionic +pilasters, supporting an elegant frieze and balustrade. +We therefore ascend the raised pavement, which, +bounded by a series of antique shafts of columns, +surrounds the whole enclosure; and having passed +down the greater part of the east end, find a small +portal close to the Giralda, which admits to the +church through the court of orange-trees. Before +we enter, we will look round on this view, which +possesses more of the Moorish character, than that +which awaits us in the interior. Some idea of the +general plan of these buildings will be necessary, +in order that you may perfectly understand our +present point of view.</p> + +<p>I mentioned above, that the general enclosure +formed a square. This square, the sides of which +face the four points of the compass, is divided by a +straight line into two unequal parts, one being about<a name="page_352" id="page_352"></a> +a third wider than the other. The direction of the +line is east and west; to the south of it is the +cathedral, to the north, the Moorish court of orange-trees. +The Arab Tower, now called the Giralda, +stands in the north-east angle of the cathedral, and +the small door, through which we have just entered, +in the south-eastern angle of the court, is +close by it.</p> + +<p>The court is surrounded by buildings; for besides +the church on its south side, a chapel called the Sagrario, +runs down the entire western end. The east +side and half the north are occupied by arcades, +which support the library, the gift of the son of +Columbus to the cathedral; and the remaining +half side by a sacristy. The buildings of the east +and north sides lean against the old embattled wall +on the outside. The chapel of the Sagrario to the +west is in the Italian style. Avenues of orange-trees, +and a marble fountain of a simple but choice +design, are the only objects which occupy the open +space. Throughout it reigns an eternal gloom, +maintained by the frowning buttresses and pinnacles +of the cathedral, which overhang it from the +south.</p> + +<p>A small doorway, near to that by which we entered +the court, gives access to the cathedral at all +hours. On entering an almost more than twilight<a name="page_353" id="page_353"></a> +would confuse the surrounding objects, did it immediately +succeed the sunshine of Andalucia; and +were not the transition rendered gradual to the eye +by the deep shades of the orange court. As you advance +towards the centre nave, this darkness aids +in producing the effect of immensity, which is the +next idea that presents itself. In fact the enormous +elevation and width of the edifice is such as at first +to overpower the imagination, and to deprive you +of the faculty of appreciating its dimensions. It produces +a novel species of giddiness arising from looking +upwards.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 351px;"> +<a href="images/ill_387_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_387_sml.jpg" width="351" height="550" alt="INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, SEVILLE." title="INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, SEVILLE." /></a> +<span class="caption">INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, SEVILLE.</span> +</div> + +<p>To arrive at the intersection of the principal nave +and transept, you traverse two side naves, both +about eighty-five feet in height, and spacious in +proportion. The centre nave is a hundred and +thirty-two feet, but rises at the quadrangle, forming +its intersection with the transept about twenty feet +higher. The ceiling here, and over the four surrounding +intercolumniations, is ornamented with +a groining of admirable richness. That of the centre +quadrangle is here and there tinged with crimson +and orange tints, proceeding from some diminutive +windows placed between the lower and upper +ceilings.</p> + +<p>After having sufficiently examined the upper view, +the eye wanders over the immense vacuum of the<a name="page_354" id="page_354"></a> +transept, and rests at length on the bronze railings +which, on the east, separate you from the high-altar, +and on the west from the choir. These are superb.</p> + +<p>That of the Capilla Mayor rises to an elevation of +sixty feet, and is throughout of the most elaborate +workmanship. It is the work of a Dominican monk, +who also executed the two pulpits. The choir forms, +as usual, a sort of saloon, which occupies the centre +of the church, that is, in this instance, two of the +five intercolumniations which reach from the transept +to the western portal. Passing round it, in +the direction of the western doors, where the view +is more open, the plan and style of the building +are more easily distinguished. They are remarkably +simple. The area is a quadrangle of +three hundred and ninety-eight feet by two hundred +and ninety-one, and is divided into five naves by +four rows of pillars, all of about sixty feet elevation. +The width of the centre nave and transept is fifty-nine +feet, and the whole is surrounded by chapels. +The distance between the pillars, of which there are +only eight in each row, has the effect of generalizing +the view of the whole edifice, and imparting to it +a grandeur which is not obtained in the cathedral of +Toledo, of almost equal dimensions; while the +smaller and less gaudily coloured windows shed a +more religious ray, and are preferable to those of<a name="page_355" id="page_355"></a> +Toledo, which, magnificent in themselves, attract +an undue share of the observation, instead of blending +into one perfect composition of architectural +harmony.</p> + +<p>Immediately above the arches of the principal +nave and transept, at a height of about ninety +feet, runs a balustrade, the design of which consists +of a series of pointed arches. Above it are +the windows, reaching nearly to the ceiling. They +are painted in rather dark tints, and afford no more +than a sort of <i>demi-jour</i>, which at the east end decreases +to twilight. Rather more light is admitted +towards the western extremity, from some windows +of plain glass, in the lateral chapels, without which +the pictures they contain could not be viewed; but +from this end the high-altar is scarcely discernible. +The simple grandeur of this view loses nothing by +the absence of all ornamental detail: the portion +most ornamented is the pavement, composed of a +mosaic of the richest marbles. About half-way between +the portals and the choir, are inserted two +or three large slabs, bearing inscriptions; one of +them is to the memory of Christopher Columbus; +another to his son. There are no other details to +draw the attention until we visit the chapels, in +which all the treasures of art are dispersed. A +few pictures are scattered here and there around<a name="page_356" id="page_356"></a> +the eastern part of the building; all of them are +good. A large one of Zurbaran, in the north transept, +is a master-piece. It represents St. Jerome, +surrounded by an assembly of monks.</p> + +<p>At the west end of the northernmost nave, the +first door opens to a vast church, called the chapel +of the Sagrario, already alluded to as forming the +western boundary of the orange-court. It is nearly +two hundred feet in length; in the Italian style; +the orders Doric and Ionic, but loaded with heavy +sculpture in the worst taste. After this a series +of chapels, of a style analogous to the body of +the edifice, succeed each other, commencing with +that of San Antonio, and continuing all round the +church. Several of them contain beautiful details +of ornament, and handsome tombs. That of the +Kings should be mentioned as an exception, with +regard to the architecture, since its style is the +<i>plateresco</i>. It contains the tombs of Alonzo the +Tenth, and his Queen Beatrix, with several others. +The most beautiful of these chapels is that of Nuestra +Señora la Antigua, situated on the south +side, below the transept. It forms a square of +about thirty feet, and rises to an elevation of upwards +of eighty. The walls are divided into stories +and compartments, and covered, as is also the ceiling, +with admirable frescos by Martinez and Rovera.<a name="page_357" id="page_357"></a> +At a side door leading to the sacristy, are two beautiful +columns of <i>verde antico</i>. The high-altar is +composed of jasper, from quarries which existed +at the distance of a few leagues from Seville. +The statues are by Pedro Cornejo; and there are +handsome tombs let into the lower part of the +walls. Four antique chandeliers, one in each corner, +are designed with uncommon grace and originality. +From the summit of a short column rises +a silver stem, from different parts of which spring +flat rods of the same metal, so slight as to bend with +the smallest weight: they are of various lengths, +and at the extremity of each waves an elegantly +formed lamp. Each of these clusters assumes a +pyramidal form, and produces a charming effect +when lighted up on days of ceremony,—from their +harmonizing with the rest of the decorations of +the chapel, no less than from the elegance of their +form.</p> + +<p>Some of the chapels of this side, and east of +the transept, communicate with other buildings, +erected subsequently to the principal edifice, and +consequently not comprised in its plan, nor analogous +to its style. Thus, after passing through the chapel +called Del Mariscal, situated at the south-east of +the apse, you enter an anteroom, which leads to +the chapter-hall. The anteroom is an apartment<a name="page_358" id="page_358"></a> +of handsome proportions, covered, in the intervals +of a row of Ionic pilasters, with a series of pieces +of sculpture in white marble. The hall itself is +magnificent. It is an oval of fifty-seven feet in +length, entirely hung with crimson velvet enriched +with gold embroidery. Another of the side +chapels leads to the smaller sacristy. I call it +smaller because it is not so large as that which +adjoins the orange-court; but it is the principal +of the two. It is a superb saloon, upwards of +seventy feet in length by about sixty wide, ornamented +with a profusion of rich sculpture. The +architect was Juan de Herrera.</p> + +<p>From the floor to a height of about four feet, a +spacious wardrobe, composed of large mahogany +drawers, runs down the two longer sides of the +room. These contain probably the richest collection +that exists of gold and silver embroidered +velvets and silks,—brocades—lace—scarfs and mantles +ornamented with precious stones: all these are +the ornaments belonging to altars and pulpits; +robes, trains, and vestures of different sorts, worn +on occasions of ceremony by the principal dignitaries. +The cathedral of Seville is said to surpass +all others in these ornaments.</p> + +<p>In this sacristy are contained likewise the treasure +of gold and silver vessels, and basins; innumerable<a name="page_359" id="page_359"></a> +crosses, reliquaries, chalices, boxes, and candlesticks; +and, in an upright mahogany case of about twenty +feet elevation, lined with white silk, the front of +which opens like a door, stands the Custodia—a +silver ornament about sixteen feet high, including +its base. On the day of the Corpus Christi, the +Host is placed in this Custodia, and carried in procession +through Seville. The silver of which it is +composed weighs seven hundred weight. But it +must not be supposed from this circumstance that +the ornament has a heavy appearance. It is a tapering +edifice containing four stories, ornamented by as +many orders of architecture. The general form is +circular, diminishing up to the summit, which supports +a single statue. Each story rests on twenty-four +columns, most of which are fluted, and all, together +with their capitals, remarkable for their delicacy +of finish. Among these are numerous statues of +saints, in whose costumes precious stones are introduced. +In that of the statue of Faith, which stands +in the centre of the lower story, are some of immense +value. This ornament was the work of Juan +de Arfe, the Cellini of Spain.</p> + +<p>But the pictures are the richest treasure of this +apartment. It is an epitome of the Cathedral, which +may be called a gallery—one of the richest that +exists—of the paintings of Spanish schools: consequently,<a name="page_360" id="page_360"></a> +according to the opinion of many—one +of the best of all galleries. The pictures are not in +great numbers, but they are well adapted to their +situation, being the largest in dimension, and among +the most prominent in value and merit, that have +been produced by their respective painters.</p> + +<p>By the greater portion of spectators, the Spanish +artists, of what may be called the golden age of +painting, will always be preferred to the Italian; +because their manner of treating their subject, +appeals rather to the passions than to the understanding. +It is the same quality which renders +the Venetian school more popular than the other +schools of Italy; and the Italian music more attractive +than the German—Rossini than Spohr or +Beethoven. I do not mean that the preference will +be the result of choice, in an individual who appreciates +the two styles perfectly; but that the difference +I allude to renders the works of the +greatest masters of Italy less easily understood.</p> + +<p>With all the intelligence and taste necessary for +the appreciation of a picture of Raffaelle, many +will have had a hundred opportunities of studying +such a picture, and will nevertheless have passed +it by, scarcely noticed; merely, because on the +first occasion of seeing it, they have not immediately +caught the idea of the artist, nor entered<a name="page_361" id="page_361"></a> +sufficiently into his feelings to trace the sparks of +his inspiration scattered over the canvass. How +many are there too careless to return to the +charge, and thus to acquire the cultivation necessary +to enable them to judge of such works, who +the moment a Murillo, or a Zurbaran meets their +view, will gaze on it with delight, for the simple +reason, that it is calculated to strike the intelligence +the least cultivated.</p> + +<p>The Spanish artists usually endeavoured to produce +an exact imitation of material nature; while +the Italians aimed at, and attained higher results. +The object of the Spaniards being less difficult of +attainment, the perfection with which they imitated +nature passes conception. To that they devoted +all the energies of their genius; while you may +search in vain in the best productions of Italy, +not excepting the school of Venice, the one that most +resembles the Spanish,—for anything approaching +their success in that respect. By way of an example, +in the Spasimo of Raffaelle, we trace the operations +of the mind, as they pierce through every +feature of every countenance, and the attitude of +every limb throughout the grouping of that great +master-piece of expression; from the brutal impatience +of the one, and the involuntary compassion +of the other executioner, up to the intensity of<a name="page_362" id="page_362"></a> +maternal suffering in the Virgin, and the indescribable +combination of heaven and earth, which +beams through the unequalled head of the Christ; +but there is no deception to the eye. No one +would mistake any of the figures for reality; nor +exclaim that it steps from the canvass; nor does +any one wish for such an effect, or perceive any +such deficiency.</p> + +<p>What, on the contrary, was the exclamation of +Murillo before Campana's Descent from the Cross? +This master-piece of Pedro de Campana is seen +at the head of the sacristy of the cathedral. It was +so favourite a picture with Murillo, that he used +to pass much of his time every day, seated before +it. On one occasion, his presence being required +on an affair of importance, which he had forgotten, +his friends found him at his usual post before the +Descent; when, pointing to the figure of the Christ, +he replied to their remonstrances, "I am only +waiting until they have taken him down."</p> + +<p>Although Murillo admired this perfect representation +of material nature, his own works are exceptions, +in fact almost the only exceptions, to this +peculiarity of the Spanish masters. He partakes, +indeed, of the qualities of both schools in an eminent +degree. In intellectual expression and delineation +of the operations of the mind, he is superior to<a name="page_363" id="page_363"></a> +all his countrymen, but inferior to the first Italian +painters. In the material imitation of nature, he +is superior to the greater number of the Italians, but +inferior to the other principal Spanish artists. There +is, at Madrid, a Christ on the Cross, of his, in which he +has attempted this effect—an effort he ought rather to +have despised. The picture contains no other object +than the figure, and the cross of admirably imitated +wood, on a simple black, or rather dark brown +background, representing complete darkness. After +sitting a short time before it, you certainly feel a +sort of uncomfortable sensation, caused by the +growing reality of the pale and tormented carcass; +but it is not to be compared to the Descent of +Campana. There the whole group is to the life, +and no darkness called in to aid the effect. The +drooping body is exposed to a powerful light, and +hangs its leaden weight on the arms of those who +support it, with a reality perfectly startling.</p> + +<p>This picture is placed in the centre of the upper +end of the sacristy, as being considered the best +of those therein contained: but it is not without +rivals. The few paintings placed here are first rate; +particularly the portraits of the two archbishops +of Seville, San Leandro, and San Isidore—two of +Murillo's most exquisite productions. Some of the +greatest compositions of this painter are contained<a name="page_364" id="page_364"></a> +in the chapels we have passed in review, where +they serve for altar-pieces, each filling an entire +side of a chapel. Of these large pictures, I think +the best on the side we are visiting is the Saint +Francis. The Saint is represented kneeling to a +vision of the Virgin. It may certainly be ranked +among Murillo's best efforts in the style he employed, +when treating these celestial subjects, and +which has been called his vaporous manner. To +speak correctly, two of his three manners are employed +in this picture, since the Saint is an instance +of that called his warm manner.</p> + +<p>On the opposite or north side of the cathedral, +in the first chapel after passing the door of the Sagrario, +is the San Antonio. This is probably the +greatest work of Murillo in the two styles just mentioned, +and certainly the most magnificent picture +contained in the cathedral. On the lower foreground +is the Saint, in adoration before the Christ, +who appears in the centre, surrounded by the Heavenly +Host.</p> + +<p>No one but Murillo could ever have thus embodied +his conception of a supernatural vision. On +sitting down before this canvass, from which, as it +extends across the whole chapel, no other object +can draw off the attention, you speedily yield to +the irresistible power of abstraction, and are lost<a name="page_365" id="page_365"></a> +in an ecstacy, nearly resembling that which the +artist has sought to represent in the countenance +and attitude of his Saint. The eye wanders in a +sort of trance through the glorious assemblage of +Heaven. The whole scene looks real: but it is only +on taking time to study the details that you discover +the prodigies of talent displayed in the drawing +and finishing of this picture. An angel, suspended +in front of the lower portion of the group, more especially +attracts the attention. One leg is extended +towards the spectator, the foreshortening of which +is a marvel of execution.</p> + +<p>Over the San Antonio, as it does not reach to +the ceiling, there is a smaller picture, representing +the Baptism of Christ, also by Murillo. In a chapel +at the south-west angle of the church, there are +several fine paintings by Luis de Vargas, one of +the founders of the school of Seville.</p> + +<p>In the choir, the collection of books for the +chanting services is worth seeing. Of these immense +folios, enclosed in massive covers, bound +with a profusion of wrought metal mostly silver—may +be counted upwards of a hundred. They are +filled with paintings, infinite in minuteness and +beauty. For the performances of the daily services +and all duties, ordinary and extraordinary, within +this edifice, more than eight hundred persons are<a name="page_366" id="page_366"></a> +employed. Five hundred masses are recited each +day at the different altars: all of which taking place +during the early part of the day, an idea may be +formed of the business which goes on. Of the six +or seven organs, I have heard three playing at the +same time in different parts of the church; but so +widely separated, as by no means to interfere +with each other's harmony. One of them was one +of the two great organs which face each other +over the choir. These two play a duet once a year, +on the day of the Corpus. The effect they produce +is not so powerful as that produced at Toledo, +but far more beautiful. At Toledo the two +which correspond to these, are assisted on that occasion +by a third, as powerful as both the others +united, placed over the portal of the south transept, +at an elevation of about seventy feet from the +ground.</p> + +<p>Among the ceremonies of the cathedral of Seville +is one sufficiently unique to be deserving of notice. +<i>El baile de los seis</i> (dance of the six), is performed +by eight youths—probably by six originally—every +evening during the feast of the Conception. +It takes place in front of the high-altar, on which +her statue is placed on that occasion. The service +is one of especial solemnity; and, as such, +accompanied, unfortunately as on all such occasions,<a name="page_367" id="page_367"></a> +by an orchestra of violins, to the exclusion +of the organs. The singing commences at four +o'clock in the afternoon, in the choir, and continues +until half-past six, when all move in procession +through the great railing, across the transept, +and ascend the flight of steps which lead +to the Capilla Mayor. Here they take their seats +according to rank, on benches placed in rows from +east to west, fronting a space which is left open +down the centre, in front of the altar. The orchestra +occupies a corner near the railing; and on +the two front benches are seated—four facing four—the +eight youths, dressed in the ancient Spanish +costume, all sky blue silk and white muslin, and +holding each his hat, also light blue, with a flowing +white feather.</p> + +<p>The chorus now recommences, but speedily drops; +when the orchestra sounds a beautiful air in the +waltz measure. This is played once by the instruments +alone, and joined the second time by the +voices of the eight boys, or youths of the age of sixteen +to eighteen; who, after having accompanied a +short time, start to their legs, and continue in the +same strain. At the next reprise they all, as if by +word of command, place their hats on their heads, +and one or two minutes after, the chant still continuing, +advance, and meet in the centre, then return<a name="page_368" id="page_368"></a> +each to his place; advance a second time, and turn +round each other, using the waltz step.</p> + +<p>After singing and dancing for about a quarter of +an hour, the voices are exchanged for the sounds of +castagnettes, which they have held all this time in +their hands, and the measure becomes more animated; +and thus they terminate the performance. The +same ceremony is repeated each night of the seven; +only varying the air of the waltz, of which they +have two.</p> + +<p>This ceremony, now belonging exclusively to the +cathedral of Seville, was originally performed in +some other cathedrals; but has been gradually laid +aside in all the others, having been found to occasion +irreverent behaviour among a portion of the +spectators. It was originally introduced among +the observances in honour of the anniversary of the +Conception, as a natural manifestation of joy; and +such a genuine Spanish bolero would have been: +but the slow time of the music, and the measured +movements, adopted for the purpose of suiting the +performance to the solemnity of the place, have +changed the nature of the dance, and deprived it +of everything approaching to cheerfulness.<a name="page_369" id="page_369"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_XX" id="LETTER_XX"></a>LETTER XX.</h3> + +<h5>SPANISH BEGGARS. HAIRDRESSING. THE GIRALDA. CASA DE +PILATOS. MONASTERIES. ITALICA.</h5> + +<p class="r">Seville.<br /> +</p> + +<p>Mendicity is one of the Curiosities—and not the +least picturesque one—of this antique country. +There should be a Mendicity Society for its preservation, +together with other legacies of the middle +ages. An entertaining book might be filled with +its annals and anecdotes.</p> + +<p>Nowhere, I should think, can beggary be a more +lucrative calling. The convents having been the +inexhaustible providence of these tribes, on their +suppression the well-born and bred Spaniards consider +the charge to have devolved upon them, +in the absence of all possible legislation on the +subject: and few, especially of the fair sex, turn a +deaf ear to the mute eloquence of the open hand. +Even a stranger, if possessed of an ear, resists with +difficulty the graceful appeal of the well trained<a name="page_370" id="page_370"></a> +proficient: <i>Noble caballero, un ochavito por Dios.</i>—A +blind girl made no request; but exclaimed—"Oh +that the Virgin of Carmen may preserve your +sight!"</p> + +<p>The mendicants are classified, and assume every +form of external humanity. Being in the coach-office +near the Plaza del Duque, a tall well-dressed +man, dangling a dark kid glove, entered, and, +walking up to the book-keeper, after having carefully +closed the door, made some communication to him +in a low voice. The other replied in a similar tone, +and they parted with mutual bows. I was puzzled +on the man's turning to me and observing that the +beggars were very annoying in Seville; but still +certain my conjecture could not but be erroneous, I +said "you don't mean to say that your acquaintance"—"Oh, +no acquaintance; I never saw him before: +he only came to beg."</p> + +<p>This species of <i>cavallero</i> pauper should by no +means be encouraged; he is not of the picturesque +sort. Nowhere do the wretches look their character +better than at Seville; as all admirers of Murillo +can testify, without consulting any other nature +than his canvass. But these consider they confer +a sort of obligation on the individual they condescend +to apply to. Nothing can exceed their +astonishment and indignation when refused. Their<a name="page_371" id="page_371"></a> +great highway is the superb polished mosaic marble +of the Cathedral; where they divide the authority +with the embroidered dignitaries of the choir. It +is useless to hope for an instant's leisure for the +contemplation of this unique temple, until you +have disposed of its entire population of ragged +despots.</p> + +<p>A sort of chivalrous etiquette is observed, in +virtue of which a female chorus is the first to form +your escort from pillar to pillar. These dismissed, +you are delivered over to the barefooted Murillos. +There are two modes of escape. The rich man +should go in with his two hands filled with coin, +and distribute to all, even to many who will return +for a second contribution before he has done. But +if economical, you may attain the same end, and +more permanently, by sacrificing four or five days +to walking up and down the nave, without looking +at anything, but simply undergoing the persecution +of the mob. After the fourth visit you will be left +in peace.</p> + +<p>These counsels I am competent to give you from +dreadful experience; more dreadful from my having +pursued a middle course. To one barefooted and +rotten-scalped embryo brigand I only gave a two-<i>quarto</i> +piece (halfpenny) about equal in real consequence +to twopence in England. If you have<a name="page_372" id="page_372"></a> +ever seen, in the era of mail coaches, the look of +quiet surprise on the countenance of the well-fed +charioteer, who, having, after the sixth or seventh +stage, opened the door, and muttered from behind +his <i>cache-nez</i> the usual "coachman, gen'lemen" +received a long-searched-for deprecatory sixpence +from some careful knight with a false shirt-collar—you +have noticed the self-same look, which was +leisurely transferred by the urchin from the piece of +copper in the open palm to my face, and back to +the piece of copper.</p> + +<p>Instead, however, of restoring it to me, his indignation +seemed to inspire him with a sudden resolution. +He rushed to a kneeling Señorita a few +paces distant, and interrupting her devotions by a +pull at the side of her mantilla, he showed the +coin in the open hand, while with the other he +pointed to the culprit. If he meditated revenge, +he should have made another choice, instead of +deranging a garment, from the folds of which a +real Andalucian mouth and pair of eyes, turning +full on me, aimed a smile which, I need not inform +you, was not dear at two <i>quartos</i>.</p> + +<p>Could such a smile have been natural, and the +expression of mere curiosity, or was it intended for +a death-wound, dealt for another's vengeance? and +did the velvet language of those eyes signify a<a name="page_373" id="page_373"></a> +horrible "Pallas te hoc vulnere," in favour of the +ragamuffin I had offended? At all events, the incident +lost him a more munificent remuneration, +by driving me from the spot, and expelling from +my head, a project previously formed, of inviting +him to my <i>fonda</i> to be sketched.</p> + +<p>With regard to the oft and still recurring subject +of Spanish beauty, you are hereby warned +against giving ear to what may be said by tourists, +who, by way of taking a new view of an old subject, +simply give the lie to their predecessors. It +is true, that in the central provinces, the genuine characteristic +Moro-Iberian beauty is rare, and that there +is little of any other sort to replace it; but this is +not the case with Andalucia, where you may arrive +fresh from the perusal of the warm effusions of the +most smitten of poets, and find the Houris of real +flesh and blood, by no means overrated.</p> + +<p>One of their peculiar perfections extends to all +parts of the Peninsula. This is the hair; everywhere +your eye lights upon some passing specimen +of these unrivalled masses of braided jet; at which +not unfrequently natives of the same sex turn +with an exclamation—Que pelo tan hermoso!</p> + +<p>I surprised the other day a village matron, whose +toilette, it being a holiday afternoon, was in progress +in no more secluded a <i>tocador</i> than the middle of<a name="page_374" id="page_374"></a> +the road. The rustic lady's-maid (whether the +practice be more or less fashionable I know not) +had placed on a stool, within reach of her right +hand as she stood behind her seated mistress, a jug of +fresh water. This did she lift, just as I approached, +up to her mouth, into which she received +as large a portion of its contents as could be +there accommodated; while with her left hand +she grasped the extremity of a mass of silken hair, +black as the raven's wing, and an ell in length. +Both hands now, stroking down the mass, spread +it out so as to present a horizontal surface of as +large an extent as possible, when, suddenly, from +the inflated cheeks of the abigail, re-issued with a +loud sound the now tepid liquid, and bathed the +entire surface, which it seemed to render, if possible, +still more glossy than before. The rest of the duty +of the hands appeared to consist in repeatedly +separating and replacing the handfuls, until the +same proceeding was reacted.</p> + +<p>The entrance to the Giralda is outside the +cathedral. Before we make the ascent, we will walk +to the extremity of the Moorish enclosure of the +orange-court, along the raised pavement which +surrounds the whole. At the angle there is an +antique shaft of granite, higher than the rest of +those placed at equal distances along the edge of<a name="page_375" id="page_375"></a> +the pavement. From that point the proportions +of the tower are seen to advantage, while you are at +the same time sufficiently near to observe the details +of the carving, and of the windows, with their +delicately formed columns of rare marbles; and +to lose in a great measure the effect of the subsequent +additions, which surmount and disfigure the +work of Geber.</p> + +<p>The Arabian part of the building is a square +of about forty-five feet, and measures in elevation +four times its width. The ornaments are not +exactly alike on all the four sides. On the north +side (our present view) the tracery commences at a +height of eighty feet, up to which point the wall +of brick is perfectly plain and smooth, with only +the interruption of two windows, placed one above +the other in the centre. The ornament, from its +commencement to the summit, is divided into two +lofty stories, surmounted by a third, of half the +height of one of the others. The two first are +divided vertically into three parts by narrow +stripes of the plain wall. The centre portions +contain two windows in each story, one over the +other, making, with the two in the lower portion, +six altogether, which are at equal distances from +each other. The form of these windows is varied, +and in all uncommonly elegant; some are double,<a name="page_376" id="page_376"></a> +with a marble column supporting their two arches, +and all are ornamented round the arches with beautiful +tracery, and furnished with marble balconies. +At one of the balconies, the Muezzin, in Mahometan +times was accustomed to present himself at each of +the hours appointed for prayer, and to pronounce +the sentences ordained by that religion for calling +the people. The half-story at the summit is ornamented +with a row of arches, supported by pilasters.</p> + +<p>On the top of the tower were seen originally, four +gilded balls of different sizes, one over the other, +diminishing upwards; the iron bar on which they +were fixed, was struck by lightning, and gave way, +leaving the balls to roll over; since which period +they were never restored to their place.</p> + +<p>The additional buildings were not erected until +the seventeenth century. They are not in themselves +inelegant, with the exception of the portion +immediately rising from the old tower, and containing +the bells. This portion is of the same +width as the tower, and appears to weigh it down +with its heavy effect; on the summit of the whole, +at about three hundred feet from the ground, is a +colossal statue of bronze, representing Faith, holding +in one hand a shield, and in the other an olive-branch. +By means of the shield, the statue obeys +the movements of the wind, and thus gives the +name of Giralda (weather-cock) to the tower.<a name="page_377" id="page_377"></a></p> + +<p>An interior tower, rather more than twenty feet +square, runs up the whole height of the Moorish +portion of the building; between which and the external +walls an easy ascent is contrived on an inclined +plane. The necessity of introducing light +throughout the ascent accounts for the different +elevation of the windows and ornaments of the different +sides; but the architect has so managed this +difficulty, that no bad effect is produced in the external +view. At the lower part of the tower the +ascent is sufficiently wide to admit of the passage of +two men on horseback abreast; but it becomes narrower +as it approaches the summit. Queen Christina +is said to have been drawn up in a small carriage. +The walls, both of the inner and outer tower, increase +in thickness as they rise, and as the ascending +plane decreases in width: a plan which appears opposed +to the principle usually adopted by modern +architects.</p> + +<p>It is known that Geber was the architect of the +Giralda, but no certainty exists respecting its date. +The Spanish antiquarian Don Rodrigo Caro supposes +it to have been erected during the reign of Benabet +Almucamus, King of Seville, shortly before the appearance +in Spain of the Almoravides; but this is no +more than a conjecture, founded on the supposed +wealth of that King, who possessed larger states<a name="page_378" id="page_378"></a> +than his successors, and who paid no tribute to the +sovereigns of Castile.</p> + +<p>Immediately over the highest story of the Moorish +tower is the belfry. The bells are suspended on the +centre of revolving beams, which traverse the open +arches of the four faces of the tower. They are +consequently in full view, as they throw their somersets +and send forth their lively clatter on a <i>dia de +fiesta</i>.</p> + +<p>Their effect is very original, and as unlike as possible +to the monotonous and melancholy cadence +of an English peal. None of them are deep-toned +nor solemn, but all high and sharp: so that being +let loose in merry disorder, and without tune, they +somehow appear to harmonize with the brilliant skies, +just as the descending ding-dong in England suits +the gloom of the northern heavens. Leave Seville, +and never shall their tones steal on your memory +without your being transported into a blaze of bright +sunshine.</p> + +<p>In Spain the houses of the grandees are not +called palaces, as those of the same rank in Italy are +usually termed. There is not even an intermediate +term, such as mansion,—still less the hall—abbey, or +castle. They have the last, but only applied in cases +in which it is correctly and legitimately applicable. +The Arab expression <i>alcazar</i>, composed of the article<a name="page_379" id="page_379"></a> +<i>al</i> and <i>cazar</i>, is so like the Spanish <i>la casa</i> (the house), +that, not having at hand a professor of Arabic to +consult, I will risk the assertion that it bore the +same meaning; notwithstanding the opinion of +several French writers who translate it <i>château</i>. +Chenier, author of the history of Morocco, derives +it from the word Caissar, which he considers synonymous +with Cæsar: but this derivation appears to +admit of much doubt, as the word would signify +the Emperor, instead of his residence. Supposing +it to signify the house, it must no doubt have meant +the principal, or royal house. At present the two +words are admitted into the Spanish language as one, +which is applied indiscriminately to royal town-residences, +whether castles or not, as well as the term +<i>palacio</i>. But a private residence of whatever extent +is modestly termed a house.</p> + +<p>In this instance, as in many others, the proud contempt +of high-sounding phraseology is common to +Spain and England, where some of the most palace-like +habitations are called Wentworth House, Hatfield +House, Burleigh House: the very porters' lodges +being sometimes such edifices as would claim the +title of <i>château</i> in some other countries. But this +same haughty modesty is rather individual than collective, +and does not prevail as applied to towns and +cities. In public acts and addresses, and even in the<a name="page_380" id="page_380"></a> +most homely precautionary warnings placarded at +the corners of streets or promenades, the form used +is,—"The constitutional Alcalde of this heroic and +very invincible town of Madrid, or Seville, forbids, or +orders, &c.;" and still more splendid epithets are +found for the nation in general.</p> + +<p>I don't know whether it has occurred to you that +this progressive dereliction of consistency is universal +in human nature, although it assumes a variety of +forms. In the present instance modesty commences +at home, as they say charity should.</p> + +<p>By the way, if charity should commence at home, +together with the other affections of the heart, such +as patriotism, then did the first Brutus make a mistake. +If, on the contrary, his merit was great in +sacrificing his son to his nation, it follows, that, in +causing his entire nation to be butchered the first +time they were guilty of any encroachment on the +rights of the rest of the world, his glory would have +increased in the ratio of one to some millions.</p> + +<p>He either acted on a principle of justice, or preferred +the applause of his compatriots to the affection +of his son. If, therefore, an opportunity was ever +afforded him of doing the world the above-mentioned +act of justice at the expense of his countrymen, +and he abstained from it,—it being impossible to +suppose a Roman republican capable of a dereliction<a name="page_381" id="page_381"></a> +of principle—it is clear that he preferred the applause +of his nation to that of the rest of the world; and all +becomes a question of taste. But what, you exclaim, +has the first or any other Brutus to do with Pilate's +house, the description of which is preceded by this +long introduction? And was not his murder of his +son benevolence itself, compared to the infliction of +these digressions on your patience?</p> + +<p>The Casa de Palatos is a palace belonging to the +Duke of Medina Cœli. One of his ancestors is said +to have built it in exact imitation of Pontius Pilate's +palace in Jerusalem, and to have obtained possession +of a large quantity of the ornaments and portable +furniture belonging to the ancient building, which, +on the completion of his edifice at Seville, he established, +each object in the place corresponding to that +which it originally occupied.</p> + +<p>A lofty wall, filling the side of the small square, +called the Plaza de Pilatos, and surmounted by a +balustrade, forms the outer enclosure of the palace. +You enter through a large plain arched doorway, +and pass through a court, containing the porter's +house, and other out-buildings devoid of ornament. +A small door on the left leads from this enclosure +to the principal court. Here you might imagine +yourself still in the Alcazar. The ornament is in +the same style; only the arcades are inferior in lightness<a name="page_382" id="page_382"></a> +and beauty. It contains, however, a fountain +very superior to that of the principal court of the +Alcazar.</p> + +<p>At the four angles are colossal statues of white +marble, representing deities of the Grecian mythology. +They are antique, and of Roman origin. +Under the arcades a series of busts of the Roman +emperors, are placed round the walls; the greater +part of them are also antique. On one side of this +court is the chapel, very small, and entirely covered +with Arabesque ornament. At one side is placed +erect against the wall a black cross, said to be a facsimile +imitation of that actually carried by our Saviour, +which occupied a similar situation in the palace +at Jerusalem. Its length is about seven feet, +and the thickness of the wood about four inches +by two. Opposite to the cross is a Madonna by Raffaelle. +As no light enters the chapel, excepting +through a small door, and that placed under the arcades, +and the picture is hung at a considerable +height, it can only be examined by the aid of a ladder, +which is kept near it, and then only very imperfectly. +At the time the chapel was habitually used, +it probably contained candles always burning.</p> + +<p>The great staircase is very ornamental and leads +to several handsome suites of rooms. There is a +colonnade on one side of the garden, under which<a name="page_383" id="page_383"></a> +lies a valuable collection of antique busts, columns, +capitals, and fragments of all sorts, "in most admired +disorder." The proprietor never visits this residence, +and every part of it is in a very neglected state.</p> + +<p>Seville lays claim to no less a founder than Hercules. +A magnificent temple dedicated to him is +said to have existed on the spot at present occupied +by the parish church of San Nicholas. Near +it a statue of the demigod has been discovered, together +with six columns, four of which are sunk +so deeply in the earth that they cannot be brought +to light. The other two are placed on lofty pedestals, +and adorn the largest of the promenades of +Seville, that called the Alameda. One of them is +surmounted by the statue mentioned above, and the +other by one of Julius Cæsar. Venus is also stated +to have shared with Hercules the devotions of the +Sevillanos. The existence of her worship in ancient +times is placed beyond a doubt by the well authenticated +martyrdom of Saints Justa and Rufina, condemned +for refusing to do honour to the rites of +that goddess, and to figure in her processions.</p> + +<p>These two martyrs to the Christian faith have +pursued, on various subsequent occasions, a conduct +calculated to afford a degree of advantage to an adversary, +should he presume to accuse them of renegade +propensities. They have manifested themselves<a name="page_384" id="page_384"></a> +determined protectors of the Arab tower, on +every occasion of its being threatened with danger. +Numerous instances are on record; the most remarkable +of which, is one that has given rise to much +controversy, and employed in more recent times the +researches of learned men. The tradition states, +that, during an earthquake, which took place in the +year 1504, and of which a vivid description may be +found at the end of a book, called the Regla Vieja, +which exists in the archives of the cathedral—the +two virgins were seen to support the tower and +prevent it from falling, surrounding it with their +arms, one on each side. It is also related that, on the +occasion of a previous earthquake, that of the year +1396, voices were heard in the air, articulated by +demons, crying, "Throw it down, throw it down;" +and that others replied, "No, we cannot, for those +villanous saints, Justa and Rufina, are guarding it." +For these reasons it is usual, in paintings representing +the Giralda, to place the figures of the two +virgin Saints supporting it, one on either side; and +a small model thus supported by images of the two +martyrs, executed in wood, is carried in the principal +religious processions. In all these representations, +the figures stand rather taller than the tower.</p> + +<p>The hospital of La Caridad is one of the principal +attractions to strangers at Seville; for in its chapel<a name="page_385" id="page_385"></a> +is contained the picture, which passes for the master-piece +of Murillo. The chapel is narrow and +lofty, and the picture placed as near as possible to +the ceiling. A sight of it can only be obtained at +an angle of about twenty degrees. But the aching +of the neck is unheeded during the examination of +this superb picture. It is called Las Aguas, the +Waters. Moses has just struck the rock, and stands +in a simple and dignified attitude. In the complete +contentment of his countenance there may be traced +a mingled expression of pity and gratitude, as he +looks on the scene which follows his action. The +artist has given proof of consummate talent in the +choice and treatment of his subject; which afforded +him a variety of grouping, of expression, and of attitude, +of which few were capable of taking better advantage.</p> + +<p>This picture is a specimen of his natural style, and +its success is considered, and I think justly, superior +to that of any other of his works. The imitation of +material nature is here carried to as great perfection +as in many of his paintings; while at the same time +nothing can surpass the poetry of the composition, +nor the exquisitely harmonious grouping of the men +and animals. In this last quality, Murillo is certainly +unequalled. He seems also in this instance, +to have reached the utmost limits of art in the expression<a name="page_386" id="page_386"></a> +of the countenances, throughout the different +groups, whether employed in offering silent +thanksgivings, or entirely absorbed in the eager effort +to obtain for their parched lips a draught of the +bright liquid. In the feeling displayed in these +instances, and so well represented, there is, it is true, +nothing elevated, but still it is feeling; and its materiality +is amply made amends for, by the chief +personage of the scene, in whose countenance nothing +but the sublime can be traced.</p> + +<p>Had Murillo not painted this picture and the +Saint Elizabeth of Hungary, Spanish art must have +contented itself with the second rank, and Raphael +would have continued without a rival. These pictures +occasion regret that such genius should have +employed itself during a long period, on works +of a different sort. The San Antonio and a few +others, were no doubt productions worthy of the painter +of the Aguas, and a hundred or two others are +magnificent paintings; but the time employed on +some of these, and on a still greater number of less +prominent merit, would have been more profitably +devoted to the production of two or three which +might have ranked with these giant creations of +his talent.</p> + +<p>In viewing either of these compositions, the other +speedily becomes present to the imagination, and<a name="page_387" id="page_387"></a> +forces you to draw a comparison between them. +They have a sort of affinity in their subject as well +as in their style. The sufferers of the St. Elizabeth, +occupied with their torments and their gratitude, +answer to those of the Aguas, engrossed also +with almost parallel feelings. The Moses, tranquil +and erect in the midst of the action which surrounds +him, is the exact pendant of the majestic figure and +compassionate countenance of the youthful princess, +exercising her saintly charities. These pictures +ought to be companions in the same gallery, were +it possible for two such works to find their way +into one and the same apartment. But that would +be a consummation as hopeless as finding St. Peter's +and the Duomo of Milan in the same town; Naples +and Seville in one province, a London and a Paris +in one country, an Ariosto and a Byron in the same +language. It has more than once occurred to me, +since I have seen these two pictures, that were +Raphael's Spasimo and Transfiguration placed on +one side of a room, and these two on the other, +and the choice offered me which pair I would possess, +I should never be able to come to a decision.</p> + +<p>Another large picture by Murillo, the multiplying +of the Loaves in the Desert, is suspended opposite +the Aguas, and at the same elevation. On attempting +to examine it, you are forcibly reminded by certain<a name="page_388" id="page_388"></a> +acute sensations in the region of the neck, of +the unnatural position it has so long maintained, +and you leave this picture, together with two others, +placed near the entrance of the chapel, for a subsequent +visit.</p> + +<p>In the church of the Faubourg Triana, on the +right hand after passing the bridge, are some excellent +pictures, particularly a Conception by Murillo. +The multitude of paintings left by this artist is incredible, +when to all those scattered through Spain, +France, and England, are added those preserved in +this his native town. Almost all the good houses in +Seville contain collections of pictures; and all the collections +have their Murillos. There are no fewer than +sixteen in the gallery of the Canon, Don Manuel Cepero; +but this is the largest of the private collections, +and the best, as it ought to be, since it is contained in +Murillo's house. It is the residence occupied by him +during the latter part of his life, and in which he +died. Its dimensions and distribution are handsome. +At the back of it there is a garden of limited extent, +but in which not an inch of space is thrown away. +Where there remains no room for choice flowers +and orange trees, the walls are painted to prolong +the illusion. The Canon possesses also several good +paintings by Italian masters. I counted likewise +four Rembrandts, and two of Rubens. Among the<a name="page_389" id="page_389"></a> +other private collections, that of the Alcalde Don +Pedro Garcia is one of the richest; it contains a +Santa Barbara of Cano, an exquisite picture. A Saint +Joseph by Murillo, in the collection of the French +Consul (a native of Seville) is admirable.</p> + +<p>In most of the churches there is sufficient of this +sort of attraction to make them worth a visit. +In the convents nothing is left; in fact they no +longer exist as convents. There may be one or +two remaining in Seville, but I did not hear of +them. The monastery of Jeronimites, and the +Chartreuse—both situated in the environs—were +the most considerable religious establishments of +Seville. They are converted, one into a school, and +the other into a porcelain manufactory. This last, +the Chartreuse, contains in its church and refectory, +plentiful traces of its former magnificence. An +Englishman has purchased the monastery with +three or four acres of ground, containing the immediate +dependencies; and he is occupied with +the labours which necessarily precede its appearance +in its new character, replacing the butteries, +kitchens, storehouses, and cells, by rows of pudding-shaped +baking-houses.</p> + +<p>He has, however, spared the chapel, which is to +continue in its former state. All the stalls, the +altar, and other immoveable furniture, remain as<a name="page_390" id="page_390"></a> +he found them. The pictures and statues had of +course been previously removed. The woodwork +is inimitable—the best I have seen in Spain; it would +be impossible in painting to represent with more +delicacy, the very texture of the drapery, the very +veins of the hands, and hair of the beards—of figures +of a quarter the natural dimensions. You are +filled with astonishment, that the infinite patience +necessary for this mechanical labour should have +accompanied the genius which conceived and executed +the incomparable figures and heads. The +refectory, of which the ceiling is the principal +ornament, is to be the great show-room for the +display of the china. The fortunate manufacturer +inhabits, with his family, the prior's residence—one +of the most elegant habitations in the world: surrounding +a court, which contains of course its +white marble fountain and colonnades: and he is +in treaty for the purchase of the orange-grove, the +park of the monastery. This pleasure-ground is +ornamented here and there with Kiosks, from which +are obtained views of Seville, and the intervening +Guadalquivir.</p> + +<p>On the confiscation of this monastery, several +magnificent pictures disappeared, a few of which +have since been placed in the cathedral. Two +alabaster monuments, belonging to the family of<a name="page_391" id="page_391"></a> +Medina Cæli, were also removed; they are placed +in a church at present under repair. They are +erect, and fit into the wall; measuring about forty +feet in height. Their upper portion is adorned with +several well-executed small statues.</p> + +<p>The other convent—that dedicated to S. Geronimo, +is situated on the opposite side of the river, about +a mile higher up. It is not so beautiful as the +Cartuja, but on a grander scale. The principal court +is magnificent; it is surrounded with upper and +lower arcades, respectively of the Ionic and Doric +orders: the apartments and church are of corresponding +extent; but have either been deprived of +their ornaments, or were originally but sparingly +decorated. A ci-devant governor of Seville—a +general officer, very distinguished as a linguist, has +turned schoolmaster, and taken up his abode here. +The day of my visit happened to be the general's +birthday, and a scene of much festivity presented +itself. The schoolmaster's successor in his former +post at Seville, had arrived, attended by the band +of a cavalry regiment; and the great court having +been converted into a ball-room, the marble arcades +were made to ring with the thrilling cadences of +the hautbois and clarionette—by way of a fitting +afterpiece to the tragic chants of former days.</p> + +<p>The relatives and friends of the students were<a name="page_392" id="page_392"></a> +present, so that the youthful dancers were well-provided +with partners. The performances were +French quadrilles, English hornpipes, German +waltzes, Russian mazurkas, and Spanish fandangos. +I had arrived too late for the first part of the entertainment, +which consisted of a bull-fight, for +which a temporary arena had been enclosed. The +bulls were what are called <i>novillos</i>—that is, scarcely +more than calves; as the full-grown animals would +have been more than a match for their juvenile +antagonists.</p> + +<p>The ruins of the Roman city of Italica, to which +I have already alluded, are situated four miles from +Seville in ascending the river—and on the opposite +bank. The whole town is underground, with the +exception of a few houses in the part in which +excavations have been made, and of the amphitheatre +which occupies an eminence. No notice was taken +in modern times of the existence of this buried town, +until towards the end of the last century, when the remains +of the amphitheatre, the only portion of the ruins +which were visible, drew the attention of travellers: +and the authorities of Seville received orders to commence +excavating. The search yielded a large quantity +of valuable remains; a temple was discovered, +in the neighbourhood of which were found several +statues and capitals of columns. A choice was made<a name="page_393" id="page_393"></a> +of the objects in the best state of preservation, +which were forwarded to Madrid in order to form +a museum. Large quantities of coins were also +sent, and collections of household utensils, and +ornaments. The Arabs, who did not consider these +Roman relics worthy objects of antiquarian research, +nevertheless had either discovered and laid +open a large portion of the town, or were themselves +its destroyers. From it they extracted the +large quantities of marble columns and slabs with +which Seville is filled. The mutilated statues, +together with several funereal monuments, found in +later times, and not considered deserving of the +journey to Madrid, have been deposited in a large +room in the Alcazar of Seville, where they are now +exhibited.</p> + +<p>No record exists of the foundation of Italica. +Its annals are traced to the time of Scipio Africanus, +who, on the completion of his conquest of Spain, +and the final expulsion of the Carthaginians, finding +himself embarrassed by the number of wounded +and sick among his troops, established them in +this town under the protection of a garrison. He +gave to the town its name of Italica,<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> its previous<a name="page_394" id="page_394"></a> +name being Sancius: the real situation of Italica +has been the subject of much controversy. Like +the Grecian cities, which claimed each to be the +birthplace of Homer, several of the towns in the +neighbourhood of Seville are candidates for the honour +of being representatives of the ancient Italica; +but ample proof exists of the identity of these +ruins with that city.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> The Historia general, written +by Alonso el Sabio, book 1., chap, <span class="smcap">XV.</span>, speaks of +Italica as a place of much importance in ancient +times, in allusion to the invasion of a people called +the Almunizes. He adds, in the antiquated Spanish +of his time, "Las nuevas fueron por todas las +tierras de como aquellas gentes avian ganado a +España, e todos los de las islas quel oyeron crecieron +les corazones por fazer otro tal, e ayuntaron muy +grandes navios, e vinieronse para España, e entraron<a name="page_395" id="page_395"></a> +por cuatro partes. Los que entraron por Cadiz +vinieron Guadalquibir arriba, e llegaron a Italica +e los de la villa salieron e lidiaron con ellos, e los +de fuera entraron con ellos de vuelta por medio +de la villa, e mataron los a todos, e ganaron la +villa." It is not clear what invasion is here alluded +to.</p> + +<p>The town of Italica was one of the six or seven +in these provinces which possessed the title of +<i>municipia</i>; a superior one to that of <i>colonia</i>, from +its involving the privilege of retaining its ancient +laws and customs, while on the colonies those of +Rome were imposed. It was among the cities +which sheltered some of the earliest converts to +Christianity. Its first bishop was the martyr Saint +Geruncio, put to death in prison. The prison, +being considered sanctified, from its containing the +saint's remains, became subsequently the resort of +pious votaries from all parts of the province. In +the Mozarabic ritual there is a hymn for the day +of this saint, one of the stanzas of which fixes +the epoque of his life and martyrdom, at that of +the apostles.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a><a name="page_396" id="page_396"></a></p> + +<p>The centurion Cornelius, mentioned in the Acts +of the Apostles, as converted by the preaching of +St. Peter, was, it is said, a native of this city, and +commanded a cohort raised in his native place.</p> + +<p>The date of the destruction of Italica, is as uncertain +as that of its origin. The fact of its existence +during almost the entire period of the Gothic +dominion, is established, by the presence of its +bishops being recorded at the different councils. +It is conjectured that its destruction was the work +of the Arabs, who were no sooner in possession of +Seville, than they considered it imprudent to allow +so large a town to be in the hands of enemies in +their immediate neighbourhood. This supposition +of Spanish antiquaries seems hazarded without sufficient +reflection; since, in the first place, had the +occupants of Italica occasioned the Arabs any uneasiness, +nothing was easier than to occupy the +place themselves; and secondly, the ruins bear +strong symptoms of having been reduced to their +present state by some convulsion of nature, rather +than by human agency: not to mention the coins +discovered in large quantities, which would not +have been neglected by human destroyers. It is +not likely that the destruction of so considerable +a place by the conquerors of the province, at the +time they were too few to defend it, would have<a name="page_397" id="page_397"></a> +been overlooked by their historians—who make no +allusion to the event.</p> + +<p>The present appearance is that of a green undulating +hill, which no one would imagine to be +composed of the remains of streets, palaces, temples, +and market-places. The upper portion only of the +amphitheatre remains above-ground. Its form is +slightly oval, nearly approaching to a circle. The +greatest diameter is three hundred and twenty-five +feet. It has twenty rows of seats, half of which +are buried; each seat is two feet and a half in +depth, and two in height. Part of the Podium +remains; and enough of the entrance, to distinguish +that it consisted of three large arches. It +was constructed with Roman solidity. Nothing less +than an earthquake could have toppled over the +masses of masonry, which appear in their confusion +like solid rocks. A very small portion of the ruins +has been explored: and part of that, for want of +being sufficiently cleared out, is again buried in +earth, and the work is discontinued. The objects +now above-ground, consist of five or six tessalated +floors, two of which have been considered of sufficient +value to be walled in, and locked up, but without +being roofed.</p> + +<p>These ruins are well worth a visit, although the +road to them from Seville, bears terrible symptoms<a name="page_398" id="page_398"></a> +of having been constructed before Macadam's day; +perhaps even before that of the Scipios.</p> + +<p>At the distance of a few hundred yards from +the nearest portion of the ruined town is situated +the village of Santi-ponce, in which is the convent of +S. Isidoro, of the order of St. Jerome. The church +contains the tombs of Don Alonzo Perez de Guzman, +surnamed the Good, and of his wife Doña Maria +Alonzo Coronel, founders of the ducal house of +Medina Sidonia. This family obtained from Ferdinand +the Fourth, a grant of Santi-ponce and old +Seville (Italica), with the district, and temporal and +spiritual jurisdiction. Don Sancho had already rewarded +the services and tried fidelity of Perez de +Guzman by presenting him with the town of Medina +Sidonia. An anecdote is told of him worthy +of a Roman republican. Being governor of Tarifa +under Sancho the Fourth, he had to defend +the town against the Infant, Don Juan, who had +revolted against his brother. This prince, learning +that a child of Guzman was in his power, being at +nurse in the environs of the town, sent for it; and, +presenting himself before the walls, declared to the +governor that he would kill the child, if the town +were not immediately surrendered. Guzman replied +by drawing his sword, and throwing it down to the +prince, who had the barbarity to order the infant +to be murdered before his father's eyes.<a name="page_399" id="page_399"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_XXI" id="LETTER_XXI"></a>LETTER XXI.</h3> + +<h5>PRIVATE HOUSES, AND LOCAL CUSTOMS IN SEVILLE.</h5> + +<p class="r">Seville.<br /> +</p> + +<p>The greater number of private houses are situated +in an interminable labyrinth of winding streets, +between the Calle de la Sierpe, and Plaza de San +Francisco and the city wall, which connects the +Aqueduct of Carmona with the Alcazar. It is the +South-eastern half of the city. To the west of the +Calle de la Sierpe there are also a few streets +containing private residences, but they are not in +so large a proportion. Some of the most elegant +are, however, on this side; which being less Moorish +and more modern, is less chary of its attractions, +and allows a part of its decoration to enliven the +external façades; while its spacious doorways frequently +open to the view of the passer-by a gay +perspective of gardens and courts.</p> + +<p>The sunny balcony, crowded with a crimson forest +of cactuses, is not more attractive to the sight,<a name="page_400" id="page_400"></a> +than the more mysterious vista beneath it, of retreating +colonnades, mingled with orange and pomegranate +trees, through which the murmur of the +fountain is scarcely audible. Few cities present +more charms to the wanderer than one in which the +houses offer a combination so luxurious as is met +with in the greater number of those of Seville. +The cool summer rooms opening into the court, in +which the drawing-room furniture is arranged on all +sides of a fountain, plentifully supplied from the +aqueduct of Carmona: and, on the upper floor, the +winter apartments, chosen from their being better +lighted, for the deposit of a collection of pictures +and these almost always excellent,—and opening to +the gallery; to which, during this season, the furniture +having been removed from below, is placed, together +with the work frames and portable musical instruments, +on the side exposed to the sun. One sees +these houses and their amiable and happy-looking +inhabitants, and imagines there is no life to be compared +to it. Yet the experiment may be made, and +fail to answer the expectations of the stranger, who, +confident in his discovery of the road to happiness, +may have pitched his tent in the midst of these bewitching +regions.</p> + +<p>Can it be fatality—or is it essential in human +nature, to find ever the least felicity there, where it<a name="page_401" id="page_401"></a> +looks for the greatest? The experiment, I say, was +made. An Englishman, possessing every advantage +of taste, talent, and wealth, took up his residence +here, resolved to devote the remainder of his days to +the peaceable enjoyments of a literary and social +life. Thanks to his literary propensities, we are +enabled to judge of the result of the trial. In a +book published by the person to whom I allude, we +find that no one could be less satisfied with his lot. +Seville and the Sevillanos meet with no mercy at his +hands, and must, if we may judge by his dislike of +them, have rendered his life a burden.</p> + +<p>This, however, is a single example, and insufficient +to deter others from the attempt. It may be that +this individual had not entered fully into the spirit +of Andalucian existence. Every detail of life being +here adapted to the place and its customs and +climate, no custom can be erred against with impunity—that +is, without the forfeit of some corresponding +advantage.</p> + +<p>Seville presents two so different aspects during the +two opposite seasons of the year, that to be well +understood it should be visited at both. During the +winter, the existence does not materially differ from +that of the inhabitants of most other European +towns; excepting that the intercourse of society is +subjected to less formality. Cards of invitation are<a name="page_402" id="page_402"></a> +rarely made use of; and you are not, consequently, +exposed to the annoyance of seeing and hearing your +house invaded by a dense crowd, on a night you have +appointed a month before, without any possibility of +foreseeing whether you would be disposed or not on +that particular night to undergo such a toil. +These crowds are, I believe, unheard of in Seville; +but those who are pleased in each other's society, +know where to find each other; and without waiting +for invitations, small circles are formed every evening, +from which all crushing, fatigue, and intense +dressing are excluded.</p> + +<p>The winter is also a more advantageous season for +the stranger, who would be totally debarred by the +summer heats from the activity necessary for the +satisfaction of his curiosity, in visiting the objects of +interest contained in and around Seville. On the +other hand, the summer season offers to his contemplation +the successful attainment of a mode of existence +suited to the burning climate; a problem +found to be solved but in few instances. The first +and most essential arrangement appears to be the +turning night into day, and <i>vice versâ</i>, as far as +regards society and all locomotion. No one leaves +his house until long after sunset, and visiting commences +some hours later. The morning being consequently +the time for repose, and the breakfast hour<a name="page_403" id="page_403"></a> +nevertheless remaining the same all the year round, +the <i>siesta</i> is very essential, and is judiciously placed +between the dinner, which terminates at four, and +the hour for movement—nine, when the Sevillano, +refreshed by three or four hours sleep, and a fresh +toilette, is infinitely better disposed for the evening's +amusements than the denizen of more northern +climes, who rises at that or a later hour from the +chief repast of the day, and is put <i>en train</i> by the less +natural and less durable stimulants of the table.</p> + +<p>This mode of life presents other numerous advantages. +A very prominent one is the inviolable +division of time between society and solitude. We +suppose the hour for rising eight,—immediately after +the chocolate,—that of breakfast eleven. The intervening +hours are solitary, and are frequently divided +between the pillow and the toilette; while they +are sometimes devoted to more useful occupations, +and added to by earlier risers. From the family +meeting at breakfast until the dinner hour, three, +the time may be employed in business, reading, +in fact, in every one's habitual pursuits. No intrusion +is to be feared. No accursed idler lounges in to +interrupt with his compliments, or gossip, your letter +to your lawyer, or, if you are a lawyer yourself, that +to your client; nor is the conscience of scrupulous +porters burdened with the mendacious "not at home."<a name="page_404" id="page_404"></a></p> + +<p>These hours are sacred, and guaranteed by the +very air, which renders the streets impassable, but +leaves the cool court protected from the sun's ray +by the <i>toldo</i>, (canvas awning spread at a level with +the roof, and which is reefed up at night like a sail,) +and refreshed by its ever-murmuring fountain and +cool marble pavement, to the peaceable enjoyment of +its owners. The female portion of the family are +thus enabled to devote themselves to household +occupations, or to their favourite employments, without +having to undergo, until the second getting +up in the evening, the fever of a complete toilette, +which would, during the day, be insupportable. +The time thus devoted to society, is amply sufficient; +as it may be prolonged, as each party feels inclined, +from an hour or two after sunset, until the +returning rays drive all back to their cool retreat.</p> + +<p>The night of the festival of St. John is, in Seville, +sacred, from remote time, to amusement and festivity. +During the five or six hours of darkness +accorded by the Midsummer sun, the banks of the +Guadalquivir echo the gay melodious laugh, which +enlivens the animated buzz of the crowd; and the +morning ray gilds the upper windows of the +deserted houses before their doors are opened to the +supper-craving population. The rite practised on +this occasion is marked by a simplicity altogether<a name="page_405" id="page_405"></a> +antique. The youth of Seville, that is the masculine +portion, have provided themselves with small +boxes, containing a sort of sugar-plum of exquisite +flavour. One of these is held between the finger +and thumb of the <i>cavallero</i>, from the moment he sets +foot on the promenade. On the approach of a party +of ladies he endeavours to distinguish, as far off as +the gloom permits, the features or dress of an already +selected object of preference; or, if still free to +make a selection, some countenance possessed of +sufficient attraction to determine his choice. On +discovering the owner of either of these requisites, he +watches a favourable opportunity, and approaching +the lady, offers the bonbon.</p> + +<p>The <i>señorita</i>—of course unmarried—thus selected, +is obliged to accept the compliment if properly +offered, as well as the arm of the <i>cavallero</i> during +the rest of the night; and, on arriving at her house, +he receives from her parents, or chaperon, as the +case may be, an invitation to supper. Should the +lady be desirous of avoiding the compliment, of +the approach of which she is usually aware, she +must exercise her ingenuity in putting obstacles +in the way of the attempt. In this effort many are +successful, since the peculiar mode of proceeding, +obligatory on those who make the offer, affords +certain facilities. The condition is not binding on<a name="page_406" id="page_406"></a> +the fair object of the compliment, unless the lips +receive the bonbon immediately from the finger +and thumb of the cavalier. This is a source of +no small amusement to the <i>señoritas</i> at the expense +of strangers from other provinces of Spain. Conscious +of being the object of preference of some +young beginner, or stranger uninitiated in the +mysteries of the rite—and who, let it be understood, +does not happen to be an object of preference with +them—they will afford him every facility of approach, +and on receiving the present in the hand, will +repulse without mercy the luckless wight, whose +retiring steps are accompanied by peals of laughter +from all the party.</p> + +<p>The month of June is likewise distinguished by +the procession of the Corpus Christi. On this +occasion all the principal streets are protected from +the sun by canvas awnings; and from the windows +of every house draperies are suspended, the materials +of which are more or less rich according to the +means of their respective proprietors. From an +early hour of the morning, ushered in by sunshine +and the gay orchestra of the Giralda bells, the vast +marble pavement of the cathedral begins to disappear +beneath the momentarily increasing crowd. +Here all classes are mingled; but the most conspicuous +are the arrivals from the surrounding<a name="page_407" id="page_407"></a> +villages, distinguished by their more sunburnt complexions +and the showy colours of their costume, +contrasted with the uniformly dark tints of the +attire of the Sevillanos.</p> + +<p>Here are seen also in great numbers, accompanied +by their relatives, the gay <i>cigarreras</i>, whose acquaintance +we shall presently make in the <i>fabrica de tabaco</i>. +The instinctive coquetry discernible, no less in the +studied reserve of their looks than in the smart step +and faultless nicety of costume, indicates how easy +would be the transition to the quality of the still +more <i>piquant</i> but somewhat less moral <i>maja</i>. The +black satin, low-quartered shoe is of a different +material; but the snow-white stocking, and dark +green skirt the same—and the black-velvet bordered +mantilla is the identical one, which was held +tight to the chin, when passing, the evening before, +under the city walls on the return from the manufactory +to the faubourg at the other extremity of +Seville.</p> + +<p>The procession, headed by a band of music, and +accompanied by the dignitaries of the diocese, and +civil authorities of the province, bearing <i>cierges</i>, +winds through the principal streets, and re-enters +the church to the sound of the two magnificent +organs, never heard in unison except on this anniversary. +The exterior of the principal portal is<a name="page_408" id="page_408"></a> +ornamented on this occasion with a sort of curtain, +which is said to contain upwards of three thousand +yards of crimson velvet, bordered with gold lace. +The columns of the centre nave are also completely +attired from top to bottom with coverings of the +same material. The value of the velvet employed, +is stated at nearly ten thousand pounds.</p> + +<p>Christmas-day is also solemnized at Seville, with +much zeal; but the manner of doing it honour presents +more of novelty than splendour. At the early +hour of seven the parish churches are completely +filled. The organ pours forth, from that time until +the termination of the service, an uninterrupted succession +of airs, called <i>seguidillas</i>, from the dance to +which they are adapted. On the gallery, which adjoins +the organ-loft of each church, are established +five or six muscular youths, selected for their untiring +activity. They are provided each with a tambourine, +and their duty consists in drawing from +it as much, and as varied sound as it will render +without coming to pieces. With this view they +enter upon the amiable contest, and try, during +three or four hours, which of their number, employing +hands, knees, feet, and elbows in succession, +can produce the most racking intonations. On the +pavement immediately below, there is generally +a group, composed of the friends of the performers,<a name="page_409" id="page_409"></a> +as may be discerned from the smiles of intelligence +directed upwards and downwards. Some of +these appear, from the animated signs of approbation +and encouragement, with which they reward +each more than usually violent concussion, to be +backers of favourite heroes. During all this time +one or two priests are engaged before the altar in +the performance of a series of noiseless ceremonies; +and the pavement of the body of the church is pressed +by the knees of a dense crowd of devotees.</p> + +<p>The propensity to robbery and assassination, attributed +by several tourists to the population of +this country, has been much exaggerated. The imagination +of the stranger is usually so worked upon +by these accounts, as to induce him never to set +foot outside the walls of whatever city he inhabits, +without being well armed. As far as regards the +environs of Seville, this precaution is superfluous. +They may be traversed in all directions, at all events +within walking distance, or to the extent of a moderate +ride, without risk. Far from exercising violence, +the peasants never fail, in passing, to greet the +stranger with a respectful salutation. But I cannot +be guarantee for other towns or environs which +I have not visited. It is certain that equal security +does not exist nearer the coast, on the frequented +roads which communicate between San Lucar, Xeres,<a name="page_410" id="page_410"></a> +and Cadiz; nor in the opposite direction, throughout +the mountain passes of the Sierra Morena. But +this state of things is far from being universal.</p> + +<p>I would much prefer passing a night on a country +road in the neighbourhood of Seville, to threading +the maze of streets, which form the south-eastern +portion of the town, mentioned above as containing +the greater number of the residences of +private families. This quarter is not without its +perils. In fact, if dark deeds are practised, no situation +could possibly be better suited to them. These +Arab streets wind, and twist, and turn back on +themselves like a serpent in pain. Every ten yards +presents a hiding-place. There is just sufficient +lighting up at night to prevent your distinguishing +whether the street is clear or not: and the +ground-floors of the houses, in the winter season, +are universally deserted.</p> + +<p>An effectual warning was afforded me, almost immediately +on my arrival at Seville, against frequenting +this portion of the town without precaution after +nightfall. An acquaintance, a young Sevillano, who +had been my daily companion during the first five or +six days which followed my arrival, was in the habit +of frequenting with assiduity, some of the above-mentioned +streets. He inhabited one of them, and +was continually drawn by potent attraction towards<a name="page_411" id="page_411"></a> +two others. In one, in particular, he followed a +practice, the imprudence of which, in more than one +respect, as he was much my junior, I had already +pointed out to him. A lady, as you have already +conjectured, resided in the house, in question. My +friend, like many of his compatriots, "sighed to +many;" but he loved this one; and she was precisely +the one that "could ne'er be his." She allowed +him, however, a harmless rendezvous, separated from +all danger, as she thought, by the distance from the +ground to the balcony, situated on the first-floor. +The lady being married, and regular visiting being +only possible at formal intervals, these interviews +had by degrees alarmingly, as appeared to me, increased +in frequency and duration; until at length +during two hours each evening, my acquaintance +poured forth in a subdued tone, calculated to reach +only the fair form which bent over the balcony, his +tender complaints.</p> + +<p>The youth of these climes are communicative on +subjects which so deeply interest their feelings; and +whether willing or not, one is often admitted to share +their secrets at the commencement of an acquaintance. +It was thus that I had had an opportunity of +lecturing my friend on the various dangers attending +the practice in which he was persisting, and of +recommending him—the best advice of all being,<a name="page_412" id="page_412"></a> +of course, useless—to revive the more prudent +custom of by-gone times, and if he must offer +nightly incense to the object of his fire, to adopt the +mode sanctioned by Count Almaviva, and entrust +his vows to the mercenary eloquence of choristers +and catgut—to anything—or anybody, provided it +be done by proxy. My warning was vain; but the +mischief did not befall him exactly in the manner +I had contemplated.</p> + +<p>His cousin opened my door while I was breakfasting, +and informed me that L—— was in the house of +Don G—— A——, and in bed, having received a +wound the previous night from some robbers; and +that he wished to see me. I found him in a house, +into which I had already been introduced, being one +of those he most frequented. A bed had been prepared +in the drawing-room, all the window-shutters +of which were closed, and he was lying there, surrounded +by the family of his host, to whom was +added his sister. As he was unable to speak above a +whisper, I was given the seat by the bedside, while +he related to me his adventure.</p> + +<p>He had just quitted the street of the balcony at +about nine o'clock, and was approaching the house +we were now in, when, on turning a corner, he was +attacked by three ruffians, one of whom demanded +his money in the usual terms, "Your purse, or your<a name="page_413" id="page_413"></a> +life!" while, before he had time to reply, but was +endeavouring to pass on, a second faced him, and +stabbed him in the breast through his cloak. He +then ran forward, followed by the three, down the +street, into the house, and up the staircase; the +robbers not quitting the pursuit until he rang the +bell on the first-floor. The surgeon had been immediately +called, and had pronounced him wounded +within—not an inch, but the tenth part of an inch—of +his life; for the steel had penetrated to within +that distance of his heart.</p> + +<p>My first impression was that the robbers were +acting a part, and had been hired to get rid of him,—otherwise +what were the utility of stabbing him, +when they might have rifled his pockets without +such necessity? But this he assured me could not +be the case, as the person most likely to fall under +such suspicion, was incapable of employing similar +means; adding, that that was the usual mode of +committing robberies in Seville. I left him, after +having assured him how much I envied his good +fortune; seeing that he was in no danger, and only +condemned to pass a week or two in the society of +charming women, all zealously employed in nursing +him—for such was the truth—one of the young ladies +being supposed, and I fear with justice, to be the +object of his addresses.<a name="page_414" id="page_414"></a></p> + +<p>The ungrateful wretch convinced me by his reply +(as we conversed in French, and were not understood +by those present) that his greatest torment was impatience +to escape from his confinement, in order to +see or write to the other fair one.</p> + +<p>At the end of a week he was sufficiently recovered +to be removed to the house of his family. From +certain hints, dropped during a conversation which +took place more than a month after the event, it is +to be feared that the knife of the assassin, in approaching +so near to the heart of his intended +victim, succeeded, by some mysterious electric transmission, +in inflicting a positive wound on that of +the lady of the balcony.</p> + +<p>I afterwards learned that it was usual for those +who inhabited or frequented this part of Seville, +and indeed all other parts, excepting the few principal +thoroughfares and streets containing the +shops and cafés, to carry arms after nightfall; and +in shaking hands with an acquaintance, I have +sometimes perceived a naked sword-blade half +visible among the folds of his cloak. These perils +only exist in the winter, and not in all winters; +only in those during which provisions increase in +price beyond the average, and the season is more +than usually rigorous: the poor being thus exposed +to more than the accustomed privations.<a name="page_415" id="page_415"></a></p> + +<p>There are towns in which assassination and robbery +are marked by more audacity than is their +habitual character in this part of Andalucia. Of +these, Malaga is said to be one of the worst, +although perhaps the most favoured spot in Europe, +with respect to natural advantages. An instance of +daring ruffianism occurred there this winter. A +person of consideration in the town had been found +in the street stabbed and robbed. His friends, +being possessed of much influence, and disposing, +no doubt, of other weighty inducements to action, +the police was aroused to unusual activity; the +murderer was arrested, and brought before the +Alcalde primero. A summary mode of jurisprudence +was put in practice, and the culprit was ordered for +execution on the following day. On being led from +the presence of the court, he turned to the Alcalde, +and addressing him with vehemence, threatened +him with certain death, in the event of the sentence +being put in execution. The Alcalde, although +doubtless not entirely free from anxiety, was, by +the threat itself, the more forcibly bound to carry +into effect the judgment he had pronounced. The +execution, therefore, took place at the appointed +hour. The following morning, the dead body of +the Alcalde was found in a street adjoining that +in which he resided.<a name="page_416" id="page_416"></a></p> + +<h3><a name="LETTER_XXII" id="LETTER_XXII"></a>LETTER XXII.</h3> + +<h5>INQUISITION. COLLEGE OF SAN TELMO. CIGAR MANUFACTORY. +BULL CIRCUS. EXCHANGE. AYUNTAMIENTO.</h5> + +<p class="r">Seville.<br /> +</p> + +<p>In the faubourg of Triana, separated from the +town by the river, may be distinguished remains +of the ancient castle, which became the headquarters +of the Inquisition, on its first creation, +in 1482. That body was, however, shortly afterwards, +compelled to evacuate the building, by a +great inundation of the Guadalquivir, which occurred +in the year 1626. It then moved into the +town, and, from that period to the close of its functions, +occupied an edifice situated in the parish +of Saint Mark. Its jurisdiction did not extend +beyond Andalucia. The entire body was composed +of the following official persons:—three inquisitors, +a judge of the fisc, a chief Alguazil, a receiver, (of +fines,) five secretaries, ten counsellors, eighty qualifiers, +one advocate of the fisc, one alcayde of the +prison, one messenger, ten honest persons, two <a name="page_417" id="page_417"></a>surgeons, +and one porter. For the City of Seville, one +hundred familiars: for the entire district, the commissaries, +notaries, and familiars, amounted to four +thousand. The ten honest persons cut but a sorry +figure in so long a list. Do they not tempt you to +parody Prince Hal's exclamation "Monstrous! but +one halfpenny-worth of bread to this intolerable +deal of sack?"</p> + +<p>The Inquisition of Seville is of an earlier date +than that of Toledo, and was the first established in +Spain. It was likewise the most distinguished by +the rigour of its sentences. The actual horrors of +the inquisitorial vaults were, I imagine, in general +much exaggerated. A few instances of severity, +accompanied by a mystery, skilfully designed to +magnify its effect, was sufficient to set on fire the +inflammable imaginations of these sunny regions, +and to spread universal terror. It was on finding +these means insufficient for the extirpation of +religious dissent, that, at length, executions were +decreed by wholesale. Rather than give credit to +the voluminous list of the secret cruelties, which +were supposed by many to be exercised by the midnight +tribunals, and which could have no adequate +object, since a conversion brought about by such +means could not, when known, profit the cause. I +think it probable that all acts of severity were made<a name="page_418" id="page_418"></a> +as public as possible, in order to employ the terror +they inspired as a means of swelling the ranks of +Catholicism.</p> + +<p>My opinion is in some measure backed by what +occurred at Toledo. On the Inquisition of that +city being dislodged from its palace,—now the seat +of the provincial administration,—it was expected +that the exploration of the subterraneous range of +apartments, known to be extensive, would bring to +light a whole Apocalypse of horrors; and all who +had interest enough to obtain admission, pressed in +crowds to be present at the opening. The disappointment +was immense on finding not a single +piece of iron, not the shadow of a skeleton, not a square +inch of bloodstain. Each individual, however, during +the permanence of these tribunals, lived in awe of +their power; and the daily actions of thousands were +influenced by the fear of becoming the victims of +their cruelties, whether real or imaginary.</p> + +<p>The terror which surrounded the persons of their +agents invested them with a moral power, which +frequently rendered them careless of the precaution +of physical force in cases where it would have appeared +to be a necessary instrument in the execution +of their designs. This confidence was once well-nigh +fatal to two zealous defenders of the faith. The +Archbishop of Toledo, subsequently Cardinal<a name="page_419" id="page_419"></a> +Ximenes de Cisneros being on a visit at the residence +of his brother of the see of Granada, it +occurred to them during an after-dinner conversation +that, could they accomplish the immediate conversion +of the few thousands of Moors remaining in +Granada, it would be the means of rendering a signal +service to the Catholic Roman Apostolic religion.</p> + +<p>Inflamed with a sudden ardour, and rendered +doubly fearless of results by the excellence of the +archiepiscopal repast, they resolved that the project +should be put in execution that very evening.</p> + +<p>Ever since the Conquest of Granada, a portion +of the city had been appropriated to the Moors who +thought proper to remain; and who received on +that occasion the solemn assurance that no molestation +would be offered to their persons or property, +nor impediment thrown in the way of their worship. +Their part of the town was called the Albaycin, and +was separated from the rest by a valley. It contained +some twenty to thirty thousand peaceably +disposed inhabitants.</p> + +<p>The two enterprising archbishops, their plan +being matured (although insufficiently, as will appear) +repaired to a house bordering on the Moorish +quarter; and, calling together all the Familiars of +the Inquisition who could be met with on the spur +of the occasion, divided them into parties, each of a<a name="page_420" id="page_420"></a> +certain force, and dispatched them on their errand, +which was, to enter the houses of the infidels, and to +intimate to the principal families the behest of the +prelates, requiring them by break of day, to abjure +the errors of their creed, and to undergo the ceremony +of baptism.</p> + +<p>But in order that so meritorious a work should +meet with the least possible delay, all the children +under a certain age were to be conveyed instantaneously +to the house occupied by the Archbishops, +in order that they might be baptised at once.</p> + +<p>The agents opened the campaign, and had already +made away with a certain number of terrified infants, +whose souls were destined to be saved thus +unceremoniously, when the alarm began to spread; +and, at the moment when the two dignitaries, impatient +to commence operations, were inquiring for the +first batch of unfledged heretics, an unexpected confusion +of sounds was heard to proceed simultaneously +from all sides of the house, and to increase rapidly +in clearness and energy: and some of the attendants, +entering, with alarm depicted on their countenances, +announced that a few hundred armed +Moors had surrounded the house, and were searching +for an entrance.</p> + +<p>It now, for the first time, occurred to the confederates, +that difficulties might possibly attend the execution<a name="page_421" id="page_421"></a> +of their project; and their ardour having had +nearly time to cool, Archbishop Ximenes, a personage +by no means wanting in prudence and energy, during +his moments of reason, employed the first instants +of the siege in taking what precautions the circumstances +admitted. He next proceeded to indite a +hasty line, destined for the sovereigns Ferdinand +and Isabella, who were journeying in the province, +to inform them of his situation, and request immediate +assistance. A black slave was selected to +be the bearer of the letter: but, thinking to inspire +him with greater promptitude and zeal, an attendant +thrust into his hand a purse of money together with +the document.</p> + +<p>The effect of this was the opposite to that which +was intended. The negro treated himself at every +house of entertainment on his road; until, before +he had half accomplished his journey, he was totally +incapacitated for further progress. This circumstance +could not, however, influence the fate of +the besieged prelates; who would have had time +to give complete satisfaction to the offended Moors +before the King could receive the intelligence. Fortunately +for them, the news had reached the governor +of Granada, a general officer in whose religious +zeal they had not had sufficient confidence +to induce them to apply to him for aid in the emergency.<a name="page_422" id="page_422"></a> +That officer, on hearing the state of things, +sent for a body of troops stationed at a neighbouring +village, to whose commander he gave orders +to place a guard, for the protection at the same time +of the churchmen from violent treatment, and of +the Moors from every sort of molestation. This +adventure of the Archbishop drew upon him the +temporary displeasure of the Court.</p> + +<div class="centeredimage" style="width: 403px;"> +<a href="images/ill_459_lg.jpg"> +<img src="images/ill_459_sml.jpg" width="403" height="550" alt="PORTAL OF SAN TELMO, SEVILLE." title="PORTAL OF SAN TELMO, SEVILLE." /></a> +<span class="caption">PORTAL OF SAN TELMO, SEVILLE.</span> +</div> + +<p>The public buildings of Seville are on as grand +a scale as those of some of the principal capitals +of Europe. The college of San Telmo, fronting +the Christina-gardens, is composed of two large +quadrangles, behind a façade of five or six hundred +feet in length, the centre of which is ornamented +by a portal of very elaborate execution in the <i>plateresco</i> +style. The architect, Matias de Figueroa, has +literally crammed the three stories with carved +columns, inscriptions, balconies, statues single and +grouped, arches, medallions, wreaths, friezes. Without +subjecting it to criticism on the score of purity, +to which it makes no pretension, it certainly is +rich in its general effect, and one of the best specimens +of its style. This college was founded for +the instruction of marine cadets, and for that reason +named after S. Telmo, who is adopted by the +mariners for their patron and advocate, as Santa +Barbara is by the land artillery. He was a Dominican<a name="page_423" id="page_423"></a> +friar, and is recorded to have exercised +miraculous influence on the elements, and thereby +to have preserved the lives of a boatful of sailors, +when on the point of destruction. The gardens +in front of this building are situated between the +river and the town walls. They are laid out in +flower beds and walks. In the centre is a raised<a name="page_424" id="page_424"></a> +platform of granite, forming a long square of +about an acre or more in extent, surrounded with +a seat of white marble. It is entered at each end +by an ascent of two or three steps. This is called +the Salon, and on Sundays and Feast-days is the +resort of the society of Seville. In the winter the +hour of the promenade is from one to three o'clock; +in the summer, the hours which intervene between +sunset and supper. During winter as well as summer, +the scent of the flowers of the surrounding +gardens fills the Salon, than which it is difficult +to imagine a more charming promenade.</p> + +<p>The cigar manufactory is also situated outside +the walls. It is a modern edifice of enormous dimensions, +and not inelegant. In one of the rooms +between two and three hundred <i>cigareras</i>, girls +employed in rolling cigars, are seen at work, and +heard likewise; for, such a Babel of voices never +met mortal ear, although familiar with the music +of the best furnished rookeries. The leaden roof, +which covers the whole establishment, furnishes a +promenade of several acres.</p> + +<p>I am anxious to return to the interior of Seville, +in order to introduce you to the Lonja; but we +must not omit the Plaza de los Toros, (bull circus,) +situated likewise outside the walls, and in view +of the river. It is said to be the handsomest in<a name="page_425" id="page_425"></a> +Spain, as well as the largest. In fact it ought to +be the best, as belonging to the principal city of +the especial province of <i>toreadores</i>. It is approached +by the gate nearest to the cathedral, and which +deserves notice, being the handsomest gate of Seville. +The principal entrance to the Plaza is on +the opposite side from the town, where the building +presents a large portion of a circle, ornamented +with plain arches round the upper story. This upper +portion extends only round a third part of the circus, +which is the extent of the part completed with +boxes and galleries, containing the higher class seats. +All the remainder consists of an uniform series of +retreating rows of seats, in the manner of an amphitheatre, +sufficient for the accommodation of an immense +multitude. These rows of seats are continued +round the whole circus: but those beneath the upper +building are not accessible to the same class of spectators +as the others—the price of the place being different. +This is regulated by the position with regard +to the sun, the shaded seats being the dearest. +The upper story consists of an elegant gallery, ornamented +with a colonnade, in the centre of which the +box of the president is surmounted by a handsomely +decorated arch.</p> + +<p>The circus, measured from the outside, is about +two hundred and fifty feet in diameter. Those who<a name="page_426" id="page_426"></a> +are desirous of witnessing to what lengths human +enthusiasm may be carried, should see a representation +in this Plaza. With seven prime bulls from +La Ronda, and a quadrille of Seville <i>toreros</i>—the +enormous circumference as full as it can hold, (as it +always is,) it is one of the most curious sights that +can be met with.</p> + +<p>The origin of this amusement is not easy to be +ascertained. It was undoubtedly in vogue among +the Spanish Arabs, and probably originated in the +time of the Goths, on the falling off of the representations +of the Roman amphitheatres for want of +a sufficient supply of wild beasts. In times not very +remote, it had become principally an amateur performance, +and the <i>toreros</i> were men of rank, who +made choice of this arena, subsequently to the falling +into disuse of the lists, in order to exhibit their +daring and dexterity before the objects of their flame. +The science is still studied by the greater part of +the Spanish youth; just as, in England, the custom +is maintained of receiving instruction in pugilism; +but an amateur is rarely seen in these days to figure +in a public arena.</p> + +<p>The intense interest which absorbs the feelings of +those present at these representations, affords a faint +notion of what must have been the attractions of a +Roman circus, in which combats were sustained by<a name="page_427" id="page_427"></a> +hundreds of wild beasts. In the bull-fight—sustained +by a single animal, the interest would not +probably be excited by the mere contest for life +which takes place between the man and the brute, +and of which the ultimate result is foreseen. It +would, on the contrary, often yield to the disgust +produced by the needless massacre of the horses; +were it not that the graceful performance of the +<i>toreros</i>, and their elegant costume, so well calculated +to set off the symmetry of their form, first draws the +attention, which, once fixed, is gradually absorbed by +the progress of the contest, and at length irresistibly +won by the variety of unforeseen incidents which +follow in rapid succession.</p> + +<p>Frequenters of theatres have been seen to fall +asleep during the most stirring scene of a melodrame; +and a continual murmur of conversation +usually forms a running accompaniment to the voices +of opera singers; but no one was ever detected slumbering +in a <i>plaza de toros</i>; nor is a remark uttered +that does not relate to the performance. This difference +may probably be explained by the superior +attraction of the <i>imprévu</i>. In the playhouse not +only is the event known beforehand, but also every +incident by which it is preceded; whereas, throughout +a <i>corrida de toros</i> nothing can be foreseen. No +one knows, during the present minute, whether the<a name="page_428" id="page_428"></a> +next will give birth to the direst of tragedies, or to +the most exhilarating farce.</p> + +<p>At Madrid the representations are inferior to those +at Seville. They are able, it is true, to procure as +fierce bulls; but they are brought from a considerable +distance, and are much more expensive. The +principal inferiority consists in the men, who at +Madrid are wanting in the rapidity of eye, and +careless courage of the Andaluz. On the entrance +of a bull on the arena, whose attitude gives promise +of an animated course, almost all the Madrid +<i>toreros</i>, (I have seen all,) will, at his first onset, disappear +simultaneously over the <i>barrera</i>. The <i>barrera</i> +is the enclosure of stout planks, strengthened by +posts, which separates the performers from the spectators. +It is about six feet in height. At a height +of three feet a projecting ledge runs round the +whole, upon which, in vaulting over, the <i>toreador</i> +places his foot. Behind this enclosure an open space +of four feet in width is left, and serves as a refuge +for those who are hard pressed. Very different is +the graceful and careless attitude with which the +Andaluz awaits the approach of the infuriated brute, +and quietly springs aside with a flourish of his +mantle of silk, while he knows there are others at +hand to draw off the animal's attention.</p> + +<p>With the exception of the <i>Toros</i> the public amusements<a name="page_429" id="page_429"></a> +of Seville are limited to the balls at the Lonja +during the Carnival, and to the opera. The opera +varies its own pleasures, while it distributes its +favours between the two western capitals of the province. +From midsummer to midwinter Cadiz receives +her share of melody, and the remaining six +months are bestowed on Seville. Xeres has, I believe, +a company to itself, supplied by a different +<i>impresario</i>.</p> + +<p>The Rossi is an excellent <i>primera dama</i>, although +wanting in animation; and Comfortini is by no +means a bad tenor. The second tenor, Tosi, is said +to be ambitious of displaying his somewhat exaggerated +attitudes on the boards of the Haymarket. +There is a deficiency of <i>ensemble</i>, since the severe +discipline necessary for obtaining that result does +not accord with the genius of the place—or perhaps +an unexceptionable <i>maestro de capella</i> is too expensive +a luxury to suit the Seville purses. However +this may be, the easy inhabitants, who hear the same +opera frequently six times in a week, and would +hear it seven times had not the performers a holiday +on Saturday—may be taken grievous liberties with +before they utter a complaint. They, in fact, look +upon the performance chiefly as an excuse for resorting +to this their habitual lounge.</p> + +<p>The Barbiere di Seviglia should, however, be witnessed<a name="page_430" id="page_430"></a> +here by every amateur. It is only here that +justice is done to the <i>libretto</i> of Rossini's masterpiece. +Figaro becomes a real barber, and scorns all +velvets and finery; and Almaviva leaves his court-dress +at home, and takes a good <i>capa</i> of <i>paño pardo</i> +for his nocturnal excursions. The scenery represents +the actual streets of Seville. Local customs +are introduced, and local expressions interspersed in +the Italian dialogue. On this occasion one spirit +animates boxes, lunetas, orchestra, and stage. At +the opening note of the first melody the allegro, +passing like electricity from the corner of the page +through the eye, brain, and arm of the leader, appears +as though it spirted like wildfire from the +extremity of his bow over stage, boxes, stalls, and +galleries, lighting up in an instant all eyes with +animation and pleasure.</p> + +<p>In the scene of old Bartolo's discomfiture the +melodies of the <i>maestro</i> are totally extinguished beneath +the din of overturned tables and chairs, and +cracking furniture; and the joyous exclamations of +the entire assembly, unite with the jibes of the actors, +and seem to pursue the poor old guardian with one +overwhelming peal of derision.</p> + +<p>But it is only in this one instance that representations +come off in such a manner. On the contrary, +the company exhibit habitually all the aristocratic<a name="page_431" id="page_431"></a> +<i>nonchalance</i> of larger capitals. Their business there +is society. It is there that <i>les affaires de cœur</i> hold +their Royal Exchange; and observation, conjecture, +and speculation,—but usually without ill-nature,—sufficiently +occupy those who are not actors in this +general by-play. The youth of these climes do not +put in practice the same arts of concealment and +reserve as are adopted in colder cities; but each, +unconscious of evil, makes for the box of his <i>enamorata</i>; +or, if that is impossible, for the nearest vacant +situation. Advise, therefore, any friend who may +intend visiting Seville, not hastily to pay his visit of +curiosity to the opera, but to wait, if possible, until +offered a seat by some <i>habituée</i> in her box. This +<i>Senora</i> may possibly not have any <i>affaire</i> of her own +on hand; in fact the married ladies of course form +an exception, if not in all cases, at least as far as +regards such undisguised manifestations of preference:—in +this case she will take delight in putting +him <i>au fait</i> of all those that are going forward.</p> + +<p>If in a conversable humour she will do more. +Commencing with the nearest, or the most conspicuous +of the performers in these mute dramas, she +will relate to him the vicissitudes of the respective +histories up to the time then present, and the probabilities +which each case may suggest for the future. +Thus your friend, instead of having sacrificed an<a name="page_432" id="page_432"></a> +entire evening to the dubious amusement of following +the plot of a single opera, which may have been +a bad one, or interpreted by bad actors, will return +to rest with some score of plots and romances filling +all the corners of his memory—all possessing the +zest of reality and actuality, as he will have contemplated +the heroes and heroines in their mortal shape, +and clothed in indisputable <i>capas</i> and <i>mantillas</i>; besides, +another advantage which these romances will +possess over all the popular and standard novels—that +of omitting the most insipid chapter of all, the +one containing the <i>dénouement</i>.</p> + +<p>There only remain two public buildings worthy of +notice; but they are such as to rank among the most +remarkable of Spain. The Lonja (Exchange) was +erected during the reign of Philip the Second, in the +year 1583, by Juan de Herrera. At this period the +excesses committed in all parts of Spain by the +architects, no longer restrained by rule of any sort, +had brought about a salutary effect, after a sufficiently +lengthened surfeit of extravagance. Herrera +took the lead in the reaction, and followed the more +correct models of art.</p> + +<p>Among the authors of some of the most lamentable +specimens of aberration of style scattered throughout +Spain, are found several names high in rank among +the painters of the best period. These artists, desirous<a name="page_433" id="page_433"></a> +of emulating some of the great masters of +Italy, who had attained equal superiority in architecture, +painting, and sculpture, risked their reputation +in these different pursuits with greater confidence +than just appreciation of their peculiar +genius. At the head of them was Alonzo Cano, one +of the most distinguished painters of the schools of +Andalucia; and who has been called the Guido of +Spain. He may certainly lay a more legitimate claim +to that title than to that of the Michael Angelo of +Spain, accorded to him by some of the less judicious +of his admirers for no other reason than that of his +combining the three above mentioned arts.</p> + +<p>His paintings are characterized by a peculiar +delicacy of manner, correct drawing, and exquisite +finish. The sickly paleness of his flesh is sometimes +unpleasing, and his personages are gainers by the +addition of drapery, in the arrangement of which +he approaches to the excellence of the best Italian +schools. The life of this artist was varied by more +adventure than usually falls to the lot of those of his +profession. His talent as a painter had already +become celebrated while he was still a monk, having +taken the vows very early in life. He had been +from the first an enemy to the subordination of the +cloister, and at length a series of irregularities led to +his expulsion from his monastery.<a name="page_434" id="page_434"></a></p> + +<p>Alonzo was not, however, the original inventor of +this eccentric style. A Roman architect, Francisco +Borromini, the rival of Bernini, and of whom it was +said, that he was the first of his time in elevation of +genius, and the last in the employment of it,—is +supposed to have first introduced it. Followers and +imitators of these sprung up in great numbers, and +Spain was speedily inundated with extravagancies: +façades, moulded into more sinuosities than a labyrinth,—cornices, +multiplying their angles like a saw, +murderously amputated columns, and broken-backed +pediments. Juan de Herrera was not, probably, +possessed of more talent than the Roman; but of +what he had he made a better use. His reputation +was beginning to make rapid progress when he was +selected, on the death of Juan Baptista de Toledo, to +continue the Escorial. His task there was not the +simple one of continuing the unfinished pile according +to the plans already traced.</p> + +<p>The religious fervor of Philip the Second was on +the ascent, and during the progress of the building +he had resolved to double the number of monks, for +whom accommodation had been provided by the +original plan. To meet this necessity, Herrera +raised the buildings to double their intended elevation. +His completion of this immense work, +rendered more difficult than it would have been +had the original design been his own, or even had<a name="page_435" id="page_435"></a> +that of his predecessor been persisted in (for various +other modifications were commanded, especially with +regard to the plan of the church,) fully established +his fame; and the edifice would probably have +gained, had Philip not, at the last moment, yielded +to a new caprice, and called in another artist (the +architect of the famous country-house of the Viso) to +erect the great staircase.</p> + +<p>The object of Herrera, traceable in all his works, +was the re-establishment of antique art in all its +purity. In cathedrals success was more difficult of +attainment than in civil edifices; but the effort is +easily discerned, striving against the difficulties inseparable +from the system, which applies to the purposes +of one creed the principles of art invented for +ministering to other forms. His cathedral of Valladolid +is an instance of this: the most unsuccessful portion +of which (the tower) has fallen before the completion +of the edifice. Should the works ever be +continued, this would be a most fortunate circumstance, +were it not that the future builders are sure +to persist in the same course, and to disfigure the +pile with another similar excrescence, in contempt +of symmetry and rule.</p> + +<p>The Lonja of Seville is a structure so perfect as to +bid defiance to criticism. It might have been built +by Vitruvius. The general plan is a quadrangle, enclosing +a court surrounded by an arcade. There are<a name="page_436" id="page_436"></a> +two stories, ornamented externally by pilasters. +The order is Tuscan, both above and below. The +court, staircase, and various apartments, are decorated +with a profusion of the rarest marbles. The whole +is a specimen, almost unique, of chaste elegance and +massive solidity. In this edifice, the resort of +wealthy traders during the period of the colonial +prosperity of Spain, are contained, among the +archives, the original despatches of Columbus: and, +it is also said, those of Cortez and Pizarro.</p> + +<p>The Ayuntamiento, or Town Hall, is an edifice +of another sort. It is of the <i>plateresco</i> epoch. But +Seville, having been apparently preserved by especial +favour from the introduction of specimens of bad +taste; it is a building of extreme beauty. The +façade is divided into two unequal parts. The +smaller of the two is covered with sculpture, and +contains an open porch or vestibule, decorated +throughout with a profusion of ornament. I could +not learn the name of the artist to whom these +sculptures are attributed, but they are worthy of the +chisel of John of Bologna. The other portion of the +front is without ornament from the ground to the +first story, along the whole extent of which runs a series +of open arches supported by columns. These columns +and arches are models of lightness and grace.</p> + +<p>The Ayuntamiento is situated in the Plaza de +San Francisco; from one extremity of which a street<a name="page_437" id="page_437"></a> +leads to the cathedral: at the other commences the +principal street of Seville, called the Calle de la +Sierpe. Here are all the best shops, and the principle +cafés. It leads also to the post-office, to the +opera, and to the Plaza del Duque, so called from +its containing the house of the Duke of Medina +Sidonia; but it possesses, likewise, two other ducal +residences, besides others of almost equal pretension. +These mansions are scarcely ever occupied by their +proprietors. It is a small irregularly formed place, +and its ducal habitations, whatever they may be internally, +by no means improve its appearance.</p> + +<p>A few streets further on is the Alameda. This is +a place magnificent in extent, but possessing no +architectural merit. Its principal ornament is an +avenue of elms, of about half a mile in length, at the +head of which are placed the two antique columns +and statues of the temple of Hercules. At the +further extremity, on the left, is the church of the +Jesuits, closed since the revolution.</p> + +<p class="c top15">THE END.</p> + +<p><a name="page_438" id="page_438"></a></p> + +<p class="c top15">LONDON:<br /> +Printed by <span class="smcap">S. & J. Bentley</span>, <span class="smcap">Wilson</span>, and <span class="smcap">Fley</span>,<br /> +Bangor House, Shoe Lane.</p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3><a name="FOOTNOTES" id="FOOTNOTES"></a>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> The very polite individual alluded to no longer fills the post of +Consul at Bayonne.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The following inscriptions are placed at the feet of the respective +statues: +</p><p> +"Aqui yace el muy Ilustre Señor Don Pedro Hernandez de Velasco, +Condestable de Castilla, Señor del estado, y gran casa de Velasco, hijo +de Don Pedro Hernandez de Velasco, y de Doña Beatriz Manrique, +Condes de Haro. Murio de setenta y siete años, anno de mil cuatro +cientos y noventa y dos, siendo solo Virey de estos reynos por los Reyes +Catolicos." +</p><p> +"Aqui yace la muy Ilustre Señora Doña Mencia de Mendoza, Condesa +de Haro, muger del Condestable Don Pedro Hernandez de +Velasco, hija de Don Inigo Lopez de Mendoza, y de Doña Catalina +de Figueroa, Marqueses de Santillana. Murio de setenta y nueve +annos, anno de mil y quiniento."</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> The above woodcut may, it is hoped, serve as a guide to future +travellers in their search for this head, of which it has no pretension +to give an adequate idea.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> It will be seen that this letter was written shortly after the +Queen's return to Spain, and previous to the publication of her +marriage.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> It is probable that this threat, supposing it real, may have +assisted in determining the Queen's resolution, since executed, of +publishing the marriage.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> The crown was valued in Cadiz at a hundred and sixty thousand +pounds, of which the emerald, which supports the cross, represents +forty thousand.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> She is of a wood, whether artificially or naturally, of a tint between +the darkest mahogany and ebony.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> The Author has in every instance made use of the word Gothic, +in preference to the employment of any sort of periphrasis; considering +that the chief intention of a name is, not that its application +should accord with its derivation, but rather that it should +present to all who know it, or have dictionaries, an identical meaning, +in order that the idea of the individual employing it may be +speedily caught. Now the word Gothic having always been applied +to this architecture, it is comprehended. A dismounted highwayman +is termed a pad. The oblong area in the centre of Madrid is +called a door. "What's in a name?"</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> +</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align="left">"Who does a kindness is not therefore kind.—</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Perhaps the wind has shifted from the East."—<span class="smcap">Pope</span>.</td></tr> +</table> +</div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Feeling his powers as a draughtsman inadequate to do justice +to this court, the author has inserted the above sketch merely to +show the general architectural design.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> He had put to death the "Master of St. Bernard," a title of +those days possessed by the chief of that order appointed by the +Pope. It was Urbano V, who, on the occasion of this act, resented +at the same time various other offences.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> The above is gathered from the following passage of Appianus +Alexandrinus. "Relicto, utpote pacata regione, valido præsidio, +Scipio milites omnes vulneribus debiles in unam urbem compulit, +quam ab Italiâ Italicam nominavit, claram natalibus Trajani et +Adriani, qui posteris temporibus Romanum imperium tenuere." +</p><p> +Elius Sparcianus, in the life of Adrian, says, "Origo imperatoris +Adriani vetustior a Picentibus, posterior ab Hispaniensibus manat; +siquidem Adriâ ortos majores suos apud Italicam, Scipionum temporibus +resedisse in libris vitæ suæ Adrianus ipse commemorat."</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> No other town is so placed as to accord with the description +given by Pliny, who passes it on the right bank of the river, and +arrives at Seville lower down on the left: "Italica et a lævâ Hispalis +colonia cognomine Romulensis." +</p><p> +Lucas de Tuy, who wrote four centuries back, says, "Italica est +Hispalis Antigua."</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> +</p> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poetry"> +<tr><td align="left">Hic fertur Apostolico</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Vates fulsisse tempore:</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Et prædicasse supremum</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Patrem potentis filii.</td></tr> +</table> +</div> + +<hr class="full" /> + +<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="transcriber note" +style="margin-bottom:5%;"> +<tr><td align="left">Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber:</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Alonza Cano=>Alonzo Cano (1)</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Abderrahman=>Abderahman (1)</td></tr> +<tr><td align="left">Andalusia=>Andalucia (1)</td></tr> +</table> + +</div> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Pictureque Antiquities of Spain;, by +Nathaniel Armstrong Wells + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PICTUREQUE ANTIQUITIES *** + +***** This file should be named 32821-h.htm or 32821-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/3/2/8/2/32821/ + +Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team +at http://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Picturesque Antiquities of Spain; + Described in a series of letters, with illustrations + representing Moorish palaces, cathedrals, and other + monuments of art, contained in the cities of Burgos, + Valladolid, Toledo, and Seville. + +Author: Nathaniel Armstrong Wells + +Release Date: June 15, 2010 [EBook #32821] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PICTURESQUE ANTIQUITIES *** + + + + +Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team +at http:://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + + +[Illustration: CHAPEL OF SAN ISIDRO, + +IN THE CHURCH OF SAN ANDRES, MADRID.] + + + + +THE + +PICTURESQUE ANTIQUITIES + +OF + +SPAIN; + +DESCRIBED IN A SERIES OF LETTERS, + +WITH ILLUSTRATIONS, + +REPRESENTING MOORISH PALACES, CATHEDRALS, AND OTHER MONUMENTS OF ART, + +CONTAINED IN THE CITIES OF + +BURGOS, VALLADOLID, TOLEDO, AND SEVILLE. + +BY + +NATHANIEL ARMSTRONG WELLS. + +LONDON: + +RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET, + +Publisher in Ordinary to Her Majesty. + +M.DCCC.XLVI. + +LONDON: + +Printed by S. & J. BENTLEY, WILSON, and FLEY, Bangor House, Shoe Lane. + + + + +PREFACE. + + +The author of the following letters is aware that his publication would +have possessed greater utility, had the architectural descriptions been +more minute. He ventures to hope, however, that this imperfection may be +in some measure balanced by the more extended sphere opened to whatever +information it may contain. + +The absence of many technical expressions, especially those which enter +into a detailed description of almost all Gothic buildings, and the +employment of which was forbidden by the occasion, may tend to +facilitate the satisfaction of popular curiosity respecting Spanish art: +the more so from the circumstance that the most intelligent in such +subjects are scarcely sufficiently agreed on the application of +technical terms, to allow of the compilation of a standard vocabulary. +His ambition will be more than satisfied, should his past, and perhaps +future researches, succeed, in some degree, in pioneering the path for a +more scientific pen. + +Should this work fall into the hands of any reader, whose expectations +of entertainment may have been encouraged by the announcement of another +Spanish tour, but who may feel but moderate enthusiasm for the artistic +and monumental glories of the Peninsula, an explanation is due to him, +exonerative of the author from much of the responsibility attached to +the matter-of-fact tone of his descriptions. It is no less his nature +than it was his wish to paint what he saw as he saw it. Unfortunately +his visits to Spain took place after the accomplishment of the +revolution, the hardest blows of which were aimed at her church. The +confiscation of the ecclesiastical revenues has necessarily stripped the +processions and other ceremonies of their former splendour, and by +suppressing what constituted one of their chief attractions to the +native population, transferred the interest of the lover of the +picturesque from the bright colours of animated grouping, to the dead +background of stone and marble they have left. + +In studying, however, to preserve this strict accuracy in all that +related to the principal subject of his correspondence, his aim was to +enliven it by the introduction of any incidents worthy of notice which +came under his observation. In this object he hopes he may have +succeeded. + +One more remark is necessary. The letters from Seville, which form the +second of the two parts into which the volume is divided, although +placed last in order of succession, date in reality from an earlier +period than the rest; and even from a different tour, as will appear +from the description of the route. They were addressed to various +individuals, whereas those forming the first part were all written to +the same person. They are thus placed with a view to geographical order +and clearness, and to a sort of unity, which appeared advisable in the +subject of a volume. The two excursions having been separated by an +interval of three years, should alterations have taken place during that +period in the places described, the above circumstance not being borne +in mind might lead to an appearance of chronological inaccuracy in the +descriptions, although there is not much probability of the existence of +such changes. + +LONDON. _December 1845._ + + + + +CONTENTS. + + + PAGE + +PART I. + + +LETTER I. + +TO MRS. C----R 1 + +LETTER II. + +ROUTE TO SPAIN THROUGH FRANCE 9 + +LETTER III. + +THE BASQUE PROVINCES 15 + +LETTER IV. + +ARRIVAL AT BURGOS. CATHEDRAL. 28 + +LETTER V. + +TOMB OF THE CID. CITADEL. 52 + +LETTER VI. + +CARTUJA DE MIRAFLORES. CONVENT OF LAS HUELGAS. 70 + +LETTER VII. + +ROUTE TO MADRID. MUSEO. 78 + +LETTER VIII. + +PICTURESQUE POSITION OF TOLEDO. FLORINDA. 103 + +LETTER IX. + +CATHEDRAL OF TOLEDO 121 + +LETTER X. + +CAFES. WEDDING CEREMONY. CATHEDRAL CONTINUED. ALCAZAR HOSPITAL +OF SANTA CRUZ. CONVENT OF LA CONCEPTION. MYSTERIOUS CAVERN. +CONVENT OF SANTA FE, OR OF SANTIAGO. SONS-IN-LAW OF THE CID. 143 + +LETTER XI. + +STREETS OF TOLEDO. EL AMA DE CASA. MONASTERY OF SAN JUAN DE +LOS REYES. PALACE OF DON HURTADO DE MENDOZA. 172 + +LETTER XII. + +ARAB MONUMENTS. PICTURES. THE PRINCESS GALIANA. ENVIRONS. 195 + +LETTER XIII. + +CASTLES OF ALMONACID, GUADAMUR, MONTALBAN, AND ESCALONA. +TORRIJOS. 214 + +LETTER XIV. + +VALLADOLID. SAN PABLO. COLLEGE OF SAN GREGORIO. ROUTE BY +SARAGOZA. 240 + +PART II.--SEVILLE. + + +LETTER XV. + +JOURNEY TO SEVILLE. CHARACTER OF THE SPANIARDS. VALLEY OF +THE RHONE. 259 + +LETTER XVI. + +VOYAGE TO GIBRALTAR 288 + +LETTER XVII. + +CADIZ. ARRIVAL AT SEVILLE. 308 + +LETTER XVIII. + +THE ARABS IN SPAIN. ALCAZAR OF SEVILLE. 315 + +LETTER XIX. + +CATHEDRAL OF SEVILLE 350 + +LETTER XX. + +SPANISH BEGGARS. HAIRDRESSING. THE GIRALDA. CASA DE PILATOS. +MONASTERIES. ITALICA. 369 + +LETTER XXI. + +PRIVATE HOUSES, AND LOCAL CUSTOMS IN SEVILLE 399 + +LETTER XXII. + +INQUISITION. COLLEGE OF SAN TELMO. CIGAR MANUFACTORY. BULL +CIRCUS. EXCHANGE. AYUNTAMIENTO. 416 + +FOOTNOTES + + + + +ENGRAVED PLATES. + + + PAGE + +CHAPEL OF SAN ISIDRO, MADRID To face Title. + +TRANSEPT OF CATHEDRAL, BURGOS 38 + +INTERIOR OF THE CHURCH OF MIRAFLOR ES 72 + +VIEW OF TOLEDO 106 + +INTERIOR OF CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO 140 + +FACADE OF SAN GREGORIO, VALLADOLID 248 + +HALL OF AMBASSADORS, DO. 315 + +FACADE OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE 325 + +GREAT COURT OF DO. 328 + +INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, SEVILLE 353 + + +WOOD ENGRAVINGS. + +ARCO DE SANTA MARIA. BURGOS. 30 + +INTERIOR OF THE CHOIR, CATHEDRAL OF BURGOS 33 + +SCULPTURE IN THE APSE, DO. DO. 40 + +HEAD OF ST. FRANCIS 48 + +FOUNTAIN OF SANTA MARIA, BURGOS 69 + +ITALIAN GALLERY AT THE MUSEO, MADRID 94 + +FLORINDA'S BATH, TOLEDO 112 + +APSE OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO 129 + +COSTUME OF A MILITARY NUN, SANTA FE, TOLEDO 165 + +CHURCH OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES, DO. 179 + +CLOISTER OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES, DO. 182 + +INTERIOR OF SANTA MARIA LA BLANCA, DO. 196 + +INTERIOR OF CHRISTO DE LA LUZ, DO. 201 + +CASTLE OF GUADAMUR. ENVIRONS OF DO. 226 + +FACADE OF SAN PABLO. VALLADOLID 242 + +COURT OF SAN GREGORIO. VALLADOLID 249 + +COURT OF DOLLS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE 331 + +FOUNTAINS AT THE ALCAZAR 339 + +PORTAL OF SAN TELMO, SEVILLE 422 + + + + +PICTURESQUE ANTIQUITIES + +OF + +SPAIN. + + + + +LETTER I. + +TO MRS. C---- R. + + +Rue de Richelieu. + +You perceived at a glance the satisfaction you caused me, when, on +receiving my temporary adieus, you requested me to send you some account +of my travels in Spain. Had it not been so, you had not been in +possession, on that day, of your usual penetration. Indeed, you no doubt +foresaw it; aware that, next to the pleasure of acquiring ocular +information respecting the peculiar objects which interest an +individual, there is no greater one than that of communicating to a +spirit, animated by congenial tastes, the results of his explorations. +You must have foreseen, that, with my recollections of the pleasure I +had derived from our excursions in one of the most interesting regions +of France, during which I was witness to the intelligence and rapidity +of perception you displayed in the appreciation of the monuments of the +Middle Ages, the opportunity of committing to paper the impressions I +should receive in a country so rich in those treasures, with a view to +your information, would give an additional interest to my tour, as well +as encouragement in surmounting the obstacles to be met with among a +people not yet broken in to the curiosity of tourists. + +You professed also, with a modesty always becoming to talent and worth, +a complete ignorance respecting Spain: adding, that you would be +grateful for every sort of information; and that you were anxious to be +enlightened on the subject not only of the monuments and fine arts, but +also of the history of that country, of which you had never had an +opportunity of informing yourself; summing up by the enumeration of the +three names of the Cid, Charles the Fifth, and Roderic the Goth, the +entire amount of your acquaintance with the leading characters of +Spanish history. + +Indeed, the ignorance you profess with some exaggeration, is more or +less general in our country; nor is it surprising that such should be +the case. Spain has been in modern times in the background of European +progress. The thousand inconveniences of its routes and inns have +deterred the most enterprising from making it a place of resort; and +while a hundred less interesting scenes of travel, such as Baden-Baden, +Bohemia, sporting adventures in Norway, or winterings in St. Petersburg, +have claimed your attention during the reposes of quadrilles, and +substantiated the conversation of several of your morning visitors, +Spain has been unnoticed and unknown--laid on the shelf with the Arabian +Nights--considered a sort of fabulous country, which it would be +charming to know, but with which there would never be a chance of +forming an acquaintance; and you have contented yourself with a sort of +general information respecting it, derived from a few romances and +poems. You are intimate with Boabdil and the wars of Granada, but to +those events is limited your knowledge of its ancient history; and the +reigns of Charles the Fifth and Philip the Second, with the addition of +some confused visions, in which _autos-da-fe_ and dungeons contrast in a +rather gloomy background with laughing majas, whirling their +castagnettes to the soft cadences of guitars, fill up the remaining +space allotted to Spain in your recollections. + +It would be a task full of interest for me--possessed, as I shall +probably be, of ample opportunities for its accomplishment--to draw up +for your information a summary of the leading events of Spanish +history; connecting them by the chain of reigns of the successive +sovereigns; and thus to press into a limited compass a sort of abstract +of the annals of this extraordinary nation: but I am deterred by the +certainty that such an attempt, by me, would fail of its intended +object. The events, thus slurred over, would have the effect of whetting +the appetite for knowledge, which they would not satisfy; and the +interminable lists of monarchs, of successions, usurpations, alliances +and intermarriages, rendered doubly intricate by the continual +recurrence of the same names, without sufficient details to +particularise each--a chaos of outlines without the necessary shading to +bring out the figures from the canvass--would not only set at defiance +the clearest memory, but would be a trial which I would not for worlds +impose upon your patience. No history is more attractive than that of +Spain; and those works which exist upon the subject, although all, more +or less, sullied with inaccuracies, and most of them infected with +prejudice, and immersed in superstitious delusion, are still well worth +your perusal; but it would lead me out of my depth, were I to undertake +in my correspondence more than an occasional historical quotation, when +required by the interest attached to any monument which it may fall to +my lot to describe. + +Were I not to transmit to you a conscientious and faithful account of +all that I shall see, I should be guilty of cruelty; and that the more +base, from the certain impunity that must attend it. I say this, from +the impossibility of your ever undertaking the same journey, and +consequently of your ever being able to compare my portraits with their +originals. In fact, the incompatibility of your nature, and that of the +Spanish climate, must ever be present to me, who, during the vivifying +heats of the late very bearable _canicule_, in your French chateau--so +constructed as to perform the functions of an atmospheric sieve, by +separating the wind, which rushed through its doors and windows, +judiciously placed in parallels for the purpose, from the warmer +sunshine without--was witness, nevertheless, to your unaffected +distress, when you protested against any lofty, oak-panelled room being +sat or reclined in by more than one human being at a time, lest it +should be over-heated; placing thus an obstacle in the way of +conversation, in which to shine is your especial province, by rendering +it necessary to converse through various open doors; while, were an +additional testimony necessary to prove the sincerity of your +sufferings, your favourite of favourites, Caliph, repulsed and +uncaressed, hung his silken ears, as he solemnly retreated to coil +himself on a distant rug, and voted the dog-days a misnomer. + +Nor were you contented with your atmosphere, until, the season of +insects and _al-fresco_ suppers being long left behind, and the autumnal +equinox having peremptorily closed the doors and windows, fitted, alas! +by a carpenter who flourished in the reign of Louis the Fourteenth, so +plentiful a supply of air was afforded by the handy-works of the said +carpenter, that the Chinese screen had some difficulty in maintaining +its post, and the flames of the well-furnished elm-fire ascended with a +roar that would have shamed many a cataract of the rival element. Not +but that I would willingly forego the opportunity of sending you +erroneous information, in exchange for your presence in that country; +and for your assistance in comprehending the nature of a people +apparently composed of such contradictory ingredients. You might +probably succeed in fathoming the hidden springs of character, which +give birth to a crowd of anomalies difficult to explain. You would +discover by what mystery of organization a people, subject to the +influence of violent passions, combine an abject subjection to the forms +of etiquette, carried to its extreme in every-day life, with occasional +outbreaks of adventure and romance worthy of the days of Orlando and +Rodomonte; and account for a nation exchanging a costume which combines +utility with grace, for one inferior in both respects. Inventors of +whatever is most fascinating in dances and music--you would discover the +motive which induces them to abandon both, but principally the first, +which they replace by the French _rigodon_, or dancing-made-easy, and +adapted to youth, manhood, and all stages of paralysis; and, possessing +the cathedrals of Leon, Burgos, and Seville, to denounce Gothic +architecture as barbarous, and to brand it with the contemptuous +denomination of "crested masonry." + +Should my mono-(--monument-) mania run riot, and over-describe, +over-taxing even your passion for that branch of art, be assured--and to +this promise you may always look back for consolation and +encouragement--that I will not write you a history of the recent, or any +previous Spanish revolution, _apropos_ of the first sentry-box I meet +with, even though its form be that of a Lilliputian brick castle. Nor +shall my first glimpse of a matador occasion you a list of bull-fights, +voluminous enough to line the circumference of the _barrera_. No +Diligence shall be waylaid, nor in my presence shall any ladies' fingers +be amputated, the quicker to secure her rings, if I can possibly avoid +it; and, as far as depends on me, I shall arrive in a whole skin at each +journey's end, and without poisoning you or myself with garlick, unless +the new Cortes pass a law for denying to the stranger all other sorts of +aliment. + +I have resolved, by a process of reasoning which I need not at present +impart to you, and in virtue of a permission which I have little doubt +of your granting, to publish my part of our correspondence. I think that +neither of us will be a loser by this plan, however conceited I may +appear to you for saying so. Yourself, in the first place, must be a +gainer by the perusal of descriptions, on which, from their being +prepared for the ordeal of a less indulgent eye, greater care will +necessarily be expended: the public may benefit in obtaining +information, which shall be at all events accurate, relative to subjects +as yet inadequately appreciated by those they are the most likely to +interest: while the chief gainer, in the event of these two ends being +attained, will of course be your devoted and humble correspondent. + + + + +LETTER II. + +ROUTE TO SPAIN THROUGH FRANCE. + + +Bayonne. + +The position of Burgos on the principal line of communication by which +Madrid is approached from the north of Europe; the fact of its being the +first city met with, after crossing the Pyrenees, in which monuments are +found remaining of the former genius and grandeur of the country; and +the name of which calls up the more stirring and eventful epochs of +Spanish history,--render it, notwithstanding its actual distance from +the frontier, a sort of introduction or gateway to Spain--the Spain of +the tourist. + +The most agreeable and least troublesome way of visiting the best parts +of Spain excludes, it is true, this route; for the provinces of the +Peninsula which combine the greater number of requisites for the +enjoyment of life with the most attractive specimens of the picturesque, +whether natural or artificial, are those nearest to the coast, and they +are approached more conveniently by sea. Those, however, who can devote +sufficient time, will be repaid, by a tour in the interior of the +country, for the increase of trouble it may occasion them; and this tour +should precede the visit to the maritime provinces, as it will render +their superior comforts and climate the more acceptable from the +contrast. The scenery of the Pyrenees, and the passing acquaintance +formed with the original and picturesque population of the Basque +provinces, secure the traveller against any danger of ennui throughout +the land-journey between the frontier and the city of Burgos. + +There does not exist the same security throughout the extent of route +which it is necessary to travel in order to reach this frontier. The +approach to Spain across the south-western provinces of France offers +few objects worthy of detaining us on our way to the Peninsula. It is +one of the least interesting of French routes. From Paris you pass +through Orleans and Tours. At Chatellerault--between the latter city and +Poitiers--the inn-door is besieged by women offering knives for sale. It +is everywhere known that cutlery is not one of the departments of French +manufactures which have attained the greatest degree of superiority. A +glance at the specimens offered for our choice while changing horses at +Chatellerault, showed them to be very bad, even for France. + +This did not, however, prevent a multitude of travellers from purchasing +each his knife, nor one of them from laying in a plentiful stock, +stating that he destined a knife for each member of his +family--evidently one of the most numerous in France. I inquired of a +native the explanation of this scene, and whether these knives were +considered superior to those met with in other towns. "Oh no," was the +reply; "but it is usual to buy knives here." I ventured to say I thought +them very bad. "That is of no consequence; because, whenever you have +passed through Chatellerault, every one asks you for a knife made on the +spot." These victims of custom had paid enormous prices for their +acquisitions. + +Poitiers is a crazy old town, but contains one of the most admirable +specimens of the architecture immediately preceding the pointed, or +ogivale, and which the French savans call "the Romane." I allude to the +church called "the Notre Dame de Poitiers." The west front is highly +ornamented, and unites all the peculiar richness with the quaintness and +simplicity of design which characterize that fine old style. I must not +omit the forest of Chatellerault, passed through on leaving that town. +It is famous as the scene of the picnic given to the ladies of the +neighbouring city by the officers of a Polish regiment quartered there, +immediately before the breaking out of the Peninsular war. It is +related that Polish gallantry overstepped etiquette to such a +degree,--and _that_ by premeditation,--as to urge these cavaliers, by +force of bayonet, and sentries, to separate all the husbands, and other +male relatives, from the fairer portion of the guests. The consequences +of such a termination of the festivities may easily be imagined; +Bonaparte, a rigid judge with regard to all divorces except his own, on +receiving the complaint of the insulted town, condemned the officers _en +masse_ to be decimated, and the survivors degraded from their rank. He +relented, however, afterwards, on an understanding that they were to +regain their sullied laurels in the Peninsula; where, in fact, in +consequence of his orders, such opportunities were afforded them, that +scarcely a man in the regiment survived the earliest campaigns. + +The inhabitants of Chatellerault are said to take great offence on being +asked their age, suspecting the inquirer of a malicious calculation. + +The new quarter of Bordeaux is handsome, spacious, and airy. In the +promenade called "La Quinconce," on the bank of the river, a large +insulated edifice, the most monumental in view, is discovered by the +inscription on its front to be an establishment for warm baths. At one +extremity of the principal facade is seen, in sculptured letters, "Bains +des dames;" at the other, "Bains des hommes." At this latter entrance a +handsome staircase leads to the corridor of general communication, on +the unsullied white wall of which the code of discipline of the +establishment, traced in large sable characters, forces itself on the +notice of the visitor. It consists of the following single and rather +singular statute: "Il est expressement defendu aux garcons de permettre +a deux hommes de se servir de la meme baignoire." After some reflection +I concluded it to be a measure of precaution with regard to cleanliness, +carried, no doubt, to an extreme at Bordeaux. This town is well +deserving of a few days' halt, should the traveller's object be +amusement, or the pleasures of the table, for which it enjoys a +well-merited reputation. It is a large and handsome city, the second in +France in beauty, and vies with the capital in the elegance of its shops +and principal streets. The theatre is, externally, the finest in France; +and there is, besides the cathedral, and surpassing it in interest and +antiquity, a remarkable Gothic church. + +Of the sixty leagues which separate this town from Bayonne, forty afford +the most perfect example of monotony. One sighs for the Steppes of +Russia. These are the well-known Landes, consisting of uncultivated +sands and morass; now covered league after league with the unvarying +gloom of the pine and cork forests,--now dreary and bare,--but ever +presenting to the wearied eye a wide interminable waste, replete with +melancholy and desolation. It is true, that a day of pouring rain was +not calculated to set off to advantage the qualities of such a region, +and should in strict justice be admitted in evidence before passing +condemnation on the Landes. + + + + +LETTER III. + +THE BASQUE PROVINCES. + + +Burgos. + +It never causes me surprise when I see the efforts made by persons of +limited means to obtain the situation of Consul in a continental town. + +In spite of one's being, as it were, tied to one's residence,--and that +not one's home,--there are advantages which counterbalance the evil. The +place carries with it a certain degree of consequence. One feels oneself +suddenly a man of influence, and a respectable public character. I have +heard one, certainly far from being high on the list of these +functionaries, termed by a humbler inhabitant of his "residence," the +"Premier Consul." + +The income, too, is, it is true, limited; but then one is usually in a +cheap place. In fact, I always envied these favoured individuals. No +calling, however, is without its _deboires_. It seems as if Providence +had decreed that an income cannot be fairly, if agreeably, earned. +Thus, the set-off against the bliss of the consul, is the necessity he +is under of holding out his hand for his fee. I make these remarks, to +introduce to your notice an ingenious method, put in practice--probably +invented--by our consul at Bayonne, for getting over the irksomeness of +this duty. I found him in his _bureau_, pen in hand, and a large sheet +of official-shaped paper before him, half written over. On my passport +being presented for his _visa_, his countenance assumed a painful +expression, in which regret was blended with a sort of tendency to +compassion, and which at first occasioned me a sensation of alarm, +conjuring up in my imagination all the consequences of an irregular +passport--tedious routes to be retraced, time lost, expense incurred, +and suspicion, and even incarceration--infection--death! + +Meanwhile he pointed to the letter he was writing, and, drawing forward +with the other hand a chair, said that he was at that moment +memorializing the Foreign Office on the subject of these visas; that his +pain was extreme at seeing travellers compelled to send or come to his +office, and to lose thus much valuable time; he was likewise concerned +at their having to pay three francs each for so useless a ceremony as +his visa; but he wished it to be remarked, that it was at present a +ceremony quite indispensable; since, only four days back, a gentleman +had been compelled to return from the Spanish frontier (a distance of +seven leagues) in the middle of the night, in consequence of his having +neglected this, as yet, necessary observance.[1] + +Leaving Bayonne by Diligence, although still at some distance from the +frontier, you are already in a Spanish vehicle. The only difference +consists in its being drawn by horses as far as Irun, a few hundred +yards in Spain, at which place they are replaced by a team of mules; but +the _mayoral_ is Spanish from the commencement, as also usually the +greater number of the travellers. From the first view of Spanish ground, +the monotony of the landscape ceases, and gives place to picturesque +scenery. This effect is as sudden as if produced by the whistle of a +scene-shifter. From the brow of a hill the valley of the Bidassoa opens +on the view, the bay on the right, two or three towns in the centre, and +beyond them, stretching to the left, the chain of the Pyrenees. This +opening scene is very satisfactory to the newly arrived traveller, whose +expectations have been rising towards fever-heat as he gradually neared +the object of his dreams--the "renowned romantic land;" the more so, as +he is well prepared, by the Landes of France, to enjoy to the utmost +the variety of scene afforded by the two days of mountain and valley +which separate the frontier from the town of Vitoria. + +The Diligence comes to a halt every afternoon; the day's journey having +commenced at three in the morning. There are three of these days between +Bayonne and Burgos. At Tolosa and Vitoria--the intermediate places of +rest--the system is as follows: Arriving at about four in the afternoon, +an interval is allowed of about two hours, which in a long journey can +always be profitably employed, until the meal, called supper. This is +Homerically plentiful, and varied sufficiently to suit the tastes of all +such as are accustomed to the vicissitudes of travelling. The repast +over, all gradually retire to their sleeping apartments, where they are +undisturbed until two o'clock in the morning. + +At this hour each passenger is furnished with a candle, and requested to +get up; and at a quarter to three the _muchacha_ (chambermaid) +reappears, bearing in her hand a plate, on which, after rubbing his +eyes, the traveller may discover, if it be allowed so to speak, an +imperceptible cup, a _xicara_,--since, having the thing, they have a +name for it, which is of course untranslateable,--of excellent +chocolate, an _azucarillo_ (almost transparent sugar prepared for +instantaneous melting), a glass of water, and a piece of bread. After +partaking of this agreeable refreshment, you have just time left to pay +your bill, fold up your passport, which during the night has remained in +the hands of the police, and to take your seat in the Diligence. + +The towns of the Basque provinces appear not to have been much +maltreated during the Carlist war; not so the villages, most of which +present a melancholy aspect of ruin and desolation. The churches, built +so as to appear more like keeps of castles, have mostly withstood the +shock. The destruction was oftener the result of burning than of +artillery. The lover of the picturesque offers his silent gratitude to +the combatants on both sides, for sparing, although unintentionally, +some of the most charming objects of all Spain. + +Among the most striking of these is Hernani. It is composed of one +street, of the exact required width for the passage of an ordinary +vehicle. This street is a perfect specimen of picturesque originality. +The old facades are mostly emblazoned with the bearings of their ancient +proprietors, sculptured in high relief. On entering the place, the +effect is that of a deep twilight after the broad blaze of the sunny +mountains. This is caused by the almost flat roofs, which advance +considerably beyond the fronts of the houses, and nearly meet in the +centre of the street: the roof of each house is either higher or lower, +or more or less projecting, than its neighbour; and all are supported by +carved woodwork, black from age. The street terminates on the brow of a +hill, and widens at the end, so as to form a small square, one +retreating side of which is occupied by the front of a church covered +with old sculpture; and the diligence, preceded by its long team of +tinkling mules, disappears through the arched gateway of a Gothic +castle. + +In this part of Spain one does not hear the sounds of the guitar; these +commence further on. On Sundays and holydays, the fair of Tolosa, and of +the other Basque towns, flourish their castagnettes to the less romantic +whinings of the violin; but, in traversing the country, the ear is +continually met by a sound less musical, although no less national, than +that of the guitar--a sort of piercing and loud complaint, comparable to +nothing but the screams of those who have "relinquished hope" at Dante's +grim gateway. + +These unearthly accents assail the ear of the traveller long before he +can perceive the object whence they proceed; but, becoming louder and +louder, there will issue from a narrow road, or rather ravine, a +diminutive cart, shut in between two small round tables for wheels. +Their voice proceeds from their junction with the axle, by a +contrivance, the nature of which I did not examine closely enough to +describe. A French tourist expresses much disgust at this custom, which +he attributes to the barbarous state of his neighbours, and their +ignorance of mechanical art; it is, however, much more probable that the +explanation given by the native population is the correct one. According +to this, the wheels are so constructed for the useful purpose of +forewarning all other drivers of the approach of a cart. The utility of +some such invention is evident. The mountain roads are cut to a depth +often of several yards, sometimes scores of yards, (being probably +dried-up beds of streams,) and frequently for a distance of some +furlongs admit of the passage of no more than one of these carts at a +time, notwithstanding their being extremely narrow. The driver, +forewarned at a considerable distance by a sound he cannot mistake, +seeks a wide spot, and there awaits the meeting. + +You need not be told that human experience analysed resolves itself into +a series of disappointments. I beg you to ask yourself, or any of your +acquaintances, whether any person, thing, or event ever turned out to be +exactly, or nearly, such as was expected he, she, or it would be. +According to the disposition of each individual, these component parts +of experience become the bane or the charm of his life. + +This truth may be made, by powerful resolve, the permanent companion of +your reflections, so as to render the expectation of disappointment +stronger than any other expectation. What then? If you know the expected +result will undergo a metamorphosis before it becomes experience, you +will not be disappointed. Only try. For instance,--every one knows the +Spanish character by heart; it is the burden of all literary +productions, which, from the commencement of time, have treated of that +country. A Carlist officer, therefore,--the hopeless martyr in the +Apostolic, aristocratic cause of divine right; the high-souled being, +rushing into the daily, deadly struggle, supported, instead of pay and +solid rations, by his fidelity to his persecuted king;--such a character +is easily figured. The theory of disappointments must here be at fault. +He is a true Spaniard; grave, reserved, dignified. His lofty presence +must impress every assembly with a certain degree of respectful awe.--I +mounted the _coupe_, or _berlina_, of the Diligence, to leave Tolosa, +with a good-looking, fair, well-fed native, with a long falling auburn +moustache. We commenced by bandying civilities as to which should hold +the door while the other ascended. No sooner were we seated than my +companion inquired whether I was military; adding, that he was a Carlist +captain of cavalry returning from a six months' emigration. + +Notwithstanding the complete polish of his manners in addressing me, it +was evident he enjoyed an uncommon exuberance of spirits, even more than +the occasion could call for from the most ardent lover of his country; +and I at first concluded he must have taken the earliest opportunity (it +being four o'clock in the morning) of renewing his long-interrupted +acquaintance with the flask of _aguardiente_: but that this was not the +case was evident afterwards, from the duration of his tremendous +happiness. During the first three or four hours, his tongue gave itself +not an instant's repose. Every incident was a subject of merriment, and, +when tired of talking to me, he would open the front-window and address +the _mayoral_; then roar to the postilion, ten mules ahead; then swear +at the _zagal_ running along the road, or toss his cigar-stump at the +head of some wayfaring peasant-girl. + +Sometimes, all his vocabulary being exhausted, he contented himself with +a loud laugh, long continued; then he would suddenly fall asleep, and, +after bobbing his head for five or six minutes, awake in a convulsion of +laughter, as though his dream was too merry for sleep. Whatever he said +was invariably preceded by two or three oaths, and terminated in the +same manner. The Spanish (perhaps, in this respect, the richest European +language) hardly sufficed for his supply. He therefore selected some of +the more picturesque specimens for more frequent repetition. These, in +default of topics of conversation, sometimes served instead of a fit of +laughter or a nap: and once or twice he hastily lowered the window, and +gave vent to a string of about twenty oaths at the highest pitch of his +lungs; then shut it deliberately, and remained silent for a minute. +During dinner he cut a whole cheese into lumps, with which he stuffed an +unlucky lap-dog, heedless of the entreaties of two fair +fellow-travellers, proprietors of the condemned quadruped. This was a +Carlist warrior! + +The inhabitants of the Basque provinces are a fine race, and taller than +the rest of the Spaniards. The men possess the hardy and robust +appearance common to mountaineers, and the symmetry of form which is +almost universal in Spain, although the difference of race is easily +perceptible. The women are decidedly handsome, although they also are +anything but Spanish-looking; and their beauty is often enhanced by an +erect and dignified air, not usually belonging to peasants, (for I am +only speaking of the lower orders,) and attributable principally to a +very unpeasant-like planting of the head on the neck and shoulders. I +saw several village girls whom nothing but their dress would prevent +from being mistaken for German or English ladies of rank, being moreover +universally blondes. On quitting Vitoria, you leave behind you the +mountains and the pretty faces. + +For us, however, the latter were not entirely lost. There were two in +the Diligence, belonging to the daughters of a Grandee of the first +class, Count de P. These youthful senoritas had taken the opportunity, +rendered particularly well-timed by the revolutions and disorders of +their country, of passing three years in Paris, which they employed in +completing their education, and seeing the wonders of that town, +_soi-disant_ the most civilized in the world; which probably it would +have been, had the old _regime_ not been overthrown. They were now +returning to Madrid, furnished with all the new ideas, and the various +useful and useless accomplishments they had acquired. + +Every one whose lot it may have been to undertake a journey of several +days in a Diligence,--that is, in one and the same,--and who +consequently recollects that trembling and anxious moment during which +he has passed in review the various members of the society of which he +is to be, _nolens volens_, a member; and the feverish interest which +directed his glance of rapid scrutiny towards those in particular of the +said members with whom he was to be exposed to more immediate contact, +and at the mercy of whose birth and education, habits, opinions, +prejudices, qualities, and propensities, his happiness and comfort were +to be placed during so large and uninterrupted a period of his +existence,--will comprehend my gratitude to these fair _emigrees_, whose +lively conversation shortened the length of each day, adding to the +charms of the magnificent scenery by the opportunity they afforded of a +congenial interchange of impressions. Although we did not occupy the +same compartment of the carriage, their party requiring the entire +interior and _rotonde_, we always renewed acquaintance when a prolonged +ascent afforded an opportunity of liberating our limbs from their +confinement. + +The two daily repasts also would have offered no charm, save that of the +Basque _cuisine_,--which, although cleanly and solid, is not perfectly +_cordon bleu_,--but for the entertaining conversation of my fair +fellow-travellers, who had treasured up in their memory the best sayings +and doings of Arnal, and the other Listons and Yateses of the French +capital, which, seasoned with a slight Spanish accent, were +indescribably _piquants_ and original. My regret was sincere on our +respective routes diverging at Burgos; for they proceeded by the direct +line over the Somo sierra to Madrid, while I take the longer road by the +Guadarramas, in order to visit Valladolid. I shall not consequently make +acquaintance with the northern approach to Madrid, unless I return +thither a second time; as to that of my fellow-travellers, I should be +too fortunate were it to be renewed during my short stay in their +capital. + + + + +LETTER IV. + +ARRIVAL AT BURGOS. CATHEDRAL. + + +Burgos. + +The chain of the Lower Pyrenees, after the ascent from the French side, +and a two days' journey of alternate mountain and valley, terminates on +the Spanish side at almost its highest level. A gentle descent leads to +the plain of Vitoria; and, after leaving behind the fresh-looking, +well-farmed environs of that town, there remains a rather monotonous +day's journey across the bare plains of Castile, only varied by the +passage through a gorge of about a mile in extent, called the Pass of +Pancorbo, throughout which the road is flanked on either side by a +perpendicular rock of from six to eight hundred feet elevation. The +ancient capital of Castile is visible from a considerable distance, when +approached in this direction; being easily recognised by the spires of +its cathedral, and by the citadel placed on an eminence, which forms a +link of a chain of hills crossing the route at this spot. + +The extent of Burgos bears a very inadequate proportion to the idea +formed of it by strangers, derived from its former importance and +renown. It is composed of five or six narrow streets, winding round the +back of an irregularly shaped colonnaded plaza. The whole occupies a +narrow space, comprised between the river Arlancon, and the almost +circular hill of scarcely a mile in circumference, (on which stands the +citadel) and covers altogether about double the extent of Windsor +Castle. + +The city has received a sort of modern facing, consisting of a row of +regularly built white houses, which turn their backs to the Plaza, and +front the river; uniting at one extremity with an ancient gateway, +which, facing the principal bridge, must originally have stood slightly +in advance of the town, to which it formed a very characteristic +entrance. It is a quadrangular edifice, pierced with a low semicircular +arch. The arch is flanked on the river front by small circular turrets, +and surmounted by seven niches, containing statues of magistrates, +kings, and heroes; while over these, in a centre niche, stands a +semicolossal statue of the Virgin, from which the monument derives its +title of "Arco de Santa Maria." Another arch, but totally simple, +situated at the other extremity of the new buildings, faces another +bridge; and this, with that of Santa Maria, and a third, placed halfway +between them, leading to the Plaza, form the three entrances to the city +on the river side. + +[Illustration: ARCO DE SANTA MARIA.] + +The dimensions of this, and many other Spanish towns, must not be +adopted as a base for estimating their amount of population. Irun, at +the frontier of France, stands on a little hill, the surface of which +would scarcely suffice for a country-house, with its surrounding +offices and gardens: it contains, nevertheless, four or five thousand +inhabitants, and comprises a good-sized market-place and handsome +town-hall, besides several streets. Nor does this close packing render +the Spanish towns less healthy than our straggling cities, planned with +a view to circulation and purity of atmosphere, although the difference +of climate would seem to recommend to each of the two countries the +system pursued by the other. The humidity of the atmosphere in England +would be the principal obstacle to cleanliness and salubrity, had the +towns a more compact mode of construction; whilst in Spain, on the +contrary, this system is advantageous as a protection against the +excessive power of the summer sun, which would render our wide +streets--bordered by houses too low to afford complete shade--not only +almost impassable, but uninhabitable. + +The Plaza of Burgos (entitled "de la Constitucion," or "de Isabel II.," +or "del Duque de la Victoria," or otherwise, according to the government +of the day,) has always been the resort of commerce. The projecting +first-floors being supported by square pillars, a sort of bazaar is +formed under them, which includes all the shop population of the city, +and forms an agreeable lounge during wet or too sunny weather. +Throughout the remainder of the town, with the exception of the modern +row of buildings above mentioned, almost all the houses are entered +through Gothic doorways, surmounted by armorial bearings sculptured in +stone, which, together with their ornamental inner courts and +staircases, testify to their having sheltered the chivalry of Old +Castile. The Cathedral, although by no means large, appears to fill half +the town; and considering that, in addition to its conspicuous and +inviting aspect, it is the principal remaining monument of the ancient +wealth and grandeur of the province, and one of the most beautiful +edifices in Europe, I will lose no time in giving you a description of +it. + +This edifice, or at least the greater portion of it, dates from the +thirteenth century. The first stone was laid by Saint Ferdinand, on the +20th of July 1221. Ferdinand had just been proclaimed king by his mother +Dona Berenguela, who had invested him with his sword at the royal +convent of the Huelgas, about a mile distant from Burgos. Don Mauricio, +Bishop of Burgos, blessed the armour as the youthful king girded it, +and, three days subsequently to the ceremony, he united him to the +Princess Beatrice, in the church of the same convent. This bishop +assisted in laying the first stone of the cathedral, and presided over +the construction of the entire body of the building, including half of +the two principal towers. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE CHOIR.] + +His tomb may be seen at the back of the Choir. From the date of the +building its style may at once be recognised, allowing for a difference +which existed between England and the Continent, the latter being +somewhat in advance. The original edifice must have been a very perfect +and admirable specimen of the pointed architecture of its time in all +its purity. As it is, unfortunately, (as the antiquary would say, and, I +should add, the mere man of taste, were it not that tastes are various, +and that the proverb says they are all in nature,) the centre of the +building, forming the intersection of the transept and nave, owing to +some defect in the original construction, fell in just at the period +during which regular architecture began to waver, and the style called +in France the "Renaissance" was making its appearance. An architect of +talent, Felipe de Borgona, hurried from Toledo, where he was employed in +carving the stalls of the choir, to furnish a plan for the centre tower. +He, however, only carried the work to half the height of the four +cylindrical piers which support it. He was followed by several others +before the termination of the work; and Juan de Herrera, the architect +of the Escorial, is said to have completed it. In this design are +displayed infinite talent and imagination; but the artist could not +alter the taste of the age. It is more than probable that he would have +kept to the pure style of his model, but for the prevailing fashion of +his time. Taken by itself, the tower is, both externally and internally, +admirable, from the elegance of its form, and the richness of its +details; but it jars with the rest of the building. + +Placing this tower in the background, we will now repair to the west +front. Here nothing is required to be added, or taken away, to afford +the eye a feast as perfect as grace, symmetry, grandeur, and lightness, +all combined, are capable of producing. Nothing can exceed the beauty of +this front taken as a whole. You have probably seen an excellent view of +it in one of Roberts's annuals. The artists of Burgos complain of an +alteration, made some fifty years back by the local ecclesiastical +authorities, nobody knows for what reason. They caused a magnificent +portal to be removed, to make way for a very simple one, totally +destitute of the usual sculptured depth of arch within arch, and of the +profusion of statuary, which are said to have adorned the original +entrance. This, however, has not produced a bad result in the view of +the whole front. Commencing by solidity and simplicity at its base, the +pile only becomes ornamental at the first story, where rows of small +trefoil arches are carved round the buttresses; while in the +intermediate spaces are an oriel window in an ornamental arch, and two +narrow double arches. The third compartment, where the towers first rise +above the body of the church, offers a still richer display of ornament. +The two towers are here connected by a screen, which masks the roof, +raising the apparent body of the facade an additional story. This +screen is very beautiful, being composed of two ogival windows in the +richest style, with eight statues occupying the intervals of their lower +mullions. A fourth story, equally rich, terminates the towers, on the +summits of which are placed the two spires. + +These are all that can be wished for the completion of such a whole. +They are, I imagine, not only unmatched, but unapproached by any others, +in symmetry, lightness, and beauty of design. The spire of Strasburg is +the only one I am acquainted with that may be allowed to enter into the +comparison. It is much larger, placed at nearly double the elevation, +and looks as light as one of these; but the symmetry of its outline is +defective, being uneven, and producing the effect of steps. And then it +is alone, and the absence of a companion gives the facade an unfinished +appearance. For these reasons I prefer the spires of Burgos. Their form +is hexagonal; they are entirely hollow, and unsupported internally. The +six sides are carved _a jour_, the design forming nine horizontal +divisions, each division presenting a different ornament on each of its +six sides. At the termination of these divisions, each pyramid is +surrounded near the summit by a projecting gallery with balustrades. +These appear to bind and keep together each airy fabric, which, +everywhere transparent, looks as though it required some such +restraint, to prevent its being instantaneously scattered by the winds. + +On examining the interior of one of these spires, it is a subject of +surprise that they could have been so constructed as to be durable. +Instead of walls, you are surrounded by a succession of little +balustrades, one over the other, converging towards the summit. The +space enclosed is exposed to all the winds, and the thickness of the +stones so slight as to have required their being bound together with +iron cramps. At a distance of a mile these spires appear as transparent +as nets. + +On entering the church by the western doors, the view is interrupted, as +is usual in Spain, by a screen, which, crossing the principal nave at +the third or fourth pillar, forms the western limit of the choir; the +eastern boundary being the west side of the transept, where there is an +iron railing. The space between the opposite side of the transept and +the apse is the _capilla mayor_ (chief chapel), in which is placed the +high altar. There are two lower lateral naves, from east to west, and +beyond them a series of chapels. The transept has no lateral naves. Some +of the chapels are richly ornamented. The first or westernmost, on the +north side, in particular, would be in itself a magnificent church. It +is called the "Chapel of Santa Tecla." Its dimensions are ninety-six +feet in length, by sixty-three in width, and sixty high. The ceiling, +and different altars, are covered with a dazzling profusion of gilded +sculpture. The ceiling, in particular, is entirely hidden beneath the +innumerable figures and ornaments of every sort of form, although of +questionable taste, which the ravings of the extravagant style, called +in Spain "Churriguesco" (after the architect who brought it into +fashion), could invent. + +The next chapel--that of Santa Ana--is not so large, but designed in far +better taste. It is Gothic, and dates from the fifteenth century. Here +are some beautiful tombs, particularly that of the founder of the +chapel. But the most attractive object is a picture, placed at an +elevation which renders difficult the appreciation of its merits without +the aid of a glass,--a Holy Family, by Andrea del Sarto. It is an +admirable picture; possessing all the grace and simplicity, combined +with the fineness of execution, of that artist. The chapel immediately +opposite (on the south side) contains some handsome tombs, and another +picture, representing the Virgin, attributed by the cicerone of the +place to Michael Angelo. We next arrive at the newer part, or centre of +the building, where four cylindrical piers of about twelve feet +diameter, with octagonal bases, form a quadrangle, and support the +centre tower, designed by Felipe de Borgona. These pillars are +connected with each other by magnificent wrought brass railings, which +give entrance respectively, westward to the choir,--on the east to the +sanctuary, or capilla mayor,--and north and south to the two ends of the +transept. Above is seen the interior of the tower, covered with a +profusion of ornament, but discordant with every other object within +view. + +[Illustration: _W.F. Starling, sc._ + +TRANSEPT OF THE CATHEDRAL, BURGOS.] + +The high altar at the back of the great chapel is also the work of +Herrera. It is composed of a series of rows of saints and apostles, +superposed one over the other, until they reach the roof. All are placed +in niches adorned with gilding, of which only partial traces remain. The +material of the whole is wood. Returning to either side-nave, a few +smaller chapels on the outside, and opposite them the railings of the +sanctuary, conduct us to the back of the high altar, opposite which is +the eastern chapel, called "of the Duke de Frias," or "Capilla del +Condestable." + +[Illustration: SCULPTURE IN THE APSE.] + +All this part of the edifice--I mean, from the transept eastward--is +admirable, both with regard to detail and to general effect. The pillars +are carved all round into niches, containing statues or groups; and the +intervals between the six last, turning round the apse, are occupied by +excellent designs, sculptured in a hard white stone. The subjects are, +the Agony in the Garden, Jesus bearing the Cross, the Crucifixion, the +Resurrection, and the Ascension. The centre piece, representing the +Crucifixion, is the most striking. The upper part contains the three +sufferers in front; and in the background a variety of buildings, trees, +and other smaller objects, supposed to be at a great distance. In the +foreground of the lower part are seen the officers and soldiers employed +in the execution; a group of females, with St. John supporting the +Virgin, and a few spectators. The costumes, the expression, the symmetry +of the figures, all contribute to the excellence of this piece of +sculpture. It would be difficult to surpass the exquisite grace +displayed in the attitudes, and flow of the drapery, of the female +group; and the Herculean limbs of the right-hand robber, as he writhes +in his torments, and seems ready to snap the cords which retain his feet +and arms,--the figure projecting in its entire contour from the surface +of the background,--present an admirable model of corporeal expression +and anatomical detail. + +In clearing the space to make room for these sculptures, the artist had +to remove the tomb of a bishop, whose career, if the ancient _chronique_ +is to be depended on, must have been rather singular. The information, +it must be owned, bears the appearance of having been transmitted by +some contemporary annalist, whose impartiality may have perhaps been +biassed by some of the numerous incitements which operate upon +courtiers. + +Don Pedro Fernandez de Frias, Cardinal of Spain, Bishop of Osma and +Cuenca, was, it is affirmed, of low parentage, of base and licentious +habits of life, and of a covetous and niggardly disposition. These +defects, however, by no means diminished the high favour he enjoyed at +the successive courts of Henry the Third and Juan the Second. The Bishop +of Segovia, Don Juan de Tordesillas, happened by an unlucky coincidence +to visit Burgos during his residence there. The characters of the two +prelates were not of a nature to harmonise in the smallest degree, and, +being thrown necessarily much in each other's way, they gave loose +occasionally to expressions more than bordering on the irreverent. It +was on one of these occasions, that, the eloquence of the Cardinal +Bishop here interred being at default, a lacquey of his followers came +to his assistance, and being provided with a _palo_, or staff, inflicted +on the rival dignitary certain arguments _ad humeros_--in fact, gave the +Bishop of Segovia a severe drubbing. The Cardinal was on this occasion +compelled to retire to Italy. + +Turning our backs to the centre piece of sculpture last described, we +enter the Capilla del Condestable through a superb bronze railing. In +these railings the Cathedral of Burgos rivals that of Seville, +compensating by number for the superior size and height of those +contained in the latter church. That of the chapel we are now entering +entirely fills the entrance arch, a height of about forty feet; the +helmet of a mounted knight in full armour, intended to represent St. +Andrew, which crowns its summit, nearly touching the keystone of the +arch. This chapel must be noticed in detail. Occupying at the extremity +of the church a position answering to that of Henry the Seventh's +Chapel at Westminster Abbey, it forms a tower of itself, which on the +outside harmonises with peculiar felicity with the three others, and +contributes to the apparent grandeur and real beauty of the exterior +view. The interior is magnificent, although its plan and style, being +entirely different from those of Henry the Seventh's Chapel, prevent the +comparison from going further. Its form is octagonal, measuring about +fifty feet in diameter, by rather more than a hundred in height. Its +style florid Gothic of the fourteenth century. The effect of its first +view is enhanced by its being filled, unlike the rest of the church, +with a blaze of light introduced through two rows of windows in the +upper part. + +Two of the sides are furnished with recesses, which form lesser chapels, +and in one of which there is a fine organ. Between the centre of the +pavement and the principal altar, a large square block of mixed marble +covers the remains of the founders of the chapel, and bears on its +surface their recumbent figures executed in great perfection.[2] This +is the finest tomb in the cathedral. The embroidery of the cushions, the +ornaments on the count's armour, the gloves of the countess, are among +the details which merit particular notice amidst the beautiful execution +of the whole. The high altar of this chapel does not accord with the +general effect, being designed in the style of the _renascimiento_. In +the centre of it is nevertheless fixed a treasure that would compensate +for worse defects. A small circular medallion represents the Virgin and +Child, in an attitude very similar to that of the Madonna della +Seggiola, executed on porphyry. This delicious little work, of about +nine inches in diameter, forms the centre of attraction, and is the most +precious ornament of the chapel. On the right hand, near the altar, a +small doorway admits to the sacristy. + +This contains several relics of the founders. A small portable altar of +ivory, forming the base of a crucifix of about eighteen inches in +height, is an exquisite model of delicate workmanship. Here also has +been treasured up a picture, behind a glass, and in a sort of wooden +case; a bequest likewise of the founders. Unfortunately they neglected +to impart the name of its author. The nebulous sort of uncertainty thus +made to surround this relic has magnified its merits, which might +otherwise perhaps not have claimed particular notice, to the most +colossal dimensions. They scarcely at last know what to say of it. At +the period of my first visit to Burgos, it was a Leonardo da Vinci; but, +after a lapse of two years, the same sacristan informed me that it was +uncertain whether the painting was executed by Raffaelle or Leonardo, +although it was generally supposed to be by Raffaelle; and a notice, +published since, gives the authority of an anonymous connaisseur, who +asserts it to be far superior to Raffaelle's "Perle." It is now +consequently decided that it cannot be a Leonardo, and is scarcely bad +enough for a Raffaelle. + +Without venturing _tantas componere lites_, I may be allowed to give my +impression, on an inspection as complete as the studied darkness of the +apartment, added to the glass and wooden case, would permit. It is a +half-figure of the Magdalene. The execution is very elaborate and highly +finished, but there are evident defects in the drawing. In colouring and +manner it certainly reminds you of da Vinci--of one of whose works it +may probably be a copy; but, whatever it is, it is easy to discover that +it is _not_ a Raffaelle. + +This chapel does not occupy the precise centre of the apse. A line drawn +from the middle of the western door through the nave would divide it +into two unequal parts, passing at a distance of nearly two yards from +its centre. An examination of the ground externally gives no clue to the +cause of this irregularity, by which the external symmetry of the +edifice is rendered imperfect, although in an almost imperceptible +degree; it must therefore be accounted for by the situation of the +adjoining parochial chapel, of more ancient construction, with which it +was not allowable to interfere, and by the unwillingness of the founder +to diminish the scale on which his chapel was planned. + +Before we leave the Chapel del Condestable, one of its ceremonies +deserves particular mention. I allude to the _missa de los carneros_ +(sheep-mass). At early mass on All Souls day, a feast celebrated in this +chapel with extraordinary pomp, six sheep are introduced, and made to +stand on a large block of unpolished marble, which has been left lying +close to the tombs, almost in the centre of the chapel; near the six +sheep are placed as many inflated skins of pigs, resembling those +usually filled with the wine of the country; to these is added the +quantity of bread produced from four bushels of wheat: and all remain in +view during the performance of high mass. At the conclusion of the final +response, the sheep are removed from their pedestal, and make for the +chapel-gates, through which they issue; and urged by the voice of their +driver, the peculiar shrill whistle of Spanish shepherds, and by the +more material argument of the staff, proceed down the entire length of +the cathedral to the music of the aforesaid whistle, accompanied by +their own bleatings and bells, until they vanish through the great +western portal. + +Returning to the transepts, we find two objects worthy of notice. The +cathedral having been erected on uneven ground, rising rapidly from +south to north, the entrance to the north transept opens at an elevation +of nearly thirty feet from the pavement. To reach this door there is an +ornamental staircase, of a sort of white stone, richly carved in the +_renaissance_ style. This door is never open, a circumstance which +causes no inconvenience; the steps being so steep as to render them less +useful than ornamental, as long as any other exit exists. + +A beautifully carved old door, of a wood become perfectly black, +although not so originally, gives access to the cloister from the east +side of the south transept. The interior of the arch which surmounts it +is filled with sculpture. A plain moulding runs round the top, at the +left-hand commencement of which is carved a head of the natural size, +clothed in a cowl. + +[Illustration: HEAD OF SAINT FRANCIS.][3] + +The attention is instantly rivetted by this head: it is not merely a +masterpiece of execution. Added to the exquisite beauty and delicate +moulding of the upper part of the face, the artist has succeeded in +giving to the mouth an almost superhuman expression. This feature, in +spite of a profusion of hair which almost covers it, lives and speaks. A +smile, in which a barely perceptible but irresistible and, as it were, +innate bitterness of satire and disdain modifies a wish of benevolence, +unites with the piercing expression of the eyes in lighting up the stone +with a degree of intellect which I had thought beyond the reach of +sculpture until I saw this head. Tradition asserts it to be a portrait +of Saint Francis, who was at Burgos at the period of the completion of +the cathedral; and who, being in the habit of examining the progress of +the works, afforded unconsciously a study to the sculptor. + +The two sacristies are entered from the cloister: one of them contains +the portraits of all the bishops and archbishops of Burgos. +Communicating with this last is a room destined for the reception of +useless lumber and broken ornaments. Here the cicerone directs your +attention to an old half-rotten oaken chest, fixed against the wall at a +considerable height. This relic is the famous Coffre del Cid, the +self-same piece of furniture immortalised in the anecdote related of the +hero respecting the loan of money obtained on security of the supposed +treasure it enclosed. The lender of the money, satisfied by the weight +of the trunk, and the chivalrous honour of its proprietor, never saw +its contents until shown them by the latter on the repayment of the +loan: they were then discovered to consist of stones and fragments of +old iron. + +One is disappointed on finding in this cathedral no more durable +_souvenir_ of the Cid than his rat-corroded wardrobe. His remains are +preserved in the chapel of the Ayuntamiento; thither we will +consequently bend our steps, not forgetting to enjoy, as we leave the +church, a long gaze at its elegant and symmetrical proportions. It may +be called an unique model of beauty of its particular sort, especially +when contemplated without being drawn into comparison with other +edifices of a different class. Catalani is said, on hearing Sontag's +performance, to have remarked that she was "la premiere de son genre, +mais que son genre n'etait pas le premier." Could the cathedral of +Seville see that of Burgos, it would probably pronounce a similar +judgment on its smaller rival. + +The profusion of ornament, the perfection of symmetry, the completeness +of finish, produce an instantaneous impression that nothing is wanting +in this charming edifice; but any one who should happen to have +previously seen that of Seville cannot, after the first moments of +enthusiasm, escape the comparison which forces itself on him, and which +is not in favour of this cathedral. It is elegant, but deficient in +grandeur; beautiful, but wanting in majesty. The stern and grand +simplicity of the one, thrown into the scales against the light, airy, +and diminutive, though graceful beauty of the other, recalls the +contrast drawn by Milton between our first parents; a contrast which, +applied to these churches, must be considered favourable to the more +majestic, however the balance of preference may turn in the poem. + + + + +LETTER V. + +TOMB OF THE CID. CITADEL. + + +Burgos. + +The Ayuntamiento, or Town-hall, presents one facade to the river, and +the other to the Plaza Mayor, being built over the archway which forms +the already mentioned entrance to the central portion of the city. The +building, like other town-halls, possesses an airy staircase, a large +public room, and a few other apartments, used for the various details of +administration; but nothing remarkable until you arrive at a handsomely +ornamented saloon, furnished with a canopied seat fronting a row of +arm-chairs. This is the room in which the municipal body hold their +juntas. It contains several portraits: two or three of kings, suspended +opposite to an equal number of queens; the two likenesses of the +celebrated judges Nuno Rasura and Lain Calvo, near which are seen the +simple square oaken chairs from within the angular and hard embrace of +which they administered the laws and government of Castile; a +full-length of Fernan Gonzalez; and lastly, one of the Cid. + +Owing to the singularity of this last portrait, it is the first to +attract attention. The hero is represented in the most extraordinary of +attitudes: the head is thrown back, and the face turned towards one +side; the legs in a sort of studied posture; a drawn sword is in the +right hand, the point somewhat raised. The general expression is that of +a comic actor attempting an attitude of mock-heroic impertinence; and is +probably the result of an unattained object in the mind of the artist, +of producing that of fearless independence. + +Beyond this apartment is the Chapel, a plain, not large room, containing +but two objects besides its very simple altar, with its, almost black, +silver candlesticks. Over the altar is a Conception, by Murillo; and, in +the centre of the chapel, a highly polished and neatly ornamented +funereal urn, composed of walnut-wood, contains the remains of the Cid: +the urn stands on a pedestal. On its two ends in letters of gold, are +inscriptions, stating its contents, and the date of its application to +its present purpose. I was told that the bones were contained in a +leaden box, but that a glass one was being prepared, which, on opening +the lid of the urn, would afford a view of the actual dust of the +warrior. + +The remains of the Cid have only recently been conveyed to Burgos from +the monastery of San Pedro de Cardenas, about four miles distant. They +had been preserved there ever since his funeral, which took place in the +presence of King Alonzo the Sixth, and the two Kings, sons-in-law of the +hero, as soon as the body arrived from Valencia. + +This monastic retreat, if dependence may be placed on the testimony of +the Cerberus of the Alcalde,--the cicerone (when duly propitiated) of +the municipal edifice,--did not turn out to be altogether a place of +repose to the warrior. According to this worthy, an amusing interpreter +of the popular local traditions, the exploits performed subsequently to +the hero's interment were such as almost to throw a shadow over those he +enacted during his mortal existence. One specimen will suffice. Some +twenty thousand individuals, including the monks of all the neighbouring +monasteries, were assembled in the church of San Pedro, and were +listening to a sermon on the occasion of the annual festival in honour +of the patron saint. Guided by curiosity, a Moor entered the church and +mingled with the crowd. After remaining during a short time motionless, +he approached a pillar, against which was suspended a portrait of the +Cid, for the purpose of examining the picture. Suddenly the figure was +seen by all present, whose testimony subsequently established the fact, +to grasp with the right hand the hilt of its sword, and to uncover a few +inches of the naked blade. The Moor instantly fell flat on the pavement, +and was found to be lifeless. + +You would be surprised at the difficulty of forming even here, in the +midst of the scenes of his exploits, a definite idea of this Hercules of +the Middle Ages. For those who are satisfied with the orthodox histories +of the monks, he is without defects--a simple unsophisticated demi-god. +But there have been Mahometan historians of Spain. These are universally +acknowledged to have treated of all that concerned themselves with +complete accuracy and impartiality; and, when this happens, it should +seem to be the best criterion, in the absence of other proof, of their +faithful delineation of others' portraits. + +However that may be, here is an instance which will give you an idea of +the various readings of the Cid's history. + +Mariana relates, that an Arab expedition, headed by five kings (as he +terms them) of the adjoining states, being signalized as having passed +the mountains of Oca, and being occupied in committing depredations on +the Christian territory, Rodrigo suddenly took the field, recovered all +the booty, and made all five kings prisoners. All this being done by +himself and his own retainers. The kings he released after signing a +treaty, according to which they agreed to pay him an annual tribute. It +happened, that on the occasion of the first payment of this, Rodrigo was +at Zamora, whither he had accompanied the King of Castile; and he took +an opportunity of receiving the Arab messengers in presence of the +court. This was at least uncommon. The messengers addressed him by the +appellation of Syd (sir) as they handed over the money. Ferdinand, +delighted with the prowess of his courtier, expressed on this occasion +the desire that he should retain the title of Syd. + +This anecdote undergoes, in the hands of the Arab writers, a curious +metamorphosis. According to them, the expression Syd was employed, not +by tributary kings, but by certain chiefs of that creed whose pay the +Catholic hero was receiving in return for aid lent against the +Christians of Aragon. + +They attribute, moreover, to this mirror of chivalry, on the surrender +of Valencia, a conduct by no means heroic--not to say worthy a +highwayman. He accepted, as they relate, the pay of the Emyr of Valencia +to protect the city against the Almoravides, who at that period were +extending their conquests all over Moorish Spain. The Cid was repulsed, +and the town taken. After this defeat he shut himself up in a castle, +since called the Pena del Cid (Rock of the Cid), and there waited his +opportunity. On the departure of the conquerors from the city, in which +they left an insufficient garrison, he hastened down at the head of his +campeadores, and speedily retook Valencia. + +The Cadi, Ahmed ben Djahhaf, left in command of the place, had, however, +only surrendered on faith of a capitulation couched in the most +favourable terms. It was even stipulated that he should retain his post +of governor; but no sooner was the Cid master of the place than he +caused the old man to be arrested and put to the torture, in order to +discover from him the situation of a treasure supposed to be concealed +in the Alcazar; after which, finding he would not speak, or had nothing +to reveal, he had him burned on the public place. + +The Citadel of Burgos, at present an insignificant fortress, was +formerly a place of considerable importance, and commanded the +surrounding country; especially on the side on which the town--placed at +the foot of the eminence--lay beneath its immediate protection, and +could listen unscathed to the whizzing of the deadly missiles of war as +they passed over its roofs. During the various wars of which Castile has +been the theatre at different periods, this citadel has, from its +important position, occupied the main attention of contending armies; +and, from forming a constant _point-de-mire_ to attacking troops, has +finally been almost annihilated. The principal portion of the present +buildings is of a modern date, but, although garrisoned, the fortress +cannot be said to be restored. + +The extent of the town was greater than at present, and included a +portion of the declivity which exists between the present houses and the +walls of the fortress. At the two extremities of the town-side of the +hill, immediately above the level of the highest-placed houses now +existing, two Arab gate-ways give access through the ancient town-walls, +which ascended the hill from the bottom. Between these there exists a +sort of flat natural terrace, above the town, and running along its +whole length, on to which some of the streets open. On this narrow level +stood formerly a part, probably the best part, of the city, which has +shared the fate of its protecting fortress; but, not being rebuilt, it +is now an empty space,--or would be so, but for the recent erection of a +cemetery, placed at about half the distance between the two extremities. + +Before, however, the lapse of years had worn away the last surviving +recollections of these localities, some worshipper of by-gone glory +succeeded in discovering, on the now grass-grown space, the situations +once occupied by the respective abodes of the Cid and of Fernan +Gonzalez. On these spots monuments have been erected. That of Gonzalez +is a handsome arch, the piers supporting which are each faced with two +pillars of the Doric order on either side; above the cornice there is a +balustrade, over which four small obelisks correspond with the +respective pillars. The arch is surmounted by a sort of pedestal, on +which is carved an inscription, stating the object of the monument. +There is nothing on the top of the pedestal, which appears to have been +intended for the reception of a statue. + +The monument in memory of the Cid is more simple. It consists of three +small pyramids in a row, supported on low bases or pedestals; that in +the centre higher than the other two, but not exceeding (inclusive of +the base) twenty feet from the ground. On the lower part of the centre +stone is carved an appropriate inscription, abounding in ellipsis, after +the manner usually adopted in Spain. + +It is not surprising that these monuments, together with the memory of +the events brought about by the men in whose honour they have been +erected, should be fast hastening to a level with the desolation +immediately surrounding them. The present political circumstances of +Spain are not calculated to favour the retrospection of by-gone glories. +Scarcely is time allowed--so rapidly are executed the transmutations of +the modern political diorama--for examining the events, or even for +recovery from the shock, of each succeeding revolution; nor force +remaining to the exhausted organs of admiration or of horror, to be +exercised on almost forgotten acts, since those performed before the +eyes of the living generation have equalled or surpassed them in +violence and energy. The arch of Fernan Gonzalez, if not speedily +restored, (which is not to be expected,) runs the risk, from its +elevation and want of solidity, of being the first of the two monuments +to crumble to dust; a circumstance which, although not destitute of an +appearance of justice,--from the fact of the hero it records having +figured on an earlier page of Castilian annals,--would nevertheless +occasion regret to those who prefer history to romance, and who estimate +essential services rendered to the state, as superior to mere individual +_eclat_, however brilliant. + +You will not probably object to the remainder of this letter being +monopolized by this founder of the independence of Castile; the less so, +from the circumstance of the near connection existing between his +parentage and that of the city we are visiting, and which owes to him so +much of its celebrity. Should you not be in a humour to be lectured on +history, you are at all events forewarned, and may wait for the next +despatch. + +Unlike many of the principal towns of the Peninsula, which content +themselves with no more modern descent than from Nebuchadnezzar or +Hercules, Burgos modestly accepts a paternity within the domain of +probability. A German, Nuno Belchides, married, in the reign of Alonzo +the Great, King of Oviedo, a daughter of the second Count of Castile, +Don Diego Porcellos. This noble prevailed on his father-in-law to +assemble the inhabitants of the numerous villages dispersed over the +central part of the province, and to found a city, to which he gave the +German name of "city" with a Spanish termination. It was Don Fruela +III., King of Leon, whose acts of injustice and cruelty caused so +violent an exasperation, that the nobles of Castile, of whom there +existed several of a rank little inferior to that of the titular Count +of the province, threw up their allegiance, and selected two of their +own body, Nuno Rasura and Lain Calvo, to whom they intrusted the supreme +authority, investing them with the modest title of Judges, by way of a +check, lest at any future time they should be tempted, upon the strength +of a higher distinction, to make encroachments on the common liberties. + +The first of the two judges, Nuno Rasura, was the son of the +above-mentioned Nuno Belchides and his wife, Sulla Bella (daughter of +Diego Porcellos), and grandfather of Fernan Gonzalez. His son Gonzalo +Nuno, Fernan's father, succeeded on his death to the dignity of Judge of +Castile, and became extremely popular, owing to his affability, and +winning urbanity of deportment in his public character. He established +an academy in his palace for the education of the sons of the nobles, +who were instructed under his own superintendence in all the +accomplishments which could render them distinguished in peace or in +war. The maternal grandfather of Fernan Gonzalez was Nuno Fernandez, one +of the Counts of Castile who were treacherously seized and put to death +by Don Ordono, King of Leon. The young Count of Castile is described as +having been a model of elegance. To singular personal beauty he added an +unmatched proficiency in all the exercises then in vogue, principally in +arms and equitation. These accomplishments, being added to much +affability and good-nature, won him the affections of the young nobles, +who strove to imitate his perfections, while they enjoyed the +festivities of his palace. + +It appears that, notwithstanding the rebellion, and appointment of +Judges, Castile had subsequently professed allegiance to the Kings of +Leon; for a second revolt was organized in the reign of Don Ramiro, at +the head of which we find Fernan Gonzalez. On this occasion, feeling +themselves too feeble to resist the royal troops, the rebels had +recourse to a Moorish chief, Aecipha. The King, however, speedily drove +the Moors across the frontier, and succeeded in capturing the principal +revolters. After a short period these were released, on the sole +condition of taking the oath of allegiance; and the peace was +subsequently sealed by the marriage of a daughter of Gonzalez with Don +Ordono, eldest son of Ramiro, and heir to the kingdom. + +The Count of Castile was, however, too powerful a vassal to continue +long on peaceable terms with a sovereign, an alliance with whose family +had more than ever smoothed the progressive ascent of his pretensions. +Soon after the accession of his son-in-law Don Ordono, he entered into +an alliance against him with the King of Navarre. This declaration of +hostility was followed by the divorce of Fernan's daughter by the King, +who immediately entered into a second wedlock. The successor of this +monarch, Don Sancho, surnamed the Fat, was indebted for a large portion +of his misfortunes and vicissitudes to the hostility of the Count of +Castile. Don Ordono, the pretender to his throne, son of Alonzo surnamed +the Monk, with the aid of Gonzalez, whose daughter Urraca, the +repudiated widow of the former sovereign, he married, took easy +possession of the kingdom, driving Don Sancho for shelter to the court +of his uncle the then King of Navarre. It is worth mentioning, that King +Sancho took the opportunity of his temporary expulsion from his states, +to visit the court of Abderahman at Cordova, and consult the Arab +physicians, whose reputation for skill in the removal of obesity had +extended over all Spain. History relates that the treatment they +employed was successful, and that Don Sancho, on reascending his throne, +had undergone so complete a reduction as to be destitute of all claims +to his previously acquired _sobriquet_. + +All these events, and the intervals which separated them, fill a +considerable space of time; and the establishment of the exact dates +would be a very difficult, if not an impossible, undertaking. Various +wars were carried on during this time by Gonzalez, and alliances formed +and dissolved. Several more or less successful campaigns are recorded +against the Moors of Saragoza, and of other neighbouring states. The +alliance with Navarre had not been durable. In 959 Don Garcia, King of +that country, fought a battle with Fernan Gonzalez, by whom he was taken +prisoner, and detained in Burgos thirteen months. The conquest of the +independence of Castile is related in the following manner. + +In the year 958, the Cortes of the kingdom were assembled at Leon, +whence the King forwarded a special invitation to the Count of Castile, +requiring his attendance, and that of the Grandees of the province, for +"deliberation on affairs of high importance to the state." Gonzalez, +although suspicious of the intentions of the sovereign, unable to devise +a suitable pretext for absenting himself, repaired to Leon, attended by +a considerable _cortege_ of nobles. The King went forth to receive him; +and it is related, that refusing to accept a present, offered by +Gonzalez, of a horse and a falcon, both of great value, a price was +agreed on; with the condition that, in case the King should not pay the +money on the day named in the agreement, for each successive day that +should intervene until the payment, the sum should be doubled. Nothing +extraordinary took place during the remainder of the visit; and the +Count, on his return to Burgos, married Dona Sancha, sister of the King +of Navarre. + +It is probable that some treachery had been intended against Gonzalez, +similar to that put in execution on a like occasion previous to his +birth, when the Counts of Castile were seized and put to death in their +prison; for, not long after, a second invitation was accepted by the +Count, who was now received in a very different manner. On his kneeling +to kiss the King's hand, Don Sancho burst forth with a volley of +reproaches, and, repulsing him with fury, gave orders for his immediate +imprisonment. It is doubtful what fate was reserved for him by the +hatred of the Queen-mother, who had instigated the King to the act of +treachery, in liquidation of an ancient personal debt of vengeance of +her own, had not the Countess of Castile, Dona Sancha, undertaken his +liberation. + +Upon receiving the news of her husband's imprisonment, she allowed a +short period to elapse, in order to mature her plan, and at the same +time lull suspicion of her intentions. She then repaired to Leon, on +pretext of a pilgrimage to Santiago, on the route to which place Leon is +situated. She was received by King Sancho with distinguished honours, +and obtained permission to visit her husband, and to pass a night in his +prison. The following morning, Gonzalez, taking advantage of early +twilight, passed the prison-doors in disguise of the Countess, and, +mounting a horse which was in readiness, escaped to Castile. + +This exploit of Dona Sancha does not belong to the days of romance and +chivalry alone: it reminds us of the still more difficult task, +accomplished by the beautiful Winifred, Countess of Nithisdale, who, +eight centuries later, effected the escape of the rebel Earl, her +husband, from the Tower, in a precisely similar manner; thus rescuing +him from the tragic fate of his friends and fellow-prisoners, the Lords +Derwentwater and Kenmure. + +Dona Sancha obtained her liberty without difficulty, being even +complimented by the King on her heroism, and provided with a brilliant +escort on her return to Castile. Gonzalez contented himself with +claiming the price agreed upon for the horse and falcon; and--the King +not seeming inclined to liquidate the debt, which, owing to the long +delay, amounted already to an enormous sum, or looking upon it as a +pretext for hostility, the absence of which would not prevent the Count +of Castile, in his then state of exasperation, from having recourse to +arms--passed the frontier of Leon at the head of an army, and, laying +waste the country, approached gradually nearer to the capital. At length +Don Sancho sent his treasurer to clear up the account, but it was found +that the debt exceeded the whole amount of the royal treasure; upon +which Gonzalez claimed and obtained, on condition of the withdrawal of +his troops, a formal definitive grant of Castile, without reservation, +to himself and his descendants. + +Before we quit Burgos for its environs, one more edifice requires our +notice. It is a fountain, occupying the centre of the space which faces +the principal front of the cathedral. This little antique monument +charms, by the quaint symmetry of its design and proportions, and +perhaps even by the terribly mutilated state of the four fragments of +Cupids, which, riding on the necks of the same number of animals so +maltreated as to render impossible the discovery of their race, form +projecting angles, and support the basin on their shoulders. Four +mermaids, holding up their tails, so as not to interfere with the +operations of the Cupids, ornament the sides of the basin, which are +provided with small apertures for the escape of the water; the top being +covered by a flat circular stone, carved around its edge. This stone,--a +small, elegantly shaped pedestal, which surmounts it,--and the other +portions already described, are nearly black, probably from antiquity; +but on the pedestal stands a little marble virgin, as white as snow. +This antique figure harmonises by its mutilation with the rest, although +injured in a smaller degree; and at the same time adds to the charm of +the whole, by the contrast of its dazzling whiteness with the dark mass +on which it is supported. The whole is balanced on the capital of a +pillar, of a most original form, which appears immediately above the +surface of a sheet of water enclosed in a large octagonal basin. + +[Illustration: FOUNTAIN OF SANTA MARIA.] + + + + +LETTER VI. + +CARTUJA DE MIRAFLORES. CONVENT OF LAS HUELGAS. + + +Burgos. + +The Chartreuse of Miraflores, situated to the east of the city, half-way +in the direction of the above-mentioned monastery of San Pedro de +Cardenas, crowns the brow of an eminence, which, clothed with woods +towards its base, slopes gradually until it reaches the river. This spot +is the most picturesque to be found in the environs of Burgos,--a region +little favoured in that respect. The view, extending right and left, +follows the course of the river, until it is bounded on the west by the +town, and on the east by a chain of mountains, a branch of the Sierra of +Oca. Henry the Third, grandfather of Isabel the Catholic, made choice of +this position for the erection of a palace; the only remnant of it now +existing is the church, which has since become the inheritance of the +Carthusian monks, the successors of its royal founder. + +The late revolution, after sparing the throne of Spain, displayed a +certain degree of logic, if not in all its acts, at least in sparing, +likewise, two or three of the religious establishments, under the +protection of which the principal royal mausoleums found shelter and +preservation. The great Chartreuse of Xeres contained probably no such +palladium, for it was among the first of the condemned: its lands and +buildings were confiscated; and its treasures of art, and all portable +riches, dispersed, as likewise its inhabitants, in the direction of all +the winds. + +In England the name of Xeres is only generally known in connection with +one of the principal objects of necessity, which furnish the table of +the _gastronome_; but in Andalucia the name of Xeres de la Frontera +calls up ideas of a different sort. It is dear to the wanderer in Spain, +whose recollections love to repose on its picturesque position, its +sunny skies, its delicious fruits, its amiable and lively population, +and lastly on its once magnificent monastery, and the treasures of art +it contained. The Prior of that monastery has been removed to the +Cartuja of Burgos, where he presides over a community, reduced to four +monks, who subsist almost entirely on charity. This amiable and +gentleman-like individual, in whom the monk has in no degree injured +the man of the world,--although a large estate, abandoned for the +cloister, proved sufficiently the sincerity of his religious +professions,--had well deserved a better fate than to be torn in his old +age from his warm Andalucian retreat, and transplanted to the rudest +spot in the whole Peninsula, placed at an elevation of more than four +thousand feet above the level of the Atlantic, and visited up to the +middle of June by snow-storms. At the moment I am writing, this innocent +victim of reform is extended on a bed of sickness, having only recently +escaped with his life from an attack, during which he was given over. + +This Cartuja possesses more than the historical reminiscences with which +it is connected, to attract the passing tourist. It owes its prolonged +existence to the possession of an admirable work of art,--the tomb of +Juan the Second and his Queen Isabel, which stands immediately in front +of the high altar of the church. This living mass of alabaster, the work +of Gil de Siloe, son of the celebrated Diego, presents in its general +plan the form of a star. It turns one of its points to the altar. Its +mass, or thickness from the ground to the surface, measures about six +feet; and this is consequently the height at which are laid the two +recumbent figures. + +[Illustration: _N. A. Wells. deb._ W. I. Starling, "84" + +INTERIOR OF THE CHURCH OF MIRAFLORES, + +NEAR BURGOS.] + +It is impossible to conceive a work more elaborate than the details of +the costumes of the King and Queen. The imitation of lace and +embroidery, the exquisite delicacy of the hands and features, the +infinitely minute carving of the pillows, the architectural railing by +which the two statues are separated, the groups of sporting lions and +dogs placed against the foot-boards, and the statues of the four +Evangelists, seated at the four points of the star which face the +cardinal points of the compass,--all these attract first the attention +as they occupy the surface; but they are nothing to the profusion of +ornament lavished on the sides. The chisel of the artist has followed +each retreating and advancing angle of the star, filling the innermost +recesses with life and movement. It would be endless to enter into a +detailed enumeration of all this. It is composed of lions and lionesses, +panthers, dogs,--crouching, lying, sitting, rampant, and standing; of +saints, male and female, and personifications of the cardinal virtues. +These figures are represented in every variety of posture,--some +standing on pedestals, and others seated on beautifully wrought +arm-chairs, but all enclosed respectively in the richest Gothic tracery, +and under cover of their respective niches. Were there no other object +of interest at Burgos, this tomb would well repay the traveller for a +halt of a few days, and a country walk. + +At the opposite side of the town may be seen the royal convent of Las +Huelgas; but as the nuns reserve to themselves the greater part of the +church, including the royal tombs, which are said to be very numerous, +no one can penetrate to satisfy his curiosity. It is, however, so +celebrated an establishment, and of such easy access from the town, that +a sight of what portions of the buildings are accessible deserves the +effort of the two hundred yards' walk which separates it from the river +promenade. This Cistercian convent was founded towards the end of the +twelfth century by Alonzo the Eighth,--the same who won the famous +battle of the Navas de Tolosa. It occupies the site of the +pleasure-grounds of a royal retreat, as is indicated by the name itself. +In its origin it was destined for the reception, exclusively, of +princesses of the blood royal. It was consequently designed on a scale +of peculiar splendour. Of the original buildings, however, only +sufficient traces remain to confirm the records of history, but not to +convey an adequate idea of their magnificence. What with the +depredations of time, the vicissitudes of a situation in the midst of +provinces so given to contention, and repeated alterations, it has +evidently, as far as regards the portions to a view of which admission +can be obtained, yielded almost all claims to identity with its ancient +self. + +The entire church, with the exception of a small portion partitioned off +at the extremity, and containing the high altar, is appropriated to the +nuns, and fitted up as a choir. It is very large; the length, of which +an estimate may be formed externally, appearing to measure nearly three +hundred feet. It is said this edifice contains the tomb of the founder, +surrounded by forty others of princesses. The entrance to the public +portion consists of a narrow vestibule, in which are several antique +tombs. They are of stone, covered with Gothic sculpture, and appear, +from the richness of their ornaments, to have belonged also to royalty. +They are stowed away, and half built into the wall, as if there had not +been room for their reception. The convent is said to contain handsome +cloisters, courts, chapter-hall, and other state apartments, all of a +construction long subsequent to its foundation. The whole is surrounded +by a complete circle of houses, occupied by its various dependants and +pensioners. These are enclosed from without by a lofty wall, and face +the centre edifice, from which they are separated by a series of large +open areas. Their appearance is that of a small town, surrounding a +cathedral and palace. + +The convent of the Huelgas takes precedence of all others in Spain. The +abbess and her successors were invested by the sovereigns of Leon and +Castile with especial prerogatives, and with a sort of authority over +all convents within those kingdoms. Her possessions were immense, and +she enjoyed the sovereign sway over an extensive district, including +several convents, thirteen towns, and about fifty villages. In many +respects her jurisdiction resembles that of a bishop. The following is +the formula which heads her official acts: + +"We, Dona ..., by the grace of God and of the Holy Apostolic See, Abbess +of the royal monastery of Las Huelgas near to the city of Burgos, order +of the Cister, habit of our father San Bernardo, Mistress, Superior, +Prelate, Mother, and lawful spiritual and temporal Administrator of the +said royal monastery, and its hospital called 'the King's Hospital,' and +of the convents, churches, and hermitages of its filiation, towns and +villages of its jurisdiction, lordship, and vassalage, in virtue of +Apostolic bulls and concessions, with all sorts of jurisdiction, proper, +almost episcopal, _nullius diocesis_, and with royal privileges, since +we exercise both jurisdictions, as is public and notorious," &c. + +The hospital alluded to gives its name to a village, about a quarter of +a mile distant, called "Hospital del Rey." This village is still in a +sort of feudal dependance on the abbess, and is the only remaining +source of revenue to the convent, having been recently restored by a +decree of Queen Isabella; for the royal blood flowing in the veins of +the present abbess had not exempted her convent from the common +confiscation decreed by the revolution. The hospital, situated in the +centre of the village, is a handsome edifice. The whole place is +surrounded by a wall, similar to that which encloses the convent and its +immediate dependances, and the entrance presents a specimen of much +architectural beauty. It forms a small quadrangle, ornamented with an +elegant arcade, and balustrades of an original design. + + + + +LETTER VII. + +ROUTE TO MADRID. MUSEO. + + +Toledo. + +The route from Burgos to Madrid presents few objects of interest. The +country is dreary and little cultivated; indeed, much of it is incapable +of culture. For those who are unaccustomed to Spanish routes, there may, +indeed, be derived some amusement from the inns, of which some very +characteristic specimens lie in their way. The Diligence halts for the +night at the Venta de Juanilla, a solitary edifice situated at the foot +of the last or highest _etage_ of the Somo Sierra, in order to leave the +principal ascent for the cool of early dawn. The building is seen from a +considerable distance, and looks large; but is found, on nearer +approach, to be a straggling edifice of one story only. + +It is a modern inn, and differs in some essential points from the +ancient Spanish _posada_,--perfect specimens of which are met with at +Briviesca and Burgos. In these the vestibule is at the same time a +cow-shed, sheepfold, stable, pigsty,--in fact, a spacious Noah's Ark, in +which are found specimens of all living animals, that is, of all sizes, +down to the most minute; but for the purification of which it would be +requisite that the entire flood should pass within, instead of on its +outside. The original ark, moreover, possessed the advantage of windows, +the absence of which causes no small embarrassment to those who have to +thread so promiscuous a congregation, in order to reach the staircase; +once at the summit of which, it must be allowed, one meets with +cleanliness, and a certain degree of comfort. + +The Venta de Juanilla, on the Somo Sierra, is a newish, clean-looking +habitation, especially the interior, where one meets with an excellent +supper, and may feast the eyes on the sight of a printed card, hanging +on the wall of the dining-room, announcing that luxury of exotic +gastronomy--Champagne--at three crowns a bottle: none were bold enough +that evening to ask for a specimen. + +There is less of the exotic in the bed-room arrangements; in fact, the +building appears to have been constructed by the Diligence proprietors +to meet the immediate necessity of the occasion. The Madrid road being +served by two Diligences, one, leaving the capital, meets at this point, +on its first night, the other, which approaches in the contrary +direction. In consequence of this arrangement, the edifice is provided +with exactly four dormitories,--two male, and two female. + +Nor is this the result of an intention to diminish the numbers quartered +in each male or female apartment; on the contrary, two rooms would have +answered the purpose better than four, but for the inconvenience and +confusion which would have arisen from the denizens of the Diligence +destined to start at a later hour being aroused from their slumbers, and +perhaps induced to depart by mistake, at the signal for calling the +travellers belonging to the earlier conveyance,--the one starting at two +o'clock in the morning, and the other at three. + +On the occasion of my _bivouaque_ in this curious establishment, an +English couple, recently married, happened to be among the number of my +fellow-sufferers; and the lady's report of the adventures of the female +dormitory of our Diligence afforded us sufficient amusement to enliven +the breakfast on the other side of the mountain. It appeared, that, +during the hustling of the males into their enclosure, a fond mother, +moved by Heaven knows what anxious apprehensions, had succeeded in +abstracting from the herd her son, a tender youth of fourteen. Whether +or not she expected to smuggle, without detection, this contraband +article into the female pen we could not determine. If she did, she +reckoned somewhat independently of her host; for on a fellow-traveller +entering in the dark, and groping about for a considerable time in +search of an unoccupied nest, a sudden exclamation aroused the fatigued +sleepers, followed by loud complaints against those who had admitted an +interloper to this holy of holies of feminine promiscuousness, to the +exclusion of one of its lawful occupants. The dispute ran high; but it +must be added to the already numerous proofs of the superior energy +proceeding from aroused maternal feelings, that the intruder was +maintained in his usurped resting-place by his determined parent, +notwithstanding the discontent naturally caused by such a proceeding. + +We have now reached the centre of these provinces, the destinies of +which have offered to Europe so singular an example of political +vicissitude. It is an attractive occupation, in studying the history of +this country, to watch the progress of the state, the ancient capital of +which we have just visited,--a province which, from being probably the +rudest and poorest of the whole Peninsula, became the most influential, +the wealthiest, the focus of power, as it is geographically the centre +of Spain,--and to witness its constantly progressive advance, as it +gradually drew within the range of its influence all the surrounding +states; exemplifying the dogged perseverance of the Spanish character, +which, notwithstanding repeated defeat, undermined the Arab power by +imperceptible advances, and eventually ridded the Peninsula of its +long-established lords. It is interesting to thread the intricate +narrative of intermarriages, treaties, wars, alliances, and successions, +interspersed with deeds of heroic chivalry and of blackest treachery, +composing the annals of the different northern states of Spain; until at +length, the Christian domination having been borne onward by successive +advantages nearly to the extreme southern shores of the Peninsula, a +marriage unites the two principal kingdoms, and leads to the subjection +of all Spain, as at present, under one monarch. + +It is still more attractive to repair subsequently to the country +itself; and from this central, pyramidal summit--elevated by the hand of +Nature to a higher level than the rest of the Peninsula; its bare and +rugged surface exposed to all the less genial influences of the +elements, and crowned by its modern capital, looking down in all +directions, like a feudal castle on the fairer and more fertile regions +subject to its dominion, and for the protection of which it is there +proudly situated,--to take a survey of this extraordinary country, view +the localities immortalized by the eventful passages of its history, and +muse on its still varying destinies. + +Madrid has in fact already experienced threatening symptoms of the +insecurity of this feudal tenure, as it were, in virtue of which it +enjoys the supreme rank. Having no claim to superiority derived from its +commerce, the fertility of its territory, the facility of its means of +communication and intercourse with the other parts of the kingdom or +with foreign states,--nothing, in fact, but its commanding and central +position, and the comparatively recent choice made of it by the +sovereigns for a residence; it has seen itself rivalled, and at length +surpassed in wealth and enterprize, by Barcelona, and its right to be +continued as the seat of government questioned and attacked. Its fall is +probably imminent, should some remedy not be applied before the +intermittent revolutionary fever, which has taken possession of the +country, makes further advances, or puts on chronic symptoms; but its +fate will be shared by the power to which it owes its creation. No +residence in Europe bears a prouder and more monarchical aspect than +Madrid, nor is better suited for the abode of the feudal pomp and +etiquette of the most magnificent--in its day--of European courts: but +riding and country sports have crossed the Channel, and are +endeavouring to take root in France; fresco-painting has invaded +England; in Sicily marble porticoes have been painted to imitate red +bricks; and a Constitutional monarchy is being erected in Spain. +Spaniards are not imitators, and cannot change their nature, although +red bricks should become the materials of Italian _palazzi_, Frenchmen +ride after fox-hounds, and Englishmen be metamorphosed to Michael +Angelos. The Alcazar of Madrid, commanding from its windows thirty miles +of royal domains, including the Escorial and several other royal +residences, is not destined to become the abode of a monarch paid to +receive directions from a loquacious and corrupt house of deputies,--the +utmost result to be obtained from forcing on states a form of government +unsuited to their character. If the Spanish reigning family, after +having settled their quarrel with regard to the succession, (if ever +they do so,) are compelled to accept a (so-called) Constitutional form +of government, with their knowledge of the impossibility of its +successful operation, they will probably endeavour, in imitation of the +highly gifted sovereign of their neighbours, to stifle it, and to +administrate in spite of it; until, either wanting the talent and energy +necessary for the maintenance of this false position, or their subjects, +as may be expected, getting impatient at finding themselves mystified, +a total overthrow will terminate the experiment. + +I am aware of the criticism to which this opinion would be exposed in +many quarters; I already hear the contemptuous upbraidings, similar to +those with which the "exquisite," exulting in an unexceptionable +wardrobe, lashes the culprit whose shoulders are guilty of a coat of the +previous year's fashion. We are told that the tendency of minds, the +progress of intellect, the spirit of the age,--all which, translated +into plain language, mean (if they mean anything) the fashion,--require +that nations should provide themselves each with a new Liberal +government; claiming, in consideration of the fashionable vogue and the +expensive nature of the article, its introduction (unlike other British +manufactures) duty-free. But it ought first to be established, whether +these larger interests of humanity are amenable to the sceptre of so +capricious a ruler as the fashion. It appears to me, that nations should +be allowed to adapt their government to their respective characters, +dispositions, habits of life, and traditions. All these are more +dependant than is supposed by those who possess not the habit of +reflection, on the race, the position, the soil and climate each has +received from nature, which, by the influence they have exercised on +their habits and dispositions, have fitted them each for a form of +constitution equally appropriate to no other people; since no two +nations are similarly circumstanced, not only in all these respects, but +even in any one of them. + +What could be more Liberal than the monarchy of Spain up to the +accession of the Bourbon dynasty? the kings never reigning but by the +consent of their subjects, and on the condition of unvarying respect for +their privileges; but never, when once seated on the throne, checked and +embarrassed in carrying through the measures necessary for the +administration of the state. The monarch was a responsible but a free +monarch until these days, when an attempt is being made to deprive him +both of freedom of action and responsibility--almost of utility, and to +render him a tool in the hands of a constantly varying succession of +needy advocates or military _parvenus_, whom the chances of civil war or +the gift of declamation have placed in the way of disputing the +ministerial salaries, without having been able to furnish either their +hearts with the patriotism, or their heads with the capacity, requisite +for the useful and upright administration of the empire. In Spain, the +advocates of continual change, in most cases in which personal interest +is not their moving spring, hope to arrive ultimately at a republic. +Now, no one more than myself admires the theories of Constitutional +governments, of universal political power and of republicanism: the last +system would be the best of all, were it only for the equality it is to +establish. But how are men to be equalised by the manufacturers of a +government? How are the ignorant and uneducated to be furnished with +legislative capacity, or the poor or unprincipled armed against the +seductions of bribery? It is not, unfortunately, in any one's power to +accomplish these requisite preliminary operations; without the +performance of which, these plausible theories will ever lose their +credit when brought to the test of experiment. How is a republic to be +durable without the previous solution of the problem of the equalisation +of human capacities? In some countries it may be almost attained for a +time; in others, never put in motion for an instant. No one more than +myself abhors tyranny and despotism; but, after hearing and reading all +the charges laid at the door of Absolutism during the last quarter of a +century, I am at a loss to account for the still greater evils and +defects, existing in Constitutional states, having been overlooked in +the comparison. The subject is far less free in France than in the +absolute states of Germany: and other appropriate comparisons might be +made which would bring us still nearer home. I would ask the advocates +for putting in practice a republican form of government, and by way of +comparing the two extremes, whether all the harm the Emperors of Russia +have ever done, or are likely to do until the end of the +world,--according to whatever sect the date of that event be +calculated,--will not knock under to one week of the exploits of the +French republicans of the last century? And if we carry on the +observation to the consequences of that revolution, until we arrive at +the decimation of that fine country under the military despotism which +was necessarily its offspring, we shall not find my argument weakened. + +I entreat your pardon for this political digression, which I am as happy +to terminate as yourself. I will only add, that, should the period be +arrived for the Spanish empire to undergo the lot of all human +things--decline and dissolution, it has no right to complain, having had +its day; but, should that moment be still distant, let us hope to see +that country, so highly favoured by Nature, once more prosperous under +the institutions which raised her to the highest level of power and +prosperity. + +Meanwhile, the elements of discord still exist in a simmering state +close to the brim of the cauldron, and a mere spark will suffice at any +moment to make them bubble over. The inhabitants of Madrid are in +hourly expectation of this spark; and not without reason, if the +_on-dits_ which circulate there, and reach to the neighbouring towns, +are deserving of credit. Queen Christina, on her road from Paris to +resume virtually, if not nominally, the government, conceived the +imprudent idea of taking Rome in her way. It is said that she confessed +to the Pope, who, in the solemn exercise of his authority as +representative of the Deity, declared to her that Spain would never +regain tranquillity until the possessions of the clergy should be +restored to them. + +Whatever else may have passed during the interview is not stated; but a +deep impression was produced on the conscience of the Queen, to which is +attributed the change in her appearance evident to those who may happen +to have seen her a few months since in Paris. This short space of time +has produced on her features the effect of years. She has lost her +_embonpoint_, and acquired in its place paleness and wrinkles. She is +firmly resolved to carry out the views of the Pope. Here, therefore, is +the difficulty. The leading members of her party are among those who +have profited largely by the change of proprietorship which these vast +possessions have undergone: being the framers or abettors of the decree, +they were placed among the nearest for the scramble. In the emptiness of +the national treasury, they consider these acquisitions their sole +reward for the trouble of conducting the revolution, and are prepared to +defend them like tigers. + +When, therefore, Queen Christina proposed her plan[4] to Narvaez, she +met with a flat refusal. He replied, that such a decree would deluge the +country with blood. The following day he was advised to give in his +resignation. This he refused to do, and another interview took place. +The Queen-mother insisted on his acceptance of the embassy to France. He +replied, that he certainly would obey her Majesty's commands; but that, +in that case, she would not be surprised if he published the act of her +marriage with Munos, which was in his power.[5] This would compel +Christina to refund all the income she has received as widow of +Ferdinand the Seventh. The interview ended angrily; and, doubtless, +recalled to Christina's recollection the still higher presumption of the +man, who owed to her the exalted situation from which, on a former +occasion, he levelled his attack on her authority. I am not answerable +for the authenticity of these generally received reports; but they prove +the unsettled state of things, when the determined disposition of the +two opposite parties, and the nearly equal balance of their force, are +taken into consideration. + +I was scarcely housed at Madrid, having only quitted the hotel the +previous day, when the news reached me of the death of one of the fair +and accomplished young Countesses--the companions of my journey from +Bayonne to Burgos. You would scarcely believe possible the regret this +intelligence occasioned me,--more particularly from the peculiar +circumstances of the occurrence. Her father had recently arrived from +France, and the house was filled for the celebration of her birthday; +but she herself was forbidden to join the dinner-party, being scarcely +recovered from a severe attack of small-pox. The father's weakness could +not deny her admission at dessert, and an ice. The following day she was +dead. + +Acquaintances made on the high road advance far more rapidly than those +formed in the usual formal intercourse of society. I can account in no +other way for the tinge of melancholy thrown over the commencement of my +sojourn at Madrid by this event,--befalling a person whose society I had +only enjoyed during three days, and whom I scarcely expected to see +again. + +The modern capital of Spain is an elegant and brilliant city, and a very +agreeable residence; but for the admirer of the picturesque, or the +tourist in search of historical _souvenirs_, it contains few objects of +attraction. The picture-gallery is, however, a splendid exception; and, +being the best in the world, compensates, as you may easily suppose, for +the deficiency peculiar to Madrid in monuments of architectural +interest. + +To put an end to the surprise you will experience at the enumeration of +such a profusion of _chefs d'oeuvre_ of the great masters as is here +found, it is necessary to lose sight of the present political situation +of Spain, and to transport ourselves to the age of painting. At that +time Spain was the most powerful, and especially the most opulent empire +in Europe. Almost all Italy belonged to her; a large portion actually +owning allegiance to her sceptre, and the remainder being subject to her +paramount influence. The familiarity which existed between Charles the +Fifth and Titian is well known; as is likewise the anecdote of the +pencil, picked up and presented by the Emperor to the artist, who had +dropped it. + +The same taste for, and patronage of, painting, continued through the +successive reigns, until the period when painting itself died a natural +death; and anecdotes similar to that of Charles the Fifth are related of +Philip the Fourth and Velasquez. All the works of art thus collected, +and distributed through the different palaces, have been recently +brought together, and placed in an edifice, some time since commenced, +and as yet not entirely completed. Titian was the most favoured of all +the Italian painters, not only with respect to his familiar intercourse +with the Emperor, but also in a professional point of view. The Museo +contains no less than forty of his best productions. Nor is it +surprising that the taste of the monarch, being formed by his +masterpieces, should extend its preference to the rest of the Venetian +school in a greater degree than to the remaining Italian schools. There +are, however, ten pictures by Raffaelle, including the Spasimo, +considered by many to be his greatest work. + +A cause similar to that above named enables us to account for the riches +assembled in the Dutch and Flemish rooms, among which may be counted +more than two hundred pictures of Teniers alone. I should observe, that +I am not answerable for this last calculation; being indebted for my +information to the director, and distinguished artist, Don Jose +Madrazo. There is no catalogue yet drawn up. Rubens has a suite of rooms +almost entirely to himself, besides his just portion of the walls of the +gallery. The Vandykes and Rembrandts are in great profusion. With regard +to the Spanish schools, it may be taken for granted that they are as +well represented as those of the foreign, although partially subject, +nations. The works of Velasquez are the most numerous; which is +accounted for by his situation of painter to the Court, under Philip the +Fourth. There are sixty of his paintings. + +[Illustration: ITALIAN GALLERY AT THE MUSEO, MADRID.] + +The Murillos are almost as numerous, and in his best style: but Seville +has retained the cream of the genius of her most talented offspring; and +even at Madrid, in the collection of the Academy, there is a +Murillo--the Saint Elizabeth--superior to any of those in the great +gallery. It is much to be wished that some artist, gifted with the pen +of a Joshua Reynolds, or even of a Mengs (author of a notice on a small +portion of these paintings), could be found, who would undertake a +complete critical review of this superb gallery. All I presume to say on +the subject is, were the journey ten times longer and more difficult, +the view of the Madrid Museo would not be too dearly purchased. + +Before I left Madrid, I went to the palace, to see the traces of the +conspiracy of the 7th October, remaining on the doors of the Queen's +apartments. You will recollect that the revolt of October 1842 was that +in favour of Christina, when the three officers, Concha, Leon, and +Pezuela, with a battalion, attacked the palace in the night, for the +purpose of carrying off the Queen and her sister. On the failure of the +attempt, owing to its having been prematurely put in execution, the +Brigadier Leon was shot, and the two others escaped. + +It appears that the execution of this officer, unlike the greater number +of these occurrences, caused a strong sensation in Madrid, owing to the +sympathy excited by his popular character, and the impression that he +was the victim of jealousy in the mind of the Regent. The fine speech, +however, attributed to him by some of the newspapers, was not pronounced +by him. His words were very few, and he uttered them in a loud and clear +tone, before giving the word of command to his executioners. This, and +his receiving the fire without turning his back, were the only incidents +worthy of remark. + +One of the two sentries stationed at the door of the Queen's anteroom +when I arrived, happened to have played a conspicuous part on the +eventful night. The Queen was defended by the guard of hallebardiers, +which always mounts guard in the interior of the palace. This sentinel +informed me that he was on guard that night, on the top step of the +staircase, when Leon, followed by a few officers, was seen to come up. +Beyond him and his fellow-sentry there were only two more, who were +posted at the door of the Queen's anteroom, adjoining her sleeping +apartment. This door faces the whole length of the corridor, with which, +at a distance of about twenty yards, the top of the staircase +communicates. In order to shield himself from the fire of the two +sentinels at the Queen's door, Leon grasped my informant by the ribs +right and left, and, raising him from the ground, carried him, like a +mummy, to the corridor; and there, turning sharp to the left, up to the +two sentries, whom he summoned to give him admittance in the name of the +absent Christina. + +On the soldiers' refusal, he gave orders to his battalion to advance, +and a pitched battle took place, which was not ultimately decided until +daybreak--seven hours after. The terror of the little princesses, during +this night, may be imagined. Two bullets penetrated into the bed-room; +and the holes made by about twenty more in the doors of some of the +state apartments communicating with the corridor, are still preserved as +souvenirs of the event. The palace contains some well-painted ceilings +by Mengs, and is worthy of its reputation of one of the finest +residences in Europe. The staircase is superb. It was here that +Napoleon, entering the palace on the occasion of his visit to Madrid, to +install Joseph Buonaparte in his kingdom, stopped on the first landing; +and, placing his hand on one of the white marble lions which crouch on +the balustrades, turned to Joseph, and exclaimed, "Mon frere, vous serez +mieux loge que moi." + +There is no road from Madrid to Toledo. On the occasions of religious +festivities, which are attended by the court, the journey is performed +by way of Aranjuez, from which place a sort of road conducts to the +ancient capital of Spain. There is, however, for those who object to +add so much to the actual distance, a track, known, in all its +sinuosities, throughout its depths and its shallows, around its bays, +promontories, islands, and peninsulas--to the driver of the diligence, +and to the mounted bearer of the mail; both of whom travel on the same +days of the week, in order to furnish reciprocal aid, in case of damage +to either. A twenty-four hours' fall of rain renders this track +impassable by the usual conveyance; a very unusual sort of carriage is +consequently kept in reserve for these occasions, and, as the period of +my journey happened to coincide with an uncommonly aqueous disposition +of the Castilian skies, I was fortunately enabled to witness the less +every day, and more eventful transit, to which this arrangement gave +rise. + +Accordingly at four o'clock on an April morning--an hour later than is +the custom on the road from France to Madrid--I ascended the steps of a +carriage, selected for its lightness, which to those who know anything +of Continental coach-building, conveys a sufficient idea of its probable +solidity. There was not yet sufficient daylight to take a view of this +fabric; but I saw, by the aid of a lantern, my luggage lifted into a +sort of loose net, composed of straw-ropes, and suspended between the +hind wheels in precisely such juxtaposition, as to make the +portmanteaus, bags, &c. bear the same topographic relation to the +vehicle, as the truffles do to a turkey, or the stuffing to a duck. +There was much grumbling about the quantity of my luggage, and some +hints thrown out, relative to the additional perils, suspended over our +heads, or rather, under our seats, in consequence of the coincidence of +the unusual weight, with the bad state of the _road_, as they termed it, +and the acknowledged caducity of the carriage. I really was, in fact, +the only one to blame; for I could not discover, besides my things, more +than two small valises belonging to all the other six passengers +together. + +At length we set off, and at a distance of four miles from Madrid, as +day began to break, we broke down. + +The break-down was neither violent nor dangerous, and was occasioned by +the crash of a hind wheel, while our pace did not exceed a walk: but it +was productive of some amusement, owing to the position, near the corner +of the vehicle which took the greatest fancy to _terra firma_, of a not +over heroic limb of the Castilian law, who had endeavoured to be +facetious ever since our departure, and whose countenance now exhibited +the most grotesque symptoms of real terror. Never, I am convinced, will +those moments be forgotten by that individual, whose vivacity deserted +him for the remainder of the journey; and whose attitude and +expression, as his extended arms failed to recover his centre of gravity +exchanged for the supine, folded-up posture, unavoidable by the occupant +at the lowest corner of a broken-down vehicle,--while his thoughts +wandered to his absent offspring, whose fond smiles awaited him in +Toledo, but to whom perhaps he was not allowed to bid an eternal +adieu--will live likewise in the memory of his fellow-travellers. + +This _denouement_ of the adventures of the first carriage rendered a +long halt necessary; during which, the postilion returned to Madrid on a +mule, and brought us out a second. This proceeding occupied four hours, +during which some entered a neighbouring _venta_, others remained on the +road, seated on heaps of stones, and all breakfasted on what provisions +they had brought with them, or could procure at the said _venta_. The +sight of the vehicle that now approached, would have been cheaply bought +at the price of twenty up-sets. Don Quixote would have charged it, had +such an apparition suddenly presented itself to his view. It was called +a phaeton, but bore no sort of resemblance to the open carriage known in +England by that name. Its form was remarkable by its length being out of +all proportion to its width,--so much so as to require three +widely-separated windows on each side. These were irregularly placed, +instead of being alike on the two sides, for the door appeared to have +been forgotten until after the completion of the fabric, and to have +taken subsequently the place of a window; which window--pursuant to a +praiseworthy sense of justice--was provided for at the expense of a +portion of deal board, and some uniformity. + +The machine possessed, nevertheless, allowing for its rather exaggerated +length, somewhat of the form of an ancient landau; but the roof +describing a semicircle, gave it the appearance of having been placed +upside down by mistake, in lowering it on to the wheels. Then, with +regard to these wheels, they certainly had nothing very extraordinary +about their appearance, when motionless; but, on being subjected to a +forward or backward impulse, they assumed, respectively, and +independently of each other, such a zigzag movement, as would belong to +a rotatory, locomotive pendulum, should the progress of mechanics ever +attain to so complicated a discovery. Indeed, the machine, in general, +appeared desirous of avoiding the monotony attendant on a +straight-forward movement; the body of the monster, from the groans, +sighs, screams, and other various sounds which accompanied its heaving, +pitching, and rolling exertions, appearing to belong to some unwieldy +and agonised mammoth and to move by its own laborious efforts, instead +of being indebted for its progress to the half-dozen quadrupeds hooked +to its front projections. + +The track along which this interesting production of mechanical art now +conveyed us, bore much resemblance to a river, in the accidents of its +course. Thus we were reminded at frequent intervals, by the suddenly +increased speed of our progress, that we were descending a rapid: at +other times the motion was so vertical, as to announce the passage down +a cataract. These incidents were not objectionable to me, as they +interrupted the monotony of the walking pace, to which we were +condemned; although one or two passengers of rather burly proportions, +seemed not much to enjoy their repetition. However this might be, +assuredly we were none of us sorry to find ourselves at eight o'clock +that evening safely housed at Toledo. + + + + +LETTER VIII. + +PICTURESQUE POSITION OF TOLEDO. FLORINDA. + + +Toledo. + +Every traveller--I don't mean every one who habitually assists in +wearing out roads, whether of stone or iron--nor who travels for +business, nor who seeks to escape from himself--meaning from ennui, (a +vain attempt, by the way, if Horace is to be depended on; since, even +should he travel on horseback, the most exhilarating sort of locomotion, +ennui will contrive to mount and ride pillion)--but every one who +deserves the name of traveller, who travels for travelling sake, for the +pleasure of travelling, knows the intensity of the feeling which impels +his right hand, as he proceeds to open the window-shutter of his +bed-room, on the morning subsequent to his nocturnal arrival in a new +town. + +The windows of the Posada del Miradero at Toledo are so placed as by no +means to diminish the interest of this operation. The shutter being +opened, I found myself looking from a perpendicular elevation of +several hundred feet, on one of the prettiest views you can imagine. The +town was at my back, and the road by which we had arrived, was cut in +the side of the precipice beneath me. In following that direction, the +first object at all prominent was the gate leading to Madrid--a cluster +of half Arab embattled towers and walls, standing somewhat to the left +at the bottom of the descent. These gave issue to the track mentioned in +my journey, and which could now be traced straight in front, to a +considerable distance. + +The ground rises slightly beyond the gates of the town, and preserves a +moderate elevation all across the view, retreating right and left, so as +to offer the convex side of the arc of an immense circle. This formation +gives to the view a valley, extending on either side, shut in on the +left by mountains at a distance of four miles; while to the east it +extends as far as the eye can reach,--some mountains, scarcely +perceptible, crossing it at the horizon. The Tagus advances down the +eastern valley from Aranjuez; which chateau is in view at the distance +of twenty-eight miles, and approaching with innumerable zigzags to the +foot of the town, suddenly forms a curve, and, dashing into the rocks, +passes round the back of the city, issues again into the western valley, +and, after another sharp turn to the left, resumes the same direction +as before. All this tract of country owes to the waters of the Tagus a +richness of vegetation, and a bright freshness nowhere surpassed. So +much for the distant view. + +To judge of the nearer appearance of the town, I crossed the bridge of +Alcantara, placed at the entrance of the eastern valley, and leading to +Aranjuez. The situation may be described in a few words. Toledo stands +on an eminence nearly circular in its general form. It is a mass of +jagged rock, almost perpendicular on all its sides. The river flows +rather more than half round it, descending from the east, and passing +round its southern side. The left or south bank is of the same +precipitous formation; but, instead of presenting that peculiarity +during only a short distance, it continues so both above and below the +town; while on the opposite side the only high ground is the solitary +mass of rock selected, whether with a view to defence or to +inconvenience, for the position of this ancient city. The Tagus is +crossed by two bridges, one at each extremity of the semi-circle +described by it round the half of the town. These bridges are both +highly picturesque, from their form no less than their situation. They +are raised upon arches of a height so disproportionate to their width, +as to appear like aqueducts; and are provided at each extremity with +towers, all, with one exception, Moorish in their style. The lower +bridge (lower by position, for it is the higher of the two in actual +elevation) bears the name of San Martin, and is traversed by the road to +Estremadura; the other leads to Aranjuez, and is the puente de +Alcantara. We are now standing on this last, having passed under the +Arab archway of its tower. + +Its width is just sufficient for the passage of two vehicles abreast, +and it is covered with flag-paving. The river flows sixty feet below. At +the back of the tower which faces you, at the opposite end of the +bridge, rises a rock, almost isolated from the rest of the cliff, and on +its top the half-ruined towers and walls of a Moorish castle. On the +left hand extends the valley, through which the river approaches in a +broad mass. The road to Aranjuez follows the same direction, after +having first disappeared round the base of the rock just mentioned, and +is bordered with rose-trees, and occasional groups of limes, which +separate it from the portions set apart for pedestrians. On the right +hand the river (still looking from the bridge) is suddenly pressed in +between precipices, becomes narrow, and at the distance of a few hundred +yards, forms a noisy cascade. + +[Illustration: VIEW OF TOLEDO] + +Still looking in that direction, the left bank--a rocky precipice, as I +mentioned before--curves round and soon hurries it out of sight. The +lower part of the opposite or town bank is ornamented, close to the +cascade, with a picturesque ruin, on which you look down from your +position. This consists of three stories of arches, standing partly in +the water. Above and behind them rise a few larger buildings, almost +perpendicularly over each other, and the summit is crowned with the +colossal quadrangular mass of the Alcazar. + +The ruinous arches just mentioned, are the remains of a building erected +by a speculator, who had conceived a plan for raising water to the +Alcazar by means of wheels, furnished with jars, according to the custom +of this part of Spain. The arrangement is simple; the jars, being +attached round a perpendicular wheel, successively fill with water, as +each arrives at the bottom, and empty themselves, on reaching the +summit, into any receptacle placed so as to receive their contents. The +speculator, having to operate on a colossal scale, intended probably to +super-pose wheel over wheel, and to establish reservoirs at different +elevations, as it would scarcely be possible to work a wheel of such +dimensions as to carry jars to the height required (more than three +hundred feet), even though furnished with ropes, which are made to turn +round the wheel and descend below it. + +Crossing the bridge, the road quits the river, or rather is left for a +certain space by it, until it meets it at the distance of a mile. This +road is a favourite promenade of the inhabitants, and deservedly so. On +each side, for the distance of a mile, it is bordered by hedges of +magnificent rose-trees. These hedges are double on both sides, enclosing +walks for the promenaders on foot. Behind those on the outside, the +colours are varied by the pale green of the olive-tree; and over them +occasional clusters of lime-trees, mingled with the acacia and laburnum, +furnish shade, in case of an excess of sunshine. This promenade, flanked +on one side by the hills, and on the other, by the highly cultivated +plain, in parts of which the Tagus is seen occasionally to peep through +its wooded banks, is most delicious during the rose season. I should +especially recommend the visitor of Toledo to repair to it during the +first hour after sunrise, when thronged with birds, which are here +almost tame, and fill the air with their music; and also in the evening, +when frequented by the mantilla-hooded fair of the city. + +There is, however, notwithstanding the beauty and gay appearance of this +profusion of roses, a singular effect produced by their situation. +Usually seen surrounded by other flowers or by well-kept grass or earth, +they do not look quite themselves on the side on which they rest their +bushy foundations on a dusty road, covered with deep ruts. The fish out +of water forms a hackneyed, not to say a dried up, comparison; but we +can compare the rather pallid and unnatural appearance of these plants +to that of a bevy of ladies, who, tired of the monotony of a ball-room +in Grosvenor Place, should resolve, precisely at the crisis when +candle-light is more than ever required for their rather suffering +complexions, to compel their partners to lead them, at sunrise, a +galopade down Tattersall's yard. The roses, thus misplaced, are +nevertheless roses, and cease not to be fair, in spite of their unusual +_entourage_, and to contribute to the beauty and novelty of this +picturesque promenade. + +Amongst the variety of harmless weaknesses by which human imagination, +and consequently human locomotion are influenced, I look upon one of the +most irresistible (if such an epithet be applicable to a weakness) to be +that fractional component part of the cravings of antiquarianism, which +urges some persons in the search after, and rewards their labours on the +discovery of, the locality supposed to be the birthscene of some great +historical event, however insignificant in other respects, or even +however loathsome its actual state may be to the outward senses. Thus, +when, in Normandy, the worthy and probably waggish majordomo of the +crumbling old castle of Falaise, directs your attention to the window +from which Duke Robert caught the first glance of the ankle of William +the Conqueror's mother,--as she pursued her professional labours, and +polluted with her soapsuds the silver brook a quarter of a mile below +him,--and suddenly yielded his soul to its irresistible beauty: +notwithstanding the impossibility of the thing, many, and I confess +myself one, are too delighted with the window, and the rivulet, and the +majordomo, and the--God knows what!--perhaps with the very +impossibility--to allow themselves a moment's sceptical or sarcastic +feeling on the subject. + +I should mention that my visit to Falaise happening to take place +shortly after the passage of the King of the French on a tour through +his western provinces, the aforesaid cicerone pointed out a highly +suspicious-looking inscription, being the initials of the monarch, +carefully engraved in the stone; which he informed me had been cut by +Louis Philippe, on the occasion of his visit at midnight to the room of +Duke Robert; but of which I took the liberty of suspecting himself of +being the sculptor, during some idle moment,--fond as he probably was of +contemplating the innocently expressive countenances of his satisfied +visitors. + +Actuated by the feeling I have attempted to describe, one of my first +inquiries at Toledo related to the well-known story of Florinda and her +bath, so fatal to the Gothic sway in Spain. I was immediately directed +to the spot, on which is seen a square tower, pierced by arched openings +through its two opposite sides, and on a third side by a similar but +smaller aperture. The four walls alone remain, and the whole is +uncovered. This symmetrical-looking edifice, well built and composed of +large stones, measures about sixteen feet square, and from forty to +fifty in elevation, and stands on the edge of the river, on the town +side, about a hundred yards below the western bridge--that called after +Saint Martin--at the precise point at which the river quits the town, +and its north bank ceases to be precipitous. + +The extreme point of the termination of the high ground is immediately +over the building, and is covered with the ruins of King Roderick's +palace, the outer walls of which descend to the water, and are +terminated by a small roundtower within a few yards of the quadrangular +edifice. The edifice is called the Bano de la Cava, meaning Florinda's +bath, although the native popular tradition, losing sight of the events +of the history, has metamorphosed the heroine of the spot into a Moorish +princess. + +In fact, the rocky precipice terminates at this spot,--the last piece +of rock forming part of the foundation of the square tower, immediately +beyond which is a gently descending sand-bank most convenient and +tempting to bathers. This circumstance, added to the situation of +Roderick's residence, immediately above the scene, was delightfully +corroborative of the tradition; and proved sufficiently, had all +investigation ceased there, the identity of the spot with the scene of +the anecdote. Owing to an excess of curiosity a new discovery threw a +doubt over the whole affair. + +[Illustration: FLORINDA'S BATH.] + +A bridge is too public a thoroughfare to allow of bathing to be +practised in its immediate neighbourhood: and, in fact, the erection of +the neighbouring one of St. Martin is of much later date than the events +of the history in question. Fatal curiosity, however, led me to the back +of the building,--the very bath of Florinda,--where it was impossible +not to discover, even to conviction, that it, the square tower itself, +had formerly been the entrance of a bridge. This is proved by the ruins +of two piers, which appear above the water,--one near to the shore on +which I was standing, the other near to the opposite bank, and both +forming a line with the square tower on looking through its two opposite +arches. The tower possesses other peculiarities which, compared with +those belonging to the bridges actually in existence, fully confirm the +supposition. + +Now, although the tradition has christened the spot Bano de la Cava, +which expression is translated "bath of the prostitute," it is certain +that Florinda was the daughter of Count Julian, governor of the Spanish +possessions in Africa, and a personage of sufficient rank and influence +to obtain a hearing at the court of the Arab Caliph, or at all events of +his viceroy in Africa, and to conceive the idea of calling a foreign +army to execute his private vengeance. It is therefore extremely +improbable that the daughter of such a person should have been seen to +measure and compare the proportions of her legs with those of her +companions in the immediate vicinity of a bridge, necessarily the most +frequented of thoroughfares. + +I confess I left the spot filled with disappointment. In vain I +reflected that after all the fact is fact--that the sensual Roderick may +certainly have spied from behind a window-lattice the frolics of some +ladies at their bath; and that, wherever his _espionage_ took place, he +may for that purpose have intentionally procured himself a place of +concealment, and have formed the resolution of possessing one of them. +In fact, it was a matter of indifference to me whether the circumstance +had occurred or not, provided I should ascertain its whereabouts, +supposing it real, instead of merely discovering the spot on which it +did not take place. + +Having thus convicted the generally received tradition of deceit,--at +least, in one of its parts,--it became an object to discover some other +version of the story, which might tally in a more satisfactory manner +with present existing proofs. The Arab historians deny the invasion to +have been brought about by any such occurrence; but Mariana, copied by +more recent writers, has either discovered or compiled a very plausible +story, clear in its details, only erroneous in respect of the heroine's +name, which he makes out to be Cava. From this version the bath is +entirely excluded. + +According to the custom in Gothic Spain, the sons of the nobles received +their education in the royal palace, and on attaining the age of +manhood, they formed an escort round the sovereign on all expeditions, +whether to the field or the chase. Their daughters were likewise +entrusted to the care of royalty, and attended the person of the Queen, +after having completed their education and instruction in the +accomplishments suited to their sex, under her superintendence. When +these noble damsels could number sufficient summers, their hands were +bestowed according to the royal selection. + +Among the attendants of Queen Egilona, was a daughter of Count Julian, +possessed of extreme beauty. Florinda, while playing with her companions +in a garden, situated on the banks of the Tagus, and overlooked by a +tower, which contained a portion of Don Rodrigo's apartments, exposed to +view, more than accorded either with etiquette or with her intention, +the symmetry of her form. King Rodrigo, who, favoured by the concealment +of a window-blind, had been watching the whole scene, became suddenly +enamoured of her, and resolved to obtain a return of his passion; but, +after finding every effort useless, and his object unattainable, he at +length employed violence. + +Every circumstance of this story is corroborated, as far as is possible +in the present time, by the position of the localities, the known +customs of the period, and the character of King Roderick. But the +historian Mariana, to show the minuteness and triumph of research, on +which he has founded his relation, quotes the young lady's own version +of the affair; in fact, no less interesting a document than her letter +to her father, then in Africa, disclosing the insult offered to the +family. The following is the translation of this portentous dispatch. A +_billet-doux_ pregnant with greater events never issued from the boudoir +of beauty and innocence. + +"Would to Heaven, my lord and father!--Would to Heaven the earth had +closed over me, before it fell to my lot to write these lines, and with +such grievous news to cause you sadness and perpetual regret! How many +are the tears that flow while I am writing, these blots and erasures are +witnesses. And yet if I do not immediately, I shall cause a suspicion +that not only the body has been polluted, but the soul likewise blotted +and stained with perpetual infamy. Would I could foresee a term to our +misery!--Who but yourself shall find a remedy for our misfortunes? Shall +we delay, until time brings to light that which is now a secret, and +the affront we have received entail on us a shame more intolerable than +death itself? I blush to write that which I am bound to divulge. O +wretched and miserable fate! In a word, your daughter--your blood, that +of the kingly line of the Goths, has suffered from King Rodrigo,--to +whose care, alas! she was entrusted like the sheep to the wolf,--a most +wicked and cruel affront. It is for you, if you are worthy the name of a +man, to cause the sweet draught of our ruin to become a deadly poison to +his life; nor to leave unpunished the mockery and insult he has cast on +our line and on our house." + +Don Julian, who, as some say, was of royal descent, and a relative, not +far removed, of Roderick--was possessed of qualities no less marked by +daring than artifice. His plans well digested, he committed his +government in Africa to the charge of a deputy, and repaired to the +court at Toledo. There he made it his business to advance in credit and +favour until the moment should arrive for action. His first step was, by +means of false alarms of attacks meditated on the northern frontier, to +get rid of the principal part of the disposable forces in that +direction. Meanwhile he caused a letter from his Countess, who remained +in Africa, to be forwarded to the King, in which, on the plea of serious +illness, she urgently entreats the royal permission for the departure +of Florinda to Ceuta. It is related that the profligate Rodrigo +consented to the journey with so much the better grace, that possession +had divested the attractions of his victim of all further hold of his +passions, already under the dominion of new allurements. + +There is a gate at Malaga, giving issue towards the sea-shore, which +bears to this day the name of Gate of the Cava: through it she is said +to have passed on embarking for Africa. + +With regard to the name "la Cava" given to the gate and to the bath, I +am disposed to prefer the popular notion to the assertion of Mariana, +that it was her name. It is a natural supposition that the anecdote of +the affair of Toledo, spread among the Arabs, who, for centuries after +this period, were the depositaries of the annals and traditions of the +Peninsula,--should have become tinted with a colour derived from their +customs and ideas. Now it would be difficult to persuade an Arab that +the circumstances of the story in question could befall a virtuous +female, surrounded with the thousand precautions peculiar to an oriental +court. If we add to this the contemptuous tone assumed by them towards +those of the hostile creed--a tone that must have suited in an especial +degree with their way of thinking on the subject of female deportment +among the Christians, which they look upon as totally devoid of +delicacy and reserve--the epithet applied to Florinda is easily +accounted for. But to return to the story. + +It only now remained for Don Julian to determine the Caliph's viceroy in +Africa in favour of the invasion. Repairing to his court, he obtained an +audience, in which he painted to the Prince, in such eloquent terms, the +natural and artificial wealth of the Spanish peninsula, the facility of +the enterprise, owing to the absence of the principal part of the +disposable hostile force, and the unpopularity of King Rodrigo, that an +expedition was immediately ordered; which, although at first prudently +limited to a small troop under Tharig, led to the conquest, in a few +campaigns, of the whole Peninsula. + +Mingled with the ruins of Roderick's palace are seen at present those of +the monastery of Saint Augustin, subsequently erected on the same site: +but on the side facing the river, the ancient wall and turrets, almost +confounded with the rock, on which they were built, have outlived the +more recent erections, or perhaps have not been interfered with by them. +Immediately beyond the portion of these walls, beneath which is seen the +Bano de la Cava, they turn, together with the brink of the precipice, +abruptly to the north, forming a right angle with the river bank: this +part faces the western _vega_ or valley, and looks down on the site of +the ancient palace gardens, which occupied the first low ground. They +extended as far as the chapel of Santa Leocadia. The ground is now +traversed by the road to the celebrated sword-blade manufactory, +situated on the bank of the river, half a mile lower down. With the +exception of the inmates of that establishment, the only human beings +who frequent the spot are the votaries on their way to the shrine of +Santa Leocadia, and the convicts of a neighbouring _Presidio_ in search +of water from the river. + + + + +LETTER IX. + +CATHEDRAL OF TOLEDO. + + +Toledo. + +Every successive aera of civilization, with the concomitant religion on +which it has been founded, and from which it has taken its peculiar +mould, has, after maintaining its ground with more or less lustre, and +throughout a greater or smaller duration, arrived at its inevitable +period of decline and overthrow. + +In ceasing, however, to live, and to fill society far and wide with its +enlightening influence,--in exchanging its erect attitude for the +prostrate one consequent on its fall,--seldom has a creed, which has +long held possession of the most enlightened intellects of our race for +the time being, undergone an entire extinction, so as to disappear +altogether from the face of the earth, and leave no trace of its +existence. The influence of the soil, formation, and climate of the +region, in the bosom of which such civilization has had its birth, on +the dispositions and faculties of the race which has become its +depositary, has always set its peculiar mark on its monuments, whether +civil, military, or religious, but especially the last; which monuments, +surviving the reign of the power to which they owe their existence, +prolong and sanctify its memory, while they stand, erect and silent, +over its grave; and furnish valuable information and benefit to those +future generations sufficiently enlightened to consult them. + +If this theory of successions and vicissitudes be consonant (which +probably no one will deny) with the march of events on the surface of +this our planet, then do the circumstances of the present situation +invest, as far as regards Spain, those relics of human genius and human +enthusiasm, the venerable temples of her declining faith, with an +interest beyond that which they have possessed at any period since their +foundation. It is impossible to have paid any attention to the events of +the last few years, without having received the conviction that the +reign of Christianity is here fast approaching,--not the commencement, +but the termination of its decline. Spaniards will never do things by +halves; and will probably prefer the entire overthrow of ancient customs +to the system pursued in France, of propping up, by government +enactments and salaries, a tottering edifice of external forms, long +since divested of its foundation of public belief. + +To speak correctly, the decline of religious supremacy in Spain is by no +means recent. It was coeval with that of the arts, and of the political +grandeur of the country. The gradual cessation of the vast gifts and +endowments for the erection of the religious establishments was a +symptom of devotional enthusiasm having passed its zenith. Had not this +occurred nearly three centuries back, Madrid would not have wanted a +Cathedral. Nothing could ever have tended more directly to compromise +the durability of Christianity in Spain, than the final expulsion or +extermination of the Moors and Jews. Had Torquemada and a few others +possessed heads as clear and calculating as their hearts were resolute +and inexorable--a knowledge of human nature as profound as their +ambition of divine honours was exalted, they would have taken care not +entirely to deprive the Church of food for its passions and energies. +They would not have devoured all their heretics at a single meal, but +would have exercised more _menagement_ and less voracity. They would +have foreseen that by burning a few hundred Jews and Arabs less each +year, nourishment would remain to animate the declamations of preachers, +and the energies of the faithful; without which the fatal effects of +sloth and indifference must inevitably take root in the imaginations, +and eventually undermine their lofty fabric. + +The decline was, however, so gradual as to exercise no perceptible +influence on the general conduct of the population, by whom forms were +still observed, churches filled, and acts of devotion unceasingly +accomplished. A variety of causes (into a description of which it is not +my object, nor would it be your wish, that I should enter, but of which +one of the most influential has been the importation of foreign +ideas--as well through natural channels, as by special and interested +exertions) has precipitated the _denouement_ of this long-commenced +revolution; and that with so headlong a rapidity, that, in that Spain +which surpassed all other nations in bigoted attachment to religious +rites, the confiscation of all the possessions of the Church, under a +promise (not to be performed) of salaries for a certain number of +ecclesiastics, insufficient for the continuation of the ancient +ceremonies, is received by the population with indifference! The +Cathedral of Toledo, deprived of the greater number of its +functionaries,--including its archbishop and fifty-six of its sixty +canons, and no longer possessing, out of an income of hundreds of +thousands sterling, a treasure sufficient for providing brooms and +sweepers for its pavement,--will, in perhaps not much more than another +year, if the predictions of the inhabitants be verified, be finally +closed to public worship. + +The same interest, therefore, which surrounded the Arab monuments three +centuries since, and the Roman edifices of Spain in the fifth century, +attaches itself now to the Christian temples; which, at this crisis, +offer themselves to the tourist in the sad but attractive gloom of +approaching death; since depriving them of the pomp and observances +which filled their tall arcades with animation, is equivalent to +separating a soul from a body. He will explore them and examine their +ceremonies with all the eagerness and perseverance of a last +opportunity,--he will wander untired through the mysterious twilight of +their arched recesses, and muse on the riches lavished around him to so +little purpose, and on the hopes of those who entrusted their memories +to the guardianship of so frail and transient a depositary. The tones of +their giant though melodious voices, as, sent from a thousand brazen +throats, they roll through the vaulted space the dirge of their +approaching fate, will fill him with sadness; and the ray that streams +upon him from each crimson and blue _rosace_ will fix itself on his +memory, kindling around it an inextinguishable warmth, as though he had +witnessed the smile of a departing saint. + +I had read of Toledo being in possession of the finest church in +Spain,--and _that_ in the book of a tourist, whose visit to this town +follows immediately that to Seville. Begging pardon of the clever and +entertaining writer to whom I allude, the Cathedral of Toledo strikes me +as far from being the finest in Spain; nor would it be the finest in +France, nor in England, nor in other countries that might be enumerated, +could it be transported to either. It is large; but in this respect it +yields to that of Seville. What its other claims to pre-eminence may be, +it is difficult to discover. It is true that its interior presents a +specimen of the simple and grand pointed style of its period. This being +put in execution on a large scale, would render it an imposing and a +beautiful edifice, but for a subsequent addition, which, to render +justice to the architect, he certainly never could have contemplated. +The noble pillars, towering to a height of sixty feet, have been +clothed, together with their capitals, in a magnificent coat of +whitewash! Without having witnessed such a desecration in this or some +similar edifice, it is impossible to conceive the deadening effect it +produces on the feeling of admiration such a building ought to excite. +An inscription in distinct and large characters, over the southernmost +of the three western doors, after recording the conquest of Granada by +the Catholic Kings, as Ferdinand and Isabella are here termed, the +expulsion of the Jews, and the completion of the Cathedral, brands with +this act of barbarism one Don Francisco Fernandez de Cuenca, _obrero +mayor_ (almost a Dean) of the Cathedral in the year 1493. + +There is, however, a moment of each day when the tall arcades vindicate +their outraged majesty. "La nuit tous les chats sont gris," says the +proverb. I therefore proceeded at the approach of twilight (all access +at a later hour being prohibited) to see whether its application would +extend to this church. This is, in fact, the hour, just before the +closing of the doors, at which it should be visited. Darkness has +assumed his empire within these walls long before the stirring labyrinth +without has had warning of his approach. No colours nor gildings (the +latter being rather injudiciously distributed) are visible--nothing but +a superb range of beautifully painted windows; and the columns only +trace their dim outline a little less black against the deep gloom of +the rest of the building. At this hour, could it last, it would be +impossible to tire of wandering through this forest of magnificent +stems, of which the branches are only seen to spring, and immediately +lose themselves beneath the glories of the coloured transparencies +rendered doubly brilliant by their contrast with the gloom of all below +them. The principal merit, in fact, of this edifice, consists in its +windows. That of the purity of its general style deserves also to be +allowed; but with some reserve in the appreciation of the accessory +points of the design. It depended, for instance, on the judgment of the +architect, to diminish or to increase the number of columns which +separate the different naves, and by their unnecessary abundance he has +impaired the grandeur of the general effect. + +The interior dimensions are as follows:--Length, including a moderately +sized chapel at the eastern extremity, three hundred and fifty English +feet; width, throughout, one hundred and seventy-four feet; height of +the principal nave and transept, about one hundred and twenty feet. The +width is divided into five naves; those at the outside rising to about +two-thirds of the height of the two next adjoining; and these to about +half that of the centre nave. An entire side of a chapel opening out of +the southernmost nave, is ornamented in the Arab style--having been +executed by a Moorish artist at the same period as the rest; and not (as +might be conjectured) having belonged to the mosque, which occupied the +same site previously to the erection of the present cathedral. This +small chapel would be a beautiful specimen of the Arab ornament in +stucco, but for several coats of whitewash it has received. An arched +recess occupies the centre, and is called the Tomb of the Alguazil. A +handsome doorway in the same style is seen in the anteroom of the +Chapter-saloon. + +[Illustration: APSE OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO.] + +Facing the entrance to the centre or extreme eastern chapel, that of San +Ildefonzo, the back of the high altar, or, as it is vulgarly called, the +Trascoro, is--not adorned, would it were possible not to say +disfigured, by an immense mass of sculpture called the Transparente. It +is not easy to imagine the reason of this altar-piece having received +its name, for it is not more transparent than any other mountain--never +was witnessed so lamentable a mis-application of riches and labour! Some +of the marble was brought from Carrara; the rest is not of a very good +white, and being thus exposed to an unfavourable contrast, adds to the +displeasing effect of the unwieldy forms which enter into the +composition of this huge blunder of art--this pile of masses on masses +of ugliness. At the sight of a large spherical form rising abruptly from +the surface of some shaft of a pillar, you step back, and discover that +it forms part of the posteriors of a corpulent cherub, as large as the +column itself, which he has thus unmercifully annihilated, in order to +save himself the trouble of passing a few inches to the left or right. +But it is needless to notice the details of this piece of sculpture, +which being the largest, and occupying the most conspicuous position in +the whole church, forcibly attracts the attention which, but for that +circumstance, one would rather bestow in another direction. + +It is a relief to take one's station on the shining mahogany benches +adjoining the wall of the opposite chapel of San Ildefonzo; and to +contemplate its chaste style and graceful proportions, and the handsome +tombs which occupy its octagonally divided walls. The piece of sculpture +in marble, placed over the principal altar, is undeserving of its +conspicuous situation. It represents the Vision of San Ildefonzo, to +which we shall shortly have occasion to direct our attention. + +The adjoining chapel, as we proceed towards the northernmost nave, that +of Santiago, or more generally called after its founder, Don Alvaro de +Luna, is still finer. It is larger and loftier, and of a more ornamental +design. It presents five sides of an octagon: the three remaining sides +turning inwards to suit the form of the apse. This Alvaro de Luna, the +Lord Essex of Juan the Second, having by the high favour he enjoyed in +the intimacy of the monarch, given umbrage to the courtiers, was put to +death by the King, who gave credit to the charges falsely brought +against him. Don Juan, however, who did not long survive his friend, had +justice done to his remains. Being found innocent by a posthumous trial +at Valladolid, his body was conveyed with great pomp to Toledo, and +placed in the centre of his chapel. The tomb of his Countess stands +close to his own; and in the niches of the surrounding walls, those of +his most distinguished relatives, one of whom, on the right of the +altar, is represented in complete armour, with a turban on his head. The +treasures bestowed on this favourite, flowed plentifully into the +Cathedral of Toledo. Besides his chapel, the finest of all--the +elaborately executed enclosure of the sanctuary, is one of his gifts: +his arms are there recognised, frequently recurring among the various +designs of the external tracery. + +A narrow passage, leading from the apse between the chapel of Don +Alvaro, and the entrance to the sacristy, communicates with the chapel +of the kings. After passing through a simply designed anteroom of more +recent date, the eye reposes with pleasure on a small interior in the +pointed style of the latest period--of proportions, perhaps, not the +less graceful from their being rather narrow for the length. Two richly +ornamented arches, stretching across the interior, divide it into three +parts, in the first of which is seen a gallery containing an elaborately +wrought gilded confessional. The walls of the two other divisions are +divided into six parts; the chapel having been constructed and endowed +by Juan the First, for the reception of six monuments: those of himself +and his Queen Isabella; those of his father Henry the Second, (natural +son of Alonzo the Eleventh, and who dethroned and killed with his own +hand his half-brother, Pedro the cruel,) and Dona Juana his wife; and +those of Henry the Third, and Dona Catalina his wife. + +Returning to the interior of the apse, and continuing in the direction +of the north side, another small passage and anteroom lead to the +principal sacristy, which communicates with the next chapel, called the +Sagrario, and composed of three apartments. The great sacristy contains +some good paintings, particularly the ceiling by Giordano--a modern tomb +of the late archbishop, Cardinal de Bourbon, and a series of narrow +doors, within which are recesses. The first of these contains the crown +and bracelets of the Virgin of the Sagrario: in four others are +preserved magnificent ornaments of silver, representing emblematically +the four quarters of the globe. Each quarter is personified by a figure +invested with the attributes which characterize the region she +represents, seated on a large silver globe, on the front of which is +traced the quarter represented. The globe is supported by figures of +animals. In the last of these recesses is seen the sword of Alonzo the +Sixth, who won Toledo from the Moors. It is small, and unornamented, +except by a hilt of embossed silver, on which the arms are repeated four +times. In the smaller sacristy within are several good pictures, but not +so remarkable as to prevent their being eclipsed by the splendid robe +of the Virgin of the neighbouring Sagrario, here exhibited, extended +flat on a semicircular board, such being the form of the garment. + +No one knows the value of this treasure. During the Peninsular War, the +archbishop, in order to spare the French Generals too great a +temptation, conveyed it, together with whatever else deserved the +precaution, to Cadiz. It is embroidered almost entirely with pearls on a +tissue of silver; but none of the silver is visible without separating +the pearls, diamonds, &c., with the fingers. Most of the larger pearls +possess the irregular sort of beaten shape often observed in the best +specimens. Some are enormous. Numbers of diamonds, rubies, and other +stones are admitted in the upper part, to vary and enliven the effect of +the different designs of the embroidery. In another case is extended the +front-piece, worn together with the robe, which is open in front. The +robe sits nearly in the fashion of a lady's cloak, but perfectly stiff, +and widening as it descends, so much as to make the figure assume the +appearance of a triangle, of which the base is longer than the two other +sides. The opening in front corresponds with the outline of the two +sides, being wider below than above, although not in as great a degree. +This opening is occupied by the front-piece, which is much smaller than +the robe, but still more valuable, being principally worked in +brilliants. It contains also every variety of precious stones, +introduced as their colours may happen to accord with the design. + +In addition to these is shown the dress of the Bambino, similar in +materials to the two others; but the pearls and diamonds more equally +distributed. + +But the marvel of this costume is the crown. This ornament adds to the +splendour of its materials, the most exquisite and elaborate +workmanship. It would require hours to appreciate the labour and taste +displayed in all its details. Marshal Soult, could he but see it, would +order masses for the soul of the prelate who spared him such a +temptation. The diamonds, especially those which compose a cross +surmounting the centre, are of the purest water, and of immense size. +But in the midst of the dazzling and harmonious intricacy of this gem of +all colours, there is a centre of attraction, which took my fancy more +than the rest. Immediately under the centre ball, an immense spherical +emerald, which supports the diamond cross, is a small bird suspended on +a hook within the crown. All the parts of this bird are composed of +white enamel, except the body, around which the wings, legs, neck, and +head, are attached, and which consists of a pearl of an oval form, about +the size of a sparrow's egg. The movement of the statue during a +procession, keeps the bird (hanging from its hook) in constant +agitation, and produces the effect of a living bird enclosed in a cage +of precious stones.[6] + +A pair of bracelets, possessing no less magnificence than the crown, but +rather too heavy and bulky to be graceful, are suspended in the same +recess, and worn on the same occasions. + +It should not be forgotten, as a proof of the judgment shown in the +choice of ornaments, which, as far as regards the front, consist +principally of diamonds, that the complexion of the Virgin of the +Sagrario, is more than dark--in fact, quite black.[7] The innermost of +the three apartments forming the chapel of the Sagrario is called the +Ochavo, and is the deposit of a collection of relics of all kinds. It is +an octagon, surmounted at an elevation of more than double its diameter +by a dome ornamented with excellent painting. The walls are faced with +the best Spanish marbles. Each of the eight sides contains an open +recess reaching to the first cornice--an elevation of about twenty-five +feet; and in these recesses are contained all the valuable relics +belonging to the cathedral;--a rich display of silver statues, +reliquaries, coffins, chests, and crosses of gold and silver, some +containing jewels of great value. A silver statue of Saint Ferdinand +wearing a golden crown is among the objects most worthy of remark; also +a cross containing a portion of the true cross, presented to the +cathedral by St. Louis. This and several other relics, such as a phial +containing the Virgin's milk, a portion of our Saviour's purple garment, +&c., were presented to the cathedral by St. Louis on his return from the +east, and are here preserved, together with the letter in his own +hand-writing, which accompanied them. + +The Virgin of the Sagrario receives by far the greatest share of +devotion brought to the numerous shrines of this vast temple, even +greater than that offered at the high altar. More masses are performed +at her altar than at all the others added together. The aisles facing +her antechapel are constantly filled with a crowd of kneeling votaries. +She stands in the second enclosure, turning her back to the Ochavo. An +iron railing separates her apartment from the first chapel, which is +usually open to the aisles. She stands consequently in full view, +magnificently robed in a _fac simile_ imitation of her pearl dress, the +original being only worn on one or two occasions during the year. + +The interior of the Capilla Mayor, is ornamented with several rows of +statues, and some handsome funereal monuments, forming together a sort +of transparent wall of sculpture on each of its sides. In the midst of a +series of mitred archbishops, and coroneted princes, the figure of a +peasant occupies one of the most conspicuous positions. It stands on the +left side, as you face the High Altar, and about twenty feet from the +pavement. This statue represents a celebrated historical personage. +Alonzo the Eighth, when penetrating across the Sierra Morena into +Andalucia, in search of the Moorish army under the King of Morocco, +Mahomed ben Jacob, was in danger of losing the fruit of his exertions, +in bringing together the forces of the Kings of Aragon and Navarre, +together with numerous other confederates. He had led the combined army +into a defile, in which he would have had to receive the attack of the +Moor at an insuperable disadvantage. The hostile forces occupied a +height called the Puerto del Miradal. + +It was at the moment that retreat was the subject of deliberation, that +a peasant presented himself, and offered to guide the army out of the +pass. Having assured himself of the man's sincerity, Alonzo put himself +under his conduct, and was led to the summit of the mountain, where he +found himself on the border of an immense plain. This decided the great +victory of las Navas de Tolosa gained over the Moors on the 16th of +July, 1212. Alonzo ordered a statue of the peasant to be placed in this +cathedral. He is represented in a costume not unlike that of an ancient +Roman rustic, a sort of tunic reaching to the knees, and his face is +covered with a profuse beard. + +The interior of the choir is the work of Felipe de Borgona, and +Berruguete; the latter having been employed, after the death of Felipe +de Borgona, in 1548, in continuing the sculptures. The entire south side +was left for him to complete; after which he added a group in marble, +representing the Transfiguration, placed rather injudiciously, since it +out-tops the screen or back of the choir; thus presenting to the view of +those who enter from the western or grand entrance, and who are more +likely to have come with the intention of viewing the ornaments, than +the canons who are seated in the choir--the back of the subject, or +rather, forms which represent no subject whatever. There is a Virgin on +a pedestal in the centre of the eastern end of the choir, turning her +back to the bronze railing which separates it from the transept. This +statue has occupied its present position ever since the erection of the +cathedral; and it is probable would long since have quitted it, but for +a still greater inconvenience consequent on its removal. The attempt was +recently made, when a mass of water issued with much violence from +beneath the pedestal, and putting to flight the canons who were +assembled to preside at the operation, instantly inundated the whole +church. The virgin occupies probably the site of the fountain which must +have been the centre of the court, at the period of the existence of the +mosque. However that may be, the spot is the exact centre of the present +edifice. + +At the two eastern angles of the quadrangle, formed by the intersection +of the transept and principal nave, close to the railing of the capilla +mayor are two pulpits of bronze, excellently wrought; supported on short +pillars of rare marbles. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, TOLEDO.] + +A tall pyramidal Gothic edifice[8] of gilded and painted wood, rising to +the full height of the ceiling, stands in front of a column of the +second nave from the north side. All its sides are open, and furnished +with bronze railings, through which is seen an altar, raised on three or +four steps. In the centre of the altar is inserted a marble slab--a +highly prized relic, being the stone on which the Virgin placed her foot +on the occasion of her appearing in the cathedral in _propria persona_ +to the Archbishop San Ildefonzo. This peculiar favour bestowed on the +saint--and a robe with which she invested him with her own hands, were +bestowed, according to the historian Mariana, in recompense of his zeal +in opposing the doctrine of the two Frenchmen, Pelagio and Helvidio, +whose writings and preachings tended to shake the belief in the +virginity of the Saviour's mother. The occurrence is thus described: + +"The night immediately preceding the feast of the Annunciation, the +archbishop entered the church, surrounded by several of the clergy. As +they entered, the cathedral appeared filled with a brilliant light. +Those who accompanied the saint, overcome with terror, turned and fled. +Remaining alone, he advanced to the foot of the high altar, and fell on +his knees; when, on the chair from which it was his custom to deliver +his exhortations to the people,--clothed in more than human +majesty--appeared the mother of Christ, who addressed him in the +following words:--'This gift, brought from Heaven, shall be the reward +of the virginity which thou hast preserved in thy body, joined with +purity of mind, and ardour of faith; and for having defended our +virginity.' + +"Having thus spoken, she placed on him, with her own hands, a robe, +which she commanded him to wear on the celebration of her festivals, and +those of her Son." + +The representations of this scene, from which is derived the claim of +superior sanctity assumed by this cathedral, are multiplied both in +marble and on canvas in all parts of the edifice, as well as in almost +all the churches of Toledo. In most cases, the execution of them has +been intrusted to unskilful hands. The best specimen is that executed in +marble over the small altar I have just noticed. It is remarkable for +the graceful and good-humoured expression of the Virgin, and the easy, +almost merry, demeanour of her celestial attendants. + +The marble box which contains the Host is let into the altar-piece, of +which it appears to form a part of the surface, only projecting slightly +as its sides are convex. Turning on a pivot, it presents four different +fronts, each representing, in well executed relief, a different scene in +the Virgin's life. + + + + +LETTER X. + +CAFES. WEDDING CEREMONY. CATHEDRAL CONTINUED. ALCAZAR HOSPITAL OF SANTA +CRUZ. CONVENT OF LA CONCEPTION. MYSTERIOUS CAVERN. CONVENT OF SANTA FE, +OR OF SANTIAGO. SONS-IN-LAW OF THE CID. + + +Toledo. + +One of the first contrasts between this and other countries, which +forces itself on the observation, is the amalgamation of the different +classes of society in public places of resort. The grandee is far too +sure of his personal importance and consideration, to entertain any fear +of its being diminished by contact with those of inferior rank; and the +peasant is far too proud to importune his superiors by any indiscreet +efforts at familiarity. + +At Burgos I found the _Gefe politico_, or governor of the province, +sipping his lemonade in the evening at the _cafe_; his elbow brushing +the back of a mayoral of a diligence, and surrounded by an assemblage of +all classes of the male inhabitants of the town. These cafes are curious +establishments; they are divided into two classes--the Cafe, properly +so called, and the Botilleria--in which tea and coffee are not usually +called for, but all the other refreshments of the cafe; such as +_helados_ (frozen beverages of all sorts), _sorbetes_ (ices), liqueurs, +wines, etc. These latter are the resort, in some towns, of both sexes, +and indeed the cafes also in a less degree. But the etiquette in these +things differs in the different provinces. + +At Madrid, where foreign customs first penetrate, ladies are rarely seen +in these resorts; by which they are considerable losers. No doubt, were +the attractions of French cafes sufficiently powerful, your sex would +not have withered them, by their disdain, into the uncivilized dens +which they are. You are not of course invited by the billiard tables, or +by the allurements of black coffee and cognac; but were the waiters to +set before you a tumbler of frozen lemonade after a July evening's dusty +walk, you would speedily bring such habits into fashion. + +Much as the refreshments of Spanish cafes have been celebrated, their +fame is surpassed by the reality. It is only when you have panted +through a southern summer's day, and breathed an atmosphere of fire, +that you are disposed to receive the illustration of the full sense of +the word refreshment; and it is then they hand you a brobdignag goblet, +brim full of frozen orange-water or lemonade, or snow-white +orgeat--which, from the imperceptible inroads made by the teaspoon on +its closing-up surface, appears likely to last you the whole night. +These and other similar luxuries, including the ices, at which those of +a Grange or Tortoni would melt with jealousy, are plentiful in second +and third-rate towns, and rank among the necessaries of life, rather +than as objects of indulgence. They are of course cheap, or it would not +answer. + +The poor apply to the distributors of iced barley-water, who carry about +a sort of cask, strapped between their shoulders, and containing ice in +the centre, to maintain the frigidity of the beverage. By lowering and +advancing the left shoulder, the vendor pours the contents of the cask +through a small neck or pipe into the glasses, which he carries in a +flat basket with cellaret partitions. A tumbler of this costs a +halfpenny; its imbibing occupies two or three minutes, and assuages for +hours the sufferings of the thirstiest palate. + +At Madrid, the cafes have each its political colour; except that called +del Principe, after the adjoining theatre. In this, politics are less +characterised, literature having here taken up her quarters. It is +probable that she is a less profitable customer, being habitually less +thirsty. Accordingly, on putting your head into the door, you see a +saloon far more brilliantly lighted up than the others; but the +peripatetic doctrines seem to prevail. Few persons are seated at the +tables; and instead of the more profitable wear and tear of broken +glasses, the proprietor probably finds substituted a thankless annual +item for worn out floors. In the same street there is a club; but this +is an exotic importation and on the exclusive plan, not quite of London, +but of the Paris _cercles_. + +In the cafes of Toledo, on the days of _fiesta_, the fair sex +predominates, especially in summer. The great resort is, however, the +Zocodover, from nine to ten in the evening. This little irregularly +formed _plaza_ is crowded like an assembly-room, and possesses its rows +of trees, although a respectable oak would almost fill it. + +A soiree has occasionally been known to be given in Toledo, but it is an +occurrence of much rarity, and mostly occasioned by some unusual +event,--the arrival of a public singer, or, still more unusual, a newly +made fortune. The other evening I was admitted to one, the pretext for +which was a wedding. This ceremony takes place at the residence of the +bride, and although a subsequent formality is necessary in the Church, +its delay does not defer the validity of the union, nor its +consummation. The wedding-day arrived, the families and friends of both +parties assemble at eight in the evening. + +The bride was distinguishable by a white veil or _mantilla_ in the +middle seat of a sofa, between her mother and sister, who rose to +receive the guests. A narrow table had been dressed up into a temporary +altar, and furnished with a crucifix and candles. All the party being +arrived, a priest left his chair, and entered an adjoining room to robe; +on his reappearance the company rose and flocked round the bride and +bridegroom, who stood together before the priest, doing penance each +with a long wax-light in the right hand, held in a muslin handkerchief. + +The ceremony lasts about ten minutes without any change of posture. The +priest departs to unrobe; the miserable bride and blushing bridegroom +receive felicitations; and all resume their seats, and look at each +other. + +Presently chocolate was handed round, and an attempt at conversational +murmur commenced, afterwards ices. And now the minister took a formal +leave of the company, after complimenting the bride. Two or three other +holy men, obedient to the signal, carried out their interminable hats +before them: when a sudden revolution broke out. At the closing of the +door on the hindmost ecclesiastic the bridegroom rushed to the altar, +and grasping with one hand the crucifix, and with the other two of the +candlesticks, ran to the apartment that had assumed the character of +vestry, and deposited them there, followed by officious friends bearing +the remaining articles, until every awe-compelling symbol had +disappeared. One or two guitars were extracted from their hiding-places +under sofas, and sent forth careless but lively preludes. The men stood +up and circulated; the women talked and laughed; a quadrille was +speedily formed, and concluded; waltzing followed, and forfeits, and +whatever you like, and--"the arrangements were on a scale of costly +magnificence, and the festivities were prolonged, &c." + +But these events are rare in Toledo. The every-day amusements consist in +an infamous theatre, and the promenade; this is only on Saints' days; +but these are almost every day. On six or seven occasions in the year, +these promenades are absolute events, and much looked forward to. It is +necessary to inquire which is the promenade patronised by the saint of +the great day, whoever he is, and take your place in the tide, for no +one absents himself. + +Dresses for these celebrations are things pre-meditated; and the effect +produced, and all the little events and rencontres of the day form for +each belle, thrilling subjects of retrospection. _Mantillas_ may be +trimmed, and innocent plots woven for these occasions, without danger of +disappointment by clouds or storms; and instead of the Virgin being +implored that the sun may shine, who never disappoints them, she is +sometimes requested to inspire some ruse for a momentary escape from his +too searching effulgence. + +Here may fair foreigners feast their eyes on fawn-coloured _majos_, +whose every step (although no more exalted beings than butchers, +postilions, horsedealers, and such like) would be envied by Antinous and +Apollo. I should advise no veils, nor winkings, nor blinkings on these +occasions, but eyes wide open--for never more (the Pyrenees once +repassed) will their orbits expand to the forms and costumes of +blackguards half so beautiful. + +But these are subjects slightly unsuited to the interior of the +cathedral, of our presence in which we are evidently forgetful. The +Mozarabic Chapel, founded by Cardinal Ximenes de Cisneros, is situated +under the southern tower, and contains a Virgin and Child executed in +Mosaic, and a curious old fresco painting, representing the battle of +Oran, at which the Cardinal was victorious over the Arabs. This chapel +is set apart for the performance of the Mozarabic ritual, still retained +by a portion of the population of Toledo, and the exercise of which was +continued in several churches, until the closing of some of them at the +recent revolution. + +The Arab conquerors of Spain exercised towards the religion of the +country, the most complete and liberal tolerance. All who preferred +remaining in the conquered towns to flight and exile, were allowed to +retain a sufficient number of places of worship for the free exercise of +their religion. On the subsequent introduction of the Italian missal, +those who retained the ancient gothic forms were called Mozarabes (mixti +Arabes, according to some, from their service being the same as that in +use during the co-existence together of the two creeds). A more probable +origin is attributed to the expression by some antiquaries, who derive +it from Muza, the name of the Moorish general. The mass of the +Christians who had taken refuge in the Asturias, applied the term to +their brethren, who preferred accepting from the Arabs what they +considered a degrading tolerance. The following singular mode of +decision was adopted for the purpose of settling the question between +the two missals. + +The King, Alonzo the Sixth, the Archbishop Don Bernardo, and the court, +were among the advocates of the new missal, which, being adopted in +Rome, they were very desirous of establishing on the occasion of the +restoration of the Christian supremacy at Toledo. The mass of the +people were attached to their ancient forms. It was resolved that the +question should be decided by an appeal to a sort of neutral power; and +Mars was selected, probably on account of his being a person +disinterested in the affair. A champion was chosen by each party, and a +day appointed for settling the difference by single combat. Accordingly, +the court, the clergy, and the people being assembled, the +representatives of the two missals took their station, lance in rest, +and on the appointed signal spurred to the encounter. The ancient missal +was approved of by the warlike god; but the King and his party were +dissatisfied with the result, and resolved on another trial. A large +fire was lighted in the principal plaza, and the two missals were thrown +into it. + +Again the ancient forms conquered, the rival parchment having caught the +flame and being drawn out in a blaze. The populace now commenced a cry +of triumph; but, to their great disappointment, the King, in his quality +of umpire, pronounced a judgment which he might as easily have put in +execution before the trials: namely, that considering that the Roman +Missal, although on fire, was not consumed, they were both equally +agreeable to the deity--they should therefore both be preserved, and +that some of the more ancient churches should continue the exercise of +the Mozarabic service, while the Roman ritual should be established in +the metropolitan temple, and in the greater number of the parishes. + +Before we leave the cathedral, the cloister claims our attention. It is +a spacious and handsome quadrangle, inclosing a garden. The eastern wall +is adorned with excellent frescos of comparatively modern date, and all +bearing the same signature--Francisco Bayeu. There are seven subjects on +that side, being the number of intervals corresponding with the arcades, +and three more continuing down another side. The best are two, taken +from the history of Saint Casilda; and three from that of San Eugenio, +first archbishop of Toledo, martyrised in France. The arcades on the +east side are shut in by large pieces of sail-cloth, in order to protect +the paintings against the sun's rays. + +The library of manuscripts belonging to this cathedral is distinguished +rather by the quality than the quantity of its contents. It is +approached by a staircase communicating with the cloister, and is a +handsome room. It contains a copy of the Talmud on the papyrus leaves, +and in the Coptic dialect. The following are also among its treasures: +The Book of Esther in Hebrew, on a single piece of parchment; two +bibles of the seventh century, one of which belonged to St. Isidore; the +missal used by Charles the Fifth in the monastery of Yuste; the poems of +Dante, manuscript of the poet's time, with illustrations; the laws of +Alonso the Tenth (surnamed the wise), and a volume of his poetical +works, with the music opposite those intended to be sung: two ancient +Chinese volumes, one on botany, the other on natural history, both +illustrated. + +The next edifice I visited was the Alcazar, the largest and most +conspicuous building in Toledo. I expected to find there some Arab and +Roman remains, having so read in more than one tour. It was not until +some time after my visit that I obtained the information that the +Moorish palace occupied a different site. The present comparatively +modern building is principally of two epochs. On the east is the +original portion erected by Alonzo the Sixth. The entire north and south +fronts are probably additions of Philip the Second. The whole partakes +of a divided character between castle and palace: it is not remarkable +for any architectural merit, possessing neither beauty as a palace, nor +solidity as a fortress; and having been occupied as a military position +during the war of the succession, and more recently in that of +independence, its being already a ruin, before its modern appearance +would seem to legitimize such a state, causes no surprise. But its +position is superb. Occupying the most elevated point of the town, it +far exceeds the whole by the immense height of its walls, and commands +an admirable view of the surrounding country. The only object deserving +notice in this ruin is a colossal staircase, which occupies an entire +side of the court,--a length of about two hundred and fifty feet,--and +is ornamented by a light and elegant colonnade. This edifice ceased to +be a palace on the final establishment of the court at Madrid, and after +some time became the manufactory whence issued the famous silk and +velvet brocades, the fabrication of which has now ceased, but with which +Toledo formerly supplied the wardrobes of the court, and the +well-garnished sacristies of Spain's wealthiest cathedrals. + +Descending from the Alcazar through the Plaza de Zocodover, and thence +towards the bridge of Alcantara, a few yards from the Plaza bring us in +view of the facade of the Hospital of Santa Cruz, or "de los ninos +expositos,"--foundling hospital. The institution owes its origin to the +Archbishop, Don Pedro Gonzalez de Mendoza, called the Great Cardinal of +Spain. Although death prevented his witnessing the execution of his +project, his fortune, administered by his next relatives and +executors,--the Queen Isabella, and the Duke of Infantado,--was +employed in the erection of the buildings, and in the endowment of the +establishment. The plans and conditions were not even drawn up until +after the Cardinal's death; and they were never entirely put in +execution. The church consists of one nave, of a length out of all +proportion to its width and elevation. It was to have been crossed by +another of the same proportions, with the exception of the elevation, +which was to have been eighty feet in both. This combined with the +length--about three hundred and fifty feet, as is seen in the existing +nave,--would have rendered the edifice one of the most extraordinary in +existence. The altar was to have stood in the centre of the intersection +of the two naves. As it is, the long bare interior looks as though it +had been destined for a picture gallery or library, but rather for the +latter from the low-coved roof of cedar, and from the inadequate +distribution of light. To the left of the altar is seen a portrait of +the founder; and on the opposite side, about a hundred feet further down +the nave, a large Adoration,--a superior painting, especially with +regard to the colouring: the author unknown. + +There are two large courts surrounded by arcades: one of them is a model +of lightness and beauty, and contains in one of its angles an admirably +ornamented staircase. The architect of the Santa Cruz was Enrique Egas, +who also built the celebrated hospital of the same name at Valladolid. +He designed the whole according to the style then introduced, after the +pointed style had been abandoned, and which in Spain received vulgarly +the appellation of Plateresco, from the ornaments resembling the +embossing of a silversmith. It is also confounded with the Renacimiento. +The Plateresco style, from the too great liberty it afforded the +architect, of setting aside the classic models, and following his own +inventions, has produced in Spain, more than in any other country, (from +there being at that period more wealth devoted to the construction of +public monuments there than elsewhere,) the evil effects resulting from +ill-guided and unrestrained powers of imagination. Fortunately, however, +a few architects existed whose more correct taste kept them within some +bounds; and who, in deserting the old models, replaced them by a style, +if less pure, yet by no means inelegant. The architect Egas appears to +have partaken of both natures at different moments; for, while his court +above-mentioned is a specimen of consummate grace and good taste, the +entrance front of the building is one of the bad examples of the style +of the period. + +The establishment covers a large space, about half the extent occupied +by the double palace of the Arab kings of Toledo. The remainder of the +site contains two convents,--that of Santiago, and that of the +Conception. The hospital was conducted formerly on a scale proportionate +to the extent of its accommodation; but it is now no more than a +reminiscence; the revenues having probably been incorporated in the +recent registrations of national property. The number of inmates at +present enjoying the benefits of the foundation amounts to fourteen +only. + +The Convent of la Conception adjoins the hospital of Santa Cruz. From +the exterior are seen two churches, placed in close parallel contact, +and each composed of a single nave. Both are evidently very ancient, one +being in the Arab style; but the form of the other renders it probable +that it is the more ancient of the two. You are disappointed after being +shown this last, on being informed that the Moorish portion is forbidden +ground, being appropriated by the nuns to their private use, and +possessing no communication with the adjoining edifice, but a curtained +grating, through which its secluded inmates assist at religious +services. In the public church, a singular ornament figures on a +conspicuous part of the wall near the entrance; it is the carcass of a +large crocodile, fixed high enough to be out of reach, although no one +would be likely to purloin so unwieldy a curiosity. We are told the +animal frequented the neighbourhood of Toledo; where, under cover of the +pine forests, which formerly extended far over this mountainous region, +its existence had long filled with terror the few travellers whom their +mercantile pursuits compelled to pass within its accustomed haunts: that +at length a knight (it was in the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella) +clothed in a full suit of armour, rode forth from Toledo, fully resolved +to try conclusions with the monster, in order if possible to immortalize +his name throughout the surrounding regions, by ridding them of so dire +a scourge. The battle took place, and victory declaring for the knight, +whose name unfortunately does not figure in the legend,--he assembled +the peasants, and had his enemy's carcass borne in triumph to Toledo, +where he made a present of it to the convent. + +While on the subject of traditions, it is worth while adverting to a +cavern, the entrance of which exists in this part of the town; and which +is said to extend to a distance of eight miles, passing under the Tagus. +It is related that somewhat less than a century back, the government +ordered this cavern to be explored; but the exploring party was met at +the commencement of the descent by so violent a gust of wind, as to +extinguish all the torches, and the courage of the explorers, for the +attempt was never resumed. The failure by no means contributed to +diminish the mysterious qualities attributed to the cavern, on the +subject of which the wildest notions are currently entertained. + +A worthy and excellent native of Toledo, to whose antiquarian enthusiasm +(a quality doubly valuable here from its scarcity) I am indebted for +some information and much entertainment, undertook one day to enlighten +me with regard to the origin of this subterranean curiosity. Commencing +by warning my credulity against the innumerable fables current on the +subject, and which only resembled each other in their absurdity and +impossibility, he added, "The real fact is this,--the cavern is the work +of Hercules, who excavated it for the accommodation of the assemblies of +the people, whom he instructed in the elements of magic." + +The convent of Santiago, or of Santa Fe, or of Las monjas santiagistas, +or Las cavalleras, occupies the portion of the ancient Moorish alcazar, +remaining from the site of the two last-mentioned buildings. It is built +round two courts, one of which is divided into planted parterres, +intersected with brick-paved walks. The architecture of this first court +is very simple; it consists of a plain arcade of semicircular arches +supported on square piers, and a repetition of the same on the first +story. From this court opens the parlour of the Commendadora or abbess, +and the choir, which forms a continuation of the public chapel. There is +also under the arcade a folding door, which, when opened exhibits a +collection of small pictures attached to it, as on the leaves of an +album, and others suspended against the portion of wall it encloses. The +centre painting of these last represents the Mater dolorosa weeping over +the dead body of her Son. It has much of the manner of Alonzo Cano, and +is an admirable painting, more especially the dead body: the superior, +however, did not know the name of the artist. She complained bitterly of +the loss of a first-rate picture of the Divino Morales, which formerly +occupied the place of her little collection, and which was taken +possession of by Marshal Soult. + +The second court is highly ornamental owing to the elegance of its +architecture, and its magnificent proportions; it is a long quadrangle; +the pillars below are very lofty, and support the gallery above without +intermediate arches. They are not of a pure design, the shafts being too +long for their diameter: in other respects they imitate the Tuscan +order. Those of the arcade above are Ionic; but the effect here is +destroyed by walls and windows, which have been constructed in their +intervals, for the purpose of converting the open gallery into a warmer +corridor. The walls below are clothed to the height of about four feet +with the _azulejos_, or porcelain mosaic, of the sort originally +employed by the Arabs, and from which the ornament took its name, being +blue and white, without any other colour. + +Opening from this court is the Sala Capitular a handsome saloon used on +occasions of elections of the Commendadora, or other solemnities, which +do not take place in the church. It contains a portrait of the sister of +St. Ferdinand,--a member of the community; and a curious picture of St. +Iago leading to victory the christian army of Don Ramiro the First. In +fulfilment of a promise made to the king the night preceding the battle +of Albayde, the apostle, according to the historians, led the army in +person, mounted on a milk-white charger, which cantered along at a +sufficient elevation over the heads of the combatants, to be visible to +all; thus inspiring, simultaneously, his _proteges_ with confidence, and +the Moors with terror. From that victory the Spanish war-cry of Santiago +is said to derive its origin. + +The buildings on the north side of the large court stand on the brink of +a perpendicular rock, overhanging the _faubourg_ on the Madrid side of +Toledo, and commanding right and left the luxuriant _vega_, to an extent +of from forty to fifty miles. Over the highest story of this portion of +the building, and forming a continuation of the rock, a Belvidere has +been constructed, the roof of which is supported by piers, leaving all +the sides open: it forms a promenade of about a hundred feet in length, +by twenty-five in width. + +The regulations of this convent are much less strict than those observed +by all other religious communities. It would not otherwise have been +possible to obtain permission to visit the establishment in detail. The +_monjas cavalleras_ (knight-nuns) of the military order of Santiago, +take the white veil only, and not the black. If a nun inherits a +property, she obtains permission from the council of military orders, +sitting at Madrid, to absent herself from the convent for the purpose of +transacting all necessary business. The same permission may be obtained +in cases of illness. In taking the vows there is no prostration beneath +the veil. The novice crosses her hands in a kneeling posture, and takes +the oath on the Gospel. One is struck by something invincibly puzzling +in this amalgamation of military regulation with religious hierarchy and +female seclusion. They call themselves knights; their abbess, commander. +The king, as Grand Master of the military orders (since Ferdinand the +Fifth) of Calatrava, Alcantara, and Santiago, is their recognised chief; +and whenever military mass is required to be performed, the troops march +into their chapel to beat of drum. + +I was even assured that these recluses are not obliged to refuse a hand +offered for a waltz, if it belongs to an arm having an epaulette at its +other extremity; and that such scenes are known to occur in the presence +of the commandress herself. + +Our party, formed for the visit to this convent, having been presented +to the superior, she gave directions to a nun to show us every part of +the establishment. This sister, who, we were told, bore the title and +rank of serjeantess (sargenta), possessed the remains of great beauty, +and her (probably) forty summers had not injured her commanding and +graceful figure. No sooner had she ushered us into the choir than she +left us for an instant, and returned with her mantle of ceremony,--the +costume in which they take the vow, and in which they appear on all +occasions of solemnity. It was with evident satisfaction that she +performed this part of her duties of cicerone; nor was it to be wondered +at. No costume could have been invented better calculated to set off her +natural advantages. It is composed of a sort of white serge, and +appears to have no seam. Attached round the shoulders it sweeps the +ground with a train of four or five feet. A cross of scarlet cloth, +bound with dark brown edges, and of a graceful form, figures on the +portion which covers the left arm from the shoulder to the elbow. The +white cap, gathered all over into minute plaits, rises into two parallel +ridges, which passing over to the back of the head, imitate the form of +a helmet. Two large lappets descend to the shoulders and complete the +costume, which is entirely white, with the exception of the cross. In +walking round the choir to display to us the effect of this dress, the +fair _santiagista_ was a model of majesty and grace. + +To judge from her replies to our questions, it would appear that the +system of softening the severity of monastic seclusion, and of partial +and occasional communication with the beings of the outer world, instead +of producing more contentment in the minds of the recluses, may possibly +tend to unsettle them, and render them more dissatisfied with their lot. +When asked how long she had inhabited the convent, she replied with an +unrestrained and most pathetic inflation of the chest, more eloquent +than the loudest complaint--"A very long time; nearly twenty years." The +white mantle, she told us, was an object the sight of which always gave +birth to serious reflections; since it was destined not even to quit her +after death, but to serve also for her shroud. + +[Illustration: COSTUME OF A MILITARY NUN.] + +The nun's choir is entirely separated from the public chapel, with the +exception of two gratings, which admit to the latter the sound of the +organ, and through which the nuns have a better view of the church than +the public can obtain of the choir, this being less lighted, and on a +lower level. Near the choir a small oratory of no greater dimensions +than about seven feet square, appears to be the only remains extant of +the Arab buildings, which occupied the site. The ceiling is +hemispherical, and ornamented in the Arab style; and one of the walls +contains a niche surrounded by Arab tracery. I should mention likewise a +fountain in the garden, which bears a similar character. + +These nuns live less in community with each other than those of other +convents; in fact, their life resembles in many respects that of +independent single ladies. Each inhabits her own suite of apartments, +and keeps her own servant. Her solitary repasts are prepared in her own +separate kitchen, and at the hour chosen by herself. Once a-year only, +on the occasion of the festival of the patron Apostle, the community +assembles at dinner. The common refectory is at present let to +strangers, together with other portions of the convent. The novice who +wishes to enter this convent must be of good family, (proof of noble +descent being demanded up to grand-fathers and grandmothers inclusive) +and possessed of property. Of the entrance of the present _commendadora_ +into the convent thirty years since, a romantic story is related. She +belongs to a family of rank in the province of La Mancha,--and it is +worth mentioning, that she recollects Espartero's father, who, as she +states, served a neighbouring family in the capacity of cowherd. + +A match, _de convenance_, had been arranged for her by her parents, on +the accomplishment of which they insisted the more rigidly from her +being known to entertain an attachment, the object of which was +disapproved. No resistance being of any avail, the wedding-day was +named; and she was taken to Toledo for the purpose of making the +necessary purchases for the occasion. It so happened that she was +received by a relative, a member of the community of Santiagistas; and +whether she confided her pains to the bosom of this relative, and +yielded to her persuasions--nuns being usually given to proselytism; or +perhaps acting on the impulse of the moment; she declared on the morning +after her arrival her resolution never to quit the convent; preferring, +as she resolutely affirmed, an entire life of seclusion, to an union +with a man she detested. Instead, therefore, of the wedding dresses, a +_manton capitular_ was the only ornament purchased. + +The property of this establishment remaining for the most part in +possession of the respective original possessors, and not forming a +common stock, the conscientious scruples of the revolution made an +exception in its favour, owing to which it is not reduced to so +destitute a condition as that of the other unclosed convents. The nuns +of San Clemente--the principal convent of Toledo, and of which the +abbess alone possessed private property, are reduced to a life of much +privation, as are also those of all the other convents. Some obtain +presents in return for objects of manual industry, such as dolls' +chairs, and other similar toys. Those of San Clemente had, and still +have, a reputation for superior skill in confectionary. A specimen of +their talent, of which I had an opportunity of judging in the house of a +friend of the abbess, appeared to me to warrant the full extent of their +culinary fame. They do not, however, exercise this art for gain. At San +Clemente, and no doubt at all the others, the new government--besides +the confiscation of all rents and possessions in money and land--seized +the provisions of corn and fruits which they found on searching the +attics of the building. + +Immediately below the ruined modern Alcazar, and facing the Expositos, +is seen a vast quadrangular building, each front of which presents from +twenty to thirty windows on a floor. It is without ornament, and is +entered by a square doorway, which leads to an interior court. It is now +an inn, called Fonda de la Caridad, but was originally the residence of +the Cid, who built it simultaneously with the erection of the Alcazar, +by Alonzo the Sixth, shortly after the taking of the town; Ruy Diaz +being at that time in high favour, and recently appointed first Alcalde +of Toledo, and governor of the palace. It was on the occasion of the +first cortez held in this town, that the hero demanded a formal audience +of Alonzo, in which he claimed justice against his two sons-in-law, the +counts of Carrion. + +These were two brothers, who had married the two Countesses of Bivar. On +the occasion of the double marriage, a brilliant party had assembled at +the Cid's residence, where all sorts of festivities had succeeded each +other. The two bridegrooms, finding themselves, during their presence in +this knightly circle, in positions calculated to test their mettle, +instead of proving themselves, by a display of unequalled valour and +skill, to be worthy of the choice by which they had been distinguished, +gave frequent proofs of deficiency in both qualities; and, long before +the breaking up of the party, their cowardice had drawn upon them +unequivocal signs of contempt from many of the company, including even +their host. Obliged to dissimulate their vexation as long as they +remained at the chateau of the Cid, they concerted a plan of vengeance +to be put in execution on their departure. + +They took formal leave, and departed with their brides for their +estate, followed by a brilliant suite. No sooner, however, had they +reached the first town, than, inventing a pretext, they despatched all +the attendants by a different route, and proceeded on their journey, +only accompanied by their wives. Towards evening the road brought them +to a forest, which appeared to offer facilities for putting their +project in execution. Here they quitted the highway, and sought a +retired situation. + +It happened that an attendant of the Countesses, surprised at the +determination of the party to divide routes, had been led by curiosity +to follow them unobserved. This follower, after having waited some time +for their return to the high-road, penetrated into the midst of the +wood, in order to discover the cause of the delay. He found the two +brides lying on the ground, almost without clothing, and covered with +blood, and learned that they had just been left by their husbands, who +had been scourging them almost to death. + +It was against the perpetrators of this outrage that the Cid pleaded for +justice. A certain number of nobles were selected by Alonzo, and +directed to give a decision after hearing the accusation and the +defence. The offence being proved, the Counts had nothing to urge in +extenuation, and judgment was pronounced. All the sums of money, +treasures, gold and silver vases and goblets, and precious stones, +given by the Cid with his daughters as their dowry, to be restored; and +(at the request of Ruy Diaz) the two Counts of Carrion, and their uncle, +who had advised them to commit the act, were condemned to enter the +lists against three of the followers of the Cid. The last decision was +momentarily evaded by the Counts; who urged, that, having come to Toledo +to be present at the cortez, they were unprovided with the necessary +accoutrements. The King, however, insisted that they should not escape +so mild a punishment, and repaired himself to Carrion, where he +witnessed the combat, in which, it is needless to add, the culprits came +off second best. The marriages being, at the same time, declared null, +the Cid's daughters were shortly afterwards married a second time; the +eldest, Dona Elvira, to Don Ramiro, son of Sancho, King of Navarre; and +the younger, Dona Sol, to Don Pedro, hereditary Prince of Aragon. + + + + +LETTER XI. + +STREETS OF TOLEDO. EL AMA DE CASA. MONASTERY OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES. +PALACE OF DON HURTADO DE MENDOZA. + + +Toledo. + +We will now hasten to the opposite extremity of the city, where the +monastery of San Juan de los Reyes lays claim to especial interest. But +I already hear you cry for mercy, and exclaim against these endless +convents and monasteries; the staircases, courts, and corridors of which +cause more fatigue to your imagination, than to the limbs of those who, +however laboriously, explore their infinite details. Infinite they are, +literally, in Toledo; where the churches, the greater number of which +belong to convents, are not seen, as elsewhere, scattered singly among +the masses of the habitations, but are frequently to be found in +clusters of three or four, whether united by the same walls, or facing +each other at the two sides of a street. It may, perhaps, afford you a +short relief to pick your way over the somewhat rugged pavement of a +few of the Toledo streets, and take a survey of the exterior town, which +our present destination requires us to traverse in its entire extent. I +must inform you that, for the success of this enterprise, the stranger +stands in absolute need of a pilot, without whose assistance his +embarrassments would be endless. + +Toledo scarcely boasts a street in which two vehicles could meet and +continue their route. Most are impassable for a single cart; and, in +more than one, I have found it impossible to carry an open umbrella. +Such being the prevailing width of the streets, their tortuous direction +causes a more serious inconvenience. He who has attempted the task of +Theseus, in the mazes of some modern garden labyrinth, will comprehend +the almost inevitable consequence of relying on his own wits for finding +his way about Toledo,--namely, the discovery that he has returned to his +point of departure at the moment he imagined that half the town +separated him from it. This result is the more favoured by the +similarity of the streets and houses. No such thing as a land-mark. All +the convents are alike. You recollect at a particular turning, having +observed a Moorish tower; consequently, at the end of the day, the sight +of the Moorish tower leads you on, buoyed up by doubly elevated +spirits, in the required direction, most anxious to bring the tiring +excursion to a close: but this tower leads you to the opposite extremity +of the city to that you seek, for there are half a dozen Moorish towers, +all alike, or with but a trifling difference in their construction. + +Nor is this obstacle to solitary exploration unaccompanied by another +inconvenience. I allude to the continual ascents and descents. The +surface of the mountain on which Toledo is built, appears to have been +ploughed by a hundred earthquakes, so cut and hacked is it, to the +exclusion of the smallest extent of level ground. To carry a railroad +across it, would require an uninterrupted succession of alternate +viaducts and tunnels. In consequence of this peculiarity, the losing +one's way occasions much fatigue. To do justice to the inhabitants, an +almost universal cleanliness pervades the town,--an excellence the +attainment of which is not easy in a city so constructed, and which +gives a favourable impression of the population. It is one of the towns +in which is proved the possibility of carrying on a successful war +against the vermin for which the Peninsula has acquired so bad a +reputation, by means of cleanliness maintained in the houses. + +In the house I inhabited on my arrival, I had suspected for some days an +unusual neglect in the duties of the housemaid, to whose department it +belonged to sweep the _esteras_ or matting, which serve for carpets, +from the circumstance of my having been visited by one or two unwelcome +tormentors. I ventured a gentle remonstrance to the _ama_ (landlady), +stating my reasons for the suspicion I entertained. It happened that on +the previous day I had mentioned my having been shown over the +Archbishop's palace. This she had not forgotten; for with a superb +coolness, scarcely to be met with out of Spain, she replied, "Fleas! oh, +no! sir! we have none here,--you must have brought them with you from +the Palace." Satisfied, however, with having maintained her dignity of +landlady, she took care to have the nuisance removed. + +This _ama_, as may be already judged, was a curiosity. In the first +place, she was a dwarf. The Spaniards are not, generally speaking, a +more diminutive race than the other inhabitants of Southern Europe: but +when a Spaniard, especially a woman, takes it into her head to be small, +they go beyond other nations. Nowhere are seen such prodigies of +exiguity. The lady was, moreover, deformed, one of her legs describing a +triangle, which compelled her in walking to imitate the sidelong +progress of a crab. Possessed of these peculiarities she had attained, +as spinster, that very uncertain age called by some "certain," but +agreed by all to be nearer the end than the commencement of life. + +Although not an exception, with regard to temper, to the generality of +those whose fate it is to endure such a complication of ills, she +nevertheless on frequent occasions gave way to much amiability, and +especially to much volubility of discourse. She was not without a tinge +of sentimentality; and when seated, fan in hand, and the _mantilla +puesta_, on one of the chairs shorn of almost their entire legs, which +were to be found in all parts of the house,--she made by no means a bad +half-length representation of a fine lady. + +She had apparently experienced some of the sorrows and disappointments +incident to humanity; and on such occasions had frequently, no doubt, +formed the resolution of increasing, although in a trifling degree, some +religious sisterhood, of which establishments she had so plentiful a +choice in her native city; but, whether on a nearer approach, she had +considered the veil an unbecoming costume, or her resolution had failed +her on the brink of the living tomb, the project had not as yet taken +effect. The turn, however, thus given to her reflections and inquiries, +had perfected in her a branch of knowledge highly useful to strangers +who might be thrown in her way. She was a limping encyclopedia of the +convents and monasteries of Toledo; and could announce each morning, +with the precision of an almanack, the name of the saint of the day,--in +what church or convent he was especially feted, and at what hour the +ceremony would take place. She was likewise _au fait_ of the foundation, +ancient and modern annals, and peculiarities of every sort which belong +to every religious establishment of the many scores existing in Toledo. +Her administration of the household affairs was admirably organized +owing to her energetic activity. Her love of cleanliness would +frequently induce her to take the sweeping department into her own +hands--a circumstance which was sure to render the operation doubly +successful, for the brooms, which in Toledo are not provided with +handles or broomsticks, were exactly of a length suited to her stature. +Before we take leave of her, here is one more of her original replies. + +I complained to her at breakfast that the eggs were not as fresh as +usual; and, suiting the action to the word, approached the egg-cup +containing the opened one so near to her, that the organs of sight and +smell could not but testify to the justice of my _reclamation_. +Shrugging her shoulders, until they almost reached the level of the +table--and with much contempt depicted on her countenance: "How could it +be otherwise?" she exclaimed, "the egg was taken a quarter of an hour +ago from under the hen; but you have broken it at the wrong end." + +The monastery called San Juan de los Reyes, was founded by Ferdinand and +Isabella, on their return from the conquest of Granada, and given to a +fraternity of Franciscan friars. An inscription to this effect in gothic +characters runs round the cloister walls, where it forms a sort of +frieze, in a line with the capitals of the semi-columns. The inhabited +part of the establishment is in a state of complete ruin, having been +destroyed by the French during the Peninsular War. The cloisters are, +likewise, in a semi-ruinous state: the part best preserved being the +church; although that was not entirely spared, as may be supposed from +its having been used as cavalry stables. + +The choice of a situation for the erection of this convent was perfect +in the then flourishing state of Toledo; and, even now, its picturesque +position lends a charm to the melancholy and deserted remains still +visible of its grandeur and beauty. It stands on the brow of the cliff, +commanding the termination of the chasm already described as commencing +at the bridge of Alcantara. It commands, therefore, the ruins of +Roderick's palace, placed a few hundred yards further on, and on a lower +level; still lower the picturesque bridge of St. Martin, striding to +the opposite cliff, over arches of ninety feet elevation, and the lovely +_vega_ which stretches to the west. + +[Illustration: CHURCH OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES.] + +This monastery was one of the most favoured amongst the numerous royal +endowments of that period. It is said that its foundation was the result +of a vow pronounced by Ferdinand and the Queen before the taking of +Granada. In addition to the scale of magnificence adopted throughout the +entire plan, the royal founders, on its completion, bestowed a highly +venerated donation--the collection of chains taken from the limbs of the +Christian captives, rescued by them from the dungeons of the Alhambra. +They are suspended on the outside walls of the two sides of the +north-eastern angle of the church, and are made to form a frieze, being +placed in couples crossing each other at an acute angle; while those +that remained are suspended vertically in rows by fours or fives, in the +intervals of the pilastres. + +The interior of the church is still sufficiently entire to give some +idea of its original splendour. Its dimensions are rather more than two +hundred feet in length, by eighty in width, and as many in +height--excepting over the intersection of the nave and transept, where +the ceiling rises to a hundred and eight feet. These dimensions are +exclusive of three recesses on either side, forming chapels open to the +nave, there being no lateral naves or aisles. The style of the whole is +very ornamental; but the east end is adorned with an unusual profusion +of sculpture. The transept is separated from the eastern extremity of +the building, by a space no greater than would suffice for one of the +arches; and its ends form the lines, which being prolonged, constitute +the backs of the chapels. The royal arms, supported by spread eagles, +are repeated five times on each end-wall; separated respectively by +statues of saints in their niches, and surmounted by a profusion of rich +tracery. These subjects entirely cover the walls to a height of about +forty feet, at which elevation another inscription in honour of the +founders runs round the whole interior. The transepts not being formed +by open arches, the sides afford space for a repetition of the same +ornament, until at their junction with the nave they are terminated by +two half-piers covered with tracery, and surmounted by semi-octagonal +balconies, beneath which the initials of Ferdinand and Isabella, made to +assume a fancy shape, and surmounted by coronets, are introduced with +singularly graceful effect. + +But the chief attraction of this ruin is the cloister. A small +quadrangle is surrounded by an ogival or pointed arcade, enriched with +all the ornament that style is capable of receiving. It encloses a +garden, which, seen through the airy-web of the surrounding tracery, +must have produced in this sunny region a charming effect. At present, +one side being in ruins and unroofed, its communication with the other +three has been interrupted; and, whether or not in the idea of +preserving the other sides from the infection, their arches have been +closed nearly to the top by thin plaister walls. Whatever may have been +the motive of this arrangement, it answers the useful purpose of +concealing from the view a gallery which surmounts the cloister, the +arches of which would neutralize the souvenirs created by the rest of +the scene, since they announce a far different epoch of art, by the +grievous backsliding of taste evinced in their angular form and uncouth +proportions. + +[Illustration: CLOISTER OF SAN JUAN DE LOS REYES, TOLEDO.] + +Until the destruction of the monastery by the French, the number of +monks was very considerable; and in consequence of the unusual +privileges accorded to their body, had become the objects of especial +veneration. A curious proof of this still exists in the form of a +printed paper, pasted on one of the doors in the interior of the church, +and no doubt preserved carefully by the fifteen or sixteen brothers, who +continued after the dispersion of the rest to inhabit the few +apartments, which, by their situation over the cloister, had escaped the +flames; and who were only finally compelled to evacuate their retreat on +the occasion of the general convent crusade of the late revolution. It +is an announcement of indulgences, of which the following is the opening +paragraph:-- + +"Indulgence and days of pardon to be gained by kissing the robe of the +brothers of San Francisco. + +"All the faithful gain, for each time that they kiss the aforesaid holy +robe with devotion of heart, two thousand and seventy-five days of +Indulgence. Further than this, whosoever of the faithful shall kiss the +aforesaid holy robe devoutly, gains each time eight thousand one hundred +days of pardon. The which urges to the exercise of this devotion the +Princes, Kings, Emperors, Bishops, and highest dignitaries of the +Church, and the monks of other religious orders; and even those of the +same order gain the same, according to the doctrine of Lantusca, who +writes, 'Videant religiosi quantum thesaurum portent secum.' Since those +who with hearts filled with lowliness and love, bend the knees to kiss +the precious garment, which opens to so many souls the entrance to +Heaven, leading them aside from the paths of perdition, with trembling +and terror of the entire hosts of hell, are doubtless those who gain the +above-mentioned Indulgences, &c." + +Cardinal Ximenes had assumed the habit of this monastery before his +nomination to the see of Toledo. + +Among the numerous relics of the ancient prosperity of this ruinous +corner of Toledo, are seen the walls of the palace of Don Juan Hurtado +de Mendoza. To them were confided the secret murmurings of Charles the +Fifth's vexation, when, elated with his Italian successes--lord of the +greatest empire of Christendom, and flattered by the magnificent +hospitality of the Genoese, he only resorted hither to be bearded by his +Spanish vassals, and to hear his request for supplies unceremoniously +refused. Although monarch of nearly half Europe, and, better still, of +Mexico and Peru, that sovereign appears to have undergone the torments +of a constantly defective exchequer. + +His armies were not numerous for such an empire, and yet they were +frequently in revolt for arrears of pay. Could at that time the inventor +of a constitution on the modern principle have presented himself to +Charles, with what treasures would he not have rewarded him? On his +arrival in Spain, in the autumn of 1538, the emperor convoked the cortez +in Toledo, "for the purpose of deliberation on the most grave and urgent +causes, which obliged him to request of his faithful vassals an +inconsiderable contribution, and of receiving the assurance of the +desire with which he was animated, of diminishing their burdens as soon +as circumstances should enable him to do so." All assembled on the +appointed day--the prelates, the grandees, the knights, the deputies of +cities and towns. The opening session took place in the great salon of +the house of Don Juan Hurtado de Mendoza, Count of Melita, in which the +emperor had taken up his abode; and two apartments in the convent of San +Juan de los Reyes, were prepared for the remaining meetings--one for the +ecclesiastical body, presided by the Cardinal de Tavera, archbishop of +Toledo, accompanied by Fray Garcia de Loaysa, cardinal, and confessor of +the emperor, afterwards Archbishop of Seville--the other for the lay +members of the cortez. + +Although an adept at dissimulation, what must have been the impatience +of Charles, while under the necessity of listening, day after day, to +reports of speeches pronounced by the independent members of his _junta_ +on the subject of his unwelcome proposition, without the consolation of +foreseeing that the supplies would eventually be forthcoming. The +orators did not spare him. The historian, Mariana, gives at full length +the speech of the condestable Don Velasco, Duke of Frias, a grandee +enjoying one of the highest dignities at the court, who commences by +declaring that, "with respect to the Sisa," (tax on provisions, forming +the principal subject of the emperor's demand,) "each of their +lordships, being such persons as they were, would understand better than +himself this business: but what he understood respecting it was, that +nothing could be more contrary to God's service, and that of his +Majesty, and to the good of these kingdoms of Castile, of which they +were natives, and to their honour, than the Sisa;" and, further on, +proposes that a request be made to his Majesty, that he would moderate +his expenditure, which was greater than that of the Catholic kings. + +On an address to this effect being presented to the emperor, he replied, +that "he thanked them for their kind intentions; but that his request +was for present aid, and not for advice respecting the future:" and +finding, at length, that no Sisa was to be obtained, he ordered the +archbishop to dissolve the _junta_, which he did in the following +words:--"Gentlemen,--his Majesty says, that he convoked your lordships' +assembly for the purpose of communicating to you his necessities, and +those of these kingdoms, since it appeared to him that, as they were +general, such also should be the remedy; but seeing all that has been +done, it appears to him that there is no need of detaining your +lordships, but that each of you may go to his house, or whither he may +think proper." + +It must be confessed that the grandees, who had on this occasion +complained of Charles's foreign expeditions, and neglect of his Spanish +dominions, did not pursue the system best calculated to reconcile him to +a residence among them. Instead of taking advantage of the opportunities +afforded by social intercourse, for making amends for the repulse he had +suffered from the cortez, they appeared desirous of rendering the amount +of humiliation which awaited him in Spain a counterpoise to his triumphs +in his other dominions. On the close of the above-mentioned session, a +tournament was celebrated in the _vega_ of Toledo. On arriving at the +lists, an _alguacil_ of the court, whose duty it was to clear the way +on the emperor's approach--seeing the Duke de l'Infantado in the way, +requested him to move on, and on his refusal struck his horse with his +staff. The duke drew his sword and cut open the officer's head. In the +midst of the disturbance occasioned by the incident, the _alcalde_ +Ronquillo came up, and attempted to arrest the duke in the emperor's +name--when the constable, Duke de Frias, who had just ridden to the +scene of bustle, reining in his horse, exclaimed, "I, in virtue of my +office, am chief minister of justice in these kingdoms, and the duke is, +therefore, my prisoner;" and addressing himself to the alcalde: "know +better another time, on what persons you may presume to exercise your +authority." The duke left the ground in company of the last speaker, and +was followed by all the nobles present, leaving the emperor entirely +unaccompanied. It appears that no notice was taken by Charles of this +insult; his manner towards the Duke of Infantado on the following day +being marked by peculiar condescension, and all compensation to the +wounded _alguacil_ left to the duke's generosity. + +The personal qualities of this prince, as a monarch, appear to have been +overrated in some degree in his own day; but far more so by subsequent +writers. The brilliancy of his reign, and the homage which surrounded +his person were due to the immense extent of his dominions; and would +never have belonged to him, any more than the states of which he was in +possession, had their attainment depended in any degree on the exercise +of his individual energies. When in the prime of youth, possessed of +repeated opportunities of distinguishing himself at the head of his +armies, he kept aloof, leaving the entire conduct of the war to his +generals. His rival, Francis the First, wounded at Pavia in endeavouring +to rally his flying troops, and at length taken prisoner while half +crushed beneath his dead horse, was greater--as he stood before the +hostile general, his tall figure covered with earth and blood--than the +absent emperor, who was waiting at Valladolid for the news of the war. + +Nor were the qualities of the statesman more conspicuous than those of +the warrior on this occasion. Having received the intelligence of his +victory, and of the capture of his illustrious prisoner, he took no +measures--gave no orders. To his general every thing was left; and when +the captive King was, at his own request, conveyed some time after to +Spain, the astonished emperor had received no previous notice of his +coming. He allowed himself to be out-manoeuvred in the treaty for the +liberation of his prisoner; and when Francis broke the pledge he had +given for the restitution of Burgundy, he took no steps to enforce the +execution of the stipulations; and he ultimately gave up the two French +princes, who remained in his power as hostages, in return for a sum of +money. + +Far from maintaining the superiority in European councils due to his +extensive dominions, the Italian republics were only prevented with the +greatest difficulty, and by the continual presence of armies, from +repeatedly declaring for France: and even the popes, to whom he paid +continual court, manifested the small estimation in which they held his +influence by constantly deserting his cause in favour of Francis,--the +cause of the champion of Christianity in favour of the ally of the +Infidel, and _that_ frequently in defiance of good faith; shewing how +little they feared the consequences of the imperial displeasure. + +If these facts fail in affording testimony to his energy and capacity, +still less does his character shine in consistency. He professed an +unceasing ardour in the cause of Christianity; offering to the French +king the renunciation of his rights, and a release from that monarch's +obligations to him, on condition of his joining him in an expedition +against the Infidels; but when he found himself at the head of an +immense army under the walls of Vienna, he sat still and allowed +Solyman to carry off at his leisure the spoils of the principal towns of +Hungary. + +When at length he made up his mind to take the field, he selected, as +most worthy of the exercise of his prowess, the triumph over the pirate +Barbarossa and his African hordes: the most important result of the +campaign being the occupation of Tunis, (where in his zealous burnings +for Christianity he installed a Mahometan sovereign,) and the wanton +destruction by his soldiers of a splendid library of valuable +manuscripts. + +We have seen how little his Spanish subjects allowed themselves to be +dazzled by the splendours of his vast authority, and history informs us +how far he was from conceiving the resolution of reducing them to +obedience by any measures savouring of energetic demonstration. The +irreverence to his person he calmly pocketed, and the deficiences in his +exchequer were supplied by means of redoubled pressure on his less +refractory Flemings. He submitted to the breach of faith of Francis of +France, and to the disrespect of his Castilian vassals; but, on the +burghers of the city of Ghent being heard to give utterance to +expressions of discontent at the immoderate liberties taken with their +purse-strings, he quits Madrid in a towering rage, crosses France at +the risk of his liberty, and enters his helpless burg at the head of a +German army, darting on all sides frowns of imperial wrath, each +prophetic of a bloody execution. + +Aware of the preparations of Francis for attacking his dominions +simultaneously in three different directions, he took insufficient or +rather no measures to oppose him, but turning his back, embarked for +Algiers, where he believed laurels to be as cheap as at Tunis. There, +however, he lost one half of his armament, destroyed by the elements; +and the remainder narrowly escaping a similar fate, and being dispersed +in all directions, he returned in time to witness the unopposed +execution of the plans of his French enemy. What measures are his on +such an emergency? Does he call together the contingents of the German +States? Unite the different corps serving in Lombardy and +Savoy,--dispatch an order to the viceroy of Naples to march for the +north of Italy; and having completed his combinations, cross the +Pyrenees at the head of a Spanish army, and give the law to his far +weaker antagonist? No! nothing that could lead to an encounter with the +French king accorded with his policy, as it has been called, but more +probably with his disposition. He quits Spain, it is true, and using all +diligence, travels round France, but not too near it, and arrives in +Flanders. Here he puts himself at the head of his Germans, and +marches--against the Duke of Cleves! who had formed an alliance with his +principal enemy. + +Seeing the emperor thus engaged, Francis completes a successful +campaign, taking possession of Luxembourg and other towns. At length the +sovereign of half Europe, having received news of the landing of an +English army in Picardy, resolves to venture a demonstration against +France. He therefore traverses Lorraine at the head of eighty thousand +troops, and makes himself master of Luneville: after which, hearing that +Francis had despatched his best troops to oppose Henry the Eighth, and +was waiting for himself, as the less dangerous foe, with an army of half +the strength of his own, and composed of recruits, he makes up his mind +to advance in the direction of Paris. After a fortnight's march he finds +himself in presence of the French king, to whom he sends _proposals of +peace_! + +These being rejected, he continues his march; when a messenger from +Francis announces his consent to treat. Under these circumstances, does +he require the cession of Burgundy, according to the terms of the +unexecuted treaty of Madrid? Does he even stipulate for any advantage, +for any equality? No! he agrees, on the contrary, to cede Flanders to +the French, under colour of a dowry with his daughter the Infanta Maria, +who was to be married to the Duke of Orleans; or else Milan, with his +niece the daughter of the King of the Romans; and he beats a retreat +with his immense army, as if taking the benefit of a capitulation. + +There is something in the result of this French campaign which appears +to explain much of Charles's previous conduct; and shows that in many +instances he was actuated by personal fear of his gallant rival. On this +occasion he did not hesitate to desert the King of England, who had no +doubt calculated on his cooeperation, as much as Charles had depended on +the diversion created by the British army. The more one reflects on the +passages of this emperor's history, the less one is surprised at his +resolution to abdicate. He gave in this a proof of his appreciation of +his real character, which undoubtedly fitted him rather for a life of +ease and retirement, than for the arduous duties of supreme power. + + + + +LETTER XII. + +ARAB MONUMENTS. PICTURES. THE PRINCESS GALIANA. ENVIRONS. + + +Toledo. + +Returning along the edge of the cliff, a very short space separates the +extreme walls of the ruined monastery of Ferdinand and Isabella, from an +edifice of much greater antiquity, although not yet a ruin. Its exterior +as you approach, is more than simple. It is not even a neatly +constructed building; but such a pile of rough looking mud and stone, +as, on the continent, announces sometimes a barn, or granary of a +farming establishment _mal monte._ A high central portion runs from end +to end, from either side of which, at about four-fifths of its height, +project lower roofs of brownish-red tiles. The old square rotten door is +in exact keeping with all this exterior, and contributes its share to +the surprise experienced on entering, when you discover, on a level with +the eye, distributed over a spacious quadrangular area, a forest of +elaborately carved capitals, surmounting octagon-shaped pillars, and +supporting innumerable horse-shoe arches, scattered in apparent +confusion. All these as you advance down a flight of steps, fall into +rank, and you speedily find yourself in the centre of an oriental temple +in all its symmetry. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF SANTA MARIA LA BLANCA, TOLEDO.] + +The principal light entering from the western extremity, you do not at +first perceive that three of the five naves terminate at the opposite +end, by half domes of more modern invention. These have since been +almost built out, and do not form a part of the general view,--not in +consequence of a decree of a committee of fine arts, but for the +convenience of the intendant of the province, who selected the edifice, +as long as it remained sufficiently weather-proof for such a purpose, +for a magazine of government stores. There is no record of the antiquity +of this church, supposed to be the most ancient in Toledo: at all +events, it is the most ancient of those constructed by the Arabs. It was +originally a synagogue, and received the above mentioned half cupolas on +its conversion to a Catholic church; since which period it has been +known by its present title of Santa Maria la Blanca. + +A few hundred yards further on, following the same direction, is the +church called the Transito, also in the oriental style, but on a +different plan: a large quadrangular room, from about ninety to a +hundred feet in length, by forty in width, and about seventy high, +without arches or columns, ornamented with Arab tracery in stucco, on +the upper part of the walls, and by a handsome cedar roof. A cement of a +different colour from the rest runs round the lowest portion of the +walls, up to about breast high; no doubt filling the space formerly +occupied by the azulejos. Some remains of these still decorate the +seats, which are attached to the walls at the two sides of the altar. +The building is in excellent preservation, and until lately was used as +a church of the Mozarabic sect. The ornaments are remarkable for the +exquisite beauty of their design, and are uninjured, excepting by the +eternal whitewash, the monomania of modern Spanish decorators. + +The Jews were the primitive occupants of this elegant temple also. +Samuel Levi, treasurer and favourite of Pedro the Cruel (who +subsequently transferred his affection from the person of his faithful +servant to the enormous wealth, amassed under so indulgent a prince, and +seized a pretext for ordering his execution) was the founder of this +synagogue. The inauguration was accompanied by extraordinary pomp. The +treasurer being, from his paramount position at the court of Castile, +the most influential personage of his tribe, the leading members of +Judaism flocked from all parts of Europe to Toledo to be present on the +occasion, and a deputation from Jerusalem brought earth of the Holy +Land, which was laid down throughout the whole interior before the +placing of the pavement. + +A very different origin, more suited to believers in miracles, is +attributed to this church by the present titular sacristan. This +Quasimodo of the fabric, a simple and worthy functionary, enjoys a +sinecure, except, it is to be feared, with regard to salary. Although, +however, no duties confine him to his post, his attachment to the +edifice prevents his ever being found further from it than the porch; +under the cool shelter of which, as he leans against the wall, he +fabricates and consumes the friendly _cigarito_. When questioned with an +appearance of interest on the subject of the building, he replies with +unrestrained delight. Its foundation he attributes to Noah, fixing the +date at seventeen hundred years back; but without adding any particulars +relative to this miraculous visit paid to Toledo, by the ghost of the +patriarch. + +As is the case with all other ecclesiastical edifices closed pursuant to +the recent decrees, this building may become the property of any one, +who would offer a sufficient price, not according to the real value, but +to that to which such objects are reduced by the great number in the +market. Several other churches are simply closed and left unguarded; but +the antiquarian sacristan above mentioned, is placed here on account of +the existence of a room in which are contained the archives of the +knights of Calatrava and Alcantara, until recently its proprietors. No +reparations, however, are ordered; and there is many an enthusiast in +archaeological research who, should such an edifice fall under his +notice, would, no doubt, rescue it from its now imminent fate. It is not +only a monument admirable for the details of the ornaments, the best of +its sort to be met with north of Andalucia, but it forms a valuable link +in the chain of architectural history. It is the first ecclesiastical +edifice of its style recorded as having set the example of an open area, +destitute of columns and arcades. + +At the distance of a few hundred yards from this building, a portion of +the precipice is pointed out, to which was given in former times the +name of the Tarpeian rock. It was the spot selected by the Jewish +authorities, (who enjoyed in Toledo, under the Kings of Castile, the +right of separate jurisdiction in their tribe,) for the execution of +their criminals. It is a perpendicular rock, but with an intermediate +sloping space between its base and the Tagus. + +One of the most curious of the Arab monuments of Toledo, is the church +called the Christo de la Luz, formerly a mosque. It is extremely small; +a square of about twenty feet; and is divided by four pillars into three +naves, connected with each other, and with the surrounding walls, by +twelve arches. This disposition produces in the ceiling nine square +compartments, which rise each to a considerable height, enclosed by +walls from the tops of the arches upwards. Each small square ceiling is +coved and ornamented with high angular ribs, rising from the cornice and +intersecting each other, so as to form a different combination in each +of the nine. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF CHRISTO DE LA LUZ. TOLEDO.] + +The principal remaining Arab buildings are, the beautiful gate called +Puerta del Sol; part of the town walls with their towers; the parochial +church of San Roman; the tower of the church of St. Thomas; and two or +three other similar towers. Several private houses contain single rooms +of the same architecture, more or less ornamental. The most considerable +of these is situated opposite the church of San Roman, and belongs to a +family residing at Talavera. They have quitted the house in Toledo, +which is in a ruinous state. The Moorish saloon is a fine room of about +sixty feet in length by upwards of forty high, and beautifully +ornamented. The Artesonado roof of cedar lets in already, in more than +one part, light and water; and half the remainder of the house has +fallen. + +The good pictures in Toledo are not very plentiful. It is said some of +the convents possessed good collections, which were seized, together +with all their other property. Many of these are to be seen in the +gallery called the Museo Nacional, at Madrid. Others have been sold. +Those of the cathedral have not been removed; but they are not numerous: +among them is a St. Francisco, by Zurbaran; and a still more beautiful +work of Alonzo del Arco, a St. Joseph bearing the Infant. It is in a +marble frame fixed in the wall, and too high to be properly viewed: but +the superiority of the colouring can be appreciated, and the excellence +of the head of the saint. In the smaller sacristy are two pictures in +Bassano's style, and some copies from Raphael, Rubens, and others. At +the head of the great sacristy, there is a large work of Domenico +Theotocopuli, commonly called El Greco, (the head of the school of +Toledo) which I prefer much to the famous Funeral of the Count Orgaz, in +the church of Santo Tonie, which, according to some, passes for his +masterpiece. In the first are traits of drawing, which forcibly call to +mind the style of the best masters of the Roman school, and prove the +obligation he was under to the instructions of his master Michel Angelo. +The subject is the Calvary. The soldiery fill the back ground. On the +right hand the foreground is occupied by an executioner preparing the +cross, and on the left, by the group of females. The erect figure of the +Christ is the principal object, and occupies the centre, somewhat +removed from the front. This is certainly a fine picture; the +composition is good, and the drawing admirable, but the colouring of the +Greco is always unpleasing. + +In the Funeral of Count Orgaz it is insufferably false; nor, in fact, is +it easy to conjecture to what sort of merit this picture owes its +celebrity. It possesses neither that of conception, nor that of +composition, nor of expression: least of all that of colouring. All that +can be said in its favour is, that the row of heads extending from one +end of the canvass to the other, across the centre, are correct +portraits of personages of note, who figured in the history of the +epoch. The worst part of all is, the Heaven of the upper plan of the +picture, into which the soul of the Count has the bad taste to apply for +admission. This was, in fact, one of the works which gave occasion to +the saying of a critic of a contemporary school, who declared that the +Glorias (heavenly visions) of the Greco looked like Infernos, and his +Infernos like Glorias. + +In the Transito there is an Adoration, a charming picture, apparently by +Rembrandt. There are here and there good pictures among the other +churches, but none very remarkable. In general, the most attractive +objects are the old picture-frames, and other gilded ornaments and wood +carvings. All these, in the taste of the commencement of the last +century and earlier, which is at present so much in request, are in such +profusion, as would draw tears of admiration from the eyes of a Parisian +upholsterer, and showers of bank notes from the purses of furniture +collectors. + +You will not, I am sure, by this time, object to our quitting Toledo, +and making a short excursion in its environs. I shall therefore request +you to accompany me to the ruins of a Moorish palace, on the banks of +the Tagus, a mile distant from the town, called the Palacio de Galiana. +The Princess Galiana was the daughter of Galafre, one of the earlier +Arab Kings of Toledo. The widely extended fame of her beauty, is said to +have fired the imagination of Charles, son of Pepin, King of France, who +resolved to throw himself at her feet as a suitor, and forthwith +repaired to Toledo. However glowing the terms in which report had +represented her charms, he found them surpassed by the reality; but a +prince of a neighbouring state had forestalled him in his suit. This +obstacle did not, however, deter him from persisting in his resolution. +He forthwith challenged his rival to mortal combat; and, clearing his +road to the hand of the princess with the point of his lance, married +her, and carried her back with him to Paris. + +The attachment of her father to this princess is said to have been such +from her earliest childhood, that he gave himself up entirely to this +affection--devoting all his wealth to the gratification of her caprices. +The Arab palace, now no longer in existence, took its name from hers, in +consequence of a new one having been erected for her by her father, +adjoining his own, at a period at which she had scarcely grown out of +childhood. The two residences being occupied by succeeding princes as +one, received the appellation of los Palacios, (the Palaces) of Galiana. + +In addition to her town residence, she soon after had the other palace +constructed about a mile from Toledo. To arrive at the ruins, we pass +the bridge of Alcantara, and follow the rose-tree promenade. From this a +path on the left-hand leads to the spot across a field in garden-like +cultivation. The selection made by the Arab princess of this situation, +proves her to have possessed, in addition to her beauty, a consummate +taste and intelligence of rural life. + +The Tagus--a name, by the way, more deserving of poetic fame than many a +more widely echoed stream--in this spot, as if conscious of the pains he +must shortly undergo, while dashing through the deep and narrow chasm +through which he must force a passage around Toledo, seems to linger, +desirous of putting off the fated storm. His course becomes more +circuitous as he approaches; and indulging in a hundred irregularities +of form, he plays round several small thickly wooded islands, +penetrating with innumerable eddies and back currents, into flowery +nooks and recesses; while here and there he spreads out in a wide sheet +his apparently motionless waters, as if seeking to sleep away the +remainder of his days on these green and luxurious banks. + +In the midst of this delicious region, which recalls to the recollection +some of the more favoured spots in England, but which, with the addition +of the Spanish climate in early summer, is superior to them all, was +placed the palace. The valley for a considerable distance still bears +the name of the Garden of the King,--Huerta del Rey. The site of part of +the pleasure grounds immediately adjoining the river, is left wild, and +covered with woods; and the remainder is converted into a farm in the +highest state of cultivation. The ruin consists of three sides of a not +very large quadrangle; the massive walls of which are pierced with two +stories of arched windows. The remainder of the edifice was doubtless +less solid, and has entirely disappeared. + +Many a tale of romance would be gathered--many a stirring scene +recorded, could so precious a document be brought to light as a +chronicle drawn up by some St. Simon of the Court of Toledo, who had +recorded the daily events of which this retreat was the theatre, during +the time it served as a residence for several successive sovereigns. But +in this land words have always been fewer than deeds, and records are +the rarest sort of subsisting monuments. One anecdote, however, is +transmitted, of which this spot was the scene, in the time of the last +but one of the Moorish princes who reigned at Toledo, before its +surrender to Alonzo the Sixth. + +Alonzo was himself one of the actors on the occasion. In early life he +had been deprived by his brother Sancho, King of Castile, of the portion +of the kingdoms which fell to his share by the will of his father, +Ferdinand the First. On his expulsion from his inheritance he took +refuge at the court of the Arab king of Toledo, by whom he was received +with every mark of favour which could have been lavished on a friend. +The Moor (for the family then reigning was not Arab, although the two +races are constantly confounded in Spanish histories) gave him a palace, +and settled on him splendid revenues, to be continued during the time he +should think fit to accept his hospitality. He even sent invitations to +all the friends and followers of his guest, in order that he might be +surrounded with his own court. + +Alonzo, touched by this delicate hospitality, attached himself warmly to +his host; his friendship for whom (I believe a solitary instance in +those times among the sovereigns in Spain) lasted until the death of the +latter. The youthful exile, thus handsomely treated, passed much of his +time in the society of his royal protector. + +On one occasion, the court being at the country palace of Galiana, the +king and his attendants were reclining in the cool shade of the garden, +and Alonzo at a short distance, apparently asleep. The king, pointing to +the town, which towered on its precipice immediately in front of the +party, was expatiating on the strength of its position. All agreed that +it was impregnable; until a brother of the monarch observed, that there +was one mode of warfare against which it would not hold out: and he +proceeded to explain his plan, which consisted of an annual devastation +of the valley of the Tagus at the time of harvest, to be executed by an +invading army, which might be disbanded during the winter months. This +system, he maintained, would inevitably reduce the city by famine to the +necessity of a surrender. + +No sooner was the last phrase uttered, than all present in an instant +struck by the same thought, turned towards the sleeper; and the greater +number, filled with suspicion respecting the reality of his slumbers, +addressed significant looks to the king, the intention of which could +not be mistaken, and which boded no good to Alonzo. Whatever might have +been the feelings of the Moor at this moment, he took no further notice +of the incident, and allowed his guest to terminate his nap when he +thought proper. + +When the death of Sancho took place before Zamora, Alonzo was still at +Toledo. The intelligence being conveyed to him by a confidential +messenger from his sister, he lost no time in taking leave of his host, +who wished him success with every demonstration of friendship, and +repairing to Burgos. There, after some hesitation, the nobles consented +to his investiture with the sovereignty. During his brilliant reign he +resisted several tempting opportunities of breaking with his Moorish +ally and former host, and thus adding to his dominions,--and preserved +his friendship and loyalty unstained. After the death of the Moorish +king, he, however, speedily fell out with his successor. War was +declared on both sides, and it was resolved to attack Toledo. The well +known result was, the taking of the town after seven years, the time +mentioned in the garden of Galiana, and by means of the annually +repeated devastation of the Vega, according to the plan imagined and +described in the above mentioned conversation. + +Returning by the Rose-tree Walk, immediately on approaching the bridge, +an advanced portion of the cliff which bounds the road on the left +detaches itself from the rest towards the summit, which rises in a +circular form. On it stands the Castle of San Servando, one of the most +picturesque of the Arab remains existing in this part of Spain. The +origin of this fort is uncertain. Some attribute it to the Romans, and +consider the Moorish windows and ornaments to be subsequent additions, +from their being constructed with bricks instead of the same stone as +the rest of the walls. But this is not a sufficient reason, since the +same peculiarity exists in all the Arab edifices in Toledo. In fact, the +reason is evident. The hard black sort of stone used for the walls, +would almost have defied the chisel which should have attempted to +fashion its surface into the delicate forms required by the Arab mode of +decorating. This argument, therefore, being set aside--remains the +masonry, which is more likely from its appearance to be Gothic or Arab, +than Roman. + +It is probably entirely Arab. It encloses a quadrangular space of about +a quarter of an acre, and is a ruin; but the walls and towers are almost +entire. There are three small towers, that is of small diameter, but +lofty; and two larger, one of which is circular: the other is a +parallelogram terminating by a semicircle at one of its extremities. +This tower has lost apparently about a third of its elevation. Their +walls are so perfectly constructed as to appear externally like solid +rocks smoothed and rounded. Each larger tower contains two rectangular +brick projections, in which are small elegantly-arched openings for +windows. + +The edifice was thoroughly repaired by Don Pedro Tenorio, archbishop of +Toledo; the same who built the bridge of San Martin. It has since played +its part in numberless wars, and was at length reduced to a ruin during +the insurrection headed by Juan de Padilla, at the commencement of +Charles the Fifth's reign. + +During the Peninsular war of the present century, the old battlements +echoed once more with the sounds of warfare. It was occupied by a body +of French, who repaired a portion of the masonry at the summits of the +towers, and erected a low wall along the whole length of the Toledo +side. They were able, from their position, to batter the Alcazar, which +is immediately opposite, but on a higher level; and to command the +bridge of Alcantara, and road to Aranjuez. + +In the other valley which extends to the west of Toledo exist the +remains of a circus for chariot races, generally supposed, at first +sight, to be Roman. They present, in fact, every characteristic of a +Roman work. The rough interior masonry is all that remains; and that +only rising to a height of from three to four feet from the ground, with +the exception of a single arch. The earth mingled with ruins, has +apparently filled up much of the interior, and surrounding the exterior +simultaneously, has only left visible the upper portion of the edifice. +The end which is in the best preservation is of a semicircular form. +From it the sides run in parallel directions, and lose themselves in the +ruins of a more recently erected convent. They are traceable to a length +of more than four hundred yards. The width is two hundred and ninety +feet within the building, at the present elevation of the ground, and +three hundred and twenty feet on the outside, which appears to have +consisted of a series of arches. There are also remains of an +amphitheatre adjoining the semicircular end of the stadium. + +There being no indication of the Romans having at any period planted any +considerable establishment at Toledo, in fact no author but Livy having +noticed the place, and he but slightly; the antiquaries have sought for +the origin of these monuments among Gothic traditions; and it is +believed by them, that they were erected during the early part of the +sixth century, by Theudio, a Gothic King, who manifested much attachment +to Roman customs. + + + + +LETTER XIII. + +CASTLES OF ALMONACID, GUADAMUR, MONTALBAN, AND ESCALONA. TORRIJOS. + + +Toledo. + +I met this morning with an entertaining scene, in a quarter in which it +might be the least looked for. The archiepiscopal palace contains an +excellent library, which has always been open to the public. Although +the revenues of the see are now withdrawn, and the palace is vacant, the +books remain on the shelves, and the head librarian, a _racionero_ of +the cathedral, has the good nature to throw open the rooms from eleven +to twelve, on all days of labour, (as those are called on which no saint +is celebrated,) although he no longer enjoys a salary, nor the means of +providing a single attendant to see to what passes in the different +apartments. + +I was occupied this morning in the _racionero's_ room, when he received +a visit from two French tourists, both persons of notoriety; one being +a member of the chamber of deputies, and one of the leaders of the +republican party; and the other, I believe, also in the chamber, but +principally known as a writer of political pamphlets, in which the +French reigning family, and the powers that be are lashed with +unwearying severity. The first mentioned personage commenced the +conversation in Spanish, which the other did not speak: but on hearing +the librarian make an observation in French, the pamphleteer took up the +argument in his own language, and nearly in the following terms. + +"As this gentleman understands French, I will explain to him the object +of my tour," and addressing himself to the Spaniard, he continued--"I +find it a relief, in the midst of my arduous political duties, to make +an occasional excursion in a foreign country, and thus to enlarge the +sphere of my usefulness, by promoting the cause of humanity in the +various localities I visit. It is thus that I have recently passed +through Andalucia, and have recommended, and, I doubt not, successfully, +to the principal personages possessed of influence in its numerous +cities, the establishment of all sorts of useful institutions. I am now +in Toledo, animated with the same zeal. I have obtained an introduction +to you, Sir, understanding that you are an individual possessed of +considerable influence, and enjoying unbounded means of carrying out +the projects, which, I doubt not, you will agree with me in considering +essential to the well being and improvement, both moral and material, of +your ancient locality." + +During this exordium, the Spaniard, who happens to be possessed of a +vivacity, unusual in his countrymen, and a sort of impatience of manner, +had endeavoured more than once to obtain a hearing. At length he +replied, that he feared it would not be in his power to carry out the +views which Monsieur did him the honour to communicate to him, owing to +the absence of sufficient resources at his disposal, whether for public +purposes, or in his individual and private capacity. + +The Frenchman was not, however, to be so easily discouraged. "This, +Sir," he replied, "is the result of your modesty; but I am persuaded +that I have only to make my objects understood, in order to obtain their +complete execution. For instance, one of the most insignificant in +expense, but of infinite utility, is this: it would be a source of much +gratification to me, if you would have the most conspicuous spots +throughout Toledo ornamented with statues, representing, with greater or +less resemblance, all the personages, distinguished from various causes +in the history of Spain, to whom Toledo has given birth. These works I +should wish to be entrusted to artists of acknowledged talent, and"--he +was proceeding with constantly increasing rapidity of enunciation, when +the exhausted librarian's patience being at an end, he interrupted the +torrent. "However grateful the city of Toledo and myself must be for +your interest and advice, I am grieved to repeat that my anxiety to +comply with your wishes is totally powerless. We are without funds; and +I, for my own part, can assure you that I am _sans le sou_. Do me the +favour to name any service of a less expensive nature, and I shall +rejoice in proving to you my entire devotion. Excuse my _impolitesse_. I +am called for in the next room. I kiss your hand." It is needless, in +fact the attempt would baffle human intelligence, to conjecture what the +real object of these very liberal and very political gentlemen might be, +in honouring all parts of Spain with their visit. + +The more distant environs of Toledo, principally towards the south and +south-east, are remarkable for a profusion of ruined castles. Supposing +a circle drawn at a distance of thirty miles from Toledo as its centre, +and divided, as it would be, by the Tagus, descending from east to west, +into two equal parts, the southern half, and the western portion of the +other, are so plentifully strewed with these fortresses, that, in many +instances, five or six are visible from the same point of view. + +A chain of low mountains crosses the southern portion of the semicircle, +in a parallel line with the Tagus. Some of its branches advance into +this region, and terminate in detached peaks, which have afforded to the +aristocracy of former times favourable positions for their strongholds; +and a still greater number of proprietors, not being possessed of the +same advantages of site, were compelled to confide in the solidity of +their walls and turrets, which they constructed in the plain, usually +adjoining the villages or towns inhabited by their vassals. The greater +number of these edifices are of a date subsequent to the surrender of +Toledo to the Christians, and were erected on the distribution of the +different towns and estates among the nobility, on their being +successively evacuated by their Moorish proprietors. The Count of +Fuensalida, Duke of Frias, is the most considerable landed proprietor on +this side of Toledo, and several of the ruined castles have descended to +him. + +I will not fatigue you by the enumeration of all these remains, of which +but a few are remarkable for picturesque qualities, and still fewer for +the possession of historical interest, as far as can be known at +present. One of them, situated ten miles to the south-east of Toledo, +and visible from its immediate neighbourhood, attracts notice owing to +its striking position. Occupying the summit of a conical hill, which +stands alone on the plain, and placed at four times the elevation of +Windsor Castle, you expect to find it connected with the history of some +knightly Peveril of the Peak, but learn with surprise that it was the +stronghold of the Archbishops of Toledo; and was erected by Don Pedro +Tenorio, the same prelate who rebuilt the bridge of San Martin, and +repaired the Moorish castle of San Servando. + +Before you ascend the peak, you pass through the village of Almonacid, +from which the castle takes its name, and which, unlike that more +recently erected pile, is completely Arab in aspect. All the houses are +entered through back courts, and present no difference of appearance, +whether shops, taverns, _posadas_, or private residences. After tying my +horse in the stable of the posada, and giving him his meal of barley, +which he had carried in the _alforjas_ (travelling bags) suspended +behind the saddle, I took my own provisions out of the opposite +receptacle, and established myself before the kitchen fire. + +On my asking for wine, the hostess requested I would furnish her with +two _quartos_ (one halfpenny) with which she purchased me a pint, at the +tavern next door. The host of the posada, who was seated next me, and a +friend at the opposite corner of the fire-place, favoured me, during my +meal, with their reminiscences of a battle fought here, during the +Peninsular war. They had not heard of the English having taken any part +in the quarrel, with the exception of the old woman, who recollected +perfectly the name of Wellington, and pronounced it as perfectly, but +thought he had been a Spanish general. They described the battle as a +hard fought one, and won by the French, who marched up the hill with +fixed bayonets, as the old host, almost blind, described by assuming the +attitude of a soldier jogging up a hill, and dislodged the Spanish +garrison from the castle. + +I could have willingly passed a week in this village, so exciting are +the remains of Arab manners to the curiosity. The name of the place had +already raised my expectations, but the blind landlord of the posada +unconsciously won my attachment from the first moment. No sooner was I +seated, than, leaning towards me, and patting my arm to draw my +attention, he pointed to his two eyes. At first I was at a loss to +understand him; but soon discovered that he was desirous of knowing +whether I was sufficiently versed in the mysteries of Esculapius, to +prescribe for the relief of his suffering organs. To this trait he soon +added one still more characteristic, by actually speaking of Toledo, by +its Moorish appellation Tolaite. Had he worn a turban, sat cross-legged +and offered me coffee and a pipe, I should not have been more taken by +surprise, than by this Arab expression assailing the ear, in the heart +of Spain, ten miles from the town itself, in which the name had probably +not been uttered for three or four centuries. + +The builder of the castle of Almonacid must have placed more confidence +in the difficulties of approach, than in the solidity of his structure. +The walls are partly of stone, and partly of _tapia_, or earth. There +only remain, the exterior wall, enclosing an area of about sixty to +seventy yards in diameter, and of a pentagonal form; and, in the centre, +the keep, a quadrangular tower, somewhat higher than the rest of the +buildings. There are no traces of living apartments. At each of the five +angles of the outer wall, is a small tower, and others in the centres of +some of the fronts; those looking to the west are circular, the rest +square. The nearer view of this ruin causes disappointment, as it +appears to have been a slovenly and hasty construction: but, at a +distance, its effect is highly picturesque. + +The castle of Montalban is situated to the south-west of Toledo, at a +distance of six Spanish leagues. It resembles, in size and importance, +some of the largest English castles; and justifies thus far the +tradition preserved here, of its having for a short period, served for a +royal prison--Juan the Second being said to have been confined there by +his exasperated favourite, Don Alvaro de Luna. This story is not, +however, confirmed by historians, several of whom I have vainly +consulted, for the purpose of discovering it. Ferreras mentions the +castle, or rather the town, which lies at a distance of two leagues +(eight miles) from it, as having belonged to the queen of Juan the +Second; who, he states, was deprived of it, against her will, in favour +of Don Alvaro, and another place given her in exchange. On the +confiscation of the favourite's possessions, previous to his +decapitation, it reverted to the crown; and there is no further notice +taken of it in the history, until the Emperor Charles the Fifth, confers +on its then proprietor the title of Count. This personage was Don Alonzo +Tellez Giron, third in descent from Juan Pacheco, Duke of Escalona, who +had erected Montalban into a separate fief, in favour of one of his sons +and his descendants, on the singular condition of the family name +undergoing a change, on each successive descent. The alternate lords +were to bear the names respectively of Giron and Pacheco. The first +Count of Montalban married a daughter of D. Ladron de Guevara, +proprietor, _a propos_ of castles, of that of Guevara, in the +neighbourhood of Vitoria, constructed in an extremely singular form. The +centre tower appears intended to imitate the castles of a chess-board. +It is situated on the southern declivity of the chain of mountains, a +branch of the Pyrenees, which separates the province of Guipuscoa from +those of Navarre and Alava. + +On the opposite descent of the chain another fortress existed in remote +times. Both were strongholds of robbers, whose descendants derived their +family name, Ladron (robber) from their ancestors' profession. In a +document signed by D. Garcia Ramirez, King of Navarre in 1135, D. Ladron +de Guevara, governor of Alava, figures among the grandees of the +kingdom; the descendants were afterwards called lords of Onate, and the +castle is at present the property of the Count de Onate, a grandee of +the first class. From its occupying a point _strategique_ of +considerable importance, commanding the plain of Alava, and the high +road as it enters the valley of Borunda, it has been in recent times +occupied by the Carlists, and fortified. + +Montalban belongs at present to the Count of Fuensalida. It is +completely ruinous, but the outer wall is almost entire; and one of two +lofty piles of building, in the form of bastions, which flanked the +entrance, is in sufficient preservation to allow the apartments to be +recognised. Their floors were at a height of about eighty feet from the +ground; and the mass of masonry which supported them, is pierced by an +immense gothic arch reaching to the rooms. The opposite corresponding +mass remains also with its arch; but the upper part which contained +rooms, no longer exists. On this, the entrance side, the approach is +almost level, and the defence consisted of a narrow and shallow moat; +but the three other sides, the fortress being of a quadrangular form, +look down into a deep ravine, through which a river, issuing from the +left, passes down two sides of the castle, and makes for the valley of +the Tagus, which river is seen at a distance of five or six miles. + +The precipice at the furthest side descends perpendicularly, and is +composed of rocks in the wildest form. The river below leaps from rock +to rock, and foams through a bed so tormented, that, although owing to +its depth of at least five hundred feet from the foundations of the +castle, it looks almost like a thread, it sends up a roar not less loud +than that of the breakers under Shakspeare's Cliff. The valley, opening +for its passage, gives to the view, first, the Tagus, on the opposite +bank of which lies the town of Montalban, dependant on the lords of the +castle; beyond it an extensive plain, dotted with castles and towns, +most of them on the road from Madrid to Talavera; and at the horizon the +Sierra del Duque, coated with snow from about half its height upwards. +The extent of the view is about sixty miles. + +The outer enceinte of the castle of Montalban encloses a space of five +or six acres in extent, in which no buildings remain, with the exception +of the picturesque ruin of a small chapel in the centre. Like almost all +other residences possessed of scenery sufficiently precipitous, this +castle boasts its lover's leap. A projection of wall is pointed out, +looking over the most perpendicular portion of the ravine, to which a +tradition is attached, deprived by time of all tangible distinctness, if +ever it possessed any. The title given to the spot in this instance is +"The Leap of the Moorish Girl," Despenadera de la Mora. The position +will probably bear no comparison with the Leucadian promontory; nor is +it equal to the Pena de los Enamorados, near Antequera, in Andalucia, +immortal likewise in the annals of passion, and of which the authentic +story is preserved. Of those in our country I could name one--but I will +not, though few know it better--nor is it the meanest of its tribe. But +with these exceptions I know of none among the numerous plagiarisms of +the famous lover's leap of antiquity that offers to despair in search of +the picturesque more attractions than the Despenadera of Montalban. + +[Illustration: CASTLE OF GUADAMUR.] + +The best preserved castle of these environs, and the handsomest +building, is that of Guadamur. It is not large, but it is impossible for +a residence-fortress to be more complete, and more compact. It is +composed of three enclosures, one within the other, and forms a +quadrangle, with the addition of a lofty and massive tower, projecting +from one of the angles. The centre, or inner quadrangle, is about half +the height of the tower, and has, at its three remaining angles, and at +the centre of each front, an elegant circular turret. This portion of +the edifice formed a commodious and handsome residence. It was divided +into two stories, with vaulted ceilings,--the lower apartments being +probably set apart for the offices of attendants, and places of +confinement for prisoners: in the centre of the upper story was a +diminutive open court, supported by the vaults of the ground-floor, and +into which a series of elegantly proportioned rooms opened on all sides. +Although the greater part of the vaults and interior walls are fallen +in, the rooms are all to be traced, and inscriptions in the old Gothic +letter run round the walls of some of the apartments. A second enclosure +rises to about two-thirds of the elevation of the inner quadrangle, and +is provided with corresponding turrets; but the proportions of these are +more spacious, and their construction and ornament more massive. Beyond +this are the exterior defences rising out of the moat, and very little +above the surrounding ground. + +Viewed from without, nothing indicates that this edifice is a ruin. Over +the entrance are the arms of the Counts of Fuensalida. It is supposed by +many that this castle was erected by Garcilaso de la Vega, grandfather +of the "Prince of Spanish poets," as the celebrated bard of Toledo is +entitled. Others maintain its founder to have been Pedro Lopez de +Ayala, first Count of Fuensalida. This latter story is the more probable +one; since, besides its being confirmed by the armorial shield above +mentioned, it has been adopted by Haro in his Nobiliario, a work drawn +up with care and research, in which Garcilaso de la Vega is stated to +have purchased some towns from the family of Ayala,--among others +Cuerva, in the near neighbourhood, but not Guadamur. + +The Ayalas were descended from the house of Haro, lords of Biscay. +Several of them had held high offices at the Court of Castile. The +grandfather of the founder of the castle had been High Chancellor of +Castile, and Great Chamberlain of Juan the First; and his father, the +first lord of Fuensalida, was High Steward, and first Alcalde of Toledo. +He lost an eye at the siege of Antequera,--taken from the Moors by +Ferdinand, afterwards King of Aragon, in the year 1410, and thus +acquired the surname of the One-eyed. To him Juan II. first granted the +faculty of converting his possessions into hereditary fiefs: "Because," +according to one of the clauses of the act, "it was just that the houses +of the grandees should remain entire in their state for the eldest son; +and in order that the eldest sons of the grandees might be maintained in +the estates of their predecessors, that the name and memory of the +grandees of the kingdom might not be lost, and that the hereditary +possessions and houses, and the generations of the sons of grandees +might be preserved." + +It was Pedro Lopez de Ayala, son of the one-eyed lord of Fuensalida +created Count by Enrique the Fourth, that built the castle. He was a +great favourite with the king, and his constant companion, +notwithstanding his being afflicted with deafness--a bad defect in a +courtier, and which procured him also a surname. He succeeded his father +in his different dignities. His loyalty did not keep pace with his +obligations to Henry the Fourth; for, being first Alcalde of Toledo, he +made no effort to prevent that town from joining the party of the Prince +Alonzo, who pretended to his brother's crown; but he was recalled to his +allegiance by the devoted exertions of his wife. + +This lady was Dona Maria de Silva, a daughter of Alonzo Tenorio de +Silva, Adelantado of Cazorla. On the breaking out of the rebellion of +Toledo, she agreed with her brother Pedro de Silva, Bishop of Badajos, +to send a joint letter to the king, in which they pressed him to come to +Toledo in disguise. Enrique the Fourth approved of the plan; and +arriving in the night, accompanied by a single attendant, was received +by the bishop at his residence in the convent of San Pedro Martir. +Notwithstanding the darkness, he had been recognised by a servant of +Marshal Payo de Ribera, a partisan of Prince Alonzo. This noble, +immediately on learning the king's arrival, joined with the Alcalde, who +had not been let into the secret by his wife, and called the citizens to +arms by sounding the great bell of the cathedral. A crowd was speedily +assembled at the king's lodging, who would have been immediately made +prisoner, but for his attendant Fernando de Ribadenegra, who succeeded, +single handed, in repulsing a party who had forced an entrance. + +At this crisis the disloyal magistrate became alarmed, and sent his two +sons, Pedro de Ayala, and Alonzo de Silva, accompanied by Perafande +Ribera, son of the above-mentioned marshal, to entreat the king to quit +the town. Henry consented; and at midnight left the convent, accompanied +by the three youths. He had ridden sixteen leagues that day, and his +horses being exhausted with fatigue, he requested the two sons of Ayala +to lend him theirs. They did so, and accompanied him on foot as far as +the city gates, where he left them, and set off for Madrid. + +In order to pacify the people, Pedro Lopez ordered his brother-in-law, +the bishop, to quit the town, and he repaired to the Huerta del Rey, a +country-house in the environs. On arriving at Olias the king sent the +two brothers, in recompense of their good service, a deed of gift of +seventy thousand _maravedis_ of annual revenue. + +The grief of Maria de Silva at the failure of her project was such as +almost to deprive her of her reason, and added to the eloquence of her +entreaties to win over her husband to the king's interests. He now, +therefore, exerted himself to gain the principal citizens, and succeeded +so completely, that within three days from the departure of Enrique the +Fourth, he was enabled to recall the Bishop of Badajos to Toledo, and to +banish in his stead the Marshal de Payo and his son, who retired to +their estates. Unanimous was now the cry of "Viva Enrique Quarto, y +Mueren los rebeldes!" and the following day, a Sunday, the king +re-entered Toledo in the midst of the general joy and festivity, and +preceded directly to the residence of the Alcalde, in order to thank his +wife for her loyal efforts. A lodging was there in readiness to receive +him, which he occupied during his stay in Toledo. Pedro Lopez de Ayala +received on the king's return to Madrid the title of Count of his town +of Fuensalida, and shortly afterwards, at Medina del Campo, a grant of +the towns of Casaruvias del monte, Chocas, and Arroyomolinos. + +The town and castle of Escalona are situated at eight leagues, or +thirty-two miles, to the east of Toledo. It is one of the towns, about +a dozen in number, the foundation of which is attributed by the Count de +Mora, in his history of Toledo, to the Jews. He fixes the date at about +five centuries before the Christian era, when a large number of +Israelites, to whom Cyrus, king of Babylon, had granted their liberty, +arrived in Spain under the guidance of a Captain Pirrus, and fixed +themselves principally in and around Toledo. He also states that the +synagogue of Toledo--since called Santa Maria la Blanca--was erected by +them. The name given by them to Escalona was Ascalon. The neighbouring +Maqueda was another of their towns, and was called Mazeda. It was +created a duchy by Ferdinand and Isabella in favour of their courtier +Cardenas. I cannot learn the date of the castle of Escalona. Alonzo the +Sixth won the town from the Moors; and it is probable that the castle +was erected, at least in part, by Diego and Domingo Alvarez, two +brothers, to whom he granted the place. After their death it reverted to +the crown of Castile, and continued to be royal property until Juan II. +gave it to his favourite Don Alvaro de Luna. + +This grandee was known to have amassed great treasures in the castle; +and on the confiscation of his possessions at the period of his final +disgrace, the king marched an army to take possession of the fortress; +but the countess held out successfully, and obliged the royal troops to +raise the siege. On a second attempt, made after Don Alvaro's execution, +his widow considered she had no further object in maintaining it, and +lost no time in coming to terms. The conditions of the surrender were, +that the treasure should be divided into three equal parts, one for the +king, another for herself, and the third for her son. The son was +likewise allowed to inherit the castle, and by the marriage of his +daughter, it came into the possession of the Marquis of Villena, D. +Lopez Pacheco, created Duke of Escalona by Henry the Fourth. The family +of Fellez Giron, proprietors of Montalban, were descendants of this +duke. At present the castle of Escalona belongs to the Duke of Ossuna. +It is not only the most considerable of the numerous ruins disposed over +the territory of Toledo, but one of the most interesting historical +relics of Spain, having filled an important place in the annals of +several of the most stirring periods. The unfortunate Blanche, Queen of +Pedro the Cruel, was its inmate during several years; as also her rival, +Maria de Padilla, at a subsequent period. + +The best excursion from Toledo in point of architectural interest, is +that to Torijos, a small town situated rather to the left of the direct +road to Escalona, and five leagues distant. Immediately before arriving +there, the castle of Barciense is met with, situated on an eminence +which commands an admirable view, extending south and west to a +semi-circle of mountains, composed of the Sierra del Duque, and the +chain called the mountains of Toledo, and for a foreground looking down +on a perfect forest of olive-grounds, surrounding the town of Torijos, +two miles distant. The ruin of Barciense consists of a lofty square +tower, and the outer walls of a quadrangle. There is nothing worth +notice, with the exception of a bas-relief, which occupies all the upper +half of the tower on the east side. It consists of a solitary lion +rampant; probably the largest crest ever emblazoned. The Dukes of +Infantado were proprietors of this castle. + +The little town of Torijos contains a Gothic, or rather semi-Moorish +palace, two Gothic churches, an ancient picturesque gateway, and the +ruins of a magnificent monastery. It is one of those towns here and +there met with on the Continent, which, at a favourable crisis of the +arts, have fallen to the proprietorship of one of those individuals +idolised by architects--men whose overplus of fortune is placed at the +disposal of their eyes, and employed in ministering to the gratification +of those organs. The greater part of the decoration of Torijos dates +from the reign of Ferdinand the Catholic, when it belonged to D. +Gutiere de Cardenas, father of the first duke of Maqueda. The following +story is related respecting the founding of the monastery by his wife +Teresa Enriquez. + +This lady resided, when at Toledo, in a mansion, the ruins of which +still exist, on the opposite side of the street to the monastery of San +Juan de los Reyes, of which I sent you a description in a former letter. +Being warmly attached to religious observances, (for she went by the +name of Teresa la Santa,) and animated with an enthusiastic fervour +towards everything which appertained to the splendid establishment in +front of her residence, she had discovered a position, from which a view +could be obtained, overlooking the principal scene of the religious +ceremonies of the Franciscans. She there caused a window to be +constructed, splendidly ornamented in the Arab style, and kneeling on a +rich _prie-dieu_, she united her daily devotions with those of the +_frailes_. + +No small sensation was caused by this proceeding, most perceptible +probably within the monastery, on the discovery being made by the +brethren of the addition to their holy fraternity. The cardinal became +alarmed, and intimated to Dona Teresa that the window was +ill-placed,--that it admitted too much light in a wrong direction; that, +in short, it must disappear. The veto of the all-powerful Ximenes de +Cisneros, already regarded as the dispenser of the royal frowns and +favours, could not be resisted. The window was blocked up; but the +interference was replied to in terms pointed with pious pique and holy +revenge. The lady declared verbally to the prelate that she had no need +of his convent, for she would found a more splendid one at Torijos. This +threat, immediately put in execution, produced the building I mentioned +above, the ruin of which is all that now remains. + +Of the inhabited portions the external walls alone remain. The cloister +is almost entire, and the church has only lost its roof. The rich +tracery surrounding the doorways, and the sculpture in all parts of the +interior, consisting chiefly of repetitions of the founder's armorial +bearings--in imitation or satire of the profusion of similar ornament in +San Juan de los Reyes--are entire, and appear as though they had been +recently executed. The church is designed after the plan of San Juan, +but the style of its ornament is much more elegant. The cloister is, +however, very inferior to that of Toledo, and the whole establishment on +a smaller scale. + +Every traveller in search of the picturesque knows in how great a degree +his satisfaction has been increased whenever the meeting with a scene +deserving of his admiration assumes the nature of a discovery. For this +reason, the chapters of tourists should never be perused before a +journey--independently of their possessing more interest subsequently to +an acquaintance having been made with the country described. Strictly +speaking written tours are intended for those who stay at home. + +But the most favourable first view of a highly admirable building or +landscape, is the one you obtain after the perusal of tours and +descriptions of the country, in none of which any notice is taken of +that particular object or scene. The village of Torijos is approached +under these advantageous circumstances. Every step is a surprise, owing +partly to the above cause, and partly to one's being inured to the +almost universal dreariness and ugliness of the villages and small towns +of this part of Spain. The appearance under these circumstances of a +beautiful Gothic cross and fountain, of an original and uncommon design, +outside the walls of the place, and the open tracery of the tall windows +of the ruined monastery at the other side of a green meadow, creates an +agreeable surprise, and adds considerably to the pleasure which would be +derived from the same objects, had expectation been already feeding on +their beauties. Imagine, then, the discovery, after leaving behind these +monuments, (sufficient for the immortality of a score of Castilian +villages,) of the facade of the principal church, consisting of one of +the richest and most exquisite specimens of Gothic decoration in Spain; +and, a street further on, of a second ornamental portal of a different +sort, but Gothic likewise, giving access to a half Arab palace. + +The Count of Altamira is the proprietor of this place, but neither he +nor any of his family have inhabited the edifice for several years, and +it is allowed to go to decay. Some of the _artesonado_ ceilings, more +especially that of the chapel in form of a cupola, admit the light +through the joinings of the gilded woodwork. A large hall on the +first-floor, which formed the anteroom to a suite of inner apartments, +decorated in the Arab style, has been taken possession of by the _haute +volee_ of Torijos for their public ball-room. A tribune for musicians is +placed against one of the end walls, and adorned with paper festoons. A +placard, inscribed with the word _galop_, was visible in front of the +seat of the leader of the band, indicating that the Torijos balls +terminate with that lively dance. There was no furniture in that nor any +other part of the house, with the exception of an _entresol_ inhabited +by the count's steward. This person no sooner learned that I was an +Englishman, than he commenced setting in the best possible light the +advantages the premises possessed for the establishment of every sort of +manufactory. + +It appears the proprietor is anxious to dispose of the building; and as +all the English pass here for manufacturers, owing to the principal +articles of common use, introduced by smugglers, being English, the +worthy factotum had instantly made up his mind that I was the purchaser +sent by Providence to take the old edifice off his master's hands. He is +evidently either promised a bonus on the success of his efforts to sell, +or he wished to pass with the property; for his idea produced a degree +of zeal most useful towards the satisfaction of my curiosity, and +without which his patience would have been exhausted before I had +completed the view of the building. One peculiarity of the rooms +consists in the ceilings--that is, the ornamental ones--being nearly all +either domes, or interiors of truncated pyramids. There is only one +flat. It is ornamented with the shell of the arms of the Cardenas +family--each of the hundreds of little square compartments having one in +its centre. The staircase is adorned with beautiful Gothic tracery. + + + + +LETTER XIV. + +VALLADOLID. SAN PABLO. COLLEGE OF SAN GREGORIO. ROUTE BY SARAGOZA. + + +Tolosa. + +I should have sent you an account of my excursion to Valladolid at the +time it took place, but was prevented by the shortness of my stay and +the hurry of my departure from Madrid, which immediately followed. I +preserved, however, memoranda of the limited explorations which were to +be made during a flying visit of three days, and will now give you the +benefit of them, such as they are; as also of my experience of the +public travelling in that direction. You will recommend your friends, +who may visit this land of adventure, and are careful at the same time +of their personal comforts, to wait the introduction of railroads, +before attempting this excursion, when you hear that I met with three +upsets in one night, and was afforded, in all, nearly five hours' +leisure for contemplating the effect of moonlight upon the sleeping +mules and an upside-down carriage! + +The town of Valladolid contains monuments of much interest, although +none of great antiquity. The greater number date from the sixteenth and +seventeenth centuries, and form a chain, illustrative of the progress of +architecture in this country, subsequently to the abandonment of the +Gothic style. This style is, however, worthily represented by two +edifices, placed in juxtaposition, and ornamented each with a facade of +extraordinary richness. I will content myself with the endeavour to give +you some idea of these two buildings, which, although belonging to a +style so common in England and France, are totally unlike all the Gothic +specimens I am acquainted with in those countries. + +[Illustration: FACADE OF SAN PABLO.] + +The largest of the two is the monastery of San Pablo. It was a +foundation of much magnificence, and the building has sustained very +little injury, owing to its having, immediately on the expulsion of the +monks, been applied to other uses, instead of being deserted and left to +decay. It is now a Presidio, or central prison for condemned +malefactors. The cloister is a superb quadrangle, of the pointed style +of the end of the fourteenth century, and is the usual resort of the +prisoners, who are grouped so thickly over its pavement, that it is with +difficulty one passes between them, without adding to the clanking of +chains as their wearers change their posture to make way. The facade of +the church is enclosed between two small octagon towers without +ornament, like a picture in a frame. Within these all is sculpture. The +door-way is formed of a triple concentric arch, flanked by rows of +statues, all of which are enclosed within another arch, which extends +across the whole width, from tower to tower. Over this there is a +circular window, surrounded with armorial escutcheons, and the remainder +of the facade is covered with groups of figures in compartments, up to +the summit, a height of about a hundred and thirty feet, where there is +a pediment ornamented with an immense armorial shield and lions rampant +as supporters, and the whole is surmounted by a cross. + +The church was erected by the celebrated Torquemada, who was a monk in +the establishment. Dona Maria, Queen of Sancho the Fourth, although +mentioned as the founder of the monastery, only completed a small +portion of the edifice compared to what was subsequently added. A +handsome tomb by Pompeyo Leoni, is seen in the church. It is that of Don +Francisco de Sandoval, Duke of Lerma, and his wife. The woodwork of the +stalls is by Ferrara. It is adorned with fluted Doric columns, and is +composed of walnut, ebony, box and cedar. The superb facade of this +church and its sumptuous tracery, had well nigh been the cause of a +misunderstanding between the representative of the Spanish Government +and myself. To obtain admission to the interior of the building, which I +was told had become national property, I addressed my humble request in +writing to the _gefe politico_, or governor of the province, resident at +Valladolid. I left the note at his official residence, and was +requested to return at an hour appointed, when I was to obtain an +audience. The functions of a _gefe politico_ answer to those of no +provincial functionary in England, or any other constitutional state--he +has more authority even than a Prefet in France. He represents the +monarchical power, with this difference, that he is uncontrolled by +parliament within the limits of his province. Although not charged with +the military administration, he can direct and dispose of the armed +force; besides being a sort of local home minister and police +magistrate; in fact, the factotum or _ame damnee_ of the Cromwell of the +moment, with whom he is in direct and constant communication on the +affairs of his district. + +I was at Valladolid during the regency of Espartero, when the cue given +to these functionaries, relative to the _surveillance_ of foreigners was +very anti-French, and favourable to England. Now in the eyes of a +_gens-d'armes_ every one is a thief until he can bring proof to the +contrary, just as by the jurisprudence of certain continental countries, +every accused is presumed criminal--just as every one who comes to a Jew +is presumed by him to have old clothes to sell, or money to borrow. +Thus, owing to the nature of the duties of the Governor of Valladolid, +every foreigner who met his eye, was a Frenchman, and an _intrigant_, +until he should prove the reverse. + +Not being aware of this at the time, I had drawn up my petition in +French. On my return for the answer, my reception was any thing but +encouraging. The excessive politeness of the Spaniard was totally lost +sight of, and I perceived a moody-looking, motionless official, seated +at a desk, with his hat resting on his eyebrows, and apparently studying +a newspaper. I stood in the middle of the room for two or three minutes +unnoticed; after which, deigning to lift his head, the personage +inquired in a gruff tone, why I did not open my cloak. I was not as yet +acquainted with the Spanish custom of drawing the end of the cloak from +off the left shoulder, on entering a room. I therefore only half +understood the question, and, being determined, at whatever price, to +see San Pablo, I took off my cloak, laid it on a chair, and returned to +face the official. "I took the liberty of requesting your permission to +view the ancient monastery of San Pablo."--"And, pray, what is your +reason for wishing to see San Pablo?"--"Curiosity."--"Oh, that is all, +is it!"--"I own likewise, that, had I found that the interior +corresponded, in point of architectural merit, with the facade, I might +have presumed to wish to sketch it, and carry away the drawing in my +portmanteau."--"Oh, no doubt--very great merit. You are a +Frenchman?"--"I beg your pardon, only an Englishman."--"You! an +Englishman!!" No answer. "And pray, from what part of England do you +come?" I declined the county, parish, and house. + +These English expressions, which I had expected would come upon his ear, +with the same familiarity as if they had been Ethiopian or Chinese, +produced a sudden revolution in my favour. The Solomon became +immediately sensible of the extreme tact he had been displaying. +Addressing me in perfect English, he proceeded to throw the blame of my +brutal reception on the unfortunate state of his country. "All the +French," he said, "who come here, come with the intention of intriguing +and doing us harm. You wrote to me in French, and that was the cause of +my error. The monastery is now a prison; I will give you an order to +view it, but you will not find it an agreeable scene, it is full of +criminals in chains." And he proceeded to prepare the order. + +Not having recovered the compliment of being taken for a conspirator; +nor admiring the civilisation of the governor of a province, who +supposed that all the thirty-four millions of French, must be +_intrigants_, I received his civilities in silence, took the order, and +my departure. The most curious part of the affair was, that I had no +passport at the time, having lost it on the road. Had my suspicious +interrogator ascertained this before making the discovery that I was +English, I should inevitably have been treated to more of San Pablo than +I desired, or than would have been required for drawing it in detail. + +The adjoining building is smaller, and with less pretension to +magnificence is filled with details far more elaborate and curious. The +Gothic architecture, like the Greek, assumed as a base and principle of +decoration the imitation of the supposed primitive abodes of rudest +invention. The Greek version of the idea is characterised by all the +grace and finished elegance peculiar to its inventors; while the same +principle in the hands of the framers of Gothic architecture, gave birth +to a style less pure and less refined; but bolder, more true to its +origin, and capable of more varied application. In both cases may be +traced the imitation of the trunks of trees; but it is only in the +Gothic style that the branches are added, and that instances are found +of the representation of the knots and the bark. In this architecture, +the caverns of the interior of mountains are evidently intended by the +deep, multiplied, and diminishing arches, which form the entrances of +cathedrals; and the rugged exterior of the rocky mass, which might +enclose such a primaeval abode, is imaged in the uneven and pinnacled +walls. + +[Illustration: FACADE OF SAN GREGORIO, VALLADOLID.] + +The facade of the college of San Gregorio, adjoining San Pablo, +furnishes an example of the Gothic decoration brought back to its +starting point. The tree is here in its state of nature; and contributes +its trunk, branches, leaves, and its handfuls of twigs bound together. A +grove is represented, composed of strippling stems, the branches of some +of which, united and bound together, curve over, and form a broad arch, +which encloses the door-way. At each side is a row of hairy savages, +each holding in one hand a club resting on the ground, and in the other +an armorial shield. The intervals of the sculpture are covered with +tracery, representing entwined twigs, like basket-work. Over the door is +a stone fourteen feet long by three in height, covered with +_fleurs-de-lis_ on a ground of wicker-work, producing the effect of +muslin. Immediately over the arch is a large flower-pot, in which is +planted a pomegranate tree. Its branches spread on either side and bear +fruit, besides a quantity of little Cupids, which cling to them in all +directions. In the upper part they enclose a large armorial escutcheon, +with lions for supporters. The arms are those of the founder of the +college, Alonzo de Burgos, Bishop of Palencia. On either side of this +design, and separated respectively by steins of slight trees, are +compartments containing armed warriors in niches, and armorial shields. +All the ornaments I have enumerated cover the facade up to its summit, +along which project entwined branches and sticks, represented as broken +off at different lengths. + +[Illustration: COURT OF SAN GREGORIO. VALLADOLID.] + +The court of this edifice is as elaborately ornamented as the facade, +but it was executed at a much later period, and belongs to the +renaissance. The pillars are extremely elegant and uncommon. The doorway +of the library is well worthy of notice; also that of the refectory. +The college of San Gregorio was, in its day, the most distinguished in +Spain. Such was the reputation it had acquired, that the being announced +as having studied there was a sufficient certificate for the proficiency +of a professor in science and erudition. It is still a college, but no +longer enjoys the same exclusive renown. In the centre of the chapel is +the tomb of the founder, covered with excellent sculpture, representing +the four virtues, and the figures of three saints and the Virgin. It is +surrounded by a balustrade ornamented with elaborate carving. Berruguete +is supposed to have been the sculptor, but in the uncertainty which +exists on the subject, it would not be difficult to make a better guess, +as it is very superior to all the works I have seen attributed to that +artist. At the foot of the statue of the bishop is the following short +inscription, "Operibus credite." To this prelate was due the facade of +San Pablo; he was a Dominican monk at Burgos, where he founded several +public works. He became confessor, chief chaplain, and preacher to +Isabel the Catholic: afterwards Bishop of Cordova; and was ultimately +translated to the see of Palencia. He received the sobriquet of Fray +Mortero, as some say from the form of his face, added to the +unpopularity which he shared with the two other favorites of Ferdinand +and Isabella,--the Duke of Maqueda, and Cardinal Ximenes, with whom he +figured in a popular triplet which at that period circulated throughout +Spain, + + Cardenas, el Cardenal, + Con el padre Fray Mortero, + Fraen el reyno al retortero. + +which may be freely translated thus: + + What with his Grace the Cardinal, + With Cardenas, and Father Mortar,-- + Spain calls aloud for quarter! quarter! + +The concise inscription seen on the tomb, was probably meant as an +answer to this satire, and to the injurious opinion generally received +respecting his character. + +I returned from Toledo by way of Madrid and Saragoza. The diligence +track from Toledo to Madrid was in a worse state than at the time of my +arrival: a circumstance by no means surprising, since what with the wear +and tear of carts and carriages, aided by that of the elements, and +unopposed by human labour, it must deteriorate gradually until it +becomes impassable. Since my last visit to the Museo the equestrian +portrait of Charles the Fifth by Titian has been restored. It was in so +degraded a condition that the lower half, containing the foreground and +the horses' legs, presented scarcely a distinguishable object. It has +been handled with care and talent, and, in its present position in the +centre of the gallery, it now disputes the palm with the Spasimo, and is +worth the journey to Madrid, were there nothing else to be seen there. I +paid another visit to the Saint Elizabeth in the Academy, and to the +Museum of Natural History, contained in the upper floor of the same +building. This gallery boasts the possession of an unique curiosity; the +entire skeleton of a Megatherion strides over the well-furnished tables +of one of the largest rooms. I believe an idea of this gigantic animal +can nowhere else be formed. The head must have measured about the +dimensions of an elephant's body. + +From Castile into Aragon the descent is continual, and the difference of +climate is easily perceptible. Vineyards here climb the mountains, and +the plains abound with olive-grounds, which are literally forests, and +in which the plants attain to the growth of those of Andalucia. In +corresponding proportion to the improving country, complaints are heard +of its population. Murders and robberies form the subject of +conversations; and certain towns are selected as more especially +_mal-composees_, for the headquarters of strong bodies of _guardia +civile_; without which precaution travelling would here be attended with +no small peril. This state of things is attributed partly to the +disorganising effects of the recent civil war, which raged with +peculiar violence in this province. The same causes have operated less +strongly in the adjoining Basque provinces, from their having to act on +a population of a different character,--colder, more industrious, and +more pacifically disposed, and without the desperate sternness and +vindictive temper of the Aragonese. + +The inhabitants of this province differ in costume and appearance from +the rest of the Spaniards. Immediately on setting foot on the Aragonese +territory, you are struck by the view of some peasant at the road-side: +his black broad-brimmed hat,--waistcoat, breeches, and stockings all of +the same hue, varied only by the broad _faja_, or sash of purple, make +his tall erect figure almost pass for that of a Presbyterian clergyman, +cultivating his Highland garden. The natives of Aragon have not the +vivacity and polished talkativeness of the Andalucian and other +Spaniards; they are reserved, slow, and less prompt to engage in +conversation, and often abrupt and blunt in their replies. These +qualities are not, however, carried so far as to silence the continual +chatter of the interior of a Spanish diligence. Spanish travelling opens +the sluices of communicativeness even of an Aragonese, as it would those +of the denizens of a first class vehicle of a Great Western train, were +they exposed during a short time to its vicissitudes. + +However philosophers may explain the phenomenon, it is certain that the +talkativeness of travellers augments in an inverse ratio to their +comforts. The Spaniards complain of the silence of a French diligence; +while, to a Frenchman, the occupants of the luxurious corners of an +English railroad conveyance, must appear to be afflicted with dumbness. + +Saragoza is one of the least attractive of Spanish towns. Its situation +is as flat and uninteresting as its streets are ugly and monotonous. The +ancient palace of the sovereigns of Aragon is now the Ayuntamiento. It +would form, in the present day, but a sorry residence for a private +individual, although it presents externally a massive and imposing +aspect. Its interior is almost entirely sacrificed to an immense hall, +called now the Lonja. It is a Gothic room, containing two rows of +pillars, supporting a groined ceiling. It is used for numerous +assemblies, elections, and sometimes for the carnival balls. The ancient +Cathedral of La Seu is a gothic edifice, of great beauty internally; but +the natives are still prouder of the more modern church called Nuestra +Senora del Pilar,--an immense building in the Italian style, erected for +the accommodation of a statue of the Virgin found on the spot, standing +on a pillar. This image is the object of peculiar veneration. + +After leaving Saragoza you are soon in the Basque provinces. The first +considerable town is Tudela in Navarre; and here we were strongly +impressed with the unbusinesslike nature of the Spaniard. This people, +thoroughly good-natured and indefatigable in rendering a service, when +the necessity arises for application to occupations of daily routine +appear to exercise less intelligence than some other nations. It is +probably owing to this cause that at Madrid the anterooms of the Foreign +Office, situated in the palace, are, at four in the afternoon, the scene +of much novelty and animation. In a town measuring no more than a mile +and a half in each direction, the inexperienced stranger usually puts +off to the last day of his stay the business of procuring his passport, +and he is taken by surprise on finding it to be the most busy day of +all. Little did he expect that the four or five _visas_ will not be +obtained in less than forty-eight hours: and he pays for his place in +the diligence or mail (always paid in advance) several days before. It +is consequently worth while to attend in person at the Secretary of +State's office, in search of one's passport, in order to witness the +scene. + +The hour for the delivery of these inevitable documents, coincides with +the shutting up for the day of all the embassies: so that those which +require the subsequent _visa_ of an ambassador, have to wait twenty-four +hours. Hence the victims of official indifference, finding themselves +disappointed of their departure, and minus the value of a place in the +mail, give vent to their dissatisfaction in a variety of languages, +forming a singular contrast to the phlegmatic and _impassible_ porters +and ushers, accustomed to the daily repetition of similar scenes. Some, +rendered unjust by adversity, loudly accuse the government of complicity +with the hotel-keepers. I saw a Frenchman whose case was cruel. His +passport had been prepared at his embassy, and as he was only going to +France, there were no more formalities necessary, but the visa of the +police, and that of the foreign office. All was done but the last, and +he was directed to call at four o'clock. His place was retained in that +evening's mail, and being a mercantile traveller, both time and cash +were of importance to him. On applying at the appointed hour, his +passport was returned to him without the _visa_, because the French +Secretary had, in a fit of absence, written Cadiz, instead of +Bordeaux--he was to wait a day to get the mistake rectified. + +These inconveniences were surpassed by that to which the passengers of +our diligence were subjected at Tudela. Imagine yourself ensconced in a +corner of the Exeter mail (when it existed) and on arriving at Taunton, +or any intermediate town, being informed that an unforeseen circumstance +rendered it necessary to remain there twenty-four hours, instead of +proceeding in the usual manner. On this announcement being made at +Tudela, I inquired what had happened, and learned that a diligence, +which usually met ours, and the mules of which were to take us on, was +detained a day at Tolosa, a hundred miles off. Rather than send a boy to +the next stage to bring the team of mules, which had nothing to do, a +dozen travellers had to wait until the better fortunes of the previous +vehicle should restore it to its natural course. + +As if this contretems was not sufficient, we were subjected to the most +galling species of tyranny, weighing on the dearest of human privileges, +I mean that which the proprietor of a shilling,--zwanziger, franc, or +pezeta,--feels that he possesses of demanding to be fed. We had left +Saragoza at nine in the morning, and had arrived without stoppages at +six. A plentiful dinner, smoking on the table of the _comedor_, might +have produced a temporary forgetfulness of our sorrows: but no +entreaties could prevail on the hostess to lay the table-cloth. It was +usual for the joint supper of the two coaches to take place at nine, and +not an instant sooner should we eat. Weighed down by this complication +of miseries, we sat, a disconsolate party, round the _brasero_, until at +about eight our spirits began to rise at the sight of a table-cloth; and +during half an hour, the occasional entrance of a waiting woman, with +the different articles for the table, kept our hopes buoyed up, and our +heads in motion towards the door, each time it opened to give entrance, +now to a vinegar cruet, now to a salt-cellar. + +At length an angelic figure actually bore in a large dish containing a +quantity of vegetables, occasioning a cry of joy to re-echo through our +end of the room. She placed it on a side-board and retired. Again the +door opened, when to our utter dismay, another apparition moved towards +the dish, took it up and carried it away; shutting the door carefully +behind her. This was the best thing that could have occurred; since it +produced a sudden outburst of mirth, which accompanied us to the table, +now speedily adorned with the materials of a plentiful repast. + +The next town to Tudela, is the gay and elegant little fortress of +Pamplona, from which place an easy day's journey, through a tract of +superb mountain scenery, brings you to Tolosa, the last resting-place on +the Spanish side. + + + + +PART II. + +SEVILLE. + + + + +LETTER XV. + +JOURNEY TO SEVILLE. CHARACTER OF THE SPANIARDS. VALLEY OF THE RHONE. + + +Marseille. + +In order to reach the south of Spain, the longest route is that which, +passing through France, leads by Bayonne to the centre of the northern +frontier of the Peninsula, which it then traverses from end to end. It +is not the longest in actual distance; but in regard to time, and to +fatigue, and (for all who do not travel by Diligence), by far the +longest, with regard to expense. Another route, longer, it is true, in +distance, but shorter with respect to all these other considerations, is +that by Lyons and Marseille; from either of which places, the journey +may be made entirely by steam. + +The shortest of all, and in every respect, is that by the Gibraltar +mail, which leaves London and Falmouth once a week. This is a quicker +journey than that through France, even for an inhabitant of France, +supposing him resident at Paris, and to proceed to England _via le +Havre_. But there is an objection to this route for a tourist. Desirous +of visiting foreign scenes, he will find it too essentially an English +journey--direct, sure, and horribly business-like and monotonous. You +touch, it is true, at Lisbon, where during a few hours, you may escape +from the beef and Stilton cheese, if not from the Port wine; and where +you may enjoy the view of some fine scenery; but all the rest is +straight-forward, desperate paddling night and day; with the additional +objection, that being surrounded by English faces, living on English +fare, and listening to English voices, the object of the traveller--that +of quitting England--is not attained; since he cannot be said to have +left that country, until he finds himself quarrelling with his rapacious +boatman on the pier of the glittering Cadiz. + +Although this arrangement may possess the merit of the magic transition +from England to Andalucia, which, it must be allowed, is a great +one--many will prefer being disembarked in France; looking forward, +since there is a time for all things, to a still more welcome +disembarkation on England's white shores, when the recollected +vicissitudes of travel shall have disposed them to appreciate more than +ever her comforts and civilization, and to be more forgiving to her +defects; and, should they not be acquainted with the banks of the Rhone +below Lyons, adopting that equally commodious and infinitely more varied +course. + +In fact, there are few who will not agree with me in pronouncing this +the best way, for the tourist, of approaching Spain. It is not every +one, who will not consider the gratifications which the inland territory +of the Peninsula may offer to his curiosity too dearly purchased by the +inconveniences inseparable from the journey. Add to this the superiority +of the maritime provinces, with scarcely any exception, in point of +climate, civilization, and attractions of every sort. Valencia, +Barcelona, Malaga, and Cadiz are more agreeable places of residence, and +possess more resources than even Madrid; but their chief advantage is a +difference of climate almost incredible, from the limited distance which +separates them from the centre of the Peninsula. The Andalucian coast +enjoys one of the best climates in the world; while the Castiles, +Aragon, and La Mancha can hardly be said to possess the average +advantages in that respect; owing to the extremes of cold and heat, +which characterize their summer and winter seasons, and which, during +autumn and spring, are continually alternating in rapid transition. + +Andalucia unites in a greater degree than the other maritime provinces, +the advantages which constitute their superiority over the rest of +Spain. It does more, for it presents to the stranger a combination of +the principal features of interest, which render the Peninsula more +especially attractive to the lover of travel. It is, in fact, to Spain +what Paris is to France; Moscow and Petersburg to Russia. England, +Italy, and Germany are not fit subjects for illustrating the comparison; +their characteristic features of attraction and interest being +disseminated more generally throughout all their provinces or states. +Whoever wishes to find Spain herself, unalloyed, in her own character +and costume, and in her best point of view, should disembark in +Andalucia. + +There, unlike the Castiles, and the still more northern provinces, in +which only the earth and air remain Spanish, and those not the best +Spanish--where all the picturesque and original qualities that +distinguish the population, are fast fading away--the upper classes in +their manners and costumes, and the Radicals in their politics, striving +to become French--there, on the contrary, all is natural and national in +its half-Arab nationality: and certainly nature and nationality have +given proof of taste in selecting for their last refuge, the most +delicious of regions; where earth and heaven have done their utmost to +form an abode, worthy of the most beautiful of the human, as well as the +brute creation. + +I will not pause to inquire whether the reproach be justly addressed by +the other Spaniards, to the inhabitants of this province, of indolence +and love of pleasure, and of a disposition to deceitfulness, concealed +beneath the gay courtesy of their manners; it would, indeed, be a +surprising, a miraculous exception to the universal system of +compensations that we recognise as governing the world, had not this +people some prominent defect, or were they not exposed to some peculiar +element of suffering, to counterbalance in a degree the especial and +exclusive gifts heaped upon them. By what other means could their +perfect happiness be interfered with? Let us, then, allow them their +defects--the necessary shade in so brilliant a picture--defects which, +in reducing their felicity to its due level, are easily fathomed, and +their consequences guarded against, by sojourners amongst them, in whose +eyes their peculiar graces, and the charm of their manner of life, find +none the less favour from their being subject to the universal law of +humanity. They cannot be better painted in a few words, than by the +sketch, drawn by the witty and graceful Lantier, from the inhabitants +of Miletus. "Les Milesiens," he says, "sont aimables. Ils emportent, +peut-etre, sur les Atheniens" (read "Castillans") "par leur politesse, +leur amenite, et les agremens de leur esprit. On leur reproche avec +raison cette facilite--cette mollesse de moeurs, qui prend quelquefois +l'air de la licence. Tout enchante les sens dans ce sejour fortune--la +purete de l'air--la beaute des femmes--enfin leur musique--leurs danses, +leurs jeux--tout inspire la volupte, et penetre l'ame d'une langueur +delicieuse. Les Zephirs ne s'y agitent que pour repandre au loin +l'esprit des fleurs et des plantes, et embaumer l'air de leurs suaves +odeurs." + +This passage is, word for word, so exactly applicable to the Andalucians +and their land, that it is difficult to imagine another people to have +sat for the portrait, nor to a more talented painter. It is a pity that +the author I quote, is a rarity in modern libraries: owing, perhaps, to +his descriptions being at times rather warm, or, as his compatriots +would say, _un peu regence_. + +In Spain, the country of proverbs, they are very fond of summing up, by +the aid of a few epithets, the distinctive character of each province. +As bad qualities frequently predominate in these estimates, it is of +course usual for the individual, who undertakes the instruction of a +foreigner in this department of knowledge, to omit the mention of his +own province. After all, the defects attributed to the inhabitants of +one portion of a country by those of another, are not to be taken for +granted without considerable reservation; allowance must be made for +rivalry and jealousies. Almost every country affords examples of these +wholesale accusations laid to the charge of particular counties or +divisions of territory. Thus the character usually attributed in Spain +to the Andalucians, is that of a people lively, gay, of extreme polish +and amiability of manners, but false and treacherous. The Galicians are +said to be stupid and heavy, but remarkably honest; the Catalonians +courageous but quarrelsome, _mauvais coucheurs_. No doubt in some of +these instances, the general impression may be borne out to a certain +extent, by some particular class of the denizens of the province alluded +to; but such distinctions are rarely perceptible among the educated +classes. It is perhaps less easy in Spain than elsewhere, to establish +these classifications at all successfully. Contradictions will be met +with at every step, calculated to shake their infallibility. To our eye, +as foreigners, there are sufficient peculiarities belonging to the +nation universally, and respecting which our knowledge is far from being +complete, without attempting to classify a greater or smaller list of +subdivisions, the appreciation of which would require a prolonged +residence in the country. + +Spain is looked upon by the greater number of strangers as a land +delivered over to depredation, and highly insecure. In fact, it is +surprising that such should not be the fate of a country in which +instruction is limited, and where, as I myself have witnessed, servants +may be known to be in the daily practice of stealing without their +dismissal being by any means a necessary result. It is surprising, that +in the absence of any strong natural objection to theft, any honesty +should exist in the presence of temptation; yet I know no country where +there is more, if I may form an opinion from the individuals of whom I +have had an opportunity of judging. However, as an instance of the +contradictions one meets with, the following event was represented as +having taken place in one of the provinces in which I had received the +favourable impression above-mentioned. + +A ci-devant colonel, just arrived in Madrid, related the fact to me one +evening, on which, as chance would have it, I found him at supper. +Immediately on my entering the room he commenced complaining of the lack +of silver articles of necessity for the table, and accounted for it in +the following manner. He had recently arrived with his family from a +provincial town, in which he had filled a government situation. Shortly +before his departure he had invited all his friends to a leave-taking +repast; and after the departure of his guests nearly two dozen articles +of plate were missing. "In packing up," I observed, "no doubt some +dishonest domestic--" "No, no," he interrupted, "they were all pocketed +by my guests." + +That the man in office should have conciliated the attachment of all his +acquaintances to such a degree, as that all should conceive +simultaneously the idea of preserving a _souvenir_ of his person, and +that in so delicate and unostentatious a manner,--was not possible. As, +therefore, I still retained my impression of the honesty of the lower +classes, and as the sufferer appeared to treat the occurrence as one by +no means extraordinary, I came to the conclusion, that--either Spanish +integrity, unlike that of other nations, must rise in an inverse ratio +to men's fortunes and stations; or that the author of the anecdote had +been tempted, by the desire of masking the (perhaps unavoidable) +deficiencies in his supper service, to have recourse to his inventive +talent, at the expense of his absent friends' reputation. + +I believe it must be allowed that with respect to the disregard of the +rights of proprietorship, of which the lower classes are accused, there +are sufficient instances on record to counterbalance, in some degree, +my personal experience; but there is this to be urged in favour of that +class of culprits, where such are met with, that their mode of operation +is far more manly and courageous than that of the depredators of some +other climes--by which means they obtain also the full reputation of +their misdeeds. There may scarcely be said to be anything mean or +degrading in their manner of thieving: and their system is itself a +proof that they see no sin in it. They take to the mountains, and +declare open war against those whom they consider the unjust +monopolizers of wealth. + +Instances of this sort are no doubt frequent in Spain; in Toledo they +relate that, some years since, the passes of Estremadura were occupied +by one of the most formidable and best organized of these bands, under +the orders of a female. Various versions were given of this woman's +history; but the one most accredited accounted in the following manner +for her having adopted the profession of freebooter. A young lady of +rank had disappeared from her family residence, leaving no trace by +which to guide conjecture as to her fate. It was therefore presumed she +had been kidnapped. The event, however, had already long ceased to be a +subject of conversation in the district, when three or four years after, +a traveller, who had escaped from an attack of banditti, announced the +fact of their being commanded by a woman. Although well disguised, her +voice, and delicate figure had betrayed her sex. The fact was +subsequently confirmed by positive discoveries; and, at length, +confiding in the alteration time and her mode of life had produced in +her appearance, she ceased to make a mystery of the circumstance, and +headed the attacks, mounted usually on a large black horse. Her age and +beauty coinciding with the description given of the young countess who +had disappeared some years previously, gave rise to the supposition of +their identity. The band has been since dispersed, and many of them +captured; but their chief has contrived to escape, and it is probable +the truth respecting her may never be divulged. + +It is said she at times exercised more pitiless cruelties than are +usually practised by the male chiefs of the regular banditti; and that, +after such acts,--as though conscience-stricken,--she would, by way of +compensation, allow parties to pass unmolested. + +From such instances as these a portion of the Spanish population must be +considered amenable to the charge brought against them; but there are +peculiarities of a different stamp, which mark the Spaniards in +general, and are more deserving of notice in a summary of the national +characteristic qualities. It is impossible, for instance, not to be +struck by the intelligence and tact, independent of cultivation, which +pervade all classes. Whether the denizens of these southern climes are +indebted to the purity of their atmosphere, for this gift of rapid +perception, in which they surpass our northern organizations, or to +whatever cause they may owe it; the fact leads to involuntary +speculation on what might have been the results, in a country so +distinguished, besides, by its natural advantages, had the Arab +supremacy lasted until our days. At a period when education was +generally held in no estimation in Europe, the first care of almost +every sovereign of that race was usually directed to the establishment, +or improvement, of the public schools, in which the sciences and +languages were taught at the royal expense. No town being unprovided +with its schools, it is difficult to imagine to what degree of +superiority over the rest of Europe the continuation of such a system +would have raised a people so gifted as to be capable of supplying, by +natural intelligence, the almost universal absence of information and +culture. + +You continually meet with such instances of uncultivated intelligence as +the following. I was occupied in sketching in a retired part of the +environs of Madrid, when a ragged, half-naked boy, not more than ten or +eleven years of age, and employed in watching sheep, having to pass near +me, stopped to examine my work. He remained for nearly a quarter of an +hour perfectly still, making no movement except that of his eyes, which +continually travelled from the paper to the landscape, and back from +that to the paper. At length, going away, he exclaimed, "Que paciencia, +Dios mio!" + +The following is an example of the absence of cultivation, where it +might have been expected to exist. A student leaving the university of +Toledo, at the age of twenty-seven, told me he had studied there eleven +years, and had that day received his diploma of barrister, which, when +sent to Madrid, where it would be backed by the sanction of the +minister, would authorise him to practise his profession in any town +throughout Spain. In the course of the same conversation, he asked me +whether Russia was not situated in the Mediterranean, and whether +England did not form a portion of that country. + +Tact and good manners are so universal among the lower classes, that a +more familiar intercourse than we are accustomed to, can be allowed +between persons of different ranks. Those of the highest class are seen, +during a journey, dining at the same table with their servants; and on +all other occasions entering into conversation with them. This +intercourse of good nature and good understanding, universally existing +between superiors and inferiors, and which is never known to degenerate +into familiarity, would preserve Spain a long time from revolutions of a +popular origin--were she left to herself. The Spaniard of the lowest +station has as considerable an idea of his personal consequence as a +marquis, and maintains with his equals all the forms of high breeding. +If you stop to listen to the discussions of a knot of ragged children +playing at marbles, you will hear them address each other by the title +of Senor. + +The urbanity and polish which prevails throughout all classes is +genuine, and the result of good-nature. This is proved by their +readiness to render all sorts of services as soon as they are acquainted +with you, and even before; and _that_ notwithstanding their suspicion +and dislike of strangers, a disposition for which they have ample cause. +I don't mean to include services which might incur pecuniary outlay; it +would be something like requesting the loan of the Highlander's +inexpressibles. Although even of this a remarkable instance has fallen +under my observation,--the capability existing,--but they will spare no +trouble nor time: doubling the value of the obligation by the graceful +and earnest manner of rendering it. + +Should your reception by a Spaniard be marked by coldness, it is +generally to be accounted for by a very excusable feeling. The Spaniard +is usually deeply preoccupied by the unfortunate state of his country. +This subject of continual reflection operating on a character singularly +proud, but which is at the same time marked by a large share of +modesty,--qualities by no means incompatible,--occasions him a sensation +when in presence of a foreigner nearly approaching to suffering. He +feels a profound veneration for the former glories of his land, and +admiration of its natural superiority; but he is distrustful of his +modern compatriots, of whom he has no great opinion. His anxiety is, +therefore, extreme with regard to the judgment which a Frenchman or +Englishman may have formed respecting his countrymen and country: and he +is not at his ease until satisfied on that point; fearing that the +backward state of material civilization may be attributed by them to +hopeless defects in the national character, and diminish their respect +for his country. He is restored to immediate peace of mind by a delicate +compliment, easily introduced, on the ancient grandeur of Spain, or the +eternal splendour of her skies and soil, and especially by an expression +of disapproval of the influence which foreign governments seem desirous +of arrogating to themselves over her political destinies. + +Should the stranger delay the application of some such soothing balm, he +will not hesitate to provoke it, by ingeniously leading the conversation +in the direction he wishes, and then heaping abuse and censure on his +compatriots. + +The interference of foreign governments in their politics is, in fact, +one of the consequences of the present national inferiority, the most +galling to their feelings. This is accounted for by the high +independence, which is one of the principal features of their character, +and is observable in the most insignificant events of their daily life. +The practice which prevails in some countries, of meddling each with his +(and even _her_) neighbour's concerns, and of heaping vituperation where +a man's conduct or opinions differ from his who speaks, is one of the +most repugnant to the Spanish nature. If a Spaniard hears such a +conversation, he stares vacantly, as though he comprehended nothing; and +the natural expression traceable on not a few countenances and attitudes +may be translated, "I don't interfere in your affairs, pray don't +trouble yourself about mine." + +It is curious to trace this in their favourite sayings, or proverbs +(_refrans_), by which the national peculiarities of character are +admirably depicted. Of these no people possess so complete a collection. +The following is one which expresses the feeling to which I allude: + + El Marques de Santa Cruz hizo + Un palacio en el Viso: + Porque pudo, y porque quiso. + +or, translated, + + What could induce Sir Santa Cruz to + Build a house the Viso close to? + --He had the money, and he chose to. + +I place, in the translation, the edifice close to the Viso, instead of +upon it, as in the original text. I doubt whether any apology is +necessary for this poetical licence, by which the intention of the +proverb undergoes no alteration. It is true, a house may be close to a +hill without being erected upon it; but if, as in this instance, it is +on the top of the hill, it is most certainly close to it likewise. + +The submission of the Spaniards to the despotism of etiquette and custom +in trifles, does not (otherwise than apparently) constitute a +contradiction to this independence of character. However that may be, +the breach of all other laws meets with easier pardon, than that of the +laws of custom. This code is made up of an infinity of minute +observances, many of which escape the notice of a foreigner, until +accustomed by degrees to the manners of those who surround him. He will +not, for instance, discover, until he has made himself some few +temporary enemies, that no greater insult can be offered to a person of +rank, or in authority, than saluting him in a cloak _embozado_--the +extremity thrown over the shoulder.--A similar neglect is not pardoned +either by the fair sex. The minutest peculiarities in dress are +observed, and if at all discordant with the received mode of the day, +incur universal blame. The situation of a stranger is, in fact, at first +scarcely agreeable in a country in which the smallest divergence from +established customs attracts general attention and criticism. This does +not, however, interfere with the ready good-nature and disposition to +oblige met with, as I said before, on all occasions. + +In some instances the attachment to external forms operates +advantageously. Such is that of the picturesque practice prevailing in +many of the provinces, of assuming the quality of the _Beata_. In +Toledo, certain peculiarities in the toilette of one of a group of young +ladies attracted my curiosity. She was apparently about seventeen; +pretty, but by no means remarkably so for a Spaniard, and appeared to be +in deep mourning. Whenever, in speaking, a movement of her right hand +and arm lifted up her mantilla, a japanned leather sash was exposed to +view, of about two inches in width, an end of which hanging from the +right side, reached rather lower than the knee. On the right sleeve, +half-way between the shoulder and the elbow, was fixed a small silver +plate, called an _escudo_, and a rosary was worn round her neck. + +I was informed, on inquiry, that she was _una beata_; and being still in +the dark, my informant related her story. He commenced by the inquiry, +whether I had heard of a young man being drowned four months previously +in the Tagus. I replied that I had heard of thirty or forty; for he +referred to the bathing season, during which, as the river is sown with +pits and precipices, and unprovided with humane societies, accidents +occur every day. He then named the victim, of whose death I had in fact +heard. He was a youth of the age of twenty, and the _novio_ (intended) +of the young lady in black. On hearing suddenly, and without +preparation, the fatal news, she had been seized with a profuse vomiting +of blood, and had continued dangerously ill during several weeks. She +was now convalescent, and had made her appearance in society for the +first time. + +My informant added, on my repeating the inquiry respecting the costume, +that it is the custom for a young lady, on recovering from a serious +illness, to offer herself to the _Virgen de los dolores_; the external +sign of the vow consisting in the adoption of a dress similar to that +worn by the Virgin in the churches. The obligation assumed lasts +generally during a year; although some retain the dress for the +remainder of their life. Examples are known of this practice among the +other sex; in which case the costume is that of a Franciscan friar; but +the _beato_ becomes the object of ridicule. + +Among the forms of society to which especial importance is attached are +the ceremonies and duration of mourning for relations. The friends of +the nearest relative,--especially if a lady,--of a person newly +deceased, assemble day after day for a considerable time in her house. +All are in full dress of deep mourning; and the victim of sorrow and +society is expected to maintain a continual outpouring of sighs and +tears, while she listens to each consoler in turn. Much importance is +attached to the display of the usual appearances of grief, even when the +circumstances of the case do not necessarily call for it. Happening to +enter a house in which news had been received of the death of a +relative, who resided in another part of Spain, I found the lady of the +house discussing with a friend the form of her new mourning dress. + +Struck by the melancholy expression of her countenance, and the redness +of her eyes, I inquired whether any bad news had been received. My +question gave rise to a renewed flood of tears; "Yes, yes," was the +reply; "I have had terrible news; my poor uncle, who had been afflicted +for years with dropsy, died only six days ago." I expressed my sincere +regret at so sad an event, while she continued her explanations to the +other lady. "I understand," she said, in a voice almost suffocated, +"that this sleeve is no longer to be--drawn in; and the--front, +according to the last--French--fashion,--is at least an inch--shorter." +Taking the opportunity of the first moment of silence, I asked for some +further details respecting this beloved uncle. "It was your Senora +mother's brother, I believe?" "No, no, the husband of my aunt: and +what--do you--think of the--mantilla?" After the reply of the other +visitor to the latter question, I continued,--"But your profound regret, +on occasion of the loss of so amiable a companion, is natural." +"Terrible, sir, yes--my poor uncle!" "Had you seen him shortly before +the sad event?" "Alas! no, sir, I never--saw him but--once in my life; +and--should not now have recognized him--for I--was then--only five +years old." + +The Spaniards are not a dinner-giving nation; obedient, as some suppose, +to their proverb,--which although the effect, may also operate as a +cause,--namely, 'Feasts are given by fools, and partaken of "by wise +men." This proverb, however, paints the national character with less +fidelity than most others; the parsimonious selfishness it implies is +not Spanish. Sufficient reasons exist to account for the rarity of +dinner invitations. + +Although the English are not responsible for the geniality of climate, +which corks up their crystallized souls to be enclosed fog-tight, until +released by a symbolical ceremony of the popping of champagne corks,--it +is not the less true that dinners are their only introductions to +acquaintanceship. Spaniards have corks also, and well worth the trouble +of drawing, as well as all the other _materiel_ of conviviality; but +they despise it, finding the expansion operated by their sunshine more +complete and less laborious. Their sociability no more requires dinner +parties than their aloes hedges do steam-pipes. With the exception of +their ungovernable passion for cold water, their sobriety is extreme; +and this may perhaps unite with a dislike to social ostentation in +resisting the exotic fashion of dinners. But bring a good letter of +introduction to a Spaniard, and you will find a daily place at a +well-supplied table, the frequent occupation of which will give +unmistakable pleasure. + +In such case you are looked for as a daily visitor; not ceremoniously, +but as using the house when in want of a more cheerful home than your +_posada_. AEolus has not yet been appointed here the arbiter of +smiles,[9] and your entrance is always the signal for the same animated +welcome. The only variation will be a good-natured remonstrance, should +your visits have undergone any interruption. + +To return to my route. Aware of the inconvenience of Spanish inland +travelling, and with Seville for my object, I proceeded to Lyon. Nor had +I long to wait for the reward attendant on my choice of route. Getting +on board the steam-packet at six o'clock on an autumn morning, I +experienced at first some discouragement, from the fog, which I had not +reflected was the natural--or rather unnatural--atmosphere of that most +discouraging of all places, a prosperous manufacturing town. No sooner, +however, had we escaped, by the aid of high-pressure steam, from these +deleterious influences, than our way gradually opened before us, rather +dimly at first, but more and more clear as the sun attained height: the +banks of the Rhone having, during this time, been progressing also in +elevation and grandeur, by eight o'clock we were enjoying a rapidly +moving panorama of superb scenery. + +This day's journey turned out unusually auspicious. Owing to some +favourable combination of celestial influences, (although I perceived no +one on board likely to have an astrologer in his pay,) no untoward +accident--so common on this line--befell us. No stoppages--no running +down of barges, nor running foul of bridges--nor bursting of engines. +The stream was neither too shallow, nor too full, so that we were +preserved both from running aground, and from being run away with. Our +boat was the fastest of the six which started at the same time; and one +is never ill-disposed by a speed of eighteen miles an hour, although it +may be acquired at an imminent risk of explosion. + +There is many a day's journey of equal or greater beauty than the +descent of the Rhone; but I know of none which operates a more singular +effect on the senses. It is that of being transported by a leap from the +north to the south of Europe. The Rhone valley, in fine weather, enjoys +a southern climate, while all the region to the north of Lyon is marked +by the characteristics of the more northern provinces. That town itself, +with its smoke, its gloom, and its dirt, maintains itself at the +latitude of Manchester; whose excellent money-making inhabitants, if +thrown in the way of a party of Lyonnais, would scarcely feel themselves +among strangers, so complete would be the similarity of habits and +manners. The transition, therefore, to those wafted down the sunny +valley of the Rhone, is as theatrical as the scenery itself, but with +the agreeable addition of reality. Every surrounding object contributes +to the magic of the change. Taking leave of a bare and treeless country, +and its consequently rough and ungenial climate, which, in its turn, +will necessarily exercise its influence on the character of the +population, you find yourself gliding between vine-clad mountains, not +black and rugged like those of the Rhine, but soft and rosy, and lighted +by a sky, which begins here to assume a southern brilliancy. The +influence of the lighter atmosphere first begins to be felt, expanding +the organs, and filling the frame with a sensation, unknown to more +northern climes, of pleasure derived from mere existence. Then the +language you hear on all sides is new and musical; for the crew of the +steamer is Provencal, and their _patois_ falls on the ear with something +approaching the soft accent of Italy; while their expressive eyes, +sunburnt faces, and a certain mixture of animation and languor--the +exact counterpart of the phlegmatic industry of the north, complete the +scene, with which they are in perfect harmony. + +_A propos_ of harmony, when the sailors' dinner hour arrived, they were +summoned by an air of Rossini, played on a bugle; the performer--one of +their number--having first thrown himself flat on the deck, in the +attitude of a Turk about to receive the bastinado, and then raising his +chest, by the aid of his two elbows, to the height required for the +inflation of the instrument. + +Nor is this leap from north to south so purely imaginary, since the boat +Sirius, aided by the furious current, actually paddled at the rate of +from seventeen to eighteen miles an hour; and we reached Avignon at +sunset, about five o'clock. The distance being calculated, allowing for +the windings of the river, will verify the rate maintained during the +day. Notwithstanding the odious nature of comparisons, I could not help +forming that between this river and the Rhine, and giving the preference +to the first. The bold though gloomy precipices of the Rhine yield, in +point of charm, to the more open expanse of the Rhone valley, and the +larger scale of the scenery, especially when the far more brilliant +lighting-up is considered. Nor does the Rhone yield to its rival, in +regard to the picturesque form and position of its castles and other +buildings; while its greater width, and handsome bridges, add an +additional feature. + +The best scene of the day, and a fit climax for its termination, was the +approach to Avignon at sunset,--a superb Claude. A turn of the river +placed the castle--an immense mass crowning the city, and presenting an +irregular outline--directly between us and the sun, the sky doing away, +by its brightness, with all the details of the landscape. The principal +objects were, the broad expanse of water, and the mass of deep purple, +tracing its dark but soft outline on the blaze of gold at its back. On +turning to look in the opposite direction, a scene equally striking +presented itself. The mountains between which we had been winding during +the last half of the day, are, from this point of view, ranged in an +immense semicircle, extending round half the horizon, and at that moment +were tinged by the sun with a bright rose colour, while they scarcely +appeared at half their actual distance. It looked like the final scene +of an aerial ballet, when a semicircle is formed by the rosy sylphs who +have figured during the representation. + +After the hurly burly of debarkation at Avignon, and forcing our way +through the army of luggage porters--a ferocious race, notorious, at +this place, for the energy, amounting often to violence, with which they +urge the acceptance of their kind offices--the picturesque look of the +place, and the necessary hour of waiting for dinner, led me to a scene, +which I accepted as a satisfactory greeting on my arrival in the land +of the troubadours. A group of half a dozen labourers, returned from +their day's work, were lolling in every variety of attitude, on some +large stones placed in front of the _chateau_. They were singing--and +with perfect precision of _ensemble_--each his part of the chorus. At +the conclusion of every _morceau_, the whole party made the facade of +the ancient palace echo with peals of laughter; after which they all +talked at once, until they had agreed on the choice of the succeeding +air. + +The castle of Avignon--ancient residence of the Popes, shelters now a +different sort of inmates. It serves for barracks for a regiment of +infantry. At this moment the lamplighter had completed his rounds in the +interior, and given to each of the innumerable windows an undue +importance in the architectural effect of the mass. Such is the +irregularity of their distribution over this vast facade--or such it +appeared to be then, for I have not seen it by daylight--as to give them +the appearance of having been thrown at it by handfuls, and fixed +themselves each at its first point of contact with the wall. + +Or by way of compensation for the extravagant supposition of so large a +hand, we can suppose the edifice diminished, and resembling with its +jagged outline, a ragged black cloak, which, having been stretched out, +to serve as a mark for rifle-shooters, would admit the light through +openings not less symmetrically distributed than these windows. + +Between Avignon and Marseille, by the land route, the only spot of +interest is Aix. It is a well placed little town; although, in the +summer, its position must procure for it rather too much warmth. There +are no remains of king Rene's palace; nor could I learn that any +souvenir of him was extant, with the exception of a statue, which +represents the jovial old king of the _trouveres_ in the character of +Bacchus. This figure ornaments a hot fountain, situated at the head of +the wide street, planted with trees, by which the town is entered. + + + + +LETTER XVI. + +VOYAGE TO GIBRALTAR. + + +Cadiz. + +I have just returned from a visit to the signal-tower--the highest +look-out in Cadiz; from which is seen a panorama equalled by few in +Europe. The Atlantic, and its coast down to Trafalgar Cape--the mountain +distances of the Ronda--and Medina Sidonia on its sugar-loaf rock, like +an advanced sentinel--all Cadiz, with its hundreds of white +Belvideres--and the bright blue bay, decked with glittering white towns, +and looking (but with more sparkling glow) like an enormous turquoise +set round with pearls. But let not, I entreat you, these magic +words--Cadiz--Andalucia--raise your expectations unduly; lest they be +disappointed, on rinding that I fail in doing justice to this charming +country. With regard to this town, not only would it be a task beyond my +powers to paint its bright aspect and to give you a sufficiently glowing +description of its pleasures. It is not even my intention to partake of +these--being bent on accomplishing my principal object--the exploration +of the monuments of Seville. However let us not anticipate. You ought to +have had news of me from Gibraltar, where I made a much longer stay than +I had intended, owing to an unexpected meeting with an old friend. + +The fact is, I put off writing until I should again be in movement, +hoping that my letters might thus acquire greater interest. I will +resume my journey from France, in which country we parted. + +The steam-packets leave Marseille for the south of Spain every tenth +day; and I happened to arrive a day or two after one of the departures. +Rather than wait eight days, therefore, I agreed for my passage on board +a trader bound for Gibraltar; by which arrangement, as the captain +assured me that the voyage would only occupy five days, I was to be at +my journey's end before the departure of the Phenicien, as the +steam-packet was called. The latter, moreover, made no progress +excepting during the night, in order to afford the passengers an +opportunity of passing each day in some town; and being anxious to +arrive at Seville, I should not have liked the delays thus occasioned. I +do not, however, recommend the adoption of my plan; for the five days, +as it turned out, became twenty-four, and the Phenicien arrived at Cadiz +long before I reached Gibraltar. + +The captain's prognostic of course supposed a favourable voyage; and I +was wrong in reckoning on this, particularly at the time of year, and in +the Mediterranean. I was wrong, also, in confiding in my Provencal +captain, who, in addition to various other bad qualities, turned out to +be the most inept blockhead to whom ever were entrusted lives and +cargoes. + +My fellow-passengers consisted of a Marseille merchant, who possessed a +trading establishment at Gibraltar; a young French officer, on leave of +absence to visit his mother, who was Spanish; and a Moorish traveller, +proceeding homeward to Tetuan. From certain hints dropped by the +merchant, who was well acquainted with the passage, we soon learned the +probable character of our captain, as he belonged to a race not very +favourably spoken of by those whose goods and persons they were in the +habit of conveying; and these predictions being soon partially confirmed +by the man's incivility, we began to look upon him as our common enemy. +One of the accusations brought against his class was, a disposition to +reduce the supply of provisions within undue limits. This, however, we +could not lay to his charge, as the adverse winds rendered necessary an +extreme prudence in our daily consumption. My principal anxiety arose +from want of confidence in the capacity of the man for the performance +of his duties as a seaman. This anxiety was grounded on various symptoms +sufficiently striking to attract the notice even of a landsman; and more +particularly on a scene, during which his presence of mind, if mind he +possessed, totally deserted him. + +We had passed several days off the Balearic Islands--or rather on and +off--for each morning we issued from behind Ivica, and returned at night +to take shelter under its cliffs; ours being the only vessel of several +performing the same passage restrained by fear from attempting any +progress during these nights. The reason of this we learned +subsequently. At length, when we did risk an advance, we chose the worst +moment of all: the breeze becoming a gale, and almost a head-wind, from +having been less unfavourable. Whatever may now have been our anxiety, +we could easily discover that the author of our misfortune was a prey to +more terror than ourselves. + +Against this wind we proceeded, gaining about a hundred yards an hour, +during five days; at the end of which it changed slightly, and allowed +us to reach the entrance of the channel; that is, we had doubled the +Cape de Gata, and were off the south coast of the peninsula, nearly +opposite Almeria, and in the direct line of all the vessels entering the +Mediterranean; which, as they are sometimes delayed in expectation of a +favourable wind for passing the Straits of Gibraltar, were now bearing +down in great numbers. At this crisis the gale, which had all along +continued to be violent, became once more almost directly adverse, and +increased in fury. + +Our gallant captain's features always assumed towards evening a more +serious expression. A faint tinge of green was observed to replace the +yellow of his usual complexion, and he passed the nights on deck, as +unapproachable as a hyena--by the way, also a most cowardly animal. At +length one day as evening approached, the wind was almost doing its +worst, and we went to bed tossed about as if in a walnut-shell--lulled +by an incessant roaring, as it were, of parks of Perkin's artillery. + +It being essential to keep a good look-out, and to show a light +occasionally, in order to avoid being run down--the lantern--unable to +live on deck, from the water as well as the wind, which passed through +the rigging--was confided to the passengers, with a recommendation, by +no means likely to be neglected, to keep it in good trim, and to hand +it up with promptitude when called for. + +At about twelve o'clock, sure enough, the call was heard, in the +somewhat agitated tones of the captain. The passenger, whose business it +was, for we took the watch each in his turn--immediately jumped up and +handed up the lantern. Thinking this sufficient, we remained as we were; +but in less than a minute, it was brought back extinguished, and thrown +down into the cabin. Immediately after a general view holloa was audible +above the roar of the storm, and the mate's voice was heard at the top +of our staircase, begging us to get up as we were going to be run down. + +We now lost no time in making our way to the deck; no one speaking a +word, but each waiting for his turn to mount. Being furthest from the +staircase, or rather ladder, I arrived the last. On reaching the deck, I +was met by about a ton of salt water, which appeared to have mistaken me +for a wicket, as it came in as solid a mass, and with about the same +impulse as a cricket ball. Finding I was not to be dashed back again +down stairs, it took the opportunity of half filling the cabin, the door +of which I had not thought of shutting. On recovering my breath and +reopening my eyes, I discerned, by aid of the white bed-apparel of my +fellow passengers, a dim crowd, pressed together at the bow of the +vessel, consisting of all the inhabitants of the frail tenement, +excepting the steersman and myself. I rushed forward; but finding my +voice insufficient to add any effect to the cry which had been set up, +to give notice to the crew of the approaching vessel, I made for the +side, which I saw, by the position of the group, was threatened with the +expected contact; and catching at a rope ladder, placed myself on the +top of the bulwarks, resolved on trying a jump as the only chance of +escape in case of meeting. + +There was now time to examine our situation perfectly well. I looked +towards the stern, and could see that the helm was not deserted: but it +was of no avail to save us from the danger; since, sailing as near the +wind as we could, as far as I understood the subsequent explanation of +the sailors, we could not change our direction on a sudden, otherwise +than by turning a sort of right-about-face. We went on, therefore, +trusting that the other crew would hear the cry, and discover our +position in time. The night being extremely dark, and the sea running +high, the approaching vessel was scarcely visible to us when first +pointed out by the sailors; still less should I have looked forward to +its threatening us with any danger; but the eye of experience had not +been deceived, and from my perch I was soon able to discover, as each +passage over the summit of a wave brought the dark mass against the sky, +that its approach was rapid, and directed with unerring precision, so as +to cross our course at the fatal moment. She was scudding before the +gale, with almost all her sails set, and consequently, on striking our +ship, nothing could save us from an instantaneous founder. + +At each successive appearance the mass became larger and blacker; but +the cry of our crew, in which I now joined, never ceased. At length we +were only separated by the ascent of one wave, at the summit of which +was balanced the huge bulk of our antagonist, while we were far below +the level of her keel--but her steersman had heard the cry; for at the +moment when certainly no hope of saving--at least our ship, remained to +any of us, we saw the other swerve as she descended--and after +approaching to within half her length of our starboard bow, she glided +by at the distance of a yard from where I was standing. + +I now drew a deep breath before I jumped down on to the deck; after +which, beginning to perceive that I was as wet as if we had been run +down, I was hastening to the cabin, when my progress was stopped by the +captain, who, without perceiving any one, was stamping up and down the +centre of the vessel, and actually tearing his hair with both his hands. +I paused to observe this tragic performance, which shortly gave place to +an indistinct and much interrupted speech, in which, in the intervals +left by all the oaths as yet invented in the French and Languedoc +tongues, there could be distinguished dark threats of vengeance, +addressed to the captain of the large brig, whom he was to discover +without fail on his return to Marseille. + +All the passengers now descended to the cabin, and having stripped and +rolled myself in my cloak turned inside out, I threw myself on my couch. +We were now, in spite of recent experience, provided with a fresh +lighted lantern, to be produced on the next call. This we took care +still to look to, although we hardly expected more than one such chance +in one night. + +It was past two, and we had scarcely left off discussing our narrow +escape, when another rapid and significant demand for the lantern +announced a second peril. On this occasion I took my time, for I had +reflected on the odds, which were immense, against our being a second +time so exactly in any one's way, where there was room for the whole +navigation of the world to pass abreast. Nor could I suspect any of my +fellow-passengers of being the unlucky Jonas of our misfortunes; +although the Moor was looked upon by some of the sailors with a +suspicious eye, for not consenting to partake of a leg of chicken, if +the animal had been killed and cooked by any other hand than his own, +and for the mysterious formalities they accused him of observing in +killing his poultry; such as turning his face in a particular direction, +and requiring the blood to flow in a particular manner--on failure of +which last requisite, he threw the fowl overboard. These things alarmed +the sailors, but helped, on the contrary, to encourage me; as I thought +the man's being possessed of a conscience and religious scruples, +rather, if any thing, an additional safeguard for us. + +This time, therefore, I drew on my boots and trowsers; and, wrapped in +my cloak, proceeded in company with the Moor, who had taken it as +leisurely as myself, to join the party on deck. They had kept the +lantern in a safe position until the moment it would have the best +chance of taking effect, a proper precaution, as it was likely to be so +short-lived. And at the moment I arrived the order was being given to +shew it ahead. A sailor took it, and before he could reach the bow of +the vessel, a wave broke over him and washed his lantern fairly into the +sea. Upon this the captain said not a word, but running to the helm, +took it in hand, and turned the ship right round, presenting her stern +to the wind, and to the approaching vessel,--which we now soon lost +sight of, as we were not a slow sailing craft in a fair wind. Having +performed this masterly feat, and given orders that no change should be +made in any respect, he went to bed; muttering as he left the deck +various indistinct sounds between his teeth. The next morning we had +undone nearly all our six day's work, and before evening of the +following day, had returned to within sight of Cape St. Martin near +Valencia. + +It was now a fortnight since we had quitted Marseille, and we were +nearly half-way to our place of destination; but Neptune took pity on +us, and having given the usual scolding to Eolus, we were allowed to +resume our course, although not at as good a rate as we could have +wished. The tempest had ceased, and by means of a feeble but fair wind +which succeeded, we regained in three days and nights almost all our +lost way, and were on the point of doubling the Cape Gata. Here we +remained stationary in a dead calm during another three days, after +which an almost imperceptible movement in the air in the wished-for +direction bore us to within sight of Gibraltar. + +This progress along the southern coast lasted three days more, and +introduced me to the climate of Andalucia. At the end of November it was +still a splendid summer--but with just sufficient air to prevent our +suffering from the heat. The blue Mediterranean at length vindicated her +fair fame, and proved that one of her smiles had the power of throwing +oblivion over all the harm of which she was capable during her moments +of fretfulness. As you will easily imagine, I passed these delicious +days, and nearly the entire nights on deck. Our view consisted of the +magnificent precipices which terminate, at the shore, the Alpuxarras +chain of mountains. These are coloured with the various tints peculiar +to the ores and marbles of which they are formed; and now showed us all +their details, although we never approached within twenty-five miles off +shore. The purity of the atmosphere added to their great elevation, gave +them the appearance of being only four or five miles distant. The only +means of proving the illusion consisted in directing the telescope along +the line of apparent demarcation between the sea and the rock, when the +positions of the different towns situated on the shore were indicated +only by the tops of their towers. Among others, the tower of Malaga +Cathedral appeared to rise solitarily from the water, the church and +town being hidden by the convexity of the sea's surface. + +With the bright blue sea for a foreground, varied by continually passing +sails, these superb cliffs formed the second plan of the picture; while +over them towered the Granada mountains of the Sierra Nevada, cutting +their gigantic outlines of glittering snow out of the dark blue of the +sky, at a distance of twenty leagues. The evenings more particularly +possessed a charm, difficult to be understood by the thousands of our +fellow creatures, unable to kill that fragment of time without the aid +of constellations of wax-lights, and sparkling toilettes,--not to +mention the bright sparks which conversation sometimes, but not always, +sprinkles o'er the scene. Now I do not pretend to speak with disrespect +of _soirees_, nor even of balls or ra-outes, as our neighbours say; +Polka forfend I should blaspheme her deity, depreciate her loudly +laudable energies, or apostrophize her strangely muscular hamstrings! I +only maintain that a night passed at sea, off the southern Spanish coast +in fine weather, does not yield to the best of nights. + +The observation of the land, of the passing sails, and the management of +our own, and the various phenomena of sea and sky, having gradually +yielded to sunset and twilight--and these in their turn leaving the +vessel to its solitude, conversation became amusing between people of +such different origin, habits, and ideas, brought together by chance, +drawn nearer to each other by the force of circumstances, and by having +partaken of the same buffetings. The Moor would then offer a cup of his +coffee, or rather, according to the Oriental custom, a thimbleful of his +quintessence of that exquisite berry. Our French ensign was a tolerable +musician, and was easily prevailed on to unpack his cornet-a-piston, and +to astonish the solitude of the night, and the denizens of the deep, by +the execution of the favourite airs of Auber and Halevy. Sometimes a +bark too distant to be visible would hail us on hearing these unusual +strains; and faint sounds of applause would arrive as if from wandering +naiads. + +At length one afternoon brought us in sight of Gibraltar. And now, lest +we should arrive without further mishap, our precious Provencal took +care to give us a parting proof of his incapacity,--which however, +thanks to our good fortune, did not bring upon us the annoyance it +threatened. The rock of Gibraltar was before us the whole of the +following day; but there appeared also in sight, somewhat to its left, +and at a much greater distance, a sort of double mountain, apparently +divided from the middle upwards by a wedge-formed cleft. The captain +replied to all questions by describing this object as consisting of two +distinct mountains, which he pronounced to be no others than the two +Pillars of Hercules,--promising us that the next morning we should see +them separated by the entire width of the Straits. + +Far from suspecting the authenticity of this explanation, I innocently +inquired what was the large rock (Gibraltar itself) apparently much +nearer to us. "Oh!" he replied, "it was some promontory on the coast of +Andalucia, the name of which had escaped his memory;" adding that we +steered very slightly to the left of the said rock, because the wind +having increased, and blowing off shore, we could not make Gibraltar +otherwise than by keeping well into the shore, to prevent our being +driven towards Africa. All this about the wind was so true, that had we +preserved to the last the direction we were then following, we must +inevitably have gone to Africa, and added a day and a night to our +voyage. + +The Marseille merchant, who had made the voyage twenty times, listened +to all this; but although very intelligent on most subjects, and more +particularly with regard to the qualities and value of silks and +quincaillerie, his notions of practical geography had not probably +attained any great development, as he appeared perfectly satisfied. I +therefore passed the day and retired that night filled with curiosity +respecting this remarkable promontory, that had escaped the notice of +Arrowsmith and the continental geographers. The following morning, to my +extreme astonishment, the double mountain was still as undivided as +ever, notwithstanding our having approached so near to the great rock as +to distinguish its colour, and the details of its surface. We were still +steering so as to leave it behind us. + +I now began to suspect something was wrong; and getting hold of the +merchant, proceeded to question him closely, recalling to his +recollection the captain's explanation of the previous day, and the +consequent miraculous union of Gibraltar with the mountain of the +monkies, to accomplish which the former must have quitted Europe +subsequently to the publication of the last newspapers we had seen at +Marseille. His replying that he certainly thought the great rock put him +in mind of Gibraltar confirmed my suppositions; and I prevailed upon him +to repeat his opinion to the ignoramus, who was peaceably eating his +breakfast on the bulwarks of the quarter-deck. We went to him instantly, +and on hearing the remark, he merely observed that it was very possible; +and leaving his sausage, quietly proceeded to the helm, which he no more +quitted until we were in the bay at four in the afternoon. We had only +lost about five or six hours by the blunder; but had we continued the +same course another half-hour, we could not possibly have made Gibraltar +that day. + +It was with more than the ordinary excitement of the organ of +travelling,--for if phrenology deserves to be called a science, such an +organ must exist,--that I approached this great Leviathan of the seas; +perhaps, all causes considered, the most remarkable object in Europe. +During the approach the interest is absorbing; and the two or three +hours employed in passing round the extremity of the rock, and +stretching sufficiently far into the Straits, to gain wind and channel +for entering the bay, slipped away more rapidly than many a ten minutes +I could have called to my recollection. The simultaneous view of Europe +and Africa; the eventful positions with which you are surrounded,--Tarifa, +Algeciras, and further on Trafalgar; the very depths beneath you too +shallow for the recollections which crowd into this limited space; +commencing with history so ancient as to have attained the rank of +fable,--and heroes long since promoted to demi-gods; and reaching to the +passage of the injured Florinda, so quickly responded to by that of +Tharig, followed by a hundred Arab fleets. The shipping of all nations +continually diverting the attention from these _souvenirs_; and, +crowning all, the stupendous mass of the now impregnable rock. + +Amidst all this, I could not drive from my thoughts the simple and +patriotic old Spanish historian de Pisa, and the operation to which he +attributes the origin of this mountain. From him may be learned all the +details respecting this work of Hercules; as to which, as well as to the +motives of its fabricator, the poets of antiquity were in the dark. +Hercules had been induced, by the high reputation of Spain, of her +population, and her various natural advantages, to conduct thither an +army for the purpose of taking possession of the country. After having +put his project in execution, he remained in Spain, and enjoyed a long +and prosperous reign. The victory, which gave him possession of the +country, took place at Tarifa; and it was in its commemoration and +honour that before he established the seat of government at Toledo, he +assembled the conquered population, and compelled them to throw stones +into the sea, by which means, in a short time, this monument was +completed. + +Before we set foot on this imperceptible trophy of a league in length by +two thousand feet high the French ensign and myself hailed a steamer as +we passed by her in the offing, and found she was bound for Cadiz, and +we must go on board the following afternoon. On landing, however, my +projects underwent a change, as I told you at the commencement of my +letter. There is not much to be seen at Gibraltar that would interest +you, except indeed the unique aspect and situation of the place. To +military men its details offer much interest. There is a large public +garden on the side of the mountain, between the town, which occupies the +inmost extremity, and the Governor's house near the entrance of the bay. +The batteries constructed in the rock are extremely curious, and +calculated to embarrass an enemy whose object should be to dismount +them. I thought, however, with deference to those conversant with these +subjects, that they were likely to possess an inconvenience--that of +exposing to suffocation the gunners employed in the caverns, out of +which there does not appear to exist sufficient means of escape for the +smoke. + +The most amusing sight in Gibraltar is the principal street, filled, as +it is, with an infinitely varied population. Here you see, crowded +together as in a fair, and distinguished by their various costumes,--the +representatives of Europe, Asia, and Africa,--Arabs, Moors, Italians, +Turks, Greeks, Russians, English, and Spaniards, Jews, and, +occasionally, a holy friar conversing with some Don Basilio, appearing, +in his long cylindrical hat, as if blessed with a skull sufficiently +hard to have entered the side of a tin chimney-top, precipitated upon +it by a gust of wind. + +Among all these a successful guess may here and there be risked at the +identity of the Andalucian leader of banditti, lounging about in search +of useful information. The contrabandistas are likewise in great +plenty. + + + + +LETTER XVII. + +CADIZ. ARRIVAL AT SEVILLE. + + +Seville. + +Cadiz is the last town in Europe I should select for a residence, had I +the misfortune to become blind. One ought to be all eyes there. It is +the prettiest of towns. After this there is no more to be said, with +regard, at least, to its external peculiarities. It possesses no +prominent objects of curiosity. There is, it is true, a tradition +stating it to have possessed a temple dedicated to Hercules; but this +has been washed away by the waves of the ocean, as its rites have been +by the influx of succeeding populations. Nothing can be more remote from +the ideas of the visitor to Cadiz, than the existence of anything +antique; unless it be the inclination to prosecute such researches: the +whole place is so bright and modern looking, and pretty in a manner +peculiar to itself, and unlike any other town,--since, like everything +else in Spain, beauty also has its originality. Nothing can be gayer +than the perspective of one of the straight, narrow streets. On either +side of the blue ribbon of sky, which separates the summits of its lofty +houses, is seen a confusion of balconies, and projecting +box-windows,--all placed irregularly--each house possessing only one or +two, so as not to interfere with each other's view, and some placed on a +lower story, others on a higher; their yellow or green hues relieving +the glittering white of the facades. Nor could anything improve the +elegant effect of the architectural ornaments, consisting of pilasters, +vases, and sculpture beneath the balconies, still less, the animated +faces--the prettiest of all Spain, after those of Malaga--whose owners +shew a preference to the projecting windows, wherever a drawing-room or +boudoir possesses one. + +The pavement of these elegant little streets, is not out of keeping with +the rest. It would be a sacrilege to introduce a cart or carriage into +them. A lady may, and often does, traverse the whole town on foot, on +her way to a ball. It is a town built as if for the celebration of a +continual carnival. Nor does the charge brought against the Gaditanas, +of devotion to pleasure, cause any surprise: were they not, they would +be misplaced in Cadiz. Hither should the victim of spleen and melancholy +direct his steps. Let him choose the season of the carnival. There is +reason to suspect that the advertiser in the Herald had this remedy in +view, when he promised a certain cure to "clergymen and noblemen, who +suffer from blushing and despondency, delusion, thoughts of self-injury, +and groundless fear:" these symptoms being indications of an attack of +that northern epidemy, which takes its name from a class of fallen +angels of a particular hue. + +In Cadiz, in fact, does Carnival--that modern Bacchus of fun, give a +loose to his wildest eccentricities--nor may those who are least +disposed to do homage to the god escape his all-pervading influence. All +laws yield to his, during his three days of Saturnalia. Not the least +eccentric of his code is that one, which authorizes the baptism of every +passenger in a street with the contents of jugs, bestowed from the fair +hands of vigilant angels who soar on the second-floor balconies. The +statute enjoins also the expression of gratitude for these favours, +conveyed with more or less precision of aim, in the form of hen's +eggs--of which there is consequently a scarcity on breakfast-tables on +the mornings of these festive days. At eleven o'clock each night, four +spacious buildings scarcely suffice for the masquerading population. + +But the paddles have been battering for some hours the waters of the +Guadalquivir, and we are approaching Seville, a city given to less +turbulent propensities--where Pleasure assumes a more timid gait, nor +cares to alarm Devotion--a partner with whom she delights, hand in hand, +to tread this marble-paved Paradise. The passage between Cadiz and +Seville, is composed of two hours of sea, and eight or nine of river. +The beautiful bay, and its white towns, with Cadiz itself, looking in +the sunshine like a palace of snow rising out of the sea--have no power +now to rivet the attention, nor to occupy feelings already glowing with +the anticipation of a sail between the banks of the Guadalquivir. A +ridge of hidden rocks lengthens the approach, compelling the pilot to +describe a large semicircle, before he can make the mouth of the river. +This delay is a violent stimulant to one's impatience. At length we have +entered the ancient Betis; and leaving behind the active little town of +St. Lucar, celebrated for its wines, and for those of the neighbouring +Xeres, of which it embarks large quantities--we are gliding between +these famous shores. + +Great, indeed, is the debt they owe to the stirring events that have +immortalized these regions, for they are anything but romantic. Nothing +can be less picturesque;--all the flatness of Holland, without the +cultivation, and the numerous well-peopled villages, which diminish the +monotonous effect. On the right are seen at some distance the wooded +hills of Xeres; but for scores of miles, on the opposite side, all is +either marsh, or half-inundated pasture, with here and there some +thinly-scattered olive trees, and herds of oxen for its sole living +occupants. At a few leagues from Seville, the increased frequency of the +olive grounds--a few villages and convents, and at length the darker +green masses of the orange groves, give rapidly strengthening +indications of approaching civilization; and you are landed a short +distance below the town, to reach which, it is necessary to traverse the +Christina Gardens. The cathedral occupies this southern extremity of the +city; and on your way to the inn, you may make an estimate of the length +of one side of its immense quadrangular enclosure. Immediately beyond +this you are received into the inevitable labyrinth of crooked lanes, +peculiar to an Arab town. + +The steam trip from Cadiz is so easy a day's journey, that no necessity +for repose or refitting interferes with the impatience of those who +arrive to explore the external town. You speedily, therefore, sally +forth, and thread a few of the mazy streets; but without venturing too +far, on account of the evident risk of losing your way. Should you +chance to stumble on the Plaza Mayor,--called Plaza de San +Francisco,--you are at once rewarded by the view of the _ayuntamiento_, +one of the most elegant edifices in Spain: otherwise the extreme +simplicity of the bare, irregular, but monotonous white houses, will +create disappointment--you will stare about in the vain search of the +magnificence, so much extolled, of this semi-Moorish capital, and +discover, that nothing can be plainer, more simple, more ugly, than the +exterior of the Seville habitations. At length, however, some open door, +or iron grille, placed on a line with an inner court, will operate a +sudden change in your ideas, and afford a clue to the mystery. Through +this railing, generally of an elegant form, is discovered a delicious +vista, in which are visible, fountains, white marble colonnades, +pomegranate and sweet lemon-trees, sofas and chairs (if in summer), and +two or three steps of a porcelain staircase. + +You now first appreciate the utility of the more than plain exteriors of +the houses of this town; and you admire an invention, which adds to the +already charming objects, composing the interior of these miniature +palaces, a beauty still greater than that which they actually possess, +lent by the effect of contrast. It is calculated that there are more +than eighty thousand white marble pillars in Seville. For this luxury +the inhabitants are indebted in a great measure to the Romans, whose +town, Italica, seated, in ancient times, on the opposite bank of the +river, four miles above Seville, and since entirely buried, furnished +the Arab architects with a considerable portion of their decorating +materials. + +In a future letter I hope to introduce you to the interior of some of +these abodes, where we shall discover that their inhabitants prove +themselves not unworthy of them, by the perfect taste and conception of +civilized life, with which their mode of existence is regulated. + +[Illustration: HALL OF AMBASSADORS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.] + + + + +LETTER XVIII. + +THE ARABS IN SPAIN. ALCAZAR OF SEVILLE. + + +Seville. + +The chief attraction of this most interesting of the provinces of the +Peninsula, consists in the numerous well preserved remains of Arab art. +The most sumptuous of their palaces are, it is true, no longer in +existence, nor the principal mosques, with the exception of the +metropolitan temple of Cordova: but there remain sufficient specimens to +shew, that their architecture had attained the highest excellence in two +of the principal requisites for excellence in that science--solidity and +beauty. + +The superiority of the Arabs in this branch of science and taste is so +striking, that all other departments of art, as well as the customs and +peculiarities of that race, and the events of their dominion in this +country, become at once the subjects of interest and inquiry. It is +consequently very satisfactory to discover that one can examine almost +face to face that people,--probably the most advanced in science and +civilization that ever set foot in Europe; so little are the traces of +their influence worn away, and so predominant is the portion of it still +discernible in the customs, manners, and race of the population of this +province, and even to a considerable extent in their language. + +There is something so brilliant in the career of the Arab people, as to +justify the interest excited by the romantic and picturesque (if the +expression may be allowed), points of their character and customs. Their +civilization appears to have advanced abreast with their conquests, and +with the same prodigious rapidity; supposing, that is, that previously +to their issuing from their peninsula, they were as backward as +historians state them to have been: a point not sufficiently +established. Sallying forth, under the immediate successors of Mahomet, +they commenced, in obedience to the injunction of their new faith, a +course of conquest unrivalled in rapidity. Their happy physical and +mental organization, enabled them to appropriate whatever was superior +in the arts and customs of the conquered nations; and whatever they +imitated acquired during the process of adaptation, new and more +graceful modifications. It has been asserted that they owed their +civilization to the Greeks; and, certainly, the first subjected +provinces being Greek, their customs could not but receive some +impression from the contact; but it is not probable that the Greeks were +altogether their instructors in civilization. Had such been the case +their language would probably have undergone a change, instead of +continuing totally independent of the Greek, and attaining to greater +richness. They are known to have possessed poets of eminence before the +appearance of Mahomet, consequently before they had any communication +with the Greeks; shortly after the commencement of their intercourse +with them, they shewed a marked superiority over them in geometry, in +astronomy, architecture, and medicine, and it would probably be found, +but for the destruction of so many Arab libraries, that they did not +yield to them in eloquence and poetic genius. + +Established in Spain, they carried the arts of civilization--the useful +no less than the elegant, to the highest perfection. They introduced +principles of agriculture adapted to the peculiarities of the country. +The chief requisite for a country, parched by a cloudless sun, being +water--they put in practice a complete system of irrigation, to which +the Spaniards are still indebted for the extraordinary fertility of +their soil. Many other arts that have since been permitted to dwindle +into insignificance, and some altogether to disappear, were bequeathed +by them. The Morocco preparation of leather is an instance of these +last. + +Their high chivalry, added to their moderation after victory, would have +divested even war of much of its barbarism, had they had to do with a +race less impenetrable, and more susceptible of polish than were the +iron legions of their Gothic antagonists. The persevering and repeated +acts of treachery practised by these, at last drew their civilized +adversaries, forcibly into the commission of acts of a similar +nature--it being frequently necessary in self-defence to adopt the same +weapons as one's enemy. When firmly settled in Spain, the Arabs no +longer appear to have taken the field with a view to conquest. +Abderahman the First, Almansor, and other conquerors, returned from +their victories to repose in their capital; contenting themselves with +founding schools and hospitals to commemorate their successes, without +making them instrumental to the increase of their domination. After this +time campaigns seem frequently to have been undertaken from motives of +emulation, and for the purpose of affording them opportunities for a +display of their prowess, and giving vent to their military ardour. They +considered an irruption on the hostile territory, or an attack on a +town, in the light of a tournament. The Christians, on the contrary, +fought with a view to exterminate, and without ever losing sight of +their main object--the expulsion of the Arabs and Moors from the +Peninsula. It was thus that they ultimately succeeded--a result they +probably would not have attained, had the Moorish leaders been actuated +by similar views, and displayed less forbearance. + +Much of the misapprehension which exists in Europe respecting this race +is attributable to the exaggerations of writers; much more to the +absence of reflection in readers, and to the almost universal practice +of bringing every act related of personages inhabiting remote and +half-known climes, to the test of the only customs and manners with +which we are familiar, and which we consider, for no other reason, +superior to all others--making no allowance for difference of education, +climate, tradition, race. An European, subjected to a similar process of +criticism, on the part of an inhabitant of the East, would certainly not +recognise his own portrait--a new disposition of light bearing upon +peculiarities, the existence of which had hitherto been unsuspected by +their owner; and he would manifest a surprise as unfeigned, as a +Frenchman once expressed in my hearing, on finding himself in a +situation almost parallel. Conversing on the subject of a play, acted +in Paris, in which an Englishman cut a ridiculous figure--a lady present +remarked, that, no doubt, in the London theatres the French were not +spared; upon which the Frenchman I allude to--a person possessed of +superior intelligence--exclaimed: "How could that be, since there was +nothing about a Frenchman that could be laughed at?" + +On reading of a reprehensible act attributed to a Mahometan, some will +brand Mahometanism in general, and of all times and places, with the +commission of the like crimes, placing the event at a distance of a +thousand leagues, or of a thousand years from its real place and date: +forgetting that power has been abused under all religions; and that we +only hear one side of the question with respect to all that relates to +the Oriental races--our information only reaching us through the medium +of writers of different and hostile faith. It is a singular fact that +the popular terror, which so long attached itself to the idea of a +Saracen, and which derived its origin from the conquests of the +Mahometans, has its equivalent in certain Mahometan countries. In some +parts of the empire of Morocco, the idea of a Christian is that of a +ruffian of immense stature and terrific features; calculated to inspire +the utmost fear in the breasts of all who approach him. Such is their +notion of his ferocity, that one of the emperors, Muley Ismael, in order +to terrify his refractory subjects into obedience, was in the habit of +threatening to have them eaten up by the Christians. + +From the inferior value set on human life by the races of the East, we +accuse them of barbarity: forgetting, that, owing to the absence of all +analogy between our origin, races, and education, we are incompetent to +appreciate their feelings, and the motives of their conduct, and have +consequently no right to condemn them. If we abstain from taking our +neighbour's life, we set also a proportionate value on our own: a native +of the East displays, it is true, less veneration for his own species. +Deeply impressed with the dogmas of his religion, which form the guide +of his every day life, the habit of acting up to the doctrines which he +has been taught to believe, diminishes his estimate of the value of +temporal life, whether that of others, or his own, which he exposes on +occasions on which we should not be inclined to do so. He does not take +life for cruelty's sake, nor without provocation. Were he to be +furnished with Arabian accounts of the treatment of a London or Paris +hackney-coach horse, he would think of the noble and friendly animal +which carries him to battle, and turn in disgust from such a page. + +The system practised at Constantinople of nailing to his door-post the +ear of the culprit detected in the employment of false weights, is, no +doubt, very discordant with our customs; but this mode of punishment is +said to be attended with such success, as to do away almost entirely +with the occasion for it. Were it adopted in some other capitals, it +would certainly at first disfigure many a neatly adorned entrance, and +give additional occupation to painters; but the result might possibly be +a more universal observance of the injunction contained in the eighth +commandment. As far as regards the Arabs of Spain, it may be securely +affirmed, that, during the course of their triumphs, and long before +they had attained their highest civilization, no cruelties were +exercised by them, which came near to the barbarity of those practised +subsequently by their Christian adversaries on victims of a different +creed, when in their power. We may instance the example set by St. +Ferdinand, who, it is said, when burning some Moors, piously stirred up +the fire himself in the public place of Palencia. + +It cannot, however, be denied that cases of cruelty have occurred, and +are related in history of the Arabs, although they are rare among those +of Spain; but, if cruel, the Arab never added hypocrisy to his cruelty. +After having ravaged all Andalucia with fire and famine, St. Ferdinand +formed the project of proceeding to Africa the following year, in order +to attack the inhabitants of that country. His death interrupted the +course of these humane projects. Being dropsical, and feeling his end +approaching, he called for his son Alphonso, afterwards his successor, +to whom this prince--cut off in the midst of his thirsty longings for +blood and slaughter--is related to have given "the counsels, which the +sentiments of piety, justice, and love for mankind, with which he was +filled, inspired so great a monarch." + +As for the degenerate modern tribes, descendants of some of the most +civilized of former days, we have witnessed their contest, _pro aris et +focis_, during the last few years, against a sample of the Christians of +to-day: the mode of making war is perfectly similar on both sides. + +It is a no less curious _travers_ of human nature, from its being an +almost universal one--that of which the modern Spaniards afford an +example. They apply the term "barbarians" to the descendants of their +Moorish compatriots, although they themselves have scarcely advanced a +step in civilization since the day that, in the public place of Granada, +Ferdinand the Catholic burned one million five thousand Arab books, +being all he could collect throughout Spain; showing what tremendous +power may be wielded by a single human hand, when applied to the task of +undoing. That King, by a single signature, accomplished an act which may +be considered as equivalent to retarding, by several centuries, the +civilization of a great country,--perhaps, even, to cutting it off from +the only opportunity it was destined to possess, during the present +ages, of arriving at the summit which the more privileged nations are +permitted to attain; while it influenced injuriously the progress of +letters, science, and art throughout Europe. But we will no longer allow +digressions to delay our visit to the Alcazar, where we shall find +visible proof of Arab superiority, at least, in architectural science +and invention. + +Passing to the east of the cathedral through the large open space, on +the left of which is the Archbishop's palace, and on the right the +cathedral and exchange, the embattled outer walls of the Alcazar stop +the view in front; varied here and there with square towers, and +containing in the centre an arched entrance. The present buildings +occupy the south-eastern corner of the ancient enclosure of the royal +residence, which comprised all the remaining space as far as the banks +of the river, passing round the south side of the cathedral, and, in +fact, including it in its precincts--an enclosure of about a mile and +a half in circumference. An old tower, or scrap of wall, indicates here +and there the position of the ancient buildings, the site of which is +now occupied by two or three _plazuelas_, or squares, and several +streets communicating between them. The present palace scarcely covers a +third of the original extent. + +[Illustration: FACADE OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.] + +Having passed through the first entrance, you are in a large square, +surrounded with buildings without ornament, and used at present as +government offices. At the opposite side another archway passes under +the buildings, and leads to a second large court. This communicates on +the left with one or two others; one of these is rather ornamental, and +in the Italian style, surrounded by an arcade supported on double +columns, and enclosing a garden sunk considerably below the level of the +ground. This court is approached by a covered passage, leading, as +already mentioned, from the left side of the second large square, the +south side of which--the side opposite to that on which we +entered--consists of the facade and portal of the inner palace of +all;--the Arab ornamental portion, the residence of the royal person. + +At the right-hand extremity of this front is the entrance to the first +floor, approached by a staircase, which occupies part of the building on +that side of the square, and which contains the apartments of the +governor. The staircase is open to the air, and is visible through a +light arcade. The centre portal of this facade is ornamented, from the +ground to the roof, with rich tracery, varied by a band of blue and +white _azulejos_, and terminating in an advancing roof of carved cedar. +Right and left, the rest of the front consists of a plain wall up to the +first floor, on which small arcades, of a graceful design, enclose +retreating balconies and windows. + +Entering through the centre door, a magnificent apartment has been +annihilated by two white partitions, rising from the ground to the +ceiling, and dividing it into three portions, the centre one forming the +passage which leads from the entrance to the principal court. Several of +the apartments are thus injured, owing to the palace being occasionally +used as a temporary lodging for the court. Passing across the degraded +hall, a magnificent embroidered arch--for the carving with which it is +covered more resembles embroidery than any other ornament--gives access +to the great court. + +It is difficult to ascertain what portion of this palace belongs to the +residence of the Moorish Kings, as Pedro the Cruel had a considerable +portion of it rebuilt by Moorish architects in the same style. The still +more recent additions are easily distinguished. One of them, in this +part of the edifice, is a gallery, erected by Charles the Fifth, over +the arcades of the great court. This gallery one would imagine to have +been there placed with a view to demonstrate the superiority of Arab art +over every other. It is conceived in the most elegant Italian style, and +executed in white marble; but, compared with the fairy arcades which +support it, it is clumsiness itself. The court is paved with white +marble slabs, and contains in the centre a small basin of the same +material, of chaste and simple form, once a fountain. The arcades are +supported on pairs of columns, measuring about twelve diameters in +height, and of equal diameter throughout. The capitals are in imitation +of the Corinthian. The entire walls, over and round the arches, are +covered with deep tracery in stucco; the design of which consists of +diamond-shaped compartments, formed by lines descending from the +cornice, and intersecting each other diagonally. These are indented in +small curves, four to each side of the diamond. In each centre is a +shell, surrounded by fanciful ornaments. The same design is repeated on +the inside of the walls, that is, under the arcade, but only on the +outer wall; and this portion of the court is covered with a +richly-ornamented ceiling of Alerce, in the manner called _artesonado_. + +On the opposite side of the court to that on which we entered, another +semicircular arch, of equal richness, leads to a room extending the +whole length of the court, and similar in form to that situated at the +entrance, possessing also an ornamental ceiling, but plainer walls. The +left and right sides of the court are shorter than the others. In the +centre of the left side, a deep alcove is formed in the wall, probably +occupied in former times by a sofa or throne: at present it is empty, +with the exception, in one corner, of a dusty collection of _azulejos_ +fallen from the walls, and exposing to temptation the itching palms of +enthusiasts. At the opposite end a large arch, admirably carved, and +containing some superb old cedar doors, leads to the Hall of +Ambassadors. This apartment is a square of about thirty-three feet, by +nearly sixty in height. It is also called the _media naranja_ +(half-orange), from the form of its ceiling. + +[Illustration: GREAT COURT OF THE ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.] + +In the centre of each side is an entrance, that from the court consists +of the arch just mentioned, forming a semicircle with the extremities +prolonged in a parallel direction. Those of the three other sides are +each composed of three arches of the horse-shoe form, or three-quarters +of a circle, and supported by two columns of rare marbles and jasper +surmounted by gilded capitals. The walls are entirely covered with +elegant designs, executed in stucco, the effect of which suffers from +a series of small arches, running round the upper part of the room, +having been deprived of their tracery to make room for the painted heads +(more or less resembling) of the kings of Spain, Goths and their +successors, excepting the Arabs and Moors. This degradation is, however, +forgotten from the moment the eye is directed to the ceiling. + +In the Arab architecture, the ornament usually becomes more choice, as +it occupies a higher elevation; and the richest and most exquisite +labours of the artist are lavished on the ceilings. The designs are +complicated geometrical problems, by means of which the decorators of +that nation of mathematicians and artists attained to a perfection of +ornament unapproached by any other style. From the cornice of this room +rise clusters of diminutive gilded semi-cupolas, commencing by a single +one, upon which two are supported, and multiplying so rapidly as they +rise, some advancing, others retreating, and each resting on a shoulder +of one below, that, by the time they reach the edge of the great cupola, +they appear to be countless. The ornament of this dome consists of +innumerable gilt projecting bands, of about two inches in width; these +intersect each other in an infinite profusion of curves, as they stretch +over the hemispherical space. The artist, who would make a pencil +sketch of this ceiling, should be as deep a geometrician as the +architect who designed it. + +On quitting the Hall of Ambassadors, we arrive at the best part of the +building. Passing through the arcade at the right-hand side, a long +narrow apartment is crossed, which opens on a small court called the +Court of Dolls (Patio de los Mucenas). No description, no painting can +do justice to this exquisite little enclosure. You stand still, gazing +round until your delight changes into astonishment at such an effect +being produced by immoveable walls and a few columns. A space, of about +twenty feet by thirty,--in which ten small pillars, placed at +corresponding but unequal distances, enclose a smaller quadrangle, and +support, over a series of different sized arches, the upper walls,--has +furnished materials to the artist for the attainment of one of the most +successful results in architecture. The Alhambra has nothing equal to +it. Its two large courts surpass, no doubt, in beauty the principal +court of this palace; but, as a whole, this residence, principally from +its being in better preservation and containing more, is superior to +that of Granada, always excepting the advantage derived from the +picturesque site of the latter. The Court of Dolls, at all events, is +unrivalled. + +[Illustration: COURT OF DOLLS, ALCAZAR, SEVILLE.[10]] + +The architect made here a highly judicious use of some of the best +gleanings from Italica, consisting of a few antique capitals, which, +being separated from their shafts, have been provided with others, +neither made for them, nor even fitted to them. The pillars are small, +and long for their diameter, with the exception of the four which occupy +the angles, which are thicker and all white. The rest are of different +coloured marbles, and all are about six feet in height. The capitals are +of still smaller proportions; so that at the junction they do not cover +the entire top of the shaft. This defect, from what cause it is +difficult to explain, appears to add to their beauty. + +The capitals are exquisitely beautiful. One in particular, apparently +Greek, tinged by antiquity with a slight approach to rose colour, is +shaped, as if carelessly, at the will of the sculptor; and derives from +its irregularly rounded volutes and uneven leaves, an inconceivable +grace. The arches are of various shapes, that is, of three different +shapes and dimensions, and whether more care, or better materials were +employed in the tracery of the walls in this court, or for whatever +other reason, it is in better preservation than the other parts of the +palace. It has the appearance of having been newly executed in hard +white stone. + +Through the Court of Dolls you pass into an inner apartment, to which it +is a worthy introduction. This room has been selected in modern times, +as being the best in the palace, for the experiment of restoring the +ceiling. The operation has been judiciously executed, and produces an +admirable effect. The design of this ceiling is the most tasteful of the +whole collection. Six or seven stars placed at equal distances from each +other, form centres, from which, following the direction of the sides of +their acute angles, depart as many lines; that is, two from each point; +or, supposing the star to have twelve points--twenty-four from each +star: but these lines soon change their directions, and intersecting +each other repeatedly, form innumerable small inclosures of an hexagonal +shape. The lines are gilt. Each hexagonal compartment rises in relief of +about an inch and a half from the surface, and is ornamented with a +flower, painted in brilliant colours on a dark ground. + +The room is twenty-four feet in height by only sixteen wide, and between +sixty and seventy in length. At the two ends, square spaces are +separated from the centre portion by a wall, advancing about two feet +from each side, and supporting an arch, extending across the entire +width. These arches were probably furnished with curtains, which +separated at will the two ends from the principal apartment, and +converted them into sleeping retreats. Their ornaments are still more +choice than those of the centre. With the exception of this room, all +the principal apartments, and the two courts, are decorated from the +ground upwards to a height of about five feet, with the _azulejos_, or +mosaic of porcelain tiles, the colours of which never lose their +brilliancy. + +The first floor is probably an addition made entirely subsequently to +the time of the Moors. It contains several suites of plain white-washed +rooms, and only two ornamental apartments, probably of Don Pedro's time. +These are equal to those on the ground floor with respect to the tracery +of the walls, unfortunately almost filled with white-wash; but their +ceilings are plainer. There is a gallery over the Court of Dolls, of a +different sort from the rest, but scarcely inferior in beauty to any +part of the edifice. The pillars, balustrades, and ceilings, are of +wood. + +One of the last mentioned apartments has an advantage over all the rest +of the palace, derived from its position. It opens on a terrace looking +over the antique gardens,--a view the most charming and original that +can be imagined. This room must be supposed to have been the boudoir of +Maria Padilla,--the object of the earliest and most durable of Pedro's +attachments; whose power over him outlived the influence of all his +future liaisons. It is indeed probable that the taste for this +residence, and the creation of a large portion of its beauties, are to +be attributed to the mistress, rather than to a gloomy and bloodthirsty +king, as Pedro is represented to have been, and whose existence was +totally unsuited to such a residence. In the Court of Dolls the portion +of pavement is pointed out on which his brother Don Fadrique fell, +slaughtered, as some say, by Pedro's own hand,--at all events in his +presence, and by his order. + +This monarch, were his palace not sufficient to immortalize him, would +have a claim to immortality, as having ordered more executions than all +the other monarchs who ever ruled in Spain, added together. It appears +to have been a daily necessity for him; but he derived more than +ordinary satisfaction when an opportunity could be obtained of ordering +an archbishop to the block. The see of Toledo became under him the most +perilous post in the kingdom, next to that of his own relatives: but he +occasionally extended the privilege to other archbishopricks. It is a +relief to meet with a case of almost merited murder in so sanguinary a +list. Such may be termed the adventure of an innocent man, who, seeing +before him a noose which closes upon everything which approaches it, +carefully inserts his neck within the circumference. + +This was the case of a monk, who, hearing that Pedro, during one of his +campaigns, was encamped in a neighbouring village, proceeded thither, +and demanded an audience. His request being immediately granted, no +doubt in the expectation of some valuable information respecting the +enemy's movements, the holy man commenced an edifying discourse, in +which he informed Don Pedro, that the venerabilissimo San Somebody (the +saint of his village) had passed a considerable time with him in his +dream of the previous night: that his object in thus miraculously +waiting upon him was, to request he would go to his Majesty, and tell +him, that, owing to the unpardonable disorders of his life, it was +determined he should lose the approaching battle. It was the unhappy +friar's last sermon; for in less than five minutes he had ceased to +exist. + +It stands to reason, that, owing to the retired habits of this friar, a +certain anecdote had never reached his ear relative to another member of +a religious fraternity. At a period that had not long preceded the event +just related, the misconduct of this sovereign had drawn down upon him +the displeasure of the head of the church.[11] The thunderbolt was +already forged beneath the arches of the Vatican; but a serious +difficulty presented itself. The culprit was likely to turn upon the +hand employed in inflicting the chastisement. At length a young monk, +known to a member of the holy synod as a genius of promise, energetic +and fertile in resources, was made choice of, who unhesitatingly +undertook the mission. He repaired to Seville, and after a few days' +delay, employed in combining his plan of operation, he got into a boat, +furnished with two stout rowers, and allowing the current to waft him +down the Guadalquivir, until he arrived opposite a portion of the bank +known to be the daily resort of the King, he approached the shore, and +waited his opportunity. + +At the accustomed hour the royal cavalcade was seen to approach; when, +standing up in the boat, which was not allowed to touch the shore, he +made signs that he would speak to the party. The monkish costume +commanded respect even from royalty, and Don Pedro reined in his horse. +The monk then inquired whether it would gratify his Majesty to listen to +the news of certain remarkable occurrences that had taken place in the +East, from which part of the world he had just arrived. The King +approached, and ordered him to tell his story: upon which he unrolled +the fatal document, and with all possible rapidity of enunciation read +it from beginning to end. + +Before it was concluded, the King had drawn his sword, and spurred his +horse to the brink of the water; but at his first movement the boat had +pushed off,--the reader still continuing his task,--so that by the time +Pedro found himself completely excommunicated, his rage passing all +bounds, he had dashed into the water, directing a sabre cut, which only +reached the boat's stern. He still, however, spurred furiously on, and +compelled his horse to swim a considerable distance; until, the animal +becoming exhausted, he only regained the shore after being in serious +danger of drowning. It may easily be imagined that the papal messenger, +satisfied with his success, avoided the contact of terra firma, until he +found himself clear of Pedro's dominions. + +Quitting the room--that of Maria Padilla (according to my conjecture) by +the door which leads to the terrace, you look down on a square portion +of ground, partitioned off from the rest by walls, against which +orange-trees are trained like our wall-fruit trees, only so thickly that +no part of the masonry is visible. All the walls in the garden are thus +masked by a depth of about eight inches of leaves evenly clipped. In the +fruit season the effect is admirable. The small square portions next to +the palace thus partitioned off are laid out in flower-beds, separated +by walks of mixed brick and porcelain, all of which communicate with +fountains in the centres. The fountains, simple and destitute of the +usual classical menagerie of marine zoology and gods and goddesses, +whose cooeperation is so indispensable in most European gardens to the +propulsion of each curling thread or gushing mass of the cold +element,--derive all their charm from the purity and taste displayed in +their design. One of the most beautiful of them consists merely of a +raised step, covered with _azulejos_, enclosing a space of an hexagonal +form, in the centre of which the water rises from a small block of +corresponding form and materials. The mosaic is continued outside the +step, but covers only a narrow space. + +[Illustration: FOUNTAINS AT THE ALCAZAR.] + +The terrace stretches away to the left as far as the extremity of the +buildings, the facade of which is hollowed out into a series of +semicircular alcoves; there being no doors nor windows, with the +exception of the door of the room through which we issued. The alcoves +are surrounded with seats, and form so many little apartments, untenable +during the summer, as they look to the south, but forming excellent +winter habitations. Arrived at the extremity of the palace front, the +promenade may be continued at the same elevation down another whole side +of the gardens, along a terrace of two stories, which follows the outer +enclosure. This terrace is very ornamental. From the ground up to a +third of its height, its front is clothed with the orange-tree, in the +same manner as the walls already described. Immediately above runs a +rustic story of large projecting stones, which serves as a basement for +the covered gallery, or lower of the two walks. This gallery is closed +on the outside, which is part of the town wall. The front or garden side +is composed of a series of rustic arches, alternately larger and +smaller, formed of rugged stones, such as are used for grottoes, and of +a dark brown colour--partly natural, partly painted. + +The arches are supported by marble columns, or rather fragments of +columns,--all the mutilated antique trunks rummaged out of Italica. For +a shaft of insufficient length a piece is found of the dimensions +required to make up the deficiency, and placed on its top without mortar +or cement. Some of the capitals are extremely curious. Among them almost +every style may be traced, from the Hindoo to the Composite: but no one +is entire, nor matched with any part of the column it was originally +destined to adorn. Over this gallery is the open terrace, which +continues that of the palace side on the same level. The view extends in +all directions, including the gardens and the surrounding country; for +we are here at the extremity of the town. At the furthest end the +edifice widens, and forms an open saloon, surrounded with seats, +glittering with the bright hues of the _azulejos_. + +From these terraces you look down on the portion of the garden in which +the royal arms are represented, formed with myrtle-hedges. Eagles, +lions, castellated towers,--all are accurately delineated. Myrtle-hedges +are also used in all parts of the gardens as borders to the walks. It is +a charming evening's occupation to wander through the different +enclosures of these gardens, which, although not very extensive, are +characterised by so much that is uncommon in their plan and ornaments, +that the lounger is never weary of them. Nor is the visible portion of +their attractions more curious than the hidden sources of amusement +and--ablution, by means of which an uninitiated wanderer over these +china-paved walks, may be unexpectedly, and more than necessarily +refreshed. By means of a handle, concealed--here in the lungs of some +bathing Diana in the recesses of her grotto--here in the hollow of a +harmless looking stone--an entire line of walk is instantaneously +converted into a stage of hydraulics--displaying to the spectator a long +line of embroidery, composed of thousands of silver threads sparkling in +the sunshine, as issuing from unseen apertures in the pavement they +cross each other at a height of a few feet from the ground, forming an +endless variety of graceful curves. Almost all the walks are sown with +these _burladores_, as they are termed. + +A large portion of the grounds consists of an orange-grove, varied with +sweet lemon-trees. The trees are sufficiently near to each other to +afford universal shade, without being so thickly planted as to interfere +with the good-keeping of the grass, nor with the movement of promenading +parties. In the centre of this grove is a beautiful edifice,--a square +pavilion entirely faced, within and without, with the _azulejos_, with +the exception only of the roof. Around it is a colonnade of white +marble, enclosing a space raised two feet above the ground, and +surrounded by a seat of the same mosaic. The interior is occupied by a +table, surrounded with seats. + +The subterranean baths, called the baths of Maria Padilla, are entered +from the palace end of the garden. They extend to a considerable +distance under the palace, and must during the summer heats, have been a +delightfully cool retreat. + +This _alcazar_ is probably the best specimen of a Moorish residence +remaining in Europe. The Alhambra would, no doubt, have surpassed it, +but for the preference accorded by the Emperor, Charles the Fifth, to +its situation over that of Seville: owing to which he contented himself +with building a gallery over the principal court at the latter; while at +Granada, he destroyed a large portion of the old buildings, which he +replaced by an entire Italian palace. At present the ornamented +apartments of the Seville palace are more numerous, and in better +preservation than those of the Alhambra. + +Both, however, would have been thrown into the shade, had any +proportionate traces existed of the palace of Abderahman the Third, in +the environs of Cordova. Unfortunately nothing of this remains but the +description. It is among the few Arab manuscripts which escaped the +colossal _auto-da-fe_ of Ferdinand and Isabella, and would appear too +extravagant to merit belief, but for the known minuteness and accuracy +of the Arab writers, proved by their descriptions of the palaces and +other edifices which remain to afford the test of comparison. + +The immense wealth lavished by these princes, must also be taken into +consideration, and especially by the Caliphs of Cordova, who possessed a +far more extended sway than belonged to the subsequent dynasties of +Seville and Granada. According to a custom prevalent at their court, +rich presents were offered to the sovereign on various occasions. Among +others, governors of provinces, on their nomination, seldom neglected +this practical demonstration of gratitude. This practice is to this day +observed at the court of the Turkish Sultan, and serves to swell the +treasury in no small degree. Abderahman the Third, having granted a +government to the brother of his favourite, Ahmed ben Sayd, the two +brothers joined purses, and offered a present made up of the following +articles--accompanied by delicate and ingenious compliments in verse, +for the composition of which they employed the most popular poet of the +day:--Four hundred pounds weight of pure gold; forty thousand sequins in +ingots of silver; four hundred pounds of aloes; five hundred ounces of +amber; three hundred ounces of camphor; thirty pieces of tissue of gold +and silk; a hundred and ten fine furs of Khorasan; forty-eight +caparisons of gold and silk, woven at Bagdad; four thousand pounds of +silk in balls; thirty Persian carpets; eight hundred suits of armour; a +thousand shields; a hundred thousand arrows; fifteen Arabian, and a +hundred Spanish horses, with their trappings and equipments; sixty young +slaves--forty male, and twenty female. + +The palace near Cordova, erected by this sovereign, was called Azarah +(the Flower) after the name of his favourite mistress. Its materials +consisted entirely of marble and cedar wood; and it contained four +thousand three hundred columns. It was sufficiently spacious to lodge +the whole court, besides a guard of cavalry. The gardens, as was usual +with the Arabs, formed the part of the residence on which were lavished +the greatest treasures of wealth, and the choicest inventions of taste. +The fountains were endless in number and variety. On one of the most +picturesque spots was situated an edifice called the Caliph's Pavilion. +It consisted of a circular gallery of white marble columns with gilded +capitals; in the centre rose a fountain of quicksilver, imitating all +the movements of water, and glittering in the sun with a brightness too +dazzling for the eye to support. Several of the saloons of this palace +were ornamented with fountains. In one, which bore the name of the +Caliph's Saloon, a fountain of jasper contained in the centre a golden +swan of beautiful workmanship--and over it hung from the ceiling a +pearl, which had been sent from Constantinople as a present from the +Greek Emperor to Abderahman. The mosque of this palace surpassed in +riches, although not in size, the Aljama of Cordova. + +These were monuments worthy to have kings and caliphs for architects, +for such they had. There is no doubt that the palace of Azahrah was +planned and designed by the Caliph himself; and the founder of that +dynasty, Abderahman the First, not only designed the magnificent mosque +of Cordova, but presided daily over the progress of its erection. +Possessed, as these sovereigns were, as well as all the well-born +portion of their nation, of a highly cultivated education, the intervals +of leisure, left them by war, were rarely thrown away in idleness. +Abderahman the First was a poet, besides being a mathematician, an +architect, and the first soldier of his time. Some of his writings have +been preserved, and are among the Arab works collected and translated by +Conde into Spanish. The following stanzas, addressed to a palm-tree, +must be, as is always the case, still more beautiful in the original, +although charming in the Spanish. The monarch of the Western Empire, +after having vanquished his enemies, and pacified his dominions,--beloved +by his subjects and by all who approached him, and possessed of the +resources of science to occupy his mind, was nevertheless unhappy. He +preferred his home in Asia to the splendours of an imperial throne in +such a land as Andalucia. He caused a young palm-tree to be brought from +Syria, and planted in a garden formed by him in the environs of Cordova; +and it was his delight to sit in a tower constructed in the garden, and +gaze at his tree. + +It was to this tree he addressed the lines thus translated:-- + + Tu tambien, insigne palma, + Eres aqui forastera. + De Algarbe las dulces auras + Tu pompa halagan y besan. + En fecundo suelo arraigas, + Y al cielo tu cima elevas, + Tristes lagrimas lloraras, + Si qual io sentir pudieras. + + Tu no sientes contratiempos + Como io de suerte aviesa: + A mi de pena y dolor + Continuas lluvias me annegan. + Con mis lagrimas regue + Las palmas que el Forat riega, + Pero las palmas y el rio + Se olvidan de mis penas. + + Cuando mios infaustos hados, + Y de Al. Abas la fiereza + Mi forzaron de dexar + Del alma las dulces prendas; + A ti de mi patria amada + Ningun recuerda ti queda; + Pero io, triste, no puedo + Dexar de llorar por ella. + +It is probable that on the occasion of the surrender of Cordova to +Ferdinand the Third, the Moors destroyed their palace of Azarah, since +they were desirous of acting in a similar manner at Seville, with regard +to Geber's Tower. Perhaps from disgust at the idea that a monument, the +beauty and grandeur of which had inspired them with a sort of affection, +would be, being gazed at, trodden, and possibly disfigured, (as it +turned out) by those whom they looked upon as barbarians, and who would +not appreciate its perfection, they attempted to introduce a clause into +the conditions of the surrender of Seville, stipulating the destruction +of the tower. + +By way of testifying to the accuracy of the opinion they had formed of +their adversaries, Saint Ferdinand was on the point of agreeing to the +clause: when his son, afterwards his successor, Alonso el Sabio, perhaps +the only Christian present, who felt sufficient interest in a square +mass of masonry, to care how the question was decided, energetically +interfered, affirming that a single brick displaced, should be paid with +the lives of the whole population. + +This most perfect scientific monument left by the Arabs, for the +possession of which, after the architect, Europe is indebted to Alonso +the Tenth, we will presently examine, together with the cathedral, which +was afterwards erected, so as to include it in his plan. + + + + +LETTER XIX + +CATHEDRAL OF SEVILLE. + + +Seville. + +We have visited the most beautiful edifice in Seville; we are now +approaching the most magnificent. The native writers, participating +somewhat in the character attributed to the inhabitants of their +province, sometimes called the Gascony of Spain, declare this cathedral +to be the grandest in the world. This is going too far; setting aside +St. Peter's, and the Santa Maria del Fiore, the style of which renders +the comparison more difficult, the Duomo of Milan, of which this +building appears to be an imitation, must be allowed to be superior to +it, externally at least, if not internally. Had they ranked it as the +finest church out of Italy, they would not have been much in error, for +such it probably is. + +No one in approaching, excepting from the west, would imagine it to be a +Gothic edifice. You perceive an immense quadrangular enclosure, filled +apparently with cupolas, towers, pinnacles of all sorts and styles, but +less of the Gothic than any other. These belong to the numerous +accessory buildings, subsequently annexed to the church; such as +sacristies, chapels, chapter-hall, each subsequent erection having been +designed in a different style. The cathedral is inaccessible on the +south side, that which we first reach in coming from the Alcazar. It is +enclosed here within a long Italian facade of about thirty to forty feet +elevation, ornamented by a row of Ionic pilasters, supporting an elegant +frieze and balustrade. We therefore ascend the raised pavement, which, +bounded by a series of antique shafts of columns, surrounds the whole +enclosure; and having passed down the greater part of the east end, find +a small portal close to the Giralda, which admits to the church through +the court of orange-trees. Before we enter, we will look round on this +view, which possesses more of the Moorish character, than that which +awaits us in the interior. Some idea of the general plan of these +buildings will be necessary, in order that you may perfectly understand +our present point of view. + +I mentioned above, that the general enclosure formed a square. This +square, the sides of which face the four points of the compass, is +divided by a straight line into two unequal parts, one being about a +third wider than the other. The direction of the line is east and west; +to the south of it is the cathedral, to the north, the Moorish court of +orange-trees. The Arab Tower, now called the Giralda, stands in the +north-east angle of the cathedral, and the small door, through which we +have just entered, in the south-eastern angle of the court, is close by +it. + +The court is surrounded by buildings; for besides the church on its +south side, a chapel called the Sagrario, runs down the entire western +end. The east side and half the north are occupied by arcades, which +support the library, the gift of the son of Columbus to the cathedral; +and the remaining half side by a sacristy. The buildings of the east and +north sides lean against the old embattled wall on the outside. The +chapel of the Sagrario to the west is in the Italian style. Avenues of +orange-trees, and a marble fountain of a simple but choice design, are +the only objects which occupy the open space. Throughout it reigns an +eternal gloom, maintained by the frowning buttresses and pinnacles of +the cathedral, which overhang it from the south. + +[Illustration: INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL, SEVILLE.] + +A small doorway, near to that by which we entered the court, gives +access to the cathedral at all hours. On entering an almost more than +twilight would confuse the surrounding objects, did it immediately +succeed the sunshine of Andalucia; and were not the transition rendered +gradual to the eye by the deep shades of the orange court. As you +advance towards the centre nave, this darkness aids in producing the +effect of immensity, which is the next idea that presents itself. In +fact the enormous elevation and width of the edifice is such as at first +to overpower the imagination, and to deprive you of the faculty of +appreciating its dimensions. It produces a novel species of giddiness +arising from looking upwards. + +To arrive at the intersection of the principal nave and transept, you +traverse two side naves, both about eighty-five feet in height, and +spacious in proportion. The centre nave is a hundred and thirty-two +feet, but rises at the quadrangle, forming its intersection with the +transept about twenty feet higher. The ceiling here, and over the four +surrounding intercolumniations, is ornamented with a groining of +admirable richness. That of the centre quadrangle is here and there +tinged with crimson and orange tints, proceeding from some diminutive +windows placed between the lower and upper ceilings. + +After having sufficiently examined the upper view, the eye wanders over +the immense vacuum of the transept, and rests at length on the bronze +railings which, on the east, separate you from the high-altar, and on +the west from the choir. These are superb. + +That of the Capilla Mayor rises to an elevation of sixty feet, and is +throughout of the most elaborate workmanship. It is the work of a +Dominican monk, who also executed the two pulpits. The choir forms, as +usual, a sort of saloon, which occupies the centre of the church, that +is, in this instance, two of the five intercolumniations which reach +from the transept to the western portal. Passing round it, in the +direction of the western doors, where the view is more open, the plan +and style of the building are more easily distinguished. They are +remarkably simple. The area is a quadrangle of three hundred and +ninety-eight feet by two hundred and ninety-one, and is divided into +five naves by four rows of pillars, all of about sixty feet elevation. +The width of the centre nave and transept is fifty-nine feet, and the +whole is surrounded by chapels. The distance between the pillars, of +which there are only eight in each row, has the effect of generalizing +the view of the whole edifice, and imparting to it a grandeur which is +not obtained in the cathedral of Toledo, of almost equal dimensions; +while the smaller and less gaudily coloured windows shed a more +religious ray, and are preferable to those of Toledo, which, +magnificent in themselves, attract an undue share of the observation, +instead of blending into one perfect composition of architectural +harmony. + +Immediately above the arches of the principal nave and transept, at a +height of about ninety feet, runs a balustrade, the design of which +consists of a series of pointed arches. Above it are the windows, +reaching nearly to the ceiling. They are painted in rather dark tints, +and afford no more than a sort of _demi-jour_, which at the east end +decreases to twilight. Rather more light is admitted towards the western +extremity, from some windows of plain glass, in the lateral chapels, +without which the pictures they contain could not be viewed; but from +this end the high-altar is scarcely discernible. The simple grandeur of +this view loses nothing by the absence of all ornamental detail: the +portion most ornamented is the pavement, composed of a mosaic of the +richest marbles. About half-way between the portals and the choir, are +inserted two or three large slabs, bearing inscriptions; one of them is +to the memory of Christopher Columbus; another to his son. There are no +other details to draw the attention until we visit the chapels, in which +all the treasures of art are dispersed. A few pictures are scattered +here and there around the eastern part of the building; all of them are +good. A large one of Zurbaran, in the north transept, is a master-piece. +It represents St. Jerome, surrounded by an assembly of monks. + +At the west end of the northernmost nave, the first door opens to a vast +church, called the chapel of the Sagrario, already alluded to as forming +the western boundary of the orange-court. It is nearly two hundred feet +in length; in the Italian style; the orders Doric and Ionic, but loaded +with heavy sculpture in the worst taste. After this a series of chapels, +of a style analogous to the body of the edifice, succeed each other, +commencing with that of San Antonio, and continuing all round the +church. Several of them contain beautiful details of ornament, and +handsome tombs. That of the Kings should be mentioned as an exception, +with regard to the architecture, since its style is the _plateresco_. It +contains the tombs of Alonzo the Tenth, and his Queen Beatrix, with +several others. The most beautiful of these chapels is that of Nuestra +Senora la Antigua, situated on the south side, below the transept. It +forms a square of about thirty feet, and rises to an elevation of +upwards of eighty. The walls are divided into stories and compartments, +and covered, as is also the ceiling, with admirable frescos by Martinez +and Rovera. At a side door leading to the sacristy, are two beautiful +columns of _verde antico_. The high-altar is composed of jasper, from +quarries which existed at the distance of a few leagues from Seville. +The statues are by Pedro Cornejo; and there are handsome tombs let into +the lower part of the walls. Four antique chandeliers, one in each +corner, are designed with uncommon grace and originality. From the +summit of a short column rises a silver stem, from different parts of +which spring flat rods of the same metal, so slight as to bend with the +smallest weight: they are of various lengths, and at the extremity of +each waves an elegantly formed lamp. Each of these clusters assumes a +pyramidal form, and produces a charming effect when lighted up on days +of ceremony,--from their harmonizing with the rest of the decorations of +the chapel, no less than from the elegance of their form. + +Some of the chapels of this side, and east of the transept, communicate +with other buildings, erected subsequently to the principal edifice, and +consequently not comprised in its plan, nor analogous to its style. +Thus, after passing through the chapel called Del Mariscal, situated at +the south-east of the apse, you enter an anteroom, which leads to the +chapter-hall. The anteroom is an apartment of handsome proportions, +covered, in the intervals of a row of Ionic pilasters, with a series of +pieces of sculpture in white marble. The hall itself is magnificent. It +is an oval of fifty-seven feet in length, entirely hung with crimson +velvet enriched with gold embroidery. Another of the side chapels leads +to the smaller sacristy. I call it smaller because it is not so large as +that which adjoins the orange-court; but it is the principal of the two. +It is a superb saloon, upwards of seventy feet in length by about sixty +wide, ornamented with a profusion of rich sculpture. The architect was +Juan de Herrera. + +From the floor to a height of about four feet, a spacious wardrobe, +composed of large mahogany drawers, runs down the two longer sides of +the room. These contain probably the richest collection that exists of +gold and silver embroidered velvets and silks,--brocades--lace--scarfs +and mantles ornamented with precious stones: all these are the ornaments +belonging to altars and pulpits; robes, trains, and vestures of +different sorts, worn on occasions of ceremony by the principal +dignitaries. The cathedral of Seville is said to surpass all others in +these ornaments. + +In this sacristy are contained likewise the treasure of gold and silver +vessels, and basins; innumerable crosses, reliquaries, chalices, boxes, +and candlesticks; and, in an upright mahogany case of about twenty feet +elevation, lined with white silk, the front of which opens like a door, +stands the Custodia--a silver ornament about sixteen feet high, +including its base. On the day of the Corpus Christi, the Host is placed +in this Custodia, and carried in procession through Seville. The silver +of which it is composed weighs seven hundred weight. But it must not be +supposed from this circumstance that the ornament has a heavy +appearance. It is a tapering edifice containing four stories, ornamented +by as many orders of architecture. The general form is circular, +diminishing up to the summit, which supports a single statue. Each story +rests on twenty-four columns, most of which are fluted, and all, +together with their capitals, remarkable for their delicacy of finish. +Among these are numerous statues of saints, in whose costumes precious +stones are introduced. In that of the statue of Faith, which stands in +the centre of the lower story, are some of immense value. This ornament +was the work of Juan de Arfe, the Cellini of Spain. + +But the pictures are the richest treasure of this apartment. It is an +epitome of the Cathedral, which may be called a gallery--one of the +richest that exists--of the paintings of Spanish schools: consequently, +according to the opinion of many--one of the best of all galleries. The +pictures are not in great numbers, but they are well adapted to their +situation, being the largest in dimension, and among the most prominent +in value and merit, that have been produced by their respective +painters. + +By the greater portion of spectators, the Spanish artists, of what may +be called the golden age of painting, will always be preferred to the +Italian; because their manner of treating their subject, appeals rather +to the passions than to the understanding. It is the same quality which +renders the Venetian school more popular than the other schools of +Italy; and the Italian music more attractive than the German--Rossini +than Spohr or Beethoven. I do not mean that the preference will be the +result of choice, in an individual who appreciates the two styles +perfectly; but that the difference I allude to renders the works of the +greatest masters of Italy less easily understood. + +With all the intelligence and taste necessary for the appreciation of a +picture of Raffaelle, many will have had a hundred opportunities of +studying such a picture, and will nevertheless have passed it by, +scarcely noticed; merely, because on the first occasion of seeing it, +they have not immediately caught the idea of the artist, nor entered +sufficiently into his feelings to trace the sparks of his inspiration +scattered over the canvass. How many are there too careless to return to +the charge, and thus to acquire the cultivation necessary to enable them +to judge of such works, who the moment a Murillo, or a Zurbaran meets +their view, will gaze on it with delight, for the simple reason, that it +is calculated to strike the intelligence the least cultivated. + +The Spanish artists usually endeavoured to produce an exact imitation of +material nature; while the Italians aimed at, and attained higher +results. The object of the Spaniards being less difficult of attainment, +the perfection with which they imitated nature passes conception. To +that they devoted all the energies of their genius; while you may search +in vain in the best productions of Italy, not excepting the school of +Venice, the one that most resembles the Spanish,--for anything +approaching their success in that respect. By way of an example, in the +Spasimo of Raffaelle, we trace the operations of the mind, as they +pierce through every feature of every countenance, and the attitude of +every limb throughout the grouping of that great master-piece of +expression; from the brutal impatience of the one, and the involuntary +compassion of the other executioner, up to the intensity of maternal +suffering in the Virgin, and the indescribable combination of heaven and +earth, which beams through the unequalled head of the Christ; but there +is no deception to the eye. No one would mistake any of the figures for +reality; nor exclaim that it steps from the canvass; nor does any one +wish for such an effect, or perceive any such deficiency. + +What, on the contrary, was the exclamation of Murillo before Campana's +Descent from the Cross? This master-piece of Pedro de Campana is seen at +the head of the sacristy of the cathedral. It was so favourite a picture +with Murillo, that he used to pass much of his time every day, seated +before it. On one occasion, his presence being required on an affair of +importance, which he had forgotten, his friends found him at his usual +post before the Descent; when, pointing to the figure of the Christ, he +replied to their remonstrances, "I am only waiting until they have taken +him down." + +Although Murillo admired this perfect representation of material nature, +his own works are exceptions, in fact almost the only exceptions, to +this peculiarity of the Spanish masters. He partakes, indeed, of the +qualities of both schools in an eminent degree. In intellectual +expression and delineation of the operations of the mind, he is superior +to all his countrymen, but inferior to the first Italian painters. In +the material imitation of nature, he is superior to the greater number +of the Italians, but inferior to the other principal Spanish artists. +There is, at Madrid, a Christ on the Cross, of his, in which he has +attempted this effect--an effort he ought rather to have despised. The +picture contains no other object than the figure, and the cross of +admirably imitated wood, on a simple black, or rather dark brown +background, representing complete darkness. After sitting a short time +before it, you certainly feel a sort of uncomfortable sensation, caused +by the growing reality of the pale and tormented carcass; but it is not +to be compared to the Descent of Campana. There the whole group is to +the life, and no darkness called in to aid the effect. The drooping body +is exposed to a powerful light, and hangs its leaden weight on the arms +of those who support it, with a reality perfectly startling. + +This picture is placed in the centre of the upper end of the sacristy, +as being considered the best of those therein contained: but it is not +without rivals. The few paintings placed here are first rate; +particularly the portraits of the two archbishops of Seville, San +Leandro, and San Isidore--two of Murillo's most exquisite productions. +Some of the greatest compositions of this painter are contained in the +chapels we have passed in review, where they serve for altar-pieces, +each filling an entire side of a chapel. Of these large pictures, I +think the best on the side we are visiting is the Saint Francis. The +Saint is represented kneeling to a vision of the Virgin. It may +certainly be ranked among Murillo's best efforts in the style he +employed, when treating these celestial subjects, and which has been +called his vaporous manner. To speak correctly, two of his three manners +are employed in this picture, since the Saint is an instance of that +called his warm manner. + +On the opposite or north side of the cathedral, in the first chapel +after passing the door of the Sagrario, is the San Antonio. This is +probably the greatest work of Murillo in the two styles just mentioned, +and certainly the most magnificent picture contained in the cathedral. +On the lower foreground is the Saint, in adoration before the Christ, +who appears in the centre, surrounded by the Heavenly Host. + +No one but Murillo could ever have thus embodied his conception of a +supernatural vision. On sitting down before this canvass, from which, as +it extends across the whole chapel, no other object can draw off the +attention, you speedily yield to the irresistible power of abstraction, +and are lost in an ecstacy, nearly resembling that which the artist has +sought to represent in the countenance and attitude of his Saint. The +eye wanders in a sort of trance through the glorious assemblage of +Heaven. The whole scene looks real: but it is only on taking time to +study the details that you discover the prodigies of talent displayed in +the drawing and finishing of this picture. An angel, suspended in front +of the lower portion of the group, more especially attracts the +attention. One leg is extended towards the spectator, the foreshortening +of which is a marvel of execution. + +Over the San Antonio, as it does not reach to the ceiling, there is a +smaller picture, representing the Baptism of Christ, also by Murillo. In +a chapel at the south-west angle of the church, there are several fine +paintings by Luis de Vargas, one of the founders of the school of +Seville. + +In the choir, the collection of books for the chanting services is worth +seeing. Of these immense folios, enclosed in massive covers, bound with +a profusion of wrought metal mostly silver--may be counted upwards of a +hundred. They are filled with paintings, infinite in minuteness and +beauty. For the performances of the daily services and all duties, +ordinary and extraordinary, within this edifice, more than eight hundred +persons are employed. Five hundred masses are recited each day at the +different altars: all of which taking place during the early part of the +day, an idea may be formed of the business which goes on. Of the six or +seven organs, I have heard three playing at the same time in different +parts of the church; but so widely separated, as by no means to +interfere with each other's harmony. One of them was one of the two +great organs which face each other over the choir. These two play a duet +once a year, on the day of the Corpus. The effect they produce is not so +powerful as that produced at Toledo, but far more beautiful. At Toledo +the two which correspond to these, are assisted on that occasion by a +third, as powerful as both the others united, placed over the portal of +the south transept, at an elevation of about seventy feet from the +ground. + +Among the ceremonies of the cathedral of Seville is one sufficiently +unique to be deserving of notice. _El baile de los seis_ (dance of the +six), is performed by eight youths--probably by six originally--every +evening during the feast of the Conception. It takes place in front of +the high-altar, on which her statue is placed on that occasion. The +service is one of especial solemnity; and, as such, accompanied, +unfortunately as on all such occasions, by an orchestra of violins, to +the exclusion of the organs. The singing commences at four o'clock in +the afternoon, in the choir, and continues until half-past six, when all +move in procession through the great railing, across the transept, and +ascend the flight of steps which lead to the Capilla Mayor. Here they +take their seats according to rank, on benches placed in rows from east +to west, fronting a space which is left open down the centre, in front +of the altar. The orchestra occupies a corner near the railing; and on +the two front benches are seated--four facing four--the eight youths, +dressed in the ancient Spanish costume, all sky blue silk and white +muslin, and holding each his hat, also light blue, with a flowing white +feather. + +The chorus now recommences, but speedily drops; when the orchestra +sounds a beautiful air in the waltz measure. This is played once by the +instruments alone, and joined the second time by the voices of the eight +boys, or youths of the age of sixteen to eighteen; who, after having +accompanied a short time, start to their legs, and continue in the same +strain. At the next reprise they all, as if by word of command, place +their hats on their heads, and one or two minutes after, the chant still +continuing, advance, and meet in the centre, then return each to his +place; advance a second time, and turn round each other, using the waltz +step. + +After singing and dancing for about a quarter of an hour, the voices are +exchanged for the sounds of castagnettes, which they have held all this +time in their hands, and the measure becomes more animated; and thus +they terminate the performance. The same ceremony is repeated each night +of the seven; only varying the air of the waltz, of which they have two. + +This ceremony, now belonging exclusively to the cathedral of Seville, +was originally performed in some other cathedrals; but has been +gradually laid aside in all the others, having been found to occasion +irreverent behaviour among a portion of the spectators. It was +originally introduced among the observances in honour of the anniversary +of the Conception, as a natural manifestation of joy; and such a genuine +Spanish bolero would have been: but the slow time of the music, and the +measured movements, adopted for the purpose of suiting the performance +to the solemnity of the place, have changed the nature of the dance, and +deprived it of everything approaching to cheerfulness. + + + + +LETTER XX. + +SPANISH BEGGARS. HAIRDRESSING. THE GIRALDA. CASA DE PILATOS. +MONASTERIES. ITALICA. + + +Seville. + +Mendicity is one of the Curiosities--and not the least picturesque +one--of this antique country. There should be a Mendicity Society for +its preservation, together with other legacies of the middle ages. An +entertaining book might be filled with its annals and anecdotes. + +Nowhere, I should think, can beggary be a more lucrative calling. The +convents having been the inexhaustible providence of these tribes, on +their suppression the well-born and bred Spaniards consider the charge +to have devolved upon them, in the absence of all possible legislation +on the subject: and few, especially of the fair sex, turn a deaf ear to +the mute eloquence of the open hand. Even a stranger, if possessed of an +ear, resists with difficulty the graceful appeal of the well trained +proficient: _Noble caballero, un ochavito por Dios._--A blind girl made +no request; but exclaimed--"Oh that the Virgin of Carmen may preserve +your sight!" + +The mendicants are classified, and assume every form of external +humanity. Being in the coach-office near the Plaza del Duque, a tall +well-dressed man, dangling a dark kid glove, entered, and, walking up to +the book-keeper, after having carefully closed the door, made some +communication to him in a low voice. The other replied in a similar +tone, and they parted with mutual bows. I was puzzled on the man's +turning to me and observing that the beggars were very annoying in +Seville; but still certain my conjecture could not but be erroneous, I +said "you don't mean to say that your acquaintance"--"Oh, no +acquaintance; I never saw him before: he only came to beg." + +This species of _cavallero_ pauper should by no means be encouraged; he +is not of the picturesque sort. Nowhere do the wretches look their +character better than at Seville; as all admirers of Murillo can +testify, without consulting any other nature than his canvass. But these +consider they confer a sort of obligation on the individual they +condescend to apply to. Nothing can exceed their astonishment and +indignation when refused. Their great highway is the superb polished +mosaic marble of the Cathedral; where they divide the authority with the +embroidered dignitaries of the choir. It is useless to hope for an +instant's leisure for the contemplation of this unique temple, until you +have disposed of its entire population of ragged despots. + +A sort of chivalrous etiquette is observed, in virtue of which a female +chorus is the first to form your escort from pillar to pillar. These +dismissed, you are delivered over to the barefooted Murillos. There are +two modes of escape. The rich man should go in with his two hands filled +with coin, and distribute to all, even to many who will return for a +second contribution before he has done. But if economical, you may +attain the same end, and more permanently, by sacrificing four or five +days to walking up and down the nave, without looking at anything, but +simply undergoing the persecution of the mob. After the fourth visit you +will be left in peace. + +These counsels I am competent to give you from dreadful experience; more +dreadful from my having pursued a middle course. To one barefooted and +rotten-scalped embryo brigand I only gave a two-_quarto_ piece +(halfpenny) about equal in real consequence to twopence in England. If +you have ever seen, in the era of mail coaches, the look of quiet +surprise on the countenance of the well-fed charioteer, who, having, +after the sixth or seventh stage, opened the door, and muttered from +behind his _cache-nez_ the usual "coachman, gen'lemen" received a +long-searched-for deprecatory sixpence from some careful knight with a +false shirt-collar--you have noticed the self-same look, which was +leisurely transferred by the urchin from the piece of copper in the open +palm to my face, and back to the piece of copper. + +Instead, however, of restoring it to me, his indignation seemed to +inspire him with a sudden resolution. He rushed to a kneeling Senorita a +few paces distant, and interrupting her devotions by a pull at the side +of her mantilla, he showed the coin in the open hand, while with the +other he pointed to the culprit. If he meditated revenge, he should have +made another choice, instead of deranging a garment, from the folds of +which a real Andalucian mouth and pair of eyes, turning full on me, +aimed a smile which, I need not inform you, was not dear at two +_quartos_. + +Could such a smile have been natural, and the expression of mere +curiosity, or was it intended for a death-wound, dealt for another's +vengeance? and did the velvet language of those eyes signify a horrible +"Pallas te hoc vulnere," in favour of the ragamuffin I had offended? At +all events, the incident lost him a more munificent remuneration, by +driving me from the spot, and expelling from my head, a project +previously formed, of inviting him to my _fonda_ to be sketched. + +With regard to the oft and still recurring subject of Spanish beauty, +you are hereby warned against giving ear to what may be said by +tourists, who, by way of taking a new view of an old subject, simply +give the lie to their predecessors. It is true, that in the central +provinces, the genuine characteristic Moro-Iberian beauty is rare, and +that there is little of any other sort to replace it; but this is not +the case with Andalucia, where you may arrive fresh from the perusal of +the warm effusions of the most smitten of poets, and find the Houris of +real flesh and blood, by no means overrated. + +One of their peculiar perfections extends to all parts of the Peninsula. +This is the hair; everywhere your eye lights upon some passing specimen +of these unrivalled masses of braided jet; at which not unfrequently +natives of the same sex turn with an exclamation--Que pelo tan hermoso! + +I surprised the other day a village matron, whose toilette, it being a +holiday afternoon, was in progress in no more secluded a _tocador_ than +the middle of the road. The rustic lady's-maid (whether the practice be +more or less fashionable I know not) had placed on a stool, within reach +of her right hand as she stood behind her seated mistress, a jug of +fresh water. This did she lift, just as I approached, up to her mouth, +into which she received as large a portion of its contents as could be +there accommodated; while with her left hand she grasped the extremity +of a mass of silken hair, black as the raven's wing, and an ell in +length. Both hands now, stroking down the mass, spread it out so as to +present a horizontal surface of as large an extent as possible, when, +suddenly, from the inflated cheeks of the abigail, re-issued with a loud +sound the now tepid liquid, and bathed the entire surface, which it +seemed to render, if possible, still more glossy than before. The rest +of the duty of the hands appeared to consist in repeatedly separating +and replacing the handfuls, until the same proceeding was reacted. + +The entrance to the Giralda is outside the cathedral. Before we make the +ascent, we will walk to the extremity of the Moorish enclosure of the +orange-court, along the raised pavement which surrounds the whole. At +the angle there is an antique shaft of granite, higher than the rest of +those placed at equal distances along the edge of the pavement. From +that point the proportions of the tower are seen to advantage, while you +are at the same time sufficiently near to observe the details of the +carving, and of the windows, with their delicately formed columns of +rare marbles; and to lose in a great measure the effect of the +subsequent additions, which surmount and disfigure the work of Geber. + +The Arabian part of the building is a square of about forty-five feet, +and measures in elevation four times its width. The ornaments are not +exactly alike on all the four sides. On the north side (our present +view) the tracery commences at a height of eighty feet, up to which +point the wall of brick is perfectly plain and smooth, with only the +interruption of two windows, placed one above the other in the centre. +The ornament, from its commencement to the summit, is divided into two +lofty stories, surmounted by a third, of half the height of one of the +others. The two first are divided vertically into three parts by narrow +stripes of the plain wall. The centre portions contain two windows in +each story, one over the other, making, with the two in the lower +portion, six altogether, which are at equal distances from each other. +The form of these windows is varied, and in all uncommonly elegant; some +are double, with a marble column supporting their two arches, and all +are ornamented round the arches with beautiful tracery, and furnished +with marble balconies. At one of the balconies, the Muezzin, in +Mahometan times was accustomed to present himself at each of the hours +appointed for prayer, and to pronounce the sentences ordained by that +religion for calling the people. The half-story at the summit is +ornamented with a row of arches, supported by pilasters. + +On the top of the tower were seen originally, four gilded balls of +different sizes, one over the other, diminishing upwards; the iron bar +on which they were fixed, was struck by lightning, and gave way, leaving +the balls to roll over; since which period they were never restored to +their place. + +The additional buildings were not erected until the seventeenth century. +They are not in themselves inelegant, with the exception of the portion +immediately rising from the old tower, and containing the bells. This +portion is of the same width as the tower, and appears to weigh it down +with its heavy effect; on the summit of the whole, at about three +hundred feet from the ground, is a colossal statue of bronze, +representing Faith, holding in one hand a shield, and in the other an +olive-branch. By means of the shield, the statue obeys the movements of +the wind, and thus gives the name of Giralda (weather-cock) to the +tower. + +An interior tower, rather more than twenty feet square, runs up the +whole height of the Moorish portion of the building; between which and +the external walls an easy ascent is contrived on an inclined plane. The +necessity of introducing light throughout the ascent accounts for the +different elevation of the windows and ornaments of the different sides; +but the architect has so managed this difficulty, that no bad effect is +produced in the external view. At the lower part of the tower the ascent +is sufficiently wide to admit of the passage of two men on horseback +abreast; but it becomes narrower as it approaches the summit. Queen +Christina is said to have been drawn up in a small carriage. The walls, +both of the inner and outer tower, increase in thickness as they rise, +and as the ascending plane decreases in width: a plan which appears +opposed to the principle usually adopted by modern architects. + +It is known that Geber was the architect of the Giralda, but no +certainty exists respecting its date. The Spanish antiquarian Don +Rodrigo Caro supposes it to have been erected during the reign of +Benabet Almucamus, King of Seville, shortly before the appearance in +Spain of the Almoravides; but this is no more than a conjecture, founded +on the supposed wealth of that King, who possessed larger states than +his successors, and who paid no tribute to the sovereigns of Castile. + +Immediately over the highest story of the Moorish tower is the belfry. +The bells are suspended on the centre of revolving beams, which traverse +the open arches of the four faces of the tower. They are consequently in +full view, as they throw their somersets and send forth their lively +clatter on a _dia de fiesta_. + +Their effect is very original, and as unlike as possible to the +monotonous and melancholy cadence of an English peal. None of them are +deep-toned nor solemn, but all high and sharp: so that being let loose +in merry disorder, and without tune, they somehow appear to harmonize +with the brilliant skies, just as the descending ding-dong in England +suits the gloom of the northern heavens. Leave Seville, and never shall +their tones steal on your memory without your being transported into a +blaze of bright sunshine. + +In Spain the houses of the grandees are not called palaces, as those of +the same rank in Italy are usually termed. There is not even an +intermediate term, such as mansion,--still less the hall--abbey, or +castle. They have the last, but only applied in cases in which it is +correctly and legitimately applicable. The Arab expression _alcazar_, +composed of the article _al_ and _cazar_, is so like the Spanish _la +casa_ (the house), that, not having at hand a professor of Arabic to +consult, I will risk the assertion that it bore the same meaning; +notwithstanding the opinion of several French writers who translate it +_chateau_. Chenier, author of the history of Morocco, derives it from +the word Caissar, which he considers synonymous with Caesar: but this +derivation appears to admit of much doubt, as the word would signify the +Emperor, instead of his residence. Supposing it to signify the house, it +must no doubt have meant the principal, or royal house. At present the +two words are admitted into the Spanish language as one, which is +applied indiscriminately to royal town-residences, whether castles or +not, as well as the term _palacio_. But a private residence of whatever +extent is modestly termed a house. + +In this instance, as in many others, the proud contempt of high-sounding +phraseology is common to Spain and England, where some of the most +palace-like habitations are called Wentworth House, Hatfield House, +Burleigh House: the very porters' lodges being sometimes such edifices +as would claim the title of _chateau_ in some other countries. But this +same haughty modesty is rather individual than collective, and does not +prevail as applied to towns and cities. In public acts and addresses, +and even in the most homely precautionary warnings placarded at the +corners of streets or promenades, the form used is,--"The constitutional +Alcalde of this heroic and very invincible town of Madrid, or Seville, +forbids, or orders, &c.;" and still more splendid epithets are found for +the nation in general. + +I don't know whether it has occurred to you that this progressive +dereliction of consistency is universal in human nature, although it +assumes a variety of forms. In the present instance modesty commences at +home, as they say charity should. + +By the way, if charity should commence at home, together with the other +affections of the heart, such as patriotism, then did the first Brutus +make a mistake. If, on the contrary, his merit was great in sacrificing +his son to his nation, it follows, that, in causing his entire nation to +be butchered the first time they were guilty of any encroachment on the +rights of the rest of the world, his glory would have increased in the +ratio of one to some millions. + +He either acted on a principle of justice, or preferred the applause of +his compatriots to the affection of his son. If, therefore, an +opportunity was ever afforded him of doing the world the above-mentioned +act of justice at the expense of his countrymen, and he abstained from +it,--it being impossible to suppose a Roman republican capable of a +dereliction of principle--it is clear that he preferred the applause of +his nation to that of the rest of the world; and all becomes a question +of taste. But what, you exclaim, has the first or any other Brutus to do +with Pilate's house, the description of which is preceded by this long +introduction? And was not his murder of his son benevolence itself, +compared to the infliction of these digressions on your patience? + +The Casa de Palatos is a palace belonging to the Duke of Medina Coeli. +One of his ancestors is said to have built it in exact imitation of +Pontius Pilate's palace in Jerusalem, and to have obtained possession of +a large quantity of the ornaments and portable furniture belonging to +the ancient building, which, on the completion of his edifice at +Seville, he established, each object in the place corresponding to that +which it originally occupied. + +A lofty wall, filling the side of the small square, called the Plaza de +Pilatos, and surmounted by a balustrade, forms the outer enclosure of +the palace. You enter through a large plain arched doorway, and pass +through a court, containing the porter's house, and other out-buildings +devoid of ornament. A small door on the left leads from this enclosure +to the principal court. Here you might imagine yourself still in the +Alcazar. The ornament is in the same style; only the arcades are +inferior in lightness and beauty. It contains, however, a fountain very +superior to that of the principal court of the Alcazar. + +At the four angles are colossal statues of white marble, representing +deities of the Grecian mythology. They are antique, and of Roman origin. +Under the arcades a series of busts of the Roman emperors, are placed +round the walls; the greater part of them are also antique. On one side +of this court is the chapel, very small, and entirely covered with +Arabesque ornament. At one side is placed erect against the wall a black +cross, said to be a facsimile imitation of that actually carried by our +Saviour, which occupied a similar situation in the palace at Jerusalem. +Its length is about seven feet, and the thickness of the wood about four +inches by two. Opposite to the cross is a Madonna by Raffaelle. As no +light enters the chapel, excepting through a small door, and that placed +under the arcades, and the picture is hung at a considerable height, it +can only be examined by the aid of a ladder, which is kept near it, and +then only very imperfectly. At the time the chapel was habitually used, +it probably contained candles always burning. + +The great staircase is very ornamental and leads to several handsome +suites of rooms. There is a colonnade on one side of the garden, under +which lies a valuable collection of antique busts, columns, capitals, +and fragments of all sorts, "in most admired disorder." The proprietor +never visits this residence, and every part of it is in a very neglected +state. + +Seville lays claim to no less a founder than Hercules. A magnificent +temple dedicated to him is said to have existed on the spot at present +occupied by the parish church of San Nicholas. Near it a statue of the +demigod has been discovered, together with six columns, four of which +are sunk so deeply in the earth that they cannot be brought to light. +The other two are placed on lofty pedestals, and adorn the largest of +the promenades of Seville, that called the Alameda. One of them is +surmounted by the statue mentioned above, and the other by one of Julius +Caesar. Venus is also stated to have shared with Hercules the devotions +of the Sevillanos. The existence of her worship in ancient times is +placed beyond a doubt by the well authenticated martyrdom of Saints +Justa and Rufina, condemned for refusing to do honour to the rites of +that goddess, and to figure in her processions. + +These two martyrs to the Christian faith have pursued, on various +subsequent occasions, a conduct calculated to afford a degree of +advantage to an adversary, should he presume to accuse them of renegade +propensities. They have manifested themselves determined protectors of +the Arab tower, on every occasion of its being threatened with danger. +Numerous instances are on record; the most remarkable of which, is one +that has given rise to much controversy, and employed in more recent +times the researches of learned men. The tradition states, that, during +an earthquake, which took place in the year 1504, and of which a vivid +description may be found at the end of a book, called the Regla Vieja, +which exists in the archives of the cathedral--the two virgins were seen +to support the tower and prevent it from falling, surrounding it with +their arms, one on each side. It is also related that, on the occasion +of a previous earthquake, that of the year 1396, voices were heard in +the air, articulated by demons, crying, "Throw it down, throw it down;" +and that others replied, "No, we cannot, for those villanous saints, +Justa and Rufina, are guarding it." For these reasons it is usual, in +paintings representing the Giralda, to place the figures of the two +virgin Saints supporting it, one on either side; and a small model thus +supported by images of the two martyrs, executed in wood, is carried in +the principal religious processions. In all these representations, the +figures stand rather taller than the tower. + +The hospital of La Caridad is one of the principal attractions to +strangers at Seville; for in its chapel is contained the picture, which +passes for the master-piece of Murillo. The chapel is narrow and lofty, +and the picture placed as near as possible to the ceiling. A sight of it +can only be obtained at an angle of about twenty degrees. But the aching +of the neck is unheeded during the examination of this superb picture. +It is called Las Aguas, the Waters. Moses has just struck the rock, and +stands in a simple and dignified attitude. In the complete contentment +of his countenance there may be traced a mingled expression of pity and +gratitude, as he looks on the scene which follows his action. The artist +has given proof of consummate talent in the choice and treatment of his +subject; which afforded him a variety of grouping, of expression, and of +attitude, of which few were capable of taking better advantage. + +This picture is a specimen of his natural style, and its success is +considered, and I think justly, superior to that of any other of his +works. The imitation of material nature is here carried to as great +perfection as in many of his paintings; while at the same time nothing +can surpass the poetry of the composition, nor the exquisitely +harmonious grouping of the men and animals. In this last quality, +Murillo is certainly unequalled. He seems also in this instance, to have +reached the utmost limits of art in the expression of the countenances, +throughout the different groups, whether employed in offering silent +thanksgivings, or entirely absorbed in the eager effort to obtain for +their parched lips a draught of the bright liquid. In the feeling +displayed in these instances, and so well represented, there is, it is +true, nothing elevated, but still it is feeling; and its materiality is +amply made amends for, by the chief personage of the scene, in whose +countenance nothing but the sublime can be traced. + +Had Murillo not painted this picture and the Saint Elizabeth of Hungary, +Spanish art must have contented itself with the second rank, and Raphael +would have continued without a rival. These pictures occasion regret +that such genius should have employed itself during a long period, on +works of a different sort. The San Antonio and a few others, were no +doubt productions worthy of the painter of the Aguas, and a hundred or +two others are magnificent paintings; but the time employed on some of +these, and on a still greater number of less prominent merit, would have +been more profitably devoted to the production of two or three which +might have ranked with these giant creations of his talent. + +In viewing either of these compositions, the other speedily becomes +present to the imagination, and forces you to draw a comparison between +them. They have a sort of affinity in their subject as well as in their +style. The sufferers of the St. Elizabeth, occupied with their torments +and their gratitude, answer to those of the Aguas, engrossed also with +almost parallel feelings. The Moses, tranquil and erect in the midst of +the action which surrounds him, is the exact pendant of the majestic +figure and compassionate countenance of the youthful princess, +exercising her saintly charities. These pictures ought to be companions +in the same gallery, were it possible for two such works to find their +way into one and the same apartment. But that would be a consummation as +hopeless as finding St. Peter's and the Duomo of Milan in the same town; +Naples and Seville in one province, a London and a Paris in one country, +an Ariosto and a Byron in the same language. It has more than once +occurred to me, since I have seen these two pictures, that were +Raphael's Spasimo and Transfiguration placed on one side of a room, and +these two on the other, and the choice offered me which pair I would +possess, I should never be able to come to a decision. + +Another large picture by Murillo, the multiplying of the Loaves in the +Desert, is suspended opposite the Aguas, and at the same elevation. On +attempting to examine it, you are forcibly reminded by certain acute +sensations in the region of the neck, of the unnatural position it has +so long maintained, and you leave this picture, together with two +others, placed near the entrance of the chapel, for a subsequent visit. + +In the church of the Faubourg Triana, on the right hand after passing +the bridge, are some excellent pictures, particularly a Conception by +Murillo. The multitude of paintings left by this artist is incredible, +when to all those scattered through Spain, France, and England, are +added those preserved in this his native town. Almost all the good +houses in Seville contain collections of pictures; and all the +collections have their Murillos. There are no fewer than sixteen in the +gallery of the Canon, Don Manuel Cepero; but this is the largest of the +private collections, and the best, as it ought to be, since it is +contained in Murillo's house. It is the residence occupied by him during +the latter part of his life, and in which he died. Its dimensions and +distribution are handsome. At the back of it there is a garden of +limited extent, but in which not an inch of space is thrown away. Where +there remains no room for choice flowers and orange trees, the walls are +painted to prolong the illusion. The Canon possesses also several good +paintings by Italian masters. I counted likewise four Rembrandts, and +two of Rubens. Among the other private collections, that of the Alcalde +Don Pedro Garcia is one of the richest; it contains a Santa Barbara of +Cano, an exquisite picture. A Saint Joseph by Murillo, in the collection +of the French Consul (a native of Seville) is admirable. + +In most of the churches there is sufficient of this sort of attraction +to make them worth a visit. In the convents nothing is left; in fact +they no longer exist as convents. There may be one or two remaining in +Seville, but I did not hear of them. The monastery of Jeronimites, and +the Chartreuse--both situated in the environs--were the most +considerable religious establishments of Seville. They are converted, +one into a school, and the other into a porcelain manufactory. This +last, the Chartreuse, contains in its church and refectory, plentiful +traces of its former magnificence. An Englishman has purchased the +monastery with three or four acres of ground, containing the immediate +dependencies; and he is occupied with the labours which necessarily +precede its appearance in its new character, replacing the butteries, +kitchens, storehouses, and cells, by rows of pudding-shaped +baking-houses. + +He has, however, spared the chapel, which is to continue in its former +state. All the stalls, the altar, and other immoveable furniture, remain +as he found them. The pictures and statues had of course been +previously removed. The woodwork is inimitable--the best I have seen in +Spain; it would be impossible in painting to represent with more +delicacy, the very texture of the drapery, the very veins of the hands, +and hair of the beards--of figures of a quarter the natural dimensions. +You are filled with astonishment, that the infinite patience necessary +for this mechanical labour should have accompanied the genius which +conceived and executed the incomparable figures and heads. The +refectory, of which the ceiling is the principal ornament, is to be the +great show-room for the display of the china. The fortunate manufacturer +inhabits, with his family, the prior's residence--one of the most +elegant habitations in the world: surrounding a court, which contains of +course its white marble fountain and colonnades: and he is in treaty for +the purchase of the orange-grove, the park of the monastery. This +pleasure-ground is ornamented here and there with Kiosks, from which are +obtained views of Seville, and the intervening Guadalquivir. + +On the confiscation of this monastery, several magnificent pictures +disappeared, a few of which have since been placed in the cathedral. Two +alabaster monuments, belonging to the family of Medina Caeli, were also +removed; they are placed in a church at present under repair. They are +erect, and fit into the wall; measuring about forty feet in height. +Their upper portion is adorned with several well-executed small statues. + +The other convent--that dedicated to S. Geronimo, is situated on the +opposite side of the river, about a mile higher up. It is not so +beautiful as the Cartuja, but on a grander scale. The principal court is +magnificent; it is surrounded with upper and lower arcades, respectively +of the Ionic and Doric orders: the apartments and church are of +corresponding extent; but have either been deprived of their ornaments, +or were originally but sparingly decorated. A ci-devant governor of +Seville--a general officer, very distinguished as a linguist, has turned +schoolmaster, and taken up his abode here. The day of my visit happened +to be the general's birthday, and a scene of much festivity presented +itself. The schoolmaster's successor in his former post at Seville, had +arrived, attended by the band of a cavalry regiment; and the great court +having been converted into a ball-room, the marble arcades were made to +ring with the thrilling cadences of the hautbois and clarionette--by way +of a fitting afterpiece to the tragic chants of former days. + +The relatives and friends of the students were present, so that the +youthful dancers were well-provided with partners. The performances were +French quadrilles, English hornpipes, German waltzes, Russian mazurkas, +and Spanish fandangos. I had arrived too late for the first part of the +entertainment, which consisted of a bull-fight, for which a temporary +arena had been enclosed. The bulls were what are called _novillos_--that +is, scarcely more than calves; as the full-grown animals would have been +more than a match for their juvenile antagonists. + +The ruins of the Roman city of Italica, to which I have already alluded, +are situated four miles from Seville in ascending the river--and on the +opposite bank. The whole town is underground, with the exception of a +few houses in the part in which excavations have been made, and of the +amphitheatre which occupies an eminence. No notice was taken in modern +times of the existence of this buried town, until towards the end of the +last century, when the remains of the amphitheatre, the only portion of +the ruins which were visible, drew the attention of travellers: and the +authorities of Seville received orders to commence excavating. The +search yielded a large quantity of valuable remains; a temple was +discovered, in the neighbourhood of which were found several statues and +capitals of columns. A choice was made of the objects in the best state +of preservation, which were forwarded to Madrid in order to form a +museum. Large quantities of coins were also sent, and collections of +household utensils, and ornaments. The Arabs, who did not consider these +Roman relics worthy objects of antiquarian research, nevertheless had +either discovered and laid open a large portion of the town, or were +themselves its destroyers. From it they extracted the large quantities +of marble columns and slabs with which Seville is filled. The mutilated +statues, together with several funereal monuments, found in later times, +and not considered deserving of the journey to Madrid, have been +deposited in a large room in the Alcazar of Seville, where they are now +exhibited. + +No record exists of the foundation of Italica. Its annals are traced to +the time of Scipio Africanus, who, on the completion of his conquest of +Spain, and the final expulsion of the Carthaginians, finding himself +embarrassed by the number of wounded and sick among his troops, +established them in this town under the protection of a garrison. He +gave to the town its name of Italica,[12] its previous name being +Sancius: the real situation of Italica has been the subject of much +controversy. Like the Grecian cities, which claimed each to be the +birthplace of Homer, several of the towns in the neighbourhood of +Seville are candidates for the honour of being representatives of the +ancient Italica; but ample proof exists of the identity of these ruins +with that city.[13] The Historia general, written by Alonso el Sabio, +book 1., chap, XV., speaks of Italica as a place of much importance in +ancient times, in allusion to the invasion of a people called the +Almunizes. He adds, in the antiquated Spanish of his time, "Las nuevas +fueron por todas las tierras de como aquellas gentes avian ganado a +Espana, e todos los de las islas quel oyeron crecieron les corazones por +fazer otro tal, e ayuntaron muy grandes navios, e vinieronse para +Espana, e entraron por cuatro partes. Los que entraron por Cadiz +vinieron Guadalquibir arriba, e llegaron a Italica e los de la villa +salieron e lidiaron con ellos, e los de fuera entraron con ellos de +vuelta por medio de la villa, e mataron los a todos, e ganaron la +villa." It is not clear what invasion is here alluded to. + +The town of Italica was one of the six or seven in these provinces which +possessed the title of _municipia_; a superior one to that of _colonia_, +from its involving the privilege of retaining its ancient laws and +customs, while on the colonies those of Rome were imposed. It was among +the cities which sheltered some of the earliest converts to +Christianity. Its first bishop was the martyr Saint Geruncio, put to +death in prison. The prison, being considered sanctified, from its +containing the saint's remains, became subsequently the resort of pious +votaries from all parts of the province. In the Mozarabic ritual there +is a hymn for the day of this saint, one of the stanzas of which fixes +the epoque of his life and martyrdom, at that of the apostles.[14] + +The centurion Cornelius, mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles, as +converted by the preaching of St. Peter, was, it is said, a native of +this city, and commanded a cohort raised in his native place. + +The date of the destruction of Italica, is as uncertain as that of its +origin. The fact of its existence during almost the entire period of the +Gothic dominion, is established, by the presence of its bishops being +recorded at the different councils. It is conjectured that its +destruction was the work of the Arabs, who were no sooner in possession +of Seville, than they considered it imprudent to allow so large a town +to be in the hands of enemies in their immediate neighbourhood. This +supposition of Spanish antiquaries seems hazarded without sufficient +reflection; since, in the first place, had the occupants of Italica +occasioned the Arabs any uneasiness, nothing was easier than to occupy +the place themselves; and secondly, the ruins bear strong symptoms of +having been reduced to their present state by some convulsion of nature, +rather than by human agency: not to mention the coins discovered in +large quantities, which would not have been neglected by human +destroyers. It is not likely that the destruction of so considerable a +place by the conquerors of the province, at the time they were too few +to defend it, would have been overlooked by their historians--who make +no allusion to the event. + +The present appearance is that of a green undulating hill, which no one +would imagine to be composed of the remains of streets, palaces, +temples, and market-places. The upper portion only of the amphitheatre +remains above-ground. Its form is slightly oval, nearly approaching to a +circle. The greatest diameter is three hundred and twenty-five feet. It +has twenty rows of seats, half of which are buried; each seat is two +feet and a half in depth, and two in height. Part of the Podium remains; +and enough of the entrance, to distinguish that it consisted of three +large arches. It was constructed with Roman solidity. Nothing less than +an earthquake could have toppled over the masses of masonry, which +appear in their confusion like solid rocks. A very small portion of the +ruins has been explored: and part of that, for want of being +sufficiently cleared out, is again buried in earth, and the work is +discontinued. The objects now above-ground, consist of five or six +tessalated floors, two of which have been considered of sufficient value +to be walled in, and locked up, but without being roofed. + +These ruins are well worth a visit, although the road to them from +Seville, bears terrible symptoms of having been constructed before +Macadam's day; perhaps even before that of the Scipios. + +At the distance of a few hundred yards from the nearest portion of the +ruined town is situated the village of Santi-ponce, in which is the +convent of S. Isidoro, of the order of St. Jerome. The church contains +the tombs of Don Alonzo Perez de Guzman, surnamed the Good, and of his +wife Dona Maria Alonzo Coronel, founders of the ducal house of Medina +Sidonia. This family obtained from Ferdinand the Fourth, a grant of +Santi-ponce and old Seville (Italica), with the district, and temporal +and spiritual jurisdiction. Don Sancho had already rewarded the services +and tried fidelity of Perez de Guzman by presenting him with the town of +Medina Sidonia. An anecdote is told of him worthy of a Roman republican. +Being governor of Tarifa under Sancho the Fourth, he had to defend the +town against the Infant, Don Juan, who had revolted against his brother. +This prince, learning that a child of Guzman was in his power, being at +nurse in the environs of the town, sent for it; and, presenting himself +before the walls, declared to the governor that he would kill the child, +if the town were not immediately surrendered. Guzman replied by drawing +his sword, and throwing it down to the prince, who had the barbarity to +order the infant to be murdered before his father's eyes. + + + + +LETTER XXI. + +PRIVATE HOUSES, AND LOCAL CUSTOMS IN SEVILLE. + + +Seville. + +The greater number of private houses are situated in an interminable +labyrinth of winding streets, between the Calle de la Sierpe, and Plaza +de San Francisco and the city wall, which connects the Aqueduct of +Carmona with the Alcazar. It is the South-eastern half of the city. To +the west of the Calle de la Sierpe there are also a few streets +containing private residences, but they are not in so large a +proportion. Some of the most elegant are, however, on this side; which +being less Moorish and more modern, is less chary of its attractions, +and allows a part of its decoration to enliven the external facades; +while its spacious doorways frequently open to the view of the passer-by +a gay perspective of gardens and courts. + +The sunny balcony, crowded with a crimson forest of cactuses, is not +more attractive to the sight, than the more mysterious vista beneath +it, of retreating colonnades, mingled with orange and pomegranate trees, +through which the murmur of the fountain is scarcely audible. Few cities +present more charms to the wanderer than one in which the houses offer a +combination so luxurious as is met with in the greater number of those +of Seville. The cool summer rooms opening into the court, in which the +drawing-room furniture is arranged on all sides of a fountain, +plentifully supplied from the aqueduct of Carmona: and, on the upper +floor, the winter apartments, chosen from their being better lighted, +for the deposit of a collection of pictures and these almost always +excellent,--and opening to the gallery; to which, during this season, +the furniture having been removed from below, is placed, together with +the work frames and portable musical instruments, on the side exposed to +the sun. One sees these houses and their amiable and happy-looking +inhabitants, and imagines there is no life to be compared to it. Yet the +experiment may be made, and fail to answer the expectations of the +stranger, who, confident in his discovery of the road to happiness, may +have pitched his tent in the midst of these bewitching regions. + +Can it be fatality--or is it essential in human nature, to find ever the +least felicity there, where it looks for the greatest? The experiment, +I say, was made. An Englishman, possessing every advantage of taste, +talent, and wealth, took up his residence here, resolved to devote the +remainder of his days to the peaceable enjoyments of a literary and +social life. Thanks to his literary propensities, we are enabled to +judge of the result of the trial. In a book published by the person to +whom I allude, we find that no one could be less satisfied with his lot. +Seville and the Sevillanos meet with no mercy at his hands, and must, if +we may judge by his dislike of them, have rendered his life a burden. + +This, however, is a single example, and insufficient to deter others +from the attempt. It may be that this individual had not entered fully +into the spirit of Andalucian existence. Every detail of life being here +adapted to the place and its customs and climate, no custom can be erred +against with impunity--that is, without the forfeit of some +corresponding advantage. + +Seville presents two so different aspects during the two opposite +seasons of the year, that to be well understood it should be visited at +both. During the winter, the existence does not materially differ from +that of the inhabitants of most other European towns; excepting that the +intercourse of society is subjected to less formality. Cards of +invitation are rarely made use of; and you are not, consequently, +exposed to the annoyance of seeing and hearing your house invaded by a +dense crowd, on a night you have appointed a month before, without any +possibility of foreseeing whether you would be disposed or not on that +particular night to undergo such a toil. These crowds are, I believe, +unheard of in Seville; but those who are pleased in each other's +society, know where to find each other; and without waiting for +invitations, small circles are formed every evening, from which all +crushing, fatigue, and intense dressing are excluded. + +The winter is also a more advantageous season for the stranger, who +would be totally debarred by the summer heats from the activity +necessary for the satisfaction of his curiosity, in visiting the objects +of interest contained in and around Seville. On the other hand, the +summer season offers to his contemplation the successful attainment of a +mode of existence suited to the burning climate; a problem found to be +solved but in few instances. The first and most essential arrangement +appears to be the turning night into day, and _vice versa_, as far as +regards society and all locomotion. No one leaves his house until long +after sunset, and visiting commences some hours later. The morning being +consequently the time for repose, and the breakfast hour nevertheless +remaining the same all the year round, the _siesta_ is very essential, +and is judiciously placed between the dinner, which terminates at four, +and the hour for movement--nine, when the Sevillano, refreshed by three +or four hours sleep, and a fresh toilette, is infinitely better disposed +for the evening's amusements than the denizen of more northern climes, +who rises at that or a later hour from the chief repast of the day, and +is put _en train_ by the less natural and less durable stimulants of the +table. + +This mode of life presents other numerous advantages. A very prominent +one is the inviolable division of time between society and solitude. We +suppose the hour for rising eight,--immediately after the +chocolate,--that of breakfast eleven. The intervening hours are +solitary, and are frequently divided between the pillow and the +toilette; while they are sometimes devoted to more useful occupations, +and added to by earlier risers. From the family meeting at breakfast +until the dinner hour, three, the time may be employed in business, +reading, in fact, in every one's habitual pursuits. No intrusion is to +be feared. No accursed idler lounges in to interrupt with his +compliments, or gossip, your letter to your lawyer, or, if you are a +lawyer yourself, that to your client; nor is the conscience of +scrupulous porters burdened with the mendacious "not at home." + +These hours are sacred, and guaranteed by the very air, which renders +the streets impassable, but leaves the cool court protected from the +sun's ray by the _toldo_, (canvas awning spread at a level with the +roof, and which is reefed up at night like a sail,) and refreshed by its +ever-murmuring fountain and cool marble pavement, to the peaceable +enjoyment of its owners. The female portion of the family are thus +enabled to devote themselves to household occupations, or to their +favourite employments, without having to undergo, until the second +getting up in the evening, the fever of a complete toilette, which +would, during the day, be insupportable. The time thus devoted to +society, is amply sufficient; as it may be prolonged, as each party +feels inclined, from an hour or two after sunset, until the returning +rays drive all back to their cool retreat. + +The night of the festival of St. John is, in Seville, sacred, from +remote time, to amusement and festivity. During the five or six hours of +darkness accorded by the Midsummer sun, the banks of the Guadalquivir +echo the gay melodious laugh, which enlivens the animated buzz of the +crowd; and the morning ray gilds the upper windows of the deserted +houses before their doors are opened to the supper-craving population. +The rite practised on this occasion is marked by a simplicity +altogether antique. The youth of Seville, that is the masculine +portion, have provided themselves with small boxes, containing a sort of +sugar-plum of exquisite flavour. One of these is held between the finger +and thumb of the _cavallero_, from the moment he sets foot on the +promenade. On the approach of a party of ladies he endeavours to +distinguish, as far off as the gloom permits, the features or dress of +an already selected object of preference; or, if still free to make a +selection, some countenance possessed of sufficient attraction to +determine his choice. On discovering the owner of either of these +requisites, he watches a favourable opportunity, and approaching the +lady, offers the bonbon. + +The _senorita_--of course unmarried--thus selected, is obliged to accept +the compliment if properly offered, as well as the arm of the +_cavallero_ during the rest of the night; and, on arriving at her house, +he receives from her parents, or chaperon, as the case may be, an +invitation to supper. Should the lady be desirous of avoiding the +compliment, of the approach of which she is usually aware, she must +exercise her ingenuity in putting obstacles in the way of the attempt. +In this effort many are successful, since the peculiar mode of +proceeding, obligatory on those who make the offer, affords certain +facilities. The condition is not binding on the fair object of the +compliment, unless the lips receive the bonbon immediately from the +finger and thumb of the cavalier. This is a source of no small amusement +to the _senoritas_ at the expense of strangers from other provinces of +Spain. Conscious of being the object of preference of some young +beginner, or stranger uninitiated in the mysteries of the rite--and who, +let it be understood, does not happen to be an object of preference with +them--they will afford him every facility of approach, and on receiving +the present in the hand, will repulse without mercy the luckless wight, +whose retiring steps are accompanied by peals of laughter from all the +party. + +The month of June is likewise distinguished by the procession of the +Corpus Christi. On this occasion all the principal streets are protected +from the sun by canvas awnings; and from the windows of every house +draperies are suspended, the materials of which are more or less rich +according to the means of their respective proprietors. From an early +hour of the morning, ushered in by sunshine and the gay orchestra of the +Giralda bells, the vast marble pavement of the cathedral begins to +disappear beneath the momentarily increasing crowd. Here all classes are +mingled; but the most conspicuous are the arrivals from the surrounding +villages, distinguished by their more sunburnt complexions and the showy +colours of their costume, contrasted with the uniformly dark tints of +the attire of the Sevillanos. + +Here are seen also in great numbers, accompanied by their relatives, the +gay _cigarreras_, whose acquaintance we shall presently make in the +_fabrica de tabaco_. The instinctive coquetry discernible, no less in +the studied reserve of their looks than in the smart step and faultless +nicety of costume, indicates how easy would be the transition to the +quality of the still more _piquant_ but somewhat less moral _maja_. The +black satin, low-quartered shoe is of a different material; but the +snow-white stocking, and dark green skirt the same--and the black-velvet +bordered mantilla is the identical one, which was held tight to the +chin, when passing, the evening before, under the city walls on the +return from the manufactory to the faubourg at the other extremity of +Seville. + +The procession, headed by a band of music, and accompanied by the +dignitaries of the diocese, and civil authorities of the province, +bearing _cierges_, winds through the principal streets, and re-enters +the church to the sound of the two magnificent organs, never heard in +unison except on this anniversary. The exterior of the principal portal +is ornamented on this occasion with a sort of curtain, which is said to +contain upwards of three thousand yards of crimson velvet, bordered with +gold lace. The columns of the centre nave are also completely attired +from top to bottom with coverings of the same material. The value of the +velvet employed, is stated at nearly ten thousand pounds. + +Christmas-day is also solemnized at Seville, with much zeal; but the +manner of doing it honour presents more of novelty than splendour. At +the early hour of seven the parish churches are completely filled. The +organ pours forth, from that time until the termination of the service, +an uninterrupted succession of airs, called _seguidillas_, from the +dance to which they are adapted. On the gallery, which adjoins the +organ-loft of each church, are established five or six muscular youths, +selected for their untiring activity. They are provided each with a +tambourine, and their duty consists in drawing from it as much, and as +varied sound as it will render without coming to pieces. With this view +they enter upon the amiable contest, and try, during three or four +hours, which of their number, employing hands, knees, feet, and elbows +in succession, can produce the most racking intonations. On the pavement +immediately below, there is generally a group, composed of the friends +of the performers, as may be discerned from the smiles of intelligence +directed upwards and downwards. Some of these appear, from the animated +signs of approbation and encouragement, with which they reward each more +than usually violent concussion, to be backers of favourite heroes. +During all this time one or two priests are engaged before the altar in +the performance of a series of noiseless ceremonies; and the pavement of +the body of the church is pressed by the knees of a dense crowd of +devotees. + +The propensity to robbery and assassination, attributed by several +tourists to the population of this country, has been much exaggerated. +The imagination of the stranger is usually so worked upon by these +accounts, as to induce him never to set foot outside the walls of +whatever city he inhabits, without being well armed. As far as regards +the environs of Seville, this precaution is superfluous. They may be +traversed in all directions, at all events within walking distance, or +to the extent of a moderate ride, without risk. Far from exercising +violence, the peasants never fail, in passing, to greet the stranger +with a respectful salutation. But I cannot be guarantee for other towns +or environs which I have not visited. It is certain that equal security +does not exist nearer the coast, on the frequented roads which +communicate between San Lucar, Xeres, and Cadiz; nor in the opposite +direction, throughout the mountain passes of the Sierra Morena. But this +state of things is far from being universal. + +I would much prefer passing a night on a country road in the +neighbourhood of Seville, to threading the maze of streets, which form +the south-eastern portion of the town, mentioned above as containing the +greater number of the residences of private families. This quarter is +not without its perils. In fact, if dark deeds are practised, no +situation could possibly be better suited to them. These Arab streets +wind, and twist, and turn back on themselves like a serpent in pain. +Every ten yards presents a hiding-place. There is just sufficient +lighting up at night to prevent your distinguishing whether the street +is clear or not: and the ground-floors of the houses, in the winter +season, are universally deserted. + +An effectual warning was afforded me, almost immediately on my arrival +at Seville, against frequenting this portion of the town without +precaution after nightfall. An acquaintance, a young Sevillano, who had +been my daily companion during the first five or six days which followed +my arrival, was in the habit of frequenting with assiduity, some of the +above-mentioned streets. He inhabited one of them, and was continually +drawn by potent attraction towards two others. In one, in particular, +he followed a practice, the imprudence of which, in more than one +respect, as he was much my junior, I had already pointed out to him. A +lady, as you have already conjectured, resided in the house, in +question. My friend, like many of his compatriots, "sighed to many;" but +he loved this one; and she was precisely the one that "could ne'er be +his." She allowed him, however, a harmless rendezvous, separated from +all danger, as she thought, by the distance from the ground to the +balcony, situated on the first-floor. The lady being married, and +regular visiting being only possible at formal intervals, these +interviews had by degrees alarmingly, as appeared to me, increased in +frequency and duration; until at length during two hours each evening, +my acquaintance poured forth in a subdued tone, calculated to reach only +the fair form which bent over the balcony, his tender complaints. + +The youth of these climes are communicative on subjects which so deeply +interest their feelings; and whether willing or not, one is often +admitted to share their secrets at the commencement of an acquaintance. +It was thus that I had had an opportunity of lecturing my friend on the +various dangers attending the practice in which he was persisting, and +of recommending him--the best advice of all being, of course, +useless--to revive the more prudent custom of by-gone times, and if he +must offer nightly incense to the object of his fire, to adopt the mode +sanctioned by Count Almaviva, and entrust his vows to the mercenary +eloquence of choristers and catgut--to anything--or anybody, provided it +be done by proxy. My warning was vain; but the mischief did not befall +him exactly in the manner I had contemplated. + +His cousin opened my door while I was breakfasting, and informed me that +L---- was in the house of Don G---- A----, and in bed, having received a +wound the previous night from some robbers; and that he wished to see +me. I found him in a house, into which I had already been introduced, +being one of those he most frequented. A bed had been prepared in the +drawing-room, all the window-shutters of which were closed, and he was +lying there, surrounded by the family of his host, to whom was added his +sister. As he was unable to speak above a whisper, I was given the seat +by the bedside, while he related to me his adventure. + +He had just quitted the street of the balcony at about nine o'clock, and +was approaching the house we were now in, when, on turning a corner, he +was attacked by three ruffians, one of whom demanded his money in the +usual terms, "Your purse, or your life!" while, before he had time to +reply, but was endeavouring to pass on, a second faced him, and stabbed +him in the breast through his cloak. He then ran forward, followed by +the three, down the street, into the house, and up the staircase; the +robbers not quitting the pursuit until he rang the bell on the +first-floor. The surgeon had been immediately called, and had pronounced +him wounded within--not an inch, but the tenth part of an inch--of his +life; for the steel had penetrated to within that distance of his heart. + +My first impression was that the robbers were acting a part, and had +been hired to get rid of him,--otherwise what were the utility of +stabbing him, when they might have rifled his pockets without such +necessity? But this he assured me could not be the case, as the person +most likely to fall under such suspicion, was incapable of employing +similar means; adding, that that was the usual mode of committing +robberies in Seville. I left him, after having assured him how much I +envied his good fortune; seeing that he was in no danger, and only +condemned to pass a week or two in the society of charming women, all +zealously employed in nursing him--for such was the truth--one of the +young ladies being supposed, and I fear with justice, to be the object +of his addresses. + +The ungrateful wretch convinced me by his reply (as we conversed in +French, and were not understood by those present) that his greatest +torment was impatience to escape from his confinement, in order to see +or write to the other fair one. + +At the end of a week he was sufficiently recovered to be removed to the +house of his family. From certain hints, dropped during a conversation +which took place more than a month after the event, it is to be feared +that the knife of the assassin, in approaching so near to the heart of +his intended victim, succeeded, by some mysterious electric +transmission, in inflicting a positive wound on that of the lady of the +balcony. + +I afterwards learned that it was usual for those who inhabited or +frequented this part of Seville, and indeed all other parts, excepting +the few principal thoroughfares and streets containing the shops and +cafes, to carry arms after nightfall; and in shaking hands with an +acquaintance, I have sometimes perceived a naked sword-blade half +visible among the folds of his cloak. These perils only exist in the +winter, and not in all winters; only in those during which provisions +increase in price beyond the average, and the season is more than +usually rigorous: the poor being thus exposed to more than the +accustomed privations. + +There are towns in which assassination and robbery are marked by more +audacity than is their habitual character in this part of Andalucia. Of +these, Malaga is said to be one of the worst, although perhaps the most +favoured spot in Europe, with respect to natural advantages. An instance +of daring ruffianism occurred there this winter. A person of +consideration in the town had been found in the street stabbed and +robbed. His friends, being possessed of much influence, and disposing, +no doubt, of other weighty inducements to action, the police was aroused +to unusual activity; the murderer was arrested, and brought before the +Alcalde primero. A summary mode of jurisprudence was put in practice, +and the culprit was ordered for execution on the following day. On being +led from the presence of the court, he turned to the Alcalde, and +addressing him with vehemence, threatened him with certain death, in the +event of the sentence being put in execution. The Alcalde, although +doubtless not entirely free from anxiety, was, by the threat itself, the +more forcibly bound to carry into effect the judgment he had pronounced. +The execution, therefore, took place at the appointed hour. The +following morning, the dead body of the Alcalde was found in a street +adjoining that in which he resided. + + + + +LETTER XXII. + +INQUISITION. COLLEGE OF SAN TELMO. CIGAR MANUFACTORY. BULL CIRCUS. +EXCHANGE. AYUNTAMIENTO. + + +Seville. + +In the faubourg of Triana, separated from the town by the river, may be +distinguished remains of the ancient castle, which became the +headquarters of the Inquisition, on its first creation, in 1482. That +body was, however, shortly afterwards, compelled to evacuate the +building, by a great inundation of the Guadalquivir, which occurred in +the year 1626. It then moved into the town, and, from that period to the +close of its functions, occupied an edifice situated in the parish of +Saint Mark. Its jurisdiction did not extend beyond Andalucia. The entire +body was composed of the following official persons:--three inquisitors, +a judge of the fisc, a chief Alguazil, a receiver, (of fines,) five +secretaries, ten counsellors, eighty qualifiers, one advocate of the +fisc, one alcayde of the prison, one messenger, ten honest persons, two +surgeons, and one porter. For the City of Seville, one hundred +familiars: for the entire district, the commissaries, notaries, and +familiars, amounted to four thousand. The ten honest persons cut but a +sorry figure in so long a list. Do they not tempt you to parody Prince +Hal's exclamation "Monstrous! but one halfpenny-worth of bread to this +intolerable deal of sack?" + +The Inquisition of Seville is of an earlier date than that of Toledo, +and was the first established in Spain. It was likewise the most +distinguished by the rigour of its sentences. The actual horrors of the +inquisitorial vaults were, I imagine, in general much exaggerated. A few +instances of severity, accompanied by a mystery, skilfully designed to +magnify its effect, was sufficient to set on fire the inflammable +imaginations of these sunny regions, and to spread universal terror. It +was on finding these means insufficient for the extirpation of religious +dissent, that, at length, executions were decreed by wholesale. Rather +than give credit to the voluminous list of the secret cruelties, which +were supposed by many to be exercised by the midnight tribunals, and +which could have no adequate object, since a conversion brought about by +such means could not, when known, profit the cause. I think it probable +that all acts of severity were made as public as possible, in order to +employ the terror they inspired as a means of swelling the ranks of +Catholicism. + +My opinion is in some measure backed by what occurred at Toledo. On the +Inquisition of that city being dislodged from its palace,--now the seat +of the provincial administration,--it was expected that the exploration +of the subterraneous range of apartments, known to be extensive, would +bring to light a whole Apocalypse of horrors; and all who had interest +enough to obtain admission, pressed in crowds to be present at the +opening. The disappointment was immense on finding not a single piece of +iron, not the shadow of a skeleton, not a square inch of bloodstain. +Each individual, however, during the permanence of these tribunals, +lived in awe of their power; and the daily actions of thousands were +influenced by the fear of becoming the victims of their cruelties, +whether real or imaginary. + +The terror which surrounded the persons of their agents invested them +with a moral power, which frequently rendered them careless of the +precaution of physical force in cases where it would have appeared to be +a necessary instrument in the execution of their designs. This +confidence was once well-nigh fatal to two zealous defenders of the +faith. The Archbishop of Toledo, subsequently Cardinal Ximenes de +Cisneros being on a visit at the residence of his brother of the see of +Granada, it occurred to them during an after-dinner conversation that, +could they accomplish the immediate conversion of the few thousands of +Moors remaining in Granada, it would be the means of rendering a signal +service to the Catholic Roman Apostolic religion. + +Inflamed with a sudden ardour, and rendered doubly fearless of results +by the excellence of the archiepiscopal repast, they resolved that the +project should be put in execution that very evening. + +Ever since the Conquest of Granada, a portion of the city had been +appropriated to the Moors who thought proper to remain; and who received +on that occasion the solemn assurance that no molestation would be +offered to their persons or property, nor impediment thrown in the way +of their worship. Their part of the town was called the Albaycin, and +was separated from the rest by a valley. It contained some twenty to +thirty thousand peaceably disposed inhabitants. + +The two enterprising archbishops, their plan being matured (although +insufficiently, as will appear) repaired to a house bordering on the +Moorish quarter; and, calling together all the Familiars of the +Inquisition who could be met with on the spur of the occasion, divided +them into parties, each of a certain force, and dispatched them on +their errand, which was, to enter the houses of the infidels, and to +intimate to the principal families the behest of the prelates, requiring +them by break of day, to abjure the errors of their creed, and to +undergo the ceremony of baptism. + +But in order that so meritorious a work should meet with the least +possible delay, all the children under a certain age were to be conveyed +instantaneously to the house occupied by the Archbishops, in order that +they might be baptised at once. + +The agents opened the campaign, and had already made away with a certain +number of terrified infants, whose souls were destined to be saved thus +unceremoniously, when the alarm began to spread; and, at the moment when +the two dignitaries, impatient to commence operations, were inquiring +for the first batch of unfledged heretics, an unexpected confusion of +sounds was heard to proceed simultaneously from all sides of the house, +and to increase rapidly in clearness and energy: and some of the +attendants, entering, with alarm depicted on their countenances, +announced that a few hundred armed Moors had surrounded the house, and +were searching for an entrance. + +It now, for the first time, occurred to the confederates, that +difficulties might possibly attend the execution of their project; and +their ardour having had nearly time to cool, Archbishop Ximenes, a +personage by no means wanting in prudence and energy, during his moments +of reason, employed the first instants of the siege in taking what +precautions the circumstances admitted. He next proceeded to indite a +hasty line, destined for the sovereigns Ferdinand and Isabella, who were +journeying in the province, to inform them of his situation, and request +immediate assistance. A black slave was selected to be the bearer of the +letter: but, thinking to inspire him with greater promptitude and zeal, +an attendant thrust into his hand a purse of money together with the +document. + +The effect of this was the opposite to that which was intended. The +negro treated himself at every house of entertainment on his road; +until, before he had half accomplished his journey, he was totally +incapacitated for further progress. This circumstance could not, +however, influence the fate of the besieged prelates; who would have had +time to give complete satisfaction to the offended Moors before the King +could receive the intelligence. Fortunately for them, the news had +reached the governor of Granada, a general officer in whose religious +zeal they had not had sufficient confidence to induce them to apply to +him for aid in the emergency. That officer, on hearing the state of +things, sent for a body of troops stationed at a neighbouring village, +to whose commander he gave orders to place a guard, for the protection +at the same time of the churchmen from violent treatment, and of the +Moors from every sort of molestation. This adventure of the Archbishop +drew upon him the temporary displeasure of the Court. + +[Illustration: PORTAL OF SAN TELMO, SEVILLE.] + +The public buildings of Seville are on as grand a scale as those of some +of the principal capitals of Europe. The college of San Telmo, fronting +the Christina-gardens, is composed of two large quadrangles, behind a +facade of five or six hundred feet in length, the centre of which is +ornamented by a portal of very elaborate execution in the _plateresco_ +style. The architect, Matias de Figueroa, has literally crammed the +three stories with carved columns, inscriptions, balconies, statues +single and grouped, arches, medallions, wreaths, friezes. Without +subjecting it to criticism on the score of purity, to which it makes no +pretension, it certainly is rich in its general effect, and one of the +best specimens of its style. This college was founded for the +instruction of marine cadets, and for that reason named after S. Telmo, +who is adopted by the mariners for their patron and advocate, as Santa +Barbara is by the land artillery. He was a Dominican friar, and is +recorded to have exercised miraculous influence on the elements, and +thereby to have preserved the lives of a boatful of sailors, when on the +point of destruction. The gardens in front of this building are situated +between the river and the town walls. They are laid out in flower beds +and walks. In the centre is a raised platform of granite, forming a +long square of about an acre or more in extent, surrounded with a seat +of white marble. It is entered at each end by an ascent of two or three +steps. This is called the Salon, and on Sundays and Feast-days is the +resort of the society of Seville. In the winter the hour of the +promenade is from one to three o'clock; in the summer, the hours which +intervene between sunset and supper. During winter as well as summer, +the scent of the flowers of the surrounding gardens fills the Salon, +than which it is difficult to imagine a more charming promenade. + +The cigar manufactory is also situated outside the walls. It is a modern +edifice of enormous dimensions, and not inelegant. In one of the rooms +between two and three hundred _cigareras_, girls employed in rolling +cigars, are seen at work, and heard likewise; for, such a Babel of +voices never met mortal ear, although familiar with the music of the +best furnished rookeries. The leaden roof, which covers the whole +establishment, furnishes a promenade of several acres. + +I am anxious to return to the interior of Seville, in order to introduce +you to the Lonja; but we must not omit the Plaza de los Toros, (bull +circus,) situated likewise outside the walls, and in view of the river. +It is said to be the handsomest in Spain, as well as the largest. In +fact it ought to be the best, as belonging to the principal city of the +especial province of _toreadores_. It is approached by the gate nearest +to the cathedral, and which deserves notice, being the handsomest gate +of Seville. The principal entrance to the Plaza is on the opposite side +from the town, where the building presents a large portion of a circle, +ornamented with plain arches round the upper story. This upper portion +extends only round a third part of the circus, which is the extent of +the part completed with boxes and galleries, containing the higher class +seats. All the remainder consists of an uniform series of retreating +rows of seats, in the manner of an amphitheatre, sufficient for the +accommodation of an immense multitude. These rows of seats are continued +round the whole circus: but those beneath the upper building are not +accessible to the same class of spectators as the others--the price of +the place being different. This is regulated by the position with regard +to the sun, the shaded seats being the dearest. The upper story consists +of an elegant gallery, ornamented with a colonnade, in the centre of +which the box of the president is surmounted by a handsomely decorated +arch. + +The circus, measured from the outside, is about two hundred and fifty +feet in diameter. Those who are desirous of witnessing to what lengths +human enthusiasm may be carried, should see a representation in this +Plaza. With seven prime bulls from La Ronda, and a quadrille of Seville +_toreros_--the enormous circumference as full as it can hold, (as it +always is,) it is one of the most curious sights that can be met with. + +The origin of this amusement is not easy to be ascertained. It was +undoubtedly in vogue among the Spanish Arabs, and probably originated in +the time of the Goths, on the falling off of the representations of the +Roman amphitheatres for want of a sufficient supply of wild beasts. In +times not very remote, it had become principally an amateur performance, +and the _toreros_ were men of rank, who made choice of this arena, +subsequently to the falling into disuse of the lists, in order to +exhibit their daring and dexterity before the objects of their flame. +The science is still studied by the greater part of the Spanish youth; +just as, in England, the custom is maintained of receiving instruction +in pugilism; but an amateur is rarely seen in these days to figure in a +public arena. + +The intense interest which absorbs the feelings of those present at +these representations, affords a faint notion of what must have been the +attractions of a Roman circus, in which combats were sustained by +hundreds of wild beasts. In the bull-fight--sustained by a single +animal, the interest would not probably be excited by the mere contest +for life which takes place between the man and the brute, and of which +the ultimate result is foreseen. It would, on the contrary, often yield +to the disgust produced by the needless massacre of the horses; were it +not that the graceful performance of the _toreros_, and their elegant +costume, so well calculated to set off the symmetry of their form, first +draws the attention, which, once fixed, is gradually absorbed by the +progress of the contest, and at length irresistibly won by the variety +of unforeseen incidents which follow in rapid succession. + +Frequenters of theatres have been seen to fall asleep during the most +stirring scene of a melodrame; and a continual murmur of conversation +usually forms a running accompaniment to the voices of opera singers; +but no one was ever detected slumbering in a _plaza de toros_; nor is a +remark uttered that does not relate to the performance. This difference +may probably be explained by the superior attraction of the _imprevu_. +In the playhouse not only is the event known beforehand, but also every +incident by which it is preceded; whereas, throughout a _corrida de +toros_ nothing can be foreseen. No one knows, during the present minute, +whether the next will give birth to the direst of tragedies, or to the +most exhilarating farce. + +At Madrid the representations are inferior to those at Seville. They are +able, it is true, to procure as fierce bulls; but they are brought from +a considerable distance, and are much more expensive. The principal +inferiority consists in the men, who at Madrid are wanting in the +rapidity of eye, and careless courage of the Andaluz. On the entrance of +a bull on the arena, whose attitude gives promise of an animated course, +almost all the Madrid _toreros_, (I have seen all,) will, at his first +onset, disappear simultaneously over the _barrera_. The _barrera_ is the +enclosure of stout planks, strengthened by posts, which separates the +performers from the spectators. It is about six feet in height. At a +height of three feet a projecting ledge runs round the whole, upon +which, in vaulting over, the _toreador_ places his foot. Behind this +enclosure an open space of four feet in width is left, and serves as a +refuge for those who are hard pressed. Very different is the graceful +and careless attitude with which the Andaluz awaits the approach of the +infuriated brute, and quietly springs aside with a flourish of his +mantle of silk, while he knows there are others at hand to draw off the +animal's attention. + +With the exception of the _Toros_ the public amusements of Seville are +limited to the balls at the Lonja during the Carnival, and to the opera. +The opera varies its own pleasures, while it distributes its favours +between the two western capitals of the province. From midsummer to +midwinter Cadiz receives her share of melody, and the remaining six +months are bestowed on Seville. Xeres has, I believe, a company to +itself, supplied by a different _impresario_. + +The Rossi is an excellent _primera dama_, although wanting in animation; +and Comfortini is by no means a bad tenor. The second tenor, Tosi, is +said to be ambitious of displaying his somewhat exaggerated attitudes on +the boards of the Haymarket. There is a deficiency of _ensemble_, since +the severe discipline necessary for obtaining that result does not +accord with the genius of the place--or perhaps an unexceptionable +_maestro de capella_ is too expensive a luxury to suit the Seville +purses. However this may be, the easy inhabitants, who hear the same +opera frequently six times in a week, and would hear it seven times had +not the performers a holiday on Saturday--may be taken grievous +liberties with before they utter a complaint. They, in fact, look upon +the performance chiefly as an excuse for resorting to this their +habitual lounge. + +The Barbiere di Seviglia should, however, be witnessed here by every +amateur. It is only here that justice is done to the _libretto_ of +Rossini's masterpiece. Figaro becomes a real barber, and scorns all +velvets and finery; and Almaviva leaves his court-dress at home, and +takes a good _capa_ of _pano pardo_ for his nocturnal excursions. The +scenery represents the actual streets of Seville. Local customs are +introduced, and local expressions interspersed in the Italian dialogue. +On this occasion one spirit animates boxes, lunetas, orchestra, and +stage. At the opening note of the first melody the allegro, passing like +electricity from the corner of the page through the eye, brain, and arm +of the leader, appears as though it spirted like wildfire from the +extremity of his bow over stage, boxes, stalls, and galleries, lighting +up in an instant all eyes with animation and pleasure. + +In the scene of old Bartolo's discomfiture the melodies of the _maestro_ +are totally extinguished beneath the din of overturned tables and +chairs, and cracking furniture; and the joyous exclamations of the +entire assembly, unite with the jibes of the actors, and seem to pursue +the poor old guardian with one overwhelming peal of derision. + +But it is only in this one instance that representations come off in +such a manner. On the contrary, the company exhibit habitually all the +aristocratic _nonchalance_ of larger capitals. Their business there is +society. It is there that _les affaires de coeur_ hold their Royal +Exchange; and observation, conjecture, and speculation,--but usually +without ill-nature,--sufficiently occupy those who are not actors in +this general by-play. The youth of these climes do not put in practice +the same arts of concealment and reserve as are adopted in colder +cities; but each, unconscious of evil, makes for the box of his +_enamorata_; or, if that is impossible, for the nearest vacant +situation. Advise, therefore, any friend who may intend visiting +Seville, not hastily to pay his visit of curiosity to the opera, but to +wait, if possible, until offered a seat by some _habituee_ in her box. +This _Senora_ may possibly not have any _affaire_ of her own on hand; in +fact the married ladies of course form an exception, if not in all +cases, at least as far as regards such undisguised manifestations of +preference:--in this case she will take delight in putting him _au fait_ +of all those that are going forward. + +If in a conversable humour she will do more. Commencing with the +nearest, or the most conspicuous of the performers in these mute dramas, +she will relate to him the vicissitudes of the respective histories up +to the time then present, and the probabilities which each case may +suggest for the future. Thus your friend, instead of having sacrificed +an entire evening to the dubious amusement of following the plot of a +single opera, which may have been a bad one, or interpreted by bad +actors, will return to rest with some score of plots and romances +filling all the corners of his memory--all possessing the zest of +reality and actuality, as he will have contemplated the heroes and +heroines in their mortal shape, and clothed in indisputable _capas_ and +_mantillas_; besides, another advantage which these romances will +possess over all the popular and standard novels--that of omitting the +most insipid chapter of all, the one containing the _denouement_. + +There only remain two public buildings worthy of notice; but they are +such as to rank among the most remarkable of Spain. The Lonja (Exchange) +was erected during the reign of Philip the Second, in the year 1583, by +Juan de Herrera. At this period the excesses committed in all parts of +Spain by the architects, no longer restrained by rule of any sort, had +brought about a salutary effect, after a sufficiently lengthened surfeit +of extravagance. Herrera took the lead in the reaction, and followed the +more correct models of art. + +Among the authors of some of the most lamentable specimens of aberration +of style scattered throughout Spain, are found several names high in +rank among the painters of the best period. These artists, desirous of +emulating some of the great masters of Italy, who had attained equal +superiority in architecture, painting, and sculpture, risked their +reputation in these different pursuits with greater confidence than just +appreciation of their peculiar genius. At the head of them was Alonzo +Cano, one of the most distinguished painters of the schools of +Andalucia; and who has been called the Guido of Spain. He may certainly +lay a more legitimate claim to that title than to that of the Michael +Angelo of Spain, accorded to him by some of the less judicious of his +admirers for no other reason than that of his combining the three above +mentioned arts. + +His paintings are characterized by a peculiar delicacy of manner, +correct drawing, and exquisite finish. The sickly paleness of his flesh +is sometimes unpleasing, and his personages are gainers by the addition +of drapery, in the arrangement of which he approaches to the excellence +of the best Italian schools. The life of this artist was varied by more +adventure than usually falls to the lot of those of his profession. His +talent as a painter had already become celebrated while he was still a +monk, having taken the vows very early in life. He had been from the +first an enemy to the subordination of the cloister, and at length a +series of irregularities led to his expulsion from his monastery. + +Alonzo was not, however, the original inventor of this eccentric style. +A Roman architect, Francisco Borromini, the rival of Bernini, and of +whom it was said, that he was the first of his time in elevation of +genius, and the last in the employment of it,--is supposed to have first +introduced it. Followers and imitators of these sprung up in great +numbers, and Spain was speedily inundated with extravagancies: facades, +moulded into more sinuosities than a labyrinth,--cornices, multiplying +their angles like a saw, murderously amputated columns, and +broken-backed pediments. Juan de Herrera was not, probably, possessed of +more talent than the Roman; but of what he had he made a better use. His +reputation was beginning to make rapid progress when he was selected, on +the death of Juan Baptista de Toledo, to continue the Escorial. His task +there was not the simple one of continuing the unfinished pile according +to the plans already traced. + +The religious fervor of Philip the Second was on the ascent, and during +the progress of the building he had resolved to double the number of +monks, for whom accommodation had been provided by the original plan. To +meet this necessity, Herrera raised the buildings to double their +intended elevation. His completion of this immense work, rendered more +difficult than it would have been had the original design been his own, +or even had that of his predecessor been persisted in (for various +other modifications were commanded, especially with regard to the plan +of the church,) fully established his fame; and the edifice would +probably have gained, had Philip not, at the last moment, yielded to a +new caprice, and called in another artist (the architect of the famous +country-house of the Viso) to erect the great staircase. + +The object of Herrera, traceable in all his works, was the +re-establishment of antique art in all its purity. In cathedrals success +was more difficult of attainment than in civil edifices; but the effort +is easily discerned, striving against the difficulties inseparable from +the system, which applies to the purposes of one creed the principles of +art invented for ministering to other forms. His cathedral of Valladolid +is an instance of this: the most unsuccessful portion of which (the +tower) has fallen before the completion of the edifice. Should the works +ever be continued, this would be a most fortunate circumstance, were it +not that the future builders are sure to persist in the same course, and +to disfigure the pile with another similar excrescence, in contempt of +symmetry and rule. + +The Lonja of Seville is a structure so perfect as to bid defiance to +criticism. It might have been built by Vitruvius. The general plan is a +quadrangle, enclosing a court surrounded by an arcade. There are two +stories, ornamented externally by pilasters. The order is Tuscan, both +above and below. The court, staircase, and various apartments, are +decorated with a profusion of the rarest marbles. The whole is a +specimen, almost unique, of chaste elegance and massive solidity. In +this edifice, the resort of wealthy traders during the period of the +colonial prosperity of Spain, are contained, among the archives, the +original despatches of Columbus: and, it is also said, those of Cortez +and Pizarro. + +The Ayuntamiento, or Town Hall, is an edifice of another sort. It is of +the _plateresco_ epoch. But Seville, having been apparently preserved by +especial favour from the introduction of specimens of bad taste; it is a +building of extreme beauty. The facade is divided into two unequal +parts. The smaller of the two is covered with sculpture, and contains an +open porch or vestibule, decorated throughout with a profusion of +ornament. I could not learn the name of the artist to whom these +sculptures are attributed, but they are worthy of the chisel of John of +Bologna. The other portion of the front is without ornament from the +ground to the first story, along the whole extent of which runs a series +of open arches supported by columns. These columns and arches are models +of lightness and grace. + +The Ayuntamiento is situated in the Plaza de San Francisco; from one +extremity of which a street leads to the cathedral: at the other +commences the principal street of Seville, called the Calle de la +Sierpe. Here are all the best shops, and the principle cafes. It leads +also to the post-office, to the opera, and to the Plaza del Duque, so +called from its containing the house of the Duke of Medina Sidonia; but +it possesses, likewise, two other ducal residences, besides others of +almost equal pretension. These mansions are scarcely ever occupied by +their proprietors. It is a small irregularly formed place, and its ducal +habitations, whatever they may be internally, by no means improve its +appearance. + +A few streets further on is the Alameda. This is a place magnificent in +extent, but possessing no architectural merit. Its principal ornament is +an avenue of elms, of about half a mile in length, at the head of which +are placed the two antique columns and statues of the temple of +Hercules. At the further extremity, on the left, is the church of the +Jesuits, closed since the revolution. + + +THE END. + +LONDON: + +Printed by S. & J. BENTLEY, WILSON, and FLEY, + +Bangor House, Shoe Lane. + + +FOOTNOTES: + +[1] The very polite individual alluded to no longer fills the post of +Consul at Bayonne. + +[2] The following inscriptions are placed at the feet of the respective +statues: + +"Aqui yace el muy Ilustre Senor Don Pedro Hernandez de Velasco, +Condestable de Castilla, Senor del estado, y gran casa de Velasco, hijo +de Don Pedro Hernandez de Velasco, y de Dona Beatriz Manrique, Condes de +Haro. Murio de setenta y siete anos, anno de mil cuatro cientos y +noventa y dos, siendo solo Virey de estos reynos por los Reyes +Catolicos." + +"Aqui yace la muy Ilustre Senora Dona Mencia de Mendoza, Condesa de +Haro, muger del Condestable Don Pedro Hernandez de Velasco, hija de Don +Inigo Lopez de Mendoza, y de Dona Catalina de Figueroa, Marqueses de +Santillana. Murio de setenta y nueve annos, anno de mil y quiniento." + +[3] The above woodcut may, it is hoped, serve as a guide to future +travellers in their search for this head, of which it has no pretension +to give an adequate idea. + +[4] It will be seen that this letter was written shortly after the +Queen's return to Spain, and previous to the publication of her +marriage. + +[5] It is probable that this threat, supposing it real, may have +assisted in determining the Queen's resolution, since executed, of +publishing the marriage. + +[6] The crown was valued in Cadiz at a hundred and sixty thousand +pounds, of which the emerald, which supports the cross, represents forty +thousand. + +[7] She is of a wood, whether artificially or naturally, of a tint +between the darkest mahogany and ebony. + +[8] The Author has in every instance made use of the word Gothic, in +preference to the employment of any sort of periphrasis; considering +that the chief intention of a name is, not that its application should +accord with its derivation, but rather that it should present to all who +know it, or have dictionaries, an identical meaning, in order that the +idea of the individual employing it may be speedily caught. Now the word +Gothic having always been applied to this architecture, it is +comprehended. A dismounted highwayman is termed a pad. The oblong area +in the centre of Madrid is called a door. "What's in a name?" + +[9] + + "Who does a kindness is not therefore kind.-- + Perhaps the wind has shifted from the East."--POPE. + +[10] Feeling his powers as a draughtsman inadequate to do justice to +this court, the author has inserted the above sketch merely to show the +general architectural design. + +[11] He had put to death the "Master of St. Bernard," a title of those +days possessed by the chief of that order appointed by the Pope. It was +Urbano V, who, on the occasion of this act, resented at the same time +various other offences. + +[12] The above is gathered from the following passage of Appianus +Alexandrinus. "Relicto, utpote pacata regione, valido praesidio, Scipio +milites omnes vulneribus debiles in unam urbem compulit, quam ab Italia +Italicam nominavit, claram natalibus Trajani et Adriani, qui posteris +temporibus Romanum imperium tenuere." + +Elius Sparcianus, in the life of Adrian, says, "Origo imperatoris +Adriani vetustior a Picentibus, posterior ab Hispaniensibus manat; +siquidem Adria ortos majores suos apud Italicam, Scipionum temporibus +resedisse in libris vitae suae Adrianus ipse commemorat." + +[13] No other town is so placed as to accord with the description given +by Pliny, who passes it on the right bank of the river, and arrives at +Seville lower down on the left: "Italica et a laeva Hispalis colonia +cognomine Romulensis." + +Lucas de Tuy, who wrote four centuries back, says, "Italica est Hispalis +Antigua." + +[14] + + Hic fertur Apostolico + Vates fulsisse tempore: + Et praedicasse supremum + Patrem potentis filii. + + + +Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber: + +Alonza Cano=>Alonzo Cano (1) + +Abderrahman=>Abderahman (1) + +Andalusia=>Andalucia (1) + + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Picturesque Antiquities of Spain;, by +Nathaniel Armstrong Wells + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PICTURESQUE ANTIQUITIES *** + +***** This file should be named 32821.txt or 32821.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/3/2/8/2/32821/ + +Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team +at http:://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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