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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 20:09:11 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 20:09:11 -0700
commit0c08cbfaf7a1af35aeac73f654a7fca09b2a8102 (patch)
treead7b8e53241fdf35e59aa3a9f4dbf2b8f0249070
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of Southern Spain, by A.F. Calvert
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: Southern Spain
+
+Author: A.F. Calvert
+
+Illustrator: Trevor Haddon
+
+Release Date: November 6, 2011 [eBook #37944]
+[Most recently updated: April 6, 2021]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+Produced by: Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOUTHERN SPAIN ***
+
+[Illustration: image of the book's cover]
+
+
+
+
+SOUTHERN SPAIN
+PAINTED BY TREVOR
+HADDON DESCRIBED
+BY A. F. CALVERT PUBLISHED
+BY A. & C. BLACK
+LONDON MCMVIII
+
+[Illustration: colophon]
+
+[Illustration: frontispiece]
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+Few travellers have leisure enough to traverse the wide realm of tawny
+Spain in its every part. Those who must confine their attention to a
+single province naturally select Andalusia, where all the Northerner's
+preconceptions of the South find realization. The wild scenery of
+Southern Spain, the gay open-air life of the people, the monuments
+attesting the splendour of the extinct civilization of the Moor, the
+spell of romance which still holds its cities, makes this land one of
+the most interesting and fascinating in Europe to the artist, the
+archæologist, and the dreamer.
+
+The present volume, mainly the embodiment of personal impressions and
+observations, is intended partly to supply the place of a guide-book to
+this part of the Peninsula, and with that object I have brought together
+as much of history, art, and topography as the traveller is likely to
+assimilate. Into the descriptive matter I have introduced a little
+gossip, which will, I hope, be not found altogether irrelevant, and may
+serve to beguile the tedium of a bare recital of facts.
+
+While I have endeavoured to make the book as useful to travellers as
+within the prescribed limits was possible, I have essayed to give it, by
+means of the illustrations, a more permanent value. It is on the brush
+rather than on the pen that I have relied to convey an idea of the
+gorgeous panorama of Southern Spain, and to recall to the returned
+traveller his impressions of the land.
+
+As a _vade-mecum_, then, for the tourist, and as an album and souvenir
+of the fairest portion of the realm of the Catholic King, I hope that
+the present volume will be of use to the public, despite the
+shortcomings it doubtless contains. For rendering these as few as
+possible, I have to thank several friends who have looked through the
+proofs. To one in particular, Mr. E. B. d'Auvergne, I am indebted for
+various scraps of original and entertaining information.
+
+A. F. CALVERT.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+ PAGE
+
+CADIZ 1
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+SEVILLE--THE PEARL OF ANDALUSIA 12
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+CORDOVA 86
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+GRANADA 107
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+MALAGA 163
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE WAY SOUTH 169
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE KINGDOM OF MURCIA 174
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+IN THE OLD KINGDOM OF VALENCIA 186
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+1. Cordova--Fountain in the Patio de los Naranjos _Frontispiece_
+
+ PAGE
+
+2. Ayamonte (The Gateway of Andalusia) 8
+
+3. Seville--A Street 12
+
+4. Seville--The Aceite Gate 20
+
+5. Seville--A Courtyard 24
+
+6. Seville--The Torre del Oro and the Cathedral 28
+
+7. Seville--The Giralda 30
+
+8. Seville--Gardens of the Alcazar 34
+
+9. Seville--Gardens of the Alcazar 40
+
+10. Seville--Patio de las Banderas 44
+
+11. Seville--Gardens of the Alcazar 50
+
+12. Seville--Interior of the Cathedral 56
+
+13. Seville--Patio de los Naranjos 60
+
+14. Seville--Plaza de San Fernando 64
+
+15. Seville--Casa de Pilatos 68
+
+16. Seville--Casa de Pilatos 72
+
+17. Seville--Garden of the Casa de Pilatos 78
+
+18. Seville--The Market Place 80
+
+19. Cordova--A Courtyard 84
+
+20. Cordova--Entrance to the City 86
+
+21. Cordova--Calle Cardinal Herrera 88
+
+22. Cordova--Moorish Mill 90
+
+23. Cordova--Mezquita 92
+
+24. Cordova--Patio de los Naranjos 94
+
+25. Cordova--Outer Wall of the Mosque 96
+
+26. Cordova--A Street Scene 98
+
+27. Cordova--A Street 100
+
+28. Cordova--The Bridge 102
+
+29. Cordova--Courtyard of an Inn 104
+
+30. Cordova--Old Houses near the River 106
+
+31. Granada--From the Generalife 108
+
+32. Granada--Sierra Nevada from the Alhambra Gardens 110
+
+33. Granada--Exterior of the Alhambra 112
+
+34. Granada--A Street in the Albaicin 114
+
+35. Granada--In the Market 116
+
+36. Granada--The Alhambra: The Aqueduct 118
+
+37. Granada--The Court of the Cypresses 120
+
+38. Granada--Villa on the Darro 122
+
+39. Granada--The Alhambra from San Miguel 124
+
+40. Granada--Towers of the Infantas, Alhambra 126
+
+41. Granada--Near the Alhambra 128
+
+42. Granada--Puerta del Vino, Alhambra 130
+
+43. Granada--The Alhambra: Tower of Comares 132
+
+44. Granada--The Court of the Lions: Moonlight 136
+
+45. Granada--The Generalife: Patio de la Acequia 138
+
+46. Granada--The Generalife: Court of the Cypresses 140
+
+47. Granada--Tocador de la Reina 142
+
+48. Granada--Torre de las Damas 144
+
+49. Granada--The Generalife: Court of the Cypresses 146
+
+50. Granada--Casa del Carbon 148
+
+51. Granada--Street in the Albaicin 150
+
+52. Granada--Interior of a Posada 152
+
+53. Granada--Old Houses, Cuesta del Pescado 154
+
+54. Granada--Old Ayuntamiento 156
+
+55. Granada--Street in the Old Quarter 158
+
+56. Granada--The Generalife: Patio de la Acequia 160
+
+57. Granada--A Corner in the Old Quarter 162
+
+58. Malaga--The Harbour 164
+
+59. Malaga--The Guadalmedina 166
+
+60. Malaga--A Market 168
+
+61. Malaga--Packing Lemons 170
+
+62. Ronda--The Tajo 172
+
+63. Ronda--Roman Bridges 174
+
+64. Ronda--At the Fountain 176
+
+65. Ronda--A Moorish Gateway 180
+
+66. Ronda--A Street Scene 182
+
+67. Ronda--The Market 184
+
+68. Orihuela on the River Segura 186
+
+69. Elche--A Street 188
+
+70. A Fisher Girl (Coast of Malaga) 190
+
+71. A Water Carrier 192
+
+72. Malaga--A Picador 196
+
+73. Valencia--Santa Catalina 198
+
+74. An Andalusian Dance 200
+
+75. Courting 204
+
+_Map at end of Volume_
+
+_The Illustrations in this Volume have been engraved and printed in
+England by_ THE MENPES PRESS, _London and Watford_
+
+
+
+
+SOUTHERN SPAIN
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+CADIZ
+
+
+Cadiz was the prettiest of all the towns of Spain, thought Byron. I
+would rather say that she was the most beautiful. She rises out of the
+sea--the boundless salt ocean that stretches from pole to pole--and the
+crests of the waves which lick her feet are not whiter than her walls.
+And these by day are bathed in liquid gold, for the sun seems to linger
+here ere he says good-night to Europe. By night the city gleams like
+washed silver, and her sheen is more magical than that of the dark yet
+phosphorescent water. Of sun and sea, light and air, is Cadiz
+compounded. She is the Gateway of the West, not sultry and southern, but
+salt and windy and dazzling white. It is thus she appears to you,
+especially when you come to her over the sea--that sea which hereabouts
+has so often been splashed with British blood. How often the pale yellow
+cliffs of Spain to the southward, and those of the lovely shore of
+Algarve to the north, have reverberated with the booming of the cannon;
+how often the strand has been littered with dead men, whose gaping
+wounds the kindly ocean had washed clean! Browning's lines recur to the
+memory:
+
+ "Nobly, nobly Cape St. Vincent to the north-west died away,
+ Sunset ran, one glorious blood-red, reeking into Cadiz Bay."
+
+For you can see the lighthouse on Cape Trafalgar, and the Bay of Cadiz
+itself has been the scene of some of England's most glorious and
+desperate feats of arms. There is little stirring now in the wide
+harbour, where the ships ride lazily at anchor, and their crews crowd to
+the bulwarks and exchange pleasantries with your boatman as he pulls you
+towards the quay. And so you step on shore, and enter the fair city.
+
+It looks so fresh and fragrant that you would not think it ancient. But
+Cadiz is the first-born city of Spain, probably the first foothold of
+civilization on the shores of the Atlantic Ocean. It marks a new and
+tremendously important step forward in the world's progress. After
+Heaven knows how many attempts and false starts, the Phœnicians dared
+what no people of the ancient world had dared before. The Pillars of
+Hercules were regarded as the western boundary of the world: beyond was
+nothingness. And one day, with the east wind filling his sails and fear
+in the hearts of his crew, some forgotten Columbus of Sidon or of Tyre
+passed through the strait, and turning northward, beached his little
+galley on the peninsula where we stand. Civilization--arts and letters,
+commerce and social life, and all that makes life dear to modern
+men--had burst the narrow limits of the Middle Sea, and first hoisted
+its flag o'er Cadiz.
+
+The thought is not uninspiring. It is not unreasonable to suppose that
+the first keel that ever ploughed the Atlantic grazed this strand. It is
+likely enough that the fleets of lost Atlantis, if that mystical isle
+possessed a ship, resorted hither, for the copper and precious metals of
+Tarshish. What voyages have begun from this port, from the little
+Phœnician craft setting forth in quest of the Tin Islands of the far
+north, to brave Cervera leading out his squadron to its preordained
+doom!
+
+ "It may be that the gulfs shall wash us down,
+ It may be we shall touch the happy isles."
+
+And careless of fate, all these dauntless sailors have adventured forth
+into the deep.
+
+In after years, the Phœnicians and Carthaginians had settlements
+here, and built great ugly palaces overlooking the sea and the
+estuaries. With their curling black beards I seem to see them, robed in
+the real Tyrian purple, reclining on their terraces even as their
+forefathers are shown in that strange picture in our National Gallery,
+"The Eve of the Deluge."
+
+Their deluge was the Roman Invasion, when, in a good hour for humanity,
+Latin superseded Semitic civilization, and the cruel gods of Sidon bowed
+before the young and beautiful gods of Rome. Gades or Gaddir--I give it
+its two oldest names--did not suffer by its change of masters. Its mart
+was crowded, its merchants known from Britain to the Fortunate Isles,
+from Lusitania to Arabia. Much wealth engendered luxury. Life in Gades
+was feverish and distempered. The people had not forgotten the worship
+of Astarte, and the Gaditane dancing-girls proved themselves worthy
+daughters of the goddess. When the gods were dethroned the sensual city
+pined; and under the austere yoke of Islam it languished and all but
+faded away. It is interesting to note that its Moslem inhabitants were
+drawn from the old race of Philistines, some of whose gods had probably
+been worshipped here in the Punic days.
+
+When Seville fell, the port continued subject to the Almohade Emir of
+Fez. Alfonso the Learned subdued it without difficulty in 1262, and
+filled it with colonists from the north coast of Spain, from such places
+as Santander and Laredo. But the Philistine taint in two senses was
+never eradicated; Cadiz remained ever financial and commercial, and
+cared nothing for art. Her brightest and blackest days followed the
+discovery of America, when she soon eclipsed Seville as the mart for the
+produce of the New Indies. Her wealth, not once but many times, wellnigh
+proved her downfall. Threatened again and again by the Barbary corsairs,
+she saw a far more terrible foe before her walls in 1587, in the person
+of Sir Francis Drake, who inflicted incalculable injury on her shipping.
+Worse was to come nine years later, when the English, under the command
+of the Earl of Essex, scaled the walls, sacked the city from end to
+end, slaughtered the inhabitants, profaned the churches and burnt the
+public buildings, and sailed away with enormous booty. Yet so quickly
+did Cadiz recover from this terrific catastrophe, that she again tempted
+the cupidity of our countrymen in 1625. But this time the Dons were well
+prepared and gave our fleet so warm a reception that we were compelled
+to retire with heavy loss.
+
+The city attained its zenith of opulence in the first quarter of the
+eighteenth century, when it had become almost the exclusive entrepôt for
+the traffic between Southern Europe and the Americas. Numerous royal
+privileges and concessions secured it almost a monopoly of the trade.
+But no one organ can hope to escape an infection attacking the whole
+system. Spain in the eighteenth century was dying from that commonest of
+national diseases--dry-rot. Yet as late as 1770 Adam Smith did not
+hesitate to say that the merchants of London had not yet the wealth to
+compete with those of Cadiz, and a few years later the value of the
+bullion landed at its quays was estimated at 125 millions sterling.
+
+Yet it was this bloated, purse-proud city, strangely enough, that proved
+the ark of refuge for Spain when the innumerable hosts of Napoleon
+swarmed over the land. Here were preserved the insignia of national
+independence, and here, amid the thunder of guns and in the lap of the
+ocean, was born the New and Free Spain. Cadiz proved a second
+Covadonga. The focus of the constitutional movement, she was savagely
+assailed by the Absolutists and their French allies. The defence of
+Trocadero, on the other side of the bay, against the forces of the Duc
+d'Angoulême popularized the name of the place throughout Europe. The
+pages of Balzac abound in allusions to that mischievous and futile
+attempt of the Government of the Restoration to rivet on Spaniards
+fetters that no Frenchman would wear. Then came a French invasion of
+another sort, of the Romanticists--of De Musset and Gautier, and the
+long-haired followers of Byron.
+
+It has often seemed to me that every city belongs to one particular age.
+This being a fancy contrary to fact, I will put it this way--that in
+every city there is always some one period of human history more readily
+recoverable than any other. This may not be the period which has left
+its mark most conspicuously on the physiognomy of the place; more
+probably it will be determined by your own preconceptions, derived from
+study or chance reading. John Addington Symonds observed that an island
+near Venice, the name of which I have forgotten, immediately recalled to
+him not the great days of the Republic with which it had an historical
+connection, but the later and decadent days of bag-wig and hair powder.
+At Cadiz I could have wished to think of the Phœnicians, thus hardily
+adventuring into the wide ocean; or of Drake and his gentlemen
+adventurers, "bound wrist to bar, all for red iniquity"; but instead I
+fancied myself back in the 'thirties of last century, and thought of De
+Musset and his "Andalouse" and his lovely Spanish girls. Is it possible
+that Andalusia in those days of our grandfathers _was_ the Andalusia of
+the Romanticists? At Cadiz, I beguiled myself into believing so--why, I
+cannot explain. Perhaps it was due to the unexpected appearance of a
+native--a distinctively Andalusian--costume in the streets. Nowhere else
+in Spain is the mantilla more conspicuous or more gorgeous. A French
+writer gives a selection of toilettes worn at a _Corrida de toros_,
+which, as I never assisted at one of these functions in Cadiz, I repeat:
+"All pink, coral necklace, white lace mantilla, big bunches of
+carnations in the hair and corsage; a blond head seen beneath a
+transparent mantilla, like a frail spider's web, red corsage and white
+gown; coral ear-rings, with bunches of roses; all black, with a white
+mantilla; all white, with a black mantilla; pale green gown with a blue
+bolero and white roses; shawl draped, brocaded, with a wealth of
+carnations in the hair; black dress and mantilla, violets in the hair;
+gold coloured shawl, embroidered with red roses, comb like a tiara set
+with bright-hued flowers," etc., etc. With confections such as these
+dazzling the eyes, it is no wonder that I began to see visions of
+gentlemen in black silk tights, dark green frock coats, and snowy white
+cravats, stammering Castilian with a Parisian accent.
+
+It would be hard, too, to keep the mind fixed on remoter and more heroic
+ages, for Cadiz is singularly destitute of antiquities. The descendants
+of the Philistines could not be expected to respect ancient monuments!
+But what they spared our freebooter ancestors burned. The old Cathedral,
+built in the thirteenth century, was almost totally consumed by the
+flames. When I say that the new building dates from 1720, I fear that
+your interest in it will expire. But it is at least imposing; and the
+choir stalls are very fine. Then there is the Capuchin Convent, where
+Murillo met his death by falling from a scaffolding while painting the
+picture of the Espousals of St. Catherine. Another picture by the same
+master may be seen in this church--St. Francis receiving the Stigmata.
+The little Academia de Bellas Artes contains some admirable specimens of
+the work of Zurbaran, brought from the Charterhouse of Jerez.
+
+These are the only sights in the tourists' agent's acceptation of the
+word, and it is likely enough that you will think three hours devoted to
+the city amply sufficient. Yet its situation at the end of a narrow spit
+like that at the entrance to the Suez Canal--in mid-sea as it were--its
+associations, and its brightness and cleanliness, make it for some the
+most charming of Spanish towns. Crenellated walls enclose it on all
+sides, the space between them and the water's edge being devoted to
+quays, promenades, and gardens. There are forts at the extremity of the
+peninsula--the Isla de Leon, as it is called. The streets are all
+very straight, very narrow, and very clean. Through the _rejas_ across
+the doorways you obtain glimpses of trim little patios, bedecked with
+flowering plants. Occasionally you come out into a little square,
+prettily laid out with gardens, like the Plaza de Mina, where the
+loungers asleep on the seats irresistibly recall dear old busy London.
+
+[Illustration: AYAMONTE (THE GATEWAY OF ANDALUSIA)]
+
+The charming Parque Genovés, bordering the sea, reminds us of the great
+merchant race of Italy who had their warehouses here. It is exquisite to
+walk by night along the sea wall, which at some points rises sheer
+upwards from the water, and to inhale the breezes blown straight across,
+one would like to think, from the West Indies. You will crave for that
+cool wind afterwards, in the parched interior of Andalusia.
+
+From Cadiz you may go to Seville by steamer up the Guadalquivir, but it
+is far from being an interesting trip. The river is about as
+picturesque, and in the same way, as the Dutch Rhine. However, in these
+days of distorted æsthetics--when all that we thought beautiful we are
+now told is ugly, and _vice versa_--it is quite possible that some
+rapturous travellers will extol the mystical loveliness of the plains of
+the Guadalquivir, rating their charms far above the vulgar, blatant
+scenery of Switzerland and the Riviera, which is at the disadvantage of
+being at once realized by the mere ordinary person. _En passant_ I
+cannot refrain from expressing my wonder why superior people of this
+sort go abroad. If Rhenish and Italian panoramas are suggestive to them
+only of oleographs and Christmas numbers, have we not our Abanas and
+Pharpars in England--the Essex marshes, the treeless downs of Sussex,
+the odoriferous banks of the Mersey, for instance?
+
+But I digress--and I counsel you against doing so, but recommend you to
+proceed to Seville, if that be your destination, by rail direct. The
+journey occupies eight and a half hours, and is not among the most
+agreeable experiences of a lifetime. The railway runs right round the
+bay of Cadiz, touching several towns of importance. That any of them are
+worth a break of journey I doubt. Puerto Santa Maria is said to be much
+resorted to by toreros and their admirers. I have never heard what
+attracts them there, but indeed my interest in bull-killing was never
+more than languid. The country round the bay is marshy. It is traversed
+by the river Guadalete, beside which, it seems, Don Roderic was not
+slain, and the battle never took place. You must look for the scene of
+that epoch-making encounter farther towards the strait near the Rio
+Barbate.
+
+Between Cadiz and Seville you stop at the buffet of Jerez to drink a
+glass of sherry in its native place. As most people know, all the good
+wine comes to England; but at Jerez I think, in all reason, the price of
+the wine might be a little lower and its quality a good deal higher. The
+city, of which I only caught a glimpse, looks like an inland Cadiz,
+very clean, white, sunny, and bright.
+
+And so we creep onwards over dreary country--like the South African
+veld--to Lebrija, an old Moorish town with a great church on a height,
+apparently the only building of note in the place. Further on is Utrera,
+renowned for bulls and for possessing one of the thirty deniers for
+which Judas sold his Master. It should be an interesting town, with its
+Moorish castle and walls still extant. But the same individuality is not
+to be expected of the smaller Spanish as of the lesser Italian cities;
+for the history of the one country has been a record of steady
+centralization; of the other, obstinate decentralization. In Utrera, and
+Moron, and Lebrija--even in Cadiz and Granada--there were no independent
+princes or ambitious municipalities to foster and to reward native art.
+The genius and talent of Spain flocked to great centres like Seville,
+Toledo, Valladolid, and Zaragoza, and became ultimately concentrated in
+Madrid. We read the same story in our own country; and in fact it is
+impossible to resist the dangerous and obvious conclusion that
+centralization and unity are good things for nations but bad things for
+art.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE PEARL OF ANDALUSIA
+
+
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--A STREET]
+
+Seville, in the glory of the Andalusian summer, is a city of white and
+gold. Her brilliancy dazzles you, as it dazzled those who wrote of her,
+a little wildly, as the eighth wonder of the world. Luis Guevara, a poet
+born within her walls, declared that she was not the eighth but the
+first of those wonders. In our own day, men of genius have felt her
+spell. "Seville," says Valdés, "has ever been for me the symbol of
+light, the city of love and joy." So much few northerners would feel
+justified in saying. To them this must be the city that most closely
+corresponds to their preconceived ideas of the sunny and romantic South.
+To Seville belong the sweep of lute-strings, the click of the castanets,
+the serenade, and above all, the bull-fight. There is something feminine
+about the radiant city, compared with the masculine strength of Toledo
+and Avila, and the harsh decadence of Granada. You will agree that no
+town is prettier, except perhaps Cadiz. So Byron said, and by him and
+all the poets of his school--Alfred de Musset for one--the city by the
+Guadalquivir was ardently loved. Yet though so conventionally
+romantic of aspect, Seville is busy, prosperous, and well peopled,
+before all other Andalusian towns. The blood still courses hotly through
+her veins--her vitality intoxicates. If you come from Cordova or
+Granada, you feel as though you were returning to the world. Here is
+life, here is gaiety; yet your driver the next instant takes you into a
+narrow, winding street, no broader than an alley, where absolute silence
+reigns. The windows are shuttered, no one seems to stir in the patios.
+There reigns a Sabbath-like calm. A minute later you are in a broad
+plaza, where electric cars boom and whirr, where all is animation and
+bustle. Such contrasts are very sharp in this city, where the streets
+exist simply for folk to dwell in, the squares and paseos for them to
+gather in and do their business. There are notable exceptions, it is
+true. There is no want of life in the Sierpes, the narrow street which
+is the Strand and Charing Cross of Seville. Here you return again and
+again, feeling it is the focus of the city's life. Little better than a
+lane is the Sierpes, where no wheeled traffic can pass. It is amazingly
+dark in the summer, when awnings are drawn right across it from roof to
+roof, and penetrating into it from the sunny plaza, it is a little time
+before you can accustom your eyes to the shadow. Here are the best
+shops, the banks, and those elegant and ostentatious casinos, where the
+aristocracy and leisured class lounge and smoke, and survey at their
+ease the unceasing procession of passers by. There are cafés here of a
+different sort, some of which are frequented by the bull-fighters and
+their admirers. Here too may be seen in all his glory that peculiar type
+of Andalusian, the "Majo," a curious blend of the English "masher" the
+"sporting man" and the "troubadour"! The people sit in the cafés to see
+the others pass, and the others walk down the street to see the people
+in the cafés. This is a form of amusement and exercise common on the
+Continent, and acclimatized already at our English seaside towns.
+Selling lottery tickets is a great industry in the Sierpes, the sale of
+tickets for the next _Corrida de toros_ even more so. The boot-blacking
+saloons remind the American visitor of his native land. For his
+delectation the _New York Herald_ is displayed in the windows of the few
+booksellers. There is nothing about this gay little thoroughfare to
+remind us of the past. The history of Seville is more easily recoverable
+by the fancy, when you are seated by the Guadalquivir, in sight of the
+Torre del Oro, on the spot perhaps where George Borrow, in an unwonted
+fit of hysteria, wept over the beauty of the scene before him.
+
+Phœnician, Carthaginian, Roman, Vandal, Goth, and Moor--the city has
+known them all and outlived them all. There seems to have been a
+settlement of the Turdetani here, before the first Phœnicians came.
+The name at all events was bestowed by the Tyrian traders, if it is
+really derived from "sephela," a plain. Then came the Carthaginians,
+whom the Spaniards accuse of having corrupted the pure and
+simple-minded natives. The city became known to the little world of
+civilization, and was spoken of by Grecian geographers as "Ispola" and
+"Hispalis." The terrible Hamilcar reduced the greater part of Spain to
+the Punic yoke. He and his successor Hasdrubal filled Andalusia with
+their massive ungainly fortresses. Salambo, the Semitic Venus, was
+worshipped on the banks of the Guadalquivir. From time to time, we doubt
+not, human sacrifices stained the altars of Baal. One wonders if the
+descendants of the Carthaginians became identified with the other great
+Semitic people, and passed as Jews. Certainly it is otherwise a little
+difficult to account for the presence in Spain of the Israelites in such
+numbers at a very early period.
+
+The Carthaginians fought hard for the province of Bætica, but Punic
+force and fraud were alike powerless before the sword of Scipio. The
+dominion of the province of Iberia passed to Rome. When the conquering
+hero turned his face homewards to claim his triumph, he was mindful of
+his warworn veterans. For them the journey back to Italy was too long
+and wearisome; they were content to die in the land they had conquered.
+Outside Hispalis a place of rest and refreshment was found for them in
+the village of Sancios. Scipio laid there the foundation of a colony,
+bestowed it on his veterans, and named it Italica, in memory of their
+fatherland. And thus was founded the first Latin-speaking settlement
+outside Italy. It lies--all that remains of it--on the slopes of the
+hills that bound the prospect westwards.
+
+Hispalis, not overshadowed by its new neighbour, flourished under the
+Roman sway. Julius Cæsar besieged the city, which was garrisoned by
+Pompey's partisans, and inscribed the date of its capture in the
+calendar of the Republic (August 9, B.C. 45). His fleet, they say, lay
+in the river between the Torre del Oro and the Palace of San Telmo. The
+townsfolk were devoted to him, and he renamed the place Julia Romula. As
+a Roman colony the town had a senate and consuls, ediles and censors.
+The wall Cæsar built endured intact until the time of Juan II., so that
+monarch wrote in his Chronicle.
+
+While its Punic physiognomy was hard to efface, Seville soon became in
+spirit a Latin town. All Andalusia was in course of time thoroughly
+Romanized. Seneca, Lucan, the Ælii, as most of us remember, were
+Spaniards--if Spaniards could be said, as yet, to have existed.
+
+Then came the era of persecutions, the establishment of Christianity and
+the disappearance of Astarte and Baal from the forum and the temple--to
+be worshipped, perhaps, for a little while longer in the recesses of the
+mountains, where Islam lingered in after times. Presently came the
+Vandals, and their fury having spent itself, they made Seville their
+capital, though they did _not_ give their name, as some have thought, to
+Andalusia. When they passed over--a whole nation--to Africa, the
+barbarous Suevi took possession of their old camping-ground. The Suevian
+king, Recchiarus, became a Catholic, at the persuasion of Sabinus,
+Bishop of Seville, in the year 448. We next hear of him murdering the
+Byzantine ambassador Censorius, in this city, and of being defeated and
+slain by the Visigoths in 456. Now comes an interregnum of seventy-five
+years. The Suevi were expelled from Seville, but their conquerors did
+not occupy the town. It must have been governed by its Catholic bishops,
+who are spoken of as miracles of wisdom and sanctity. Under Theudis the
+Gothic king, Seville again rose to the rank of a capital--or at any rate
+shared the dignity with Toledo. Here Theudis was assassinated, and his
+son and successor Theudisel also, a few months later. The latter
+sovereign is described as a detestably wicked person. He was of course
+an Aryan, and gave a shocking example of his hard-hearted incredulity.
+Among the hills where lies Italica is a village called San Juan de
+Aznalfarache. Near this in the sixth century was a tank which was
+miraculously filled once a year, when the Catholics resorted to it to
+baptize their catechumens. Theudisel had the tank, when it was dry,
+thoroughly investigated, and, satisfied that it was fed by no spring,
+had a lid fastened over it and sealed with his own seal. But next Easter
+it was full of water! Not to be baffled, the king dug a ditch to the
+depth of twenty-five feet all round the tank, but found no trace of a
+spring. He would perhaps have gone on digging for years had not his
+nobles rid the world of so sceptical a monarch.
+
+We come now to the days of good King Leovgild, who consolidated the
+Visigothic monarchy and warred successfully against the Greeks and
+barbarous Suevi. His son, Ermengild, being sent to govern Seville, was
+converted by Leander, the bishop of the city, to the Catholic faith. The
+prince thought he could give no better proof of his zeal for his new
+creed than by revolting against his father. A bloody war resulted.
+Ermengild was worsted and was shut up in Seville, while his father
+occupied Italica and pressed him closely. The rebels capitulated and
+were treated leniently. The prince afterwards headed a second revolt
+against his father, was captured and executed. He has been enrolled
+among the saints of the Catholic Church.
+
+It is quite conceivable that a man of fanatical temperament should feel
+himself called upon to effect the conversion of his fellows to what he
+believes to be the true faith, even at the cost of his kinsfolk's blood;
+but unfortunately for the Visigothic prince, his interests so coincided
+with his principles that worldly people not unnaturally suggest that the
+desire to wear his father's crown had as much to do with his action as
+the desire to convert his father's subjects.
+
+When Spain from Aryan became Catholic, Seville became the Metropolitan
+See, and Leander its Archbishop. He was succeeded in that office by his
+brother Isidore, a much better man than he, and renowned as a doctor of
+the Church and writer on things generally. But by the end of the seventh
+century the primacy had passed to Toledo, and before the next century
+was fourteen years old the last of the Visigoths had reigned over Spain.
+
+After the victory over Roderic near Jerez, Tarik, the Moorish commander,
+marched straight upon Toledo. The reduction of Seville he left to his
+superior officer, Musa. The citizens offered, it is said, a stout
+resistance, and then retired to Beja, on the other side of the Guadiana.
+During the absence of the Moorish commander they recovered the city,
+only to be dispossessed and finally subjugated by his son, the famous
+Abd-el-Aziz, the Abdalasis of Spanish story. Thenceforward for 536 years
+Seville was known as Ishbiliyah, one of the fairest cities of Islam.
+
+When Musa was recalled to Damascus his son remained beside the
+Guadalquivir (as the river Bætis had now come to be called). He
+espoused, according to tradition, Roderic's widow, Exilona, who, legend
+says, had originally been a Moorish princess. For a brief period he
+dwelt in splendour in the old Acropolis, near where the Convent of La
+Trinidad now stands. But his enemies had been busy far away at the
+khalifa's court. While he was in the act of prayer in the mosque he had
+built adjacent to his palace, the messenger of death appeared. Exilona
+was left a second time a widow, and to the aged Musa was shown, months
+later, the lifeless head of his valiant son. Under Abd-el-Aziz's
+immediate successors the seat of government of the latest province of
+the Moslem Empire was transferred from Seville to Cordova. From all
+parts of the East, but especially from Syria, men came flocking to
+Andalusia. Quarrels arose as to the partition of the conquered land
+between the Berbers, who had composed the hordes of Tarik and Musa, and
+the new Saracen settlers. Finally it was decreed that each tribe or
+nationality should be allotted that region which bore the most
+resemblance to its original place of abode. Under this arrangement
+Ishbiliyah was assigned to the people of Homs, the ancient Emesa, a
+Syrian town on the Orontes. (We are reminded of the parallel between
+Macedon and Monmouth.) But in the course of time the original derivation
+of the Spanish Moslems was half forgotten, and the classification was
+rather into pure-blooded Arabs and Muwallads or half-breeds.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--THE ACEITE GATE]
+
+Here at Seville the young Abd-er-Rahman arrived, to restore the empire
+of his forefathers, the Umeyyas, and under these walls the horde of the
+Abbassides was cut to pieces. Yet despite the prosperity she enjoyed
+under the Western Khalifate, the city murmured against Cordova, and more
+than once essayed to throw off the yoke. In Abdullah's reign (888-912) a
+chief named Ibrahim Ibn Hajjaj assumed semi-regal state at Ishbiliyah.
+When he rode forth he was attended by five hundred cavaliers, and he
+ventured to wear the tiraz, the official insignia of the amirs. He
+was a liberal patron of the arts and letters. "In all the West,"
+exclaimed a delighted bard, "I found no noble man but Ibrahim, and he
+was nobility itself! When you have once lived within his shadow, to live
+elsewhere is misery." Such flattery did not delude Ibrahim into too
+great a confidence in his own power. He readily submitted to the great
+khalifa, Abd-ur-Rahman III., by whom the city was greatly favoured. The
+channel of the Guadalquivir was narrowed and deepened, the palm-tree
+introduced from Africa, and the city adorned with gardens and fine
+edifices. The splendour of the court of Cordova was reflected on
+Seville, which became famous as a seat of learning. In those days
+flourished Ahmed Ben Abdallah, surnamed "El Beji," or "The Sage," the
+author of an Encyclopædia of Sciences which was long esteemed a piece of
+marvellous erudition.
+
+Some strange and unexpected figures about this time flit across the
+stage of Andalusian history. The Northmen, or "Majus" as they were
+called by the Arabs, appeared in the year 844 off Lisbon. After
+spreading dismay through Lusitania they sailed their long ships
+southwards to Cadiz, and disembarked. They vanquished the khalifa's
+troops in three pitched battles, and penetrating into Seville sacked the
+rich city from end to end. Luckily they remained but a day and a night,
+and after sustaining several desperate attacks from the inhabitants of
+the country, with varying results, they retired overland to Lisbon,
+where they re-embarked. They came again fifteen years later, and this
+time sailed up the Guadalquivir, burnt the principal mosque, and threw
+down the Roman walls. Then they made sail for the eastern coasts of
+Spain, where they were attacked and routed by the Saracen fleet. An army
+of demons must these strange uncouth pirates have seemed to the
+Andalusians, who knew not whence they came nor to what race of men they
+belonged.
+
+On the break-up of the Western Khalifate in 1009, the shrewd and
+powerful kadi, Mohammed Ben Abbad, secured the sovereignty of the city
+for himself and his descendants. He contrived to give his usurpation the
+appearance of legality. He espoused the cause of an impostor who
+personated the deposed khalifa, Hisham, and pretended to govern the city
+in his name. His power once firmly established, Ben Abbad disposed of
+his puppet, and announced that the khalifa was dead and had designated
+him his lawful successor. For the second time Seville rose to the rank
+of an independent State.
+
+The dynasty of Abbad, emulous of the glories of Cordova, outshone all
+the other rulers of Spain in elegance and culture. The city was adorned
+with beautiful gardens and buildings. Learning was held in honour, and
+the amir disputed the palm with a swarm of fellow-poets. Walking one day
+with his courtiers, on these very banks of the Guadalquivir, the Amir
+Mut'adid-billah observed the water lying glassy beneath the waving
+light. He improvised a line comparing the surface of the stream to a
+cuirass, and called on the poet Aben Amr to complete the verse. This the
+laureate found some difficulty in doing, and to his chagrin he was
+anticipated by a girl of the people standing by, who contributed these
+lines:
+
+ "A strong cuirass, magnificent in combat,
+ Like water frozen over."
+
+The amir, far from resenting this intrusion of a bystander into the
+royal circle, bade the girl draw nearer and asked her name. She said
+that her name was Romikiwa and that she was the slave of Romiya. The
+prince then asked if she were married. The maiden replied that she was
+not. "It is well," said Mut'adid-billah, "for I propose to buy you and
+to marry you." It is to be presumed that Romiya had no objection to
+offer to this plan.
+
+This monarch, the son of the first Abbadite amir, could do other things
+than make verses. He was a mighty warrior in Islam, and kept a kind of
+garden planted with the skulls of his enemies, in the contemplation of
+which he took great delight. With a view to adding to his collection he
+made extensive conquests in what are now the provinces of Ciudad Real,
+Badajoz, and Alemtejo, and undertook successful expeditions against
+Cordova and Ronda. It was the misfortune of his son and successor,
+Mote'mid, to be the contemporary of those great and vigorous Castilian
+kings, Fernando el Magno and Alfonso VI. Conscious of the weakness of
+his little State, the Amir of Ishbiliyah neglected no means of humouring
+his powerful neighbour. Fernando sent an armed mission to his court to
+demand the body of the holy martyr, Justa. But though Mote'mid eagerly
+extended all the assistance in his power, no trace of the relics could
+be obtained. The mission would have been obliged to return empty-handed
+had not St. Isidore (the brother of St. Leander) appeared in a dream to
+one of the Christian envoys and commanded him to convey his remains to
+Leon, instead of St. Justa's. The venerable prelate's body was
+discovered at Italica and carried off to the north, fragrant with
+balsamic odours and wrapped in costly silks. Mote'mid loudly lamented
+the loss of the remains. "Oh! venerable brother," he was heard to
+exclaim, "dost thou then leave me? Thou knowest what has passed between
+me and thee, and the love I bear thee. I pray thee to forget me never."
+Very remarkable words indeed, to fall from the lips of a Mohammedan
+sovereign in reference to a Catholic saint.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--A COURTYARD]
+
+In truth the Spanish Moslems of that day were sadly wanting in zeal for
+their religion. "In those days," writes an Arab chronicler, "men of
+virtue and principle were rare among the people of Mohammed. The
+majority scrupled not to drink wine and to give themselves up to every
+kind of dissipation. The conquerors of Andalusia disputed about their
+slaves and singing girls, passing their time in debauchery and
+pleasures, wasting the treasure of the State on amusement, and
+oppressing the people with exactions and tributes that they might buy
+the friendship of the tyrant Alfonso with costly presents. So things
+went on among the quarrelsome Mussulman chiefs, until, the conquerors
+and the conquered alike prostrated and the kings and captains having
+lost their pristine worth, the warriors became cowards, the people
+vegetated in misery and dejection, the whole of society became corrupt,
+and the lifeless, soulless body of Islam was only a decaying carcase.
+The Moslems who did not bow beneath the yoke of Alfonso consented to pay
+him annual tributes, constituting themselves in this manner mere tax
+collectors for the Christian king on their own territories. Meanwhile
+the affairs of Islam were directed by Jews, who obtained the offices of
+wizir, hagib, and khatib, reserved in another age to the most
+illustrious of the citizens. The Christians devastated the beautiful
+land of Andalusia, and carried off captives and booty, burning villages
+and threatening the towns."
+
+In pursuance of his policy of conciliation, Mote'mid gave his daughter
+Zayda in marriage to Alfonso VI., her dowry being all the towns Mut'adid
+had conquered in New Castile. Lucas of Tuy says the damsel was taken
+"quasi pro uxore ut præmissam est." But this ambiguous union did not
+avert a serious rupture between the sovereigns a year or two later.
+When the Castilian king sent two ambassadors to Seville to collect his
+tribute, one of them, a Jew, conducted himself so haughtily that the
+exasperated Moslems stabbed him to death, letting the Christians escape
+without serious injury. This outrage meant war. Mote'mid cast about him
+for an ally. No help was to be found in Spain, and with inward
+misgivings, no doubt, the Abbadite amir called on the Almoravides of
+Africa to uphold the cause of Islam. Warned of the danger of this
+course, Mote'mid is said to have replied, "Better be a camel driver in
+the African desert than a swineherd in Castile." The Almoravides came
+and routed the Christians. They returned to Africa, and then came again,
+this time reducing all the petty Mussulman States beneath their sway. In
+1091 Ishbiliyah became a mere provincial centre, the seat of a Berber
+governor. Mote'mid was sent in chains to Africa, where he died four
+years later.
+
+The Almoravide rule was of scant duration. Fifty-five years later all
+Andalusia was annexed to the empire of the Almohades. The third
+sovereign of the new dynasty dealt what seemed a decisive blow to the
+allied Christians at Alarcos in the year 1195. But the conquerors knew
+not how to follow up their victory. The Spaniards rallied, and in 1212
+was fought the battle of "Las Navas de Tolosa." The Mussulmans were
+totally defeated, and left, it is said, six hundred thousand dead upon
+the field. Yet the knell of Ishbiliyah had not yet sounded. The
+authority of the Almohade khalifas was nominally recognized in the city
+sixteen years longer. In 1228 the last of the race of Abd-ul-Mumin to
+rule in Spain was expelled by the famous Ben Hud, who was himself slain
+by his rival Al Ahmar, the founder of the Nasrite dynasty of Granada,
+ten years later. In their despair the people of Seville turned once more
+to the African Almohades. But no new army of Ghazis crossed the strait
+to do battle with the Unbeliever. The Andalusians were left to fight
+their last fight unassisted. Cordova had fallen before St. Ferdinand,
+and the Sevillians provoked his anger by the murder of one of their
+chiefs who was devoted to his interests. At the eleventh hour the
+defence was entrusted--strangely enough for a Mohammedan community--to a
+junta composed of six persons. Their names are worth being recorded: Abu
+Faris Ben Hafs, Sakkaf, Ben Shoayb, Yahya Ben Khaldun, Ben Khiyar, and
+Abu Bekr Ben Sharih.
+
+Thus driven to bay, the Moors offered a determined resistance. They were
+attacked not only by the Castilians, but by their own co-religionists;
+for Al Ahmar, the new Amir of Granada, was serving with his followers
+under the banner of Ferdinand. The siege lasted fifteen months. A fleet
+was brought round from the shores of Biscay under the command of Admiral
+Ramon Bonifaz. The Moorish ships were dispersed and the chain which the
+defenders had stretched across the river broken. The besieged were thus
+cut off from their magazines in the suburb of Triana. Meanwhile all the
+outlying posts had been taken by the Castilians, and the Moors were
+driven to take refuge within the walls. Only when threatened with famine
+did the garrison ask for terms. They offered to capitulate if they were
+allowed to destroy their principal mosque to save it from profanation.
+The Infante Alfonso replied that if a single brick was displaced, the
+whole population would be put to the sword. The terms finally accorded
+the besieged were, for that age, not ungenerous. A limited number of
+families were to be allowed to remain in the city, the lives and
+property of these and of the rest were to be respected, and the means of
+transport to Africa and other parts of the peninsula were to be provided
+for those who were to leave. Probably only a few thousand Moors remained
+in Seville. Abu Faris, magnanimously declining an honourable post
+offered him by the conqueror, retired to Barbary. Thither he was
+followed by thousands of his fellow-townsmen, while others accepted Al
+Ahmar's invitation to settle at Granada.
+
+Ferdinand took possession of the city on December 22, 1248. He took up
+his residence at the Alcazar, and allotted houses and lands to his
+officers, not forgetting even his Moorish auxiliaries. Among his first
+cares was the purification of the mosque and its conversion into a
+Christian church. It is interesting to note that the first of his
+knights to mount the Giralda Tower was a Scotsman named Lawrence Poore.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--THE TORRE DEL ORO AND THE CATHEDRAL]
+
+Seville had remained in the power of the Mussulmans five hundred
+and thirty-six years. We, who see all Spain Spanish and remember it was
+so at the beginning, are apt to look on the Moorish occupation as a mere
+episode or interlude in the history of the country. It is difficult to
+realize that the sway of the Crescent lasted in Seville for as long a
+period as has passed with us since the death of King Edward III.
+
+Yet there are few monuments remaining to-day to commemorate a
+civilization which endured five centuries. The Moors have left their
+impress, it is true, in a scarcely definable way on the city, the
+physiognomy of which is more Oriental than that of Granada, a later seat
+of Mohammedan empire. But this is in great part due to the men who lived
+under the Christian kings, who had caught the spirit of the Moors and
+perpetuated their traditions of art and culture. Here we have no such
+mighty memorials of the vanished race as the Mezquita or the Alhambra.
+Still, a few memorials of that far-off age there are; and we will go in
+search of them.
+
+Here on the quays of the Guadalquivir rises a polygonal tower of three
+storeys, poetically termed the "Torre del Oro." But here we find no
+Danaë awaiting a rescuer, but only the harbour master and his
+assistants. When the Almohades ruled in Seville a great iron chain was
+drawn across the river, and a tower built on either side to support it.
+The tower on the Triana side has long since disappeared, but the "Torre
+del Oro" remains as it was built in 1220--except, indeed, for the small
+turret or superstructure added in the eighteenth century. It is said,
+too, that it was once adorned with beautiful glazed tiles, from which
+(though this seems unlikely) it derived its name. In the days when it
+stood the brunt of the attack from the squadron of Ramon Bonifaz, it was
+connected with the Alcazar by a wall, called, in military language, a
+curtain. This was not demolished until the year 1821. At the same time
+disappeared the main entrance to the Alcazar.
+
+The Almohades did much to embellish and to improve the city during their
+century of sovereignty. The only important Mohammedan work remaining to
+us in Seville belongs to that period, and illustrates the victory of the
+African or Berber over the Byzantine influences traceable in earlier
+Moorish architecture. The new conquerors of Andalusia were a virile,
+hardy race, and there is something vigorous and coarse in their
+handiwork. They developed an excessive fondness for ornamentation which
+mars much of their work, and were too much addicted to the use of
+painted stucco and gilding. To them we owe the stalactite roofing,
+afterwards developed with such success at the Alhambra. "It is certain,"
+says Don Pedro de Madrazo, "that the innovations characteristic of
+Mussulman architecture in Spain during the eleventh and twelfth
+centuries cannot be explained as a natural modification of the Arabic
+art of the Khalifate, or as a prelude to the art of Granada, for
+there is very little similarity between the style called Secondary or
+Mauritanian, and the Arab-Byzantine and Andalusian; while on the other
+hand it is evident that the Saracenic monuments of Fez and Morocco, of
+the reigns of Yusuf Ben Tashfin, Abdul Ben Ali, Al Mansûr, and Nasr,
+partake of the character of the ornamentation introduced by the
+Almohades into Spain."
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--THE GIRALDA]
+
+The most important example of this style is the far-famed Giralda Tower,
+at the north-eastern corner of the Cathedral, the most renowned of
+minarets and one of the strongest buildings in the world. It was built
+in the reign of Yakûb al Mansûr by an architect whose name is variously
+written Gabir, Hever, and Yever. Quantities of Roman remains and
+statuary were used in making the foundations. The wall at the base is
+nine feet in thickness, which increases with the height. The lower part
+is of stone, the upper part of brick. For the first fifteen metres the
+four faces of the tower are plain; at that height begins a series of
+vertical windows, mostly of two lights, some with the horseshoe, others
+with the pointed arch; while on either side the masonry is carved into
+what seem panels of trellis work. There is much in the details of this
+decoration to interest the student of Moorish art, who will recognize in
+them the inception of many forms developed (and not always to advantage)
+at Granada.
+
+But the Giralda as we now see it is a third as high again as it was
+left by the Almohades. In their time it was crowned by a pinnacle to
+which were attached four balls of gilded copper--one of which was so
+large, we are told, that the city gate had to be widened that it might
+be brought hither. The iron bar supporting the balls weighed about ten
+hundredweights, and the whole was cast by a Sicilian Arab named Abu
+Leyth at a cost of about fifty thousand pounds of our money. The balls
+were thrown down by an earthquake in 1395, when their proportions were
+carefully ascertained.
+
+It was not till 1568 that the upper stage of the fabric, a graceful
+Renaissance superstructure, was added by Fernando Ruiz. In the same year
+Morel's great statue of Faith, cast in bronze, was placed on the apex to
+symbolize the triumph of Christianity over the creed of Islam. It is a
+clever piece of workmanship, for though it weighs twenty-five
+hundredweights and measures fourteen feet in height, it sways and turns
+with every wind. Hence the name applied to the Tower--Giralda, from _que
+gira_, "which turns."
+
+The first thing you will be asked to do by the guides at Seville is to
+mount the Giralda, which you do by means of thirty-five inclined planes,
+up which a horse might be ridden with ease to the very top. Each stage
+of the ascent is named: "El Cuerpo de Campañas," after its fine peal of
+bells, one of which weighs eighteen tons; "El Cuerpo del Reloj," after
+the clock first set up in 1400--the earliest tower-clock in Spain. Then
+there are the prettily-named floors of the Lilies and the Stars. Some of
+the rooms are inhabited by the bell-ringers, who may at times be heard
+practising not only the chimes but the peculiar guitar-playing of
+Andalusia.
+
+The view from the summit of the tower I think, on the whole,
+disappointing. The principal buildings of the city are too closely
+grouped below the spectator to give a very fine effect to the panorama,
+and the country round is not beautiful. Looking across the arid region
+beyond the river, it is hard to believe that in Moorish times it was
+renowned for its beauty and fertility and compared by Arabic writers to
+the Garden of Eden. Looking down we scan the white city, a labyrinth of
+lanes and alleys, only here and there a plaza opening like a lake among
+the closely-set roofs. Far away to the north the Sierra Morena limits
+the prospect. How often, when from this tower the muezzin proclaimed the
+Islamic profession of faith, his eyes must have lingered apprehensively
+on those mountains from whose crests the Christian seemed to hurl back
+defiance and repudiation.
+
+For the Giralda was the minaret of the great mosque begun by Yusuf, the
+son of Abd-ur-Rahman, in 1171, and completed by his son and successor,
+Yakub al Mansûr. The earlier mosque on the same site had been destroyed
+by the Normans, but some portions of it seem to appear in the horseshoe
+arches of the Puerta del Lagarto and the northern wall of the Patio de
+los Naranjos. This latter court, which shuts in the Cathedral on the
+north side, contains the fountain at which the devout Moslems performed
+their ablutions. The picturesque Puerta del Perdon, through which you
+pass on your way into the town, is a Mudejar, not a Moorish, horseshoe
+arch, erected by Alfonso XI. to commemorate the victory at the Salado in
+the year 1340. The doors with bronze plates, despite their Arabic
+inscriptions, also date from that time. The gate was restored in the
+sixteenth century and adorned with sculptures. The terra-cotta statues
+of St. Peter and St Paul on the outer side are the work of Miguel
+Florentin, one of the earliest of the apostles of Renaissance sculpture
+to settle in Spain. The relief over the arch, representing the expulsion
+of the money-changers from the Temple, is also by him, and commemorates
+the substitution of the Lonja or Bourse for this gate as a rendezvous
+for merchants. The belfry storey is modern. At the little shrine just
+inside, to the left on entering, may be seen a "Christ bearing the
+Cross," by Luis de Vargas. The money-changers and brokers have gone, but
+this gate remains a favourite haunt of the gossips and loungers of
+Seville, and in the cool of the evening is occupied by some pleasant
+little family groups from the adjoining houses. The southern side of the
+patio is occupied by the Cathedral, the western by the church or chapel
+of the Sagrario. The house on the north side inside the old Moorish
+wall, to the right of the Giralda gate (on entering), is occupied
+by the Biblioteca Colombina, bequeathed by the son of Columbus. The
+pulpit from which St. Vincent Ferrer, the "Angel of the Judgment,"
+thundered forth his terrific fulminations against sinners, Jews, and
+heretics, I omitted to notice.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR]
+
+Everyone who reaches the Patio de los Naranjos for the first time is
+sure to enter the Cathedral, which he should not do until the Alcazar at
+least has been visited. Not that the two great buildings of Seville
+exhibit any transition of style from the one to the other, but because,
+having begun the consideration of Moorish architectural work, we ought
+naturally to pass on immediately to the Mauresque work of the first
+century of Castilian rule.
+
+The group of buildings which for greater clearness we will call, with
+the Spaniards themselves, the Alcazares lie to the south of the
+Cathedral, and are surrounded by an embattled wall built by the Arabs.
+This enclosure, it should be understood, includes a great many private
+houses and open spaces besides the Alcazar proper. Immediately inside
+the wall are two squares called the Patio de las Banderas and Patio de
+la Monteria. At the far end of the former is the office of the governor
+of the palace, and to the right of this is an entrance whence a
+colonnaded passage called the Apeadero leads straight through to the
+gardens, or, by turning to the right, to the Patio del Leon. On one side
+this latter square communicates with the Patio de la Monteria; on the
+other side is the Palace of the Alcazar itself. I hope this will make
+the rather puzzling topography of the place a little more intelligible.
+
+Whether or not the Roman "Arx" stood on this spot, as tradition avers, I
+cannot pretend to say. But there is no room for doubt that a palace
+stood here in the days of the Abbadite amirs, and that this building was
+restored and remodelled by the Almohades. To outward seeming the Alcazar
+is as Moorish a monument as the Alhambra. In reality, few traces remain
+of the palace raised by the Moslem rulers of either dynasty, and the
+present building was mainly the work of the Castilian kings--especially
+of Pedro the Cruel. But though built under and for a Christian monarch,
+it is practically certain that the architects were Moors and good
+Moslems, and that their instructions and intentions were to build a
+Moorish palace. Historically, you may say, the Alcazar is a Christian
+work; artistically, Mohammedan.
+
+The actual palace occupies only a small part of the site of the older
+structures, and incorporates but a few fragments of their fabrics. Since
+Pedro the Cruel's day, so many sovereigns have restored, remodelled, and
+added to the building, that it is far from being homogeneous, though we
+can hardly agree with Contreras that it is "far from being a monument of
+Oriental art."
+
+Pedro built more than one palace, or, more correctly, two or three wings
+of the same palace, in this enclosure. Traces of his Stucco Palace
+(Palacio del Yeso) remain. Pedro looms very large in the history of
+Seville. He plays as prominent a part here as Harûn-al-Rashid in the
+story of Bagdad. He was fond of the Moors, and affected their costumes
+and customs. He also favoured the Jews, and was alleged by his enemies
+to be the changeling child of a Jewess. His treasurer and trusted
+adviser was an Israelite named Simuel Ben Levi. He served the king long
+and faithfully, till one day it was whispered that half the wealth that
+should fill the royal coffers had been diverted into his own. Ben Levi
+was seized without warning and placed on the rack, whereupon he expired,
+not of pain, but of sheer indignation. Under his house--so the story
+goes--was found a cavern in which were three piles of gold and silver,
+twice as high as a man. Pedro on beholding these was much affected. "Had
+Simuel surrendered a third of the least of these piles," he exclaimed,
+"he should have gone free. Why would he rather die than speak?"
+
+Stories innumerable are told of this king, a good many, no doubt, being
+pure inventions. There is no reason to question the account of his
+treatment of Abu Saïd, the Moorish Sultan of Granada. This prince had
+usurped the throne, and being solicitous of Pedro's alliance, came to
+visit him at the Alcazar with a magnificent retinue. The costliest
+presents were offered to the Castilian king, whose heart, however, was
+bent on possessing the superb ruby in the regalia of his guest. Before
+many hours had passed, the Moors were seized in their apartments and
+stripped of their raiment and valuables. Abu Saïd, ridiculously tricked
+out, was mounted on a donkey, and with thirty-six of his courtiers,
+hurried to a field outside the town, where they were bound to posts. A
+train of horsemen appeared, Don Pedro at their head, and transfixed the
+helpless men with darts, the king shouting, as he hurled his missiles at
+his luckless guest: "This for the treaty you made me conclude with
+Aragon! This for the castle you took from me!" The ruby which had been
+the cause of the Moor's death was presented by his murderer to the Black
+Prince, and now adorns the crown of England.
+
+Nor did Pedro confine his fury to the sterner sex. Doña Urraca Osorio,
+because her son was concerned in Don Enrique's uprising, was burned at
+the stake on the Alameda. Her faithful servant, Leonor Dávalos, seeing
+that the flames had consumed her mistress's clothing, threw herself into
+the pyre to cover her nakedness, and was likewise burnt to ashes. Having
+conceived a passion for Doña Maria Coronel, the king caused her husband
+to be executed in the Torre del Oro. The widow, far from yielding to his
+entreaties and threats, took the veil and destroyed her beauty by means
+of vitriol. Pedro at once transferred his attentions to her sister, Doña
+Aldonza, and met with more success. If a chronicler is to be believed,
+he threw his brother Enrique's young daughter naked to the lions, like
+some Christian virgin martyr. The generous (or possibly overfed) brutes
+refused the proffered prey, and the whimsical tyrant ever afterwards
+treated the maiden kindly. In memory of her experience, she was known as
+"Leonor de los Leones."
+
+The misdeeds and eccentricities of this extraordinary monarch have been
+chronicled by Ayala (who was a partisan of Don Enrique), and given a
+wider circulation by the pen of Prosper Mérimée. I cannot very well omit
+the oft-told tale that gives its name to the curious little street, near
+the Casa de los Abades, called Calle Cabeza de Don Pedro. There the
+king's head may be seen in effigy high up on the wall at the corner of
+the street. Pedro, prowling about the town after dark, had a quarrel
+with a passer-by to whom, of course, he was unknown, and whom he
+incontinently ran through the body. Thinking there had been no witness
+to his crime, he stalked back to his palace. Next day he summoned the
+Alcalde of Seville to his presence and asked for news of the town. The
+magistrate told him that the body of a man had been found, murdered by
+whom no one knew. The king would suffer no laxity on the part of his
+officers. If the assassin were not discovered the alcalde must pay the
+penalty of the crime with his own life. Luckily for the magistrate, an
+old dame had beheld the encounter of the previous night, and now
+hastened to him with the surprising news that the man he sought after
+was no other than his majesty. She had recognized him beyond all
+possibility of doubt, not only by his features, but by the peculiar
+clicking of the royal knees. The alcalde hanged the king in effigy and
+invited him to the spectacle. "It is well," said the prince, after an
+ominous pause, "I am satisfied. Justice has been done."
+
+I have told the tale rather hurriedly, as it is far from being well
+authenticated, and because it will doubtless be familiar in some form or
+another to most readers. That Pedro had a sense of humour is shown by
+yet another incident. A priest for murdering a shoemaker was condemned
+by the ecclesiastical tribune to be suspended from his sacerdotal
+functions for the space of twelve months. On hearing this Pedro decreed
+that any tradesman who murdered a priest should be punished by being
+restrained from the exercise of his trade for the like period.
+
+But now let us return to the palace of which the sinister king seems the
+presiding genius.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR]
+
+Crossing the Plaza del Triunfo, which lies between the Cathedral and the
+old Moorish walls, we enter the Patio de las Banderas, so called either
+because a flag was hoisted here when the royal family was in residence,
+or on account of the trophy, composed of the arms of Spain with crossed
+flags, displayed over one of the arches. Pedro was accustomed to
+administer justice, tempered with ferocity, after the Oriental fashion,
+seated on a stone bench in a corner of this square. The surrounding
+private houses occupy the site of the old Palace of the Almohades,
+and one of the halls--the Sala de Justicia--is still visible. It is
+entered from the Patio de la Monteria. Contreras assigns a date to this
+room even earlier than the advent of the Almohades. It is square, and
+measures nine metres across. The stucco ceiling is adorned with stars
+and wreaths, and bordered by a painted frieze. The decorations consist
+chiefly of inscriptions in Cufic characters. The right-angled apertures
+in the walls were closed either by screens of translucent stucco or by
+tapestries, "which must," says Gestoso y Perez, "have made the hall
+appear a miracle of wealth and splendour." It was in this hall, often
+overlooked by visitors, that Don Pedro overheard four judges discussing
+the division of a bribe they had received. The question was abruptly
+solved by the division of the disputants' heads and bodies. Thanks to
+its isolation, the Sala de Justicia escaped the dreadful "restoration"
+effected in the middle of the nineteenth century by the Duc de
+Montpensier. The house No. 3, Patio de las Banderas, formed part, in the
+opinion of Gestoso y Perez, of the Palacio del Yeso, or Stucco Palace,
+of Don Pedro.
+
+Passing through the colonnaded Apeadero, built by Philip III. in 1607,
+and once used as an armoury, we reach the Patio del Leon, where
+tournaments used to be held, and stand in front of the Palace of the
+Alcazar. The façade is gorgeous yet elegant, of a gaudiness that in this
+brilliant city of golden sunshine and white walls is not obtrusive. Yet,
+despite the Moorish character of the decoration, the Arabic capitals
+and pilasters, and the square entrance "in the Persian style," the front
+is not that of an eastern palace; and it is without surprise that we
+read over the portal, in quaint Gothic characters, the legend: "The most
+high, the most noble, the most powerful, and the most victorious Don
+Pedro, commanded these Palaces, these Alcazares, and these entrances to
+be made in the year (of Cæsar) 1402" (1364). Elsewhere on the façade are
+the oft-repeated Cufic inscriptions: "There is no conqueror but Allah,"
+"Glory to our lord the Sultan" (Don Pedro), "Eternal glory to Allah,"
+etc., etc.
+
+This is a very different entrance from that of the Alhambra, the
+building on the model of which the Alcazar was undoubtedly planned. From
+the entrance a passage leads from your left to one extremity of the
+Patio de las Doncellas, the central and principal court of the palace.
+How this patio came to be so named I have never been able to ascertain.
+There is an absurd story to the effect that here were collected the
+girls fabled to have been sent by way of annual tribute by Mauregato to
+the khalifa. Had such a transaction taken place, the tribute would have
+been payable, of course, at Cordova, not at Seville. Moreover this court
+was among the works executed in the fourteenth century.
+
+The Alcazar strikes us (if we have come from Granada) as being on a much
+smaller scale than the Alhambra. It is very much better preserved, as
+it should be, seeing that it is a century younger; and if it vaguely
+strikes one as being fitter for the abode of a court favourite than of a
+monarch, it impresses one as being fresher, more elegant--in a word,
+more artistic--than the older building.
+
+The Patio de las Doncellas is an oblong, and surrounded by an arcade of
+pointed and dentated arches which spring from the capitals of white
+marble columns placed in pairs. The middle arch on each side is higher
+than the others, and springs from oblong imposts resting on the twin
+columns and flanked by the miniature pillars characteristic of the
+Granadine architecture. The spandrils are beautifully adorned with
+stucco work of the trellis pattern. On the frieze above runs a flowing
+scroll with Arabic inscriptions, among them being "Glory to our lord,
+the Sultan Don Pedro," and this very remarkable text: "There is but one
+God; He is eternal; He was not begotten and has never begotten, and He
+has no equal." This inscription, opposed to the tenets of Christianity,
+was evidently designed by a Moslem artificer, who relied (and safely
+relied) on the ignorance of his employers. The frieze is decorated also,
+at intervals, by the escutcheons of Don Pedro and of Ferdinand and
+Isabella, and by the well-known devices of Charles V., the Pillars of
+Hercules with the motto "Plus Oultre." The inside of the arcade is
+ornamented with a high dado of glazed tile mosaic (azulejo),
+brilliantly coloured and with the highly-prized metallic glint. The
+combinations and variations of the designs are very ingenious and
+interesting. This decoration probably dates from Don Pedro's time.
+Behind each central arch is a round-arched doorway, flanked by twin
+windows. These are framed in rich conventional ornamental work. Through
+little oblong windows above the doors light falls and illumines the
+ceilings of the apartments opening into the court. The ceiling of the
+arcade dates from the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella, but was restored
+in 1856. A deep cornice marks the division of the lower part of the
+court from the upper storey, the front of which, with its white marble
+arches, columns and balustrades, was the work of Don Luis de Vega, a
+sixteenth-century architect.
+
+Three recesses in the wall to the left of the entrance are pointed out
+as the audience closets of King Pedro; but they are much more likely to
+be walled-up entrances to formerly existing corridors and chambers
+behind.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--PATIO DE LAS BANDERAS]
+
+The door facing this wall gives access to the Hall of the Ambassadors
+(Salon de los Embajadores), the finest apartment in this fairy palace.
+The doors are magnificent examples of inlay work, and were, according to
+the inscription on them, made by Moorish carpenters from Toledo in the
+year 1364. The hall is about thirty-three feet square, and exhibits a
+splendid combination of the various styles with the Gothic and
+Renaissance. The ornamentation is rich and elaborate almost beyond
+the possibility of description. The magnificent "half-orange" ceiling of
+carved wood rests on a frieze decorated with the Tower and Lion. Then
+come Cufic inscriptions on a blue ground and ugly female heads of the
+sixteenth century. Then, below another band of decoration, is a row of
+fifty-six busts of the Kings of Spain, from Receswinto the Goth to
+Philip III. These date, at earliest, from the sixteenth century. The
+wrought-iron balconies were made by Francisco Lopez in 1592. The
+decoration of this splendid chamber is completed by a high dado of blue,
+white, and green "azulejos." It was in this hall that Abu Saïd is said
+to have been received by his treacherous host.
+
+The Hall of the Ambassadors communicated on each side with the patio and
+adjoining halls by entrances composed of three horseshoe arches,
+supported by graceful pillars and enclosed in a circular arch.
+
+Through the arch facing the entrance from the patio we pass into a long
+narrow apartment, known as the Comedor, where the late Comtesse de Paris
+was born in 1848. To the north of the salon is a small square chamber,
+called the "Cuarto del Techo de Felipe Segundo," with a coffered ceiling
+dating from the time of that king. North of this room is the exquisite
+little Patio de las Muñecas (Court of the Dolls), purely Granadine in
+treatment. The rounded arches are separated by cylindrical pillars--I
+call them so for want of a better word--which rest on slender columns
+of different colours, reminding one of the early or Cordovan style. The
+capitals are rich, the pillars they uphold decorated with vertical lines
+of Cufic inscriptions, many of which, says Contreras, are placed upside
+down. The walls and spandrils are tastefully adorned with stucco work of
+the trellis pattern, tiling and mosaic. This court, though still
+harmonious and beautiful, suffered rather than benefited by its
+restoration in 1843; but the architecture has been not unsuccessfully
+reproduced in the upper storey.
+
+This charming spot is by no means suggestive of deeds of blood and
+violence; yet, just as they point out the Salon de los Embajadores as
+the scene of the arrest of the Red Sultan by Don Pedro, so here do the
+guides place the scene of the murder of Don Fadrique by the truculent
+monarch--a fratricide to be avenged by another fratricide at Montiel.
+The Master of Santiago, to give the Don his usual title, after a
+successful campaign in Murcia, had been graciously received by his
+brother the king, and presently went to pay his respects in another part
+of the palace to the royal favourite, Maria de Padilla. It is said that
+she warned him of his impending fate; perhaps by her manner, if not by
+words, she tried to arouse in him a sense of danger, but the soldier
+prince returned to the king's presence. With a shout, Pedro gave the
+fatal signal. "Kill the Master of Santiago," he cried. Guards fell upon
+the prince. His sword was entangled in his scarf, and he was butchered
+without mercy. His retainers fled in all directions, pursued by Pedro's
+guards. One took refuge in Maria de Padilla's own apartment, and tried
+to screen himself by holding her little daughter, Doña Beatriz, before
+him. Pedro tore the child away, and despatched the unfortunate man with
+his own hand. The murder took place on May 19, 1358.
+
+To the west of the court is a little room, elegantly decorated, and
+named after the Catholic Sovereigns, by whom it was restored. Their
+well-known devices appear, together with the Towers and Lions, among the
+decorations, which reveal the influence of the plateresque style. The
+north side of the patio is occupied by the Cuarto de los Principes, not
+to be confounded with a similarly named apartment on the floor above. At
+either end of this room is an arch, adorned with stucco work, admitting
+to a cabinet or alcove. That to the right has a fine artesonado ceiling,
+and that to the left is decorated in a species of Moorish plateresque
+style. An inscription states that the frieze was made in the year 1543
+by Juan de Simancas, master carpenter.
+
+East of the Patio de las Muñecas, and occupying the north side of the
+Patio de las Doncellas, is the long room called the Dormitorio de los
+Reyes Moros. All the apartments in the Alcazar are fancifully named, but
+the designation of none is quite so stupid and misleading as this. The
+columns of the twin windows on either side of the door appear to date
+from the time of the Khalifate. The doors themselves are richly inlaid
+and painted with geometrical patterns. The three horseshoe arches
+leading to the _al hami_, or alcove, also seem to belong to the early
+period of Spanish-Arabic art. The room is so richly decorated that
+scarce a handbreadth of the surface is free from ornament.
+
+On the opposite side of the central court is the sumptuous Salon de
+Carlos V., the ceiling of which was constructed by order of the emperor,
+and is adorned with classical heads. The tile and stucco work is the
+finest in the palace. There is a legend to the effect that St. Ferdinand
+died in this room--on his knees, with a cord round his neck and a taper
+in his hand--but it is unlikely that this part of the palace existed in
+his time. The guide pointed out the room to the west of this salon as
+the chamber of Maria de Padilla, but this again is, to put it mildly,
+doubtful.
+
+The upper chambers of the Alcazar, which are not accessible to the
+general public, are very handsome. The floor overlooking the Patio del
+Leon is occupied by the Sala del Principe, with its beautiful spring
+windows, polychrome tiling, and columns brought from the old Moorish
+Palace at Valencia. Adjacent is the Oratory, built by order of Ferdinand
+and Isabella in 1504. The tile work is of extraordinary beauty, and
+shows that the Moors had not a monopoly of talent in this kind of
+decoration. The fine Visitation over the altar is signed by Francesco
+Nicoloso, the Italian. On the same floor is the reputed bed-chamber of
+Don Pedro. Over the door may be seen four death's-heads, and over
+another entrance the curious figure of a man who looks back over his
+shoulder at a grinning skull. These gruesome designs commemorate the
+summary execution by the king of four judges whom he overheard
+discussing the division of a bribe. The royal apartments on this floor
+contain some precious works of art; but I abstain from mentioning the
+most remarkable of these, as pictures are so often transferred in Spain
+from one royal residence to another that such indications are often out
+of date before they are printed.
+
+The Alcazar, I think, disappoints most foreigners. The architectural and
+decorative work of the Spanish Moors and their descendants pleases
+people quite inexperienced in the arts by its mere prettiness, its
+brilliance, its originality, and its colour; and it delights still more
+those who are able to appreciate its marvellous combinations of
+geometrical forms, its exquisite epigraphy, and all its subtle details.
+But the average traveller stands between these two classes of observers.
+He looks for grandeur where he should expect only beauty, and his eye is
+wearied by the wealth of conventional ornamentation. What I think is
+conspicuously lacking in the Alcazar, and to almost the same extent in
+the Alhambra, is atmosphere. Memories do not haunt you in these gilded
+halls. There is nothing about them to suggest that anything ever
+happened here. The legends tell us the contrary; but assuredly no one
+was ever less successful in impressing his personality on his abode than
+were the founders and inhabitants of the Alcazar.
+
+The gardens are really the most pleasing spot within the enclosure. They
+form a delicious pleasaunce, where the orange and citron diffuse their
+fragrance, and magic fountains spring up suddenly beneath the
+passenger's feet, sprinkling him with a cooling dew. I noticed some
+flower beds shaped like curiously formed crosses, which the gardener
+told me were the crosses of the orders of Calatrava, Santiago,
+Alcantara, and Montesa. You are also shown the Baths of Maria de
+Padilla, which are approached through a gloomy arched entrance. In the
+favourite's time they had no other roof than the sky, and no further
+protection from prying eyes than that afforded by a screen of orange and
+lemon trees. In Mohammedan times the baths were probably used by the
+ladies of the harem.
+
+But if the Alcazar is a disappointment to the majority of visitors, I
+cannot conceive the Cathedral being so, despite the unfavourable
+criticism to which it has been subjected. The exterior, it is true, is
+unimpressive, and the vastness of the pile is largely responsible for
+the powerful effect proclaimed by the interior. But when the worst has
+been urged, this, the third largest church in Christendom, remains a
+grand, a solemn, and a magnificent temple, thoroughly Christian in
+atmosphere and details.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR]
+
+I like the story of its foundation better than the silly tales about Don
+Pedro, or about crucifixes helping jilted damsels. It has, moreover, the
+very unusual merit of being true. After the conquest by St. Ferdinand
+the old mosque of the Almohades was "purified," and served as the
+cathedral till, towards the end of the fourteenth century, it became
+practically ruined by earthquakes. The dean and chapter took counsel
+together, and at a conclave held in the Court of the Elms, on the south
+side of the mosque, it was resolved to build a new church forthwith.
+Then uprose a zealous prebendary and cried: "Let us build a church so
+great that those who come after us will think us mad to have attempted
+it!" The proposal was adopted with acclamation; and the great-hearted
+priests bound themselves to contribute from their own stipends as much
+money as might be necessary, should the revenue of the See prove unequal
+to the cost of the undertaking. They could never hope to see the fruit
+of their labours. I do not think the name of any one of them has been
+preserved. The architect alike has been forgotten. All concerned sought
+only the greater glorification of their faith. Such greatness of spirit
+deserved a noble monument.[*]
+
+[Note *: Instances of this lofty spirit are frequent in the history
+of the Spanish peoples. When, after their first uprising against the
+mother country, the people of Honduras (Central America) met in Congress
+to frame a Constitution, a priest rose and proposed that before anything
+else was done, every slave in the country should be set free. And the
+measure was carried unanimously and enthusiastically by the Congress,
+which must have included many slaveholders. It took the United States
+forty years to follow this example.]
+
+The Cathedral took one hundred and seventeen years to build, the first
+stone having been laid in 1402 and the lantern having been finished by
+Juan Gil de Hontañon in 1519. Of the mosque certain portions were left:
+the Giralda, the Patio de los Naranjos, and the portal called the Puerta
+del Lagarto. The latter is named after the wooden model of an alligator
+which hangs from the roof. Three or four centuries ago the mummified
+form of a real alligator hung there. It was one of the gifts of an
+Egyptian khalifa to the daughter of a Castilian king, whom he sought in
+marriage. The saurian was accompanied from the banks of the Nile by
+various animals peculiar to that fertile region, but these interesting
+offerings failed to make any impression on the heart of the Infanta.
+Thus the forlorn-looking effigy of the reptile is in reality an
+affecting memorial of unrequited love.
+
+Churches, it has been remarked, were considered in the Middle Ages very
+proper repositories for curiosities of all sorts. The cloister of the
+Lagarto contains also an elephant's tusk, weighing seventy pounds, and a
+horse's bit, said to be that of Babieca, the Cid's charger.
+
+Very grateful is the sudden cool of the great church when you enter it
+from the sun-scorched plaza. Then there comes over you a feeling of
+profound reverence, followed very soon by an infinite restfulness. There
+is no place in Seville where you more willingly linger. A holy calm
+pervades the whole building, and you wonder that it should have
+suggested to Théophile Gautier such fantastic comparisons. If it were
+not the temple of Christ, I could believe it to be the temple of
+Silence.
+
+The Puerta del Lagarto is the favourite entrance, but when the day comes
+for a painstaking examination, you would do well to begin at one of the
+entrances in the west front. Of these there are three: the Puerta Mayor,
+the Puerta del Bautismo, and the Puerta San Miguel. All are enriched
+with good statuary, the graceful and vigorous statues of the side doors
+being the work of Pedro Millán, a fifteenth-century sculptor of renown.
+Entering, we set foot on the fine marble floor and make out the
+stupendous church to be composed of a nave and of two aisles on either
+side. The nave, you are told, is one hundred feet high and fifty feet
+wide. The noble columns, almost free of adornment, which uphold the
+spacious vaults recede in the far distance like trees in an overarching
+avenue. The effect, fine as it is, might have been much finer if the
+centre of the nave had not been blocked up by the choir. The "Trascoro,"
+or screen, facing the west entrance, is richly adorned with red columns.
+Over the altar is a fourteenth-century picture of the Madonna, and a
+painting by Pacheco, the Inquisitor, representing St. Ferdinand
+receiving the keys of Seville. Over one of the beautiful little side
+altars of the choir is one of the rare examples of good Spanish
+sculpture--a Virgin, by Juan Martinez Montañez. On the altar side the
+choir is shut off by a sixteenth-century railing, attributed to Sancho
+Muñoz. This protects from intrusion their reverences the canons, who
+sit in stalls, exquisitely carved between the years 1475 and 1538. The
+patterns and coloured inlaid work of the backs reveal Moorish influence.
+The lectern was the work of Bartolomé Morel. When the lantern collapsed
+in 1888, the choir was severely damaged. The architect who restored the
+fabric proposed to move it considerably nearer the high altar, but the
+proposal was stupidly rejected. A good opportunity for improving the
+appearance of the Cathedral was thus lost.
+
+The retablo of the high altar is the quintessence of late Gothic
+sculpture. It is a marvellous work of extraordinary delicacy and
+elaboration. Each of the forty-five compartments into which it is
+divided contains a subject from the Bible or from the lives of the
+saints, carved, painted, or gilded with the rarest skill. Begun by the
+Fleming Dancart, in 1479, this wonderful triumph of the carver's art was
+completed by Spanish artists in 1526. The earlier work is in the middle.
+Crowning it is a gilt crucifix and the statues of Our Lady and St. John.
+
+There are some very interesting objects in the Sacristy, as it is
+called, between the reredos and the hind wall of the chancel. The
+sacristan will show you the reliquary, shaped like a triptych, which
+came from Constantinople and was presented to the old cathedral by
+Alfonso the Learned. The double folding door is also said to have come
+from the Moorish temple. With a glance at the fine terra-cotta statues
+by Miguel Florentin, Juan Marin, and others, we pass behind the chancel
+wall, and see before us the plateresque Royal Chapel, built by Charles
+V. over the remains of certain of his ancestors. Beneath the altar lies
+the body of St. Ferdinand in crown and royal robes. He lies here in the
+heart of his fairest conquest, even as his descendants, Ferdinand and
+Isabella, sleep in the heart of Granada. You may see his sword, the
+handle of which was denuded of gems by Pedro the Cruel, lest they should
+excite the cupidity of others. That royal humorist also lies here, near
+his saintly ancestor and the one woman whom he ever loved, the gentle
+Maria de Padilla. Then there is to be seen the Vírgen de los Reyes, an
+image presented by St. Louis of France to St. Ferdinand of Castile.
+(Strange that when saints filled the thrones of Europe, things went on
+no better than they do now!) Another relic highly prized is the Vírgen
+de las Batallas, an ivory statuette which St. Ferdinand used to carry at
+his saddle-bow. These memorials of the heroic past give you little time
+or inclination for an examination of the chapel itself, which has a
+lofty dome, and is flanked at the entrance by twelve good statues by
+Peter Kempener--whom Spaniards call Campaña. At least (so I read) he
+drew them on the wall with charcoal for a ducat each, and they were
+executed by Lorenzo del Vao and Campos in 1553.
+
+This chapel and the reredos of the chancel must be called, I suppose,
+the great sights of the Cathedral, though to some its chief treasures
+will be the numerous works of Murillo enshrined in its chapels and
+dependencies. For myself, I like the building for its own sake, or, to
+use a very hard-worked word, for its atmosphere. As you cross the nave,
+looking upwards, where the light streams through the tall clerestory
+windows, you will be tempted to neglect the dark chapels in the aisles,
+and to revel for a while in these exquisite symphonies in coloured
+glass. Few of them are of Spanish workmanship. Master Christopher the
+German (Micer Cristobal Aleman) began the first--the first stained-glass
+window in Seville--in 1504, the work being afterwards carried on by the
+German Heinrich, the Flemings Beernaert of Zeeland and Jan Beernaert,
+Carel of Bruges, and Arnulf of Flanders. The best windows are those
+adorned with the Ascension, St. Mary Magdalen, Lazarus, and the Entry
+into Jerusalem, by Arnulf and his brother, and the Resurrection, by
+Carel of Bruges.
+
+In the south transept is a monument, striking in itself and of very
+recent erection, which will in the course of time attract more pilgrims
+than the soldier saint's shrine. For here are contained the remains of a
+man who added not a Moorish city but a continent to the realm of Leon
+and Castile. The ashes of Christopher Columbus repose in a coffin which
+is borne on the shoulders of four figures of bronze, representing the
+kingdoms of Castile, Leon, Aragon, and Navarre.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL]
+
+These figures are not wanting in majesty and expression. All are crowned
+and wear semi-sacerdotal garb. Castile holds an oar, Leon a cross.
+Behind them come Aragon and Navarre, sombre of countenance, wearing
+shirts of mail. On the bosom of each is displayed the national
+escutcheon: the Towers of Castile, the Lions of Leon, the Bats of
+Aragon, and the Chains of Navarre. The pall bears words traced by
+Isabella herself:
+
+ "A Castilla y Leon,
+ Nuevo mundo dió Colon,"
+
+and round the pedestal is an inscription which relates how the body of
+the immortal Admiral of the Indies was brought here when the "ungrateful
+America" revolted from the Spanish yoke. But however much the Spain of
+to-day may honour Columbus dead, it is hardly for her to reproach any
+land with ingratitude towards him.
+
+Half-way between the main entrance and the choir, the Great Navigator's
+son is buried. An inscription on a slab invites the reader to pray for
+the soul of Don Fernando Colon, who, as Ford very truly says, would have
+been considered a great man if he had been the son of a less great
+father. He rendered important services to literature, and left behind
+him a library of 15,000 volumes, including some manuscripts of extreme
+rarity. It was ultimately acquired by the Crown, and constitutes the
+basis of the Biblioteca Columbina, housed in the Patio de los Naranjos.
+
+The Royal Chapel is flanked by two little chapels, one of which,
+dedicated to St. Peter, contains some Zurbarans, impossible to
+distinguish in the dim light; while in the other (Capilla de la
+Concepcion grande) is a fine monument of Cardinal Cienfuegos and a
+crucifix attributed to Alonso Cano. Opening on to the north side are the
+chapels del Pilar, de las Evangelistas, de las Doncellas, de San
+Francisco, de Santiago, de las Escales, and del Bautisterio. In the
+latter is one of Murillo's most famous works, "The Vision of St. Anthony
+of Padua." Of Cano's works there is a specimen, the "Virgin and Child,"
+over the altar of Belen, adjacent to the Puerta de los Naranjos. Valdés
+Leal and Juan de las Roelas are represented in the chapel of Santiago,
+and Herrera the younger by an ambitious "Apotheosis of St. Francis" in
+the chapel of that saint. In the Capilla de las Escalas are two works of
+Luca Giordano, strong in drawing, colour, and character. The same chapel
+contains the fine tomb of Bishop Baltasar del Rio, dating from about
+1500.
+
+In the south aisle are the chapels of the Mariscal, San Andres, las
+Dolores, la Antigua, San Hermenegildo, San José, Santa Ana, and Santa
+Laureana. These chapels are richer in sculpture than in painting.
+Kempener designed the beautiful altar-piece in the Capilla del Mariscal,
+and Montañez the grand statue of St. Hermenegildo in his chapel. On the
+west side of the Puerta de San Cristobal, over a small altar, is the
+"Generacion" of Luis de Vargas--the much praised "leg" picture which
+has given its name to the chapel. The fresco of St. Christopher that
+faces it is remarkable only for its size. You find such pictures of the
+saint at the entrances to many Spanish churches, the old belief having
+been that those who gazed upon it would not die unpreparedly that day. A
+much more ancient and interesting mural painting in the Byzantine style
+is to be seen in the large chapel of the "Antigua," where it was placed
+in 1578. The retablo of St. Anne's Chapel is also very old, and comes
+from the former cathedral. The next chapel, San José, is adorned by
+Valdés Leal's "Espousals of the Virgin." The Cathedral does not contain
+any fine ancient tombs. One of the best is that of Archbishop Mendoza,
+by Miguel Florentin, in the Antigua Chapel.
+
+As every visitor to Seville professes a special devotion to Murillo, he
+will probably overlook the fine "Nativity" by Luis de Vargas to the
+right, on entering, of the Puerta del Nacimiento, and hurry at once to
+the more famous master's "Guardian Angel," between Puerta Mayor and
+Puerta del Bautismo. His "St. Leander" and "St. Isidore" are to be seen
+in the great Sacristy, where they are eclipsed by Kempener's beautiful
+"Descent from the Cross," before which Murillo himself used to stand for
+hours in rapt contemplation. The French cut this priceless work into
+five pieces, intending to remove it, and although their design was
+frustrated, the subsequent restoration was badly effected. The
+Sacristia de los Calices is a storehouse of art treasures. Here you may
+see Goya's "Saint Justa and Saint Rufina," a "Trinity" by "El Greco,"
+the "Angel de la Guarda" and "St. Dorothy" of Murillo, the "Death of a
+Saint" by Zurbaran, and the superb crucifix of Montañez. A "Conception"
+by Murillo is in the Chapter House, a splendid hall in the Renaissance
+style.
+
+In the great Sacristy is preserved the "treasury" of the Cathedral. It
+includes a wonderful monstrance by that prince of goldsmiths, Juan de
+Arfe; and something more interesting in the shape of keys presented to
+St. Ferdinand on the surrender of the city. The key presented by the
+Jews is iron-gilt and bears the inscription in Hebrew: "The King of
+Kings will open, the King of all earth will enter." The key offered by
+the Moors is silver-gilt, and the Arabic inscription reads: "May Allah
+render eternal the dominion of Islam in this city."
+
+Attached to many (if not to all) Spanish cathedrals, one finds large
+chapels which are the official parish churches of the cities--the
+parochial clergy being distinct from the diocesan chapter. At Seville,
+as at Granada, this chapel is called the "Sagrario," and is built at the
+west end of the Patio de los Naranjos and entered from a door in the
+north aisle of the Cathedral, near the Capilla del Bautisterio. Built
+between 1618 and 1662 by Miguel Zumarraga and Fernando de Iglesias,
+the church is in the Baroque style, and roofed with a single and very
+daring arch. The rich statues that adorn the interior are by Dayne and
+Jose de Arce. There is a notable retablo by Pedro Roldán that came from
+a Franciscan convent now suppressed. In one of the side chapels is a
+fine "Virgin" by Montañez. Beneath this church the Archbishops of
+Seville are now buried.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--PATIO DE LOS NARANJOS]
+
+As we emerge from this vast temple, we remain for a few seconds dazzled
+by the sunlight. Then as we turn to the left we notice a rectangular,
+classic-looking building, standing between the Cathedral and the walls
+of the Alcazar. This is one of the numerous deserted Lonjas or Exchanges
+of Spain. The Patio de los Naranjos was formerly infested by the
+merchants and brokers of the city, to the great scandal of the devout.
+Archbishop de Rojas prevailed upon Philip II. to erect an Exchange or
+Casa de Contratacion, as Sir Thomas Gresham had just done in London. The
+building was begun in 1598, at precisely the moment when the commerce of
+Seville began to decline. It reflects the spirit of Philip II. and of
+his architect, Herrera--stern, sober, simple. There is a fine inner
+court, with Doric and Ionic columns. Here the South American archives
+are deposited, a rich mine for some future historian who shall have the
+patience to examine them. As an exchange, the Lonja soon proved a
+failure. It was early deserted by business men, and is best remembered
+as the seat of Murillo's Academy of Painters.
+
+The spacious days of Charles V. and Philip II. were productive of
+innumerable public buildings, mostly in a quasi-Roman style and all very
+pompous and oppressive. The Town-hall or Ayuntamiento of Seville is an
+extremely ornate structure, in what is called the plateresque or Spanish
+Renaissance style. It stands in the Plaza de la Constitucion, where the
+electric cars perform intricate evolutions. Its effect is lost through
+its being placed on the ground level, without terrace, steps, or
+approach, or even railings to prevent inquisitive urchins staring in at
+the windows. The building is long and remarkably narrow, and of two
+storeys. I have seldom seen a public building more elaborately adorned
+or more badly placed. The interior is more satisfactory. The lower
+council chamber is a magnificent hall, worthy, as a Spanish writer
+remarks, of the Senate of a great republic. A noble staircase, with a
+fine ceiling, leads to the upper council chamber, which has some
+splendid artesonado work. Opposite--that is, on the east side of--this
+building is the Audiencia or Court-house, where I whiled away a hot
+afternoon by assisting at a Spanish trial. The case was of no particular
+interest, but the differences in the procedure and constitution of the
+court from our own were worth noting. There were three judges, who wore
+black silk gowns, without wigs or bands. Over their heads was the arms
+of Spain, and on the desk, facing the president, a large crucifix. The
+jury sat on chairs on each side of the judges. A desk was reserved for
+the public prosecutor, another for the prisoner's advocate. The judges
+took far less part in the proceedings than they do in France. The case
+seemed to be left entirely to the public prosecutor, who, it is just to
+say, allowed the accused to make long rambling statements, without the
+least attempt to interrupt or confuse him. The public at the rear of the
+court appeared to take far more interest in the proceedings than any
+immediately concerned in them.
+
+The Plaza de la Constitucion, outside the court, is the place of
+execution. But the death penalty is very rarely inflicted in Spain. Two
+or three years ago the Crown could find no pretext for pardoning two
+particularly atrocious murderers, who were accordingly put to death by
+the garrote in this square. The people of Seville, not being accustomed
+like the more enlightened Britons to some two dozen executions a year,
+showed their sense of the awful occurrence and of the disgrace to their
+city by donning the deepest mourning.
+
+But the stranger does not come to Seville to visit courts or to hear
+about public executions--unless these happened two or three centuries
+ago, when as Sir W. S. Gilbert somewhere observes, they are looked at
+through the glamour of romance. The searcher for the beautiful is
+usually rewarded here by finding it in unexpected corners of the
+monotonous labyrinth of lanes and alleys. Plunging into the maze of
+white-walled dwellings in the north-eastern quarter of the city, a
+minaret only less beautiful than the Giralda seems to beckon us from
+afar. It appears and reappears, and we lose our way a dozen times before
+we stand at its foot. It is a beautiful tower in the purest Almohade or
+Mauritanian style, without any features borrowed from Christian
+architecture. The highest edifice, this, in Seville, except the Giralda.
+From its summit Cervantes used to scan the streets below, at certain
+hours of the day, for the form of a local beauty of whom he was
+enamoured. Here, of course, stood a mosque in Mussulman days, on the
+site of the adjacent church of San Marcos. The portal is very fine, but
+the Moorish features are the work of Mudejar and not Almohade artisans.
+
+We wander on, and are presently surprised by the superb frontal of the
+convent church of Santa Paula. It is faced with white and blue azulejos,
+the work of Francesco of Pisa and Pedro Millán. Over the arch are
+disposed seven medallions illustrating the birth of Christ and the life
+of St. Paul, the figures white on a blue ground. On the tympanum of the
+arch is displayed the Spanish coat of arms in white marble, flanked by
+the escutcheons of the inevitable and ubiquitous Ferdinand and Isabella.
+Having seen this, it is hardly worth our while to enter the church,
+which contains the tombs of the founders, Dom Joao de Henriquez,
+Constable of Portugal, and his wife Donha Isabel. In the same quarter of
+the city, though some distance away, is a monument of some
+interest--the church of Omnium Sanctorum, built in 1356 on the site of a
+Roman temple. Here again there is a tower graceful enough, in its lower
+storey recalling the Giralda. The church exhibits a rather happy
+combination of the Moorish and Gothic styles. On one of the doors is the
+coat of arms of Portugal, commemorating the pious generosity of Diniz,
+king of that country. This must have belonged to the earlier structure.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--PLAZA DE SAN FERNANDO]
+
+Finding your way back to the Sierpes, you may inspect the interesting
+Church of the University. Here repose the members of the illustrious
+Ribera family, which looms very large in the history of Seville. Their
+remains were brought hither on the suppression of the Cartuja, outside
+the town. The oldest tomb is that of the eldest Ribera, who died in
+1423, aged 105. He thus lived through the reigns of Alfonso XI., Pedro
+the Cruel, Enrique II., Juan I., Enrique III., and Juan II., yet, as is
+usually the case with centenarians, he failed to engrave his name as
+deeply on history as did some of his shorter lived descendants.
+
+The famous Duke of Alcalá, the owner of the Casa de Pilatos, is
+commemorated by a fine bronze effigy--one of the few sepulchral
+monuments of this kind in Spain. At the feet of Don Lorenzo Figueroa a
+dog is sculptured, most probably the symbol of fidelity, but some say,
+his favourite. Over the altar are three good pictures by Roelas, one of
+the ablest interpreters of the Andalusian spirit. Here, too, are a
+couple of works by Alonso Cano, "St. John the Baptist" and "St. John the
+Divine." The statue of St. Ignatius Loyola by Montañez is said to be a
+faithful likeness of the saint. It was coloured by Pacheco the
+Inquisitor.
+
+The adjacent University was originally a Jesuit college, and was built
+in the middle of the sixteenth century, after designs by Herrera. It is
+not very well attended to-day, and from the outside would be taken for
+an inconsiderable college. It seems to have been much more flourishing a
+hundred years ago, when our countryman Blanco White attended its
+courses. The original university was founded by Canon Rodrigo de
+Santuella in 1472, in the Colegio Maese Rodrigo, near the Cathedral.
+
+From the last resting-place of the Riberas in the centre of the town it
+is not far to their old home, the Casa de Pilatos, though Dædalus
+himself might easily get lost in this labyrinth of streets resembling
+each other as closely as those of an American city. The names of some of
+these thoroughfares--Francos, Gallegos, Genovés--remind us of the days
+of St. Ferdinand, when the room of the banished Moors was filled by
+settlers, not only from all parts of Spain, but from the rest of Europe.
+It was the same with all the towns resumed by the Spaniards. These
+foreign colonies had their own laws and customs, and yet they were
+entirely absorbed by the natives and left no trace or influence behind
+them. The Spaniards possessed, in those days at any rate, the same
+wonderful capacity for the absorption of other races displayed by the
+Anglo-Saxons in America. There was nothing new in this; for they had
+absorbed the Visigoths, just as they had absorbed the Romans before
+them. The Castilian tongue is indeed Latin, but I fancy that the people
+of Spain are as much the children of the soil--_autochthones_--as the
+Athenians themselves.
+
+Reflections like these--which I do not expect will profoundly influence
+ethnologists--occupied me as I pursued my tortuous course to the Casa de
+Pilatos. When I at last found it, I was struck by the plain and
+dignified exterior. To the left of the door I observed a plain cross of
+jasper. The story goes that in October, 1521, the Marquis de Tarifa, on
+his return from a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, placed this cross against the
+wall and counted thence the fourteen stations of the Cross, according to
+their order in the Holy City. The last fortuitously coincided with the
+Cruz del Campo, raised near the Caños de Carmona in 1482. I doubt if the
+marquis had any such thought when he raised this jasper cross, for the
+distance from the Prætorium at Jerusalem to the chapel in the Church of
+the Holy Sepulchre that marks the site of Calvary is greatly less than
+the distance between the two points mentioned here in Seville. But why
+the house was called after Pilate is not easy to determine. It was begun
+in 1500 and finished thirty-three years after by Don Per Afan de
+Ribera, first Duke of Alcalá, and sometime Viceroy of Naples. This great
+nobleman was the Mæcenas of his generation. Not only did he enrich his
+house with priceless works of art and a fine library--since removed to
+Madrid--but he made it the rendezvous of all the art and talent of
+Andalusia. Hither came Gongora, the poet, to converse, it is said, with
+Cervantes. Here Pacheco, the artist-inquisitor, discussed the mission of
+art with Herrera. Here came Rioja, Cespedes, Jauregui, and others of
+less note. The example set by the Medici was followed by many of the
+great grandees of Spain at this time. The Velascos presided over a
+coterie of literati at Burgos; the Duke of Villahermosa, at Zaragoza,
+affected to delight in the company of the brilliant and learned. Even so
+small a place as Plasencia had its own patron of the arts in Don Luis de
+Avila, and in Madrid there was "the feast of reason and the flow of
+soul" at the mansion of Don Antonio Perez. But for all its associations,
+like the Alcazar, the Casa de Pilatos remains very much like a museum.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--CASA DE PILATOS]
+
+The building illustrates the fashion of the Mudejar and Renaissance
+styles, almost to the effacement of the former. In the architecture of
+this epoch we usually find an Arabic groundwork nearly concealed by
+ornament of the newer style. The geometrical designs remain, but the
+flowing inscriptions, so important a feature of Moorish decoration, have
+gone. A thousand details would show the veriest tyro that this was
+not the work of Moors, yet the central court bears a general
+resemblance to the Alcazar. Pedro de Madrazo directs attention to the
+harmonious variety of the arches and windows, and compares it to the
+admired disorder of the forest and plantation. I imagine the architect
+had the Court of the Lions, at Granada, in his mind. Here dolphins
+uphold the upper basin of the fountain, and noble statues of the deities
+of Greece and Rome--the gift of Pope Pius V.--stand in the angles of the
+court. Hence you pass into the so-called Prætorium, with its splendid
+coffered ceiling and beautiful tiling, where you may distinguish the
+Spanish azulejos of the best moulds by the designs stamped on them of
+fanciful monsters, grotesques, and escutcheons. Then there is the superb
+staircase with its "half-orange" ceiling, and the chapel with its mixed
+Gothic and Mudejar features. What grandee in Europe has a finer home
+than this? And yet, I am told the owner, His Grace of Medinaceli, comes
+here but seldom.
+
+There are many old mansions in Seville worth a walk on a cool day--and a
+glimpse. They are not great sights, such as those we have already seen
+in the city, or such as are more numerous in Paris and Rome, Brussels
+and Venice. But those visitors who are really interested in Seville, and
+are capable of appreciating Moorish and plateresque art in their various
+imitations and combinations, will enjoy these little excursions. There
+is an interesting old house at No. 6, Abades. It is now a
+boarding-house, and you may live there in princely fashion for six
+francs a day. No one knows how old it is. It belonged at the beginning
+of the fifteenth century to a family of Genoese merchants called Pinelo.
+In 1407 the Infante Fadrique, uncle of Juan II., lodged there. What was
+the occasion of his visit to Seville I forget. Afterwards it became the
+property of the "abbés" or "abades" of the Cathedral. Many of these
+reverend gentlemen still patronize the establishment, and may be seen
+puffing their "Puros" in the court, which is said to be a fine example
+of the Sevillian Renaissance style. That style I conceive to have been
+compounded of all pre-existing styles. Digby Wyatt, however, considered
+the house to be much more Italian than Spanish. It is a vast place,
+where dark corridors seem to lead indefinitely into space.
+
+There is rather less to reward your curiosity at the Palacio de las
+Dueñas, a vast mansion belonging to the Duke of Alba. Once it boasted
+eleven "patios," with nine fountains and one hundred columns of marble.
+A fine court, surrounded by a graceful arcade, remains. The staircase
+recalls that of the Casa de Pilatos. Our countryman Lord Holland stayed
+here a hundred years ago. He was a great admirer of Spanish literature
+at a time when it was hardly as much a matter of interest to foreigners
+as it is at present.
+
+Then there is the Casa de Bustos Tavera, where, according to Lope de
+Vega, Sancho the Brave used to visit the "Star of Seville"; and the
+Casa Olea, in the Calle Guzman el Bueno, with a hall of Mudejar
+workmanship dating from the days of Don Pedro.
+
+It is the romantic aspect of Seville that has impressed some visitors
+much more than its historical or archæological side. Over the poets and
+dramatists of the Romantic school the city exercised a strange
+fascination. Byron and Alfred de Musset found the atmosphere of the
+place most congenial. Through their rose-coloured spectacles every girl
+they met in these narrow white streets seemed "preternaturally pretty."
+The principal business of the inhabitants in the 'twenties and 'thirties
+of last century, to judge by the French poet's descriptions, was
+love-making, strumming the guitar, and duelling. That Spain was ever a
+romantic country in the vulgarly accepted sense of the term, I doubt.
+Roman Catholic customs and institutions forbid that free intermingling
+of the sexes from which result the thousand and one emotions,
+complications, situations, and catastrophes that are the ingredients of
+romance. In countries like Spain, where the canon law obtained, there
+could be, for instance, no runaway matches, no desperate flights in a
+post-chaise to a church (say) over the Portuguese border, with an irate
+father in pursuit. There could not have been, and cannot be at the
+present time, any walks with the beloved down the moonlit grove, any
+trysts by the stile or the ruined keep, any rendezvous among the
+rose-bushes. If a Spanish girl did any of these things, she would
+indeed, in French parlance, have thrown her cap over the mill. The
+affair would no longer have the complexion of a romance but of a sordid
+intrigue. This being so, I was delighted to hear that occasionally
+clandestine marriages are resorted to in Spain, and that fond lovers
+find a means of uniting in defiance of stern parents, even in Andalusia.
+The couple, accompanied by a few friends, contrive to sit next to each
+other in church, as far out of sight of the rest of the worshippers as
+possible. Their troths are plighted in an undertone just loud enough for
+the witnesses to hear, the ring slipped on under cover of the mantilla,
+and the hands joined at the precise moment the all-unconscious celebrant
+turns towards the congregation at the end of the mass and pronounces the
+benediction. In the eyes of the Church the two are married as
+irrevocably as if the Cardinal Lord Archbishop of Toledo had performed
+the ceremony. The vows have been exchanged before witnesses in a sacred
+edifice, and an anointed priest has simultaneously blessed the
+contracting parties from the altar. What can parents do? The Don may
+rage, the Doña may upbraid, but when the Church makes itself an
+accomplice of lovers, even in Spain the law must acquiesce. And there is
+no divorce!
+
+That genuine romance tinges the lives of Spanish men and women, few who
+know them can doubt. But the Andalusia of musical comedy, the creation
+of which is largely due to the poets of the Romantic school, does not
+exist. Seville never was a glorified Cremorne; and persons of a
+Byronic turn would find adventures suitable to their mood more readily
+by the banks of the Thames and the Hudson than by those of the
+Guadalquivir.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--CASA DE PILATOS]
+
+For all that, some romantic stories are told about old Seville, and one
+of these has some foundation of truth. About the middle of the
+seventeenth century, the city re-echoed with reports of the wild and
+desperate doings of a certain wealthy gallant, Don Miguel de Marana by
+name. By some he is called De Mañara. Marriage with the heiress of the
+Mendoza family did not sober him, though an alliance with so solemn a
+thing as money generally brings the most hot-headed Latin youth to his
+senses. Like many other wicked persons, our gallant had a nice taste in
+art, and is said to have encouraged Murillo. Now comes the remarkable
+and the improving part of the story. It is not safe to vouch for the
+accuracy of the details of any part of it. One morning Seville woke up
+to find--no doubt to her unspeakable consolation--the wicked De Marana a
+changed man. He became a saint--an ascetic in the seventeenth-century
+acceptation of the word. The wine-bibber forswore even chocolate as too
+strong a beverage.
+
+What had happened to produce so edifying a change? Accounts vary. The
+most picturesque explanation is that the Don, prowling about the streets
+one night, perceived a funeral procession approaching. Curiosity
+impelled him to look at the face of the corpse, which was uncovered, and
+lo! it was his own.
+
+If you doubt the sincerity of Don Miguel's conversion, you have only to
+visit the Church of La Caridad, which, together with the adjoining
+hospital, he founded and wherein he was buried. I do not think you will
+share the opinion of Sir W. Stirling-Maxwell that this is the most
+elegant church in Seville, but you will be rewarded for the visit by
+seeing some very remarkable works of art. Near the entrance are the two
+extraordinary pictures which proclaim the artist, Valdés Leal, to have
+been a master of realism. One of these exhibits a corpse at which,
+Murillo declared, you must look with your nostrils shut. The church
+contains six canvases by Murillo himself--"Moses Striking the Rock,"
+"The Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes," "The Charity of St. Juan de
+Dios," "The Annunciation," "The Infant Jesus," and "St. John." The third
+is really the finest of these pictures, though the first, commonly
+called "La Sed" (Thirst), is the most generally preferred. The figures
+are, as usual in this master's compositions, ordinary Seville types.
+Over the altar is another great work, "The Descent from the Cross," by
+Pedro Roldán.
+
+The "Caridad" has indeed the most important collection of pictures in
+southern Spain, next to the Museo, as the old Convent of La Merced is
+now called. There, of course, some of the greatest works of art by
+Spanish masters are to be seen. There you may see the "St. Thomas of
+Villanueva" giving alms, Murillo's favourite picture; his beautiful
+"St. Felix of Cantalicio," and "St. Leander and St. Buenaventura," and
+his famous "Vírgen de la Servilleta" which was _not_ painted on a
+serviette. On the south wall hangs his "Saints Justa and Rufina"
+(holding the Giralda), exquisitely coloured, and on the north wall the
+admirable "St. Anthony de Padua." But one grows a little weary of
+Murillo in Seville. Zurbaran, the great painter of monks, is well
+represented by the wonderful "St. Hugh in the Refectory," and
+"Apotheosis of St. Thomas Aquinas." This last picture, I am told, was
+carried off by Soult, and recovered by Wellington at Waterloo. The older
+Herrera's "St. Hermenegild" is good, but by no means Andalusian. The
+native temper finds more truthful expression in the works of Roelas,
+Valdés Leal, Cespedes and Frutet, which may be studied to the best
+advantage here. Curiously enough, the gallery contains not a single work
+by Velazquez, who was born in Seville; nor any paintings by Alonso Cano
+or Luis de Vargas. Spanish sculpture, of which one sees so little, is
+not unworthily represented by a beautiful St. Bruno by Montañez, and by
+some busts and crucifixes of less importance. The students of Andalusian
+art must also visit the Hospital de la Sangre, near the Macarena Gate,
+for some splendid works by Zurbaran and by his less-known forerunner
+Roelas. The three pictures ascribed to the last named are, however, very
+awkwardly placed and difficult to see.
+
+Murillo's house is still standing in the Plaza de Alfaro in the old
+Ghetto. Here he died on April 3, 1682, after his fall from the
+scaffolding at Cadiz. His studio is shown filled with several undoubted
+works of his brush. The house belongs to the executors of the late Dean
+Cepero.
+
+The Duke de Montpensier has a fine collection of pictures at his ugly
+Palace of St. Telmo, near the Torre del Oro. Among them is included a
+sketch by our late Queen, when she was still a princess. The palace
+looks on a parade which is much resorted to by the Sevillanos in the
+summer months. Here you see the boys playing at the inevitable
+bull-fight. One who takes the part of toro has a real bull's horns with
+which he "gores" his comrades with great ferocity. The insistence on
+this brutal "sport" among the Andalusians has taken the form of acute
+monomania. Exasperated strangers have been heard to declare that in
+southern Spain you hear of but two things--Toros y Moros. In another
+corner of the promenade, you will come upon a party of little girls
+going through the peculiar and stately dances, or rather measures, of
+their country, to the accompaniment of a low chant and a clapping of
+hands, in which the boys, looking on from a distance, will join. Boys
+and girls, unless they are quite babies, are seldom seen together. You
+pass on and find a group of citizens seated at the little tables round a
+kiosk, refreshing themselves with lemonade and being entertained by a
+conjuror--a fine-looking man--who sends round the hat after every two
+or three tricks. In the ordinary way you are asked for alms more often
+than in Granada, but not, of course, to anything like the same extent as
+in London. English travellers are given to commenting on the mendicity
+in foreign cities, but I must confess that nowhere have I met with so
+many beggars as in our own capital. In Spain the fraternity chiefly
+haunt the steps of churches, the one spot in our happy country that they
+seem to avoid.
+
+We reach the beginning of the Delicias Gardens, which extend two or
+three miles southward along the river bank. All the rank and fashion of
+Seville--and a great deal besides--turns out in summer evenings to drive
+in the Delicias. The concourse of vehicles is immense, but reminded me
+rather of the return from the Derby than of Rotten Row. The great
+ambition of the Spaniard is to possess a conveyance, and he seems to
+care little how dilapidated or ancient it may be, so long as it goes on
+wheels. Side by side with the handsome equipages of the Sevillian
+aristocracy, you will see a wretched Rosinante painfully dragging what I
+took to be the original "one-hoss shay," or the carriage in which Lord
+Ferrers was driven to the scaffold. It is impossible to restrain a
+smile, but after all a conveyance is a real necessity in a climate like
+this, and if a man cannot afford a good carriage, he must needs put up
+with a bad one. The traffic is well regulated by mounted police. The
+foot-paths are also crowded, and when night falls, everyone adjourns to
+the numerous open-air cafés and kiosks to drink light beer and lemonade.
+Sober, steady Spain! How certain of our reformers at home would love
+you, if they but knew you! Where in the world (except in the East) are
+men more abstemious or women more staid and demure?
+
+If you wish (as of course, being a modern traveller, you are sure to do)
+to study the life of the people, you had better betake yourself to the
+other end of the city--to the Alameda de Hercules, so called after two
+columns which the natives believe were presented by that muscular
+demigod. Here a perpetual fair seems in progress. There are the usual
+booths, with fat ladies, boneless wonders, and dwarfs, and more
+questionable exhibitions. On a platform sat three depressed and underfed
+wretches, who, I thought, were to be immediately garrotted. Suddenly one
+sprang up and gave a very clever rendering of the arrival and departure
+of a train at a country station. He was vociferously applauded, and,
+thus encouraged, danced a sort of "cellar-flap" with great animation to
+the indispensable accompaniment of hand-clapping. In a popular assembly
+of Andalusian town and country folk, the modern observer ought, I am
+well aware, to find many extraordinary and significant phases of
+humanity, exhibiting the striking individuality of the people, their
+race-consciousness, their psychological import, their evolutional
+significance, and so forth. I blush to confess that in the crowds
+applauding the ventriloquist or gaping at the fat lady, I saw only a
+collection of good-humoured ordinary people, enjoying themselves much
+after the fashion of ordinary people in England.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--GARDEN OF THE CASA DE PILATOS]
+
+Perhaps the Sevillano is more his real self on these occasions than when
+disporting himself at the world-famous fair, which begins on the Monday
+after Easter and attracts strangers from all parts of Europe. Though a
+somewhat overrated festival, I think it more distinctive and original in
+certain of its aspects than the gorgeous religious ceremonies by which
+it is preceded. The wealthier families of Seville rig up for themselves
+on the fair-ground "casetas," or temporary residences of wood or canvas,
+with two or more apartments. A great deal of expense is lavished on the
+upholstering and decoration of these pavilions, and those of the four
+principal clubs are fitted up in the most luxurious fashion. In the
+evening the _jeunesse dorée_ of the city drive out to the fair in smart
+traps drawn by dashing little horses with jangling little bells, and
+visits are exchanged at the casetas, where as the evening becomes
+cooler, dancing takes place, to the sound of the piano, the guitar, and
+the castanet. The pretty señoritas of Seville have no objection to going
+through the graceful measures of the South in full view of an uninvited
+audience who crowd round the opening of the tent and from time to time
+give vent to admiring "Olés!" and bursts of hand-clapping. Dancing will
+be interrupted at 8.30, when everyone comes out to look at the firework
+display. Then of course there are the usual popular amusements--the
+inevitable bioscope, the gramophone, and all sorts of shows. Peasantry
+and aristocracy alike dress their very best on this occasion. The
+smartest toilettes and the most picturesque of native costumes are seen
+side by side, the latest confections of Worth and Paquin and costly
+heirlooms handed down from the days of Boabdil and Gonsalvo de Cordova.
+
+Whether such an intermingling of all classes, of the richest and the
+poorest, could take place with mutual enjoyment and comfort in any
+country but Spain, is a matter open to doubt.
+
+The object of the fair is, I believe, the sale of cattle, and about
+eighty thousand beasts are to be seen on the Prado de San Sebastian. To
+say that the most sanguinary bull-fights complete the festivities is
+perhaps superfluous. The most skilful and renowned toreros are engaged
+on this occasion, and the arenas literally smoke with the blood of bulls
+and disembowelled horses. Smithfield and Deptford can show nothing in
+comparison.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--THE MARKET PLACE]
+
+The religious ceremonies, of which travellers talk so much, are not for
+the most part peculiar to Seville, as it ought to be unnecessary to
+remind them. The tableaux in the processions struck me as theatrical,
+but as being on the whole as well represented as similar show-pieces in
+our pageants. The famous Dance of the Seises is reserved for the
+octaves of the Immaculate Conception and Corpus Christi. It has been
+described over and over again. There is nothing irreverent about the
+performance, which is in itself graceful and quaint; only carried out
+before the high altar it strikes one as rather meaningless. So, I
+suppose, most such functions impress those who are unprepared for them
+by temperament and education. There cannot be much doubt that the
+ceremony originated in an attempt to attract the ungodly to church--an
+early and respectable precedent for the methods of the Salvation Army.
+
+Others have it that the dance is a survival of some pagan
+ceremony--which will remind us that we have so far neglected the
+monuments of the Romans which were bequeathed to Seville. These are not
+very numerous or interesting. Only a fragment remains, at the north-east
+angle of the city, of the massive wall which Cæsar built, and which
+completely girdled Seville as late as the reign of Juan II. It was
+strengthened, tradition tells us, by 166 towers, which were freely used
+as prisons by later rulers. The Cordoba Gate marks the site of the
+dungeon of the canonized Hermenegild. Close to it is the Capuchin
+Convent, built upon the foundations of the palace of the Roman governor,
+Diogenianus, and afterwards associated with Murillo. A noble aqueduct
+built by the Romans, and known to-day as the Caños de Carmona, still
+brings water from Alcala de Guadaira to Seville. Everyone who visits
+Seville is expected to make an excursion to the ruins of Italica, a few
+miles on the other side of the Guadalquivir. There is remarkably little
+to see when you get there, and not much is known about the place. There
+were few, if any, private dwellings here, and it existed rather as the
+place of meeting and distributing centre for the colonists scattered
+over the district. It was indeed raised to the dignity of a municipality
+by Augustus, but petitioned to be restored to its old rank of a Roman
+colony. It did not prove unworthy of its connection with the great
+capital. Hence sprang the illustrious line of the Ælii, and many of the
+eminent Roman Spaniards who conferred such lustre on the early empire
+are believed to have been natives. The town was embellished in those
+palmy days with temples, palaces, amphitheatres, and baths, quite out of
+proportion to its population.
+
+Its downfall, like its earlier history, is mysterious. Here Leovigild
+placed his headquarters when besieging Seville. Then came the Arabs, who
+dismantled it and carried off columns and blocks of masonry on which are
+founded the Giralda and other important buildings in the neighbouring
+city. Italica disappeared from history; and all you can see of it to-day
+is a few remains of walls and earthbanks outlining the amphitheatre.
+
+It might not be worth the journey were it not that it can be included in
+an excursion to the villages of Santi Ponce, Castilleja la Cuesta, and
+the Cartuja. The parish church of the first named wretched village is
+remarkable as the last resting-place of the illustrious Guzman el Bueno,
+that Spaniard of the Roman mould who refused to save the life of his son
+at the cost of the fortress of Tarifa, which he held for his king. The
+hero's kneeling effigy dates, as the inscription beneath informs us,
+from the year 1609, the three hundredth anniversary of his death. The
+modern traveller, whose sympathies are usually more with the æsthetic
+than the heroic, will be more interested in the lifelike St. Jerome, one
+of the finest works of Montañez, to be seen over the high altar. The
+saint, regarding a crucifix devoutly, beats his breast with a stone. On
+either side are beautiful bas-reliefs of the Nativity and the Adoration
+of the Magi.
+
+The convent was inhabited first by the Cistercians, next by the Hermits
+of St. Jerome. It presents rather the appearance of a fortified abbey of
+the middle ages. The church is divided into two naves, each of which was
+a distinct church--one, I suspect, belonging to the monastery, the other
+to the parish; a not uncommon medieval arrangement. I almost forgot to
+add that it contains the ashes (literally) of Doña Urraca Osorio, a lady
+burnt to death, as I have said, by Pedro the Cruel.
+
+At Castilleja la Cuesta--a village on the height--is the house where
+Hernando Cortes died in 1547. The house has been converted by the Duc de
+Montpensier into a sort of museum. The Conquistador's bones repose in
+the land which, with so much intrepidity and ruthlessness, he won for
+Spain.
+
+The old Charterhouse or Cartuja is now occupied by the porcelain factory
+of Pickman & Co. It lies on the west bank of the Guadalquivir, a few
+minutes' walk from the railway bridge. It was founded in the first
+decade of the fifteenth century by Archbishop de Mena, and was the
+burial-place of the Riberas, till their remains were transferred to the
+University Church. There is little to see except some stalls carved, if
+I remember aright, by Duque Cornejo, in the little chapel.
+
+You may return to the city through the transpontine quarter of Triana, a
+collection of whitewashed houses inhabited chiefly by gipsies. To
+distinguish these no longer nomadic Bohemians from the lower-class
+Andalusians around them is not an easy task. As at Granada, gipsy dances
+are got up by the guides and hotel people, and here, I am told, they
+possess the merit which a Frenchman denies to those of the other
+city--impropriety. The patron saints of Seville, Saints Justa and
+Rufina, were potters in this quarter. In their time the Carthaginian
+goddess, Astarte or Salambo, was much venerated in the Roman city. The
+commemoration of the death of Adonis took place in the month of July,
+when the image of the goddess was borne in triumph through the streets,
+while the people following with cries and lamentations deplored the
+untimely end of her beloved. A strange survival, this, on soil so
+far to the west, of the hideous Punic rites! The two maidens, newly
+converted to the religion of the Crucified, refused to do reverence to
+the image as it was carried past, and were haled before the governor,
+Diogenianus, in his palace by the Cordova Gate. They were put to death
+in due course, and have received more honour since from architects,
+sculptors, and painters, than Venus-Astarte in all her glory received
+from her devotees.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--A COURTYARD]
+
+Before leaving Triana, visit the Church of Santa Ana, to see the
+exquisite Madonna of Alejo Fernandez, whom Lord Leighton considered the
+most conspicuous among the Gothic painters. There is a regard for beauty
+in the figures, not by any means obtrusive in most of the paintings of
+the period, though the awkward pose of some of the angels shows that the
+artist had not quite emancipated himself from Byzantine influence. And
+the thought occurred to me as I made my way back to the Delicias
+Gardens, where the people were driving out to take the air, and knots
+were collecting round musicians and mountebanks--when the whole city was
+yielding itself up to the sensuous charm of the summer night--that the
+art of Fernandez was expressive of Seville: of a people in whom the
+sense of beauty and the joy of living cannot be extinguished, though at
+the call of religion they reluctantly keep their faces half turned
+towards sad facts and yet more sombre unrealities.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+CORDOVA
+
+ "They say the Lion and the Lizard keep
+ The Courts where Jamshyd gloried and drank deep."
+
+
+The sands of Asia are strewn with the ruins of cities once the gorgeous
+capitals of mighty empires. Here in Spain the followers of the Prophet
+raised a metropolis as splendid as any of the new Babylons of the East;
+and its fall has been wellnigh as great as theirs. We need not credit
+all the assertions of the Arabian writers (for the scribes of that
+nation, as Cervantes remarks, are not a little addicted to fiction). We
+can hardly believe that Cordova in its prime contained 300,000
+inhabitants, 600 mosques, 50 hospitals, 800 public schools, 900 baths,
+600 inns, and a library of 600,000 volumes; but there is evidence enough
+to satisfy us that this was in the tenth century the most magnificent
+and populous city in Europe, Byzantium alone excepted. Now it is a small
+provincial capital, bright, white, and coquettish, utterly without the
+solemnity and majesty which should invest the seats of vanished empires.
+Here greatness has been swallowed up in insignificance, not in
+desolation. The Court of the Khalifas, the Western Mecca, does not lie
+in lordly ruin like a fallen Colossus, but has sunk into mere pettiness.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--ENTRANCE TO THE CITY]
+
+Victor Hugo draws, as only he knew how, in a couple of lines, a
+picturesque sketch of Cordova, but this hardly corresponds to the
+impressions of the modern traveller. The houses may be old (some of them
+certainly are), but in their coats of dazzling whitewash they look
+brand-new. Gautier very sensibly remarks that, thanks to whitewash, the
+wall which was erected a century ago cannot be distinguished from that
+which was erected yesterday. Its general application "imparts a uniform
+tint to all buildings, fills up the architectural lines, effaces all
+their delicate ornamentation, and does not allow you to read their age."
+Cordova, which was formerly a centre of Arabian civilization, is now
+nothing more than a confused mass of small white houses, above which
+rise a few mangrove trees, with their metallic green foliage, or some
+palm trees with their branches spread out like the claws of a crab;
+while the whole town is divided by narrow passages into a number of
+separate blocks, where it would be difficult for two mules to pass
+abreast. Such is Cordova to-day, and I doubt very much if its external
+aspect was a whit more splendid or by any means as pleasing in the days
+of its glory. Some authors write as if they imagined the Mohammedans
+built their capitals on the lines of Paris and Washington. A visit to
+Constantinople or to Cairo would remove that impression. Imagine
+Cordova covering three or four times its present area, its windows
+obscured with lattices, its walls less white, its streets filled with a
+noisy mob of beshawled and beturbaned men--black, brown, and white--with
+noble mosques and elegant minarets here and there, and you will have a
+fair picture of the capital of the Western Khalifate.
+
+Of its outward seeming only. Its culture and refined social life merited
+for Cordova the title of the Athens of the West. When all Europe was
+sunk in barbarism, medicine and chemistry, the natural sciences, the
+arts and philosophy, all found a refuge here. Culture was diffused
+through all classes of the population, if only very superficially, to an
+extent never perhaps equalled elsewhere. And though there was little
+initiative or originality about the scholars at Cordova, their labours
+contributed to keep alive a taste for the humanities which otherwise
+would never have revived in Europe. The comforts and amenities of life
+were carefully studied in the Western Khalifate. All the products which
+minister to luxury were at that time the almost exclusive property of
+the Moslem world, and to the bazaars of Cordova were brought the
+choicest spoils of Egypt, Persia, Arabia, and Hindostan. And at the head
+of this urbane and flourishing commonwealth sat the great Umeyyad
+khalifa, emulous of the glories of Bagdad and Cairo, and eager to
+surpass them in elegance and splendour.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--CALLE CARDINAL HERRERA]
+
+Of those great days all that remains is the Mezquita--and that is much.
+Next to St. Peter's it is the largest of Christian temples, and
+certainly among the most ancient. As a Mohammedan place of worship, it
+ranked in sanctity with the Mosque of Omar at Jerusalem, immediately
+after Mecca, which it was indeed designed to eclipse. It was
+Abd-ur-Rahman's ambition to focus all the interests of Islam at this
+point within his own dominions. Spanish Moslems were taught that a
+pilgrimage to the "Zeka" of Cordova was in all respects equivalent to a
+pilgrimage to Mecca. Hence Sancho Panza's saying, "Andar de Zeca en
+Mecca." That the Umeyyad khalifa succeeded in diverting the Faithful
+from the old shrine to the new is doubtful, but he and his successors
+spared no pains to render their mosque one of the wonders of the world.
+In the year 786, seized, it is said, by a sudden inspiration,
+Abd-ur-Rahman convoked his council and declared his intention of raising
+a temple to Allah on the site of a Christian church. The Moslems had
+already appropriated half of the Basilica of San Vicente to their use,
+suffering the Christians to perform their rites in the adjoining
+portion. The khattib was commanded to approach the unbelievers to
+negotiate the purchase of the whole edifice. The Christians stood out
+for a high price, and got it. They received a sum equal to £400,000 of
+our money, and permission, moreover, to rebuild all their churches in
+the city that had existed at the time of the Conquest. When we remember
+the violent seizure and "purification" of the Church of St. Sophia by
+the Turks, seven hundred years later, we can see how little Islam had
+learnt of toleration in the meantime.
+
+The old basilica was accordingly demolished and the mosque begun. The
+khalifa set apart a portion of his revenues for the work, and laboured
+himself upon it for an hour each day. Thus encouraged, his subjects of
+all ranks made it a point of honour to contribute either their personal
+labour or their money to the great work. Though most of the columns came
+from the marble quarries of the neighbouring town of Cabra, as many as
+possible were brought from the most distant parts of the Mohammedan
+empire, from the works of civilizations which Islam had subdued. The
+mosque was to be a monument to the triumph of the Crescent. Its
+dimensions as projected by the founder were four times less than those
+of the existing building.
+
+The successors of Abd-ur-Rahman obtained the assistance of Byzantine
+craftsmen, and embellished the mosque with rich mosaics. Almost a
+quarter of the actual building was added by Al Hakem II., and the
+eastern half by Al Mansûr. To effect this last expansion, a cottage
+beneath a palm tree had to be acquired. The old lady to whom it belonged
+refused to budge till an exactly similar abode was found for her. This
+was done at last, after a diligent search, and a liberal donation made
+to her to boot.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--MOORISH MILL]
+
+Thus was reared this mighty temple of Islam on European soil, at a time
+when the state of the Christian world went far to justify the exultant
+words of the khalifa: "Let us build the Kaaba of the West upon the
+site of a Christian temple, which we will destroy, so that we may set
+forth how the Cross shall fall and become abased before the True
+Prophet. Allah will never place the world beneath the feet of those who
+make themselves the slaves of drink and sensuality, while they preach
+penitence and the joys of chastity, and while extolling poverty, enrich
+themselves to the loss of their neighbours. For these, the sad and
+silent cloister; for us, the crystalline fountain and the shady grove;
+for them, the rude and unsocial life of dungeon-like strongholds; for
+us, the charm of social life and culture; for them, intolerance and
+tyranny; for us, a ruler who is our father; for them, the darkness of
+ignorance; for us, letters and instruction widespread as our creed; for
+them, the wilderness, celibacy, and the doom of the false martyr; for
+us, plenty, love, brotherhood and eternal joy."
+
+The face of the world has changed somewhat in ten centuries.
+
+It must, I think, be admitted that the Mezquita, to European eyes, is
+fantastic and interesting rather than beautiful. It may be compared to a
+forest of columns or to a seemingly endless series of parallel aisles
+spanned by low horseshoe arches. It does in truth remind one, as one
+writer observes, of a gigantic crypt. The additions of Al Mansûr, may be
+distinguished by the pointed arches. Otherwise there is little of the
+variety insured in Christian churches by the distribution of the parts.
+It is only in the columns themselves that we find any relief from the
+prevailing uniformity. There are interesting differences in their
+capitals, and in their bases also, which are, however, buried
+underground. In the ruder carving is seen an attempt on the part of the
+Moorish masons to copy the work of the more skilled craftsmen of Rome
+and Byzantium. The mean vaulting overhead is modern. It is gradually
+being taken down and replaced by the beautiful carved ceiling of white
+larchwood which Murphy described a hundred years ago. He says: "Above
+the first arch is placed a second, considerably narrower and connecting
+it with the square pillars that support the timber work of the roof,
+which is not less curious in its execution than are the other parts of
+the building. It was put together in the time of Abd-ur-Rahman I., and
+subsists to this day unimpaired, though partially concealed by the
+plaster-work of the modern arches. The beams contain many thousands of
+cubic feet; the bottoms and side of the cross beams have been carved and
+painted with different figures; the rafters also are painted red. Such
+parts as retain the paint are untouched by worms: the other parts, where
+the paint no longer remains, are so little affected that the decay of a
+thousand years is scarcely perceptible; and, what is rarely to be seen
+in an edifice of such antiquity, no cobwebs whatever are to be traced
+here. The timber work of the roof is further covered with lead; and
+the whole has been executed with such precision and taste, that it may
+justly be pronounced a _chef-d'œuvre_ of art, both with respect to
+the arrangement of the different parts, as well as to the extent and
+solidity of the whole."
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--MEZQUITA]
+
+But what must have lent so much of beauty to the building originally was
+that, instead of being enclosed with walls as it is at present, its long
+arcades opened into the groves of orange trees without, which were
+simply their natural continuation--a graceful and symmetrical plan which
+one would like to see attempted in modern times. Though, too, every
+Mohammedan temple is necessarily simple in plan and can never approach
+the Christian churches in elaboration and gorgeousness, here Moslem art
+exhausted its ingenuity on the embellishment of those more sacred parts
+of the building such as the Sanctuary and the Maksurrah.
+
+The Sanctuary or Zeka has been spared to us. It is a little heptagonal
+recess, paved with white marble and roofed with a shell-like cupola of
+marble of a single block. The sides are formed by dentated horseshoe
+arches which interlace and enclose each other in a beautiful
+complication. Here in the southern wall is the recess which indicated
+the direction of Mecca, and towards which the worshippers turned; it is
+adorned with exquisite mosaic work and with inscriptions from the Koran
+and the names of the architects. In the Sanctuary was preserved for
+several centuries after the Reconquest the superb "mimbar" or pulpit of
+Al Hakem II. "It was of marble," says Señor de Madrazo, "and of the most
+precious woods, such as ebony, red sandal-wood, bakam, Julian aloe,
+etc.; it cost 35,000 dineros and 3 adirames. It had nine steps." We are
+told that it was composed of 36,000 pieces of wood, joined with pins of
+silver and gold, and encrusted with precious stones. Its construction
+lasted seven years, eight artificers being employed upon it daily. This
+tribune was reserved for the khalifa, and in it was deposited the
+principal object of the veneration of the Moslems of Andalusia and Al
+Moghreb--a copy of the Koran supposed to have been written by Othman and
+stained with his precious blood. This treasure was preserved in a
+binding of cloth-of-gold sewn with pearls and rubies, covered with the
+richest red silk, and placed on a lectern of aloe-wood with nails of
+gold. Its weight was extraordinary, and two men could carry it only with
+difficulty. It was placed in the mimbar, when the imam read from it the
+prayer of the Azulah, and was then placed in the treasury with the gold
+and silver vessels used in the ceremonies of the "Ramadan."
+
+The Maksurrah is now transformed into the chapel of Villa Viciosa. Here
+sat the khalifa when not officiating as imam. Little is visible of the
+original decoration, except the cupola, similar to that of the
+Sanctuary. Adjacent to this chapel another has been discovered which it
+is thought will prove to be the treasury to which Madrazo refers.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--PATIO DE LOS NARANJOS]
+
+When Cordova was taken by St. Ferdinand in 1236, the mosque was
+reconsecrated as a Christian cathedral, but little alteration was made
+in the original structure. It was in 1523 that the unfortunate idea
+possessed the bishop, Don Alfonso Manrique, to build a new church in the
+middle of the Mohammedan temple. So proud were the Cordovans of their
+great monument, that the municipality threatened the innovators with
+death if they ventured to carry the project into execution. However,
+this decree was overridden by an order from Charles V., who knew so
+little what he was about that on visiting Cordova a few years later, he
+bitterly expressed his regret at having allowed the mosque to be
+interfered with. Two hundred columns had been swept away to make room
+for the existing chancel, choir, and lateral chapels. Though we resent
+their appearance here, these parts of the church are not wanting in
+taste and richness. The reredos of jasper and bronze is painted by
+Antonio Palomino, and flanks a sumptuous and beautifully moulded
+tabernacle. Not so much praise can be bestowed on the choir, where,
+however, the stalls by Pedro Duque Cornejo reveal skilful workmanship.
+Lope de Rueda, the Spanish Molière, is entombed here. In the Cathedral
+is also buried the poet Gongora, whose style is aptly compared by Mme.
+Dieulafoy to that of Churriguera in architecture. A more interesting
+grave is that of Doña Maria de Guzman de Paredes, a lady celebrated for
+her wit and wisdom in the days of Philip II., and who won every degree
+it was in the power of the University of Alcalá to confer. Duque Cornejo
+is also buried here.
+
+In the Sacristy is a fine monstrance by Juan de Arfe. The chapels do not
+call for particular examination.
+
+If the Mezquita is strange within, it is eminently picturesque without.
+The massive walls are crenellated and supported by stout square
+buttresses. Between these are horseshoe arches, richly decorated, and
+forming originally sixteen entrances, most of which are now blocked up.
+The Puerta del Perdon has been adorned with the arms of Castile and
+Leon, and is secured by bronze doors of an interesting type. An
+inscription upon it runs:--"On the 2nd day of the month of March of the
+era of Cæsar 1415 (1577 A.D.), in the reign of the Most High and Mighty
+Don Enrique, King of Castile."
+
+Of the minaret, once equal to the Giralda and, like it, once surmounted
+by great metal globes, only the lowest storey remains, an earthquake
+having thrown down the superstructure in the sixteenth century. And the
+famous Court of the Orange Trees, on to which the aisles at one time
+opened, has lost much of its charm. The trees are stunted and withered,
+and the soil covered with coarse grass and weeds. On three sides the
+court is surrounded by a gallery, on the fourth by the buildings of the
+chapter. The basin was placed here in 945 by Abd-ur-Rahman, and might
+with advantage be used for its original purpose by some of the
+habitués of the patio. Two Roman columns at the entrance to the
+Cathedral announce the distance to Gades (114 miles) from the Temple of
+Janus, which stood on this site.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--OUTER WALL OF THE MOSQUE]
+
+On the whole the far-famed Mezquita may be pronounced disappointing. It
+must always be so with the simply planned temples of Islam, when they
+are stripped of the innumerable lamps, the rich carpets and handsome
+furniture, still to be seen in them at Cairo, Constantinople, and
+Smyrna.
+
+Of the magnificent Palace of the Khalifas, the wonderful domain of Az
+Zahara, no trace remains. It was built by a Byzantine architect on the
+flanks of a hill, three miles north-east of Cordova, which the khalifa
+at one time thought of levelling. Arab writers declare this to have been
+the largest palace, as of course it was the most magnificent, ever
+raised by the hand of man. The harem (_credat Judæus_) could accommodate
+6,000 women, 3,790 eunuchs, and 1,500 guards. Marble appears to have
+been freely used in the construction, from which it would seem that the
+building bore little resemblance to the Alcazar of a later day. There
+were, of course, thousands--tens of thousands--of columns brought from
+Rome and Tunis, and probably from Carthage, and fine fragments of
+terra-cotta are still unearthed on the site. Aqueducts conducted sweet
+waters to every chamber in the palace, and fountains cooled the air in
+the luxuriantly planted gardens. We are told of the Hall of Ceremonial,
+with its brilliant mosaics and its ceiling of scented wood, in the
+centre of which was set an immense pearl, the gift of the Emperor
+Constantinos Porphyrogenitos. And we hear in addition of basins filled
+with quicksilver for the amusement of the odalisques.
+
+This gorgeous pile owes its existence to a favourite of the Khalifa An
+Nasir, who at her death directed that her immense wealth should be
+employed in ransoming Moslem prisoners in the clutch of the Christian.
+The bereaved potentate sent east, west, north and south in order to
+execute this pious request, only to find to his joy that no such thing
+as a Moslem captive was anywhere to be found. The happy thought then
+came to him to expend the money on the erection of a palace to be named
+after a new favourite, Zahara, whose name it should perpetuate, and in
+whose society he might hope to forget the deceased. This seems to us a
+somewhat queer application of the legacy. The work occupied ten thousand
+men daily for many years, and cost during An Nasir's reign alone seven
+and a half millions of dineros or pieces of gold.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--A STREET SCENE]
+
+The palace seems to have excited, as well it might, the cupidity of
+neighbouring monarchs. Alfonso VI., the conqueror of Toledo, demanded it
+of the Amir Al Mutamed, as a residence for his queen, Doña Constancia,
+whose accouchement he suggested might take place in the mosque. It was
+the Moor's rejection of this original proposal that led to hostilities,
+and threw the Spanish Moslems into the arms of the terrible
+Almorávides. Those fierce sectaries seem to have entirely neglected Az
+Zahara, and under the puritanical Almohades we can easily imagine it
+would be suffered to decay. How little was left of it when Ferdinand
+took the place is shown by his referring to it merely as Cordova la
+Vieja (Old Cordova).
+
+Men who lived in such comfort and luxury might be supposed to have
+regarded their less fortunate fellows with easy good nature and
+tolerance, and according to most historians the khalifas of Cordova were
+benevolent despots, even towards their Christian subjects. Some Spanish
+writers, however, paint the lot of these last in gloomy colours, though,
+if we accept their accounts _in toto_, without the least reservation,
+there can be no question that the lot of the Christian under the Moor
+was very much better than the lot of the Moor under the Christian. But
+that standpoint would not be that of the historians in question. They
+are frankly partisans. The Mohammedans, they would argue, deserved what
+they got, because they worshipped the false Prophet; the Christians were
+in the right. It is more difficult to understand their vehement
+condemnation of the Bishop Recafred, because he forbade his flock to
+seek voluntary martyrdom by publicly cursing Mohammed. To curse the
+Arabian Prophet or anyone else is nowhere laid down as a Christian's
+duty, and on merely prudential grounds the prelate was surely justified
+in dissuading his people from pursuing a course which must finally have
+resulted in their complete extermination. Probably in disgust at the
+ingratitude and imbecility of his flock, Recafred embraced the creed of
+Islam, and died cursed and abominated by the people whose utter
+extinction he had averted. The history of the martyrs of Cordova is a
+curious chapter in the annals of religion.
+
+It was recently remarked of Italy that there was not enough faith to
+generate a heresy, and by a parity of reasoning the lamp of faith must
+have burnt very brightly in the Christian community of Cordova. The
+Saracen authorities were bewildered by the multitude of sects and
+factions which claimed to represent the Church of Christ, and to
+administer its temporalities. Councils of the Christian prelates were
+frequently convoked by the khalifas, but by the defeated side their
+decisions were always branded as schismatical or heretical. Religious
+debate is the favourite occupation of a decaying State, and the
+Mohammedans themselves had their divisions. The doctors of the law, who
+congregated in a special quarter of the capital, constituted themselves
+the critics of their rulers and of public morals. They considered
+culture and luxury incompatible with morality, and preached the creed of
+the Uncomfortable and the Unlovely with the zest of an English Puritan.
+One day there arose a sovereign (Hakem) more sensitive of censure than
+his predecessors. He burnt out the Puritan quarter and forced the
+zealots to take refuge in distant parts where their peculiar talents
+were more in demand.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--A STREET]
+
+The more human side of Islam found an embodiment in the illustrious
+Ziryab, the favourite of Abd-ur-Rahman II. In his case, I suppose, as in
+all else, it is necessary to discount by fifty per cent. all the
+appreciations of Arabic writers; yet through all the cobwebs of
+exaggeration and tradition, we can discern the outlines of a very
+remarkable personality. Ziryab was the Admirable Crichton of his age. He
+combined the attributes of Leonardo da Vinci and Beau Nash. He alone
+could decide on the proper method of eating asparagus and on the
+planning of a city. He could pronounce with finality on the wisdom of a
+move at chess and a far-reaching treaty of state. He had views on the
+organization of armies and aviaries; he was listened to with equal
+respect by statesmen and scullery-maids. And (wonderful to relate) this
+authority on everybody's business was loved by everyone!
+
+The history of Cordova, like that of most capitals, belongs to the
+nation at large, and cannot be more than touched upon here. Memorials of
+ancient days are the picturesque Moorish walls with their flanking
+towers and the grand old bridge of sixteen arches, built by the
+khalifas. It marked the limit of navigation in Roman days, whereas now
+no boat can ascend the Guadalquivir above Seville. The bridge is
+defended on the south side by a very picturesque _tête du pont_ called
+Calahorra, a fine specimen of the medieval barbican. Here a strange
+scene was witnessed in the year 1394, when the prototype of Don
+Quixote, Don Martin de la Barbuda, Grand Master of Calatrava, appeared
+at the head of a few knights and a fanatical rabble on his way to fight
+the Moors of Granada. His enterprise was directly counter to the king's
+orders; the two countries were at peace. The royal officers assembled on
+the bridge expostulated and threatened the crusaders in vain. The Grand
+Master was accompanied by a hermit, who exhorted him to proceed and
+promised him that his victory should be purchased without the loss of a
+single Christian life. The officials were swept aside, and the wild
+cavalcade went on its way to destruction. None of the knights ever
+returned alive across the bridge of Cordova.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--THE BRIDGE]
+
+During the four centuries following the Reconquest, the city boasted
+that it was the home of the finest flower of the European aristocracy.
+Their old mansions have for the most part disappeared, but the name of
+the most distinguished member of the order is treasured in Cordova and
+honoured far beyond the limits of Spain. Gonzalo Hernandez de Aguilar y
+de Cordova, "the Great Captain," is the hero of the city. The principal
+street is named after him, as indeed one might suppose the town to have
+been, from the reverence in which he is held. On the whole, he was the
+greatest soldier this country has produced. With forces hardly superior
+to those with which Cortes and Pizarro conquered a savage foe, he
+vanquished the best equipped troops in Christendom and matched his
+strength successfully against the most brilliant warriors of his day.
+His reward, it is hardly necessary to say of the servant of a
+fifteenth-century king, was ingratitude and neglect. When the odious
+Ferdinand V. demanded from him a statement of his military expenditure,
+he responded with the famous "Cuentas del Gran Capitan," which silenced
+even the venal monarch. The statement ran:
+
+ "200,736 ducats and 9 reals paid to the clergy and the poor who
+ prayed for the victory of the arms of Spain.
+
+ "100 millions in pikes, bullets, and entrenching tools; 100,000 in
+ powder and cannon-balls, 10,000 ducats in scented gloves to
+ preserve the troops from the odour of the enemies' dead left on the
+ battlefield; 100,000 ducats spent in the repair of the bells
+ completely worn out by every day announcing fresh victories gained
+ over our enemies; 50,000 ducats in 'aguardiente' for the troops, on
+ the eve of battle. A million and a half for the safeguarding
+ prisoners and wounded.
+
+ "One million for Masses of Thanksgiving, 700,494 ducats for secret
+ service, etc.
+
+ "And one hundred millions for the patience with which I have
+ listened to the King, who demands an account from the man who has
+ presented him with a kingdom"!
+
+This singular balance-sheet sufficiently shows the temper of the
+grandees of Spain even in the days of the New Monarchy. Cordova has
+reason to be proud of her eponymous hero. She has not been very fruitful
+in great men. She has produced no painters of eminence, unless Pablo de
+Cespedes may be classed among such; but Mme. Dieulafoy reminds us that
+to Juan de Mena, a native of the place and a courtier of Juan II.,
+Spanish poetry is deeply indebted:
+
+ "His great work, 'The Labyrinth,' may in a measure be compared with
+ that part of the 'Divina Commedia' where the Florentine places
+ himself under the protection of Beatrice. Accompanied by a
+ beautiful young woman personifying Providence, the poet witnesses
+ the apparition of the worthies of History and Legend, and amuses
+ himself in sketching their portraits. At times the style becomes
+ heavy and pedantic, at others the touches of the pencil have a
+ vigour and simplicity altogether Dantesque. Before Juan de Mena,
+ the Castilian muse had never taken so daring a flight; and in spite
+ of the defects of the general scheme, the untasteful phraseology,
+ and the measure, 'The Labyrinth' abounds in conceptions and
+ episodes where energy blended with beauty reveals a genius of the
+ first order."
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--COURTYARD OF AN INN]
+
+From poetry to leather the transition may seem abrupt, but it is to be
+feared that our city has derived more renown from the latter than the
+former. The stamped and gilded leather of Cordova was highly esteemed
+all over the civilized world from the fifteenth century to the
+eighteenth. Whether the industry was introduced by the Moors it is idle
+to inquire; long after their departure it formed the principal business
+and source of revenue of the Spaniards of the city. A powerful guild
+laid down strict rules as to apprenticeship, and regulated the quality
+and quantity of the manufacture. Terrible penalties were enforced
+against the tanner who made use of the hides of animals that had died of
+disease. The kings of Spain considered trunks or other objects
+bound in Cordova leather gifts very suitable for their fellow-princes.
+The Catholic kings, absurdly enough, forbade its exportation to the New
+World, not wishing to deprive the mother-country of goods of such price.
+With protection on this scale, we are not surprised to learn that the
+industry began to decline. Cordova was at length surpassed in its own
+line by Venice and other cities. The rich specimens of its work which
+adorned the mansions of its old noblesse were sold and dispersed all
+over the world, upon the general impoverishment of the kingdom in the
+eighteenth century. Then came the sack of the city, a hundred years ago,
+by the army of Dupont. Time has spared the famous race of Cordovan
+horses, and many a poor hidalgo rides into the town on a steed which if
+sold in London might redeem his shattered fortunes.
+
+I have said a great deal about Cordova and its titles to remembrance;
+but it must be confessed that there is little enough to see in it. The
+churches present no features of interest, except the Colegiata de San
+Hipolito, modernized in 1729, which contains the tombs of Ferdinand IV.
+and Alfonso XI. Nor is walking through the city an exercise altogether
+pleasing, as the streets which were the first paved in Europe, in 850,
+might also claim to be the worst paved in the world. The stones are so
+sharp and pointed that in parts you have to skip from one to the other,
+like a bear dancing on hot iron--an original but ungraceful method of
+locomotion. A drive in the surrounding country is productive of more
+pleasure. The neighbourhood is a Paradise of fertility, and sets one
+wondering what becomes of all the money that this must bring in and
+represent. Spain and Greece are very poor countries, but I do not think
+that Spaniards and Greeks are, for the most part, very poor.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--OLD HOUSES NEAR THE RIVER]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+GRANADA
+
+
+Over two thousand feet above the sea stands the ancient city of Granada,
+once the teeming centre of the kingdom of the Moors and now a town of
+memories eloquent of the grandeur of older days. The province bearing
+its name is bounded on the north by sterile ranges, while close to the
+southern seaboard stretch the huge shoulders and serrated peaks of the
+noble Sierra Nevada, rivalling in height the chief summits of the
+Pyrenees. Between these ranges spread fertile vegas, or plains, rising
+here and there to over a thousand feet, a district of vineyards and
+olive groves, and semi-tropical plants find a favourable habitat.
+
+Granada, though on the verge of an arid territory, is in a strip of
+great fertility, watered by the Genil and the Darro, the latter--the
+Hadarro of the Moors--a stream that is heavily taxed by the farmers for
+purposes of irrigation. Théophile Gautier praised the river of Granada
+for its beauty, but since his day the stream has shrunk, and nowadays
+the volume of water is insignificant, especially during a dry summer.
+
+The waters of the Darro have a reputation for their healing qualities,
+and cattle that drink from it are said to recover quickly from diseases.
+Hence, in the ancient speech, the river had the title of "The Salutary
+Bath of Sheep." Under the Moors the environs of Granada were in the
+highest state of cultivation, and they are still very productive. The
+land yields plenteous wine and oil. The chief crops are grains of
+various sorts. Hemp and flax flourish, and oranges, lemons, and figs are
+a source of income to the agriculturists. Granada is also famed for its
+mulberry trees, whose leaves provide food for the silk caterpillar,
+though the silk trade is in a state of sad decay.
+
+The soil around the city never rests. There is no waste of land. Oranges
+and pomegranates grow profusely. The cactus is cultivated for the
+production of the cochineal insect. Clovers yield several cuttings each
+year in this fecund territory.
+
+In the neighbouring mountains there are rich veins of marble, and jasper
+and amethyst are found. Yet the mining industry in the Sierra Nevada
+remains to be developed. The Granadines are hardly a commercial
+population, though numerous crafts are practised in their city.
+Factories for the production of sugar from beetroot have been erected in
+recent years, and it is hoped that this industry will increase.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--FROM THE GENERALIFE]
+
+The life of Granada in its lighter aspects can be well studied on the
+promenade of the Salón, one of the most beautiful parades in
+Europe. Here, under the shade of luxuriant trees, amid handsome
+fountains, and by parterres decked richly with many flowers, the people
+of the city stroll upon summer evenings after the great heat of the day.
+From the Salón you gain a superb view of the purple Sierra Nevada, which
+at sunset wears a wealth of changing hues.
+
+A walk along the promenade precedes the evening gathering in the patios
+of the houses of the upper and middle classes, when to the sound of
+guitar and the rattle of castanets, young and old dance together. At
+these tertulia, or evening parties, singing alternates with dancing the
+bolero and the jota. And later, when the lights are dim, and the
+watchman tramps slowly through the streets, you see the lovers, the
+"novios" waiting beneath the windows of the adored fair ones, or lightly
+strumming serenades on their guitars.
+
+At festival times the city is all animation. The anniversary of the
+taking of Granada is celebrated on January 2, when a procession is
+formed and proceeds to the Cathedral. Corpus Christi is another feast
+day, and there are two fairs during the year, one in June and the other
+in September.
+
+But it is Granada of the past rather than of the present that holds us
+during a sojourn in the city of hills and vistas. It is the scene of
+dreams, a city of meditation. You court serenity rather than hilarity
+amid these haunted streets and silent ruins. The Arabs had a saying,
+referring to one who was sad, "He is thinking of Granada." It is this
+spirit, perhaps, which prevails in the patios of the Alhambra and amid
+the orange trees of the Generalife Gardens. And yet it is not true
+depression. It is a sense of the glory that has been, a meditativeness
+which is induced by the somnolence of the scene, and fostered by the
+languorous atmosphere of the South.
+
+An ancient legend, often rehearsed by chroniclers, ascribed the founding
+of the city to certain descendants of Noah. It stated that Tubal settled
+in Spain and populated the country. There is some evidence that the
+province of Granada was the first district in Spain peopled by aliens.
+The founder of a town on the site of modern Granada is alleged to have
+been the mythical Iberus, who built Illiberis, which has been referred
+to as the original city. At any rate Illiberis existed in the Roman
+days, for it was a municipium under the rule of Augustus. The town was
+also the scene of an ecclesiastical council in the fourth century.
+
+Plundered by the Vandals, and won by the Visigoths, Illiberis was in
+decay at the time of the coming of the Moors to the Iberian Peninsula.
+With the conquest of Andalusia, the town of Granada first came into
+existence.
+
+At this period the Berbers overran the territory, though the Moorish
+authors relate that settlers from Damascus were the first Eastern
+colonizers of Granada.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--SIERRA NEVADA FROM THE ALHAMBRA GARDENS]
+
+The greatest obscurity shrouds the history of the city. It is strange
+that the writers of medieval times so rarely allude to Granada. About
+the year 860, a war raged over Andalusia between the native Moslems and
+their foreign rulers, the chief leader of the former being Omar Ben
+Hafsûn. Under his lieutenant, Nabil, an attack was made on Granada, and
+we read that some exultant verses written by the belligerents were
+attached to an arrow and propelled over the city wall. In these verses
+the words _Kalat-al-hamra_ ("the Red Castle") appear. This first
+reference to Al-Hamra suggests that an edifice for defence stood on the
+hill now occupied by the Alhambra.
+
+In 886 Omar Ben Hafsûn appears to have wrested Granada from the Khalifa
+of Cordova. A few years later Omar was conquered, and retiring to the
+Castle of Bobastro, he embraced the Christian faith, in which he died.
+
+Zawi Ben Ziri, a Berber, first established Granada as a kingdom in 1013.
+Gayangos, the Spanish historian, states that Illiberis--or Elvira, as it
+was called at this time--was a dwindling city and that Habus Ibn
+Makesen, nephew to Zawi Ben Ziri, founded a new town and capital.
+
+Habus was a builder as well as a warrior. He is the putative founder of
+the old Kasba, or citadel, in the Albaicin quarter, which was added to
+by his heir, Badis, who succeeded him in rule. The king is also said to
+have built the Casa del Gallo de Viento, in the same quarter, where he
+probably resided. Badis proved an ambitious and warlike monarch, for he
+enlarged his dominions widely, and even subdued the resolute hillfolk of
+the Alpujarras. He conquered Malaga, and made plans to besiege Seville.
+But his force was routed at Cabra by the famous Cid Campeador, Ruy Diaz
+de Bivar, the ally of the sultan of that city. To Badis is attributed a
+persecution of the Jews, who numbered several thousands in Elvira, and a
+terrible slaughter decimated their ranks.
+
+At the advent of the Almoravides, a fierce sect of Northern Africa,
+Granada was captured (1090) by Abd-ul-Aziz. The city now rose in
+importance. Soon after the Almoravide settlement, the followers of Islam
+in Granada attacked the Christians of the city and destroyed their
+church by fire. The unfortunate Christians appealed for help to Alfonso
+of Aragon, and the king came to their relief at the head of a strong
+army. In the combat at Anzul the Almoravides were worsted. Alfonso
+before retiring laid waste the fertile plain, and left the Christians to
+make the best of their position. His action had little effect upon the
+Almoravides, for in 1126 numbers of Christians were banished to Barbary
+and the rest bitterly oppressed.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--EXTERIOR OF THE ALHAMBRA]
+
+The doom of the Almoravides came in 1148. A mightier host, the rapacious
+and fanatical Almohades, surged over the city. The Moorish inhabitants,
+strengthening their forces with the aid of Christians and Jews, invited
+Ibrahim Ibn Humushk to lead them to the expulsion of the new sectaries.
+The invaders took refuge in the Kasba, and sought relief from
+Africa, whence an army was despatched. This force was beaten by Humushk,
+and the Granadines secured the assistance of the Sultan of Murcia and
+Valencia, whose troops attacked the Kasba, which was held by the
+Almohades. On the arrival of a second army, they made a sally and
+inflicted severe losses upon the soldiers of the sultan and his
+Christian allies. After this success, the Almohades endeavoured to
+pacify the unruly among their neighbours. Their governor, Sidi Abu
+Abrahim Ishak, was a tactful and benevolent leader. He improved the
+city, built a palace for himself, and made the Kasba a stronger
+fortress. The power of the Almohades was, however, insecure. Ben Hud, a
+potent chieftain, who had gained a strip of territory on the coast, now
+discerned that the hour was ripe for an assault upon Cordova, Jaen, and
+Granada. His domination was not permanent. Mohammed al Ahmar, uniting
+with the foes of Ben Hud, held Seville for a brief space, and then drove
+his rival to Almeria, where he was murdered in 1237.
+
+Granada now came under the sway of Al Ahmar, and in the hour of his
+triumph he was proclaimed monarch of a large part of southern Spain. For
+two hundred and fifty years the State founded by him resisted the
+Christian hosts. Granada rose to the zenith of power and prosperity. Its
+first sultan was a man of high character, courteous, dignified, and
+astute. He reigned long, and spent himself in affairs of government and
+in military enterprises, though he used every means to maintain peace.
+
+Al Ahmar's last expedition was undertaken against the Spanish forces and
+the governors of Guadix and Malaga (their allies) when he was eighty
+years of age, and failing in strength through illness. A fall from his
+horse brought him to his end. He expired in the arms of his ally, the
+Infante Don Felipe, and under cover of darkness his body was borne to
+Granada, where it was entombed in the burial ground of Assabica.
+
+The sovereignty now descended to Al Ahmar's son, named Mohammed II., who
+ascended the throne in 1273. He was renowned for his wisdom in the law,
+and during his reign of twenty-nine years he proved a worthy son of a
+great father.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--A STREET IN THE ALBAICIN]
+
+During his negotiations with Alfonso X. at Seville, Mohammed was the
+victim of an artifice of Queen Violante. Upon being asked by the queen a
+favour, he yielded in accordance with the chivalric notions of the time,
+but his chagrin was deep when he learned that he had agreed to a year's
+truce to the rebels within his dominion. Smarting under this device, he
+made plans for the annihilation of his foes. Now the friend of the
+Spaniards against the African, now the ally of his own co-religionists,
+Mohammed's career was one of strife. He died in 1302, able to boast that
+he had not lost a particle of the soil bequeathed to him by his father.
+Mohammed III. was, like his father, a forceful sovereign. He
+applied himself rigorously to the government of his territory, often
+spending the whole twenty-four hours in affairs of State. In 1306 he
+seized Ceuta, and brought a number of the conquered to Granada. But
+reverses came when the governor of Almeria rebelled and joined hands
+with the King of Aragon. Meanwhile the Castilians attacked Algeciras,
+and Mohammed, between two foes, was brought to bay. He extricated
+himself from danger by yielding four fortresses and paying a heavy sum.
+But his troubles were not at an end. Returning to Granada, he was
+surrounded by conspirators in his palace, and forced to yield the throne
+to his brother, Abu-l-Juyyush Muley Nasr. Humiliated and defeated,
+Mohammed retired to Almuñecar, where he lived in seclusion.
+
+Nasr's first coup after seizing the throne was a successful attack upon
+Don Jaime at Almeria. Unfortunately a conspiracy was fomented by his
+nephew Abu-l-Walid. Nasr, who seems to have had a fit of apoplexy, was
+thought to be dead when Mohammed III. was brought back to Granada. He
+was, however, alive upon the return of the lawful sovereign; and on the
+authority of some historians he ordered that his rival should be put to
+death, while other writers assert that Mohammed was again banished to
+Almuñecar.
+
+Soon after, Nasr was assailed by the followers of Abu-l-Walid, and
+forced to yield. As a solatium he was allowed to rule over the town of
+Guadix, whither he retired. Al Khattib relates that Nasr was a
+philosopher, and versed in the sciences of astronomy and mathematics.
+
+Abu-l-Walid was an implacable foe of the Christians. His assault on
+Gibraltar was frustrated; but he gained a signal victory over the
+Castilians in 1319, when the princes Pedro and Juan were killed.
+Following up this success, he marched upon the towns of Martos and Baza,
+and ravaged the country. It was at the latter town that artillery was
+first used in Spain.
+
+Hailed with joy, the victorious Abu-l-Walid returned to Granada bearing
+the spoils of war. Among the captives was a maiden of unusual beauty,
+whom he had wrested from an inferior officer. This act so incensed the
+chieftain that three days after he stabbed his ruler outside the
+Alhambra. Dying from the wound, Abu-l-Walid exacted an oath of fealty
+from the eminent and powerful to his eldest son, Mulai Mohammed Ben
+Ismaïl. This command was fulfilled before the sultan's minister
+disclosed the death of his royal master.
+
+The boy king, Mohammed IV., was soon busy quelling factions in his
+State, and repelling the African army, which took in turn Marbella,
+Algeciras, and Ronda. He also defeated the Castilians in several
+desperate encounters, but lost the day at Gibraltar.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--IN THE MARKET]
+
+Mohammed IV., who was assassinated at Gibraltar by his allies the
+Moroccans, was succeeded in 1333 by his brother Yusuf I. This king
+was a hater of warfare; he sought the peaceful reform of the community
+rather than the expansion of his kingdom. Under his rule Granada
+prospered and the condition of the people was bettered. Yusuf I. was
+disturbed in the tranquillity of his noble palace at Malaga by the
+appeals of the African potentates for his aid in reconquering Spain.
+Compelled to join the invaders, he sustained a severe disaster at the
+Salado, and was forced to acquire peace at the cost of yielding
+Algeciras. He was murdered by a madman in 1358.
+
+Mohammed V. was the next sovereign. He was a worthy son of his
+high-principled father, Yusuf; but fate decreed that his reign should
+not prove peaceful, for soon after his accession, his younger brother
+Ismaïl conspired with certain officers of state and made an attempt to
+gain the throne. Upon a night in August, 1360, about one hundred
+conspirators climbed the walls of the Kasba and after killing the wizir,
+proclaimed Ismaïl as sultan. Mohammed, who was without the palace at the
+time, essayed to enter; but he was received with a flight of arrows, and
+mounting a horse he galloped away to Guadix. Here he was welcomed, and
+from this town he sped to Marbella, thence to Africa, where he received
+the aid of Abu-l-Hasan. With troops lent to him he returned to Spain,
+hoping to crush the usurper. But Abu-l-Hasan capriciously ordered the
+return of his soldiers, and Mohammed retreated to Ronda with a few
+adherents.
+
+Dissension had arisen meanwhile between Ismaïl and Abu Saïd, one of the
+chief conspirators, who was burning to take the reins of government in
+his own hands. Ismaïl was besieged by Abu Saïd, and upon venturing out
+of his palace was slain.
+
+Fresh trouble arose in Granada, for Pedro of Castile came to the
+assistance of the lawful ruler. But Mohammed, witnessing the ravage of
+the district by the Christian army, was far from receiving the invader
+with open arms. "For no empire in the world would I sacrifice my
+country," cried the sultan. Thereupon the King of Castile retired, and
+Abu Saïd, mistaking the reason of his return to Seville, went thither to
+beg his alliance. The story of the sultan's murder, at the instigation
+of Pedro the Cruel, has often been told. Abu Saïd was done to death at
+Seville, and the resplendent ruby which was taken from him was presented
+to the Black Prince of England, and is still preserved among the regalia
+of England.
+
+Mohammed then returned to his capital. With the exception of a rebellion
+under Ali Ben Nasr, he passed twenty years of peace. Granada became a
+more thriving city, and under the sultan's clement administration, it
+was the resort of traders of all nations and the centre of culture in
+the south. According to Mendoza, the inhabitants of Granada numbered
+about 420,000 in the reign of Mohammed V., but it is probable that the
+number was wildly over-estimated.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE ALHAMBRA: THE AQUEDUCT]
+
+Yusuf II. followed Mohammed V. He was suspected of favouring the
+Christians. He certainly released all the captives of that faith, and
+restored them to their own country. This act appears to have incited his
+son Mohammed to rise against the throne. Yusuf was at first disposed to
+relinquish his sovereignty, for he was a lover of peace; but on the
+advice of an ambassador from Morocco he raised an army and advanced on
+Murcia.
+
+At this period the King of Castile was Enrique III., an incapable
+monarch in defiance of whose orders Don Martin de la Barbuda, the Master
+of Calatrava, headed an advance into the kingdom of Yusuf. The force
+was, however, entirely routed by the Moors. Soon after (1395) Yusuf, the
+pacific sovereign, was dead--the victim, it is said, of a poisoned
+potion, in the form of a tonic sent him by the Sultan of Fez.
+
+The first exploit of Yusuf's son Mohammed was a visit to Toledo, with
+twenty-five mounted attendants, where he appeared before Enrique III.
+and besought a renewal of the truce. The armistice was disregarded by
+the governor of Andalusia, who invaded the Moorish dominions, till
+Mohammed, in reprisal, seized the citadel of Ayamonte. At Jijena he was
+defeated, and was forced to plead for peace. He was at the point of
+death, when the idea seized him to secure the government of Granada for
+his son by the assassination of his brother. The governor of Salobreña
+was commanded to put to death the prince whom he had in his keeping.
+The doomed man asked leave to finish the game of chess in which he was
+engaged, and before either player could cry "Checkmate," the news came
+that the prince's brother was dead and that he had been declared sultan.
+Yusuf III. was faced with difficulties immediately upon his accession.
+Antequera fell into the hands of the Castilians, led by the Infante
+Fernando. The defenders were slain, and only about two thousand of the
+townsmen outlived the rigours of the siege. The survivors were allowed
+to settle in Granada, and they gave the name of Antequeruela to the
+suburb.
+
+When the natives of Gibraltar revolted, and declared allegiance to Fez,
+the sultan of that State sent his brother Abu Saïd to secure the town.
+Abu Saïd, being left to the mercy of the enemy, was seized and brought
+to Granada, where he was shown a letter from the ruler of Fez desiring
+that he might be despatched. With this request the generous Yusuf
+refused to comply. He released his captive and furnished him with money
+and troops with which he left for Africa. The brother who had planned
+his death was hurled from the throne, and till Abu Saïd's death Granada
+did not want an ally.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE COURT OF THE CYPRESSES]
+
+In rapid succession sultans now flit across the lurid page of Granada's
+history. It is a gloomy tale of incessant civil strife and of
+unsuccessful warfare with the Christians. Rulers are expelled from their
+thrones by pretenders who themselves fall victims to the poignards
+of their partisans. Sovereigns purchase their disputed crowns by selling
+the honour and independence of their country to the foreigner. To trace
+the miserable vicissitudes of the careers--we cannot call them
+reigns--of Mohammed VII., Mohammed VIII., Yusuf IV., and Saïd Ben
+Ismaïl, would be to weary and disgust you with a nation whose stubborn
+fight against overwhelming odds should command our respect.
+
+The last act in the protracted drama began with the accession of Mulai
+Hasan in the year 1465. With his famous reply to the Castilian
+ambassadors who demanded tribute, "Here we manufacture only iron
+spear-heads for our enemies," the final campaign began. Every incident
+of that war has been made familiar to us Anglo-Saxons by the pen of
+Prescott. In his pages long ago most of us read of the taking of Zahara
+by the Moors and of the brilliant surprise of the fortress of Alhama by
+the gallant Marquis of Cadiz. We have not forgotten the wailing of the
+Moors, "Ay de mi, Alhama!" nor the domestic revolution that followed
+when the old sultan was hurled from his throne by his son Boabdil. Poor
+Boabdil, on whom the blame of all his country's disasters has been laid
+by historians, Christian and Arab! Weak or foolhardy, the "Little King"
+fought like a Trojan against Ferdinand and Isabella for his country, and
+against his father and his uncle for his crown, at one and the same
+time. He was taken prisoner by Ferdinand and is said to have signed a
+treaty surrendering his dominions to the Catholic Sovereigns. This is
+rendered improbable by his comparatively generous treatment at the end
+of the war, when he had resisted the Spaniards to the uttermost, and
+fought them many times after his release from captivity. Desperate deeds
+of valour were done on both sides, though the strategy of the Spanish
+commanders does not appear to have been of a very high order, since,
+with the whole of Spain at their back, it took them eleven years to
+conquer a small kingdom distracted by three rival rulers. The old sultan
+retired from the contest, as finally did his brother, the brave Zaghal.
+When the Christians were preparing a final assault on the doomed city,
+Boabdil rode out from the Alhambra, for the last time, on the morning of
+the memorable 2nd of January, 1492. Ferdinand with a brilliant cavalcade
+awaited him on the banks of the Genil. The keys were handed over, a
+hurried exchange of formal courtesies, and the last ruler of the Spanish
+Moors passed away into exile and obscurity. The rays of the wintry sun
+glinted on the great silver cross which was hoisted on the Torre de la
+Vela in token that the reign of Mohammed was for ever at an end in
+Spain.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--VILLA ON THE DARRO]
+
+Yes, at an end. On that morning, Ferdinand and Isabella accomplished the
+task begun by Pelayo at Covadonga, seven hundred and seventy-four years
+before. The Moorish dominion in Spain had endured little short of eight
+centuries. It was as if the descendants of Harold Godwin were to
+arise and overthrow the existing English monarchy. But what is most
+remarkable is that the petty State of Granada had survived the break-up
+of the great Moorish empire in the west by two hundred and fifty years.
+Such a race deserved a manlier if not a more beautiful monument than the
+Alhambra.
+
+What followed the extinction of the Nasrid monarchy is not pleasant
+reading. The rights and privileges guaranteed the conquered were soon
+swept aside. The mild Archbishop de Talavera, the humane Tendilla, were
+superseded in the government of the city by fanatics more after
+Isabella's heart. Systematic persecution of the luckless Moslems ensued.
+They revolted, and their revolt was quenched with their own blood. They
+were intimidated, browbeaten, imprisoned, condemned, and burned. Their
+language, costume, and creed were banned. They were ordered to embrace
+Christianity under pain of death, and forbidden to quit the country.
+They appealed to Egypt, but it is a long way from the banks of the Genil
+to those of the Nile. Finally (and one hears of it with relief) they
+were all expelled from the country. As a race they perished utterly. The
+art, the civilization, which they had learnt on Spanish soil, they left
+buried in Spanish ground, and it was a long time before it was
+disinterred.
+
+The price Spain paid for national unity was a heavy one, but it was
+worth it. When we turn to Turkey, can anyone say that a united Spain
+would have been possible, with the fairest of her provinces and cities
+and the whole of her southern seaboard in possession of a people alien
+in race, tongue and creed?
+
+With Oriental people, the history of the palace is the history of the
+State. At Granada every traveller turns instinctively towards the
+Alhambra as the point of supreme interest. The famous pile is to the
+city what the Mezquita is to Cordova--not quite, perhaps, since Granada
+contains more than one building of intrinsic interest.
+
+The Alhambra has been so often described (by the present writer among
+others) that it is not easy to say anything new in regard to it, or even
+to avoid identity of language with other writers in the description of
+certain of its parts. Yet it would be impossible to give any account of
+Granada without some notice of this famous building. To begin with, I
+must impress on those about to visit it for the first time that the
+Alhambra is not a single palace, but properly speaking is the name given
+to a fortified eminence lying to the south-east of the city, and
+including two palaces, a citadel, and a multitude of private residences.
+In its nature it may be compared with the Acropolis of Athens and the
+far-distant Castle of Bamborough. The name, as most people are aware, is
+derived from _Kalat al hamra_--"the Red Castle," to adopt a translation
+which I have never seen disputed. (While not pretending to rank as an
+Arabist, I have not failed to notice that an infinite number of
+words put forward as Arabic by writers on the Spanish Moors are
+unintelligible to Syrian and Egyptian Arabs, and, which is more to the
+point, to many Hindu students of Arabic.) In shape the hill has been
+cleverly compared by Ford to a grand piano. Rearward it abuts on the
+Cerro del Sol ("the Mountain of the Sun"), to which Washington Irving
+alludes so often.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE ALHAMBRA FROM SAN MIGUEL]
+
+To the south of the Alhambra hill lies another and a narrower spur,
+which is crowned near the town end by the Vermilion Towers, or Torres
+Bermejas; on the north-east rises the hill of the Generalife, laid out
+in gardens. The townward extremity of the Alhambra is washed at the foot
+by the river Darro, and is crowned by the Torre de la Vela, of which
+more anon.
+
+To reach the Alhambra you ascend from the Plaza Nueva in the heart of
+the town by the steep and narrow Calle Gomeres. This street is laid out
+to attract and cater for tourists, who are greeted here with a civility
+and cordiality not always conspicuous in the rest of the town. Half-way
+up the toilsome ascent you will probably be waylaid by a
+theatrically-attired personage who will accost you in bad French with
+the information that he is the chief of the gipsies. The costume he
+wears was given to his father or grandfather by Fortuny--one of the rare
+examples of artists condescending to manufacture the picturesque. The
+chief will endeavour to engage you in conversation, and will offer you
+his photograph at fifty centimes a copy. If you have a camera he will
+allow you to take his portrait for a consideration. It seems incredible
+that a human being could be so much of a nuisance and yet remain in good
+health and spirits.
+
+The dragon having been successfully circumvented, you enter the
+Hesperides, or in other words, the charming Alamedas of the Alhambra.
+These groves occupy the deep depression between the famous hill and the
+Vermilion Towers. They are planted with magnificent elms, sent hither, I
+believe, from England by the Duke of Wellington. They have thriven well
+in Spanish soil, and harbour a colony of nightingales and other
+singing-birds, unusually numerous for this land of passion, where wines
+are rich and birds are rare. The "bulbul," as certain writers love to
+call it, sings very sweetly in these leafy retreats, a statement some
+travellers who persist in coming at the wrong season will not hesitate
+to contradict. I must admit that the bird is as elusive as the
+"alpengluh," or as the hunter's moon at Tintern. It is always cool here
+on the slope of the Alhambra. Even the fierce rays of the Andalusian sun
+cannot penetrate the thick leafage. Rills bubbling forth from the red
+sides of the hill, or tumbling over its edge, keep the roots of the
+trees perennially moist and feed a dense under-growth. On summer
+afternoons this is the only spot in Granada where you may sit in
+comfort. Meanwhile, up and down in quick succession pass the sandalled
+water-carriers hurrying to fill their skins with the precious fluid
+and to dispense it in the scorched, thirsty town below. "Agua-a-ah!"
+Their prolonged nasal drawling cry comes back to me as I write, and I
+seem to hear the rapid patter of their feet and to see the light cutting
+chequers on the shadow of the trees. A great man is the water-carrier,
+loved and respected by all the people of southern Spain. We who live in
+the humid sea-girt North can little understand the longing for clear,
+cool water, the reverence for its dispensers, that must ever be felt in
+the South. How constantly wells are referred to in the Bible: "As the
+hart panteth after the water brooks," "With joy shall ye draw waters
+from the wells of salvation." How significant are these beautiful
+passages for those that have journeyed to the South!
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--TOWERS OF THE INFANTAS, ALHAMBRA]
+
+Reluctantly withdrawing from this delightful spot, you must climb the
+hill to the right of the entrance--there is a winding path to the
+summit. Here you find the Torres Bermejas--a group of exceedingly
+ancient and not very dilapidated towers, used as a military prison. They
+date, it is believed, from the days before the Zirite dynasty, but you
+will not be tempted to examine them attentively, for the purlieus are of
+the most uninviting description. The adjoining cottages are peopled by
+rascally-looking men and slatternly women, who would be better, one
+would think, inside than just outside a gaol.
+
+In ancient days an embattled wall connected these towers with the
+opposite point of the Alhambra, closing the mouth of the valley, which
+was not then the pleasaunce it is now, but an arid ravine used as the
+burial ground of the fortress. The entrance to the valley is now through
+the Puerta de las Granadas, built by order of Charles V. Taking the path
+to the left, we soon reach the fountain in the Renaissance style,
+erected in 1545 by Pedro Machuca, by order of the Conde de Tendilla. It
+is ornamented with the imperial shield and the heads of the three
+river-gods, Genil, Darro, and Beiro. The medallions represent Alexander
+the Great, Hercules slaying the hydra, Phryxus and Helle, and Daphne
+pursued by Apollo. The laurels growing out of the distressed damsel's
+head give her the appearance of a Sioux brave. A few steps beyond we
+reach the famous Puerta de la Justicia, so called because within it the
+Moorish sultans or their kadis administered justice--or it may have been
+merely law. This entrance is formed by two towers of reddish brick,
+placed back to back, and united by an upper storey. We look at once for
+the hand and key so often referred to by Irving, and distinguish them
+with difficulty--the first over the outermost horseshoe arch, the latter
+over the middle arch. Opinion is divided as to the meaning of these
+symbols. The key is supposed by some to signify the power of God to
+unlock the gate of Heaven to the true believer, while the hand appears
+to have been regarded as a talisman against the evil eye. A winding
+corridor leads through the gate into the citadel, past an
+inscription celebrating the Conquest in 1492, and an altar now enclosed
+within a sort of cupboard.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--NEAR THE ALHAMBRA]
+
+This gate is placed at right angles to the wall which girdles the hill
+and runs along its edge, following all its inequalities of level. It is
+in fairly good preservation, but the rampart walk has disappeared here
+and there. Of the square mural towers a great many remain--some
+hopelessly ruinous, others inhabited by the guardians of the domain or
+their widows and relations. The towers on the south-west side, as far as
+I could judge, were better adapted for defence than those on the
+north-east, where the width of the windows would have greatly
+embarrassed the defence. The area enclosed by the outer wall was
+divided, it seems, by two cross walls into what, in the medieval
+parlance, we would call the outer, middle and inner wards. To the last
+corresponded the citadel proper or Kasba (Alcazaba, the Spaniards call
+it), whose massive walls rise to your left on emerging from the Puerta
+de la Justicia. This is the oldest part of the fortress. It occupies the
+extremity of the plateau, which is marked by the tall, square Torre de
+la Vela, or watch tower, whereon a silver cross was planted by the
+"Tercer Rey," Cardinal Mendoza, to announce the occupation of the
+Alhambra by the Spaniards. Here also is a bell which can be heard as far
+off as Loja, and which, if struck with sufficient force by a maiden, is
+said to have the faculty of procuring her a husband. The view from the
+platform is noble. The dazzling white city is spread out beneath, in
+front stretches the Vega, to the south the eyes rest lovingly on the
+white streaks of the Sierra Nevada.
+
+Upon this tower I met a French entomologist, who announced that he
+should not trouble to visit any other part of the Alhambra, and was, in
+fact, surprised to learn that there was anything more to see. His
+horizon was bounded by the Lepidoptera, on one side, and the Coleoptera
+(I think that is the word) on the other. After all, archæologists take
+no more interest in black beetles than entomologists do in buildings.
+Incidentally, I should think Granada an admirable place for the intimate
+study of insects.
+
+From the Torre de las Armas, a road led from the citadel down the
+declivity to the town, crossing the Darro by the ruined Puente del Cadi.
+On the inner side the citadel is strengthened by the picturesque Torre
+del Homenage--a name often given to towers in Spain. The open space
+before it, where the water-carriers gather round the well, was a
+comparatively deep ravine in Moorish times, and was not levelled up till
+after the fall of Boabdil. On the opposite side--facing the Torre del
+Homenage--it was bounded by what I will call the wall of the middle
+ward, which ran across from the Torre de las Gallinas to near the Puerta
+de la Justicia, and of which only the gatehouse, the beautiful Puerta
+del Vino, remains.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--PUERTA DEL VINO, ALHAMBRA]
+
+This admitted to the area which contained the palaces and also the
+little town of the Alhambra--inhabited by persons attached to the
+court, the ulema, chiefs of such powerful tribes as the Beni Serraj and
+the Beni Theghri, discarded sultanas, ex-favourites, soldiers of
+fortune, plenipotentiaries and envoys, and a crowd of parasites and
+hangers-on. To-day the population is limited chiefly to one little
+street, composed of pensions, photographers' shops and estancos. The
+plan of the whole fortress no doubt varied from age to age, but in the
+main agreed with that according to which most European strongholds were
+constructed. There was the outer wall with its mural towers and
+gatehouses; a strong inner ward, in place of a keep shut off by a ditch
+or ravine; and two or more other enclosures, each defended by a wall
+with a fortified entrance. It does not seem that the portcullis and
+drawbridge were used by the Moorish engineers.
+
+While the Kasba is generally attributed to an earlier dynasty, the outer
+wall and the other Moorish buildings are almost unanimously ascribed to
+Al Ahmar and his successors of the Nasrid dynasty. To reach the Alhambra
+Palace, called pre-eminently by foreigners the Alhambra and by the
+Spaniards the Alcazar, or Palacio Arabe, you pass across the plaza,
+leaving the unfinished Palace of Charles V. to your right. Behind it you
+find not an imposing and gorgeous structure, but what appears to be a
+collection of tile-roofed sheds. A mean, characterless entrance admits
+you to the far-famed palace.
+
+The building belongs to the last stage of Spanish-Arabic art, when the
+seed of Mohammedan ideas and culture had long since taken root in the
+soil and produced a style purely local in many of its features. Some
+authorities trace the first principles of Arabic architecture back to
+the Copts; the Spaniards argue that their style is derived from
+Byzantine works they found before them in Andalusia. The germs of Arabic
+art are certainly not, if travellers' tales be true, to be found in
+Arabia. The Saracen conquerors were warriors, not artists, and their
+ideas of form and ornament were undoubtedly borrowed--like their vaunted
+culture--from the more civilized nations with which they came in
+contact. With Morocco just across the strait, it is not safe to claim
+too much of native genius and refinement for the Moor. Whatever may have
+been the primitive models of Andalusian architecture, as time went by it
+lost much of the dignity and simplicity of its earliest examples--such
+as the Giralda and the Mezquita. The Moors of Granada had wearied of the
+fanaticism and austerity of Islam. If not precisely decadent, they had
+lost the fire and enthusiasm of youth, and wanted to enjoy a comfortable
+old age. If the palace we are about to enter seems in parts more like
+the bower of an odalisque than the seat of royalty, we must remember
+that the sultans wanted to enjoy life here, and had no fancy for the
+stern, military-looking palaces of their Christian rivals. Your
+Oriental, like the cat, values luxury very highly, and yet, from
+our point of view, does not seem to secure it. A European would have
+found himself hopelessly uncomfortable at the court of Al Ahmar and
+Mohammed V.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE ALHAMBRA: TOWER OF COMARES]
+
+Architecturally the Alhambra Palace has little merit. It is impossible
+to trace any order in the distribution of its parts, which ought not of
+course to be expected in a building repeatedly added to in the course of
+two and a half centuries. Moreover, a portion was demolished to make
+room for the Palace of Charles V. The Moorish builders were fond of
+conceits which our taste condemns. They liked to conceal the supports of
+a heavy tower, and to leave it seemingly suspended in the air. There is
+nothing imposing about the edifice, nothing stately. Its great charm
+consists in its decoration, which is wonderful and, in its own line,
+beyond all praise. It is based on the strictest geometrical plan, and
+every design and pattern may be resolved into a symmetrical arrangement
+of lines and curves at regular distances. The intersection of lines at
+various angles is the secret of the system. All these lines flow from a
+parent stem, and nothing accidental or extraneous is permitted. The same
+adhesion to sharply-defined principles is conspicuous in the
+colour-scheme. On the stucco only the primary colours are used; the
+secondary tints being reserved for the dados of mosaic or tile work. The
+green seen on the groundwork was originally blue. To-day, when the white
+parts have assumed the tint of old ivory and time has subdued the vivid
+colouring, the effect is more harmonious than it could have been
+originally.
+
+Epigraphy, or long flowing inscriptions, proclaiming the merits of the
+sultans or of the chambers themselves, enters largely into the
+decoration. Those who can read these at a glance must find the halls
+less monotonous than most people are likely to do. The beauty of the
+ornamentation consists in its exquisite symmetry, and this is not
+apparent to every comer, who may fail to realize with Mr. Lomas "that
+the exact relation between the irregular widths of cloistering on the
+long and short sides of the court [of the Lions] is that of the squares
+upon the sides of a right-angled triangle"!
+
+The inscription that most frequently recurs in the decoration is the
+famous "There is no conqueror but God"--the words used by Al Ahmar on
+his return from the siege of Seville, in deprecation of the acclamations
+of his subjects. The newer parts are readily recognizable by the yoke
+and sheaf of arrows, the favourite devices of Ferdinand and Isabella,
+whose initials, F and Y, are also seen; and by the Pillars of Hercules
+and the motto "Plus Oultre," denoting work executed by order of Charles
+V.
+
+The oldest part of the building--by which I mean that which appears to
+have been the least altered--is round about the Patio de la Mezquita,
+more properly named "del Mexuar," after the divan or "meshwâr" that held
+its sittings here. The southern façade of this small court reminds one
+very much of the front of the Alcazar at Seville. From this you enter
+the disused chapel, an uninteresting apartment consecrated in 1629. The
+Moorish decoration has almost completely disappeared, but much of the
+work in the little apartment adjacent, called the Sultan's Oratory,
+seems to be original. There never was a mosque here, but there may have
+been a private praying-place. Yusuf I. is supposed to have been stabbed
+here. The tragic deed was more probably done at the great mosque outside
+the palace where the Alhambra parish church now stands. From the Patio
+del Mexuar a tunnel called the Viaducto leads to the Patio de la Reja,
+the Baths, and the Garden of Daraxa.
+
+The Court of the Myrtles (Patio de las Arrayanes, or de la Alberca) is
+the first entered by the visitor. It is an oblong space, the middle of
+which is occupied by a tank of bright green water. This is bordered by
+trimly kept hedges of myrtle. The side walls are modern, and do not
+deserve attention. The front to the right on entering is very beautiful.
+It is composed of two arcaded galleries, one above the other, with a
+smaller closed gallery--a sort of triforium--interposed. The arches
+spring from marble columns, with variously decorated capitals. The
+central arch of the lowest gallery rises nearly to the cornice, and is
+decorated in a style which Contreras thought suggestive of Indian
+architecture. Fine lattice work closes the seven windows of the
+triforium. The upper gallery is equally graceful, but looks in imminent
+danger of collapse. Above a similar but single arcade at the opposite
+end of the court rises the square massive upper storey of the Tower of
+Comares, with its crenellated summit. To reach its interior we cross the
+gallery beneath a little dome painted with stars on a blue ground, and a
+long parallel apartment (Sala de la Barca) gutted by fire in 1890, and
+enter the spacious Hall of the Ambassadors (Sala de los Embajadores),
+the largest hall in the Alhambra. Here was held the final council which
+decided the fate of Islam in Spain. Looking upwards we behold the
+glorious airy dome of larch-wood with painted stars. The decoration is
+magnificent--mostly in red and black--and may be divided into four
+zones: (1) a dado of mosaic tiles or azulejos; (2) stucco work in eight
+horizontal bands, each of a different design; (3) a row of five windows
+once filled with stained glass on each side; (4) a carved wooden
+cornice, supporting the roof. On three sides of the hall are alcoves,
+each with a window, the one opposite the entrance having been near the
+Sultan's throne.
+
+The Hall of the Ambassadors probably never looked very different from
+what it is now. It was never a private apartment. We can imagine it
+occupied, when no function was proceeding, by a few slaves dozing on
+mats or reclining dog-like on the richly carpeted floor, ready, however,
+to spring up and make the lowest of salaams as some bearded dignity
+entered.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE COURT OF THE LIONS: MOONLIGHT]
+
+This splendid hall and the other apartments adjacent to the Court of the
+Myrtles are supposed (I know not on what authority) to have
+constituted the official or public part of the royal residence, together
+with the apartments demolished to make room for the Palace of Charles V.
+The rest of the building, on this supposition, was the private or harem
+quarter. A narrow passage leads from the Court of the Myrtles to the
+Court of the Lions. "There is no part of the edifice that gives us a
+more complete idea of its original beauty and magnificence than this,"
+says Washington Irving, "for none has suffered so little from the
+ravages of time. In the centre stands the fountain famous in song and
+story. The alabaster basins still shed their diamond drops; and the
+twelve lions which support them cast forth their crystal streams as in
+the days of Boabdil. [The fountain nowadays plays only once a year.] The
+architecture, like that of all other parts of the palace, is
+characterized by elegance rather than grandeur; bespeaking a delicate
+and a graceful taste, and a disposition to indolent enjoyment. When one
+looks upon the fairy tracery of the peristyles, and the apparently
+fragile fretwork of the walls, it is difficult to believe that so much
+has survived the wear and tear of centuries, the shocks of earthquakes,
+the violence of war, and the quiet though no less baneful pilferings of
+the tasteful traveller; it is almost sufficient to excuse the popular
+tradition that the whole is protected by a magic charm."
+
+I fancy that the gifted American was himself responsible for that
+tradition, for the Spaniards, as Lady Louisa Tenison observed sixty odd
+years ago, are not an imaginative race, and whatever legends or
+traditions are current relate almost exclusively to the Virgin and
+saints. Spanish folk-lore knows nothing of fairies and goblins. The
+palace which Irving tells us the people regarded as enchanted had been
+used by them for years as a factory, as store-rooms, as a laundry, as a
+caravanserai. This hardly suggests that it was looked upon with
+superstitious awe. The truth is that the palace had enchanted Washington
+Irving, as it has done many others--not natives--since.
+
+The Court of the Lions is an oblong, surrounded by a gallery formed by
+124 marble columns, eleven feet in height and placed irregularly, some
+in pairs, some single. The arches exhibit a similar variety of curve,
+and the capitals are of various designs. The tile roofing of the
+galleries rather mars the effect, but the stucco work within them is of
+the richest and finest description. In the centre of the short sides are
+two charming little pavilions, with "half-orange" domes and basins in
+their marble flooring. The court is gravelled, and derives its name from
+the twelve marble animals that support the basin of the central
+fountain. These creatures are called lions, but why I am at a loss to
+understand. They look more like poodles than any other living
+quadrupeds. Ford humorously remarks: "Their faces are barbecued, and
+their manes cut like the scales of a griffin, and their legs like
+bedposts, while water-pipes stuck in their mouths do not add to their
+dignity." An Arabic inscription reminds us that nothing need be
+feared from them, as life is wanting to enable them to show their fury.
+That fury would no doubt have been directed in the first instance at the
+sculptor who had made of the unfortunate creatures such grotesque
+caricatures.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE GENERALIFE: PATIO DE LA ACEQUIA]
+
+The court is surrounded by four splendid rooms--the halls of the
+Mocarabes, the Abencerrages, the Two Sisters, and of Justice. The second
+and third resemble each other, and are covered with the most marvellous
+specimens of the artesonado or carved wood ceiling. The stalactites or
+pendants, though in reality following a strict geometrical plan, exhibit
+complications and varieties that it is impossible for the eye to follow.
+The style may well have been suggested by the honey-comb. It is
+confusing, beautiful, glorious--certainly the most remarkable
+achievement of the art of the Spanish Moor. The walls are covered with
+lace-work in stucco of the most exquisite pattern, with mosaic dados,
+and friezes decorated with inscriptions in praise of Mohammed V. At the
+sides of the rooms are the alcoves characteristic of Oriental domestic
+architecture.
+
+The Hall of the Two Sisters is so called from a couple of slabs of
+marble let into the flooring. The other chamber derives its name from
+the thirty-six chiefs of the Beni Serraj tribe, fabled to have been
+decapitated within it by order of Boabdil. The story was a pure
+invention of a Ginés Perez de Hita, a writer who lived in the sixteenth
+century. It has now spread through all lands, thanks to the version of
+Chateaubriand. The tribe is supposed in this story to have espoused the
+"Little King's" cause against his father, Mulai Hasan. Later on their
+chief, Hamet, was suspected of intriguing with the Castilians; and, what
+was still more criminal in the eyes of a Moslem, of carrying on a love
+affair with one of the sultanas. A cypress in the gardens of the
+Generalife is pointed out as the lovers' trysting-place. The sultan
+resolved to make an end of this pestilent brood, but Hamet himself,
+warned at the eleventh hour, escaped the fate of his kinsmen. The frail
+sultana would have shared their fate, had not four champions presented
+themselves and vindicated her reputation against all comers in the
+lists. Thus the affair ended happily--except for the thirty-six chiefs.
+Thus the story. I hope it will stimulate your imagination. For myself,
+there is an utter absence of the personal and human note about these
+gorgeous Moorish halls. It is certainly easier to believe that they
+sprang into existence at the bidding of an enchanter than that they were
+ever the scenes of men's loves and hates, hopes and fears.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE GENERALIFE: COURT OF THE CYPRESSES]
+
+The Hall of Justice (Sala de la Justicia), at the far side of the Court
+of Lions, is a long apartment, divided into alcoves specially remarkable
+for the paintings on its ceiling. These have been the subject of endless
+controversy. To begin with, it was doubted if a Mohammedan could have
+painted them, since the representation of living objects is contrary to
+the injunctions of the Koran. I have it on the authority of a very
+learned Moslem friend, a recognized authority on Mohammedan law, that
+the plastic arts are not forbidden by the Prophet, but merely pointed
+out as a possible snare and stumbling-block in the way of the believer.
+Painting has been a recognized art in Persia for centuries, and I have
+seen some pictures from that country which reveal no mean degree of
+skill. There is therefore no good reason to doubt that these curious
+works were executed by Moorish artists at the end of the fourteenth
+century. They are done on leather prepared with gypsum and nailed to the
+wooden ceiling. The colours (red, green, gold, etc.) are still vivid,
+but mildew is covering them in parts, and in places the gypsum is
+peeling off. These valuable specimens of Moorish art ought to have been
+taken down and placed under glass long ago. The first of the three
+represents ten bearded, robed, and turbaned personages, who may with
+some degree of probability be identified with the first sultans of the
+Nasrid dynasty. According to Oliver, the Moor in the green costume
+occupying the middle of one side is Al Ahmar, the founder of the race.
+Then, counting from his right, come Mohammed II., Nasr Abu-l-Juyyush,
+Mohammed IV., Saïd Ismaïl, Mohammed V. (in the red robe), Yusuf II.,
+Yusuf I., Abu-l-Walid, and Mohammed III. The family likeness between
+these potentates is striking, and the red beards suggest a liberal use
+of the dye still largely used by the Oriental man of middle age. The
+other pictures are more interesting. The first represents hunting
+scenes. Moors are seen chasing the wild boar, while Spanish knights are
+in pursuit of the lion and the bear. In another part of the composition
+the huntsmen are seen returning and offering the spoils of the chase to
+their ladies. The Moor greets his sultana with a benign and
+condescending air, the Christian on his knees offers his prize to his
+lady. In the next picture is another hunting scene, with a page, with
+sword and shield, leaning against a tree, awaiting his master's return.
+In another quarter of the picture his master (presumably) is rescuing a
+distressed damsel from a wild-looking creature who is quite undismayed
+by the tame lion accompanying his captive. Further on, the same knight
+is unhorsed and overthrown by a Moorish huntsman, two ladies from a
+castle in the background most ungratefully applauding the Christian's
+discomfiture. The pictures evidently were intended to record the
+incidents of a border warfare not dissimilar to those commemorated in
+our ballad of Chevy Chase.
+
+In this hall a temporary chapel was set up, and mass was celebrated, on
+the taking of the city by the Spaniards.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--TOCADOR DE LA REINA]
+
+Crossing the Hall of the Two Sisters, we enter the beautiful Mirador de
+"Lindaraja," the most charming and elegant of all the apartments in the
+palace. Through three tall windows, once filled with coloured crystals,
+we look down into the pretty Patio de Daraxa, which, like the chamber,
+does not derive its name from an imaginary sultana, but from a word
+meaning "vestibule." It is a delightful garden, where shade is always to
+be obtained between the closely planted cypresses, orange, and peach
+trees, rising between twin hedges of box and bushes of rose and myrtle.
+In the centre is a seventeenth-century fountain. Here you will always
+find some artist committing to canvas his impressions of one of the
+fairest gardens men have fashioned for themselves.
+
+The rooms on the other side of the patio were built by Charles V., and
+include the Tocador de la Reina, or Queen's Boudoir, a prettily
+decorated belvedere affording an entrancing view. It was in this room
+that Washington Irving took up his quarters. Théophile Gautier slept
+sometimes in the hall of the Abencerrages, sometimes in that of the Two
+Sisters, and was impressed by the eerieness of the palace at night. Yet
+there is not a manor-house in England or a château in France that is not
+more suggestive of the spectral and uncanny than these gilded halls and
+open courts. However, everyone has his own preconceptions of the weird
+and the picturesque.
+
+From the Patio de Daraxa we enter the very interesting Baths, ably
+restored by the late Don Rafael Contreras. The Sala de las Camas, or
+chamber of repose, is among the most brilliantly decorated rooms in the
+palace, yet, as elsewhere in this neglected pile, the gilding is being
+suffered to fade and the tiling in the niches, I noticed, is loosening
+and breaking up. From a gallery running round the chamber, the music of
+the odalisques was wafted down to the sultan reclining in one of the
+divans below. He must have been in no hurry to leave this spot, where he
+dreamily puffed at his hubble-bubble and watched the play of the
+fountain. The light came from apertures in the superb artesonado
+ceiling. Without, on a stone seat, the eunuchs mounted guard and
+preserved their lord's repose from interruption. The actual baths are
+contained in two adjacent chambers. A staircase ascended to the Hall of
+the Two Sisters above, for the use, not improbably, of the ladies of the
+harem. On leaving the baths you may follow the tunnel across the
+uninteresting Patio de la Reja and beneath the Tower of Comares, to the
+Patio del Mexuar.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--TORRE DE LAS DAMAS]
+
+No visitor to the Alhambra must omit to walk round the outer wall or
+enceinte, and to inspect the towers. The Torre de las Damas, a fortified
+tower dating from the time of Yusuf I., was inhabited by Ismaïl, the
+brother of Mohammed V., and marked the palace limits on this side. It
+contains a tastefully decorated hall. Adjacent to it is a beautiful if
+gaudy little Mohammedan mihrab or oratory, approached through a private
+garden. Here was the house of Anastasio de Bracamonte, the esquire of
+the Conde de Tendilla, to whom was assigned the custody of the Alhambra
+at the Reconquest. The Puerta de Hierro, a little further on, was
+restored at the same time, and faces the gate and path leading to the
+Generalife. Passing the Torre de los Picos, we reach the Torre de
+la Cautiva, which contains a beautiful chamber, over which a lovely rosy
+tint is diffused by the tiles and stucco. The Torre de las Infantas,
+built by Mohammed VII., is a perfect example of an Oriental
+dwelling-house. Through the usual zigzag vestibule you reach a hall with
+a fountain in the centre and alcoves in three of the sides. The
+decoration is perhaps over elaborate. The towers on the other side of
+the enceinte were, as I have said, intended mainly for defence. Near the
+ruinous Torre del Agua, at the south-east extremity, a viaduct crosses
+the ravine from the Generalife, and some of the water precipitates
+itself over the brow of the hill in a mass of vivid living greenery.
+Further on, towards the Gate of Justice, is the Torre de los Siete
+Suelos, through which Boabdil is said to have made his last exit. It is
+supposed to extend far underground, and to contain much buried treasure.
+So at least Irving was told by the inhabitants, or possibly told them!
+Hence issues the Belludo, the spectral pack, which traverses the streets
+of Granada by night--also according to legend. This story of the Wild
+Huntsman crops up, in one form or another, in every part of Europe.
+There are the Dandy Dogs in Cornwall, the Wild Huntsman in Germany,
+Thibaut le Tricheur in the valley of the Loire, the Chasseur Noir of
+Fontainebleau, and so on. Folk-lore of this sort is easily fabricated.
+Foreigners in search of the picturesque ask the natives of such a place
+as this if ghosts do not haunt the ruins. The guide, anxious to please,
+says "Doubtless!" The foreigner goes on to tell him of spectres that
+affect this particular class of building at home; and the guide readily
+devises a local version of the yarn for the benefit of the next
+stranger. I have found that the peasantry in most European countries
+hear of their local traditions and folk-lore first through the medium of
+books. And these remarks apply with especial force to the people of
+Latin countries, whom, contrary to the received opinion, I know to be
+less imaginative and less superstitious than northerners. It is natural
+that the gloomy forests of Germany and Sweden, rather than the sunlit
+plains of Andalusia, should generate dark fancies.
+
+Strictly speaking the Generalife, the Trianon of the Moorish kings, is a
+more beautiful place than the Alhambra, though it has no architectural
+merit. It became the property at the Reconquest of a Christianized Moor,
+Don Pedro de Granada, who claimed to be descended from the famous Ben
+Hud, and from whose family it passed into the possession of the
+Marquises of Campotejar. The approach lies along a magnificent avenue of
+cypresses and tall shrubs. Arrived at the entrance you are admitted by a
+very comely damsel, and allowed to wander about the lovely gardens by
+yourself and to stay there all day if you like. At the far end of the
+first court is a poor collection of portraits, among which is one--No.
+11--absurdly supposed to be a portrait of Ben Hud (died about 1237),
+though the person is dressed in the costume of the fifteenth century.
+This is the portrait which English travellers, and even the usually
+correct Baedeker, persist in mistaking for Boabdil's.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE GENERALIFE: COURT OF THE CYPRESSES]
+
+The gardens of the Generalife are beyond all praise. Water bubbles up
+everywhere, and moistens the roots of gorgeous oleanders, myrtles,
+orange trees, cedars, and cypresses--the tallest trees in Spain. Beneath
+one of these--that to the right as you reach the head of the first
+flight of steps--the sultana is alleged to have kept her tryst with
+Hamet, the Abencerrage. Not a bad place, this, for a lovers' meeting.
+You rise from one flower-laden terrace to another till you reach the
+ugly belvedere--scribbled all over with idiots' names--whence you obtain
+a ravishing view of the Alhambra, the city, the Vega, and the mountains.
+The hours spent in the Generalife Gardens will be remembered as among
+the pleasantest of one's lifetime.
+
+It may be, as a French writer states, impossible to tickle the surface
+of Granada without discovering Moorish remains, but certainly, outside
+the Alhambra, very few are to be seen above ground. The most conspicuous
+of them in the lower town is, on the whole, the Casa del Carbon, a
+dilapidated structure with a bold horseshoe archway which confronts you
+as you cross the Reyes Catolicos near the Post Office. The house is now
+used as a coal depot, but beneath the thick coating of grime you may
+discern the traces of graceful decorative work. The building is said to
+have been a corn exchange in Moorish days. More interesting are the
+vestiges of the ancient walls that girdled the oldest quarter, _el
+viejo Albaicin_. They were built in great part by Christian
+captives--perhaps by those whose chains are hung up on the walls of San
+Juan de los Reyes at Toledo. The Moors of Granada grew embittered by
+their reverses, and treated their Christian subjects harshly. The
+martyrs whom the monument on the Alhambra hill commemorates are not
+merely the creatures of pious imagination. There is an ugly story, too,
+of an unfortunate monk accused of heretical doctrines, who took refuge
+at Granada and was burnt at the stake by the Moslems.
+
+Two of the old gatehouses on this side of the city are still standing.
+They are massive crenellated towers, pierced with round-headed archways.
+I do not consider them entrancingly picturesque; they form the northern
+entrances to the Albaicin quarter, which is now a perplexing congeries
+of squalid houses, formless convents, and churches tottering to their
+fall. Whatever interest its antiquity may excite is lost in disgust at
+its wretchedness. On the outskirts dwell the gipsies--mostly in
+semi-underground burrows, and left very much to themselves by the local
+authority. These are the poor creatures who are dragged out to bore
+visitors with their wearisome dances, the fee charged for which goes
+almost entirely into the pockets of the guides. The gipsies of Spain are
+not nomadic. There are people in Granada who wish they were.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--CASA DEL CARBON]
+
+In the Albaicin the Zirite sultans had their palaces, one of which was
+called the House of the Weathercock, from the bronze figure of a
+horseman that surmounted it and served as a vane. Washington Irving has
+written a story about it. Fragments of all these ancient buildings are
+incorporated with modern houses, and may be identified by those who care
+to take the trouble. Romantic legends (of the precise nature of which I
+am ignorant) cluster round the Casa de las Tres Estrellas, possibly
+because it affords ingress to a subterranean passage leading no man
+knows whither. But I do not think you will be tempted to linger long in
+this odoriferous, wormeaten quarter. You may be said to have escaped
+from it when you reach the picturesque Carrera de Darro, the embankment
+of that narrow stream facing the Alhambra. Here may be seen a Moorish
+bath at one of the private houses, and--much more delightful to the
+artist--a broken Moorish bridge, the Puente del Cadi, to which a path
+led down from the Torre de las Armas. Against the little church near
+this point you will notice a white corner house with a handsome doorway
+in the Renaissance style. At the angle of the house is a balcony,
+bearing the odd inscription, "Esperandola del Cielo" ("Waiting for it
+from Heaven"). The words are accounted for by the following story: The
+house was built by Hernando de Zafra, the astute secretary of Ferdinand
+and Isabella, and the negotiator of the capitulation of Granada. He
+suspected his daughter of a love affair with an unknown cavalier. To
+satisfy his doubts he surprised her one day, and found his page
+assisting the lover to escape by the window. Baulked of his prey the
+enraged father turned upon the lad. "Mercy," implored the page. "Look
+for it in Heaven!" answered the Don, as he hurled his daughter's
+accomplice after her lover into the street below. There are those who
+say that De Zafra had no daughter, and that he has been libelled in this
+matter. But the episode is more probable than the foreign-made yarns
+about the Alhambra.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--STREET IN THE ALBAICIN]
+
+The rivers of Granada are more spoken of than seen. At the foot of the
+Alhambra the Darro disappears, its channel through the town having been
+roofed over at different epochs. Till the middle of the last century the
+houses of the Zacatin looked at the back upon the stream, as may be seen
+from a picture by Roberts in the South Kensington Galleries. There was a
+local proverb which said "Ugly as the back of the Zacatin," an evidence
+of the persistent confusion of the ugly and the picturesque. This part
+of the stream is now covered by the Reyes Catolicos Street. The famous
+Zacatin--a lane-like thoroughfare, like those we have seen in
+Seville--was once the principal street in Granada, and seems to have
+been full of animation in Gautier's time. That brilliant Frenchman
+speaks of meeting there parties of students from Salamanca, playing as
+they went on the guitar, triangles, and castanets--truly a singular mode
+of taking one's walks abroad, such as even the Spaniards of the
+'thirties and 'forties must have marvelled at exceedingly. Are we
+to understand by this remarkable passage that the alumni of Salamanca
+formed processions like those of the Salvation Army, whenever they met
+by chance in the public street, or that, like the fine lady of Banbury
+Cross, they were determined to move nowhere without a musical
+accompaniment? At all events, the Zacatin is quiet enough nowadays. It
+still contains some of the best shops in the town and is one of the few
+comparatively shady walks outside the precincts of the Alhambra. It
+leads you to the far-famed Plaza de Bibarrambla, with the name of which
+we have been familiarized by Byron's rendering of the Spanish ballad,
+"Ay de mi, Alhama!" The square, like so much else in Granada, has been
+so completely modernized that nothing remains to recall the days when
+the sultans here assisted at pageants and tournaments, wherein
+Christians often took part. It is edifying to learn that Spanish
+knights, forbidden in their own country to cut each other's throats,
+often resorted hither to do so, by gracious permission of his Moorish
+Majesty.
+
+We are now in the neighbourhood of the second great sight of
+Granada--the Cathedral with its adjoining buildings. The church called
+the Sagrario is an eighteenth-century structure immediately adjoining
+the west front of the Cathedral, on the south side, which served for a
+time as the metropolitan church of Granada. The interior is sombre,
+heavy, and Churrigueresque--a style which, it always strikes me, might
+have been devised by an undertaker accustomed to a high-class business.
+One of the chapels, however, is interesting. It contains the bones of
+"the magnificent cavalier, Fernando del Pulgar, Lord of El Salar," as
+the inscription records. This gallant knight, during the last siege of
+Granada, penetrated into the city with fifteen horsemen, and nailed a
+paper bearing the Ave Maria on the door of the mosque. This brave
+exploit earned for him and his descendants the right of remaining
+covered in the Cathedral and before the king. In Philip II.'s time the
+Marqués del Salar, the representative of the family, was fined for
+appearing covered before the High Court of Granada. He appealed to the
+king, invoking the privilege conferred on his ancestor. "Not so,"
+replied Philip; "you may wear your bonnet in the presence of the king,
+but not in the sacred presence of Justice." With the fine was built the
+staircase in the Audiencia in the Plaza Nueva.
+
+Behind the Sagrario is the mausoleum of Ferdinand and Isabella--the
+Capilla Real--a temple peculiarly sacred in the eyes of all good
+Spaniards. The two great sovereigns lie here in the heart of the city
+which they recovered for Christendom, even as many great soldiers have
+caused their remains to be buried on the sites of their greatest
+victories. The chapel, founded in 1504 and completed in 1517, is a noble
+example of late Gothic. The exterior is very simple, the decoration
+consisting mainly of two highly ornate balustrades, surmounting each of
+the two stages. The well-known devices and monograms of the
+founders are interwoven with the decoration. Through a portal flanked by
+the figures of heralds we enter the chapel--plain, bright, and airy. The
+chancel is railed off by a magnificent grille of gilt ironwork, wrought
+by Maestre Bartolomé of Jaen, in 1522. Between this and the altar are
+the superb tombs of Ferdinand and Isabella, and of their daughter Joanna
+and her husband, Philip I. The former is ascribed to a Florentine
+sculptor, Domenico Fancelli.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--INTERIOR OF A POSADA]
+
+The recumbent effigies of the Reyes Catolicos are full of expression and
+majesty. Both wear their crowns, and Ferdinand is in full armour. At the
+angles of the tomb are seated figures, and the sides are sculptured with
+medallions and escutcheons and the figures of angels and saints. The
+figures of the unhappy Joanna and her Flemish consort are less lifelike,
+and the decoration is much more florid. It must be admitted that the
+Renaissance character of these sepulchral monuments contrasts rather
+oddly with the Gothic surroundings. The kneeling statues of the founders
+at the sides of the altar are believed to be actual likenesses. The
+reliefs on the retablo, by Vigarni, represent the surrender of Granada
+and the subsequent baptism of the Moors. In the former, both the
+sovereigns are shown, in the company of Cardinal Mendoza, receiving the
+keys from Boabdil; in the latter, we note that the candidates for
+baptism are so many that the rite is being administered by means of a
+syringe.
+
+Beneath the tombs is the vault containing all that was mortal of the
+makers of Modern Spain. The sacristan thrusts a lighted taper forward
+into the gloomy abode of death, and you are able to distinguish five
+coffins--those of Ferdinand and Isabella, Philip, Joanna, and the
+Infante Miguel. Philip's coffin, it will be remembered, was carried
+about by his lovesick widow till she had to be parted from it by force.
+The coffins are rude, bulging, and almost shapeless. One only, that of
+Ferdinand, can be identified, and this only by the simple letter F upon
+it. Might not this stand as well for Felipe?
+
+The sacristan next shows you the treasury of the chapel. Among the
+relics are the crown, sceptre, and mirror of Isabella, her missal
+beautifully illuminated, and the standard embroidered by her that
+floated over the city. A casket is shown which was filled with jewels
+which she pawned to procure funds for Columbus's first voyage of
+discovery. Few investments have proved more profitable, as far as
+material wealth is concerned. You may also see Ferdinand's sword, rather
+interesting to those curious in ancient weapons.
+
+The Royal Chapel is quite independent of the immediately adjacent
+Cathedral. The chaplains have a right of way across the Cathedral
+transept to the Puerta del Perdon, a privilege deeply resented by the
+chapter. Once when the Archbishop wished to visit the chapel, his
+attendant canons were refused admission. The irate prelate caused the
+chaplains to be arrested for this affront, and a long lawsuit
+followed. But all this happened a long time ago, and it is to be hoped
+that the two bodies of clergy now live upon good terms with each other.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--OLD HOUSES, CUESTA DEL PESCADO]
+
+A very beautiful arch, richly and tastefully adorned with statues,
+admits to the Cathedral. This church, described by Fergusson as one of
+the finest in Europe, was begun by Diego de Siloe, about 1525, and not
+completed till 1703. The exterior is far from corresponding to the
+majesty of the interior, though the Puerto del Perdon, already referred
+to, on the north side, is a beautiful piece of work. The impression
+produced on entering the Cathedral is rather similar to that experienced
+on entering St. Peter's. There is an atmosphere of loftiness, luxury,
+and cold purity--like that clinging to the finest classical works. This
+is certainly the triumph of Spanish Renaissance architecture. The effect
+is, of course, utterly different from that of the grand old Gothic fane
+of Seville. Like all Renaissance churches, as it seems to me, it lacks
+the devotional atmosphere. The nave, as usual, is obstructed by the
+choir--where, by the way, Alonso Cano was buried. The dome above the
+chancel is sublime, the daring of the arches wonderful. The altar is
+completely insulated by the ambulatory.
+
+Before it are the grand sculptured heads of Adam and Eve by Cano. His
+also are seven of the frescoes decorating the upper part of the dome.
+The others are by his pupils. The Cathedral contains much of this
+irascible and wayward artist's best work. In the chapel of San Miguel is
+a "Virgen de la Soledad," in whose human beauty and pathos his genius
+finds its highest expression. In the chapel of Jesus Nazareno, Cano's
+"Via Crucis" does not suffer by comparison with three works of Ribera
+and a "St. Francis" by El Greco. The artist's studio may be seen in one
+of the towers flanking the west front of the Cathedral. He was a native
+of Granada, and a lay canon of the chapter. He died in poverty at his
+house in the Albaicin quarter, aged 66 years, on October 5, 1667. He was
+a man of hasty but not ungenerous temper, and in some of his phases of
+character recalls Fuseli. Justice has hardly been done to his great
+talent, of which he himself seems to have entertained an exaggerated
+estimate.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--OLD AYUNTAMIENTO]
+
+The minor churches of Granada are not of very great interest. The church
+of San Geronimo was built by the Great Captain as a mausoleum for
+himself and his wife, but such of his remains as escaped the ghoulish
+spoliation of the French have been transported to Madrid. The church is
+no longer used as a place of worship. The retablo is remarkable, and in
+it may be traced the dawning of Siloe's ambition to create a true
+Spanish Renaissance style. The church of San Juan de Dios, not far off,
+is filled with tawdry rubbish, petticoated crucifixes, etc. Here is
+buried the titular saint, a Portuguese, Joao de Robles, who in the
+seventeenth century devoted himself with so much energy to the sick
+and suffering that his contemporaries esteemed him mad. You may see the
+cage in which he was confined at the hospital founded by Isabella the
+Catholic on the arid, ugly Plaza de Triunfo, near the Bull Ring. A
+column in the middle of the square marks the spot where Doña Mariana
+Pineda was publicly garrotted in 1831. This lady is the great heroine of
+Granada. She perished a victim to the reactionary tendencies then
+prevalent in Spain. Spaniards were then crying "Hurrah for our chains!"
+and Doña Mariana's house was known to be a rendezvous of the Liberals of
+Granada. On raiding her house the police discovered a tricolour flag.
+This was evidence enough, and in the thirty-first year of her age this
+beautiful and accomplished woman suffered a shameful death. A few years
+later, when the nation had recovered its sanity, the magistrate who had
+condemned her was shot, and her remains were transported with great pomp
+to the Cathedral, where they have been interred close to Alonso Cano's.
+A monument has also been raised to her memory in the Campillo Square.
+
+There is another story connected with the Triunfo worth telling, though
+it is not very well authenticated. The remains of royal personages on
+their way to the Capilla Real were here identified by the officers of
+the court. The Duke of Gandia was present on such an occasion, and was
+so impressed by the evidences of mortality when the coffin was opened
+that he vowed he would never again serve an earthly master. He entered
+the Society of Jesus, and after his death was canonized under the name
+of St. Francis Borgia. The story is a curious and suggestive one, as
+also is that of the duke praying that his wife might die if it were for
+his soul's good. St. Francis Borgia has always seemed to me an extreme
+example of other-worldliness.
+
+A dusty road through most uninviting surroundings leads to the Cartuja,
+or Charterhouse, founded in 1516 by the Great Captain. The cloisters are
+painted with scenes of the martyrdom of the Carthusian monks in London
+by the minions of Henry VIII.
+
+The church is an extraordinary edifice. Its style is damnable, but it is
+gorgeous and dazzling to a degree which compels admiration. The doors of
+the choir are exquisitely inlaid with ebony, cedar, mother-of-pearl, and
+tortoiseshell. The statue of Bruno is by Cano. In the sanctuary behind
+the altar coloured marbles, twisted and fluted, are combined in
+extravagant magnificence. Some of the slabs are richly veined with
+agate, and the hand of nature has traced some semblances of human and
+animal forms. In the adjoining sacristy are some wonderful inlaid doors
+and presses. They must surely be the finest works of their kind in the
+world. It is strange that so much genius for detail and so much costly
+material should have been combined to produce so tasteless a building.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--STREET IN THE OLD QUARTER]
+
+Outside this church there are not many places in the vicinity of Granada
+worth a visit. The church of Sacramonte looms rather prominently in the
+landscape, and you are to some extent rewarded for the trouble of a
+pilgrimage thither by the fine view of the city. The hill contains some
+caves in which, in the year 1594, one Hernandez professed to have
+discovered certain books written in Arabic characters on sheets of lead.
+The find was reported to the archbishop, Don Pedro Vaca de Castro, who
+examined the books and declared them to contain the acts of the martyrs,
+Mesito and Hiscius, Tesiphus and Cecilius, put to death by the Romans
+and buried in the caves. His grace's pronouncement was not considered
+final, and theological opinion was sharply divided on the subject for
+many years. At last the continuance of the controversy was forbidden by
+Papal decree. It seems that doubt is now thrown even on the existence of
+the martyrs. The church built over the place of their supposed sepulchre
+was for a time famous as a shrine of pilgrims. The usual rock worn away
+by the kisses of the devout is shown. There is a superstition that a
+person kissing the stone for the first time will be married within the
+year, if single, and released from the conjugal tie if already married.
+As divorce does not exist in Spain it is to be hoped that few
+discontented Benedicts have recourse to this stone.
+
+St. Cecilius, at all events, was known to fame before the alleged
+discovery of his grave; for in the Antequeruela quarter an oratory
+dedicated to him existed throughout the Moorish domination, and was the
+only Christian place of worship within the city. I do not think that
+any trace of it is to be detected now. In that part of the city is the
+Casa de los Tiros, where you must apply for tickets for the Generalife;
+it is worth seeing on its own account, and it is the repository of the
+sword of Boabdil, which seems to have more claims to authenticity than
+most of the relics of the Little King. Descending towards the Puerta
+Real we pass the Cuarto de Santo Domingo, a private villa in which is
+incorporated all that remains of an Almohade palace. Near by, against
+the church of Santo Domingo, is an exceedingly picturesque little
+archway where one can fancy a bravo waiting, stiletto in hand. The
+Campillo, in the centre of which rises the statue of Mariana Pineda, is
+a quiet little square enough, referred to (as the Rondilla) by Cervantes
+as a resort of adventurers and desperadoes. These gentry are now more
+likely to be found in the immediately adjacent Alameda, outside the
+hotel of the same name, where the cafés and tables spread in front of
+them seem exceedingly well patronized.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE GENERALIFE: PATIO DE LA ACEQUIA]
+
+Following the Genil, and leaving the unimpressive monument of Columbus
+and Isabella to the left, you reach, after a walk overpoweringly
+fatiguing in summer, the little Ermita de San Sebastian. This was a
+Moorish oratory in old days, and outside it took place the surrender of
+the keys by Boabdil on the memorable 2nd of January, 1492. If you go
+farther on--and I doubt if you will be tempted to--you will come to a
+very old Moorish palace called the Alcazar Genil, now the property
+of the Duke of Gor. Here, says Simonet, were lodged the Christian
+princes and knights who so often found an asylum at the court of
+Granada. In the gardens are tanks once used, it is believed, for mimic
+naval fights. In the same direction, I understand, is Zubia. Here
+Isabella the Catholic, reconnoitring the city during the siege, narrowly
+escaped capture by a Moorish patrol. She concealed herself behind a
+laurel bush, which is still pointed out. Another instance of the small
+chances that determine the fate of kingdoms! To commemorate her escape
+the queen built near by a convent, which has long since disappeared.
+
+You may return to the city by the Puerta Verde, near the Bab-en-Neshti
+or Puerta de los Molinos, through which the Spaniards entered after
+Boabdil's submission.
+
+Apart from the Alhambra and the Cathedral buildings, it will have been
+seen that Granada has not many claims on the stranger's interest.
+Considering the expectations formed of it after reading Prescott and
+Irving, most English people will pronounce it to be a disappointment.
+From certain points of view it remains the pleasantest place for a
+protracted stay in Andalusia during the summer. It is only when you come
+to it from Seville or Cordova or Cadiz, that you realize how cool, in
+comparison, is this city on the plateau between the snow-clad mountains.
+Even before the sun has gone down, you can dine very pleasantly in the
+open, hearkening to the splash of the fountains, and inhaling the
+fragrance of the rose. There is no need here, as at Seville, to shut
+yourself, till nightfall, within walls three feet thick. By night we
+stroll across the Plaza of the Alhambra, and see the white city gleaming
+with a shimmer reflected in the luminous sky above. Granada resumes her
+aspect of an Oriental city beneath the crescent moon riding triumphant
+over Andalusia.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--A CORNER IN THE OLD QUARTER]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+MALAGA
+
+
+Second in size among Andalusian cities, Malaga is the least interesting.
+Were it not for the sea, its position would be one of singular
+remoteness. On the extreme verge of Europe, the mighty Sierra Nevada
+rises behind it, and cuts it off from the rest of Spain. Yet as a
+flourishing port it is one of the towns in the Peninsula best known
+among Englishmen. It is beloved by our sailors. From the odd phases of
+life to be seen in and around the harbour, they derive their notions of
+the people and the country. With that utter absence of curiosity
+noticeable in their kind, they never penetrate inland, or even into the
+outskirts of the town. But nothing can dispel Jack's conviction that his
+knowledge of Spain and the Spaniards is intimate and profound.
+
+Malaga is not, as its appearance suggests, a city of purely modern
+growth. It was known to the Phœnicians and the Romans, and before it
+became subject to the Almoravides was an independent principality under
+the Hammudiya dynasty. Later it shared the fortunes of the Sultanate of
+Granada, and its siege and capture by Ferdinand and Isabella contributed
+to bring about the fall of the capital. This part of its history is
+dealt with in great detail by Prescott. Among the numerous incidents of
+the siege was a determined attempt on the part of a Moor named Ibrahim
+al Gherbi to assassinate the Spanish sovereign. The defence was
+conducted by the indomitable Hemet el Zegri, who yielded to famine
+rather than to the arms of the besiegers. The treatment of the fallen
+city leaves an indelible blot on the fame of the conquerors. The
+population, with the exception of a few hundreds, were sold into
+slavery, presents of the fairest maidens being made to the various
+courts of Europe. A worse fate was reserved for the Jews and renegades,
+who were committed to the flames.
+
+The old Moorish fortress of Gibralfaro still frowns down on the lively
+city to remind us of those days. Some of the walls and towers are
+believed to be of Phœnician origin. The stronghold has undergone
+repeated restorations and adaptations to military requirements, but a
+great deal of Moorish work may still be detected. A horseshoe arch
+behind the Paseo de la Alameda serves to identify the Moslems' dockyard
+or Atarazanas, and to indicate how far the sea has receded in the wake
+of the banished race southwards towards Africa.
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--THE HARBOUR]
+
+The Cathedral towers high above all the other buildings of the
+city. It is in the Classical style, and though designed by Diego de
+Siloe in 1528, was built for the most part in the early eighteenth
+century. It must be confessed that it looks better at a distance than
+near. The interior is solemn and cold. It is worth visiting for some
+specimens of Cano's art which it contains, and for Mena's magnificent
+carving in the choir. As at Granada, the edifice is adjoined by a
+smaller church called the Sagrario, founded by the Catholic Sovereigns
+in 1488 as the cathedral of the conquered city.
+
+But it is not for its monuments or historical associations that Malaga
+is to be visited. Its interest is of to-day. And in truth it needed not
+the hand of man to embellish a spot where Nature has been so lavish of
+her choicest gifts. The gardens round Malaga abound in the finest
+specimens of tropical flora. Tall india-rubber plants, gigantic
+eucalyptus, great bamboos, the rarest exotics, such as the _Pritchardia
+folifera_, the araucaria, and the _Scaforthia elegans_, flourish on this
+favoured shore. The villas of the wealthier classes stand each in a
+veritable Paradise. And everywhere the white flower of the orange, the
+oleander, the vine, and tree-high ferns!
+
+This luxuriant vegetation is the less to be expected since want of water
+is the great drawback to the prosperity of the district. Through the
+middle of the town runs the Guadalmedina--a broad channel, without a
+drain of water! The new and magnificent promenade, planted with palms,
+sweeps round the sea-front, as fine as anything on the Riviera. To drive
+along it in the sensuous southern night is to drink a deep draught of
+the joy of life. At one point the drive descends into the bed of the
+river, along which you may proceed for a mile or more. And yet at times
+the Guadalmedina becomes a roaring torrent, bursting its banks and
+sweeping away farmsteads and stock. It is difficult to say whether flood
+or drought has done most damage to the province.
+
+As at Seville, you find life here focussing in lane-like streets, closed
+to vehicles, and lined with cafés and casinos, among the finest I have
+seen in Spain. Here to an early hour of the morning the men of the city
+gossip in garrulous, intimate groups of nine and ten, all, as it seemed
+to me, talking together. The number of cigarettes smoked during the
+progress of these tremendous conversations must be stupendous. As you
+will see the same group meeting night after night, you wonder what there
+can be in the outwardly uneventful round of life of Malaga to supply
+topics for conversation. To an Englishman there is a mystery about this
+ability to talk for five or six hours about nothing at all. You will see
+the same thing in the dullest provincial towns in France and Italy--the
+same groups of stout, bald-headed citizens talking with frantic
+animation every evening. Their newspapers afford the slenderest mental
+pabulum--their contents could be dismissed in ten minutes--and the
+respectable gentlemen in question are never seen to read books. How
+then do they recruit their stock of ideas and find an inexhaustible
+stock of topics for conversation?
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--THE GUADALMEDINA]
+
+Women are, of course, conspicuous by their absence. Here we have another
+illustration of the utterly false ideas Englishmen usually entertain
+concerning Latins. To judge from novels written fifty or even thirty
+years ago, John Bull appears to have regarded the foreigner with pitying
+contempt as a mere philanderer, always running after a petticoat; yet no
+one can be in Spain a fortnight without noticing the Spaniard's
+disinclination for female society, or at any rate how perfectly content
+he is without it.
+
+I do not fancy the ladies of Malaga care very much for society either,
+in our acceptation of the word. Looking out of the window appears to be
+their favourite recreation. They do not inherit the habit from the
+Moors, for that people, as I have said, were nearly all expelled at the
+Reconquest, and the town was resettled. All the Andalusian towns were
+wholly or in part emptied of their Mohammedan population when taken by
+the Christians, and repeopled with Castilians and others from Northern
+Spain. This fact is forgotten by those who recognize in every trait of
+the Andalusian a heritage from the Moor. We might as well think we
+derive our chief national characteristics from the Britons or the
+Normans.
+
+East of Malaga lie several coast towns of importance, within whose gates
+the traveller rarely sets foot. Motril, Adra, Almeria--what is there in
+them to reward the fatigue of a journey in a diligence along the parched
+shore, or in some crazy coasting craft, with timbers straining and
+creaking before the lightest breeze? Almeria is now connected directly
+by rail with Madrid and Granada. The prosperity of the whole district is
+bound to be greatly increased by the construction of the line so long
+promised from Guadix to Baza. This short link in the railway system
+would save the traveller from Malaga to Valencia nearly 180 miles, or
+its alternative--a long and exhausting diligence journey. It would also
+bring the southern parts of Andalusia into direct communication with the
+great commercial centres of eastern Spain and with Marseilles. It would
+supply us with a new route to Gibraltar, moreover. This, with a line
+from Jaca across the Pyrenees into France, and another from Huelva to
+connect with the Portuguese system Villa Real de São Antonio, are links
+of which Spain stands vitally in need.
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--A MARKET]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE WAY SOUTH
+
+
+At Bobadilla--the Clapham Junction of Andalusia--the Spanish railway
+system is joined by the line of that purely British undertaking, the
+Algeciras Railway Company. A Spaniard told me that this line would never
+have been built by one of his countrymen, as no one in Spain had any
+desire to facilitate Gibraltar's communication with England, and the
+country it traversed had been sufficiently opened up. I do not think it
+would be difficult to demonstrate that the line may prove of very
+substantial benefit to Spain, but I will confine myself to thanking the
+promoters for having rendered accessible certainly the most beautiful
+part of Andalusia, and in my opinion one of the most wildly picturesque
+regions of Europe. The country between Ronda and Algeciras is the
+Andalusia dreamt of by the romancers. It is a savage, silent country, of
+warmer browns and greens than the rest of Spain. Here the train takes
+you no longer across the scorched sky-rimmed plains, but along the very
+edge of dizzy ravines, at the foot of which, hundreds of feet below,
+angry white torrents foam and froth. Now you are climbing with obvious
+effort the steep shoulder of a mountain, now you are racing headlong
+down into a valley which seems to lie almost vertically beneath you. Now
+you plunge into the bowels of the Sierra and emerge with a shriek of
+triumph in a cauldron-shaped valley, from which Nature has provided no
+egress. There is no want of verdure; the cork-woods, vineyards, and
+olives dot the lower slopes of the tawny hills. And far up against the
+sky-line loom shattered towers and crumbling castles, whence you seem to
+see trains of steel-clad knights issuing forth to do battle with the
+Moor.
+
+The country is reminiscent essentially of the days of chivalry. Perhaps
+the ruined strongholds and the dark gorges are still haunted by the
+knights, who have driven away all other ghosts and will not let us think
+of anyone but them. The Romans were once here, and at Munda, as every
+schoolboy knows, Cæsar defeated with great slaughter the army led by the
+sons of Pompey. That town has now been identified with Ronda, the
+romantic capital of this most romantic region. Here the people have not
+forgotten Rome. They will show you a cave where in the semi-darkness you
+descry awful forms in stone, seeming like a ghostly and gigantic choir
+of monks. These are the Roman priests turned to stone upon the downfall
+of their gods, those of the people who cherish tradition will tell you.
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--PACKING LEMONS]
+
+The town itself you will not find very interesting, though the
+escutcheons displayed over every second or third house in one quarter
+will evoke some reflections on departed glory and the fall of the
+mighty. In some such _solar_ our novelists Seton Merriman and Mr. Mason
+have laid the scenes of leading episodes in their two charming romances.
+Ronda has had a stirring past. She shared in all the vicissitudes of
+Granada, and towards the end of the long agony of the Reconquest was the
+scene of constant and ferocious border warfare.
+
+It was here that Mohammed V. received the head of his rival Abu Saïd,
+who had been put to death at Seville by Pedro the Cruel. The town was
+taken by the army of Ferdinand and Isabella on May 22, 1485. The people
+of the surrounding mountains were deeply attached to the creed of Islam,
+and rose in revolt in 1501 against their Christian oppressors. Before
+they were crushed they inflicted a severe blow on their adversaries,
+completely wiping out a force under Don Alonso de Aguilar. Westward, on
+the other side of the high mountains, lies Zahara, the capture of which
+one December night by Mulai Hasan was the signal for the last crusade
+against the Spanish Moors of Granada.
+
+But it is to its striking situation that Ronda owes its interest. Fitted
+rather to be the eyrie of eagles than the abode of men, it looks down
+from the verge of precipitous cliffs nearly three thousand feet above
+sea level. Midway, town and rocky hill are cleft asunder by the Tajo,
+an awful gorge, two hundred feet across, and twice as much in depth.
+Gazing down into the abyss, you realize with something of a shudder that
+a pebble dropped over the edge of the precipice would fall sheer and
+plumb, without rebound or ricochet, into the river Guadalevin, which
+rushes below, filling the chasm with foam and spray. The ravine is
+spanned by a bridge built in the eighteenth century, a wonderful
+construction, from which when it was near completion its architect fell
+headlong. Access to the river may be obtained by a flight of 365 steps
+called the Mina, hewn through the rock. This singular work was executed
+by the Moors, who thus ensured themselves a supply of water against the
+dangers of a siege. Numerous subterranean chambers are also ascribed to
+them, or rather to their Christian captives.
+
+But the most delightful spot in Ronda is the little Alameda laid out on
+the edge of a perpendicular cliff. Leaning on the railing you may drink
+in the beauty and grandeur of a prospect hardly surpassed in Europe. The
+fair fertile country below is shut in by an amphitheatre of mountains
+which soar upwards to heights of five and six thousand feet. The eye
+seeks in vain for an outlet from the valley, till it discerns the white,
+dusty high-road winding, doubling, and finally disappearing over a dip
+between the ranges. The river, a thousand feet below, swirls and gurgles
+among the rocks, glad to have escaped from the dark gorge to which it
+has so long been confined.
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--THE TAJO]
+
+In the evenings the air is keen at Ronda, and in summer you may often
+hear English spoken by officers of the garrison of Gibraltar and their
+families, who come here to escape the torrid heat of the Rock. With a
+little capital and energy the place might be developed into a
+flourishing health resort.
+
+But now the way lies south and seaward. Ever downwards slowly travels
+the train. The night gathers over the castled crags and the mysterious
+forests. We detect by their gleam the rivers over which we pass. But now
+a bright starlike light is seen to the southward. It flashes and is
+gone, to reappear the next instant. We are nearing the strait, and the
+searchlight tells us that Britannia watches here with unsleeping eyes
+over the fortunes of her children in two seas and two continents.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE KINGDOM OF MURCIA
+
+
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--ROMAN BRIDGES]
+
+The province of Murcia resembles the home of the Arab race more closely
+than does any other part of Europe. It is a wild, fierce region, hot and
+tawny like a lion's hide, furrowed by deep winding ravines, intersected
+by serrated mountains, on whose flanks, for the heat of the sun, no
+green thing can grow. Much of the land is occupied by plateaux, bare and
+rocky like great altars on which all that lives is offered to and
+consumed by the sun. From these uplands you survey vast expanses of
+sheer desert--fulvid, rocky, and scorching. Your gaze may travel far
+before you descry any fitting resting-place for man. The mountains
+afford no shade, even in the deepest cañons the streams are often
+traceable only by a narrow path of sand and pebbles, yet here and there
+has man successfully wrested from harsh Nature a secure foothold, an
+oasis kept ever green by some more constant rivulet. The waters of the
+Segura and the Sangonera are the life-blood of the province. Wayward and
+Arethusa-like, the rivers have with infinite pains been coaxed into
+conformity with the needs of man. To the science of irrigation the
+province owes its existence. Water here is above all things prized and
+sold like treasure to the highest bidder. Mr. Jean Brunhés in a lately
+published work gives some most curious and interesting particulars
+relating to the system of irrigation in force in Murcia and the
+adjoining province of Alicante. The volume of the Monegre is divided
+into old water and new water, the former belonging of right to the
+ancient riparian proprietors, the latter to the owners of the locks and
+reservoirs. A very vicious system prevails at Lorca. There a private
+company is the owner of all the water of the Guadalentin, subject to the
+condition of supplying the old proprietors of the adjoining lands with
+500 litres per second every day. In consequence, in times of drought the
+company is mistress of the situation and can force up prices to a figure
+absolutely ruinous to the cultivators. Only in this way can it make good
+the losses incurred in rainy seasons. The precious fluid being sold,
+too, by public auction, the rich farmer is in a position to deprive his
+poorer rivals of their means of subsistence. To palliate this evil to
+some extent, the rule now obtains that the bidder who has bought the
+first lot can buy as many of the lots following as he may desire at the
+same figure. The price therefore is not forced up too rapidly. Moreover,
+if the company's barrage at a certain point is swept away or broken
+through by the current, the water which thus escapes becomes public
+property. This accident occurs five or six times a year, and the
+company is not allowed to make the barrage any stronger when it is
+rebuilt. Notwithstanding these concessions, it seems that the principle
+of private enterprise has been pushed too far in this part of the world.
+
+Mr. Brunhés described the sale of water at Lorca in the following words:
+
+"The sale takes place in a badly-lit hall with naked walls, on a level
+with the street, with which it communicates by an immense door almost
+its own breadth. This door remains open during the sale and the crowd of
+bidders stand partly in the street. The hall has no floor--you stand on
+the bare ground. Opposite the door at the end of the hall is a
+railed-off dais entered by a side door, and without any direct
+communication with the public side. On the dais the secretaries are
+seated at a large table covered by a threadbare green cloth. Behind the
+table are five arm-chairs. In one is seated the presiding officer (a
+civil engineer who must own no land in the 'Vega'). On a stool is
+stationed the crier.
+
+"At eight o'clock in the morning, at a sign from the presiding officer,
+the crier pronounces these words in a singing monotonous voice and
+without any pause between the two phrases: 'In honour of the Holy
+Sacrament of the altar, who buys the first lot of Sotellana?'
+Immediately shouts go up 'Eight, nine, ten reals!' One voice overpowers
+the other, wide-open mouths vociferate loudly, necks are strained,
+muscles grow tense with excitement. The bidders press and crush
+each other against the iron railing, for the one nearest has the best
+chance of being heard. The presiding officer listens, and follows the
+frantic shouting with sovereign calm. Suddenly, with a quick gesture, he
+designates the highest bidder. At once the clamour ceases. Amid absolute
+silence the man indicated calls out his name, which the clerks write
+down.
+
+"The men are hatless. Some wear black or dark-coloured handkerchiefs
+bound round their heads, but all hold their broad-brimmed hats in their
+hands. No one smokes or talks till the bidding recommences, and even
+those in the street are silent and bare-headed. It is easy to see that
+all are peasants. Heads are closely cropped; here are no beards or
+moustaches, no one wears a collar, and most carry a cloak other than the
+aristocratic 'Capa' on the shoulders or arm. It is a curious and
+impressive sight enough, these bronzed physiognomies animated by one
+desire to obtain possession as cheaply as may be of the supreme good,
+water."
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--AT THE FOUNTAIN]
+
+Before the industry of man had harnessed the wayward streams this hot
+land must have been little better than an arid wilderness, yet it has
+been inhabited from the remotest times, and its possession was keenly
+contested between the great powers of antiquity. The natives were known
+to the ancients as the Mastiani, and are credited with the virtues which
+were so long supposed to have been characteristic of primitive man. This
+simple, blameless race fell an easy victim to the wily Phœnicians,
+who scented the precious metals within these barren hills. Elche,
+Guadix, and Jijona betray in their etymology a Semitic origin. Next came
+the Greek Vikings from Samos and Rhodes and Phokaia, establishing
+themselves at many points along the eastern shore of the Iberian land.
+The rivalry between the Phœnician and Hellenic colonies precipitated
+a contest between their respective allies, the Carthaginians and the
+Romans. Hasdrubal founded the port of New Carthage, the name of which is
+still preserved in Cartagena, whence, with a host of 90,000 foot and
+12,000 horse, Hannibal started on his famous march to Rome. The fall of
+the city, which was bravely defended by Mago against Scipio, entailed
+the destruction of the Punic power in Spain.
+
+Under the Roman yoke Carthago Nova became the capital of the vast
+province of Tarraconensis, and the adjoining district in consequence
+felt the full force of all the attacks made by rebels and barbarians on
+the tottering empire. Under the Visigoths it was erected into a duchy by
+the name of Aurariola. The Duke Theodomir, unlike most of his peers,
+offered a strenuous resistance to the Moslem arms, and when defeated in
+battle and besieged in Orihuela, succeeded by a stratagem in preserving
+his territory. By disguising all the women as warriors and parading them
+on the walls, he so deceived the Moors as to the strength of the
+garrison as to obtain from them a recognition of the independence of the
+duchy, subject to the suzerainty of the khalifa.
+
+The province became known after its chief by the name of Todmir. It
+endured as an autonomous state for some sixty-eight years, its final
+absorption in the Moslem empire being brought about by the last dukes
+espousing the cause of Charlemagne or his Moorish allies. Arabic
+colonists poured in and soon out-numbered the Christian inhabitants. The
+last province of Spain to bow before the Crescent became rapidly the
+most Moorish of any.
+
+Cartagena and Orihuela, the old Visigothic centres, declined, and
+Murcia, practically a Mohammedan foundation, took their place. The city
+rivalled Toledo and Cordova as a manufactory of arms and munitions of
+war. It underwent the usual vicissitudes of Moorish states, forming now
+part of one kingdom, now of another, at times independent, more often
+subject to Valencia, Granada, or Cordova. Finally, in 1243, Abu Bekr,
+the titular amir of Murcia, acknowledged the suzerainty of Castile, only
+to repudiate it in 1252. The war lasted some time, but the desertion of
+Al Ahmar of Granada left Abu Bekr at the mercy of the Christians. Murcia
+was taken in 1266 by Don Jaime of Aragon, who immediately handed over
+his conquest to his son-in-law, Alfonso of Castile. The step, though
+probably not dictated by motives of policy, was a wise one, for it left
+a sort of buffer state between Aragon and Granada, and preserved the
+frontiers of the former kingdom from molestation by the Moors for the
+next two centuries.
+
+The town of Murcia has completely rid itself of all outward evidences of
+its erstwhile subjection to Islam. Gone is the Alcazar, where the amirs
+mimicked the state of Cordova and Toledo, gone is the wall which kept
+the Christian out, gone is the mosque wherein thousands of turbaned
+heads were bowed daily towards Mecca. Yet in the narrow dark streets
+like the Sierpes of Seville, across which awnings are stretched, we
+might recognize something of the East, were not such thoroughfares
+equally characteristic of the Christian South. The Calles de la Traperia
+and de la Plateria, however, irresistibly recall Smyrna. They lead into
+one of those dazzling white, dusty squares which every Southern and
+Eastern city boasts, and which is always named in Spain after the
+Constitution, in Italy after Victor Emmanuel, and in France after the
+Republic. Murcia is hotter than Seville, and the passage of this plaza
+between eleven in the forenoon and five in the afternoon requires the
+courage of a Mutius Scævola. In the evening you may join the citizens in
+their promenade upon the Malecon, which affords a charming view of the
+rich "huerta" or vale of the Segura. This is described by Mr. Brunhés as
+"an admirable zone of model agricultural establishments. The soil is
+levelled and prepared for irrigation with geometrical precision. To each
+particular crop corresponds a design with little shelving beds of
+special forms." Not an inch of ground is wasted; on the summit of the
+slopes, for instance, sweet potatoes are planted at regular
+intervals. The cereals and vegetables are tended with special care,
+almost individually. The melons are protected by coverings. No one can
+visit the environs of Murcia without being impressed by the
+extraordinary industry and thriftiness of its people. And field labour
+in this climate must be arduous in the extreme. But no doubt the
+mythical "dolce far niente" Spaniard will continue for many years to
+haunt the back streets of literature in company with the big-toothed
+English girl, her red-whiskered parent, and other creations of ignorance
+and prejudice.
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--A MOORISH GATEWAY]
+
+Murcia cannot be called an interesting town. It has only one
+"sight"--and that not of first-class interest--the Cathedral. This
+occupies, as usual, the site of the mosque, and dates in its oldest part
+from 1368. The west front was restored in the seventeenth century,
+fortunately before the decay of Spanish art had become too conspicuous.
+The interior produces a good effect, though robbed of much of its
+interest by a fire some sixty years ago. The choir stalls are good, as
+they generally are in this country of clever wood-carvers, and came from
+a suppressed monastery in the neighbourhood. The reredos is modern and
+poor. With a glance at the urn containing the internal organs of Alfonso
+the Learned, we pass on to the beautiful and interesting Junteron
+Chapel. This was founded in 1515 by the Archdeacon of Lorca, Don Gil
+Junteron, and is in the most exuberant Renaissance style. It is
+astonishing that where the figures and designs are so numerous, so
+intermingled, and so complicated, each should be sculptured with such
+exquisite skill and correctness. The Velez Chapel is a little earlier,
+and was evidently modelled on the Constable's Chapel at Burgos. The
+style, as might be expected, reminds one also of the Chapel Royal at
+Granada. Parts of it, says Don Rodrigo Amador de los Rios, evidence the
+painful caprices and aberrations which announce the death agony of a
+powerful art in its decline. It would be dangerous to express such an
+opinion in Murcia, where the chapel is accounted the eighth and greatest
+wonder of the world. In somewhat more restrained terms the sacristan
+will call your attention to the panelling and lockers in the Sacristy,
+which occupies the centre of the graceful steeple, and certainly
+deserves the epithet of sumptuous, so liberally bestowed in Spain.
+
+Much older than Murcia, Cartagena has preserved even fewer monuments of
+antiquity, though it has not lost the military character first impressed
+upon it by its founder Hasdrubal. For this is the first arsenal of
+Spain, and perhaps its strongest fortress. Its splendid sheltered
+harbour is defended by powerful forts and formidable batteries. Their
+fire has not always been directed upon the enemies of Spain. For many
+months in the year 1873 over them waved the red flag of the
+"Intransigentes," the extreme communistic republicans, who,
+simultaneously with the Carlists of the north, threatened ruin to
+Castelar's government at Madrid. The acquisition of the great national
+arsenal without firing a shot was, of course, of the utmost
+advantage to these determined revolutionaries. They disposed of 583
+pieces of ordnance, including twenty-eight Krupp guns, with 180,000
+shells and 4,332 quintals of powder. In addition they were supported by
+the ironclad frigates Numancia, Vittoria, Tetuan, and Mendez Nuñez. The
+garrison, in addition to the enthusiastic population, included several
+revolted battalions of regular troops under the command of General
+Contreras. The communist Junta was presided over by Don Antonio Gálvez.
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--A STREET SCENE]
+
+Against this terrible stronghold of the revolution, General Martinez
+Campos advanced with an army from Madrid with orders to reduce the place
+with the utmost despatch. This was easier said than done. Supplies were
+lacking; the advantage in artillery lay entirely with the besieged. The
+Carlists effected diversions in favour of the Intransigentes--an odd
+coalition. Meantime, three of the revolutionary vessels were seized by
+the Prussian squadron as pirates--an utterly unjustifiable interference
+with the domestic affairs of another State. We might as reasonably have
+seized the vessels of the Confederate States in 1864. The Prussians and
+Italians exacted, moreover, a war indemnity of 50,000 pesetas from the
+Cantonal Junta, which body became a prey to internal dissensions. One of
+its members was assassinated. Taking advantage of these embarrassments
+of the besieged, the republican troops redoubled their efforts. Señor
+Castelar came down from Madrid to assume the supreme command, and
+Martinez Campos was superseded by General Lopéz Dominguez. An incessant
+bombardment was kept up, the besieged responding shell by shell. In
+January the frigate Tetuan was burnt to the water's edge, and a day or
+two later the explosion of the gun park destroyed hundreds of the
+garrison. The end was near. The city had for half a year defied almost
+the whole kingdom, and withstood the covert attacks of foreign Powers.
+Among the revolutionaries were men who burned to emulate the Numantians,
+and to make of themselves, the whole population, and the city, one vast
+blazing hecatomb. Before this desperate resolution could be executed,
+the Government troops forced their way into wretched, blood-drenched
+Cartagena. Gálvez, Contreras, and the leaders of the cantonal movement
+escaped by sea in the ironclad Numancia, which far exceeded the
+Government vessels in speed, and took refuge in Algeria. Thus collapsed
+a movement which was, after the Commune of Paris, the most determined
+organized attempt ever made to subvert the existing constitution of
+European society.
+
+I have given at some length this chapter in the history of Cartagena,
+partly because the town has little interest in itself, and partly
+because these events, though so recent and so significant, are never so
+much as alluded to by most writers of travel books. Out of so much evil
+good came at last, for these wellnigh fatal disorders opened the eyes of
+the Spaniards to the instability of the Madrid Government, and
+formed the prelude to the reign of peace inaugurated by the accession to
+the throne of King Alfonso XII.
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--THE MARKET]
+
+Apart from its historical associations, Murcia repays the attention of
+the traveller less than any other province of Spain. Fortunately, almost
+the only places of interest it contains--the ones I have mentioned--lie
+on or close to the direct route from Granada into the old kingdom of
+Valencia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+IN THE OLD KINGDOM OF VALENCIA
+
+
+The southernmost position of the ancient kingdom of Valencia belongs
+geographically and historically to Murcia. The huerta in which Orihuela
+stands is a continuation of the huerta of Murcia, and in the town itself
+we recognize the Aurariola which was the capital of the latter kingdom.
+I did not stop at Orihuela, but I understand that it remains distinct
+from all other towns in Valencia, in that its people speak pure
+Castilian. For that variety of the Romance tongue which I may denominate
+Catalan is spoken with local modifications all along the eastern coast
+of Spain, from the mouth of the Segura to the frontier of Rousillon. It
+is not, of course, a mere dialect of Castilian. It is a distinct
+language, believed by most authorities to have been the language of
+those Romanized Spaniards who were driven north of the Pyrenees by the
+Arabic invasion, and who reintroduced it on their reconquest of this
+portion of their old territory. Before Valencia was recovered by James
+I. of Aragon--Jaime lo Conqueridor--the Christians of the province
+probably spoke Castilian or a tongue akin to it. Catalan was simply
+the language of the new rulers, which the people soon acquired. In the
+province of Aragon itself Catalan, or Limousin as some call it, was
+never spoken. This circumstance no doubt powerfully contributed to the
+adoption of Castilian, in preference to the sister tongue, upon the
+unification of the two kingdoms. But for some reason unknown to
+us--unless it was merely the proximity of Murcia--Orihuela resisted the
+Catalanizing influence of its conqueror.
+
+[Illustration: ORIHUELA--ON THE RIVER SEGURA]
+
+Elche, our first stopping-place, famous in its way, is very often
+described and compared to half-a-dozen localities in Asia and Africa. I
+also will venture on a comparison, and say that from certain points of
+view it reminded me of Ismailia. It is completely surrounded by
+magnificent date-palms, the number of which a French author estimates at
+80,000. In the shade of the avenues formed by these majestic trees
+flourish the laurel, the rose, and the geranium; beyond extend crops of
+lucerne and wheat, watered by the carefully regulated Vinalapó. For all
+the shade dispersed by the palms, Elche merits its sobriquet, "the
+frying-pan"! The temperature completes the resemblance with Africa. From
+the summit of the hill on which it is built, the town is seen to be
+situated in a real oasis. Beyond the outer ring of cultivation extends a
+desert as white and as saline as that which borders the Suez Canal. The
+eye rests lovingly on the not far distant sea.
+
+Elche makes an agreeable impression on most travellers. Gustave Doré
+has left us his impressions of it--over-imaginative as usual. Mr. Frank
+Barrett, that entertaining novelist, introduces the town into English
+fiction. In Spain it is not more celebrated for its palms (which are
+exported for religious uses) than for its Passion or Mystery Play, the
+only one of the kind in the kingdom. This institution is explained by
+the following legend. On the night of December 29, 1370, a mounted
+coastguard named Francisco Cantó, while patrolling the shore,
+encountered a man seated on a huge coffer. This stranger entreated the
+guard to carry his burden to Elche, and to deposit it at the first house
+where he saw a light, and having obtained his reluctant consent,
+abruptly disappeared. Cantó, in accordance with the mysterious man's
+instructions, left the chest at the Hermitage of San Sebastian. On
+opening it, it was found to contain an image of the Virgin and the words
+and music of the play as now performed. The image was regarded as
+miraculous, and resisted all attempts to remove it from the hermitage.
+It was not my good fortune to see the play, which takes place every year
+in the Iglesia Mayor, transformed for the purpose into a theatre. The
+representation lasts two days, the subject being the Assumption of the
+Virgin. The words, in the old Valencian dialect, are wedded to old
+Gregorian music. I understand that with a naïveté characteristic of
+medieval institutions, the Supreme Being Himself is personified on the
+stage.
+
+[Illustration: ELCHE--A STREET]
+
+A spectacle equally curious but not so picturesque is the daily sale of
+water, which takes place here as at Lorca, but with official calm and
+with none of the excitement to be remarked at the latter place.
+
+From this sweltering climate we hasten to the sea-shore, where at rare
+intervals a refreshing breeze may be felt. Alicante, the second town in
+the kingdom of Valencia, is modern, commercial, and thriving. The
+land-locked harbour is bordered by broad white quays, glistering in the
+sun's rays, with heaps of tarry cordage, and canvas distilling
+characteristically marine odours. Trains of mules pass by dragging
+enormous loads of oranges. In the harbour women are busy loading an
+English craft which flies the Blue Peter; they swarm up and down the
+side like ants, or rather like the colliers so familiar to passengers
+through the Suez Canal. The background to this scene of light and
+animation is formed by the enormous rock, comparable to Gibraltar, which
+is crowned by the ancient castle of Santa Barbara--so called after the
+saint on whose festival, in the year 1248, it was taken by the
+Castilians. Four years later it was stormed by the Aragonese, King
+Alfonso the Battler being the third to enter the fortress. The Castilian
+governor, with his sword in one hand and his keys in the other, fell
+pierced with wounds at the conqueror's feet. The possession of the town,
+as of Orihuela, was afterwards confirmed to Aragon by treaty.
+
+Alicante is resorted to for sea-bathing during the summer. The water, I
+am told, is then lukewarm--hot enough, according to one account, to
+shave with! The thought of the place in August makes the Northerner
+reach for a cooling drink. But I am assured that the heat is tempered by
+refreshing breezes from the sea, and that in the long shadow of the
+castle rock delicious evenings may be enjoyed.
+
+So we journey northward. The country reveals the results of the most
+systematic and intensive culture. We are told that the Valencians are
+lazy, but if so it must be because the most cleverly devised schemes of
+irrigation and cultivation have set them free of labour.
+
+The province of Alicante--the southernmost of the three into which the
+ancient kingdom is divided--contains several important towns. There is
+the beautifully-named Villajoyosa, Benidorm--so Provençal in sound--and
+Alcoy, a busy, industrial centre, situated in a blooming orchard
+country. Here is celebrated every April the festival of St. George, when
+a sort of sham fight takes place between peasants arrayed respectively
+as Moors and Christians. From Alcoy a short line runs to Gandía on the
+coast, the cradle of the famous house of Borgia.
+
+[Illustration: A FISHER GIRL (COAST OF MALAGA)]
+
+Every town and village in this thickly peopled region has its historical
+memories. Villena recalls the famous family to which it gave the title
+of marquis; Jativa, a desperate struggle during the War of the Spanish
+Succession, in which much English blood was spilled. This latter town
+was the birthplace of Ribera, and, as some say, of Alexander
+Borgia. It is situated in a country which might be described as a
+veritable Mahomet's paradise. The cottages in the neighbourhood are
+almost suffocated by the palm and orange trees. Beneath the golden fruit
+we find our way to the castle, or rather castles--the new and the
+old--built side by side upon a hill. Part of the fabric dates from the
+time of the Moors. Later, the stronghold served as a state prison.
+Within its walls languished and died the unhappy Count of Urgel, a
+pretender to the throne of Aragon, and here passed a ten years'
+captivity (1512-22) the Duke of Calabria, the rightful heir to the
+throne of Naples, to leave his prison on his appointment to the
+viceroyalty of the fair province he surveyed from its windows!
+
+The custodian of the castle shows the usual underground chambers, which
+may have been, as he alleges, dungeons, but were quite as likely (as
+they generally were with us) store-rooms and wine cellars.
+
+At Alcira we cross the Jucár, after the Ebro the most important Spanish
+river running into the Mediterranean Sea. It rises within a few miles of
+the source of the Tagus, in the Montes Universales, on the borders of
+Aragon and New Castile, and flows south through the plains of La Mancha
+till it enters the province of Albacete, when it takes an easterly
+course. In the same province of Valencia it has excavated some
+magnificent gorges. It is indeed a strong, impetuous stream, bursting
+its banks again and again and levying a heavy tribute on the
+surrounding country. Each time it makes for itself a new channel,
+sweeping away whole villages. The village of Alcocer stood on its banks,
+near its confluence with the Albaida. After countless harvests had been
+devastated and inestimable damage to some extent repaired, the two
+streams swelled with fury and in one day reduced a vast extent of
+country to a flat stretch of mud. Then, by another shifting of its bed,
+the terrible Jucár laid bare the foundations of the homes it had ruined.
+There is no security of tenure within its valley! Where your house
+stands to-day, ships may ride to-morrow. Yet here as everywhere else
+along the prolific shore, the waters form the great source of wealth,
+fertilizing vast rice-fields and heavy-laden orchards. The marshy and
+unhealthy lagoon of the Albufera, from which one of Napoleon's marshals
+took his title, is being gradually filled up by the débris brought down
+from the mountains by the rivers, and will ultimately form a "huerta" of
+untold fertility. Meanwhile every effort is made to encourage the
+afforesting of the rugged hill-sides, in order to check the violence of
+the floods and the denuding of the arid, desiccated soil. As a result of
+these wise measures, the kingdom of Valencia will within a short period
+become one of the two or three richest agricultural districts in all
+Europe.
+
+[Illustration: A WATER CARRIER]
+
+The history of the land is that of its capital. Valencia is first
+mentioned as having been granted by the consul Junius Brutus to the
+warriors of Viriathus upon the death of their chief, and their
+consequent surrender. The history of few Roman colonies, as it has
+reached us, is of interest. The province had the usual martyrs under the
+persecutions of Diocletian and Decius, and was the place of banishment
+of the zealot Ermengild. It remained under the Moorish yoke for over
+five hundred years, at one time forming part of the khalifate, at other
+times constituting one or more petty kingdoms.
+
+Don Téodoro Llorente speaks of "The slave kings" of Valencia, and thus
+describes the rulers of uncertain and various origin who, like the
+Janissaries of Turkey, had begun as slaves in the palace of the khalifa
+and won power for themselves with their swords. One of these princes
+added the Balearic Isles to his realms, and unsuccessfully attempted the
+conquest of Sardinia.
+
+The kingdom thus founded by military adventurers was overthrown by the
+most famous of that warlike brood.
+
+The history of the events which brought about the conquest of Valencia
+by the Cid is extremely complex. The king or amir, Kadir, was the puppet
+of the rival powers which aspired to the possession of his dominions,
+and was alternately upheld on his tottering throne by one and the other.
+Weary of this dishonourable tutelage, the people arose under the
+leadership of Ibn Jahhaf. Kadir fled disguised as a woman, but was
+detected and beheaded. That strange anomaly, a Mohammedan republic, was
+formed. In other words, Valencia was governed by an assembly of
+notables called the Al Jama, of which Ibn Jahhaf was the president.
+
+The people which arrogates the right to choose its ruler has ever been
+considered a sort of pirate among the nations, and fair game for more
+powerful states. Kadir at the moment of his deposition had been
+nominally under the protection of the Cid. That redoubtable warrior,
+under the pretext of avenging his protégé's death, advanced on Valencia.
+The Almoravides came to his assistance, but precipitately retired.
+Distrusting these allies almost as much as the Christians, Ibn Jahhaf
+amused the Cid with negotiations, but meanwhile made preparations for
+defence. He became the special object of the famous warrior's hatred,
+and when the city fell, was burnt to death at the stake before the eyes
+of his horrified countrymen. The Cid now ruled Valencia as absolute lord
+and despot till his death, five years later, in 1097. The legend need
+not be related here, how his wife defended the city for two years after
+his death, and finally, setting his corpse fully armed upon his
+warhorse, won a victory over the terrified Moors and thus took him to
+his last resting-place at Cardeña.
+
+Valencia was not finally wrested from the yoke of Islam till the
+memorable 28th of September, 1238, when the standard of the victorious
+Jaime I. of Aragon was hoisted over the tower of Ali Bufat. In the
+history of Aragon the conquest ranks with the taking of Seville in the
+history of Castile. Granada was the joint conquest of both kingdoms. It
+is curious to compare the ready submission of the Moors, and their
+surrender of whole kingdoms to the Christians, sometimes as the result
+of a single battle, with the tenacious resistance offered by their
+descendants in Algeria in modern times. Enervated by the climate of
+Spain, the Mussulmans of that country were absolutely incapable of
+maintaining a prolonged guerrilla warfare. If a fortified capital was
+taken they at once handed over the whole kingdom to the conqueror. They
+were not, of course, peculiar in this respect. The sentiment of
+nationality and physical courage are characteristic far more of the
+modern than of the ancient world. We have only to compare the resistance
+of the Anglo-Saxons to the Normans with that of the Boers to the
+British, of the French in the Hundred Years' War with that of their
+descendants in 1871, to realize how much more of manliness and endurance
+we possess than did our ancestors. We must go back to the days of
+Leonidas and Regulus to find parallels for the exploits of our own
+Indian army; to Numantia and Saguntum for parallels to Saragossa and
+Gerona. National and individual self-respect withered under feudalism,
+and revived only on the introduction of free institutions.
+
+Valencia to-day, as befits the capital of a rich, prosperous province,
+is a handsome, modern progressive city. There is little or nothing about
+to remind one of its erstwhile masters, the Moors, and it has not
+retained more monuments of its past than most other cities. Interesting
+it is not from the sightseer's point of view, nor convenient from a
+stranger's, since indications of the names of the streets are few and
+far between. New avenues are being formed, and in these magnificent
+houses are arising, all happily in different styles, original and
+individual, forming a contrast to the dull uniformity of most
+Continental town perspectives. At two points the town is entered by
+massive gates of the castellated type--the Torres de Serranos and de
+Cuarte. The former date from the fourteenth century, and have two
+octagonal towers with heavy machicolations at two-thirds of their
+height; the machicolation is continued across the connecting storey,
+which is richly panelled above the narrow archway. The Torres de Cuarte
+are drum towers, similarly flanking a gateway; in this case the parapet
+is itself borne on corbels and machicolated. The work dates from the
+fifteenth century. These towers add much to the picturesqueness of their
+respective quarters. The Citadel, in another part of the town, replaces
+the old temple built in 1238 by the Knights Templars on the spot where
+the Aragonese planted their cross on entering Valencia. It contains the
+chapel where St. Vicente Ferrer, "the Angel of the Judgment," took the
+habit of St. Dominic.
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--A PICADOR]
+
+A glance at the Cathedral and the Lonja, and we shall have "done"
+Valencia in the tourist's sense. The former building was founded in the
+year 1262 on the site of the principal mosque. In it the Kings of
+Aragon took the oath as Kings of Valencia. Repeatedly restored, and
+"modernized" in 1750, it presents a dreadful jumble of styles, and is
+far behind the cathedrals of Andalusia in beauty and interest. The
+Micalet Tower, however, rising at the end of the Calle de Zaragoza,
+presents a striking appearance. It is the great landmark of the
+district, and the Valencians refer to exile as "losing sight of the
+Micalet." The view from the summit is very fine. The main entrance to
+the Cathedral is poor, but the north door, called the Puerta de los
+Apostoles, richly sculptured and delicately moulded, exhibits the skill
+and imagery of the fourteenth century at its best.
+
+Above the interesting semicircular Puerta del Palau are seen on
+medallions the heads of seven men and seven women--these representing
+the seven knights of the Conquest and the seven ladies (some say of
+Valencia, and others of Lerida) whom they married. From these alliances
+sprang the nobility of the province. This doorway was evidently
+constructed by the architect who designed the Puerta dels Infants at
+Lerida.
+
+The interior has also suffered by restoration. The pointed arches have
+been rounded, the Gothic columns almost concealed by Corinthian
+pilasters, the walls covered with marbles. The effect is rich ("La Rica"
+is the surname which particularly distinguishes this Cathedral), but
+much of the religious antique air of the place has gone for ever. The
+plan is, as usual with Spanish churches, cruciform. The chancel was
+reconstructed in 1682, but the altar was melted down by the French in
+1809. Fortunately the fine panel-shutters made for its protection in the
+sixteenth century have been preserved. They were carved by a carpenter
+named Carles, and are painted with scenes from the lives of Christ and
+the Virgin. These works are ascribed by some to Francisco Pagano and
+Pablo de San Leocadio, by others to Leonardo da Vinci himself. Hanging
+to one of the pillars on the Gospel side may be seen the spurs and
+bridle of Jaime lo Conqueridor, presented by him, on the day he took the
+city, to his master of the horse, Juan de Perthusa.
+
+Over the crossing rises the fine octagonal lantern, built in 1404 and
+restored in 1731. The trophies which once adorned it have long since
+been carried off, among them the flags taken from the Genoese by Ramon
+Corveran, a famous sea-dog of Valencia.
+
+The pulpit, over which is displayed a picture of St. Vicente Ferrer, was
+the one from which that zealous missionary actually preached. It can,
+however, hardly be regarded as a curiosity, as the saint must have
+preached in nearly every church in the Peninsula, France, and Flanders.
+
+[Illustration: VALENCIA--SANTA CATALINA]
+
+The choir is modern, except the rear portion or "trascoro," which dates
+from the end of the fifteenth century; and the chapels contain little
+that is of interest. Tomás de Villanueva, the holy Archbishop of
+Valencia, is entombed in the chapel dedicated to him. The chapel of
+another Valencian saint, St. Francis Borgia, is remarkable for a curious
+picture representing his conversion of a dying man. The penitent is
+depicted almost nude, and attended by comically fantastic monsters.
+Another painting shows the saint, as Duke of Gandía, taking leave of his
+relatives when about to embrace the religious state.
+
+Leaving the Cathedral, we visit the noble Gothic Lonja, or Silk
+Exchange, built between the years 1482 and 1498 by Pedro Compte. Though
+not in the purest style, the result is imposing and dignified. A French
+writer (M. Paul Jousset), not addicted to laudatory language, admits
+that this building is worth a visit to Valencia to see. Its square
+tower, its crenellated chimneys, open galleries, and high windows,
+recall the palace-like châteaux of the Loire. Within is a noble hall
+divided into three by rows of spirally-fluted columns. The roof is
+studded with stars, and round the frieze runs the inscription: "He only
+that shall not have deceived nor done usury, shall be worthy of eternal
+life." For the commercial integrity of Valencia it is to be hoped that
+the business men frequenting this exchange keep their eyes fixed on the
+text. Another public building worthy of attention is the Audiencia, in
+good Renaissance style, with grand halls adorned by portraits of eminent
+natives of the province. In the Salon de Cortes, the old provincial
+States assembled till the middle of the eighteenth century.
+
+The minor churches of Valencia are hardly worth a visit--the less so
+that in this climate the stranger is generally well content to "laze"
+his time away. He may do this very pleasantly on the Paseo de la
+Glorieta or Plaza Principe Alfonso, two charming shady spots, where
+numerous trees are reflected in the waters of the cool basins. Further
+off, across the parched Turia, you reach the Alameda, a leafy avenue
+where fountains diffuse a refreshing dew. And if you should chance to
+doze on one of the benches, you need not fear interruption. This
+charming promenade, for some occult reason, is neglected by the
+citizens.
+
+The picture gallery of Valencia is important. It contains fine specimens
+of contemporary Spanish art, including works by Sorolla and Benlliure.
+Ribalta may be studied here, and also the less-known masters of the
+Valencian school, such as Orrente, March, Espinosa, and Juanes. There
+used to be several fine private collections in Valencia, but these have
+all been dispersed.
+
+The country round Valencia is far more interesting than the city. In no
+other part of Spain, says Mr. Brunhés, has man more successfully
+combated and reduced natural aridity by irrigation and cultivation; so
+successfully indeed, that from Gandía to Valencia, for instance, a
+stretch of 100 kilometres, the gardens succeed each other so closely
+that it is easy to forget--in spite of the naked slopes on the
+horizon--that these oases occupy a naturally arid soil. This is, in
+short, the best cultivated province in the kingdom.
+
+[Illustration: AN ANDALUSIAN DANCE]
+
+The numberless canals and watercourses which intersect the land in all
+directions are fed for the most part by the Jucár and Turia--the latter
+the local stream of Valencia--but every possible source is turned to
+account. Here the water supply, comprised in the Canal of Moncada and
+the Seven Canals, belongs to the community, by whom is indirectly
+elected the famous tribunal which meets every Thursday morning at the
+Apostles' Gate of the Cathedral.
+
+The sittings of this singular court are the most interesting sight in
+Valencia. In the plaza a crowd of countryfolk are collected, furiously
+discussing their affairs and pleading their cases in advance, after the
+manner of litigants all the world over. Meanwhile the alguazil of the
+tribunal has disposed an ancient sofa in the shadow of the great Gothic
+portal and marked off a space before it with a railing. Presently the
+seven judges arrive--one for each canal. They have the air of well-to-do
+peasants, and such they are--grave, stoutly-built men, with tanned faces
+and close-cropped hair. They wear black, the colour beloved by the
+comfortably-situated working man all the world over; but they have not
+discarded the native handkerchief round their polished brows or the
+_espadrilla_, or Valencian shoe. Each is known by the name of the canal
+which he represents--Mislata, Cuarte, and so forth. These
+peasant-magistrates having taken their seats, the oldest pronounces the
+words "Se obri el tribunal" (The tribunal is open). For a moment
+absolute silence reigns. Then those who have the right to be heard first
+are introduced within the railing and plead their cause bare-headed
+before the court. Woe to the insolent wight that dare stand covered in
+its presence! The alguazil will tear the handkerchief off his head, and
+he will be mulcted, moreover, in a fine. Anyone who speaks before his
+turn is fined. The discipline is severe. Each must wait till the
+president indicates with his foot that it is his turn to be heard.
+Notwithstanding, the fiery Valencians find it hard to restrain their
+feelings. At every moment there is an explosion of wrath or indignation,
+a heated expostulation from one or the other of the parties. The fines
+thus accumulated must represent a considerable sum. The procedure is
+entirely verbal; even the judgments are not recorded. But no court
+exercises more absolute power than the Tribunal de las Aguas of
+Valencia.
+
+Life in the fertile huerta of Valencia is beautifully described by the
+great novelist, Blasco Ibañez, a native of the city. The following
+roughly translated passages, though they convey little idea of the
+forceful and elegant style of the original, will at least enable the
+reader to picture a summer in the South:
+
+"When the vast plain awakes in the bluish light of dawn, the last of the
+nightingales that have sang through the night breaks off abruptly in his
+final trill, as though he had been stricken by the steely shaft of day.
+Sparrows in whole coveys burst forth from the thatched roofs, and
+beneath this aerial rabble preening their wings, the trees shake and
+nod.
+
+"One by one the murmurs of the night subside--the trickling of
+watercourses, the sighing of the reeds, the barking of the watchful
+dogs. Other sounds belonging to the day grow louder and fill the huerta.
+The crow of the cock is heard from every farm; the village bells re-echo
+the call to prayer borne across from the towers of Valencia, which are
+yet misty in the distance; from the farmyards arises a discordant animal
+concert--the neighing of horses, the bellowing of oxen, the clucking of
+hens, the bleating of lambs, the grunting of swine--the sounds produced
+by beasts that scent the keen odour of vegetation in the morning breeze
+and are hungry for the fields.
+
+"The sky is suffused with light, and with light, life inundates the
+plain and penetrates to the interior of human and animal abodes. Doors
+open creaking. In the porches white figures appear, their hands clasped
+behind their necks, scanning the horizon. From the stables issue towards
+the city, milch cows, flocks of goats, manure carts. Bells tinkle
+between the dwarf trees bordering the high road, and every now and again
+is heard the sharp '_Arre, Aca!_' of the drivers.
+
+"On the thresholds of the cottages those bound for the town exchange
+greetings with those that stay in the fields: '_Bon dia nos done Deu!_'
+(May God give us a good day!) '_Bon dia._'
+
+"Immense is the energy, the explosion of life, at midsummer, the best
+season of the year, the time of harvest and abundance. Space throbs with
+light and heat. The African sun rains torrents of fire on the land
+already cracked and wrinkled by its burning caresses, and its golden
+beams pierce the dense foliage, beneath which are hidden the canals and
+trenches to save them from the all-powerful vivifying heat.
+
+"The branches of the trees are heavy with fruit. They bend beneath the
+weight of yellow grapes covered with glazed leaves. Like the pink cheeks
+of a child glow the apricots amid the verdure. Children greedily eye the
+luscious burden of the fig trees. From the gardens is wafted the scent
+of the jasmin, and the magnolias dispense their incense in the burning
+air laden with the perfume of the cereals.
+
+"The gleaming scythe has already sheared the land, levelling the golden
+fields of wheat and the tall corn stalks, which bowed beneath their
+heavy load of life. The hay forms yellow hills which reflect the colour
+of the sun. The wheat is winnowed in a whirlwind of dust; in the naked
+fields among the stubble, sparrows hop from spot to spot in search of
+stray gleanings. Everywhere are happiness and joyous labour. Waggons go
+groaning down the road; children frolic in the fields and among the
+sheaves, thinking of the wheaten cakes in prospect and of the lazy,
+pleasant life which begins for the farmer when his barn is filled. Even
+the old horses stride along more gaily, cheered by the smell of the
+golden grain which will flow steadily into their mangers as the year
+rolls on.
+
+[Illustration: COURTING]
+
+"When the harvest has levelled the panorama and cleared the great
+stretches of wheat sprinkled with poppies, the plain seems vast, almost
+illimitable. Farther than the eye can reach stretch its great squares of
+red soil marked off by paths and trenches. The Sunday's rest is
+rigorously observed over the whole countryside. Not a man is seen
+toiling in the fields, not a beast at work on the road. Down the paths
+pass old women with their mantillas drawn over their eyes and their
+little chairs hanging to their arms. In the distance resound, like the
+tearing of linen, the shots fired at the swallows, which fly hither and
+thither in circles. A noise seems to be produced by their wings ruffling
+the crystal firmament. From the canals rises the murmur of clouds of
+almost invisible flies. In a farm all painted blue under an ancient
+arbour there is a whirlwind of gaily coloured shawls and petticoats,
+while the guitars with their drowsy rhythm and the strident cornets
+accompany the measures of the Valencian Jota.
+
+"In the village the little plaza is thronged with the field folk. The
+men are in their shirt sleeves, with black sashes and gorgeous
+handkerchiefs arranged mitre-like on their heads. The old men lean on
+their big Liria sticks. The young men, with sleeves turned up, display
+their red nervous arms and carry mere sprigs of ash between their huge
+knotted fingers.
+
+"In the afternoon, towards the fountain, along the road bordered with
+poplars which shake their silvered foliage, go groups of girls with
+their pitchers on their heads. Their rhythmical movements and their
+grace recall the Athenian canephoræ. This procession to the well lends
+to the huerta of Valencia something of a biblical character. The Fontana
+de la Reina is the pride of the huerta, condemned to drink the water of
+wells and the red and dirty liquid of the canals. It is esteemed as an
+ancient and valuable work. It has a square basin with walls of reddish
+stone. The water is below the soil. You reach the bottom by means of six
+green and slippery steps. Opposite the steps is a defaced bas-relief,
+probably a Virgin attended by angels--no doubt an ex-voto of the time of
+the Conquest. Laughter and chatter are not wanting round the well. The
+girls cluster round, eager to fill their pitchers but in no hurry to
+depart. They jostle each other on the steps, their petticoats gathered
+in between their legs, the better to lean forward and to plunge their
+vessels into the basin. The surface of the water is unceasingly troubled
+by the bubbles rising from the sandy bed, which is covered with weeds
+waving in the current."
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+Abades, No. 6, 70
+
+Abbad, Mohammed Ben, 22
+
+Abdallah, Ahmed Ben, 21
+
+Abd-el-Aziz, 19
+
+Abd-ur-Rahman, 89
+
+Abd-ur-Rahman III., 21
+
+Abu-l-Walid, 115
+
+Adra, 168
+
+Ælii, 16
+
+Ahmar, Mohammed al, 27, 113
+
+Alarcos, 26
+
+Albaicin, 148
+
+Alcazaba, 129
+
+Alcazares, 35
+
+Alcazar Genil, 161
+
+Alcoy, 190
+
+Alfonso VI., 24, 25, 98
+
+Alfonso X., 114
+
+Alfonso the Battler, King, 189
+
+Alfonso the Learned, 4, 181
+
+Al Hakem II., 90
+
+Alhama, 121
+
+Alhambra, The, 124
+
+Alicante, 189
+
+Al Mansûr, 90
+
+Almeria, 168
+
+Almohades, 26, 30, 112
+
+Almoravides, 26, 112, 194
+
+Aragon, Don Jaime of, 179
+
+Arfe, Juan de, 60, 96
+
+Aurariola, 178
+
+Az Zahara, 97
+
+
+Barbuda, Don Martin de la, 102, 119
+
+Baths, 143
+
+Bekr, Abu, 179
+
+Belludo, 145
+
+Ben Hud, 27, 113
+
+Biblioteca Colombina, 35
+
+Boabdil, 121
+
+
+Cadiz, 1
+
+Cadiz, Marquis of, 121
+
+Cæsar, Julius, 16
+
+Campaña--_See_ Kempener
+
+Campillo, 160
+
+Cano, Alonso, 66, 75, 155, 165
+
+Caños de Carmona, 81
+
+Capilla Real, 152
+
+Cartagena, 182
+
+Carthaginians, 3, 14, 15
+
+Cartuja, 84, 158
+
+Casa de Bustos Tavera, 70
+
+Casa del Carbon, 147
+
+Casa de los Tiros, 160
+
+Casa de Pilatos, 66
+
+Cathedral, 50, 151, 155, 165, 196
+
+Cespedes, Pablo de, 75, 103
+
+Charles V., 95
+
+Cid Campeador, Ruy Diaz de Bivar, 112, 193
+
+Colon, Fernando, 57
+
+Columbus, Christopher, 56, 160
+
+Cordova, 86
+
+Cornejo, Duque, 95, 96
+
+Coronel, Doña Maria, 38
+
+Cortes, Hernando, 83
+
+Court of the Lions, 137
+
+Cuarto de Santo Domingo, 160
+
+
+Dance of the Seises, 81
+
+Dávalos, Leonor, 38
+
+Delicias Gardens, 77
+
+Dios, San Juan de, 156
+
+Drake, Sir Francis, 4
+
+
+Elche, 187
+
+El Greco, 60
+
+Enrique III., 119
+
+Ermengild, 18, 193
+
+Ermita de San Sebastian, 160
+
+"Esperandola del Cielo," 149
+
+Essex, Earl of, 5
+
+Exilona, 19
+
+
+Fadrique, Don, 46
+
+Fair of Seville, 79
+
+Ferdinand and Isabella, 121
+
+Fernandez, Alejo, 85
+
+Fernando el Magno, 24
+
+Ferrer, St. Vincent, 35
+
+Frutet, 75
+
+
+Gandía, 190
+
+Gandia, Duke of, 157
+
+Generalife, The, 146
+
+Gibralfaro, 164
+
+Gibraltar, 173
+
+Giordano, Luca, 58
+
+Gipsies, 84
+
+Giralda Tower, 31
+
+Gongora, 95
+
+Goya, 60
+
+Granada, 107
+
+Great Captain, 102, 156
+
+Guadalquivir, The, 9
+
+Guzman el Bueno, 83
+
+
+Hajjaj, Ibrahim Ibn, 20
+
+Hall of the Two Sisters, 139
+
+Halls of the Abencerrages, 139
+
+Hasan, Mulai, 121
+
+Hernandez (Gonzalo), de Aguilar y de Cordova,
+ "the Great Captain," 102, 156
+
+Herrera, 58, 61, 66
+
+Herrera, The Older, 75
+
+
+Illiberis, 111
+
+"Intransigentes," 182
+
+Irrigation, 175, 200
+
+Isidore, St., 19
+
+Ismaïl, Saïd Ben, 121
+
+Italica, 15, 17, 18, 82
+
+
+Jaime lo Conqueridor, 186, 194, 198
+
+Jativa, 190
+
+Jerez, 10
+
+Juan II., 16
+
+Jucár, 191
+
+Junteron, Don Gil, 181
+
+
+Kadir, 193
+
+Kempener, Peter, 55, 58, 59
+
+
+La Caridad, 74
+
+"Las Navas de Tolosa," 26
+
+La Trinidad, 19
+
+Leal, Valdés, 58, 59, 74, 75
+
+Leander, 18
+
+Lebrija, 11
+
+Leovgild, 18
+
+Levi, Simuel Ben, 37
+
+Lonja, 196, 199
+
+Lorca, 175
+
+Lucan, 16
+
+
+Majus, 21
+
+Malaga, 163
+
+Malecon, 180
+
+Marana, Miguel de, 73
+
+Mena, Juan de, 104
+
+Mezquita, 88
+
+Mihrab, 144
+
+Mirador de "Lindaraja," 142
+
+Mohammed II., 114
+
+Mohammed III., 114
+
+Mohammed IV., 116
+
+Mohammed V., 117, 171
+
+Mohammed VI., 119
+
+Mohammed VII., 121
+
+Mohammed VIII., 121
+
+Mohammedan Paintings, 140
+
+Montañez, 58, 60, 66, 75, 83
+
+Mote'mid, 23
+
+Motril, 168
+
+Munda, 170
+
+Murcia, 174, 179, 180
+
+Murillo, 8, 56, 58, 59, 60, 61, 73, 74, 75, 76
+
+Musa, 19
+
+Museo of Seville, 74
+
+Musset, Alfred de, 7, 12, 71
+
+Mut'adid-billah, Amir, 22
+
+Muwallads, 20
+
+
+Nasr, Abu-l-Juyyush Muley, 115
+
+Northmen, 21
+
+
+Omnium Sanctorum, 65
+
+Oratory, 144
+
+Orihuela, 178, 186
+
+Osorio, Doña Urraca, 38
+
+
+Padilla, Maria de, 46
+
+Palace of Charles V., 131
+
+Palace of St. Telmo, 76
+
+Palacio de las Dueñas, 70
+
+Palomino, 95
+
+Paredes, Doña Maria de Guzman, 95
+
+Patio de Daraxa, 142
+
+Patio de la Alberca, 135
+
+Patio de las Arrayanes, 135
+
+Patio de las Muñecas, 45
+
+Patio de los Naranjos, 34
+
+Patio "del Mexuar," 134
+
+Pedro the Cruel, 36
+
+Phœnicians, The, 2, 14
+
+Pineda, Doña Mariana, 157
+
+Plaza de Bibarrambla, 151
+
+Poore, Lawrence, 28
+
+Puerta de Hierro, 144
+
+Puerta de la Justicia, 128
+
+Puerta del Lagarto, 53
+
+Puerta del Perdon, 34
+
+Puerta del Vino, 130
+
+Puerto Santa Maria, 10
+
+Pulgar, Fernando del, Lord of El Salar, 152
+
+
+Ramon Bonifaz, 27
+
+Recchiarus, 17
+
+Ribera, 190
+
+Robles, Joao de, 156
+
+Roelas, Juan de las, 58, 65, 75
+
+Roldán, Pedro, 61
+
+Romanticists, 6, 7
+
+Ronda, 170
+
+Rueda, Lope de, 95
+
+
+Sacromonte, 158
+
+Saïd, Abu, 37, 118, 171
+
+St. Ferdinand, 27, 55, 95
+
+St. Isidore, 24
+
+St. Justa, 84
+
+St. Rufina, 84
+
+St. Vicente Ferrer, 196, 198
+
+Sala de la Justicia, 140
+
+Sala de los Embajadores, 136
+
+Salambo, 15, 84
+
+Salon de los Embajadores, 44
+
+San Geronimo, 156
+
+Santa Ana, 85
+
+Santa Paula, 64
+
+Santo Domingo, 160
+
+Scipio, 15
+
+Seneca, 16
+
+Seville, 12
+
+Siloe, Diego de, 156, 165
+
+Suevi, 17
+
+
+Talavera, Archbishop de, 123
+
+Tarik, 19
+
+Tarshish, 3
+
+Tendilla, Count of, 123
+
+Theodomir, 178
+
+Theudis, 17
+
+Theudisel, 17
+
+Tocador de la Reina, 143
+
+Todmir, 179
+
+Torre de Cuarte, 196
+
+Torre de Serranos, 196
+
+Torre del Agua, 145
+
+Torre del Homenage, 130
+
+"Torre del Oro," 29
+
+Torre de la Cautiva, 145
+
+Torre de la Vela, 129
+
+Torre de las Damas, 144
+
+Torre de las Infantas, 145
+
+Torre de los Picos, 144
+
+Torre de los Siete Suelos, 145
+
+Torres Bermejas, 127
+
+Tower of Comares, 136
+
+Triana, 84
+
+Tribunal de las Aguas, 201
+
+Turdetani, 14
+
+
+University Church, Seville, 65
+
+Utrera, 11
+
+
+Valdes, 75
+
+Valencia, 192, 195
+
+Vandals, 16
+
+Vargas, Luis de, 34, 58, 59, 75
+
+Velazquez, 75
+
+Velez Chapel, 182
+
+Vermilion Towers, 125
+
+Vigarni, 153
+
+Visigoths, 17
+
+
+Yusuf I., 117
+
+Yusuf II., 119
+
+Yusuf III., 120
+
+Yusuf IV., 121
+
+
+Zacatin, 150
+
+Zaghal, 122
+
+Zahara, 121, 171
+
+Zayda, 25
+
+Zegri, Hamet el, 164
+
+Ziryab, 101
+
+Zurbaran, 58, 60, 75
+
+[Illustration: MAP ACCOMPANYING "SOUTHERN SPAIN" BY TREVOR HADDEN AND A.
+F. CALVERT. (A. & C. BLACK)]
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOUTHERN SPAIN ***
+
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+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Southern Spain, by Haddon &amp; Calvert</title>
+<link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
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+<body>
+
+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold;'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Southern Spain, by A.F. Calvert</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Southern Spain</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: A.F. Calvert</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: Trevor Haddon</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Release Date: November 6, 2011 [eBook #37944]<br />
+[Most recently updated: April 6, 2021]</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOUTHERN SPAIN ***</div>
+
+<hr class="full" />
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/cover_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="394" height="550" alt="images of the book&#39;s cover" title="images of the book&#39;s cover" /></a>
+</p>
+
+<h1>SOUTHERN SPAIN<br />
+<small>PAINTED&nbsp; &nbsp; BY &nbsp; &nbsp; TREVOR<br />
+HADDON &nbsp; &#183; &nbsp; &nbsp; DESCRIBED<br />
+BY &nbsp;A. F. CALVERT&nbsp; &#183; &nbsp;PUB-<br />
+LISHED BY A. &amp; C. BLACK<br />
+LONDON &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &#183; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; MCMVIII</small></h1>
+
+<p>
+<br />
+<br />
+</p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<span style="margin-left: 15%;"><img src="images/colophon.jpg" width="100" height="129" alt="colophon" /></span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br />
+<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="FRONT" id="FRONT"></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_001" id="ill_001"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_001-frontispiece_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_001-frontispiece_sml.jpg" width="400" height="550" alt="Frontispiece" /></a>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br />
+<br />
+</p>
+
+<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE</h2>
+
+<p class="nind">F<small>EW</small> travellers have leisure enough to traverse the wide realm of tawny
+Spain in its every part. Those who must confine their attention to a
+single province naturally select Andalusia, where all the Northerner's
+preconceptions of the South find realization. The wild scenery of
+Southern Spain, the gay open-air life of the people, the monuments
+attesting the splendour of the extinct civilization of the Moor, the
+spell of romance which still holds its cities, makes this land one of
+the most interesting and fascinating in Europe to the artist, the
+archæologist, and the dreamer.</p>
+
+<p>The present volume, mainly the embodiment of personal impressions and
+observations, is intended partly to supply the place of a guide-book to
+this part of the Peninsula, and with that object I have brought together
+as much of history, art, and topography as the traveller is likely to
+assimilate. Into the descriptive matter I have introduced a little
+gossip, which will, I hope, be not found altogether irrelevant, and may
+serve to beguile the tedium of a bare recital of facts.</p>
+
+<p>While I have endeavoured to make the book as useful to travellers as
+within the prescribed limits was possible, I have essayed to give it, by
+means of the illustrations, a more permanent value. It is on the brush
+rather than on the pen that I have relied to convey an idea of the
+gorgeous panorama of Southern Spain, and to recall to the returned
+traveller his impressions of the land.</p>
+
+<p>As a <i>vade-mecum</i>, then, for the tourist, and as an album and souvenir
+of the fairest portion of the realm of the Catholic King, I hope that
+the present volume will be of use to the public, despite the
+shortcomings it doubtless contains. For rendering these as few as
+possible, I have to thank several friends who have looked through the
+proofs. To one in particular, Mr. E. B. d'Auvergne, I am indebted for
+various scraps of original and entertaining information.</p>
+
+<p class="r">
+A. F. CALVERT.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<br />
+<br />
+</p>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="CONTENTS">
+
+<tr><th colspan="2" align="center"><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a><big>CONTENTS</big></th></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>C<small>ADIZ</small> </td><td align="right"><a href="#page_001">1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>Seville&mdash;T<small>HE</small> P<small>EARL OF</small> A<small>NDALUSIA</small></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_012">12</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>C<small>ORDOVA</small></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_086">86</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>G<small>RANADA</small></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_107">107</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>M<small>ALAGA</small></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_163">163</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>T<small>HE</small> W<small>AY</small> S<small>OUTH</small></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_169">169</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>T<small>HE</small> K<small>INGDOM OF</small> M<small>URCIA</small></td><td align="right"><a href="#page_174">174</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>I<small>N THE</small> O<small>LD</small> K<small>INGDOM OF</small> V<small>ALENCIA</small>&nbsp; &nbsp; </td><td align="right"><a href="#page_186">186</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#INDEX">INDEX</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>
+<br />
+<br />
+</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="ILLUSTRATIONS">
+
+<tr><th colspan="3" align="center"><a name="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS" id="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS"></a><big>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</big></th></tr>
+
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_001">1.</a></td><td> Cordova&mdash;Fountain in the Patio de los Naranjos</td><td><a href="#FRONT"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td colspan="3" align="right"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_002">2.</a></td><td> Ayamonte (The Gateway of Andalusia)</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_008">8</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_003">3.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;A Street</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_012">12</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_004">4.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;The Aceite Gate</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_020">20</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_005">5.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;A Courtyard</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_024">24</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_006">6.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;The Torre del Oro and the Cathedral</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_028">28</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_007">7.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;The Giralda</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_030">30</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_008">8.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;Gardens of the Alcazar</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_034">34</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_009">9.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;Gardens of the Alcazar</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_040">40</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_010">10.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;Patio de las Banderas</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_044">44</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_011">11.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;Gardens of the Alcazar</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_050">50</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_012">12.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;Interior of the Cathedral</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_056">56</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_013">13.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;Patio de los Naranjos</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_060">60</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_014">14.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;Plaza de San Fernando</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_064">64</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_015">15.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;Casa de Pilatos</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_068">68</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_016">16.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;Casa de Pilatos</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_072">72</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_017">17.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;Garden of the Casa de Pilatos</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_078">78</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_018">18.</a></td><td> Seville&mdash;The Market Place</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_080">80</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_019">19.</a></td><td> Cordova&mdash;A Courtyard</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_084">84</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_020">20.</a></td><td> Cordova&mdash;Entrance to the City</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_086">86</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_021">21.</a></td><td> Cordova&mdash;Calle Cardinal Herrera</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_088">88</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_022">22.</a></td><td> Cordova&mdash;Moorish Mill</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_090">90</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_023">23.</a></td><td> Cordova&mdash;Mezquita</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_092">92</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_024">24.</a></td><td> Cordova&mdash;Patio de los Naranjos</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_094">94</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_025">25.</a></td><td> Cordova&mdash;Outer Wall of the Mosque</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_096">96</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_026">26.</a></td><td> Cordova&mdash;A Street Scene</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_098">98</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_027">27.</a></td><td> Cordova&mdash;A Street</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_100">100</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_028">28.</a></td><td> Cordova&mdash;The Bridge</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_102">102</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_029">29.</a></td><td> Cordova&mdash;Courtyard of an Inn</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_104">104</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_030">30.</a></td><td> Cordova&mdash;Old Houses near the River</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_106">106</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_031">31.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;From the Generalife</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_108">108</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_032">32.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Sierra Nevada from the Alhambra Gardens</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_110">110</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_033">33.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Exterior of the Alhambra</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_112">112</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_034">34.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;A Street in the Albaicin</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_114">114</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_035">35.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;In the Market</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_116">116</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_036">36.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;The Alhambra: The Aqueduct</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_118">118</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_037">37.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;The Court of the Cypresses</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_120">120</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_038">38.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Villa on the Darro</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_122">122</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_039">39.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;The Alhambra from San Miguel</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_124">124</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_040">40.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Towers of the Infantas, Alhambra</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_126">126</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_041">41.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Near the Alhambra</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_128">128</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_042">42.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Puerta del Vino, Alhambra</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_130">130</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_043">43.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;The Alhambra: Tower of Comares</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_132">132</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_044">44.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;The Court of the Lions: Moonlight</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_136">136</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_045">45.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;The Generalife: Patio de la Acequia</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_138">138</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_046">46.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;The Generalife: Court of the Cypresses</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_140">140</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_047">47.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Tocador de la Reina</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_142">142</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_048">48.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Torre de las Damas</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_144">144</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_049">49.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;The Generalife: Court of the Cypresses</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_146">146</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_050">50.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Casa del Carbon</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_148">148</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_051">51.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Street in the Albaicin</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_150">150</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_052">52.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Interior of a Posada</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_152">152</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_053">53.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Old Houses, Cuesta del Pescado</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_154">154</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_054">54.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Old Ayuntamiento</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_156">156</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_055">55.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;Street in the Old Quarter</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_158">158</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_056">56.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;The Generalife: Patio de la Acequia</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_160">160</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_057">57.</a></td><td> Granada&mdash;A Corner in the Old Quarter</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_162">162</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_058">58.</a></td><td> Malaga&mdash;The Harbour</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_164">164</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_059">59.</a></td><td> Malaga&mdash;The Guadalmedina</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_166">166</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_060">60.</a></td><td> Malaga&mdash;A Market</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_168">168</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_061">61.</a></td><td> Malaga&mdash;Packing Lemons</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_170">170</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_062">62.</a></td><td> Ronda&mdash;The Tajo</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_172">172</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_063">63.</a></td><td> Ronda&mdash;Roman Bridges</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_174">174</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_064">64.</a></td><td> Ronda&mdash;At the Fountain</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_176">176</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_065">65.</a></td><td> Ronda&mdash;A Moorish Gateway</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_180">180</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_066">66.</a></td><td> Ronda&mdash;A Street Scene</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_182">182</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_067">67.</a></td><td> Ronda&mdash;The Market</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_184">184</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_068">68.</a></td><td> Orihuela on the River Segura</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_186">186</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_069">69.</a></td><td> Elche&mdash;A Street</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_188">188</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_070">70.</a></td><td> A Fisher Girl (Coast of Malaga)</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_190">190</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_071">71.</a></td><td> A Water Carrier</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_192">192</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_072">72.</a></td><td> Malaga&mdash;A Picador</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_196">196</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_073">73.</a></td><td> Valencia&mdash;Santa Catalina</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_198">198</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_074">74.</a></td><td> An Andalusian Dance</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_200">200</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="right"><a href="#ill_075">75.</a></td><td> Courting</td><td align="right"><a href="#page_204">204</a></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td colspan="3" align="center"><a href="#ill_076-map"><i>Map at end of Volume</i></a></td></tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<p>
+<br />
+</p>
+
+<p class="c"><i>The Illustrations in this Volume have been engraved and printed in
+England by</i><br />
+T<small>HE</small> M<small>ENPES</small> P<small>RESS</small>, <i>London and Watford</i><a name="page_001" id="page_001"></a></p>
+
+<h2>SOUTHERN SPAIN</h2>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I<br /><br />
+<small>CADIZ</small></h2>
+
+<p class="nind">C<small>ADIZ</small> was the prettiest of all the towns of Spain, thought Byron. I
+would rather say that she was the most beautiful. She rises out of the
+sea&mdash;the boundless salt ocean that stretches from pole to pole&mdash;and the
+crests of the waves which lick her feet are not whiter than her walls.
+And these by day are bathed in liquid gold, for the sun seems to linger
+here ere he says good-night to Europe. By night the city gleams like
+washed silver, and her sheen is more magical than that of the dark yet
+phosphorescent water. Of sun and sea, light and air, is Cadiz
+compounded. She is the Gateway of the West, not sultry and southern, but
+salt and windy and dazzling white. It is thus she appears to you,
+especially when you come to her over the sea&mdash;that sea which hereabouts
+has so often been splashed with British blood. How often the pale yellow
+cliffs of Spain to the southward, and those of the lovely shore of
+Algarve to the north, have reverberated with the booming of the cannon;
+how often the strand has been littered with dead men,<a name="page_002" id="page_002"></a> whose gaping
+wounds the kindly ocean had washed clean! Browning's lines recur to the
+memory:</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poetry">
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 0em;">"Nobly, nobly Cape St. Vincent to the north-west died away,</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: .25em;">Sunset ran, one glorious blood-red, reeking into Cadiz Bay."</span></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>For you can see the lighthouse on Cape Trafalgar, and the Bay of Cadiz
+itself has been the scene of some of England's most glorious and
+desperate feats of arms. There is little stirring now in the wide
+harbour, where the ships ride lazily at anchor, and their crews crowd to
+the bulwarks and exchange pleasantries with your boatman as he pulls you
+towards the quay. And so you step on shore, and enter the fair city.</p>
+
+<p>It looks so fresh and fragrant that you would not think it ancient. But
+Cadiz is the first-born city of Spain, probably the first foothold of
+civilization on the shores of the Atlantic Ocean. It marks a new and
+tremendously important step forward in the world's progress. After
+Heaven knows how many attempts and false starts, the Ph&oelig;nicians dared
+what no people of the ancient world had dared before. The Pillars of
+Hercules were regarded as the western boundary of the world: beyond was
+nothingness. And one day, with the east wind filling his sails and fear
+in the hearts of his crew, some forgotten Columbus of Sidon or of Tyre
+passed through the strait, and turning northward, beached his little
+galley on the peninsula where we stand. Civilization&mdash;arts and letters,
+commerce and social life, and all that makes life<a name="page_003" id="page_003"></a> dear to modern
+men&mdash;had burst the narrow limits of the Middle Sea, and first hoisted
+its flag o'er Cadiz.</p>
+
+<p>The thought is not uninspiring. It is not unreasonable to suppose that
+the first keel that ever ploughed the Atlantic grazed this strand. It is
+likely enough that the fleets of lost Atlantis, if that mystical isle
+possessed a ship, resorted hither, for the copper and precious metals of
+Tarshish. What voyages have begun from this port, from the little
+Ph&oelig;nician craft setting forth in quest of the Tin Islands of the far
+north, to brave Cervera leading out his squadron to its preordained
+doom!</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poetry">
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 0em;">"It may be that the gulfs shall wash us down,</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: .25em;">It may be we shall touch the happy isles."</span></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>And careless of fate, all these dauntless sailors have adventured forth
+into the deep.</p>
+
+<p>In after years, the Ph&oelig;nicians and Carthaginians had settlements
+here, and built great ugly palaces overlooking the sea and the
+estuaries. With their curling black beards I seem to see them, robed in
+the real Tyrian purple, reclining on their terraces even as their
+forefathers are shown in that strange picture in our National Gallery,
+"The Eve of the Deluge."</p>
+
+<p>Their deluge was the Roman Invasion, when, in a good hour for humanity,
+Latin superseded Semitic civilization, and the cruel gods of Sidon bowed
+before the young and beautiful gods of Rome. Gades or Gaddir&mdash;I give it
+its two oldest names&mdash;did not suffer by its change of masters. Its mart
+was crowded, its<a name="page_004" id="page_004"></a> merchants known from Britain to the Fortunate Isles,
+from Lusitania to Arabia. Much wealth engendered luxury. Life in Gades
+was feverish and distempered. The people had not forgotten the worship
+of Astarte, and the Gaditane dancing-girls proved themselves worthy
+daughters of the goddess. When the gods were dethroned the sensual city
+pined; and under the austere yoke of Islam it languished and all but
+faded away. It is interesting to note that its Moslem inhabitants were
+drawn from the old race of Philistines, some of whose gods had probably
+been worshipped here in the Punic days.</p>
+
+<p>When Seville fell, the port continued subject to the Almohade Emir of
+Fez. Alfonso the Learned subdued it without difficulty in 1262, and
+filled it with colonists from the north coast of Spain, from such places
+as Santander and Laredo. But the Philistine taint in two senses was
+never eradicated; Cadiz remained ever financial and commercial, and
+cared nothing for art. Her brightest and blackest days followed the
+discovery of America, when she soon eclipsed Seville as the mart for the
+produce of the New Indies. Her wealth, not once but many times, wellnigh
+proved her downfall. Threatened again and again by the Barbary corsairs,
+she saw a far more terrible foe before her walls in 1587, in the person
+of Sir Francis Drake, who inflicted incalculable injury on her shipping.
+Worse was to come nine years later, when the English, under the command
+of the Earl of<a name="page_005" id="page_005"></a> Essex, scaled the walls, sacked the city from end to
+end, slaughtered the inhabitants, profaned the churches and burnt the
+public buildings, and sailed away with enormous booty. Yet so quickly
+did Cadiz recover from this terrific catastrophe, that she again tempted
+the cupidity of our countrymen in 1625. But this time the Dons were well
+prepared and gave our fleet so warm a reception that we were compelled
+to retire with heavy loss.</p>
+
+<p>The city attained its zenith of opulence in the first quarter of the
+eighteenth century, when it had become almost the exclusive entrepôt for
+the traffic between Southern Europe and the Americas. Numerous royal
+privileges and concessions secured it almost a monopoly of the trade.
+But no one organ can hope to escape an infection attacking the whole
+system. Spain in the eighteenth century was dying from that commonest of
+national diseases&mdash;dry-rot. Yet as late as 1770 Adam Smith did not
+hesitate to say that the merchants of London had not yet the wealth to
+compete with those of Cadiz, and a few years later the value of the
+bullion landed at its quays was estimated at 125 millions sterling.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it was this bloated, purse-proud city, strangely enough, that proved
+the ark of refuge for Spain when the innumerable hosts of Napoleon
+swarmed over the land. Here were preserved the insignia of national
+independence, and here, amid the thunder of guns and in the lap of the
+ocean, was born the New and Free<a name="page_006" id="page_006"></a> Spain. Cadiz proved a second
+Covadonga. The focus of the constitutional movement, she was savagely
+assailed by the Absolutists and their French allies. The defence of
+Trocadero, on the other side of the bay, against the forces of the Duc
+d'Angoulême popularized the name of the place throughout Europe. The
+pages of Balzac abound in allusions to that mischievous and futile
+attempt of the Government of the Restoration to rivet on Spaniards
+fetters that no Frenchman would wear. Then came a French invasion of
+another sort, of the Romanticists&mdash;of De Musset and Gautier, and the
+long-haired followers of Byron.</p>
+
+<p>It has often seemed to me that every city belongs to one particular age.
+This being a fancy contrary to fact, I will put it this way&mdash;that in
+every city there is always some one period of human history more readily
+recoverable than any other. This may not be the period which has left
+its mark most conspicuously on the physiognomy of the place; more
+probably it will be determined by your own preconceptions, derived from
+study or chance reading. John Addington Symonds observed that an island
+near Venice, the name of which I have forgotten, immediately recalled to
+him not the great days of the Republic with which it had an historical
+connection, but the later and decadent days of bag-wig and hair powder.
+At Cadiz I could have wished to think of the Ph&oelig;nicians, thus hardily
+adventuring into the wide ocean; or of Drake and his gentlemen
+adventurers,<a name="page_007" id="page_007"></a> "bound wrist to bar, all for red iniquity"; but instead I
+fancied myself back in the 'thirties of last century, and thought of De
+Musset and his "Andalouse" and his lovely Spanish girls. Is it possible
+that Andalusia in those days of our grandfathers <i>was</i> the Andalusia of
+the Romanticists? At Cadiz, I beguiled myself into believing so&mdash;why, I
+cannot explain. Perhaps it was due to the unexpected appearance of a
+native&mdash;a distinctively Andalusian&mdash;costume in the streets. Nowhere else
+in Spain is the mantilla more conspicuous or more gorgeous. A French
+writer gives a selection of toilettes worn at a <i>Corrida de toros</i>,
+which, as I never assisted at one of these functions in Cadiz, I repeat:
+"All pink, coral necklace, white lace mantilla, big bunches of
+carnations in the hair and corsage; a blond head seen beneath a
+transparent mantilla, like a frail spider's web, red corsage and white
+gown; coral ear-rings, with bunches of roses; all black, with a white
+mantilla; all white, with a black mantilla; pale green gown with a blue
+bolero and white roses; shawl draped, brocaded, with a wealth of
+carnations in the hair; black dress and mantilla, violets in the hair;
+gold coloured shawl, embroidered with red roses, comb like a tiara set
+with bright-hued flowers," etc., etc. With confections such as these
+dazzling the eyes, it is no wonder that I began to see visions of
+gentlemen in black silk tights, dark green frock coats, and snowy white
+cravats, stammering Castilian with a Parisian accent.<a name="page_008" id="page_008"></a></p>
+
+<p>It would be hard, too, to keep the mind fixed on remoter and more heroic
+ages, for Cadiz is singularly destitute of antiquities. The descendants
+of the Philistines could not be expected to respect ancient monuments!
+But what they spared our freebooter ancestors burned. The old Cathedral,
+built in the thirteenth century, was almost totally consumed by the
+flames. When I say that the new building dates from 1720, I fear that
+your interest in it will expire. But it is at least imposing; and the
+choir stalls are very fine. Then there is the Capuchin Convent, where
+Murillo met his death by falling from a scaffolding while painting the
+picture of the Espousals of St. Catherine. Another picture by the same
+master may be seen in this church&mdash;St. Francis receiving the Stigmata.
+The little Academia de Bellas Artes contains some admirable specimens of
+the work of Zurbaran, brought from the Charterhouse of Jerez.</p>
+
+<p>These are the only sights in the tourists' agent's acceptation of the
+word, and it is likely enough that you will think three hours devoted to
+the city amply sufficient. Yet its situation at the end of a narrow spit
+like that at the entrance to the Suez Canal&mdash;in mid-sea as it were&mdash;its
+associations, and its brightness and cleanliness, make it for some the
+most charming of Spanish towns. Crenellated walls enclose it on all
+sides, the space between them and the water's edge being devoted to
+quays, promenades, and gardens. There are forts at the extremity of the
+peninsula&mdash;the<a name="page_009" id="page_009"></a> Isla de Leon, as it is called. The streets are all
+very straight, very narrow, and very clean. Through the <i>rejas</i> across
+the doorways you obtain glimpses of trim little patios, bedecked with
+flowering plants. Occasionally you come out into a little square,
+prettily laid out with gardens, like the Plaza de Mina, where the
+loungers asleep on the seats irresistibly recall dear old busy London.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_002" id="ill_002"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_002-ayamonte_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_002-ayamonte_sml.jpg" width="475" height="550" alt="AYAMONTE (THE GATEWAY OF ANDALUSIA)" title="AYAMONTE (THE GATEWAY OF ANDALUSIA)" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">AYAMONTE (THE GATEWAY OF ANDALUSIA)</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The charming Parque Genovés, bordering the sea, reminds us of the great
+merchant race of Italy who had their warehouses here. It is exquisite to
+walk by night along the sea wall, which at some points rises sheer
+upwards from the water, and to inhale the breezes blown straight across,
+one would like to think, from the West Indies. You will crave for that
+cool wind afterwards, in the parched interior of Andalusia.</p>
+
+<p>From Cadiz you may go to Seville by steamer up the Guadalquivir, but it
+is far from being an interesting trip. The river is about as
+picturesque, and in the same way, as the Dutch Rhine. However, in these
+days of distorted æsthetics&mdash;when all that we thought beautiful we are
+now told is ugly, and <i>vice versa</i>&mdash;it is quite possible that some
+rapturous travellers will extol the mystical loveliness of the plains of
+the Guadalquivir, rating their charms far above the vulgar, blatant
+scenery of Switzerland and the Riviera, which is at the disadvantage of
+being at once realized by the mere ordinary person. <i>En passant</i> I
+cannot refrain from expressing my wonder why<a name="page_010" id="page_010"></a> superior people of this
+sort go abroad. If Rhenish and Italian panoramas are suggestive to them
+only of oleographs and Christmas numbers, have we not our Abanas and
+Pharpars in England&mdash;the Essex marshes, the treeless downs of Sussex,
+the odoriferous banks of the Mersey, for instance?</p>
+
+<p>But I digress&mdash;and I counsel you against doing so, but recommend you to
+proceed to Seville, if that be your destination, by rail direct. The
+journey occupies eight and a half hours, and is not among the most
+agreeable experiences of a lifetime. The railway runs right round the
+bay of Cadiz, touching several towns of importance. That any of them are
+worth a break of journey I doubt. Puerto Santa Maria is said to be much
+resorted to by toreros and their admirers. I have never heard what
+attracts them there, but indeed my interest in bull-killing was never
+more than languid. The country round the bay is marshy. It is traversed
+by the river Guadalete, beside which, it seems, Don Roderic was not
+slain, and the battle never took place. You must look for the scene of
+that epoch-making encounter farther towards the strait near the Rio
+Barbate.</p>
+
+<p>Between Cadiz and Seville you stop at the buffet of Jerez to drink a
+glass of sherry in its native place. As most people know, all the good
+wine comes to England; but at Jerez I think, in all reason, the price of
+the wine might be a little lower and its quality a good deal higher. The
+city, of which I only caught a<a name="page_011" id="page_011"></a> glimpse, looks like an inland Cadiz,
+very clean, white, sunny, and bright.</p>
+
+<p>And so we creep onwards over dreary country&mdash;like the South African
+veld&mdash;to Lebrija, an old Moorish town with a great church on a height,
+apparently the only building of note in the place. Further on is Utrera,
+renowned for bulls and for possessing one of the thirty deniers for
+which Judas sold his Master. It should be an interesting town, with its
+Moorish castle and walls still extant. But the same individuality is not
+to be expected of the smaller Spanish as of the lesser Italian cities;
+for the history of the one country has been a record of steady
+centralization; of the other, obstinate decentralization. In Utrera, and
+Moron, and Lebrija&mdash;even in Cadiz and Granada&mdash;there were no independent
+princes or ambitious municipalities to foster and to reward native art.
+The genius and talent of Spain flocked to great centres like Seville,
+Toledo, Valladolid, and Zaragoza, and became ultimately concentrated in
+Madrid. We read the same story in our own country; and in fact it is
+impossible to resist the dangerous and obvious conclusion that
+centralization and unity are good things for nations but bad things for
+art.<a name="page_012" id="page_012"></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II<br /><br />
+<small>THE PEARL OF ANDALUSIA</small></h2>
+
+<p><a name="ill_003" id="ill_003"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_003-seville_a_street_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_003-seville_a_street_sml.jpg" width="337" height="550" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;A STREET" title="SEVILLE&mdash;A STREET" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;A STREET</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="nind">S<small>EVILLE</small>, in the glory of the Andalusian summer, is a city of white and
+gold. Her brilliancy dazzles you, as it dazzled those who wrote of her,
+a little wildly, as the eighth wonder of the world. Luis Guevara, a poet
+born within her walls, declared that she was not the eighth but the
+first of those wonders. In our own day, men of genius have felt her
+spell. "Seville," says Valdés, "has ever been for me the symbol of
+light, the city of love and joy." So much few northerners would feel
+justified in saying. To them this must be the city that most closely
+corresponds to their preconceived ideas of the sunny and romantic South.
+To Seville belong the sweep of lute-strings, the click of the castanets,
+the serenade, and above all, the bull-fight. There is something feminine
+about the radiant city, compared with the masculine strength of Toledo
+and Avila, and the harsh decadence of Granada. You will agree that no
+town is prettier, except perhaps Cadiz. So Byron said, and by him and
+all the poets of his school&mdash;Alfred de Musset for one&mdash;the city by the
+Guadalquivir was<a name="page_013" id="page_013"></a> ardently loved. Yet though so conventionally
+romantic of aspect, Seville is busy, prosperous, and well peopled,
+before all other Andalusian towns. The blood still courses hotly through
+her veins&mdash;her vitality intoxicates. If you come from Cordova or
+Granada, you feel as though you were returning to the world. Here is
+life, here is gaiety; yet your driver the next instant takes you into a
+narrow, winding street, no broader than an alley, where absolute silence
+reigns. The windows are shuttered, no one seems to stir in the patios.
+There reigns a Sabbath-like calm. A minute later you are in a broad
+plaza, where electric cars boom and whirr, where all is animation and
+bustle. Such contrasts are very sharp in this city, where the streets
+exist simply for folk to dwell in, the squares and paseos for them to
+gather in and do their business. There are notable exceptions, it is
+true. There is no want of life in the Sierpes, the narrow street which
+is the Strand and Charing Cross of Seville. Here you return again and
+again, feeling it is the focus of the city's life. Little better than a
+lane is the Sierpes, where no wheeled traffic can pass. It is amazingly
+dark in the summer, when awnings are drawn right across it from roof to
+roof, and penetrating into it from the sunny plaza, it is a little time
+before you can accustom your eyes to the shadow. Here are the best
+shops, the banks, and those elegant and ostentatious casinos, where the
+aristocracy and leisured class lounge and smoke, and survey at their
+ease the unceasing procession of passers by.<a name="page_014" id="page_014"></a> There are cafés here of a
+different sort, some of which are frequented by the bull-fighters and
+their admirers. Here too may be seen in all his glory that peculiar type
+of Andalusian, the "Majo," a curious blend of the English "masher" the
+"sporting man" and the "troubadour"! The people sit in the cafés to see
+the others pass, and the others walk down the street to see the people
+in the cafés. This is a form of amusement and exercise common on the
+Continent, and acclimatized already at our English seaside towns.
+Selling lottery tickets is a great industry in the Sierpes, the sale of
+tickets for the next <i>Corrida de toros</i> even more so. The boot-blacking
+saloons remind the American visitor of his native land. For his
+delectation the <i>New York Herald</i> is displayed in the windows of the few
+booksellers. There is nothing about this gay little thoroughfare to
+remind us of the past. The history of Seville is more easily recoverable
+by the fancy, when you are seated by the Guadalquivir, in sight of the
+Torre del Oro, on the spot perhaps where George Borrow, in an unwonted
+fit of hysteria, wept over the beauty of the scene before him.</p>
+
+<p>Ph&oelig;nician, Carthaginian, Roman, Vandal, Goth, and Moor&mdash;the city has
+known them all and outlived them all. There seems to have been a
+settlement of the Turdetani here, before the first Ph&oelig;nicians came.
+The name at all events was bestowed by the Tyrian traders, if it is
+really derived from "sephela," a plain. Then came the Carthaginians,
+whom the Spaniards<a name="page_015" id="page_015"></a> accuse of having corrupted the pure and
+simple-minded natives. The city became known to the little world of
+civilization, and was spoken of by Grecian geographers as "Ispola" and
+"Hispalis." The terrible Hamilcar reduced the greater part of Spain to
+the Punic yoke. He and his successor Hasdrubal filled Andalusia with
+their massive ungainly fortresses. Salambo, the Semitic Venus, was
+worshipped on the banks of the Guadalquivir. From time to time, we doubt
+not, human sacrifices stained the altars of Baal. One wonders if the
+descendants of the Carthaginians became identified with the other great
+Semitic people, and passed as Jews. Certainly it is otherwise a little
+difficult to account for the presence in Spain of the Israelites in such
+numbers at a very early period.</p>
+
+<p>The Carthaginians fought hard for the province of Bætica, but Punic
+force and fraud were alike powerless before the sword of Scipio. The
+dominion of the province of Iberia passed to Rome. When the conquering
+hero turned his face homewards to claim his triumph, he was mindful of
+his warworn veterans. For them the journey back to Italy was too long
+and wearisome; they were content to die in the land they had conquered.
+Outside Hispalis a place of rest and refreshment was found for them in
+the village of Sancios. Scipio laid there the foundation of a colony,
+bestowed it on his veterans, and named it Italica, in memory of their
+fatherland. And thus was founded the first Latin-speaking settlement
+outside Italy. It<a name="page_016" id="page_016"></a> lies&mdash;all that remains of it&mdash;on the slopes of the
+hills that bound the prospect westwards.</p>
+
+<p>Hispalis, not overshadowed by its new neighbour, flourished under the
+Roman sway. Julius Cæsar besieged the city, which was garrisoned by
+Pompey's partisans, and inscribed the date of its capture in the
+calendar of the Republic (August 9, <small>B.C.</small> 45). His fleet, they say, lay
+in the river between the Torre del Oro and the Palace of San Telmo. The
+townsfolk were devoted to him, and he renamed the place Julia Romula. As
+a Roman colony the town had a senate and consuls, ediles and censors.
+The wall Cæsar built endured intact until the time of Juan II., so that
+monarch wrote in his Chronicle.</p>
+
+<p>While its Punic physiognomy was hard to efface, Seville soon became in
+spirit a Latin town. All Andalusia was in course of time thoroughly
+Romanized. Seneca, Lucan, the Ælii, as most of us remember, were
+Spaniards&mdash;if Spaniards could be said, as yet, to have existed.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the era of persecutions, the establishment of Christianity and
+the disappearance of Astarte and Baal from the forum and the temple&mdash;to
+be worshipped, perhaps, for a little while longer in the recesses of the
+mountains, where Islam lingered in after times. Presently came the
+Vandals, and their fury having spent itself, they made Seville their
+capital, though they did <i>not</i> give their name, as some have thought, to
+Andalusia. When they passed<a name="page_017" id="page_017"></a> over&mdash;a whole nation&mdash;to Africa, the
+barbarous Suevi took possession of their old camping-ground. The Suevian
+king, Recchiarus, became a Catholic, at the persuasion of Sabinus,
+Bishop of Seville, in the year 448. We next hear of him murdering the
+Byzantine ambassador Censorius, in this city, and of being defeated and
+slain by the Visigoths in 456. Now comes an interregnum of seventy-five
+years. The Suevi were expelled from Seville, but their conquerors did
+not occupy the town. It must have been governed by its Catholic bishops,
+who are spoken of as miracles of wisdom and sanctity. Under Theudis the
+Gothic king, Seville again rose to the rank of a capital&mdash;or at any rate
+shared the dignity with Toledo. Here Theudis was assassinated, and his
+son and successor Theudisel also, a few months later. The latter
+sovereign is described as a detestably wicked person. He was of course
+an Aryan, and gave a shocking example of his hard-hearted incredulity.
+Among the hills where lies Italica is a village called San Juan de
+Aznalfarache. Near this in the sixth century was a tank which was
+miraculously filled once a year, when the Catholics resorted to it to
+baptize their catechumens. Theudisel had the tank, when it was dry,
+thoroughly investigated, and, satisfied that it was fed by no spring,
+had a lid fastened over it and sealed with his own seal. But next Easter
+it was full of water! Not to be baffled, the king dug a ditch to the
+depth of twenty-five feet all round the tank, but found<a name="page_018" id="page_018"></a> no trace of a
+spring. He would perhaps have gone on digging for years had not his
+nobles rid the world of so sceptical a monarch.</p>
+
+<p>We come now to the days of good King Leovgild, who consolidated the
+Visigothic monarchy and warred successfully against the Greeks and
+barbarous Suevi. His son, Ermengild, being sent to govern Seville, was
+converted by Leander, the bishop of the city, to the Catholic faith. The
+prince thought he could give no better proof of his zeal for his new
+creed than by revolting against his father. A bloody war resulted.
+Ermengild was worsted and was shut up in Seville, while his father
+occupied Italica and pressed him closely. The rebels capitulated and
+were treated leniently. The prince afterwards headed a second revolt
+against his father, was captured and executed. He has been enrolled
+among the saints of the Catholic Church.</p>
+
+<p>It is quite conceivable that a man of fanatical temperament should feel
+himself called upon to effect the conversion of his fellows to what he
+believes to be the true faith, even at the cost of his kinsfolk's blood;
+but unfortunately for the Visigothic prince, his interests so coincided
+with his principles that worldly people not unnaturally suggest that the
+desire to wear his father's crown had as much to do with his action as
+the desire to convert his father's subjects.</p>
+
+<p>When Spain from Aryan became Catholic, Seville became the Metropolitan
+See, and Leander its Archbishop.<a name="page_019" id="page_019"></a> He was succeeded in that office by his
+brother Isidore, a much better man than he, and renowned as a doctor of
+the Church and writer on things generally. But by the end of the seventh
+century the primacy had passed to Toledo, and before the next century
+was fourteen years old the last of the Visigoths had reigned over Spain.</p>
+
+<p>After the victory over Roderic near Jerez, Tarik, the Moorish commander,
+marched straight upon Toledo. The reduction of Seville he left to his
+superior officer, Musa. The citizens offered, it is said, a stout
+resistance, and then retired to Beja, on the other side of the Guadiana.
+During the absence of the Moorish commander they recovered the city,
+only to be dispossessed and finally subjugated by his son, the famous
+Abd-el-Aziz, the Abdalasis of Spanish story. Thenceforward for 536 years
+Seville was known as Ishbiliyah, one of the fairest cities of Islam.</p>
+
+<p>When Musa was recalled to Damascus his son remained beside the
+Guadalquivir (as the river Bætis had now come to be called). He
+espoused, according to tradition, Roderic's widow, Exilona, who, legend
+says, had originally been a Moorish princess. For a brief period he
+dwelt in splendour in the old Acropolis, near where the Convent of La
+Trinidad now stands. But his enemies had been busy far away at the
+khalifa's court. While he was in the act of prayer in the mosque he had
+built adjacent to his palace, the messenger of death appeared. Exilona
+was left a second time a widow,<a name="page_020" id="page_020"></a> and to the aged Musa was shown, months
+later, the lifeless head of his valiant son. Under Abd-el-Aziz's
+immediate successors the seat of government of the latest province of
+the Moslem Empire was transferred from Seville to Cordova. From all
+parts of the East, but especially from Syria, men came flocking to
+Andalusia. Quarrels arose as to the partition of the conquered land
+between the Berbers, who had composed the hordes of Tarik and Musa, and
+the new Saracen settlers. Finally it was decreed that each tribe or
+nationality should be allotted that region which bore the most
+resemblance to its original place of abode. Under this arrangement
+Ishbiliyah was assigned to the people of Homs, the ancient Emesa, a
+Syrian town on the Orontes. (We are reminded of the parallel between
+Macedon and Monmouth.) But in the course of time the original derivation
+of the Spanish Moslems was half forgotten, and the classification was
+rather into pure-blooded Arabs and Muwallads or half-breeds.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_004" id="ill_004"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_004-seville-the-aceite-gate_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_004-seville-the-aceite-gate_sml.jpg" width="391" height="550" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;THE ACEITE GATE" title="SEVILLE&mdash;THE ACEITE GATE" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;THE ACEITE GATE</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Here at Seville the young Abd-er-Rahman arrived, to restore the empire
+of his forefathers, the Umeyyas, and under these walls the horde of the
+Abbassides was cut to pieces. Yet despite the prosperity she enjoyed
+under the Western Khalifate, the city murmured against Cordova, and more
+than once essayed to throw off the yoke. In Abdullah's reign (888-912) a
+chief named Ibrahim Ibn Hajjaj assumed semi-regal state at Ishbiliyah.
+When he rode forth he was attended by five hundred cavaliers, and he
+ventured to wear the<a name="page_021" id="page_021"></a> tiraz, the official insignia of the amirs. He
+was a liberal patron of the arts and letters. "In all the West,"
+exclaimed a delighted bard, "I found no noble man but Ibrahim, and he
+was nobility itself! When you have once lived within his shadow, to live
+elsewhere is misery." Such flattery did not delude Ibrahim into too
+great a confidence in his own power. He readily submitted to the great
+khalifa, Abd-ur-Rahman III., by whom the city was greatly favoured. The
+channel of the Guadalquivir was narrowed and deepened, the palm-tree
+introduced from Africa, and the city adorned with gardens and fine
+edifices. The splendour of the court of Cordova was reflected on
+Seville, which became famous as a seat of learning. In those days
+flourished Ahmed Ben Abdallah, surnamed "El Beji," or "The Sage," the
+author of an Encyclopædia of Sciences which was long esteemed a piece of
+marvellous erudition.</p>
+
+<p>Some strange and unexpected figures about this time flit across the
+stage of Andalusian history. The Northmen, or "Majus" as they were
+called by the Arabs, appeared in the year 844 off Lisbon. After
+spreading dismay through Lusitania they sailed their long ships
+southwards to Cadiz, and disembarked. They vanquished the khalifa's
+troops in three pitched battles, and penetrating into Seville sacked the
+rich city from end to end. Luckily they remained but a day and a night,
+and after sustaining several desperate attacks from the inhabitants of
+the country, with varying results, they retired overland to Lisbon,
+where<a name="page_022" id="page_022"></a> they re-embarked. They came again fifteen years later, and this
+time sailed up the Guadalquivir, burnt the principal mosque, and threw
+down the Roman walls. Then they made sail for the eastern coasts of
+Spain, where they were attacked and routed by the Saracen fleet. An army
+of demons must these strange uncouth pirates have seemed to the
+Andalusians, who knew not whence they came nor to what race of men they
+belonged.</p>
+
+<p>On the break-up of the Western Khalifate in 1009, the shrewd and
+powerful kadi, Mohammed Ben Abbad, secured the sovereignty of the city
+for himself and his descendants. He contrived to give his usurpation the
+appearance of legality. He espoused the cause of an impostor who
+personated the deposed khalifa, Hisham, and pretended to govern the city
+in his name. His power once firmly established, Ben Abbad disposed of
+his puppet, and announced that the khalifa was dead and had designated
+him his lawful successor. For the second time Seville rose to the rank
+of an independent State.</p>
+
+<p>The dynasty of Abbad, emulous of the glories of Cordova, outshone all
+the other rulers of Spain in elegance and culture. The city was adorned
+with beautiful gardens and buildings. Learning was held in honour, and
+the amir disputed the palm with a swarm of fellow-poets. Walking one day
+with his courtiers, on these very banks of the Guadalquivir, the Amir
+Mut'adid-billah observed the water lying glassy<a name="page_023" id="page_023"></a> beneath the waving
+light. He improvised a line comparing the surface of the stream to a
+cuirass, and called on the poet Aben Amr to complete the verse. This the
+laureate found some difficulty in doing, and to his chagrin he was
+anticipated by a girl of the people standing by, who contributed these
+lines:</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poetry">
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 0em;">"A strong cuirass, magnificent in combat,</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: .25em;">Like water frozen over."</span></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>The amir, far from resenting this intrusion of a bystander into the
+royal circle, bade the girl draw nearer and asked her name. She said
+that her name was Romikiwa and that she was the slave of Romiya. The
+prince then asked if she were married. The maiden replied that she was
+not. "It is well," said Mut'adid-billah, "for I propose to buy you and
+to marry you." It is to be presumed that Romiya had no objection to
+offer to this plan.</p>
+
+<p>This monarch, the son of the first Abbadite amir, could do other things
+than make verses. He was a mighty warrior in Islam, and kept a kind of
+garden planted with the skulls of his enemies, in the contemplation of
+which he took great delight. With a view to adding to his collection he
+made extensive conquests in what are now the provinces of Ciudad Real,
+Badajoz, and Alemtejo, and undertook successful expeditions against
+Cordova and Ronda. It was the misfortune of his son and successor,
+Mote'mid, to be the contemporary of those great and vigorous<a name="page_024" id="page_024"></a> Castilian
+kings, Fernando el Magno and Alfonso VI. Conscious of the weakness of
+his little State, the Amir of Ishbiliyah neglected no means of humouring
+his powerful neighbour. Fernando sent an armed mission to his court to
+demand the body of the holy martyr, Justa. But though Mote'mid eagerly
+extended all the assistance in his power, no trace of the relics could
+be obtained. The mission would have been obliged to return empty-handed
+had not St. Isidore (the brother of St. Leander) appeared in a dream to
+one of the Christian envoys and commanded him to convey his remains to
+Leon, instead of St. Justa's. The venerable prelate's body was
+discovered at Italica and carried off to the north, fragrant with
+balsamic odours and wrapped in costly silks. Mote'mid loudly lamented
+the loss of the remains. "Oh! venerable brother," he was heard to
+exclaim, "dost thou then leave me? Thou knowest what has passed between
+me and thee, and the love I bear thee. I pray thee to forget me never."
+Very remarkable words indeed, to fall from the lips of a Mohammedan
+sovereign in reference to a Catholic saint.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_005" id="ill_005"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_005-seville-a-courtyard_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_005-seville-a-courtyard_sml.jpg" width="373" height="550" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;A COURTYARD" title="SEVILLE&mdash;A COURTYARD" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;A COURTYARD</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>In truth the Spanish Moslems of that day were sadly wanting in zeal for
+their religion. "In those days," writes an Arab chronicler, "men of
+virtue and principle were rare among the people of Mohammed. The
+majority scrupled not to drink wine and to give themselves up to every
+kind of dissipation. The conquerors of Andalusia disputed about their
+slaves<a name="page_025" id="page_025"></a> and singing girls, passing their time in debauchery and
+pleasures, wasting the treasure of the State on amusement, and
+oppressing the people with exactions and tributes that they might buy
+the friendship of the tyrant Alfonso with costly presents. So things
+went on among the quarrelsome Mussulman chiefs, until, the conquerors
+and the conquered alike prostrated and the kings and captains having
+lost their pristine worth, the warriors became cowards, the people
+vegetated in misery and dejection, the whole of society became corrupt,
+and the lifeless, soulless body of Islam was only a decaying carcase.
+The Moslems who did not bow beneath the yoke of Alfonso consented to pay
+him annual tributes, constituting themselves in this manner mere tax
+collectors for the Christian king on their own territories. Meanwhile
+the affairs of Islam were directed by Jews, who obtained the offices of
+wizir, hagib, and khatib, reserved in another age to the most
+illustrious of the citizens. The Christians devastated the beautiful
+land of Andalusia, and carried off captives and booty, burning villages
+and threatening the towns."</p>
+
+<p>In pursuance of his policy of conciliation, Mote'mid gave his daughter
+Zayda in marriage to Alfonso VI., her dowry being all the towns Mut'adid
+had conquered in New Castile. Lucas of Tuy says the damsel was taken
+"quasi pro uxore ut præmissam est." But this ambiguous union did not
+avert a serious rupture between the sovereigns a year or two later.
+When<a name="page_026" id="page_026"></a> the Castilian king sent two ambassadors to Seville to collect his
+tribute, one of them, a Jew, conducted himself so haughtily that the
+exasperated Moslems stabbed him to death, letting the Christians escape
+without serious injury. This outrage meant war. Mote'mid cast about him
+for an ally. No help was to be found in Spain, and with inward
+misgivings, no doubt, the Abbadite amir called on the Almoravides of
+Africa to uphold the cause of Islam. Warned of the danger of this
+course, Mote'mid is said to have replied, "Better be a camel driver in
+the African desert than a swineherd in Castile." The Almoravides came
+and routed the Christians. They returned to Africa, and then came again,
+this time reducing all the petty Mussulman States beneath their sway. In
+1091 Ishbiliyah became a mere provincial centre, the seat of a Berber
+governor. Mote'mid was sent in chains to Africa, where he died four
+years later.</p>
+
+<p>The Almoravide rule was of scant duration. Fifty-five years later all
+Andalusia was annexed to the empire of the Almohades. The third
+sovereign of the new dynasty dealt what seemed a decisive blow to the
+allied Christians at Alarcos in the year 1195. But the conquerors knew
+not how to follow up their victory. The Spaniards rallied, and in 1212
+was fought the battle of "Las Navas de Tolosa." The Mussulmans were
+totally defeated, and left, it is said, six hundred thousand dead upon
+the field. Yet the knell of Ishbiliyah had not yet sounded. The
+authority of the Almohade<a name="page_027" id="page_027"></a> khalifas was nominally recognized in the city
+sixteen years longer. In 1228 the last of the race of Abd-ul-Mumin to
+rule in Spain was expelled by the famous Ben Hud, who was himself slain
+by his rival Al Ahmar, the founder of the Nasrite dynasty of Granada,
+ten years later. In their despair the people of Seville turned once more
+to the African Almohades. But no new army of Ghazis crossed the strait
+to do battle with the Unbeliever. The Andalusians were left to fight
+their last fight unassisted. Cordova had fallen before St. Ferdinand,
+and the Sevillians provoked his anger by the murder of one of their
+chiefs who was devoted to his interests. At the eleventh hour the
+defence was entrusted&mdash;strangely enough for a Mohammedan community&mdash;to a
+junta composed of six persons. Their names are worth being recorded: Abu
+Faris Ben Hafs, Sakkaf, Ben Shoayb, Yahya Ben Khaldun, Ben Khiyar, and
+Abu Bekr Ben Sharih.</p>
+
+<p>Thus driven to bay, the Moors offered a determined resistance. They were
+attacked not only by the Castilians, but by their own co-religionists;
+for Al Ahmar, the new Amir of Granada, was serving with his followers
+under the banner of Ferdinand. The siege lasted fifteen months. A fleet
+was brought round from the shores of Biscay under the command of Admiral
+Ramon Bonifaz. The Moorish ships were dispersed and the chain which the
+defenders had stretched across the river broken. The besieged were thus
+cut off from their magazines in the suburb of Triana.<a name="page_028" id="page_028"></a> Meanwhile all the
+outlying posts had been taken by the Castilians, and the Moors were
+driven to take refuge within the walls. Only when threatened with famine
+did the garrison ask for terms. They offered to capitulate if they were
+allowed to destroy their principal mosque to save it from profanation.
+The Infante Alfonso replied that if a single brick was displaced, the
+whole population would be put to the sword. The terms finally accorded
+the besieged were, for that age, not ungenerous. A limited number of
+families were to be allowed to remain in the city, the lives and
+property of these and of the rest were to be respected, and the means of
+transport to Africa and other parts of the peninsula were to be provided
+for those who were to leave. Probably only a few thousand Moors remained
+in Seville. Abu Faris, magnanimously declining an honourable post
+offered him by the conqueror, retired to Barbary. Thither he was
+followed by thousands of his fellow-townsmen, while others accepted Al
+Ahmar's invitation to settle at Granada.</p>
+
+<p>Ferdinand took possession of the city on December 22, 1248. He took up
+his residence at the Alcazar, and allotted houses and lands to his
+officers, not forgetting even his Moorish auxiliaries. Among his first
+cares was the purification of the mosque and its conversion into a
+Christian church. It is interesting to note that the first of his
+knights to mount the Giralda Tower was a Scotsman named Lawrence Poore.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_006" id="ill_006"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_006-sevelle_torre_oro_catherdral_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_006-sevelle_torre_oro_catherdral_sml.jpg" width="550" height="372" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;THE TORRE DEL ORO AND THE CATHEDRAL" title="SEVILLE&mdash;THE TORRE DEL ORO AND THE CATHEDRAL" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;THE TORRE DEL ORO AND THE CATHEDRAL</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Seville had remained in the power of the Mussulmans<a name="page_029" id="page_029"></a> five hundred
+and thirty-six years. We, who see all Spain Spanish and remember it was
+so at the beginning, are apt to look on the Moorish occupation as a mere
+episode or interlude in the history of the country. It is difficult to
+realize that the sway of the Crescent lasted in Seville for as long a
+period as has passed with us since the death of King Edward III.</p>
+
+<p>Yet there are few monuments remaining to-day to commemorate a
+civilization which endured five centuries. The Moors have left their
+impress, it is true, in a scarcely definable way on the city, the
+physiognomy of which is more Oriental than that of Granada, a later seat
+of Mohammedan empire. But this is in great part due to the men who lived
+under the Christian kings, who had caught the spirit of the Moors and
+perpetuated their traditions of art and culture. Here we have no such
+mighty memorials of the vanished race as the Mezquita or the Alhambra.
+Still, a few memorials of that far-off age there are; and we will go in
+search of them.</p>
+
+<p>Here on the quays of the Guadalquivir rises a polygonal tower of three
+storeys, poetically termed the "Torre del Oro." But here we find no
+Danaë awaiting a rescuer, but only the harbour master and his
+assistants. When the Almohades ruled in Seville a great iron chain was
+drawn across the river, and a tower built on either side to support it.
+The tower on the Triana side has long since disappeared, but the "Torre
+del Oro" remains as it was built in 1220&mdash;<a name="page_030" id="page_030"></a>except, indeed, for the small
+turret or superstructure added in the eighteenth century. It is said,
+too, that it was once adorned with beautiful glazed tiles, from which
+(though this seems unlikely) it derived its name. In the days when it
+stood the brunt of the attack from the squadron of Ramon Bonifaz, it was
+connected with the Alcazar by a wall, called, in military language, a
+curtain. This was not demolished until the year 1821. At the same time
+disappeared the main entrance to the Alcazar.</p>
+
+<p>The Almohades did much to embellish and to improve the city during their
+century of sovereignty. The only important Mohammedan work remaining to
+us in Seville belongs to that period, and illustrates the victory of the
+African or Berber over the Byzantine influences traceable in earlier
+Moorish architecture. The new conquerors of Andalusia were a virile,
+hardy race, and there is something vigorous and coarse in their
+handiwork. They developed an excessive fondness for ornamentation which
+mars much of their work, and were too much addicted to the use of
+painted stucco and gilding. To them we owe the stalactite roofing,
+afterwards developed with such success at the Alhambra. "It is certain,"
+says Don Pedro de Madrazo, "that the innovations characteristic of
+Mussulman architecture in Spain during the eleventh and twelfth
+centuries cannot be explained as a natural modification of the Arabic
+art of the Khalifate, or as a prelude to the art of Granada,<a name="page_031" id="page_031"></a> for
+there is very little similarity between the style called Secondary or
+Mauritanian, and the Arab-Byzantine and Andalusian; while on the other
+hand it is evident that the Saracenic monuments of Fez and Morocco, of
+the reigns of Yusuf Ben Tashfin, Abdul Ben Ali, Al Mansûr, and Nasr,
+partake of the character of the ornamentation introduced by the
+Almohades into Spain."</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_007" id="ill_007"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_007-seville_giralda_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_007-seville_giralda_sml.jpg" width="327" height="550" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;THE GIRALDA" title="SEVILLE&mdash;THE GIRALDA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;THE GIRALDA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The most important example of this style is the far-famed Giralda Tower,
+at the north-eastern corner of the Cathedral, the most renowned of
+minarets and one of the strongest buildings in the world. It was built
+in the reign of Yakûb al Mansûr by an architect whose name is variously
+written Gabir, Hever, and Yever. Quantities of Roman remains and
+statuary were used in making the foundations. The wall at the base is
+nine feet in thickness, which increases with the height. The lower part
+is of stone, the upper part of brick. For the first fifteen metres the
+four faces of the tower are plain; at that height begins a series of
+vertical windows, mostly of two lights, some with the horseshoe, others
+with the pointed arch; while on either side the masonry is carved into
+what seem panels of trellis work. There is much in the details of this
+decoration to interest the student of Moorish art, who will recognize in
+them the inception of many forms developed (and not always to advantage)
+at Granada.</p>
+
+<p>But the Giralda as we now see it is a third as high<a name="page_032" id="page_032"></a> again as it was
+left by the Almohades. In their time it was crowned by a pinnacle to
+which were attached four balls of gilded copper&mdash;one of which was so
+large, we are told, that the city gate had to be widened that it might
+be brought hither. The iron bar supporting the balls weighed about ten
+hundredweights, and the whole was cast by a Sicilian Arab named Abu
+Leyth at a cost of about fifty thousand pounds of our money. The balls
+were thrown down by an earthquake in 1395, when their proportions were
+carefully ascertained.</p>
+
+<p>It was not till 1568 that the upper stage of the fabric, a graceful
+Renaissance superstructure, was added by Fernando Ruiz. In the same year
+Morel's great statue of Faith, cast in bronze, was placed on the apex to
+symbolize the triumph of Christianity over the creed of Islam. It is a
+clever piece of workmanship, for though it weighs twenty-five
+hundredweights and measures fourteen feet in height, it sways and turns
+with every wind. Hence the name applied to the Tower&mdash;Giralda, from <i>que
+gira</i>, "which turns."</p>
+
+<p>The first thing you will be asked to do by the guides at Seville is to
+mount the Giralda, which you do by means of thirty-five inclined planes,
+up which a horse might be ridden with ease to the very top. Each stage
+of the ascent is named: "El Cuerpo de Campañas," after its fine peal of
+bells, one of which weighs eighteen tons; "El Cuerpo del Reloj," after
+the clock first set up in 1400&mdash;the earliest tower-clock<a name="page_033" id="page_033"></a> in Spain. Then
+there are the prettily-named floors of the Lilies and the Stars. Some of
+the rooms are inhabited by the bell-ringers, who may at times be heard
+practising not only the chimes but the peculiar guitar-playing of
+Andalusia.</p>
+
+<p>The view from the summit of the tower I think, on the whole,
+disappointing. The principal buildings of the city are too closely
+grouped below the spectator to give a very fine effect to the panorama,
+and the country round is not beautiful. Looking across the arid region
+beyond the river, it is hard to believe that in Moorish times it was
+renowned for its beauty and fertility and compared by Arabic writers to
+the Garden of Eden. Looking down we scan the white city, a labyrinth of
+lanes and alleys, only here and there a plaza opening like a lake among
+the closely-set roofs. Far away to the north the Sierra Morena limits
+the prospect. How often, when from this tower the muezzin proclaimed the
+Islamic profession of faith, his eyes must have lingered apprehensively
+on those mountains from whose crests the Christian seemed to hurl back
+defiance and repudiation.</p>
+
+<p>For the Giralda was the minaret of the great mosque begun by Yusuf, the
+son of Abd-ur-Rahman, in 1171, and completed by his son and successor,
+Yakub al Mansûr. The earlier mosque on the same site had been destroyed
+by the Normans, but some portions of it seem to appear in the horseshoe
+arches of the Puerta del Lagarto and the northern wall of the<a name="page_034" id="page_034"></a> Patio de
+los Naranjos. This latter court, which shuts in the Cathedral on the
+north side, contains the fountain at which the devout Moslems performed
+their ablutions. The picturesque Puerta del Perdon, through which you
+pass on your way into the town, is a Mudejar, not a Moorish, horseshoe
+arch, erected by Alfonso XI. to commemorate the victory at the Salado in
+the year 1340. The doors with bronze plates, despite their Arabic
+inscriptions, also date from that time. The gate was restored in the
+sixteenth century and adorned with sculptures. The terra-cotta statues
+of St. Peter and St Paul on the outer side are the work of Miguel
+Florentin, one of the earliest of the apostles of Renaissance sculpture
+to settle in Spain. The relief over the arch, representing the expulsion
+of the money-changers from the Temple, is also by him, and commemorates
+the substitution of the Lonja or Bourse for this gate as a rendezvous
+for merchants. The belfry storey is modern. At the little shrine just
+inside, to the left on entering, may be seen a "Christ bearing the
+Cross," by Luis de Vargas. The money-changers and brokers have gone, but
+this gate remains a favourite haunt of the gossips and loungers of
+Seville, and in the cool of the evening is occupied by some pleasant
+little family groups from the adjoining houses. The southern side of the
+patio is occupied by the Cathedral, the western by the church or chapel
+of the Sagrario. The house on the north side inside the old Moorish
+wall, to the right of the Giralda gate<a name="page_035" id="page_035"></a> (on entering), is occupied
+by the Biblioteca Colombina, bequeathed by the son of Columbus. The
+pulpit from which St. Vincent Ferrer, the "Angel of the Judgment,"
+thundered forth his terrific fulminations against sinners, Jews, and
+heretics, I omitted to notice.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_008" id="ill_008"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_008-seville_gardens-alcazar-a_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_008-seville_gardens-alcazar-a_sml.jpg" width="372" height="550" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR" title="SEVILLE&mdash;GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Everyone who reaches the Patio de los Naranjos for the first time is
+sure to enter the Cathedral, which he should not do until the Alcazar at
+least has been visited. Not that the two great buildings of Seville
+exhibit any transition of style from the one to the other, but because,
+having begun the consideration of Moorish architectural work, we ought
+naturally to pass on immediately to the Mauresque work of the first
+century of Castilian rule.</p>
+
+<p>The group of buildings which for greater clearness we will call, with
+the Spaniards themselves, the Alcazares lie to the south of the
+Cathedral, and are surrounded by an embattled wall built by the Arabs.
+This enclosure, it should be understood, includes a great many private
+houses and open spaces besides the Alcazar proper. Immediately inside
+the wall are two squares called the Patio de las Banderas and Patio de
+la Monteria. At the far end of the former is the office of the governor
+of the palace, and to the right of this is an entrance whence a
+colonnaded passage called the Apeadero leads straight through to the
+gardens, or, by turning to the right, to the Patio del Leon. On one side
+this latter square communicates with the Patio de la Monteria; on the
+other side is the Palace<a name="page_036" id="page_036"></a> of the Alcazar itself. I hope this will make
+the rather puzzling topography of the place a little more intelligible.</p>
+
+<p>Whether or not the Roman "Arx" stood on this spot, as tradition avers, I
+cannot pretend to say. But there is no room for doubt that a palace
+stood here in the days of the Abbadite amirs, and that this building was
+restored and remodelled by the Almohades. To outward seeming the Alcazar
+is as Moorish a monument as the Alhambra. In reality, few traces remain
+of the palace raised by the Moslem rulers of either dynasty, and the
+present building was mainly the work of the Castilian kings&mdash;especially
+of Pedro the Cruel. But though built under and for a Christian monarch,
+it is practically certain that the architects were Moors and good
+Moslems, and that their instructions and intentions were to build a
+Moorish palace. Historically, you may say, the Alcazar is a Christian
+work; artistically, Mohammedan.</p>
+
+<p>The actual palace occupies only a small part of the site of the older
+structures, and incorporates but a few fragments of their fabrics. Since
+Pedro the Cruel's day, so many sovereigns have restored, remodelled, and
+added to the building, that it is far from being homogeneous, though we
+can hardly agree with Contreras that it is "far from being a monument of
+Oriental art."</p>
+
+<p>Pedro built more than one palace, or, more correctly, two or three wings
+of the same palace, in this enclosure.<a name="page_037" id="page_037"></a> Traces of his Stucco Palace
+(Palacio del Yeso) remain. Pedro looms very large in the history of
+Seville. He plays as prominent a part here as Harûn-al-Rashid in the
+story of Bagdad. He was fond of the Moors, and affected their costumes
+and customs. He also favoured the Jews, and was alleged by his enemies
+to be the changeling child of a Jewess. His treasurer and trusted
+adviser was an Israelite named Simuel Ben Levi. He served the king long
+and faithfully, till one day it was whispered that half the wealth that
+should fill the royal coffers had been diverted into his own. Ben Levi
+was seized without warning and placed on the rack, whereupon he expired,
+not of pain, but of sheer indignation. Under his house&mdash;so the story
+goes&mdash;was found a cavern in which were three piles of gold and silver,
+twice as high as a man. Pedro on beholding these was much affected. "Had
+Simuel surrendered a third of the least of these piles," he exclaimed,
+"he should have gone free. Why would he rather die than speak?"</p>
+
+<p>Stories innumerable are told of this king, a good many, no doubt, being
+pure inventions. There is no reason to question the account of his
+treatment of Abu Saïd, the Moorish Sultan of Granada. This prince had
+usurped the throne, and being solicitous of Pedro's alliance, came to
+visit him at the Alcazar with a magnificent retinue. The costliest
+presents were offered to the Castilian king, whose heart, however, was
+bent on possessing the superb ruby in the regalia<a name="page_038" id="page_038"></a> of his guest. Before
+many hours had passed, the Moors were seized in their apartments and
+stripped of their raiment and valuables. Abu Saïd, ridiculously tricked
+out, was mounted on a donkey, and with thirty-six of his courtiers,
+hurried to a field outside the town, where they were bound to posts. A
+train of horsemen appeared, Don Pedro at their head, and transfixed the
+helpless men with darts, the king shouting, as he hurled his missiles at
+his luckless guest: "This for the treaty you made me conclude with
+Aragon! This for the castle you took from me!" The ruby which had been
+the cause of the Moor's death was presented by his murderer to the Black
+Prince, and now adorns the crown of England.</p>
+
+<p>Nor did Pedro confine his fury to the sterner sex. Doña Urraca Osorio,
+because her son was concerned in Don Enrique's uprising, was burned at
+the stake on the Alameda. Her faithful servant, Leonor Dávalos, seeing
+that the flames had consumed her mistress's clothing, threw herself into
+the pyre to cover her nakedness, and was likewise burnt to ashes. Having
+conceived a passion for Doña Maria Coronel, the king caused her husband
+to be executed in the Torre del Oro. The widow, far from yielding to his
+entreaties and threats, took the veil and destroyed her beauty by means
+of vitriol. Pedro at once transferred his attentions to her sister, Doña
+Aldonza, and met with more success. If a chronicler is to be believed,
+he threw his brother Enrique's young daughter naked to the lions,<a name="page_039" id="page_039"></a> like
+some Christian virgin martyr. The generous (or possibly overfed) brutes
+refused the proffered prey, and the whimsical tyrant ever afterwards
+treated the maiden kindly. In memory of her experience, she was known as
+"Leonor de los Leones."</p>
+
+<p>The misdeeds and eccentricities of this extraordinary monarch have been
+chronicled by Ayala (who was a partisan of Don Enrique), and given a
+wider circulation by the pen of Prosper Mérimée. I cannot very well omit
+the oft-told tale that gives its name to the curious little street, near
+the Casa de los Abades, called Calle Cabeza de Don Pedro. There the
+king's head may be seen in effigy high up on the wall at the corner of
+the street. Pedro, prowling about the town after dark, had a quarrel
+with a passer-by to whom, of course, he was unknown, and whom he
+incontinently ran through the body. Thinking there had been no witness
+to his crime, he stalked back to his palace. Next day he summoned the
+Alcalde of Seville to his presence and asked for news of the town. The
+magistrate told him that the body of a man had been found, murdered by
+whom no one knew. The king would suffer no laxity on the part of his
+officers. If the assassin were not discovered the alcalde must pay the
+penalty of the crime with his own life. Luckily for the magistrate, an
+old dame had beheld the encounter of the previous night, and now
+hastened to him with the surprising news that the man he sought after
+was no other than his majesty. She had recognized him beyond all<a name="page_040" id="page_040"></a>
+possibility of doubt, not only by his features, but by the peculiar
+clicking of the royal knees. The alcalde hanged the king in effigy and
+invited him to the spectacle. "It is well," said the prince, after an
+ominous pause, "I am satisfied. Justice has been done."</p>
+
+<p>I have told the tale rather hurriedly, as it is far from being well
+authenticated, and because it will doubtless be familiar in some form or
+another to most readers. That Pedro had a sense of humour is shown by
+yet another incident. A priest for murdering a shoemaker was condemned
+by the ecclesiastical tribune to be suspended from his sacerdotal
+functions for the space of twelve months. On hearing this Pedro decreed
+that any tradesman who murdered a priest should be punished by being
+restrained from the exercise of his trade for the like period.</p>
+
+<p>But now let us return to the palace of which the sinister king seems the
+presiding genius.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_009" id="ill_009"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_009-seville_gardens-alcazar-b_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_009-seville_gardens-alcazar-b_sml.jpg" width="380" height="550" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR" title="SEVILLE&mdash;GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Crossing the Plaza del Triunfo, which lies between the Cathedral and the
+old Moorish walls, we enter the Patio de las Banderas, so called either
+because a flag was hoisted here when the royal family was in residence,
+or on account of the trophy, composed of the arms of Spain with crossed
+flags, displayed over one of the arches. Pedro was accustomed to
+administer justice, tempered with ferocity, after the Oriental fashion,
+seated on a stone bench in a corner of this square. The surrounding
+private houses occupy the site of the old<a name="page_041" id="page_041"></a> Palace of the Almohades,
+and one of the halls&mdash;the Sala de Justicia&mdash;is still visible. It is
+entered from the Patio de la Monteria. Contreras assigns a date to this
+room even earlier than the advent of the Almohades. It is square, and
+measures nine metres across. The stucco ceiling is adorned with stars
+and wreaths, and bordered by a painted frieze. The decorations consist
+chiefly of inscriptions in Cufic characters. The right-angled apertures
+in the walls were closed either by screens of translucent stucco or by
+tapestries, "which must," says Gestoso y Perez, "have made the hall
+appear a miracle of wealth and splendour." It was in this hall, often
+overlooked by visitors, that Don Pedro overheard four judges discussing
+the division of a bribe they had received. The question was abruptly
+solved by the division of the disputants' heads and bodies. Thanks to
+its isolation, the Sala de Justicia escaped the dreadful "restoration"
+effected in the middle of the nineteenth century by the Duc de
+Montpensier. The house No. 3, Patio de las Banderas, formed part, in the
+opinion of Gestoso y Perez, of the Palacio del Yeso, or Stucco Palace,
+of Don Pedro.</p>
+
+<p>Passing through the colonnaded Apeadero, built by Philip III. in 1607,
+and once used as an armoury, we reach the Patio del Leon, where
+tournaments used to be held, and stand in front of the Palace of the
+Alcazar. The façade is gorgeous yet elegant, of a gaudiness that in this
+brilliant city of golden sunshine and white walls is not obtrusive. Yet,
+despite the<a name="page_042" id="page_042"></a> Moorish character of the decoration, the Arabic capitals
+and pilasters, and the square entrance "in the Persian style," the front
+is not that of an eastern palace; and it is without surprise that we
+read over the portal, in quaint Gothic characters, the legend: "The most
+high, the most noble, the most powerful, and the most victorious Don
+Pedro, commanded these Palaces, these Alcazares, and these entrances to
+be made in the year (of Cæsar) 1402" (1364). Elsewhere on the façade are
+the oft-repeated Cufic inscriptions: "There is no conqueror but Allah,"
+"Glory to our lord the Sultan" (Don Pedro), "Eternal glory to Allah,"
+etc., etc.</p>
+
+<p>This is a very different entrance from that of the Alhambra, the
+building on the model of which the Alcazar was undoubtedly planned. From
+the entrance a passage leads from your left to one extremity of the
+Patio de las Doncellas, the central and principal court of the palace.
+How this patio came to be so named I have never been able to ascertain.
+There is an absurd story to the effect that here were collected the
+girls fabled to have been sent by way of annual tribute by Mauregato to
+the khalifa. Had such a transaction taken place, the tribute would have
+been payable, of course, at Cordova, not at Seville. Moreover this court
+was among the works executed in the fourteenth century.</p>
+
+<p>The Alcazar strikes us (if we have come from Granada) as being on a much
+smaller scale than the<a name="page_043" id="page_043"></a> Alhambra. It is very much better preserved, as
+it should be, seeing that it is a century younger; and if it vaguely
+strikes one as being fitter for the abode of a court favourite than of a
+monarch, it impresses one as being fresher, more elegant&mdash;in a word,
+more artistic&mdash;than the older building.</p>
+
+<p>The Patio de las Doncellas is an oblong, and surrounded by an arcade of
+pointed and dentated arches which spring from the capitals of white
+marble columns placed in pairs. The middle arch on each side is higher
+than the others, and springs from oblong imposts resting on the twin
+columns and flanked by the miniature pillars characteristic of the
+Granadine architecture. The spandrils are beautifully adorned with
+stucco work of the trellis pattern. On the frieze above runs a flowing
+scroll with Arabic inscriptions, among them being "Glory to our lord,
+the Sultan Don Pedro," and this very remarkable text: "There is but one
+God; He is eternal; He was not begotten and has never begotten, and He
+has no equal." This inscription, opposed to the tenets of Christianity,
+was evidently designed by a Moslem artificer, who relied (and safely
+relied) on the ignorance of his employers. The frieze is decorated also,
+at intervals, by the escutcheons of Don Pedro and of Ferdinand and
+Isabella, and by the well-known devices of Charles V., the Pillars of
+Hercules with the motto "Plus Oultre." The inside of the arcade is
+ornamented with a high dado of glazed tile mosaic (azulejo),
+brilliantly<a name="page_044" id="page_044"></a> coloured and with the highly-prized metallic glint. The
+combinations and variations of the designs are very ingenious and
+interesting. This decoration probably dates from Don Pedro's time.
+Behind each central arch is a round-arched doorway, flanked by twin
+windows. These are framed in rich conventional ornamental work. Through
+little oblong windows above the doors light falls and illumines the
+ceilings of the apartments opening into the court. The ceiling of the
+arcade dates from the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella, but was restored
+in 1856. A deep cornice marks the division of the lower part of the
+court from the upper storey, the front of which, with its white marble
+arches, columns and balustrades, was the work of Don Luis de Vega, a
+sixteenth-century architect.</p>
+
+<p>Three recesses in the wall to the left of the entrance are pointed out
+as the audience closets of King Pedro; but they are much more likely to
+be walled-up entrances to formerly existing corridors and chambers
+behind.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_010" id="ill_010"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_010-seville_patio_de_las_banderas_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_010-seville_patio_de_las_banderas_sml.jpg" width="383" height="550" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;PATIO DE LAS BANDERAS" title="SEVILLE&mdash;PATIO DE LAS BANDERAS" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;PATIO DE LAS BANDERAS</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The door facing this wall gives access to the Hall of the Ambassadors
+(Salon de los Embajadores), the finest apartment in this fairy palace.
+The doors are magnificent examples of inlay work, and were, according to
+the inscription on them, made by Moorish carpenters from Toledo in the
+year 1364. The hall is about thirty-three feet square, and exhibits a
+splendid combination of the various styles with the Gothic and
+Renaissance. The ornamentation is<a name="page_045" id="page_045"></a> rich and elaborate almost beyond
+the possibility of description. The magnificent "half-orange" ceiling of
+carved wood rests on a frieze decorated with the Tower and Lion. Then
+come Cufic inscriptions on a blue ground and ugly female heads of the
+sixteenth century. Then, below another band of decoration, is a row of
+fifty-six busts of the Kings of Spain, from Receswinto the Goth to
+Philip III. These date, at earliest, from the sixteenth century. The
+wrought-iron balconies were made by Francisco Lopez in 1592. The
+decoration of this splendid chamber is completed by a high dado of blue,
+white, and green "azulejos." It was in this hall that Abu Saïd is said
+to have been received by his treacherous host.</p>
+
+<p>The Hall of the Ambassadors communicated on each side with the patio and
+adjoining halls by entrances composed of three horseshoe arches,
+supported by graceful pillars and enclosed in a circular arch.</p>
+
+<p>Through the arch facing the entrance from the patio we pass into a long
+narrow apartment, known as the Comedor, where the late Comtesse de Paris
+was born in 1848. To the north of the salon is a small square chamber,
+called the "Cuarto del Techo de Felipe Segundo," with a coffered ceiling
+dating from the time of that king. North of this room is the exquisite
+little Patio de las Muñecas (Court of the Dolls), purely Granadine in
+treatment. The rounded arches are separated by cylindrical pillars&mdash;I
+call them<a name="page_046" id="page_046"></a> so for want of a better word&mdash;which rest on slender columns
+of different colours, reminding one of the early or Cordovan style. The
+capitals are rich, the pillars they uphold decorated with vertical lines
+of Cufic inscriptions, many of which, says Contreras, are placed upside
+down. The walls and spandrils are tastefully adorned with stucco work of
+the trellis pattern, tiling and mosaic. This court, though still
+harmonious and beautiful, suffered rather than benefited by its
+restoration in 1843; but the architecture has been not unsuccessfully
+reproduced in the upper storey.</p>
+
+<p>This charming spot is by no means suggestive of deeds of blood and
+violence; yet, just as they point out the Salon de los Embajadores as
+the scene of the arrest of the Red Sultan by Don Pedro, so here do the
+guides place the scene of the murder of Don Fadrique by the truculent
+monarch&mdash;a fratricide to be avenged by another fratricide at Montiel.
+The Master of Santiago, to give the Don his usual title, after a
+successful campaign in Murcia, had been graciously received by his
+brother the king, and presently went to pay his respects in another part
+of the palace to the royal favourite, Maria de Padilla. It is said that
+she warned him of his impending fate; perhaps by her manner, if not by
+words, she tried to arouse in him a sense of danger, but the soldier
+prince returned to the king's presence. With a shout, Pedro gave the
+fatal signal. "Kill the Master of Santiago," he cried.<a name="page_047" id="page_047"></a> Guards fell upon
+the prince. His sword was entangled in his scarf, and he was butchered
+without mercy. His retainers fled in all directions, pursued by Pedro's
+guards. One took refuge in Maria de Padilla's own apartment, and tried
+to screen himself by holding her little daughter, Doña Beatriz, before
+him. Pedro tore the child away, and despatched the unfortunate man with
+his own hand. The murder took place on May 19, 1358.</p>
+
+<p>To the west of the court is a little room, elegantly decorated, and
+named after the Catholic Sovereigns, by whom it was restored. Their
+well-known devices appear, together with the Towers and Lions, among the
+decorations, which reveal the influence of the plateresque style. The
+north side of the patio is occupied by the Cuarto de los Principes, not
+to be confounded with a similarly named apartment on the floor above. At
+either end of this room is an arch, adorned with stucco work, admitting
+to a cabinet or alcove. That to the right has a fine artesonado ceiling,
+and that to the left is decorated in a species of Moorish plateresque
+style. An inscription states that the frieze was made in the year 1543
+by Juan de Simancas, master carpenter.</p>
+
+<p>East of the Patio de las Muñecas, and occupying the north side of the
+Patio de las Doncellas, is the long room called the Dormitorio de los
+Reyes Moros. All the apartments in the Alcazar are fancifully named, but
+the designation of none is quite so stupid and<a name="page_048" id="page_048"></a> misleading as this. The
+columns of the twin windows on either side of the door appear to date
+from the time of the Khalifate. The doors themselves are richly inlaid
+and painted with geometrical patterns. The three horseshoe arches
+leading to the <i>al hami</i>, or alcove, also seem to belong to the early
+period of Spanish-Arabic art. The room is so richly decorated that
+scarce a handbreadth of the surface is free from ornament.</p>
+
+<p>On the opposite side of the central court is the sumptuous Salon de
+Carlos V., the ceiling of which was constructed by order of the emperor,
+and is adorned with classical heads. The tile and stucco work is the
+finest in the palace. There is a legend to the effect that St. Ferdinand
+died in this room&mdash;on his knees, with a cord round his neck and a taper
+in his hand&mdash;but it is unlikely that this part of the palace existed in
+his time. The guide pointed out the room to the west of this salon as
+the chamber of Maria de Padilla, but this again is, to put it mildly,
+doubtful.</p>
+
+<p>The upper chambers of the Alcazar, which are not accessible to the
+general public, are very handsome. The floor overlooking the Patio del
+Leon is occupied by the Sala del Principe, with its beautiful spring
+windows, polychrome tiling, and columns brought from the old Moorish
+Palace at Valencia. Adjacent is the Oratory, built by order of Ferdinand
+and Isabella in 1504. The tile work is of extraordinary beauty, and
+shows that the Moors had not a monopoly of talent in this kind of
+decoration. The fine Visitation over the<a name="page_049" id="page_049"></a> altar is signed by Francesco
+Nicoloso, the Italian. On the same floor is the reputed bed-chamber of
+Don Pedro. Over the door may be seen four death's-heads, and over
+another entrance the curious figure of a man who looks back over his
+shoulder at a grinning skull. These gruesome designs commemorate the
+summary execution by the king of four judges whom he overheard
+discussing the division of a bribe. The royal apartments on this floor
+contain some precious works of art; but I abstain from mentioning the
+most remarkable of these, as pictures are so often transferred in Spain
+from one royal residence to another that such indications are often out
+of date before they are printed.</p>
+
+<p>The Alcazar, I think, disappoints most foreigners. The architectural and
+decorative work of the Spanish Moors and their descendants pleases
+people quite inexperienced in the arts by its mere prettiness, its
+brilliance, its originality, and its colour; and it delights still more
+those who are able to appreciate its marvellous combinations of
+geometrical forms, its exquisite epigraphy, and all its subtle details.
+But the average traveller stands between these two classes of observers.
+He looks for grandeur where he should expect only beauty, and his eye is
+wearied by the wealth of conventional ornamentation. What I think is
+conspicuously lacking in the Alcazar, and to almost the same extent in
+the Alhambra, is atmosphere. Memories do not haunt you in these gilded
+halls. There is nothing about them to suggest<a name="page_050" id="page_050"></a> that anything ever
+happened here. The legends tell us the contrary; but assuredly no one
+was ever less successful in impressing his personality on his abode than
+were the founders and inhabitants of the Alcazar.</p>
+
+<p>The gardens are really the most pleasing spot within the enclosure. They
+form a delicious pleasaunce, where the orange and citron diffuse their
+fragrance, and magic fountains spring up suddenly beneath the
+passenger's feet, sprinkling him with a cooling dew. I noticed some
+flower beds shaped like curiously formed crosses, which the gardener
+told me were the crosses of the orders of Calatrava, Santiago,
+Alcantara, and Montesa. You are also shown the Baths of Maria de
+Padilla, which are approached through a gloomy arched entrance. In the
+favourite's time they had no other roof than the sky, and no further
+protection from prying eyes than that afforded by a screen of orange and
+lemon trees. In Mohammedan times the baths were probably used by the
+ladies of the harem.</p>
+
+<p>But if the Alcazar is a disappointment to the majority of visitors, I
+cannot conceive the Cathedral being so, despite the unfavourable
+criticism to which it has been subjected. The exterior, it is true, is
+unimpressive, and the vastness of the pile is largely responsible for
+the powerful effect proclaimed by the interior. But when the worst has
+been urged, this, the third largest church in Christendom, remains a
+grand, a solemn, and a magnificent temple, thoroughly Christian in
+atmosphere and details.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_011" id="ill_011"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_011-seville_gardens_of_the_alcazar_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_011-seville_gardens_of_the_alcazar_sml.jpg" width="382" height="550" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR" title="SEVILLE&mdash;GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR</span>
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="page_051" id="page_051"></a></p>
+
+<p>I like the story of its foundation better than the silly tales about Don
+Pedro, or about crucifixes helping jilted damsels. It has, moreover, the
+very unusual merit of being true. After the conquest by St. Ferdinand
+the old mosque of the Almohades was "purified," and served as the
+cathedral till, towards the end of the fourteenth century, it became
+practically ruined by earthquakes. The dean and chapter took counsel
+together, and at a conclave held in the Court of the Elms, on the south
+side of the mosque, it was resolved to build a new church forthwith.
+Then uprose a zealous prebendary and cried: "Let us build a church so
+great that those who come after us will think us mad to have attempted
+it!" The proposal was adopted with acclamation; and the great-hearted
+priests bound themselves to contribute from their own stipends as much
+money as might be necessary, should the revenue of the See prove unequal
+to the cost of the undertaking. They could never hope to see the fruit
+of their labours. I do not think the name of any one of them has been
+preserved. The architect alike has been forgotten. All concerned sought
+only the greater glorification of their faith. Such greatness of spirit
+deserved a noble monument.<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[*]</a></p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[*]</span></a> Instances of this lofty spirit are frequent in the history
+of the Spanish peoples. When, after their first uprising against the
+mother country, the people of Honduras (Central America) met in Congress
+to frame a Constitution, a priest rose and proposed that before anything
+else was done, every slave in the country should be set free. And the
+measure was carried unanimously and enthusiastically by the Congress,
+which must have included many slaveholders. It took the United States
+forty years to follow this example.</p></div>
+
+<p>The Cathedral took one hundred and seventeen years to build, the first
+stone having been laid in 1402<a name="page_052" id="page_052"></a> and the lantern having been finished by
+Juan Gil de Hontañon in 1519. Of the mosque certain portions were left:
+the Giralda, the Patio de los Naranjos, and the portal called the Puerta
+del Lagarto. The latter is named after the wooden model of an alligator
+which hangs from the roof. Three or four centuries ago the mummified
+form of a real alligator hung there. It was one of the gifts of an
+Egyptian khalifa to the daughter of a Castilian king, whom he sought in
+marriage. The saurian was accompanied from the banks of the Nile by
+various animals peculiar to that fertile region, but these interesting
+offerings failed to make any impression on the heart of the Infanta.
+Thus the forlorn-looking effigy of the reptile is in reality an
+affecting memorial of unrequited love.</p>
+
+<p>Churches, it has been remarked, were considered in the Middle Ages very
+proper repositories for curiosities of all sorts. The cloister of the
+Lagarto contains also an elephant's tusk, weighing seventy pounds, and a
+horse's bit, said to be that of Babieca, the Cid's charger.</p>
+
+<p>Very grateful is the sudden cool of the great church when you enter it
+from the sun-scorched plaza. Then there comes over you a feeling of
+profound reverence, followed very soon by an infinite restfulness. There
+is no place in Seville where you more willingly linger. A holy calm
+pervades the whole building, and you wonder that it should have
+suggested to Théophile Gautier such fantastic comparisons. If it were
+not the<a name="page_053" id="page_053"></a> temple of Christ, I could believe it to be the temple of
+Silence.</p>
+
+<p>The Puerta del Lagarto is the favourite entrance, but when the day comes
+for a painstaking examination, you would do well to begin at one of the
+entrances in the west front. Of these there are three: the Puerta Mayor,
+the Puerta del Bautismo, and the Puerta San Miguel. All are enriched
+with good statuary, the graceful and vigorous statues of the side doors
+being the work of Pedro Millán, a fifteenth-century sculptor of renown.
+Entering, we set foot on the fine marble floor and make out the
+stupendous church to be composed of a nave and of two aisles on either
+side. The nave, you are told, is one hundred feet high and fifty feet
+wide. The noble columns, almost free of adornment, which uphold the
+spacious vaults recede in the far distance like trees in an overarching
+avenue. The effect, fine as it is, might have been much finer if the
+centre of the nave had not been blocked up by the choir. The "Trascoro,"
+or screen, facing the west entrance, is richly adorned with red columns.
+Over the altar is a fourteenth-century picture of the Madonna, and a
+painting by Pacheco, the Inquisitor, representing St. Ferdinand
+receiving the keys of Seville. Over one of the beautiful little side
+altars of the choir is one of the rare examples of good Spanish
+sculpture&mdash;a Virgin, by Juan Martinez Montañez. On the altar side the
+choir is shut off by a sixteenth-century railing, attributed to Sancho
+Muñoz. This<a name="page_054" id="page_054"></a> protects from intrusion their reverences the canons, who
+sit in stalls, exquisitely carved between the years 1475 and 1538. The
+patterns and coloured inlaid work of the backs reveal Moorish influence.
+The lectern was the work of Bartolomé Morel. When the lantern collapsed
+in 1888, the choir was severely damaged. The architect who restored the
+fabric proposed to move it considerably nearer the high altar, but the
+proposal was stupidly rejected. A good opportunity for improving the
+appearance of the Cathedral was thus lost.</p>
+
+<p>The retablo of the high altar is the quintessence of late Gothic
+sculpture. It is a marvellous work of extraordinary delicacy and
+elaboration. Each of the forty-five compartments into which it is
+divided contains a subject from the Bible or from the lives of the
+saints, carved, painted, or gilded with the rarest skill. Begun by the
+Fleming Dancart, in 1479, this wonderful triumph of the carver's art was
+completed by Spanish artists in 1526. The earlier work is in the middle.
+Crowning it is a gilt crucifix and the statues of Our Lady and St. John.</p>
+
+<p>There are some very interesting objects in the Sacristy, as it is
+called, between the reredos and the hind wall of the chancel. The
+sacristan will show you the reliquary, shaped like a triptych, which
+came from Constantinople and was presented to the old cathedral by
+Alfonso the Learned. The double folding door is also said to have come
+from the Moorish temple.<a name="page_055" id="page_055"></a> With a glance at the fine terra-cotta statues
+by Miguel Florentin, Juan Marin, and others, we pass behind the chancel
+wall, and see before us the plateresque Royal Chapel, built by Charles
+V. over the remains of certain of his ancestors. Beneath the altar lies
+the body of St. Ferdinand in crown and royal robes. He lies here in the
+heart of his fairest conquest, even as his descendants, Ferdinand and
+Isabella, sleep in the heart of Granada. You may see his sword, the
+handle of which was denuded of gems by Pedro the Cruel, lest they should
+excite the cupidity of others. That royal humorist also lies here, near
+his saintly ancestor and the one woman whom he ever loved, the gentle
+Maria de Padilla. Then there is to be seen the Vírgen de los Reyes, an
+image presented by St. Louis of France to St. Ferdinand of Castile.
+(Strange that when saints filled the thrones of Europe, things went on
+no better than they do now!) Another relic highly prized is the Vírgen
+de las Batallas, an ivory statuette which St. Ferdinand used to carry at
+his saddle-bow. These memorials of the heroic past give you little time
+or inclination for an examination of the chapel itself, which has a
+lofty dome, and is flanked at the entrance by twelve good statues by
+Peter Kempener&mdash;whom Spaniards call Campaña. At least (so I read) he
+drew them on the wall with charcoal for a ducat each, and they were
+executed by Lorenzo del Vao and Campos in 1553.</p>
+
+<p>This chapel and the reredos of the chancel must be<a name="page_056" id="page_056"></a> called, I suppose,
+the great sights of the Cathedral, though to some its chief treasures
+will be the numerous works of Murillo enshrined in its chapels and
+dependencies. For myself, I like the building for its own sake, or, to
+use a very hard-worked word, for its atmosphere. As you cross the nave,
+looking upwards, where the light streams through the tall clerestory
+windows, you will be tempted to neglect the dark chapels in the aisles,
+and to revel for a while in these exquisite symphonies in coloured
+glass. Few of them are of Spanish workmanship. Master Christopher the
+German (Micer Cristobal Aleman) began the first&mdash;the first stained-glass
+window in Seville&mdash;in 1504, the work being afterwards carried on by the
+German Heinrich, the Flemings Beernaert of Zeeland and Jan Beernaert,
+Carel of Bruges, and Arnulf of Flanders. The best windows are those
+adorned with the Ascension, St. Mary Magdalen, Lazarus, and the Entry
+into Jerusalem, by Arnulf and his brother, and the Resurrection, by
+Carel of Bruges.</p>
+
+<p>In the south transept is a monument, striking in itself and of very
+recent erection, which will in the course of time attract more pilgrims
+than the soldier saint's shrine. For here are contained the remains of a
+man who added not a Moorish city but a continent to the realm of Leon
+and Castile. The ashes of Christopher Columbus repose in a coffin which
+is borne on the shoulders of four figures of bronze, representing the
+kingdoms of Castile, Leon, Aragon, and Navarre.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_012" id="ill_012"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_012-seville_interior_of_the_cathedral_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_012-seville_interior_of_the_cathedral_sml.jpg" width="351" height="550" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL" title="SEVILLE&mdash;INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL</span>
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="page_057" id="page_057"></a></p>
+
+<p>These figures are not wanting in majesty and expression. All are crowned
+and wear semi-sacerdotal garb. Castile holds an oar, Leon a cross.
+Behind them come Aragon and Navarre, sombre of countenance, wearing
+shirts of mail. On the bosom of each is displayed the national
+escutcheon: the Towers of Castile, the Lions of Leon, the Bats of
+Aragon, and the Chains of Navarre. The pall bears words traced by
+Isabella herself:</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poetry">
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 0em;">"A Castilla y Leon,</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: .25em;">Nuevo mundo dió Colon,"</span></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="nind">and round the pedestal is an inscription which relates how the body of
+the immortal Admiral of the Indies was brought here when the "ungrateful
+America" revolted from the Spanish yoke. But however much the Spain of
+to-day may honour Columbus dead, it is hardly for her to reproach any
+land with ingratitude towards him.</p>
+
+<p>Half-way between the main entrance and the choir, the Great Navigator's
+son is buried. An inscription on a slab invites the reader to pray for
+the soul of Don Fernando Colon, who, as Ford very truly says, would have
+been considered a great man if he had been the son of a less great
+father. He rendered important services to literature, and left behind
+him a library of 15,000 volumes, including some manuscripts of extreme
+rarity. It was ultimately acquired by the Crown, and constitutes the
+basis of the Biblioteca Columbina, housed in the Patio de los Naranjos.<a name="page_058" id="page_058"></a></p>
+
+<p>The Royal Chapel is flanked by two little chapels, one of which,
+dedicated to St. Peter, contains some Zurbarans, impossible to
+distinguish in the dim light; while in the other (Capilla de la
+Concepcion grande) is a fine monument of Cardinal Cienfuegos and a
+crucifix attributed to Alonso Cano. Opening on to the north side are the
+chapels del Pilar, de las Evangelistas, de las Doncellas, de San
+Francisco, de Santiago, de las Escales, and del Bautisterio. In the
+latter is one of Murillo's most famous works, "The Vision of St. Anthony
+of Padua." Of Cano's works there is a specimen, the "Virgin and Child,"
+over the altar of Belen, adjacent to the Puerta de los Naranjos. Valdés
+Leal and Juan de las Roelas are represented in the chapel of Santiago,
+and Herrera the younger by an ambitious "Apotheosis of St. Francis" in
+the chapel of that saint. In the Capilla de las Escalas are two works of
+Luca Giordano, strong in drawing, colour, and character. The same chapel
+contains the fine tomb of Bishop Baltasar del Rio, dating from about
+1500.</p>
+
+<p>In the south aisle are the chapels of the Mariscal, San Andres, las
+Dolores, la Antigua, San Hermenegildo, San José, Santa Ana, and Santa
+Laureana. These chapels are richer in sculpture than in painting.
+Kempener designed the beautiful altar-piece in the Capilla del Mariscal,
+and Montañez the grand statue of St. Hermenegildo in his chapel. On the
+west side of the Puerta de San Cristobal, over a small altar, is the
+"Generacion" of Luis de Vargas&mdash;the much<a name="page_059" id="page_059"></a> praised "leg" picture which
+has given its name to the chapel. The fresco of St. Christopher that
+faces it is remarkable only for its size. You find such pictures of the
+saint at the entrances to many Spanish churches, the old belief having
+been that those who gazed upon it would not die unpreparedly that day. A
+much more ancient and interesting mural painting in the Byzantine style
+is to be seen in the large chapel of the "Antigua," where it was placed
+in 1578. The retablo of St. Anne's Chapel is also very old, and comes
+from the former cathedral. The next chapel, San José, is adorned by
+Valdés Leal's "Espousals of the Virgin." The Cathedral does not contain
+any fine ancient tombs. One of the best is that of Archbishop Mendoza,
+by Miguel Florentin, in the Antigua Chapel.</p>
+
+<p>As every visitor to Seville professes a special devotion to Murillo, he
+will probably overlook the fine "Nativity" by Luis de Vargas to the
+right, on entering, of the Puerta del Nacimiento, and hurry at once to
+the more famous master's "Guardian Angel," between Puerta Mayor and
+Puerta del Bautismo. His "St. Leander" and "St. Isidore" are to be seen
+in the great Sacristy, where they are eclipsed by Kempener's beautiful
+"Descent from the Cross," before which Murillo himself used to stand for
+hours in rapt contemplation. The French cut this priceless work into
+five pieces, intending to remove it, and although their design was
+frustrated, the subsequent<a name="page_060" id="page_060"></a> restoration was badly effected. The
+Sacristia de los Calices is a storehouse of art treasures. Here you may
+see Goya's "Saint Justa and Saint Rufina," a "Trinity" by "El Greco,"
+the "Angel de la Guarda" and "St. Dorothy" of Murillo, the "Death of a
+Saint" by Zurbaran, and the superb crucifix of Montañez. A "Conception"
+by Murillo is in the Chapter House, a splendid hall in the Renaissance
+style.</p>
+
+<p>In the great Sacristy is preserved the "treasury" of the Cathedral. It
+includes a wonderful monstrance by that prince of goldsmiths, Juan de
+Arfe; and something more interesting in the shape of keys presented to
+St. Ferdinand on the surrender of the city. The key presented by the
+Jews is iron-gilt and bears the inscription in Hebrew: "The King of
+Kings will open, the King of all earth will enter." The key offered by
+the Moors is silver-gilt, and the Arabic inscription reads: "May Allah
+render eternal the dominion of Islam in this city."</p>
+
+<p>Attached to many (if not to all) Spanish cathedrals, one finds large
+chapels which are the official parish churches of the cities&mdash;the
+parochial clergy being distinct from the diocesan chapter. At Seville,
+as at Granada, this chapel is called the "Sagrario," and is built at the
+west end of the Patio de los Naranjos and entered from a door in the
+north aisle of the Cathedral, near the Capilla del Bautisterio. Built
+between 1618 and 1662 by Miguel Zumarraga and Fernando de<a name="page_061" id="page_061"></a> Iglesias,
+the church is in the Baroque style, and roofed with a single and very
+daring arch. The rich statues that adorn the interior are by Dayne and
+Jose de Arce. There is a notable retablo by Pedro Roldán that came from
+a Franciscan convent now suppressed. In one of the side chapels is a
+fine "Virgin" by Montañez. Beneath this church the Archbishops of
+Seville are now buried.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_013" id="ill_013"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_013-seville_patio_naranjos_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_013-seville_patio_naranjos_sml.jpg" width="397" height="550" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;PATIO DE LOS NARANJOS" title="SEVILLE&mdash;PATIO DE LOS NARANJOS" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;PATIO DE LOS NARANJOS</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>As we emerge from this vast temple, we remain for a few seconds dazzled
+by the sunlight. Then as we turn to the left we notice a rectangular,
+classic-looking building, standing between the Cathedral and the walls
+of the Alcazar. This is one of the numerous deserted Lonjas or Exchanges
+of Spain. The Patio de los Naranjos was formerly infested by the
+merchants and brokers of the city, to the great scandal of the devout.
+Archbishop de Rojas prevailed upon Philip II. to erect an Exchange or
+Casa de Contratacion, as Sir Thomas Gresham had just done in London. The
+building was begun in 1598, at precisely the moment when the commerce of
+Seville began to decline. It reflects the spirit of Philip II. and of
+his architect, Herrera&mdash;stern, sober, simple. There is a fine inner
+court, with Doric and Ionic columns. Here the South American archives
+are deposited, a rich mine for some future historian who shall have the
+patience to examine them. As an exchange, the Lonja soon proved a
+failure. It was early deserted by business men, and is best remembered
+as the seat of Murillo's Academy of Painters.<a name="page_062" id="page_062"></a></p>
+
+<p>The spacious days of Charles V. and Philip II. were productive of
+innumerable public buildings, mostly in a quasi-Roman style and all very
+pompous and oppressive. The Town-hall or Ayuntamiento of Seville is an
+extremely ornate structure, in what is called the plateresque or Spanish
+Renaissance style. It stands in the Plaza de la Constitucion, where the
+electric cars perform intricate evolutions. Its effect is lost through
+its being placed on the ground level, without terrace, steps, or
+approach, or even railings to prevent inquisitive urchins staring in at
+the windows. The building is long and remarkably narrow, and of two
+storeys. I have seldom seen a public building more elaborately adorned
+or more badly placed. The interior is more satisfactory. The lower
+council chamber is a magnificent hall, worthy, as a Spanish writer
+remarks, of the Senate of a great republic. A noble staircase, with a
+fine ceiling, leads to the upper council chamber, which has some
+splendid artesonado work. Opposite&mdash;that is, on the east side of&mdash;this
+building is the Audiencia or Court-house, where I whiled away a hot
+afternoon by assisting at a Spanish trial. The case was of no particular
+interest, but the differences in the procedure and constitution of the
+court from our own were worth noting. There were three judges, who wore
+black silk gowns, without wigs or bands. Over their heads was the arms
+of Spain, and on the desk, facing the president, a large crucifix. The
+jury sat on chairs on each side of the judges. A desk was reserved for
+the public prosecutor, another<a name="page_063" id="page_063"></a> for the prisoner's advocate. The judges
+took far less part in the proceedings than they do in France. The case
+seemed to be left entirely to the public prosecutor, who, it is just to
+say, allowed the accused to make long rambling statements, without the
+least attempt to interrupt or confuse him. The public at the rear of the
+court appeared to take far more interest in the proceedings than any
+immediately concerned in them.</p>
+
+<p>The Plaza de la Constitucion, outside the court, is the place of
+execution. But the death penalty is very rarely inflicted in Spain. Two
+or three years ago the Crown could find no pretext for pardoning two
+particularly atrocious murderers, who were accordingly put to death by
+the garrote in this square. The people of Seville, not being accustomed
+like the more enlightened Britons to some two dozen executions a year,
+showed their sense of the awful occurrence and of the disgrace to their
+city by donning the deepest mourning.</p>
+
+<p>But the stranger does not come to Seville to visit courts or to hear
+about public executions&mdash;unless these happened two or three centuries
+ago, when as Sir W. S. Gilbert somewhere observes, they are looked at
+through the glamour of romance. The searcher for the beautiful is
+usually rewarded here by finding it in unexpected corners of the
+monotonous labyrinth of lanes and alleys. Plunging into the maze of
+white-walled dwellings in the north-eastern quarter of the city, a
+minaret only less<a name="page_064" id="page_064"></a> beautiful than the Giralda seems to beckon us from
+afar. It appears and reappears, and we lose our way a dozen times before
+we stand at its foot. It is a beautiful tower in the purest Almohade or
+Mauritanian style, without any features borrowed from Christian
+architecture. The highest edifice, this, in Seville, except the Giralda.
+From its summit Cervantes used to scan the streets below, at certain
+hours of the day, for the form of a local beauty of whom he was
+enamoured. Here, of course, stood a mosque in Mussulman days, on the
+site of the adjacent church of San Marcos. The portal is very fine, but
+the Moorish features are the work of Mudejar and not Almohade artisans.</p>
+
+<p>We wander on, and are presently surprised by the superb frontal of the
+convent church of Santa Paula. It is faced with white and blue azulejos,
+the work of Francesco of Pisa and Pedro Millán. Over the arch are
+disposed seven medallions illustrating the birth of Christ and the life
+of St. Paul, the figures white on a blue ground. On the tympanum of the
+arch is displayed the Spanish coat of arms in white marble, flanked by
+the escutcheons of the inevitable and ubiquitous Ferdinand and Isabella.
+Having seen this, it is hardly worth our while to enter the church,
+which contains the tombs of the founders, Dom Joao de Henriquez,
+Constable of Portugal, and his wife Donha Isabel. In the same quarter of
+the city, though some distance away, is a monument of some<a name="page_065" id="page_065"></a>
+interest&mdash;the church of Omnium Sanctorum, built in 1356 on the site of a
+Roman temple. Here again there is a tower graceful enough, in its lower
+storey recalling the Giralda. The church exhibits a rather happy
+combination of the Moorish and Gothic styles. On one of the doors is the
+coat of arms of Portugal, commemorating the pious generosity of Diniz,
+king of that country. This must have belonged to the earlier structure.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_014" id="ill_014"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_014-seville_plaza_san_fernando_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_014-seville_plaza_san_fernando_sml.jpg" width="550" height="437" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;PLAZA DE SAN FERNANDO" title="SEVILLE&mdash;PLAZA DE SAN FERNANDO" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;PLAZA DE SAN FERNANDO</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Finding your way back to the Sierpes, you may inspect the interesting
+Church of the University. Here repose the members of the illustrious
+Ribera family, which looms very large in the history of Seville. Their
+remains were brought hither on the suppression of the Cartuja, outside
+the town. The oldest tomb is that of the eldest Ribera, who died in
+1423, aged 105. He thus lived through the reigns of Alfonso XI., Pedro
+the Cruel, Enrique II., Juan I., Enrique III., and Juan II., yet, as is
+usually the case with centenarians, he failed to engrave his name as
+deeply on history as did some of his shorter lived descendants.</p>
+
+<p>The famous Duke of Alcalá, the owner of the Casa de Pilatos, is
+commemorated by a fine bronze effigy&mdash;one of the few sepulchral
+monuments of this kind in Spain. At the feet of Don Lorenzo Figueroa a
+dog is sculptured, most probably the symbol of fidelity, but some say,
+his favourite. Over the altar are three good pictures by Roelas, one of
+the ablest interpreters<a name="page_066" id="page_066"></a> of the Andalusian spirit. Here, too, are a
+couple of works by Alonso Cano, "St. John the Baptist" and "St. John the
+Divine." The statue of St. Ignatius Loyola by Montañez is said to be a
+faithful likeness of the saint. It was coloured by Pacheco the
+Inquisitor.</p>
+
+<p>The adjacent University was originally a Jesuit college, and was built
+in the middle of the sixteenth century, after designs by Herrera. It is
+not very well attended to-day, and from the outside would be taken for
+an inconsiderable college. It seems to have been much more flourishing a
+hundred years ago, when our countryman Blanco White attended its
+courses. The original university was founded by Canon Rodrigo de
+Santuella in 1472, in the Colegio Maese Rodrigo, near the Cathedral.</p>
+
+<p>From the last resting-place of the Riberas in the centre of the town it
+is not far to their old home, the Casa de Pilatos, though Dædalus
+himself might easily get lost in this labyrinth of streets resembling
+each other as closely as those of an American city. The names of some of
+these thoroughfares&mdash;Francos, Gallegos, Genovés&mdash;remind us of the days
+of St. Ferdinand, when the room of the banished Moors was filled by
+settlers, not only from all parts of Spain, but from the rest of Europe.
+It was the same with all the towns resumed by the Spaniards. These
+foreign colonies had their own laws and customs, and yet they were
+entirely absorbed by the natives and left no trace or influence behind
+them. The Spaniards<a name="page_067" id="page_067"></a> possessed, in those days at any rate, the same
+wonderful capacity for the absorption of other races displayed by the
+Anglo-Saxons in America. There was nothing new in this; for they had
+absorbed the Visigoths, just as they had absorbed the Romans before
+them. The Castilian tongue is indeed Latin, but I fancy that the people
+of Spain are as much the children of the soil&mdash;<i>autochthones</i>&mdash;as the
+Athenians themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Reflections like these&mdash;which I do not expect will profoundly influence
+ethnologists&mdash;occupied me as I pursued my tortuous course to the Casa de
+Pilatos. When I at last found it, I was struck by the plain and
+dignified exterior. To the left of the door I observed a plain cross of
+jasper. The story goes that in October, 1521, the Marquis de Tarifa, on
+his return from a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, placed this cross against the
+wall and counted thence the fourteen stations of the Cross, according to
+their order in the Holy City. The last fortuitously coincided with the
+Cruz del Campo, raised near the Caños de Carmona in 1482. I doubt if the
+marquis had any such thought when he raised this jasper cross, for the
+distance from the Prætorium at Jerusalem to the chapel in the Church of
+the Holy Sepulchre that marks the site of Calvary is greatly less than
+the distance between the two points mentioned here in Seville. But why
+the house was called after Pilate is not easy to determine. It was begun
+in 1500 and finished thirty-three years after by<a name="page_068" id="page_068"></a> Don Per Afan de
+Ribera, first Duke of Alcalá, and sometime Viceroy of Naples. This great
+nobleman was the Mæcenas of his generation. Not only did he enrich his
+house with priceless works of art and a fine library&mdash;since removed to
+Madrid&mdash;but he made it the rendezvous of all the art and talent of
+Andalusia. Hither came Gongora, the poet, to converse, it is said, with
+Cervantes. Here Pacheco, the artist-inquisitor, discussed the mission of
+art with Herrera. Here came Rioja, Cespedes, Jauregui, and others of
+less note. The example set by the Medici was followed by many of the
+great grandees of Spain at this time. The Velascos presided over a
+coterie of literati at Burgos; the Duke of Villahermosa, at Zaragoza,
+affected to delight in the company of the brilliant and learned. Even so
+small a place as Plasencia had its own patron of the arts in Don Luis de
+Avila, and in Madrid there was "the feast of reason and the flow of
+soul" at the mansion of Don Antonio Perez. But for all its associations,
+like the Alcazar, the Casa de Pilatos remains very much like a museum.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_015" id="ill_015"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_015-seville_casa_pilatos_a_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_015-seville_casa_pilatos_a_sml.jpg" width="391" height="550" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;CASA DE PILATOS" title="SEVILLE&mdash;CASA DE PILATOS" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;CASA DE PILATOS</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The building illustrates the fashion of the Mudejar and Renaissance
+styles, almost to the effacement of the former. In the architecture of
+this epoch we usually find an Arabic groundwork nearly concealed by
+ornament of the newer style. The geometrical designs remain, but the
+flowing inscriptions, so important a feature of Moorish decoration, have
+gone. A thousand details would show the veriest tyro that this was
+not<a name="page_069" id="page_069"></a> the work of Moors, yet the central court bears a general
+resemblance to the Alcazar. Pedro de Madrazo directs attention to the
+harmonious variety of the arches and windows, and compares it to the
+admired disorder of the forest and plantation. I imagine the architect
+had the Court of the Lions, at Granada, in his mind. Here dolphins
+uphold the upper basin of the fountain, and noble statues of the deities
+of Greece and Rome&mdash;the gift of Pope Pius V.&mdash;stand in the angles of the
+court. Hence you pass into the so-called Prætorium, with its splendid
+coffered ceiling and beautiful tiling, where you may distinguish the
+Spanish azulejos of the best moulds by the designs stamped on them of
+fanciful monsters, grotesques, and escutcheons. Then there is the superb
+staircase with its "half-orange" ceiling, and the chapel with its mixed
+Gothic and Mudejar features. What grandee in Europe has a finer home
+than this? And yet, I am told the owner, His Grace of Medinaceli, comes
+here but seldom.</p>
+
+<p>There are many old mansions in Seville worth a walk on a cool day&mdash;and a
+glimpse. They are not great sights, such as those we have already seen
+in the city, or such as are more numerous in Paris and Rome, Brussels
+and Venice. But those visitors who are really interested in Seville, and
+are capable of appreciating Moorish and plateresque art in their various
+imitations and combinations, will enjoy these little excursions. There
+is an interesting old house at<a name="page_070" id="page_070"></a> No. 6, Abades. It is now a
+boarding-house, and you may live there in princely fashion for six
+francs a day. No one knows how old it is. It belonged at the beginning
+of the fifteenth century to a family of Genoese merchants called Pinelo.
+In 1407 the Infante Fadrique, uncle of Juan II., lodged there. What was
+the occasion of his visit to Seville I forget. Afterwards it became the
+property of the "abbés" or "abades" of the Cathedral. Many of these
+reverend gentlemen still patronize the establishment, and may be seen
+puffing their "Puros" in the court, which is said to be a fine example
+of the Sevillian Renaissance style. That style I conceive to have been
+compounded of all pre-existing styles. Digby Wyatt, however, considered
+the house to be much more Italian than Spanish. It is a vast place,
+where dark corridors seem to lead indefinitely into space.</p>
+
+<p>There is rather less to reward your curiosity at the Palacio de las
+Dueñas, a vast mansion belonging to the Duke of Alba. Once it boasted
+eleven "patios," with nine fountains and one hundred columns of marble.
+A fine court, surrounded by a graceful arcade, remains. The staircase
+recalls that of the Casa de Pilatos. Our countryman Lord Holland stayed
+here a hundred years ago. He was a great admirer of Spanish literature
+at a time when it was hardly as much a matter of interest to foreigners
+as it is at present.</p>
+
+<p>Then there is the Casa de Bustos Tavera, where, according to Lope de
+Vega, Sancho the Brave used to<a name="page_071" id="page_071"></a> visit the "Star of Seville"; and the
+Casa Olea, in the Calle Guzman el Bueno, with a hall of Mudejar
+workmanship dating from the days of Don Pedro.</p>
+
+<p>It is the romantic aspect of Seville that has impressed some visitors
+much more than its historical or archæological side. Over the poets and
+dramatists of the Romantic school the city exercised a strange
+fascination. Byron and Alfred de Musset found the atmosphere of the
+place most congenial. Through their rose-coloured spectacles every girl
+they met in these narrow white streets seemed "preternaturally pretty."
+The principal business of the inhabitants in the 'twenties and 'thirties
+of last century, to judge by the French poet's descriptions, was
+love-making, strumming the guitar, and duelling. That Spain was ever a
+romantic country in the vulgarly accepted sense of the term, I doubt.
+Roman Catholic customs and institutions forbid that free intermingling
+of the sexes from which result the thousand and one emotions,
+complications, situations, and catastrophes that are the ingredients of
+romance. In countries like Spain, where the canon law obtained, there
+could be, for instance, no runaway matches, no desperate flights in a
+post-chaise to a church (say) over the Portuguese border, with an irate
+father in pursuit. There could not have been, and cannot be at the
+present time, any walks with the beloved down the moonlit grove, any
+trysts by the stile or the ruined keep, any rendezvous among the
+rose-bushes. If a Spanish girl did any of these things, she would
+indeed, in French parlance,<a name="page_072" id="page_072"></a> have thrown her cap over the mill. The
+affair would no longer have the complexion of a romance but of a sordid
+intrigue. This being so, I was delighted to hear that occasionally
+clandestine marriages are resorted to in Spain, and that fond lovers
+find a means of uniting in defiance of stern parents, even in Andalusia.
+The couple, accompanied by a few friends, contrive to sit next to each
+other in church, as far out of sight of the rest of the worshippers as
+possible. Their troths are plighted in an undertone just loud enough for
+the witnesses to hear, the ring slipped on under cover of the mantilla,
+and the hands joined at the precise moment the all-unconscious celebrant
+turns towards the congregation at the end of the mass and pronounces the
+benediction. In the eyes of the Church the two are married as
+irrevocably as if the Cardinal Lord Archbishop of Toledo had performed
+the ceremony. The vows have been exchanged before witnesses in a sacred
+edifice, and an anointed priest has simultaneously blessed the
+contracting parties from the altar. What can parents do? The Don may
+rage, the Doña may upbraid, but when the Church makes itself an
+accomplice of lovers, even in Spain the law must acquiesce. And there is
+no divorce!</p>
+
+<p>That genuine romance tinges the lives of Spanish men and women, few who
+know them can doubt. But the Andalusia of musical comedy, the creation
+of which is largely due to the poets of the Romantic school, does not
+exist. Seville never was a glorified Cremorne; and<a name="page_073" id="page_073"></a> persons of a
+Byronic turn would find adventures suitable to their mood more readily
+by the banks of the Thames and the Hudson than by those of the
+Guadalquivir.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_016" id="ill_016"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_016-seville_casa_pilatos_b_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_016-seville_casa_pilatos_b_sml.jpg" width="391" height="550" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;CASA DE PILATOS" title="SEVILLE&mdash;CASA DE PILATOS" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;CASA DE PILATOS</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>For all that, some romantic stories are told about old Seville, and one
+of these has some foundation of truth. About the middle of the
+seventeenth century, the city re-echoed with reports of the wild and
+desperate doings of a certain wealthy gallant, Don Miguel de Marana by
+name. By some he is called De Mañara. Marriage with the heiress of the
+Mendoza family did not sober him, though an alliance with so solemn a
+thing as money generally brings the most hot-headed Latin youth to his
+senses. Like many other wicked persons, our gallant had a nice taste in
+art, and is said to have encouraged Murillo. Now comes the remarkable
+and the improving part of the story. It is not safe to vouch for the
+accuracy of the details of any part of it. One morning Seville woke up
+to find&mdash;no doubt to her unspeakable consolation&mdash;the wicked De Marana a
+changed man. He became a saint&mdash;an ascetic in the seventeenth-century
+acceptation of the word. The wine-bibber forswore even chocolate as too
+strong a beverage.</p>
+
+<p>What had happened to produce so edifying a change? Accounts vary. The
+most picturesque explanation is that the Don, prowling about the streets
+one night, perceived a funeral procession approaching. Curiosity
+impelled him to look at the face of the corpse, which was uncovered, and
+lo! it was his own.<a name="page_074" id="page_074"></a></p>
+
+<p>If you doubt the sincerity of Don Miguel's conversion, you have only to
+visit the Church of La Caridad, which, together with the adjoining
+hospital, he founded and wherein he was buried. I do not think you will
+share the opinion of Sir W. Stirling-Maxwell that this is the most
+elegant church in Seville, but you will be rewarded for the visit by
+seeing some very remarkable works of art. Near the entrance are the two
+extraordinary pictures which proclaim the artist, Valdés Leal, to have
+been a master of realism. One of these exhibits a corpse at which,
+Murillo declared, you must look with your nostrils shut. The church
+contains six canvases by Murillo himself&mdash;"Moses Striking the Rock,"
+"The Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes," "The Charity of St. Juan de
+Dios," "The Annunciation," "The Infant Jesus," and "St. John." The third
+is really the finest of these pictures, though the first, commonly
+called "La Sed" (Thirst), is the most generally preferred. The figures
+are, as usual in this master's compositions, ordinary Seville types.
+Over the altar is another great work, "The Descent from the Cross," by
+Pedro Roldán.</p>
+
+<p>The "Caridad" has indeed the most important collection of pictures in
+southern Spain, next to the Museo, as the old Convent of La Merced is
+now called. There, of course, some of the greatest works of art by
+Spanish masters are to be seen. There you may see the "St. Thomas of
+Villanueva" giving<a name="page_075" id="page_075"></a> alms, Murillo's favourite picture; his beautiful
+"St. Felix of Cantalicio," and "St. Leander and St. Buenaventura," and
+his famous "Vírgen de la Servilleta" which was <i>not</i> painted on a
+serviette. On the south wall hangs his "Saints Justa and Rufina"
+(holding the Giralda), exquisitely coloured, and on the north wall the
+admirable "St. Anthony de Padua." But one grows a little weary of
+Murillo in Seville. Zurbaran, the great painter of monks, is well
+represented by the wonderful "St. Hugh in the Refectory," and
+"Apotheosis of St. Thomas Aquinas." This last picture, I am told, was
+carried off by Soult, and recovered by Wellington at Waterloo. The older
+Herrera's "St. Hermenegild" is good, but by no means Andalusian. The
+native temper finds more truthful expression in the works of Roelas,
+Valdés Leal, Cespedes and Frutet, which may be studied to the best
+advantage here. Curiously enough, the gallery contains not a single work
+by Velazquez, who was born in Seville; nor any paintings by Alonso Cano
+or Luis de Vargas. Spanish sculpture, of which one sees so little, is
+not unworthily represented by a beautiful St. Bruno by Montañez, and by
+some busts and crucifixes of less importance. The students of Andalusian
+art must also visit the Hospital de la Sangre, near the Macarena Gate,
+for some splendid works by Zurbaran and by his less-known forerunner
+Roelas. The three pictures ascribed to the last named are, however, very
+awkwardly placed and difficult to see.<a name="page_076" id="page_076"></a></p>
+
+<p>Murillo's house is still standing in the Plaza de Alfaro in the old
+Ghetto. Here he died on April 3, 1682, after his fall from the
+scaffolding at Cadiz. His studio is shown filled with several undoubted
+works of his brush. The house belongs to the executors of the late Dean
+Cepero.</p>
+
+<p>The Duke de Montpensier has a fine collection of pictures at his ugly
+Palace of St. Telmo, near the Torre del Oro. Among them is included a
+sketch by our late Queen, when she was still a princess. The palace
+looks on a parade which is much resorted to by the Sevillanos in the
+summer months. Here you see the boys playing at the inevitable
+bull-fight. One who takes the part of toro has a real bull's horns with
+which he "gores" his comrades with great ferocity. The insistence on
+this brutal "sport" among the Andalusians has taken the form of acute
+monomania. Exasperated strangers have been heard to declare that in
+southern Spain you hear of but two things&mdash;Toros y Moros. In another
+corner of the promenade, you will come upon a party of little girls
+going through the peculiar and stately dances, or rather measures, of
+their country, to the accompaniment of a low chant and a clapping of
+hands, in which the boys, looking on from a distance, will join. Boys
+and girls, unless they are quite babies, are seldom seen together. You
+pass on and find a group of citizens seated at the little tables round a
+kiosk, refreshing themselves with lemonade and being entertained by a
+conjuror&mdash;a fine-<a name="page_077" id="page_077"></a>looking man&mdash;who sends round the hat after every two
+or three tricks. In the ordinary way you are asked for alms more often
+than in Granada, but not, of course, to anything like the same extent as
+in London. English travellers are given to commenting on the mendicity
+in foreign cities, but I must confess that nowhere have I met with so
+many beggars as in our own capital. In Spain the fraternity chiefly
+haunt the steps of churches, the one spot in our happy country that they
+seem to avoid.</p>
+
+<p>We reach the beginning of the Delicias Gardens, which extend two or
+three miles southward along the river bank. All the rank and fashion of
+Seville&mdash;and a great deal besides&mdash;turns out in summer evenings to drive
+in the Delicias. The concourse of vehicles is immense, but reminded me
+rather of the return from the Derby than of Rotten Row. The great
+ambition of the Spaniard is to possess a conveyance, and he seems to
+care little how dilapidated or ancient it may be, so long as it goes on
+wheels. Side by side with the handsome equipages of the Sevillian
+aristocracy, you will see a wretched Rosinante painfully dragging what I
+took to be the original "one-hoss shay," or the carriage in which Lord
+Ferrers was driven to the scaffold. It is impossible to restrain a
+smile, but after all a conveyance is a real necessity in a climate like
+this, and if a man cannot afford a good carriage, he must needs put up
+with a bad one. The traffic is well regulated by mounted police. The
+foot-<a name="page_078" id="page_078"></a>paths are also crowded, and when night falls, everyone adjourns to
+the numerous open-air cafés and kiosks to drink light beer and lemonade.
+Sober, steady Spain! How certain of our reformers at home would love
+you, if they but knew you! Where in the world (except in the East) are
+men more abstemious or women more staid and demure?</p>
+
+<p>If you wish (as of course, being a modern traveller, you are sure to do)
+to study the life of the people, you had better betake yourself to the
+other end of the city&mdash;to the Alameda de Hercules, so called after two
+columns which the natives believe were presented by that muscular
+demigod. Here a perpetual fair seems in progress. There are the usual
+booths, with fat ladies, boneless wonders, and dwarfs, and more
+questionable exhibitions. On a platform sat three depressed and underfed
+wretches, who, I thought, were to be immediately garrotted. Suddenly one
+sprang up and gave a very clever rendering of the arrival and departure
+of a train at a country station. He was vociferously applauded, and,
+thus encouraged, danced a sort of "cellar-flap" with great animation to
+the indispensable accompaniment of hand-clapping. In a popular assembly
+of Andalusian town and country folk, the modern observer ought, I am
+well aware, to find many extraordinary and significant phases of
+humanity, exhibiting the striking individuality of the people, their
+race-consciousness, their psychological import, their evolutional
+significance, and so forth. I<a name="page_079" id="page_079"></a> blush to confess that in the crowds
+applauding the ventriloquist or gaping at the fat lady, I saw only a
+collection of good-humoured ordinary people, enjoying themselves much
+after the fashion of ordinary people in England.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_017" id="ill_017"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_017-seville_casa_pilatos_garden_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_017-seville_casa_pilatos_garden_sml.jpg" width="406" height="550" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;GARDEN OF THE CASA DE PILATOS" title="SEVILLE&mdash;GARDEN OF THE CASA DE PILATOS" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;GARDEN OF THE CASA DE PILATOS</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the Sevillano is more his real self on these occasions than when
+disporting himself at the world-famous fair, which begins on the Monday
+after Easter and attracts strangers from all parts of Europe. Though a
+somewhat overrated festival, I think it more distinctive and original in
+certain of its aspects than the gorgeous religious ceremonies by which
+it is preceded. The wealthier families of Seville rig up for themselves
+on the fair-ground "casetas," or temporary residences of wood or canvas,
+with two or more apartments. A great deal of expense is lavished on the
+upholstering and decoration of these pavilions, and those of the four
+principal clubs are fitted up in the most luxurious fashion. In the
+evening the <i>jeunesse dorée</i> of the city drive out to the fair in smart
+traps drawn by dashing little horses with jangling little bells, and
+visits are exchanged at the casetas, where as the evening becomes
+cooler, dancing takes place, to the sound of the piano, the guitar, and
+the castanet. The pretty señoritas of Seville have no objection to going
+through the graceful measures of the South in full view of an uninvited
+audience who crowd round the opening of the tent and from time to time
+give vent to admiring "Olés!" and bursts of hand-clapping.<a name="page_080" id="page_080"></a> Dancing will
+be interrupted at 8.30, when everyone comes out to look at the firework
+display. Then of course there are the usual popular amusements&mdash;the
+inevitable bioscope, the gramophone, and all sorts of shows. Peasantry
+and aristocracy alike dress their very best on this occasion. The
+smartest toilettes and the most picturesque of native costumes are seen
+side by side, the latest confections of Worth and Paquin and costly
+heirlooms handed down from the days of Boabdil and Gonsalvo de Cordova.</p>
+
+<p>Whether such an intermingling of all classes, of the richest and the
+poorest, could take place with mutual enjoyment and comfort in any
+country but Spain, is a matter open to doubt.</p>
+
+<p>The object of the fair is, I believe, the sale of cattle, and about
+eighty thousand beasts are to be seen on the Prado de San Sebastian. To
+say that the most sanguinary bull-fights complete the festivities is
+perhaps superfluous. The most skilful and renowned toreros are engaged
+on this occasion, and the arenas literally smoke with the blood of bulls
+and disembowelled horses. Smithfield and Deptford can show nothing in
+comparison.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_018" id="ill_018"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_018-seville_marketplace_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_018-seville_marketplace_sml.jpg" width="550" height="410" alt="SEVILLE&mdash;THE MARKET PLACE" title="SEVILLE&mdash;THE MARKET PLACE" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">SEVILLE&mdash;THE MARKET PLACE</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The religious ceremonies, of which travellers talk so much, are not for
+the most part peculiar to Seville, as it ought to be unnecessary to
+remind them. The tableaux in the processions struck me as theatrical,
+but as being on the whole as well represented as similar show-pieces in
+our pageants. The famous Dance of<a name="page_081" id="page_081"></a> the Seises is reserved for the
+octaves of the Immaculate Conception and Corpus Christi. It has been
+described over and over again. There is nothing irreverent about the
+performance, which is in itself graceful and quaint; only carried out
+before the high altar it strikes one as rather meaningless. So, I
+suppose, most such functions impress those who are unprepared for them
+by temperament and education. There cannot be much doubt that the
+ceremony originated in an attempt to attract the ungodly to church&mdash;an
+early and respectable precedent for the methods of the Salvation Army.</p>
+
+<p>Others have it that the dance is a survival of some pagan
+ceremony&mdash;which will remind us that we have so far neglected the
+monuments of the Romans which were bequeathed to Seville. These are not
+very numerous or interesting. Only a fragment remains, at the north-east
+angle of the city, of the massive wall which Cæsar built, and which
+completely girdled Seville as late as the reign of Juan II. It was
+strengthened, tradition tells us, by 166 towers, which were freely used
+as prisons by later rulers. The Cordoba Gate marks the site of the
+dungeon of the canonized Hermenegild. Close to it is the Capuchin
+Convent, built upon the foundations of the palace of the Roman governor,
+Diogenianus, and afterwards associated with Murillo. A noble aqueduct
+built by the Romans, and known to-day as the Caños de Carmona, still
+brings water from Alcala de Guadaira to Seville. Everyone who visits
+Seville is expected<a name="page_082" id="page_082"></a> to make an excursion to the ruins of Italica, a few
+miles on the other side of the Guadalquivir. There is remarkably little
+to see when you get there, and not much is known about the place. There
+were few, if any, private dwellings here, and it existed rather as the
+place of meeting and distributing centre for the colonists scattered
+over the district. It was indeed raised to the dignity of a municipality
+by Augustus, but petitioned to be restored to its old rank of a Roman
+colony. It did not prove unworthy of its connection with the great
+capital. Hence sprang the illustrious line of the Ælii, and many of the
+eminent Roman Spaniards who conferred such lustre on the early empire
+are believed to have been natives. The town was embellished in those
+palmy days with temples, palaces, amphitheatres, and baths, quite out of
+proportion to its population.</p>
+
+<p>Its downfall, like its earlier history, is mysterious. Here Leovigild
+placed his headquarters when besieging Seville. Then came the Arabs, who
+dismantled it and carried off columns and blocks of masonry on which are
+founded the Giralda and other important buildings in the neighbouring
+city. Italica disappeared from history; and all you can see of it to-day
+is a few remains of walls and earthbanks outlining the amphitheatre.</p>
+
+<p>It might not be worth the journey were it not that it can be included in
+an excursion to the villages of Santi Ponce, Castilleja la Cuesta, and
+the Cartuja.<a name="page_083" id="page_083"></a> The parish church of the first named wretched village is
+remarkable as the last resting-place of the illustrious Guzman el Bueno,
+that Spaniard of the Roman mould who refused to save the life of his son
+at the cost of the fortress of Tarifa, which he held for his king. The
+hero's kneeling effigy dates, as the inscription beneath informs us,
+from the year 1609, the three hundredth anniversary of his death. The
+modern traveller, whose sympathies are usually more with the æsthetic
+than the heroic, will be more interested in the lifelike St. Jerome, one
+of the finest works of Montañez, to be seen over the high altar. The
+saint, regarding a crucifix devoutly, beats his breast with a stone. On
+either side are beautiful bas-reliefs of the Nativity and the Adoration
+of the Magi.</p>
+
+<p>The convent was inhabited first by the Cistercians, next by the Hermits
+of St. Jerome. It presents rather the appearance of a fortified abbey of
+the middle ages. The church is divided into two naves, each of which was
+a distinct church&mdash;one, I suspect, belonging to the monastery, the other
+to the parish; a not uncommon medieval arrangement. I almost forgot to
+add that it contains the ashes (literally) of Doña Urraca Osorio, a lady
+burnt to death, as I have said, by Pedro the Cruel.</p>
+
+<p>At Castilleja la Cuesta&mdash;a village on the height&mdash;is the house where
+Hernando Cortes died in 1547. The house has been converted by the Duc de
+Montpensier into a sort of museum. The Conquistador's bones<a name="page_084" id="page_084"></a> repose in
+the land which, with so much intrepidity and ruthlessness, he won for
+Spain.</p>
+
+<p>The old Charterhouse or Cartuja is now occupied by the porcelain factory
+of Pickman &amp; Co. It lies on the west bank of the Guadalquivir, a few
+minutes' walk from the railway bridge. It was founded in the first
+decade of the fifteenth century by Archbishop de Mena, and was the
+burial-place of the Riberas, till their remains were transferred to the
+University Church. There is little to see except some stalls carved, if
+I remember aright, by Duque Cornejo, in the little chapel.</p>
+
+<p>You may return to the city through the transpontine quarter of Triana, a
+collection of whitewashed houses inhabited chiefly by gipsies. To
+distinguish these no longer nomadic Bohemians from the lower-class
+Andalusians around them is not an easy task. As at Granada, gipsy dances
+are got up by the guides and hotel people, and here, I am told, they
+possess the merit which a Frenchman denies to those of the other
+city&mdash;impropriety. The patron saints of Seville, Saints Justa and
+Rufina, were potters in this quarter. In their time the Carthaginian
+goddess, Astarte or Salambo, was much venerated in the Roman city. The
+commemoration of the death of Adonis took place in the month of July,
+when the image of the goddess was borne in triumph through the streets,
+while the people following with cries and lamentations deplored the
+untimely end of her beloved. A strange<a name="page_085" id="page_085"></a> survival, this, on soil so
+far to the west, of the hideous Punic rites! The two maidens, newly
+converted to the religion of the Crucified, refused to do reverence to
+the image as it was carried past, and were haled before the governor,
+Diogenianus, in his palace by the Cordova Gate. They were put to death
+in due course, and have received more honour since from architects,
+sculptors, and painters, than Venus-Astarte in all her glory received
+from her devotees.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_019" id="ill_019"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_019-cordova_courtyarrd_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_019-cordova_courtyarrd_sml.jpg" width="550" height="327" alt="CORDOVA&mdash;A COURTYARD" title="CORDOVA&mdash;A COURTYARD" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">CORDOVA&mdash;A COURTYARD</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Before leaving Triana, visit the Church of Santa Ana, to see the
+exquisite Madonna of Alejo Fernandez, whom Lord Leighton considered the
+most conspicuous among the Gothic painters. There is a regard for beauty
+in the figures, not by any means obtrusive in most of the paintings of
+the period, though the awkward pose of some of the angels shows that the
+artist had not quite emancipated himself from Byzantine influence. And
+the thought occurred to me as I made my way back to the Delicias
+Gardens, where the people were driving out to take the air, and knots
+were collecting round musicians and mountebanks&mdash;when the whole city was
+yielding itself up to the sensuous charm of the summer night&mdash;that the
+art of Fernandez was expressive of Seville: of a people in whom the
+sense of beauty and the joy of living cannot be extinguished, though at
+the call of religion they reluctantly keep their faces half turned
+towards sad facts and yet more sombre unrealities.<a name="page_086" id="page_086"></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III<br /><br />
+<small>CORDOVA</small></h2>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 0em;">"They say the Lion and the Lizard keep</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: .25em;">The Courts where Jamshyd gloried and drank deep."</span></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="nind">T<small>HE</small> sands of Asia are strewn with the ruins of cities once the gorgeous
+capitals of mighty empires. Here in Spain the followers of the Prophet
+raised a metropolis as splendid as any of the new Babylons of the East;
+and its fall has been wellnigh as great as theirs. We need not credit
+all the assertions of the Arabian writers (for the scribes of that
+nation, as Cervantes remarks, are not a little addicted to fiction). We
+can hardly believe that Cordova in its prime contained 300,000
+inhabitants, 600 mosques, 50 hospitals, 800 public schools, 900 baths,
+600 inns, and a library of 600,000 volumes; but there is evidence enough
+to satisfy us that this was in the tenth century the most magnificent
+and populous city in Europe, Byzantium alone excepted. Now it is a small
+provincial capital, bright, white, and coquettish, utterly without the
+solemnity and majesty which should invest the seats of vanished empires.
+Here greatness has been swallowed up in insignificance,<a name="page_087" id="page_087"></a> not in
+desolation. The Court of the Khalifas, the Western Mecca, does not lie
+in lordly ruin like a fallen Colossus, but has sunk into mere pettiness.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_020" id="ill_020"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_020-cordova_city_entrance_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_020-cordova_city_entrance_sml.jpg" width="550" height="415" alt="CORDOVA&mdash;ENTRANCE TO THE CITY" title="CORDOVA&mdash;ENTRANCE TO THE CITY" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">CORDOVA&mdash;ENTRANCE TO THE CITY</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Victor Hugo draws, as only he knew how, in a couple of lines, a
+picturesque sketch of Cordova, but this hardly corresponds to the
+impressions of the modern traveller. The houses may be old (some of them
+certainly are), but in their coats of dazzling whitewash they look
+brand-new. Gautier very sensibly remarks that, thanks to whitewash, the
+wall which was erected a century ago cannot be distinguished from that
+which was erected yesterday. Its general application "imparts a uniform
+tint to all buildings, fills up the architectural lines, effaces all
+their delicate ornamentation, and does not allow you to read their age."
+Cordova, which was formerly a centre of Arabian civilization, is now
+nothing more than a confused mass of small white houses, above which
+rise a few mangrove trees, with their metallic green foliage, or some
+palm trees with their branches spread out like the claws of a crab;
+while the whole town is divided by narrow passages into a number of
+separate blocks, where it would be difficult for two mules to pass
+abreast. Such is Cordova to-day, and I doubt very much if its external
+aspect was a whit more splendid or by any means as pleasing in the days
+of its glory. Some authors write as if they imagined the Mohammedans
+built their capitals on the lines of Paris and Washington. A visit to
+Constantinople or to Cairo would remove that impression. Imagine
+Cordova<a name="page_088" id="page_088"></a> covering three or four times its present area, its windows
+obscured with lattices, its walls less white, its streets filled with a
+noisy mob of beshawled and beturbaned men&mdash;black, brown, and white&mdash;with
+noble mosques and elegant minarets here and there, and you will have a
+fair picture of the capital of the Western Khalifate.</p>
+
+<p>Of its outward seeming only. Its culture and refined social life merited
+for Cordova the title of the Athens of the West. When all Europe was
+sunk in barbarism, medicine and chemistry, the natural sciences, the
+arts and philosophy, all found a refuge here. Culture was diffused
+through all classes of the population, if only very superficially, to an
+extent never perhaps equalled elsewhere. And though there was little
+initiative or originality about the scholars at Cordova, their labours
+contributed to keep alive a taste for the humanities which otherwise
+would never have revived in Europe. The comforts and amenities of life
+were carefully studied in the Western Khalifate. All the products which
+minister to luxury were at that time the almost exclusive property of
+the Moslem world, and to the bazaars of Cordova were brought the
+choicest spoils of Egypt, Persia, Arabia, and Hindostan. And at the head
+of this urbane and flourishing commonwealth sat the great Umeyyad
+khalifa, emulous of the glories of Bagdad and Cairo, and eager to
+surpass them in elegance and splendour.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_021" id="ill_021"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_021-cordova_calle_cardinal_herrera_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_021-cordova_calle_cardinal_herrera_sml.jpg" width="393" height="550" alt="CORDOVA&mdash;CALLE CARDINAL HERRERA" title="CORDOVA&mdash;CALLE CARDINAL HERRERA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">CORDOVA&mdash;CALLE CARDINAL HERRERA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Of those great days all that remains is the Mezquita&mdash;and that is much.
+Next to St. Peter's it is the<a name="page_089" id="page_089"></a> largest of Christian temples, and
+certainly among the most ancient. As a Mohammedan place of worship, it
+ranked in sanctity with the Mosque of Omar at Jerusalem, immediately
+after Mecca, which it was indeed designed to eclipse. It was
+Abd-ur-Rahman's ambition to focus all the interests of Islam at this
+point within his own dominions. Spanish Moslems were taught that a
+pilgrimage to the "Zeka" of Cordova was in all respects equivalent to a
+pilgrimage to Mecca. Hence Sancho Panza's saying, "Andar de Zeca en
+Mecca." That the Umeyyad khalifa succeeded in diverting the Faithful
+from the old shrine to the new is doubtful, but he and his successors
+spared no pains to render their mosque one of the wonders of the world.
+In the year 786, seized, it is said, by a sudden inspiration,
+Abd-ur-Rahman convoked his council and declared his intention of raising
+a temple to Allah on the site of a Christian church. The Moslems had
+already appropriated half of the Basilica of San Vicente to their use,
+suffering the Christians to perform their rites in the adjoining
+portion. The khattib was commanded to approach the unbelievers to
+negotiate the purchase of the whole edifice. The Christians stood out
+for a high price, and got it. They received a sum equal to £400,000 of
+our money, and permission, moreover, to rebuild all their churches in
+the city that had existed at the time of the Conquest. When we remember
+the violent seizure and "purification" of the Church of St. Sophia by
+the Turks,<a name="page_090" id="page_090"></a> seven hundred years later, we can see how little Islam had
+learnt of toleration in the meantime.</p>
+
+<p>The old basilica was accordingly demolished and the mosque begun. The
+khalifa set apart a portion of his revenues for the work, and laboured
+himself upon it for an hour each day. Thus encouraged, his subjects of
+all ranks made it a point of honour to contribute either their personal
+labour or their money to the great work. Though most of the columns came
+from the marble quarries of the neighbouring town of Cabra, as many as
+possible were brought from the most distant parts of the Mohammedan
+empire, from the works of civilizations which Islam had subdued. The
+mosque was to be a monument to the triumph of the Crescent. Its
+dimensions as projected by the founder were four times less than those
+of the existing building.</p>
+
+<p>The successors of Abd-ur-Rahman obtained the assistance of Byzantine
+craftsmen, and embellished the mosque with rich mosaics. Almost a
+quarter of the actual building was added by Al Hakem II., and the
+eastern half by Al Mansûr. To effect this last expansion, a cottage
+beneath a palm tree had to be acquired. The old lady to whom it belonged
+refused to budge till an exactly similar abode was found for her. This
+was done at last, after a diligent search, and a liberal donation made
+to her to boot.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_022" id="ill_022"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_022-cordova_moorish_mill_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_022-cordova_moorish_mill_sml.jpg" width="550" height="383" alt="CORDOVA&mdash;MOORISH MILL" title="CORDOVA&mdash;MOORISH MILL" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">CORDOVA&mdash;MOORISH MILL</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Thus was reared this mighty temple of Islam on European soil, at a time
+when the state of the Christian world went far to justify the exultant
+words<a name="page_091" id="page_091"></a> of the khalifa: "Let us build the Kaaba of the West upon the
+site of a Christian temple, which we will destroy, so that we may set
+forth how the Cross shall fall and become abased before the True
+Prophet. Allah will never place the world beneath the feet of those who
+make themselves the slaves of drink and sensuality, while they preach
+penitence and the joys of chastity, and while extolling poverty, enrich
+themselves to the loss of their neighbours. For these, the sad and
+silent cloister; for us, the crystalline fountain and the shady grove;
+for them, the rude and unsocial life of dungeon-like strongholds; for
+us, the charm of social life and culture; for them, intolerance and
+tyranny; for us, a ruler who is our father; for them, the darkness of
+ignorance; for us, letters and instruction widespread as our creed; for
+them, the wilderness, celibacy, and the doom of the false martyr; for
+us, plenty, love, brotherhood and eternal joy."</p>
+
+<p>The face of the world has changed somewhat in ten centuries.</p>
+
+<p>It must, I think, be admitted that the Mezquita, to European eyes, is
+fantastic and interesting rather than beautiful. It may be compared to a
+forest of columns or to a seemingly endless series of parallel aisles
+spanned by low horseshoe arches. It does in truth remind one, as one
+writer observes, of a gigantic crypt. The additions of Al Mansûr, may be
+distinguished by the pointed arches. Otherwise there is little of the
+variety insured in Christian churches by<a name="page_092" id="page_092"></a> the distribution of the parts.
+It is only in the columns themselves that we find any relief from the
+prevailing uniformity. There are interesting differences in their
+capitals, and in their bases also, which are, however, buried
+underground. In the ruder carving is seen an attempt on the part of the
+Moorish masons to copy the work of the more skilled craftsmen of Rome
+and Byzantium. The mean vaulting overhead is modern. It is gradually
+being taken down and replaced by the beautiful carved ceiling of white
+larchwood which Murphy described a hundred years ago. He says: "Above
+the first arch is placed a second, considerably narrower and connecting
+it with the square pillars that support the timber work of the roof,
+which is not less curious in its execution than are the other parts of
+the building. It was put together in the time of Abd-ur-Rahman I., and
+subsists to this day unimpaired, though partially concealed by the
+plaster-work of the modern arches. The beams contain many thousands of
+cubic feet; the bottoms and side of the cross beams have been carved and
+painted with different figures; the rafters also are painted red. Such
+parts as retain the paint are untouched by worms: the other parts, where
+the paint no longer remains, are so little affected that the decay of a
+thousand years is scarcely perceptible; and, what is rarely to be seen
+in an edifice of such antiquity, no cobwebs whatever are to be traced
+here. The timber work of the roof is further covered with lead; and<a name="page_093" id="page_093"></a>
+the whole has been executed with such precision and taste, that it may
+justly be pronounced a <i>chef-d'&oelig;uvre</i> of art, both with respect to
+the arrangement of the different parts, as well as to the extent and
+solidity of the whole."</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_023" id="ill_023"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_023-cordova_mezquita_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_023-cordova_mezquita_sml.jpg" width="390" height="550" alt="CORDOVA&mdash;MEZQUITA" title="CORDOVA&mdash;MEZQUITA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">CORDOVA&mdash;MEZQUITA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>But what must have lent so much of beauty to the building originally was
+that, instead of being enclosed with walls as it is at present, its long
+arcades opened into the groves of orange trees without, which were
+simply their natural continuation&mdash;a graceful and symmetrical plan which
+one would like to see attempted in modern times. Though, too, every
+Mohammedan temple is necessarily simple in plan and can never approach
+the Christian churches in elaboration and gorgeousness, here Moslem art
+exhausted its ingenuity on the embellishment of those more sacred parts
+of the building such as the Sanctuary and the Maksurrah.</p>
+
+<p>The Sanctuary or Zeka has been spared to us. It is a little heptagonal
+recess, paved with white marble and roofed with a shell-like cupola of
+marble of a single block. The sides are formed by dentated horseshoe
+arches which interlace and enclose each other in a beautiful
+complication. Here in the southern wall is the recess which indicated
+the direction of Mecca, and towards which the worshippers turned; it is
+adorned with exquisite mosaic work and with inscriptions from the Koran
+and the names of the architects. In the Sanctuary was preserved for
+several centuries after the Reconquest the superb "mimbar"<a name="page_094" id="page_094"></a> or pulpit of
+Al Hakem II. "It was of marble," says Señor de Madrazo, "and of the most
+precious woods, such as ebony, red sandal-wood, bakam, Julian aloe,
+etc.; it cost 35,000 dineros and 3 adirames. It had nine steps." We are
+told that it was composed of 36,000 pieces of wood, joined with pins of
+silver and gold, and encrusted with precious stones. Its construction
+lasted seven years, eight artificers being employed upon it daily. This
+tribune was reserved for the khalifa, and in it was deposited the
+principal object of the veneration of the Moslems of Andalusia and Al
+Moghreb&mdash;a copy of the Koran supposed to have been written by Othman and
+stained with his precious blood. This treasure was preserved in a
+binding of cloth-of-gold sewn with pearls and rubies, covered with the
+richest red silk, and placed on a lectern of aloe-wood with nails of
+gold. Its weight was extraordinary, and two men could carry it only with
+difficulty. It was placed in the mimbar, when the imam read from it the
+prayer of the Azulah, and was then placed in the treasury with the gold
+and silver vessels used in the ceremonies of the "Ramadan."</p>
+
+<p>The Maksurrah is now transformed into the chapel of Villa Viciosa. Here
+sat the khalifa when not officiating as imam. Little is visible of the
+original decoration, except the cupola, similar to that of the
+Sanctuary. Adjacent to this chapel another has been discovered which it
+is thought will prove to be the treasury to which Madrazo refers.<a name="page_095" id="page_095"></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_024" id="ill_024"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_024-cordova_patio_naranjos_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_024-cordova_patio_naranjos_sml.jpg" width="550" height="392" alt="CORDOVA&mdash;PATIO DE LOS NARANJOS" title="CORDOVA&mdash;PATIO DE LOS NARANJOS" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">CORDOVA&mdash;PATIO DE LOS NARANJOS</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>When Cordova was taken by St. Ferdinand in 1236, the mosque was
+reconsecrated as a Christian cathedral, but little alteration was made
+in the original structure. It was in 1523 that the unfortunate idea
+possessed the bishop, Don Alfonso Manrique, to build a new church in the
+middle of the Mohammedan temple. So proud were the Cordovans of their
+great monument, that the municipality threatened the innovators with
+death if they ventured to carry the project into execution. However,
+this decree was overridden by an order from Charles V., who knew so
+little what he was about that on visiting Cordova a few years later, he
+bitterly expressed his regret at having allowed the mosque to be
+interfered with. Two hundred columns had been swept away to make room
+for the existing chancel, choir, and lateral chapels. Though we resent
+their appearance here, these parts of the church are not wanting in
+taste and richness. The reredos of jasper and bronze is painted by
+Antonio Palomino, and flanks a sumptuous and beautifully moulded
+tabernacle. Not so much praise can be bestowed on the choir, where,
+however, the stalls by Pedro Duque Cornejo reveal skilful workmanship.
+Lope de Rueda, the Spanish Molière, is entombed here. In the Cathedral
+is also buried the poet Gongora, whose style is aptly compared by Mme.
+Dieulafoy to that of Churriguera in architecture. A more interesting
+grave is that of Doña Maria de Guzman de Paredes, a lady celebrated for
+her wit and wisdom in the days of Philip II., and<a name="page_096" id="page_096"></a> who won every degree
+it was in the power of the University of Alcalá to confer. Duque Cornejo
+is also buried here.</p>
+
+<p>In the Sacristy is a fine monstrance by Juan de Arfe. The chapels do not
+call for particular examination.</p>
+
+<p>If the Mezquita is strange within, it is eminently picturesque without.
+The massive walls are crenellated and supported by stout square
+buttresses. Between these are horseshoe arches, richly decorated, and
+forming originally sixteen entrances, most of which are now blocked up.
+The Puerta del Perdon has been adorned with the arms of Castile and
+Leon, and is secured by bronze doors of an interesting type. An
+inscription upon it runs:&mdash;"On the 2nd day of the month of March of the
+era of Cæsar 1415 (1577 <small>A.D.</small>), in the reign of the Most High and Mighty
+Don Enrique, King of Castile."</p>
+
+<p>Of the minaret, once equal to the Giralda and, like it, once surmounted
+by great metal globes, only the lowest storey remains, an earthquake
+having thrown down the superstructure in the sixteenth century. And the
+famous Court of the Orange Trees, on to which the aisles at one time
+opened, has lost much of its charm. The trees are stunted and withered,
+and the soil covered with coarse grass and weeds. On three sides the
+court is surrounded by a gallery, on the fourth by the buildings of the
+chapter. The basin was placed here in 945 by Abd-ur-Rahman, and might
+with advantage be used for its original purpose by some of<a name="page_097" id="page_097"></a> the
+habitués of the patio. Two Roman columns at the entrance to the
+Cathedral announce the distance to Gades (114 miles) from the Temple of
+Janus, which stood on this site.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_025" id="ill_025"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_025-cordova_outer_wall_mosque_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_025-cordova_outer_wall_mosque_sml.jpg" width="550" height="372" alt="CORDOVA&mdash;OUTER WALL OF THE MOSQUE" title="CORDOVA&mdash;OUTER WALL OF THE MOSQUE" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">CORDOVA&mdash;OUTER WALL OF THE MOSQUE</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>On the whole the far-famed Mezquita may be pronounced disappointing. It
+must always be so with the simply planned temples of Islam, when they
+are stripped of the innumerable lamps, the rich carpets and handsome
+furniture, still to be seen in them at Cairo, Constantinople, and
+Smyrna.</p>
+
+<p>Of the magnificent Palace of the Khalifas, the wonderful domain of Az
+Zahara, no trace remains. It was built by a Byzantine architect on the
+flanks of a hill, three miles north-east of Cordova, which the khalifa
+at one time thought of levelling. Arab writers declare this to have been
+the largest palace, as of course it was the most magnificent, ever
+raised by the hand of man. The harem (<i>credat Judæus</i>) could accommodate
+6,000 women, 3,790 eunuchs, and 1,500 guards. Marble appears to have
+been freely used in the construction, from which it would seem that the
+building bore little resemblance to the Alcazar of a later day. There
+were, of course, thousands&mdash;tens of thousands&mdash;of columns brought from
+Rome and Tunis, and probably from Carthage, and fine fragments of
+terra-cotta are still unearthed on the site. Aqueducts conducted sweet
+waters to every chamber in the palace, and fountains cooled the air in
+the luxuriantly planted gardens. We are told of the Hall of Ceremonial,
+with<a name="page_098" id="page_098"></a> its brilliant mosaics and its ceiling of scented wood, in the
+centre of which was set an immense pearl, the gift of the Emperor
+Constantinos Porphyrogenitos. And we hear in addition of basins filled
+with quicksilver for the amusement of the odalisques.</p>
+
+<p>This gorgeous pile owes its existence to a favourite of the Khalifa An
+Nasir, who at her death directed that her immense wealth should be
+employed in ransoming Moslem prisoners in the clutch of the Christian.
+The bereaved potentate sent east, west, north and south in order to
+execute this pious request, only to find to his joy that no such thing
+as a Moslem captive was anywhere to be found. The happy thought then
+came to him to expend the money on the erection of a palace to be named
+after a new favourite, Zahara, whose name it should perpetuate, and in
+whose society he might hope to forget the deceased. This seems to us a
+somewhat queer application of the legacy. The work occupied ten thousand
+men daily for many years, and cost during An Nasir's reign alone seven
+and a half millions of dineros or pieces of gold.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_026" id="ill_026"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_026-cordova_street_scene_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_026-cordova_street_scene_sml.jpg" width="446" height="550" alt="CORDOVA&mdash;A STREET SCENE" title="CORDOVA&mdash;A STREET SCENE" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">CORDOVA&mdash;A STREET SCENE</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The palace seems to have excited, as well it might, the cupidity of
+neighbouring monarchs. Alfonso VI., the conqueror of Toledo, demanded it
+of the Amir Al Mutamed, as a residence for his queen, Doña Constancia,
+whose accouchement he suggested might take place in the mosque. It was
+the Moor's rejection of this original proposal that led to hostilities,
+and threw<a name="page_099" id="page_099"></a> the Spanish Moslems into the arms of the terrible
+Almorávides. Those fierce sectaries seem to have entirely neglected Az
+Zahara, and under the puritanical Almohades we can easily imagine it
+would be suffered to decay. How little was left of it when Ferdinand
+took the place is shown by his referring to it merely as Cordova la
+Vieja (Old Cordova).</p>
+
+<p>Men who lived in such comfort and luxury might be supposed to have
+regarded their less fortunate fellows with easy good nature and
+tolerance, and according to most historians the khalifas of Cordova were
+benevolent despots, even towards their Christian subjects. Some Spanish
+writers, however, paint the lot of these last in gloomy colours, though,
+if we accept their accounts <i>in toto</i>, without the least reservation,
+there can be no question that the lot of the Christian under the Moor
+was very much better than the lot of the Moor under the Christian. But
+that standpoint would not be that of the historians in question. They
+are frankly partisans. The Mohammedans, they would argue, deserved what
+they got, because they worshipped the false Prophet; the Christians were
+in the right. It is more difficult to understand their vehement
+condemnation of the Bishop Recafred, because he forbade his flock to
+seek voluntary martyrdom by publicly cursing Mohammed. To curse the
+Arabian Prophet or anyone else is nowhere laid down as a Christian's
+duty, and on merely prudential grounds the prelate was surely justified
+in dissuading his people from pursuing a course which must finally<a name="page_100" id="page_100"></a> have
+resulted in their complete extermination. Probably in disgust at the
+ingratitude and imbecility of his flock, Recafred embraced the creed of
+Islam, and died cursed and abominated by the people whose utter
+extinction he had averted. The history of the martyrs of Cordova is a
+curious chapter in the annals of religion.</p>
+
+<p>It was recently remarked of Italy that there was not enough faith to
+generate a heresy, and by a parity of reasoning the lamp of faith must
+have burnt very brightly in the Christian community of Cordova. The
+Saracen authorities were bewildered by the multitude of sects and
+factions which claimed to represent the Church of Christ, and to
+administer its temporalities. Councils of the Christian prelates were
+frequently convoked by the khalifas, but by the defeated side their
+decisions were always branded as schismatical or heretical. Religious
+debate is the favourite occupation of a decaying State, and the
+Mohammedans themselves had their divisions. The doctors of the law, who
+congregated in a special quarter of the capital, constituted themselves
+the critics of their rulers and of public morals. They considered
+culture and luxury incompatible with morality, and preached the creed of
+the Uncomfortable and the Unlovely with the zest of an English Puritan.
+One day there arose a sovereign (Hakem) more sensitive of censure than
+his predecessors. He burnt out the Puritan quarter and forced the
+zealots to take refuge in distant parts where their peculiar talents
+were more in demand.<a name="page_101" id="page_101"></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_027" id="ill_027"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_027-cordova_a_street_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_027-cordova_a_street_sml.jpg" width="432" height="550" alt="CORDOVA&mdash;A STREET" title="CORDOVA&mdash;A STREET" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">CORDOVA&mdash;A STREET</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The more human side of Islam found an embodiment in the illustrious
+Ziryab, the favourite of Abd-ur-Rahman II. In his case, I suppose, as in
+all else, it is necessary to discount by fifty per cent. all the
+appreciations of Arabic writers; yet through all the cobwebs of
+exaggeration and tradition, we can discern the outlines of a very
+remarkable personality. Ziryab was the Admirable Crichton of his age. He
+combined the attributes of Leonardo da Vinci and Beau Nash. He alone
+could decide on the proper method of eating asparagus and on the
+planning of a city. He could pronounce with finality on the wisdom of a
+move at chess and a far-reaching treaty of state. He had views on the
+organization of armies and aviaries; he was listened to with equal
+respect by statesmen and scullery-maids. And (wonderful to relate) this
+authority on everybody's business was loved by everyone!</p>
+
+<p>The history of Cordova, like that of most capitals, belongs to the
+nation at large, and cannot be more than touched upon here. Memorials of
+ancient days are the picturesque Moorish walls with their flanking
+towers and the grand old bridge of sixteen arches, built by the
+khalifas. It marked the limit of navigation in Roman days, whereas now
+no boat can ascend the Guadalquivir above Seville. The bridge is
+defended on the south side by a very picturesque <i>tête du pont</i> called
+Calahorra, a fine specimen of the medieval barbican. Here a strange
+scene was witnessed in the<a name="page_102" id="page_102"></a> year 1394, when the prototype of Don
+Quixote, Don Martin de la Barbuda, Grand Master of Calatrava, appeared
+at the head of a few knights and a fanatical rabble on his way to fight
+the Moors of Granada. His enterprise was directly counter to the king's
+orders; the two countries were at peace. The royal officers assembled on
+the bridge expostulated and threatened the crusaders in vain. The Grand
+Master was accompanied by a hermit, who exhorted him to proceed and
+promised him that his victory should be purchased without the loss of a
+single Christian life. The officials were swept aside, and the wild
+cavalcade went on its way to destruction. None of the knights ever
+returned alive across the bridge of Cordova.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_028" id="ill_028"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_028-cordova_the_bridge_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_028-cordova_the_bridge_sml.jpg" width="550" height="351" alt="CORDOVA&mdash;THE BRIDGE" title="CORDOVA&mdash;THE BRIDGE" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">CORDOVA&mdash;THE BRIDGE</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>During the four centuries following the Reconquest, the city boasted
+that it was the home of the finest flower of the European aristocracy.
+Their old mansions have for the most part disappeared, but the name of
+the most distinguished member of the order is treasured in Cordova and
+honoured far beyond the limits of Spain. Gonzalo Hernandez de Aguilar y
+de Cordova, "the Great Captain," is the hero of the city. The principal
+street is named after him, as indeed one might suppose the town to have
+been, from the reverence in which he is held. On the whole, he was the
+greatest soldier this country has produced. With forces hardly superior
+to those with which Cortes and Pizarro conquered a savage foe, he
+vanquished the best equipped troops in Christendom and matched<a name="page_103" id="page_103"></a> his
+strength successfully against the most brilliant warriors of his day.
+His reward, it is hardly necessary to say of the servant of a
+fifteenth-century king, was ingratitude and neglect. When the odious
+Ferdinand V. demanded from him a statement of his military expenditure,
+he responded with the famous "Cuentas del Gran Capitan," which silenced
+even the venal monarch. The statement ran:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"200,736 ducats and 9 reals paid to the clergy and the poor who
+prayed for the victory of the arms of Spain.</p>
+
+<p>"100 millions in pikes, bullets, and entrenching tools; 100,000 in
+powder and cannon-balls, 10,000 ducats in scented gloves to
+preserve the troops from the odour of the enemies' dead left on the
+battlefield; 100,000 ducats spent in the repair of the bells
+completely worn out by every day announcing fresh victories gained
+over our enemies; 50,000 ducats in 'aguardiente' for the troops, on
+the eve of battle. A million and a half for the safeguarding
+prisoners and wounded.</p>
+
+<p>"One million for Masses of Thanksgiving, 700,494 ducats for secret
+service, etc.</p>
+
+<p>"And one hundred millions for the patience with which I have
+listened to the King, who demands an account from the man who has
+presented him with a kingdom"!</p></div>
+
+<p>This singular balance-sheet sufficiently shows the temper of the
+grandees of Spain even in the days of the New Monarchy. Cordova has
+reason to be proud of her eponymous hero. She has not been very fruitful
+in great men. She has produced no painters of eminence, unless Pablo de
+Cespedes may be classed among such; but Mme. Dieulafoy reminds us that
+to<a name="page_104" id="page_104"></a> Juan de Mena, a native of the place and a courtier of Juan II.,
+Spanish poetry is deeply indebted:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"His great work, 'The Labyrinth,' may in a measure be compared with
+that part of the 'Divina Commedia' where the Florentine places
+himself under the protection of Beatrice. Accompanied by a
+beautiful young woman personifying Providence, the poet witnesses
+the apparition of the worthies of History and Legend, and amuses
+himself in sketching their portraits. At times the style becomes
+heavy and pedantic, at others the touches of the pencil have a
+vigour and simplicity altogether Dantesque. Before Juan de Mena,
+the Castilian muse had never taken so daring a flight; and in spite
+of the defects of the general scheme, the untasteful phraseology,
+and the measure, 'The Labyrinth' abounds in conceptions and
+episodes where energy blended with beauty reveals a genius of the
+first order."</p></div>
+
+<p><a name="ill_029" id="ill_029"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_029-cordova_courtyard_inn_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_029-cordova_courtyard_inn_sml.jpg" width="550" height="441" alt="CORDOVA&mdash;COURTYARD OF AN INN" title="CORDOVA&mdash;COURTYARD OF AN INN" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">CORDOVA&mdash;COURTYARD OF AN INN</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>From poetry to leather the transition may seem abrupt, but it is to be
+feared that our city has derived more renown from the latter than the
+former. The stamped and gilded leather of Cordova was highly esteemed
+all over the civilized world from the fifteenth century to the
+eighteenth. Whether the industry was introduced by the Moors it is idle
+to inquire; long after their departure it formed the principal business
+and source of revenue of the Spaniards of the city. A powerful guild
+laid down strict rules as to apprenticeship, and regulated the quality
+and quantity of the manufacture. Terrible penalties were enforced
+against the tanner who made use of the hides of animals that had died of
+disease. The kings of Spain considered trunks or other objects<a name="page_105" id="page_105"></a>
+bound in Cordova leather gifts very suitable for their fellow-princes.
+The Catholic kings, absurdly enough, forbade its exportation to the New
+World, not wishing to deprive the mother-country of goods of such price.
+With protection on this scale, we are not surprised to learn that the
+industry began to decline. Cordova was at length surpassed in its own
+line by Venice and other cities. The rich specimens of its work which
+adorned the mansions of its old noblesse were sold and dispersed all
+over the world, upon the general impoverishment of the kingdom in the
+eighteenth century. Then came the sack of the city, a hundred years ago,
+by the army of Dupont. Time has spared the famous race of Cordovan
+horses, and many a poor hidalgo rides into the town on a steed which if
+sold in London might redeem his shattered fortunes.</p>
+
+<p>I have said a great deal about Cordova and its titles to remembrance;
+but it must be confessed that there is little enough to see in it. The
+churches present no features of interest, except the Colegiata de San
+Hipolito, modernized in 1729, which contains the tombs of Ferdinand IV.
+and Alfonso XI. Nor is walking through the city an exercise altogether
+pleasing, as the streets which were the first paved in Europe, in 850,
+might also claim to be the worst paved in the world. The stones are so
+sharp and pointed that in parts you have to skip from one to the other,
+like a bear dancing on hot iron&mdash;an original but ungraceful method of
+locomotion. A drive in the<a name="page_106" id="page_106"></a> surrounding country is productive of more
+pleasure. The neighbourhood is a Paradise of fertility, and sets one
+wondering what becomes of all the money that this must bring in and
+represent. Spain and Greece are very poor countries, but I do not think
+that Spaniards and Greeks are, for the most part, very poor.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_030" id="ill_030"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_030-cordova_old_houses_near_river_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_030-cordova_old_houses_near_river_sml.jpg" width="550" height="393" alt="CORDOVA&mdash;OLD HOUSES NEAR THE RIVER" title="CORDOVA&mdash;OLD HOUSES NEAR THE RIVER" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">CORDOVA&mdash;OLD HOUSES NEAR THE RIVER</span>
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="page_107" id="page_107"></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV<br /><br />
+<small>GRANADA</small></h2>
+
+<p class="nind">O<small>VER</small> two thousand feet above the sea stands the ancient city of Granada,
+once the teeming centre of the kingdom of the Moors and now a town of
+memories eloquent of the grandeur of older days. The province bearing
+its name is bounded on the north by sterile ranges, while close to the
+southern seaboard stretch the huge shoulders and serrated peaks of the
+noble Sierra Nevada, rivalling in height the chief summits of the
+Pyrenees. Between these ranges spread fertile vegas, or plains, rising
+here and there to over a thousand feet, a district of vineyards and
+olive groves, and semi-tropical plants find a favourable habitat.</p>
+
+<p>Granada, though on the verge of an arid territory, is in a strip of
+great fertility, watered by the Genil and the Darro, the latter&mdash;the
+Hadarro of the Moors&mdash;a stream that is heavily taxed by the farmers for
+purposes of irrigation. Théophile Gautier praised the river of Granada
+for its beauty, but since his day the stream has shrunk, and nowadays
+the volume of water is insignificant, especially during a dry summer.<a name="page_108" id="page_108"></a></p>
+
+<p>The waters of the Darro have a reputation for their healing qualities,
+and cattle that drink from it are said to recover quickly from diseases.
+Hence, in the ancient speech, the river had the title of "The Salutary
+Bath of Sheep." Under the Moors the environs of Granada were in the
+highest state of cultivation, and they are still very productive. The
+land yields plenteous wine and oil. The chief crops are grains of
+various sorts. Hemp and flax flourish, and oranges, lemons, and figs are
+a source of income to the agriculturists. Granada is also famed for its
+mulberry trees, whose leaves provide food for the silk caterpillar,
+though the silk trade is in a state of sad decay.</p>
+
+<p>The soil around the city never rests. There is no waste of land. Oranges
+and pomegranates grow profusely. The cactus is cultivated for the
+production of the cochineal insect. Clovers yield several cuttings each
+year in this fecund territory.</p>
+
+<p>In the neighbouring mountains there are rich veins of marble, and jasper
+and amethyst are found. Yet the mining industry in the Sierra Nevada
+remains to be developed. The Granadines are hardly a commercial
+population, though numerous crafts are practised in their city.
+Factories for the production of sugar from beetroot have been erected in
+recent years, and it is hoped that this industry will increase.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_031" id="ill_031"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_031-granada_from_the_gerneralife_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_031-granada_from_the_gerneralife_sml.jpg" width="392" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;FROM THE GENERALIFE" title="GRANADA&mdash;FROM THE GENERALIFE" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;FROM THE GENERALIFE</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The life of Granada in its lighter aspects can be well studied on the
+promenade of the Salón, one of the<a name="page_109" id="page_109"></a> most beautiful parades in
+Europe. Here, under the shade of luxuriant trees, amid handsome
+fountains, and by parterres decked richly with many flowers, the people
+of the city stroll upon summer evenings after the great heat of the day.
+From the Salón you gain a superb view of the purple Sierra Nevada, which
+at sunset wears a wealth of changing hues.</p>
+
+<p>A walk along the promenade precedes the evening gathering in the patios
+of the houses of the upper and middle classes, when to the sound of
+guitar and the rattle of castanets, young and old dance together. At
+these tertulia, or evening parties, singing alternates with dancing the
+bolero and the jota. And later, when the lights are dim, and the
+watchman tramps slowly through the streets, you see the lovers, the
+"novios" waiting beneath the windows of the adored fair ones, or lightly
+strumming serenades on their guitars.</p>
+
+<p>At festival times the city is all animation. The anniversary of the
+taking of Granada is celebrated on January 2, when a procession is
+formed and proceeds to the Cathedral. Corpus Christi is another feast
+day, and there are two fairs during the year, one in June and the other
+in September.</p>
+
+<p>But it is Granada of the past rather than of the present that holds us
+during a sojourn in the city of hills and vistas. It is the scene of
+dreams, a city of meditation. You court serenity rather than hilarity
+amid these haunted streets and silent ruins. The Arabs had a saying,
+referring to one who was sad,<a name="page_110" id="page_110"></a> "He is thinking of Granada." It is this
+spirit, perhaps, which prevails in the patios of the Alhambra and amid
+the orange trees of the Generalife Gardens. And yet it is not true
+depression. It is a sense of the glory that has been, a meditativeness
+which is induced by the somnolence of the scene, and fostered by the
+languorous atmosphere of the South.</p>
+
+<p>An ancient legend, often rehearsed by chroniclers, ascribed the founding
+of the city to certain descendants of Noah. It stated that Tubal settled
+in Spain and populated the country. There is some evidence that the
+province of Granada was the first district in Spain peopled by aliens.
+The founder of a town on the site of modern Granada is alleged to have
+been the mythical Iberus, who built Illiberis, which has been referred
+to as the original city. At any rate Illiberis existed in the Roman
+days, for it was a municipium under the rule of Augustus. The town was
+also the scene of an ecclesiastical council in the fourth century.</p>
+
+<p>Plundered by the Vandals, and won by the Visigoths, Illiberis was in
+decay at the time of the coming of the Moors to the Iberian Peninsula.
+With the conquest of Andalusia, the town of Granada first came into
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>At this period the Berbers overran the territory, though the Moorish
+authors relate that settlers from Damascus were the first Eastern
+colonizers of Granada.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_032" id="ill_032"></a>ill_032</p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_032-granada_sierra_nevada_from_the_alhambra_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_032-granada_sierra_nevada_from_the_alhambra_sml.jpg" width="550" height="384" alt="GRANADA--SIERRA NEVADA FROM THE ALHAMBRA GARDENS" title="GRANADA--SIERRA NEVADA FROM THE ALHAMBRA GARDENS" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA--SIERRA NEVADA FROM THE ALHAMBRA GARDENS</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The greatest obscurity shrouds the history of the city. It is strange
+that the writers of medieval times<a name="page_111" id="page_111"></a> so rarely allude to Granada. About
+the year 860, a war raged over Andalusia between the native Moslems and
+their foreign rulers, the chief leader of the former being Omar Ben
+Hafsûn. Under his lieutenant, Nabil, an attack was made on Granada, and
+we read that some exultant verses written by the belligerents were
+attached to an arrow and propelled over the city wall. In these verses
+the words <i>Kalat-al-hamra</i> ("the Red Castle") appear. This first
+reference to Al-Hamra suggests that an edifice for defence stood on the
+hill now occupied by the Alhambra.</p>
+
+<p>In 886 Omar Ben Hafsûn appears to have wrested Granada from the Khalifa
+of Cordova. A few years later Omar was conquered, and retiring to the
+Castle of Bobastro, he embraced the Christian faith, in which he died.</p>
+
+<p>Zawi Ben Ziri, a Berber, first established Granada as a kingdom in 1013.
+Gayangos, the Spanish historian, states that Illiberis&mdash;or Elvira, as it
+was called at this time&mdash;was a dwindling city and that Habus Ibn
+Makesen, nephew to Zawi Ben Ziri, founded a new town and capital.</p>
+
+<p>Habus was a builder as well as a warrior. He is the putative founder of
+the old Kasba, or citadel, in the Albaicin quarter, which was added to
+by his heir, Badis, who succeeded him in rule. The king is also said to
+have built the Casa del Gallo de Viento, in the same quarter, where he
+probably resided. Badis proved an ambitious and warlike monarch, for he<a name="page_112" id="page_112"></a>
+enlarged his dominions widely, and even subdued the resolute hillfolk of
+the Alpujarras. He conquered Malaga, and made plans to besiege Seville.
+But his force was routed at Cabra by the famous Cid Campeador, Ruy Diaz
+de Bivar, the ally of the sultan of that city. To Badis is attributed a
+persecution of the Jews, who numbered several thousands in Elvira, and a
+terrible slaughter decimated their ranks.</p>
+
+<p>At the advent of the Almoravides, a fierce sect of Northern Africa,
+Granada was captured (1090) by Abd-ul-Aziz. The city now rose in
+importance. Soon after the Almoravide settlement, the followers of Islam
+in Granada attacked the Christians of the city and destroyed their
+church by fire. The unfortunate Christians appealed for help to Alfonso
+of Aragon, and the king came to their relief at the head of a strong
+army. In the combat at Anzul the Almoravides were worsted. Alfonso
+before retiring laid waste the fertile plain, and left the Christians to
+make the best of their position. His action had little effect upon the
+Almoravides, for in 1126 numbers of Christians were banished to Barbary
+and the rest bitterly oppressed.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_033" id="ill_033"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_033-granada_exterior_alhambra_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_033-granada_exterior_alhambra_sml.jpg" width="379" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;EXTERIOR OF THE ALHAMBRA" title="GRANADA&mdash;EXTERIOR OF THE ALHAMBRA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;EXTERIOR OF THE ALHAMBRA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The doom of the Almoravides came in 1148. A mightier host, the rapacious
+and fanatical Almohades, surged over the city. The Moorish inhabitants,
+strengthening their forces with the aid of Christians and Jews, invited
+Ibrahim Ibn Humushk to lead them to the expulsion of the new sectaries.
+The invaders took refuge in the Kasba, and sought relief from<a name="page_113" id="page_113"></a>
+Africa, whence an army was despatched. This force was beaten by Humushk,
+and the Granadines secured the assistance of the Sultan of Murcia and
+Valencia, whose troops attacked the Kasba, which was held by the
+Almohades. On the arrival of a second army, they made a sally and
+inflicted severe losses upon the soldiers of the sultan and his
+Christian allies. After this success, the Almohades endeavoured to
+pacify the unruly among their neighbours. Their governor, Sidi Abu
+Abrahim Ishak, was a tactful and benevolent leader. He improved the
+city, built a palace for himself, and made the Kasba a stronger
+fortress. The power of the Almohades was, however, insecure. Ben Hud, a
+potent chieftain, who had gained a strip of territory on the coast, now
+discerned that the hour was ripe for an assault upon Cordova, Jaen, and
+Granada. His domination was not permanent. Mohammed al Ahmar, uniting
+with the foes of Ben Hud, held Seville for a brief space, and then drove
+his rival to Almeria, where he was murdered in 1237.</p>
+
+<p>Granada now came under the sway of Al Ahmar, and in the hour of his
+triumph he was proclaimed monarch of a large part of southern Spain. For
+two hundred and fifty years the State founded by him resisted the
+Christian hosts. Granada rose to the zenith of power and prosperity. Its
+first sultan was a man of high character, courteous, dignified, and
+astute. He reigned long, and spent himself in affairs of<a name="page_114" id="page_114"></a> government and
+in military enterprises, though he used every means to maintain peace.</p>
+
+<p>Al Ahmar's last expedition was undertaken against the Spanish forces and
+the governors of Guadix and Malaga (their allies) when he was eighty
+years of age, and failing in strength through illness. A fall from his
+horse brought him to his end. He expired in the arms of his ally, the
+Infante Don Felipe, and under cover of darkness his body was borne to
+Granada, where it was entombed in the burial ground of Assabica.</p>
+
+<p>The sovereignty now descended to Al Ahmar's son, named Mohammed II., who
+ascended the throne in 1273. He was renowned for his wisdom in the law,
+and during his reign of twenty-nine years he proved a worthy son of a
+great father.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_034" id="ill_034"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_034-granada_street_albaicin_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_034-granada_street_albaicin_sml.jpg" width="349" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;A STREET IN THE ALBAICIN" title="GRANADA&mdash;A STREET IN THE ALBAICIN" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;A STREET IN THE ALBAICIN</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>During his negotiations with Alfonso X. at Seville, Mohammed was the
+victim of an artifice of Queen Violante. Upon being asked by the queen a
+favour, he yielded in accordance with the chivalric notions of the time,
+but his chagrin was deep when he learned that he had agreed to a year's
+truce to the rebels within his dominion. Smarting under this device, he
+made plans for the annihilation of his foes. Now the friend of the
+Spaniards against the African, now the ally of his own co-religionists,
+Mohammed's career was one of strife. He died in 1302, able to boast that
+he had not lost a particle of the soil bequeathed to him by his father.
+Mohammed III. was, like his father, a<a name="page_115" id="page_115"></a> forceful sovereign. He
+applied himself rigorously to the government of his territory, often
+spending the whole twenty-four hours in affairs of State. In 1306 he
+seized Ceuta, and brought a number of the conquered to Granada. But
+reverses came when the governor of Almeria rebelled and joined hands
+with the King of Aragon. Meanwhile the Castilians attacked Algeciras,
+and Mohammed, between two foes, was brought to bay. He extricated
+himself from danger by yielding four fortresses and paying a heavy sum.
+But his troubles were not at an end. Returning to Granada, he was
+surrounded by conspirators in his palace, and forced to yield the throne
+to his brother, Abu-l-Juyyush Muley Nasr. Humiliated and defeated,
+Mohammed retired to Almuñecar, where he lived in seclusion.</p>
+
+<p>Nasr's first coup after seizing the throne was a successful attack upon
+Don Jaime at Almeria. Unfortunately a conspiracy was fomented by his
+nephew Abu-l-Walid. Nasr, who seems to have had a fit of apoplexy, was
+thought to be dead when Mohammed III. was brought back to Granada. He
+was, however, alive upon the return of the lawful sovereign; and on the
+authority of some historians he ordered that his rival should be put to
+death, while other writers assert that Mohammed was again banished to
+Almuñecar.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after, Nasr was assailed by the followers of Abu-l-Walid, and
+forced to yield. As a solatium he<a name="page_116" id="page_116"></a> was allowed to rule over the town of
+Guadix, whither he retired. Al Khattib relates that Nasr was a
+philosopher, and versed in the sciences of astronomy and mathematics.</p>
+
+<p>Abu-l-Walid was an implacable foe of the Christians. His assault on
+Gibraltar was frustrated; but he gained a signal victory over the
+Castilians in 1319, when the princes Pedro and Juan were killed.
+Following up this success, he marched upon the towns of Martos and Baza,
+and ravaged the country. It was at the latter town that artillery was
+first used in Spain.</p>
+
+<p>Hailed with joy, the victorious Abu-l-Walid returned to Granada bearing
+the spoils of war. Among the captives was a maiden of unusual beauty,
+whom he had wrested from an inferior officer. This act so incensed the
+chieftain that three days after he stabbed his ruler outside the
+Alhambra. Dying from the wound, Abu-l-Walid exacted an oath of fealty
+from the eminent and powerful to his eldest son, Mulai Mohammed Ben
+Ismaïl. This command was fulfilled before the sultan's minister
+disclosed the death of his royal master.</p>
+
+<p>The boy king, Mohammed IV., was soon busy quelling factions in his
+State, and repelling the African army, which took in turn Marbella,
+Algeciras, and Ronda. He also defeated the Castilians in several
+desperate encounters, but lost the day at Gibraltar.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_035" id="ill_035"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_035-granada_market_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_035-granada_market_sml.jpg" width="374" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;IN THE MARKET" title="GRANADA&mdash;IN THE MARKET" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;IN THE MARKET</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Mohammed IV., who was assassinated at Gibraltar by his allies the
+Moroccans, was succeeded in 1333<a name="page_117" id="page_117"></a> by his brother Yusuf I. This king
+was a hater of warfare; he sought the peaceful reform of the community
+rather than the expansion of his kingdom. Under his rule Granada
+prospered and the condition of the people was bettered. Yusuf I. was
+disturbed in the tranquillity of his noble palace at Malaga by the
+appeals of the African potentates for his aid in reconquering Spain.
+Compelled to join the invaders, he sustained a severe disaster at the
+Salado, and was forced to acquire peace at the cost of yielding
+Algeciras. He was murdered by a madman in 1358.</p>
+
+<p>Mohammed V. was the next sovereign. He was a worthy son of his
+high-principled father, Yusuf; but fate decreed that his reign should
+not prove peaceful, for soon after his accession, his younger brother
+Ismaïl conspired with certain officers of state and made an attempt to
+gain the throne. Upon a night in August, 1360, about one hundred
+conspirators climbed the walls of the Kasba and after killing the wizir,
+proclaimed Ismaïl as sultan. Mohammed, who was without the palace at the
+time, essayed to enter; but he was received with a flight of arrows, and
+mounting a horse he galloped away to Guadix. Here he was welcomed, and
+from this town he sped to Marbella, thence to Africa, where he received
+the aid of Abu-l-Hasan. With troops lent to him he returned to Spain,
+hoping to crush the usurper. But Abu-l-Hasan capriciously ordered the
+return of his soldiers, and Mohammed retreated to Ronda with a few
+adherents.<a name="page_118" id="page_118"></a></p>
+
+<p>Dissension had arisen meanwhile between Ismaïl and Abu Saïd, one of the
+chief conspirators, who was burning to take the reins of government in
+his own hands. Ismaïl was besieged by Abu Saïd, and upon venturing out
+of his palace was slain.</p>
+
+<p>Fresh trouble arose in Granada, for Pedro of Castile came to the
+assistance of the lawful ruler. But Mohammed, witnessing the ravage of
+the district by the Christian army, was far from receiving the invader
+with open arms. "For no empire in the world would I sacrifice my
+country," cried the sultan. Thereupon the King of Castile retired, and
+Abu Saïd, mistaking the reason of his return to Seville, went thither to
+beg his alliance. The story of the sultan's murder, at the instigation
+of Pedro the Cruel, has often been told. Abu Saïd was done to death at
+Seville, and the resplendent ruby which was taken from him was presented
+to the Black Prince of England, and is still preserved among the regalia
+of England.</p>
+
+<p>Mohammed then returned to his capital. With the exception of a rebellion
+under Ali Ben Nasr, he passed twenty years of peace. Granada became a
+more thriving city, and under the sultan's clement administration, it
+was the resort of traders of all nations and the centre of culture in
+the south. According to Mendoza, the inhabitants of Granada numbered
+about 420,000 in the reign of Mohammed V., but it is probable that the
+number was wildly over-estimated.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_036" id="ill_036"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_036-granada_aqueduct_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_036-granada_aqueduct_sml.jpg" width="446" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;THE ALHAMBRA: THE AQUEDUCT" title="GRANADA&mdash;THE ALHAMBRA: THE AQUEDUCT" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;THE ALHAMBRA: THE AQUEDUCT</span>
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="page_119" id="page_119"></a></p>
+
+<p>Yusuf II. followed Mohammed V. He was suspected of favouring the
+Christians. He certainly released all the captives of that faith, and
+restored them to their own country. This act appears to have incited his
+son Mohammed to rise against the throne. Yusuf was at first disposed to
+relinquish his sovereignty, for he was a lover of peace; but on the
+advice of an ambassador from Morocco he raised an army and advanced on
+Murcia.</p>
+
+<p>At this period the King of Castile was Enrique III., an incapable
+monarch in defiance of whose orders Don Martin de la Barbuda, the Master
+of Calatrava, headed an advance into the kingdom of Yusuf. The force
+was, however, entirely routed by the Moors. Soon after (1395) Yusuf, the
+pacific sovereign, was dead&mdash;the victim, it is said, of a poisoned
+potion, in the form of a tonic sent him by the Sultan of Fez.</p>
+
+<p>The first exploit of Yusuf's son Mohammed was a visit to Toledo, with
+twenty-five mounted attendants, where he appeared before Enrique III.
+and besought a renewal of the truce. The armistice was disregarded by
+the governor of Andalusia, who invaded the Moorish dominions, till
+Mohammed, in reprisal, seized the citadel of Ayamonte. At Jijena he was
+defeated, and was forced to plead for peace. He was at the point of
+death, when the idea seized him to secure the government of Granada for
+his son by the assassination of his brother. The governor of Salobreña
+was commanded to put to death the prince<a name="page_120" id="page_120"></a> whom he had in his keeping.
+The doomed man asked leave to finish the game of chess in which he was
+engaged, and before either player could cry "Checkmate," the news came
+that the prince's brother was dead and that he had been declared sultan.
+Yusuf III. was faced with difficulties immediately upon his accession.
+Antequera fell into the hands of the Castilians, led by the Infante
+Fernando. The defenders were slain, and only about two thousand of the
+townsmen outlived the rigours of the siege. The survivors were allowed
+to settle in Granada, and they gave the name of Antequeruela to the
+suburb.</p>
+
+<p>When the natives of Gibraltar revolted, and declared allegiance to Fez,
+the sultan of that State sent his brother Abu Saïd to secure the town.
+Abu Saïd, being left to the mercy of the enemy, was seized and brought
+to Granada, where he was shown a letter from the ruler of Fez desiring
+that he might be despatched. With this request the generous Yusuf
+refused to comply. He released his captive and furnished him with money
+and troops with which he left for Africa. The brother who had planned
+his death was hurled from the throne, and till Abu Saïd's death Granada
+did not want an ally.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_037" id="ill_037"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_037-granada_court_of_cypresses_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_037-granada_court_of_cypresses_sml.jpg" width="400" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;THE COURT OF THE CYPRESSES" title="GRANADA&mdash;THE COURT OF THE CYPRESSES" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;THE COURT OF THE CYPRESSES</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>In rapid succession sultans now flit across the lurid page of Granada's
+history. It is a gloomy tale of incessant civil strife and of
+unsuccessful warfare with the Christians. Rulers are expelled from their
+thrones by pretenders who themselves fall victims to the<a name="page_121" id="page_121"></a> poignards
+of their partisans. Sovereigns purchase their disputed crowns by selling
+the honour and independence of their country to the foreigner. To trace
+the miserable vicissitudes of the careers&mdash;we cannot call them
+reigns&mdash;of Mohammed VII., Mohammed VIII., Yusuf IV., and Saïd Ben
+Ismaïl, would be to weary and disgust you with a nation whose stubborn
+fight against overwhelming odds should command our respect.</p>
+
+<p>The last act in the protracted drama began with the accession of Mulai
+Hasan in the year 1465. With his famous reply to the Castilian
+ambassadors who demanded tribute, "Here we manufacture only iron
+spear-heads for our enemies," the final campaign began. Every incident
+of that war has been made familiar to us Anglo-Saxons by the pen of
+Prescott. In his pages long ago most of us read of the taking of Zahara
+by the Moors and of the brilliant surprise of the fortress of Alhama by
+the gallant Marquis of Cadiz. We have not forgotten the wailing of the
+Moors, "Ay de mi, Alhama!" nor the domestic revolution that followed
+when the old sultan was hurled from his throne by his son Boabdil. Poor
+Boabdil, on whom the blame of all his country's disasters has been laid
+by historians, Christian and Arab! Weak or foolhardy, the "Little King"
+fought like a Trojan against Ferdinand and Isabella for his country, and
+against his father and his uncle for his crown, at one and the same
+time. He was taken<a name="page_122" id="page_122"></a> prisoner by Ferdinand and is said to have signed a
+treaty surrendering his dominions to the Catholic Sovereigns. This is
+rendered improbable by his comparatively generous treatment at the end
+of the war, when he had resisted the Spaniards to the uttermost, and
+fought them many times after his release from captivity. Desperate deeds
+of valour were done on both sides, though the strategy of the Spanish
+commanders does not appear to have been of a very high order, since,
+with the whole of Spain at their back, it took them eleven years to
+conquer a small kingdom distracted by three rival rulers. The old sultan
+retired from the contest, as finally did his brother, the brave Zaghal.
+When the Christians were preparing a final assault on the doomed city,
+Boabdil rode out from the Alhambra, for the last time, on the morning of
+the memorable 2nd of January, 1492. Ferdinand with a brilliant cavalcade
+awaited him on the banks of the Genil. The keys were handed over, a
+hurried exchange of formal courtesies, and the last ruler of the Spanish
+Moors passed away into exile and obscurity. The rays of the wintry sun
+glinted on the great silver cross which was hoisted on the Torre de la
+Vela in token that the reign of Mohammed was for ever at an end in
+Spain.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_038" id="ill_038"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_038-granada_villa_on_the_darro_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_038-granada_villa_on_the_darro_sml.jpg" width="550" height="438" alt="GRANADA&mdash;VILLA ON THE DARRO" title="GRANADA&mdash;VILLA ON THE DARRO" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;VILLA ON THE DARRO</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Yes, at an end. On that morning, Ferdinand and Isabella accomplished the
+task begun by Pelayo at Covadonga, seven hundred and seventy-four years
+before. The Moorish dominion in Spain had endured little short of eight
+centuries. It was as if the<a name="page_123" id="page_123"></a> descendants of Harold Godwin were to
+arise and overthrow the existing English monarchy. But what is most
+remarkable is that the petty State of Granada had survived the break-up
+of the great Moorish empire in the west by two hundred and fifty years.
+Such a race deserved a manlier if not a more beautiful monument than the
+Alhambra.</p>
+
+<p>What followed the extinction of the Nasrid monarchy is not pleasant
+reading. The rights and privileges guaranteed the conquered were soon
+swept aside. The mild Archbishop de Talavera, the humane Tendilla, were
+superseded in the government of the city by fanatics more after
+Isabella's heart. Systematic persecution of the luckless Moslems ensued.
+They revolted, and their revolt was quenched with their own blood. They
+were intimidated, browbeaten, imprisoned, condemned, and burned. Their
+language, costume, and creed were banned. They were ordered to embrace
+Christianity under pain of death, and forbidden to quit the country.
+They appealed to Egypt, but it is a long way from the banks of the Genil
+to those of the Nile. Finally (and one hears of it with relief) they
+were all expelled from the country. As a race they perished utterly. The
+art, the civilization, which they had learnt on Spanish soil, they left
+buried in Spanish ground, and it was a long time before it was
+disinterred.</p>
+
+<p>The price Spain paid for national unity was a heavy one, but it was
+worth it. When we turn to Turkey,<a name="page_124" id="page_124"></a> can anyone say that a united Spain
+would have been possible, with the fairest of her provinces and cities
+and the whole of her southern seaboard in possession of a people alien
+in race, tongue and creed?</p>
+
+<p>With Oriental people, the history of the palace is the history of the
+State. At Granada every traveller turns instinctively towards the
+Alhambra as the point of supreme interest. The famous pile is to the
+city what the Mezquita is to Cordova&mdash;not quite, perhaps, since Granada
+contains more than one building of intrinsic interest.</p>
+
+<p>The Alhambra has been so often described (by the present writer among
+others) that it is not easy to say anything new in regard to it, or even
+to avoid identity of language with other writers in the description of
+certain of its parts. Yet it would be impossible to give any account of
+Granada without some notice of this famous building. To begin with, I
+must impress on those about to visit it for the first time that the
+Alhambra is not a single palace, but properly speaking is the name given
+to a fortified eminence lying to the south-east of the city, and
+including two palaces, a citadel, and a multitude of private residences.
+In its nature it may be compared with the Acropolis of Athens and the
+far-distant Castle of Bamborough. The name, as most people are aware, is
+derived from <i>Kalat al hamra</i>&mdash;"the Red Castle," to adopt a translation
+which I have never seen disputed. (While not pretending to rank as an
+Arabist, I have not failed<a name="page_125" id="page_125"></a> to notice that an infinite number of
+words put forward as Arabic by writers on the Spanish Moors are
+unintelligible to Syrian and Egyptian Arabs, and, which is more to the
+point, to many Hindu students of Arabic.) In shape the hill has been
+cleverly compared by Ford to a grand piano. Rearward it abuts on the
+Cerro del Sol ("the Mountain of the Sun"), to which Washington Irving
+alludes so often.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_039" id="ill_039"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_039-granada_alhambra_from_san_miguel_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_039-granada_alhambra_from_san_miguel_sml.jpg" width="550" height="359" alt="GRANADA&mdash;THE ALHAMBRA FROM SAN MIGUEL" title="GRANADA&mdash;THE ALHAMBRA FROM SAN MIGUEL" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;THE ALHAMBRA FROM SAN MIGUEL</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>To the south of the Alhambra hill lies another and a narrower spur,
+which is crowned near the town end by the Vermilion Towers, or Torres
+Bermejas; on the north-east rises the hill of the Generalife, laid out
+in gardens. The townward extremity of the Alhambra is washed at the foot
+by the river Darro, and is crowned by the Torre de la Vela, of which
+more anon.</p>
+
+<p>To reach the Alhambra you ascend from the Plaza Nueva in the heart of
+the town by the steep and narrow Calle Gomeres. This street is laid out
+to attract and cater for tourists, who are greeted here with a civility
+and cordiality not always conspicuous in the rest of the town. Half-way
+up the toilsome ascent you will probably be waylaid by a
+theatrically-attired personage who will accost you in bad French with
+the information that he is the chief of the gipsies. The costume he
+wears was given to his father or grandfather by Fortuny&mdash;one of the rare
+examples of artists condescending to manufacture the picturesque. The
+chief will endeavour to engage you in conversation, and will offer you
+his photograph at fifty centimes a<a name="page_126" id="page_126"></a> copy. If you have a camera he will
+allow you to take his portrait for a consideration. It seems incredible
+that a human being could be so much of a nuisance and yet remain in good
+health and spirits.</p>
+
+<p>The dragon having been successfully circumvented, you enter the
+Hesperides, or in other words, the charming Alamedas of the Alhambra.
+These groves occupy the deep depression between the famous hill and the
+Vermilion Towers. They are planted with magnificent elms, sent hither, I
+believe, from England by the Duke of Wellington. They have thriven well
+in Spanish soil, and harbour a colony of nightingales and other
+singing-birds, unusually numerous for this land of passion, where wines
+are rich and birds are rare. The "bulbul," as certain writers love to
+call it, sings very sweetly in these leafy retreats, a statement some
+travellers who persist in coming at the wrong season will not hesitate
+to contradict. I must admit that the bird is as elusive as the
+"alpengluh," or as the hunter's moon at Tintern. It is always cool here
+on the slope of the Alhambra. Even the fierce rays of the Andalusian sun
+cannot penetrate the thick leafage. Rills bubbling forth from the red
+sides of the hill, or tumbling over its edge, keep the roots of the
+trees perennially moist and feed a dense under-growth. On summer
+afternoons this is the only spot in Granada where you may sit in
+comfort. Meanwhile, up and down in quick succession pass the sandalled
+water-carriers hurrying to fill their skins with the<a name="page_127" id="page_127"></a> precious fluid
+and to dispense it in the scorched, thirsty town below. "Agua-a-ah!"
+Their prolonged nasal drawling cry comes back to me as I write, and I
+seem to hear the rapid patter of their feet and to see the light cutting
+chequers on the shadow of the trees. A great man is the water-carrier,
+loved and respected by all the people of southern Spain. We who live in
+the humid sea-girt North can little understand the longing for clear,
+cool water, the reverence for its dispensers, that must ever be felt in
+the South. How constantly wells are referred to in the Bible: "As the
+hart panteth after the water brooks," "With joy shall ye draw waters
+from the wells of salvation." How significant are these beautiful
+passages for those that have journeyed to the South!</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_040" id="ill_040"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_040-granada_towers_infantas_alhambra_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_040-granada_towers_infantas_alhambra_sml.jpg" width="550" height="419" alt="GRANADA&mdash;TOWERS OF THE INFANTAS, ALHAMBRA" title="GRANADA&mdash;TOWERS OF THE INFANTAS, ALHAMBRA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;TOWERS OF THE INFANTAS, ALHAMBRA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Reluctantly withdrawing from this delightful spot, you must climb the
+hill to the right of the entrance&mdash;there is a winding path to the
+summit. Here you find the Torres Bermejas&mdash;a group of exceedingly
+ancient and not very dilapidated towers, used as a military prison. They
+date, it is believed, from the days before the Zirite dynasty, but you
+will not be tempted to examine them attentively, for the purlieus are of
+the most uninviting description. The adjoining cottages are peopled by
+rascally-looking men and slatternly women, who would be better, one
+would think, inside than just outside a gaol.</p>
+
+<p>In ancient days an embattled wall connected these towers with the
+opposite point of the Alhambra,<a name="page_128" id="page_128"></a> closing the mouth of the valley, which
+was not then the pleasaunce it is now, but an arid ravine used as the
+burial ground of the fortress. The entrance to the valley is now through
+the Puerta de las Granadas, built by order of Charles V. Taking the path
+to the left, we soon reach the fountain in the Renaissance style,
+erected in 1545 by Pedro Machuca, by order of the Conde de Tendilla. It
+is ornamented with the imperial shield and the heads of the three
+river-gods, Genil, Darro, and Beiro. The medallions represent Alexander
+the Great, Hercules slaying the hydra, Phryxus and Helle, and Daphne
+pursued by Apollo. The laurels growing out of the distressed damsel's
+head give her the appearance of a Sioux brave. A few steps beyond we
+reach the famous Puerta de la Justicia, so called because within it the
+Moorish sultans or their kadis administered justice&mdash;or it may have been
+merely law. This entrance is formed by two towers of reddish brick,
+placed back to back, and united by an upper storey. We look at once for
+the hand and key so often referred to by Irving, and distinguish them
+with difficulty&mdash;the first over the outermost horseshoe arch, the latter
+over the middle arch. Opinion is divided as to the meaning of these
+symbols. The key is supposed by some to signify the power of God to
+unlock the gate of Heaven to the true believer, while the hand appears
+to have been regarded as a talisman against the evil eye. A winding
+corridor leads through the gate into the citadel, past an<a name="page_129" id="page_129"></a>
+inscription celebrating the Conquest in 1492, and an altar now enclosed
+within a sort of cupboard.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_041" id="ill_041"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_041-granada_near_the_alhambra_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_041-granada_near_the_alhambra_sml.jpg" width="383" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;NEAR THE ALHAMBRA" title="GRANADA&mdash;NEAR THE ALHAMBRA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;NEAR THE ALHAMBRA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>This gate is placed at right angles to the wall which girdles the hill
+and runs along its edge, following all its inequalities of level. It is
+in fairly good preservation, but the rampart walk has disappeared here
+and there. Of the square mural towers a great many remain&mdash;some
+hopelessly ruinous, others inhabited by the guardians of the domain or
+their widows and relations. The towers on the south-west side, as far as
+I could judge, were better adapted for defence than those on the
+north-east, where the width of the windows would have greatly
+embarrassed the defence. The area enclosed by the outer wall was
+divided, it seems, by two cross walls into what, in the medieval
+parlance, we would call the outer, middle and inner wards. To the last
+corresponded the citadel proper or Kasba (Alcazaba, the Spaniards call
+it), whose massive walls rise to your left on emerging from the Puerta
+de la Justicia. This is the oldest part of the fortress. It occupies the
+extremity of the plateau, which is marked by the tall, square Torre de
+la Vela, or watch tower, whereon a silver cross was planted by the
+"Tercer Rey," Cardinal Mendoza, to announce the occupation of the
+Alhambra by the Spaniards. Here also is a bell which can be heard as far
+off as Loja, and which, if struck with sufficient force by a maiden, is
+said to have the faculty of procuring her a husband. The view from the
+platform is noble. The dazzling white<a name="page_130" id="page_130"></a> city is spread out beneath, in
+front stretches the Vega, to the south the eyes rest lovingly on the
+white streaks of the Sierra Nevada.</p>
+
+<p>Upon this tower I met a French entomologist, who announced that he
+should not trouble to visit any other part of the Alhambra, and was, in
+fact, surprised to learn that there was anything more to see. His
+horizon was bounded by the Lepidoptera, on one side, and the Coleoptera
+(I think that is the word) on the other. After all, archæologists take
+no more interest in black beetles than entomologists do in buildings.
+Incidentally, I should think Granada an admirable place for the intimate
+study of insects.</p>
+
+<p>From the Torre de las Armas, a road led from the citadel down the
+declivity to the town, crossing the Darro by the ruined Puente del Cadi.
+On the inner side the citadel is strengthened by the picturesque Torre
+del Homenage&mdash;a name often given to towers in Spain. The open space
+before it, where the water-carriers gather round the well, was a
+comparatively deep ravine in Moorish times, and was not levelled up till
+after the fall of Boabdil. On the opposite side&mdash;facing the Torre del
+Homenage&mdash;it was bounded by what I will call the wall of the middle
+ward, which ran across from the Torre de las Gallinas to near the Puerta
+de la Justicia, and of which only the gatehouse, the beautiful Puerta
+del Vino, remains.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_042" id="ill_042"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_042-granada_puerta_del_vino_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_042-granada_puerta_del_vino_sml.jpg" width="437" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;PUERTA DEL VINO, ALHAMBRA" title="GRANADA&mdash;PUERTA DEL VINO, ALHAMBRA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;PUERTA DEL VINO, ALHAMBRA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>This admitted to the area which contained the palaces and also the
+little town of the Alhambra&mdash;<a name="page_131" id="page_131"></a>inhabited by persons attached to the
+court, the ulema, chiefs of such powerful tribes as the Beni Serraj and
+the Beni Theghri, discarded sultanas, ex-favourites, soldiers of
+fortune, plenipotentiaries and envoys, and a crowd of parasites and
+hangers-on. To-day the population is limited chiefly to one little
+street, composed of pensions, photographers' shops and estancos. The
+plan of the whole fortress no doubt varied from age to age, but in the
+main agreed with that according to which most European strongholds were
+constructed. There was the outer wall with its mural towers and
+gatehouses; a strong inner ward, in place of a keep shut off by a ditch
+or ravine; and two or more other enclosures, each defended by a wall
+with a fortified entrance. It does not seem that the portcullis and
+drawbridge were used by the Moorish engineers.</p>
+
+<p>While the Kasba is generally attributed to an earlier dynasty, the outer
+wall and the other Moorish buildings are almost unanimously ascribed to
+Al Ahmar and his successors of the Nasrid dynasty. To reach the Alhambra
+Palace, called pre-eminently by foreigners the Alhambra and by the
+Spaniards the Alcazar, or Palacio Arabe, you pass across the plaza,
+leaving the unfinished Palace of Charles V. to your right. Behind it you
+find not an imposing and gorgeous structure, but what appears to be a
+collection of tile-roofed sheds. A mean, characterless entrance admits
+you to the far-famed palace.<a name="page_132" id="page_132"></a></p>
+
+<p>The building belongs to the last stage of Spanish-Arabic art, when the
+seed of Mohammedan ideas and culture had long since taken root in the
+soil and produced a style purely local in many of its features. Some
+authorities trace the first principles of Arabic architecture back to
+the Copts; the Spaniards argue that their style is derived from
+Byzantine works they found before them in Andalusia. The germs of Arabic
+art are certainly not, if travellers' tales be true, to be found in
+Arabia. The Saracen conquerors were warriors, not artists, and their
+ideas of form and ornament were undoubtedly borrowed&mdash;like their vaunted
+culture&mdash;from the more civilized nations with which they came in
+contact. With Morocco just across the strait, it is not safe to claim
+too much of native genius and refinement for the Moor. Whatever may have
+been the primitive models of Andalusian architecture, as time went by it
+lost much of the dignity and simplicity of its earliest examples&mdash;such
+as the Giralda and the Mezquita. The Moors of Granada had wearied of the
+fanaticism and austerity of Islam. If not precisely decadent, they had
+lost the fire and enthusiasm of youth, and wanted to enjoy a comfortable
+old age. If the palace we are about to enter seems in parts more like
+the bower of an odalisque than the seat of royalty, we must remember
+that the sultans wanted to enjoy life here, and had no fancy for the
+stern, military-looking palaces of their Christian rivals. Your
+Oriental, like the cat, values luxury very highly,<a name="page_133" id="page_133"></a> and yet, from
+our point of view, does not seem to secure it. A European would have
+found himself hopelessly uncomfortable at the court of Al Ahmar and
+Mohammed V.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_043" id="ill_043"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_043-granada_alhambra_tower_copmares_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_043-granada_alhambra_tower_copmares_sml.jpg" width="435" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;THE ALHAMBRA: TOWER OF COMARES" title="GRANADA&mdash;THE ALHAMBRA: TOWER OF COMARES" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;THE ALHAMBRA: TOWER OF COMARES</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Architecturally the Alhambra Palace has little merit. It is impossible
+to trace any order in the distribution of its parts, which ought not of
+course to be expected in a building repeatedly added to in the course of
+two and a half centuries. Moreover, a portion was demolished to make
+room for the Palace of Charles V. The Moorish builders were fond of
+conceits which our taste condemns. They liked to conceal the supports of
+a heavy tower, and to leave it seemingly suspended in the air. There is
+nothing imposing about the edifice, nothing stately. Its great charm
+consists in its decoration, which is wonderful and, in its own line,
+beyond all praise. It is based on the strictest geometrical plan, and
+every design and pattern may be resolved into a symmetrical arrangement
+of lines and curves at regular distances. The intersection of lines at
+various angles is the secret of the system. All these lines flow from a
+parent stem, and nothing accidental or extraneous is permitted. The same
+adhesion to sharply-defined principles is conspicuous in the
+colour-scheme. On the stucco only the primary colours are used; the
+secondary tints being reserved for the dados of mosaic or tile work. The
+green seen on the groundwork was originally blue. To-day, when the white
+parts have assumed the tint of old ivory and time has subdued the<a name="page_134" id="page_134"></a> vivid
+colouring, the effect is more harmonious than it could have been
+originally.</p>
+
+<p>Epigraphy, or long flowing inscriptions, proclaiming the merits of the
+sultans or of the chambers themselves, enters largely into the
+decoration. Those who can read these at a glance must find the halls
+less monotonous than most people are likely to do. The beauty of the
+ornamentation consists in its exquisite symmetry, and this is not
+apparent to every comer, who may fail to realize with Mr. Lomas "that
+the exact relation between the irregular widths of cloistering on the
+long and short sides of the court [of the Lions] is that of the squares
+upon the sides of a right-angled triangle"!</p>
+
+<p>The inscription that most frequently recurs in the decoration is the
+famous "There is no conqueror but God"&mdash;the words used by Al Ahmar on
+his return from the siege of Seville, in deprecation of the acclamations
+of his subjects. The newer parts are readily recognizable by the yoke
+and sheaf of arrows, the favourite devices of Ferdinand and Isabella,
+whose initials, F and Y, are also seen; and by the Pillars of Hercules
+and the motto "Plus Oultre," denoting work executed by order of Charles
+V.</p>
+
+<p>The oldest part of the building&mdash;by which I mean that which appears to
+have been the least altered&mdash;is round about the Patio de la Mezquita,
+more properly named "del Mexuar," after the divan or "meshwâr" that held
+its sittings here. The southern façade of this small court reminds one
+very much of the front of the<a name="page_135" id="page_135"></a> Alcazar at Seville. From this you enter
+the disused chapel, an uninteresting apartment consecrated in 1629. The
+Moorish decoration has almost completely disappeared, but much of the
+work in the little apartment adjacent, called the Sultan's Oratory,
+seems to be original. There never was a mosque here, but there may have
+been a private praying-place. Yusuf I. is supposed to have been stabbed
+here. The tragic deed was more probably done at the great mosque outside
+the palace where the Alhambra parish church now stands. From the Patio
+del Mexuar a tunnel called the Viaducto leads to the Patio de la Reja,
+the Baths, and the Garden of Daraxa.</p>
+
+<p>The Court of the Myrtles (Patio de las Arrayanes, or de la Alberca) is
+the first entered by the visitor. It is an oblong space, the middle of
+which is occupied by a tank of bright green water. This is bordered by
+trimly kept hedges of myrtle. The side walls are modern, and do not
+deserve attention. The front to the right on entering is very beautiful.
+It is composed of two arcaded galleries, one above the other, with a
+smaller closed gallery&mdash;a sort of triforium&mdash;interposed. The arches
+spring from marble columns, with variously decorated capitals. The
+central arch of the lowest gallery rises nearly to the cornice, and is
+decorated in a style which Contreras thought suggestive of Indian
+architecture. Fine lattice work closes the seven windows of the
+triforium. The upper gallery is equally graceful, but looks in imminent
+danger of collapse.<a name="page_136" id="page_136"></a> Above a similar but single arcade at the opposite
+end of the court rises the square massive upper storey of the Tower of
+Comares, with its crenellated summit. To reach its interior we cross the
+gallery beneath a little dome painted with stars on a blue ground, and a
+long parallel apartment (Sala de la Barca) gutted by fire in 1890, and
+enter the spacious Hall of the Ambassadors (Sala de los Embajadores),
+the largest hall in the Alhambra. Here was held the final council which
+decided the fate of Islam in Spain. Looking upwards we behold the
+glorious airy dome of larch-wood with painted stars. The decoration is
+magnificent&mdash;mostly in red and black&mdash;and may be divided into four
+zones: (1) a dado of mosaic tiles or azulejos; (2) stucco work in eight
+horizontal bands, each of a different design; (3) a row of five windows
+once filled with stained glass on each side; (4) a carved wooden
+cornice, supporting the roof. On three sides of the hall are alcoves,
+each with a window, the one opposite the entrance having been near the
+Sultan's throne.</p>
+
+<p>The Hall of the Ambassadors probably never looked very different from
+what it is now. It was never a private apartment. We can imagine it
+occupied, when no function was proceeding, by a few slaves dozing on
+mats or reclining dog-like on the richly carpeted floor, ready, however,
+to spring up and make the lowest of salaams as some bearded dignity
+entered.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_044" id="ill_044"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_044-granada_court_of_the_lions_moonlight_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_044-granada_court_of_the_lions_moonlight_sml.jpg" width="417" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;THE COURT OF THE LIONS: MOONLIGHT" title="GRANADA&mdash;THE COURT OF THE LIONS: MOONLIGHT" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;THE COURT OF THE LIONS: MOONLIGHT</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>This splendid hall and the other apartments adjacent to the Court of the
+Myrtles are supposed (I know not on<a name="page_137" id="page_137"></a> what authority) to have
+constituted the official or public part of the royal residence, together
+with the apartments demolished to make room for the Palace of Charles V.
+The rest of the building, on this supposition, was the private or harem
+quarter. A narrow passage leads from the Court of the Myrtles to the
+Court of the Lions. "There is no part of the edifice that gives us a
+more complete idea of its original beauty and magnificence than this,"
+says Washington Irving, "for none has suffered so little from the
+ravages of time. In the centre stands the fountain famous in song and
+story. The alabaster basins still shed their diamond drops; and the
+twelve lions which support them cast forth their crystal streams as in
+the days of Boabdil. [The fountain nowadays plays only once a year.] The
+architecture, like that of all other parts of the palace, is
+characterized by elegance rather than grandeur; bespeaking a delicate
+and a graceful taste, and a disposition to indolent enjoyment. When one
+looks upon the fairy tracery of the peristyles, and the apparently
+fragile fretwork of the walls, it is difficult to believe that so much
+has survived the wear and tear of centuries, the shocks of earthquakes,
+the violence of war, and the quiet though no less baneful pilferings of
+the tasteful traveller; it is almost sufficient to excuse the popular
+tradition that the whole is protected by a magic charm."</p>
+
+<p>I fancy that the gifted American was himself responsible for that
+tradition, for the Spaniards, as Lady Louisa Tenison observed sixty odd
+years ago,<a name="page_138" id="page_138"></a> are not an imaginative race, and whatever legends or
+traditions are current relate almost exclusively to the Virgin and
+saints. Spanish folk-lore knows nothing of fairies and goblins. The
+palace which Irving tells us the people regarded as enchanted had been
+used by them for years as a factory, as store-rooms, as a laundry, as a
+caravanserai. This hardly suggests that it was looked upon with
+superstitious awe. The truth is that the palace had enchanted Washington
+Irving, as it has done many others&mdash;not natives&mdash;since.</p>
+
+<p>The Court of the Lions is an oblong, surrounded by a gallery formed by
+124 marble columns, eleven feet in height and placed irregularly, some
+in pairs, some single. The arches exhibit a similar variety of curve,
+and the capitals are of various designs. The tile roofing of the
+galleries rather mars the effect, but the stucco work within them is of
+the richest and finest description. In the centre of the short sides are
+two charming little pavilions, with "half-orange" domes and basins in
+their marble flooring. The court is gravelled, and derives its name from
+the twelve marble animals that support the basin of the central
+fountain. These creatures are called lions, but why I am at a loss to
+understand. They look more like poodles than any other living
+quadrupeds. Ford humorously remarks: "Their faces are barbecued, and
+their manes cut like the scales of a griffin, and their legs like
+bedposts, while water-pipes stuck in their mouths do not add to their
+dignity." An Arabic inscription<a name="page_139" id="page_139"></a> reminds us that nothing need be
+feared from them, as life is wanting to enable them to show their fury.
+That fury would no doubt have been directed in the first instance at the
+sculptor who had made of the unfortunate creatures such grotesque
+caricatures.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_045" id="ill_045"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_045-granada_generalife_patio_acequia_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_045-granada_generalife_patio_acequia_sml.jpg" width="452" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;THE GENERALIFE: PATIO DE LA ACEQUIA" title="GRANADA&mdash;THE GENERALIFE: PATIO DE LA ACEQUIA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;THE GENERALIFE: PATIO DE LA ACEQUIA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The court is surrounded by four splendid rooms&mdash;the halls of the
+Mocarabes, the Abencerrages, the Two Sisters, and of Justice. The second
+and third resemble each other, and are covered with the most marvellous
+specimens of the artesonado or carved wood ceiling. The stalactites or
+pendants, though in reality following a strict geometrical plan, exhibit
+complications and varieties that it is impossible for the eye to follow.
+The style may well have been suggested by the honey-comb. It is
+confusing, beautiful, glorious&mdash;certainly the most remarkable
+achievement of the art of the Spanish Moor. The walls are covered with
+lace-work in stucco of the most exquisite pattern, with mosaic dados,
+and friezes decorated with inscriptions in praise of Mohammed V. At the
+sides of the rooms are the alcoves characteristic of Oriental domestic
+architecture.</p>
+
+<p>The Hall of the Two Sisters is so called from a couple of slabs of
+marble let into the flooring. The other chamber derives its name from
+the thirty-six chiefs of the Beni Serraj tribe, fabled to have been
+decapitated within it by order of Boabdil. The story was a pure
+invention of a Ginés Perez de Hita, a writer who lived in the sixteenth
+century. It has now spread through all lands, thanks to the version of<a name="page_140" id="page_140"></a>
+Chateaubriand. The tribe is supposed in this story to have espoused the
+"Little King's" cause against his father, Mulai Hasan. Later on their
+chief, Hamet, was suspected of intriguing with the Castilians; and, what
+was still more criminal in the eyes of a Moslem, of carrying on a love
+affair with one of the sultanas. A cypress in the gardens of the
+Generalife is pointed out as the lovers' trysting-place. The sultan
+resolved to make an end of this pestilent brood, but Hamet himself,
+warned at the eleventh hour, escaped the fate of his kinsmen. The frail
+sultana would have shared their fate, had not four champions presented
+themselves and vindicated her reputation against all comers in the
+lists. Thus the affair ended happily&mdash;except for the thirty-six chiefs.
+Thus the story. I hope it will stimulate your imagination. For myself,
+there is an utter absence of the personal and human note about these
+gorgeous Moorish halls. It is certainly easier to believe that they
+sprang into existence at the bidding of an enchanter than that they were
+ever the scenes of men's loves and hates, hopes and fears.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_046" id="ill_046"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_046-granada_generalife_court_of_cypresses_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_046-granada_generalife_court_of_cypresses_sml.jpg" width="364" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;THE GENERALIFE: COURT OF THE CYPRESSES" title="GRANADA&mdash;THE GENERALIFE: COURT OF THE CYPRESSES" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;THE GENERALIFE: COURT OF THE CYPRESSES</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The Hall of Justice (Sala de la Justicia), at the far side of the Court
+of Lions, is a long apartment, divided into alcoves specially remarkable
+for the paintings on its ceiling. These have been the subject of endless
+controversy. To begin with, it was doubted if a Mohammedan could have
+painted them, since the representation of living objects is contrary to
+the injunctions of the Koran. I have it on the authority of<a name="page_141" id="page_141"></a> a very
+learned Moslem friend, a recognized authority on Mohammedan law, that
+the plastic arts are not forbidden by the Prophet, but merely pointed
+out as a possible snare and stumbling-block in the way of the believer.
+Painting has been a recognized art in Persia for centuries, and I have
+seen some pictures from that country which reveal no mean degree of
+skill. There is therefore no good reason to doubt that these curious
+works were executed by Moorish artists at the end of the fourteenth
+century. They are done on leather prepared with gypsum and nailed to the
+wooden ceiling. The colours (red, green, gold, etc.) are still vivid,
+but mildew is covering them in parts, and in places the gypsum is
+peeling off. These valuable specimens of Moorish art ought to have been
+taken down and placed under glass long ago. The first of the three
+represents ten bearded, robed, and turbaned personages, who may with
+some degree of probability be identified with the first sultans of the
+Nasrid dynasty. According to Oliver, the Moor in the green costume
+occupying the middle of one side is Al Ahmar, the founder of the race.
+Then, counting from his right, come Mohammed II., Nasr Abu-l-Juyyush,
+Mohammed IV., Saïd Ismaïl, Mohammed V. (in the red robe), Yusuf II.,
+Yusuf I., Abu-l-Walid, and Mohammed III. The family likeness between
+these potentates is striking, and the red beards suggest a liberal use
+of the dye still largely used by the Oriental man of middle age. The
+other pictures are more interesting. The first represents<a name="page_142" id="page_142"></a> hunting
+scenes. Moors are seen chasing the wild boar, while Spanish knights are
+in pursuit of the lion and the bear. In another part of the composition
+the huntsmen are seen returning and offering the spoils of the chase to
+their ladies. The Moor greets his sultana with a benign and
+condescending air, the Christian on his knees offers his prize to his
+lady. In the next picture is another hunting scene, with a page, with
+sword and shield, leaning against a tree, awaiting his master's return.
+In another quarter of the picture his master (presumably) is rescuing a
+distressed damsel from a wild-looking creature who is quite undismayed
+by the tame lion accompanying his captive. Further on, the same knight
+is unhorsed and overthrown by a Moorish huntsman, two ladies from a
+castle in the background most ungratefully applauding the Christian's
+discomfiture. The pictures evidently were intended to record the
+incidents of a border warfare not dissimilar to those commemorated in
+our ballad of Chevy Chase.</p>
+
+<p>In this hall a temporary chapel was set up, and mass was celebrated, on
+the taking of the city by the Spaniards.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_047" id="ill_047"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_047-granada_tocador_reina_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_047-granada_tocador_reina_sml.jpg" width="380" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;TOCADOR DE LA REINA" title="GRANADA&mdash;TOCADOR DE LA REINA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;TOCADOR DE LA REINA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Crossing the Hall of the Two Sisters, we enter the beautiful Mirador de
+"Lindaraja," the most charming and elegant of all the apartments in the
+palace. Through three tall windows, once filled with coloured crystals,
+we look down into the pretty Patio de Daraxa, which, like the chamber,
+does not derive its name from an<a name="page_143" id="page_143"></a> imaginary sultana, but from a word
+meaning "vestibule." It is a delightful garden, where shade is always to
+be obtained between the closely planted cypresses, orange, and peach
+trees, rising between twin hedges of box and bushes of rose and myrtle.
+In the centre is a seventeenth-century fountain. Here you will always
+find some artist committing to canvas his impressions of one of the
+fairest gardens men have fashioned for themselves.</p>
+
+<p>The rooms on the other side of the patio were built by Charles V., and
+include the Tocador de la Reina, or Queen's Boudoir, a prettily
+decorated belvedere affording an entrancing view. It was in this room
+that Washington Irving took up his quarters. Théophile Gautier slept
+sometimes in the hall of the Abencerrages, sometimes in that of the Two
+Sisters, and was impressed by the eerieness of the palace at night. Yet
+there is not a manor-house in England or a château in France that is not
+more suggestive of the spectral and uncanny than these gilded halls and
+open courts. However, everyone has his own preconceptions of the weird
+and the picturesque.</p>
+
+<p>From the Patio de Daraxa we enter the very interesting Baths, ably
+restored by the late Don Rafael Contreras. The Sala de las Camas, or
+chamber of repose, is among the most brilliantly decorated rooms in the
+palace, yet, as elsewhere in this neglected pile, the gilding is being
+suffered to fade and the tiling in the niches, I noticed, is loosening
+and breaking up. From a gallery running<a name="page_144" id="page_144"></a> round the chamber, the music of
+the odalisques was wafted down to the sultan reclining in one of the
+divans below. He must have been in no hurry to leave this spot, where he
+dreamily puffed at his hubble-bubble and watched the play of the
+fountain. The light came from apertures in the superb artesonado
+ceiling. Without, on a stone seat, the eunuchs mounted guard and
+preserved their lord's repose from interruption. The actual baths are
+contained in two adjacent chambers. A staircase ascended to the Hall of
+the Two Sisters above, for the use, not improbably, of the ladies of the
+harem. On leaving the baths you may follow the tunnel across the
+uninteresting Patio de la Reja and beneath the Tower of Comares, to the
+Patio del Mexuar.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_048" id="ill_048"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_048-granada_torre_damas_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_048-granada_torre_damas_sml.jpg" width="387" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;TORRE DE LAS DAMAS" title="GRANADA&mdash;TORRE DE LAS DAMAS" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;TORRE DE LAS DAMAS</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>No visitor to the Alhambra must omit to walk round the outer wall or
+enceinte, and to inspect the towers. The Torre de las Damas, a fortified
+tower dating from the time of Yusuf I., was inhabited by Ismaïl, the
+brother of Mohammed V., and marked the palace limits on this side. It
+contains a tastefully decorated hall. Adjacent to it is a beautiful if
+gaudy little Mohammedan mihrab or oratory, approached through a private
+garden. Here was the house of Anastasio de Bracamonte, the esquire of
+the Conde de Tendilla, to whom was assigned the custody of the Alhambra
+at the Reconquest. The Puerta de Hierro, a little further on, was
+restored at the same time, and faces the gate and path leading to the
+Generalife. Passing the Torre de los Picos, we<a name="page_145" id="page_145"></a> reach the Torre de
+la Cautiva, which contains a beautiful chamber, over which a lovely rosy
+tint is diffused by the tiles and stucco. The Torre de las Infantas,
+built by Mohammed VII., is a perfect example of an Oriental
+dwelling-house. Through the usual zigzag vestibule you reach a hall with
+a fountain in the centre and alcoves in three of the sides. The
+decoration is perhaps over elaborate. The towers on the other side of
+the enceinte were, as I have said, intended mainly for defence. Near the
+ruinous Torre del Agua, at the south-east extremity, a viaduct crosses
+the ravine from the Generalife, and some of the water precipitates
+itself over the brow of the hill in a mass of vivid living greenery.
+Further on, towards the Gate of Justice, is the Torre de los Siete
+Suelos, through which Boabdil is said to have made his last exit. It is
+supposed to extend far underground, and to contain much buried treasure.
+So at least Irving was told by the inhabitants, or possibly told them!
+Hence issues the Belludo, the spectral pack, which traverses the streets
+of Granada by night&mdash;also according to legend. This story of the Wild
+Huntsman crops up, in one form or another, in every part of Europe.
+There are the Dandy Dogs in Cornwall, the Wild Huntsman in Germany,
+Thibaut le Tricheur in the valley of the Loire, the Chasseur Noir of
+Fontainebleau, and so on. Folk-lore of this sort is easily fabricated.
+Foreigners in search of the picturesque ask the natives of such a place
+as this if ghosts do not haunt the ruins. The guide, anxious to please,
+says "Doubtless!" The<a name="page_146" id="page_146"></a> foreigner goes on to tell him of spectres that
+affect this particular class of building at home; and the guide readily
+devises a local version of the yarn for the benefit of the next
+stranger. I have found that the peasantry in most European countries
+hear of their local traditions and folk-lore first through the medium of
+books. And these remarks apply with especial force to the people of
+Latin countries, whom, contrary to the received opinion, I know to be
+less imaginative and less superstitious than northerners. It is natural
+that the gloomy forests of Germany and Sweden, rather than the sunlit
+plains of Andalusia, should generate dark fancies.</p>
+
+<p>Strictly speaking the Generalife, the Trianon of the Moorish kings, is a
+more beautiful place than the Alhambra, though it has no architectural
+merit. It became the property at the Reconquest of a Christianized Moor,
+Don Pedro de Granada, who claimed to be descended from the famous Ben
+Hud, and from whose family it passed into the possession of the
+Marquises of Campotejar. The approach lies along a magnificent avenue of
+cypresses and tall shrubs. Arrived at the entrance you are admitted by a
+very comely damsel, and allowed to wander about the lovely gardens by
+yourself and to stay there all day if you like. At the far end of the
+first court is a poor collection of portraits, among which is one&mdash;No.
+11&mdash;absurdly supposed to be a portrait of Ben Hud (died about 1237),
+though the person is dressed in the costume of the fifteenth century.
+This is the portrait which English travellers,<a name="page_147" id="page_147"></a> and even the usually
+correct Baedeker, persist in mistaking for Boabdil's.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_049" id="ill_049"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_049-granada_generalife_court_of_cypresses_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_049-granada_generalife_court_of_cypresses_sml.jpg" width="392" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;THE GENERALIFE: COURT OF THE CYPRESSES" title="GRANADA&mdash;THE GENERALIFE: COURT OF THE CYPRESSES" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;THE GENERALIFE: COURT OF THE CYPRESSES</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The gardens of the Generalife are beyond all praise. Water bubbles up
+everywhere, and moistens the roots of gorgeous oleanders, myrtles,
+orange trees, cedars, and cypresses&mdash;the tallest trees in Spain. Beneath
+one of these&mdash;that to the right as you reach the head of the first
+flight of steps&mdash;the sultana is alleged to have kept her tryst with
+Hamet, the Abencerrage. Not a bad place, this, for a lovers' meeting.
+You rise from one flower-laden terrace to another till you reach the
+ugly belvedere&mdash;scribbled all over with idiots' names&mdash;whence you obtain
+a ravishing view of the Alhambra, the city, the Vega, and the mountains.
+The hours spent in the Generalife Gardens will be remembered as among
+the pleasantest of one's lifetime.</p>
+
+<p>It may be, as a French writer states, impossible to tickle the surface
+of Granada without discovering Moorish remains, but certainly, outside
+the Alhambra, very few are to be seen above ground. The most conspicuous
+of them in the lower town is, on the whole, the Casa del Carbon, a
+dilapidated structure with a bold horseshoe archway which confronts you
+as you cross the Reyes Catolicos near the Post Office. The house is now
+used as a coal depot, but beneath the thick coating of grime you may
+discern the traces of graceful decorative work. The building is said to
+have been a corn exchange in Moorish days. More interesting are the
+vestiges of the ancient walls that girdled the oldest<a name="page_148" id="page_148"></a> quarter, <i>el
+viejo Albaicin</i>. They were built in great part by Christian
+captives&mdash;perhaps by those whose chains are hung up on the walls of San
+Juan de los Reyes at Toledo. The Moors of Granada grew embittered by
+their reverses, and treated their Christian subjects harshly. The
+martyrs whom the monument on the Alhambra hill commemorates are not
+merely the creatures of pious imagination. There is an ugly story, too,
+of an unfortunate monk accused of heretical doctrines, who took refuge
+at Granada and was burnt at the stake by the Moslems.</p>
+
+<p>Two of the old gatehouses on this side of the city are still standing.
+They are massive crenellated towers, pierced with round-headed archways.
+I do not consider them entrancingly picturesque; they form the northern
+entrances to the Albaicin quarter, which is now a perplexing congeries
+of squalid houses, formless convents, and churches tottering to their
+fall. Whatever interest its antiquity may excite is lost in disgust at
+its wretchedness. On the outskirts dwell the gipsies&mdash;mostly in
+semi-underground burrows, and left very much to themselves by the local
+authority. These are the poor creatures who are dragged out to bore
+visitors with their wearisome dances, the fee charged for which goes
+almost entirely into the pockets of the guides. The gipsies of Spain are
+not nomadic. There are people in Granada who wish they were.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_050" id="ill_050"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_050-granada_casa_del_carbo_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_050-granada_casa_del_carbo_sml.jpg" width="390" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;CASA DEL CARBON" title="GRANADA&mdash;CASA DEL CARBON" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;CASA DEL CARBON</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>In the Albaicin the Zirite sultans had their palaces, one of which was
+called the House of the Weathercock,<a name="page_149" id="page_149"></a> from the bronze figure of a
+horseman that surmounted it and served as a vane. Washington Irving has
+written a story about it. Fragments of all these ancient buildings are
+incorporated with modern houses, and may be identified by those who care
+to take the trouble. Romantic legends (of the precise nature of which I
+am ignorant) cluster round the Casa de las Tres Estrellas, possibly
+because it affords ingress to a subterranean passage leading no man
+knows whither. But I do not think you will be tempted to linger long in
+this odoriferous, wormeaten quarter. You may be said to have escaped
+from it when you reach the picturesque Carrera de Darro, the embankment
+of that narrow stream facing the Alhambra. Here may be seen a Moorish
+bath at one of the private houses, and&mdash;much more delightful to the
+artist&mdash;a broken Moorish bridge, the Puente del Cadi, to which a path
+led down from the Torre de las Armas. Against the little church near
+this point you will notice a white corner house with a handsome doorway
+in the Renaissance style. At the angle of the house is a balcony,
+bearing the odd inscription, "Esperandola del Cielo" ("Waiting for it
+from Heaven"). The words are accounted for by the following story: The
+house was built by Hernando de Zafra, the astute secretary of Ferdinand
+and Isabella, and the negotiator of the capitulation of Granada. He
+suspected his daughter of a love affair with an unknown cavalier. To
+satisfy his doubts he surprised her one day, and found his<a name="page_150" id="page_150"></a> page
+assisting the lover to escape by the window. Baulked of his prey the
+enraged father turned upon the lad. "Mercy," implored the page. "Look
+for it in Heaven!" answered the Don, as he hurled his daughter's
+accomplice after her lover into the street below. There are those who
+say that De Zafra had no daughter, and that he has been libelled in this
+matter. But the episode is more probable than the foreign-made yarns
+about the Alhambra.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_051" id="ill_051"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_051-granada_street_albaicin_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_051-granada_street_albaicin_sml.jpg" width="317" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;STREET IN THE ALBAICIN" title="GRANADA&mdash;STREET IN THE ALBAICIN" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;STREET IN THE ALBAICIN</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The rivers of Granada are more spoken of than seen. At the foot of the
+Alhambra the Darro disappears, its channel through the town having been
+roofed over at different epochs. Till the middle of the last century the
+houses of the Zacatin looked at the back upon the stream, as may be seen
+from a picture by Roberts in the South Kensington Galleries. There was a
+local proverb which said "Ugly as the back of the Zacatin," an evidence
+of the persistent confusion of the ugly and the picturesque. This part
+of the stream is now covered by the Reyes Catolicos Street. The famous
+Zacatin&mdash;a lane-like thoroughfare, like those we have seen in
+Seville&mdash;was once the principal street in Granada, and seems to have
+been full of animation in Gautier's time. That brilliant Frenchman
+speaks of meeting there parties of students from Salamanca, playing as
+they went on the guitar, triangles, and castanets&mdash;truly a singular mode
+of taking one's walks abroad, such as even the Spaniards of the
+'thirties and 'forties must have marvelled at<a name="page_151" id="page_151"></a> exceedingly. Are we
+to understand by this remarkable passage that the alumni of Salamanca
+formed processions like those of the Salvation Army, whenever they met
+by chance in the public street, or that, like the fine lady of Banbury
+Cross, they were determined to move nowhere without a musical
+accompaniment? At all events, the Zacatin is quiet enough nowadays. It
+still contains some of the best shops in the town and is one of the few
+comparatively shady walks outside the precincts of the Alhambra. It
+leads you to the far-famed Plaza de Bibarrambla, with the name of which
+we have been familiarized by Byron's rendering of the Spanish ballad,
+"Ay de mi, Alhama!" The square, like so much else in Granada, has been
+so completely modernized that nothing remains to recall the days when
+the sultans here assisted at pageants and tournaments, wherein
+Christians often took part. It is edifying to learn that Spanish
+knights, forbidden in their own country to cut each other's throats,
+often resorted hither to do so, by gracious permission of his Moorish
+Majesty.</p>
+
+<p>We are now in the neighbourhood of the second great sight of
+Granada&mdash;the Cathedral with its adjoining buildings. The church called
+the Sagrario is an eighteenth-century structure immediately adjoining
+the west front of the Cathedral, on the south side, which served for a
+time as the metropolitan church of Granada. The interior is sombre,
+heavy, and Churrigueresque&mdash;a style which, it always strikes me,<a name="page_152" id="page_152"></a> might
+have been devised by an undertaker accustomed to a high-class business.
+One of the chapels, however, is interesting. It contains the bones of
+"the magnificent cavalier, Fernando del Pulgar, Lord of El Salar," as
+the inscription records. This gallant knight, during the last siege of
+Granada, penetrated into the city with fifteen horsemen, and nailed a
+paper bearing the Ave Maria on the door of the mosque. This brave
+exploit earned for him and his descendants the right of remaining
+covered in the Cathedral and before the king. In Philip II.'s time the
+Marqués del Salar, the representative of the family, was fined for
+appearing covered before the High Court of Granada. He appealed to the
+king, invoking the privilege conferred on his ancestor. "Not so,"
+replied Philip; "you may wear your bonnet in the presence of the king,
+but not in the sacred presence of Justice." With the fine was built the
+staircase in the Audiencia in the Plaza Nueva.</p>
+
+<p>Behind the Sagrario is the mausoleum of Ferdinand and Isabella&mdash;the
+Capilla Real&mdash;a temple peculiarly sacred in the eyes of all good
+Spaniards. The two great sovereigns lie here in the heart of the city
+which they recovered for Christendom, even as many great soldiers have
+caused their remains to be buried on the sites of their greatest
+victories. The chapel, founded in 1504 and completed in 1517, is a noble
+example of late Gothic. The exterior is very simple, the decoration
+consisting mainly of two highly ornate balustrades, surmounting each of
+the two stages. The well-known<a name="page_153" id="page_153"></a> devices and monograms of the
+founders are interwoven with the decoration. Through a portal flanked by
+the figures of heralds we enter the chapel&mdash;plain, bright, and airy. The
+chancel is railed off by a magnificent grille of gilt ironwork, wrought
+by Maestre Bartolomé of Jaen, in 1522. Between this and the altar are
+the superb tombs of Ferdinand and Isabella, and of their daughter Joanna
+and her husband, Philip I. The former is ascribed to a Florentine
+sculptor, Domenico Fancelli.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_052" id="ill_052"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_052-granada_interior_posada_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_052-granada_interior_posada_sml.jpg" width="550" height="410" alt="GRANADA&mdash;INTERIOR OF A POSADA" title="GRANADA&mdash;INTERIOR OF A POSADA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;INTERIOR OF A POSADA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The recumbent effigies of the Reyes Catolicos are full of expression and
+majesty. Both wear their crowns, and Ferdinand is in full armour. At the
+angles of the tomb are seated figures, and the sides are sculptured with
+medallions and escutcheons and the figures of angels and saints. The
+figures of the unhappy Joanna and her Flemish consort are less lifelike,
+and the decoration is much more florid. It must be admitted that the
+Renaissance character of these sepulchral monuments contrasts rather
+oddly with the Gothic surroundings. The kneeling statues of the founders
+at the sides of the altar are believed to be actual likenesses. The
+reliefs on the retablo, by Vigarni, represent the surrender of Granada
+and the subsequent baptism of the Moors. In the former, both the
+sovereigns are shown, in the compan y of Cardinal Mendoza, receiving the
+keys from Boabdil; in the latter, we note that the candidates for
+baptism are so many that the rite is being administered by means of a
+syringe.<a name="page_154" id="page_154"></a></p>
+
+<p>Beneath the tombs is the vault containing all that was mortal of the
+makers of Modern Spain. The sacristan thrusts a lighted taper forward
+into the gloomy abode of death, and you are able to distinguish five
+coffins&mdash;those of Ferdinand and Isabella, Philip, Joanna, and the
+Infante Miguel. Philip's coffin, it will be remembered, was carried
+about by his lovesick widow till she had to be parted from it by force.
+The coffins are rude, bulging, and almost shapeless. One only, that of
+Ferdinand, can be identified, and this only by the simple letter F upon
+it. Might not this stand as well for Felipe?</p>
+
+<p>The sacristan next shows you the treasury of the chapel. Among the
+relics are the crown, sceptre, and mirror of Isabella, her missal
+beautifully illuminated, and the standard embroidered by her that
+floated over the city. A casket is shown which was filled with jewels
+which she pawned to procure funds for Columbus's first voyage of
+discovery. Few investments have proved more profitable, as far as
+material wealth is concerned. You may also see Ferdinand's sword, rather
+interesting to those curious in ancient weapons.</p>
+
+<p>The Royal Chapel is quite independent of the immediately adjacent
+Cathedral. The chaplains have a right of way across the Cathedral
+transept to the Puerta del Perdon, a privilege deeply resented by the
+chapter. Once when the Archbishop wished to visit the chapel, his
+attendant canons were refused admission. The irate prelate caused the
+chaplains to be arrested for<a name="page_155" id="page_155"></a> this affront, and a long lawsuit
+followed. But all this happened a long time ago, and it is to be hoped
+that the two bodies of clergy now live upon good terms with each other.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_053" id="ill_053"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_053-granada_old_houses_cuesta_pescado_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_053-granada_old_houses_cuesta_pescado_sml.jpg" width="447" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;OLD HOUSES, CUESTA DEL PESCADO" title="GRANADA&mdash;OLD HOUSES, CUESTA DEL PESCADO" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;OLD HOUSES, CUESTA DEL PESCADO</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>A very beautiful arch, richly and tastefully adorned with statues,
+admits to the Cathedral. This church, described by Fergusson as one of
+the finest in Europe, was begun by Diego de Siloe, about 1525, and not
+completed till 1703. The exterior is far from corresponding to the
+majesty of the interior, though the Puerto del Perdon, already referred
+to, on the north side, is a beautiful piece of work. The impression
+produced on entering the Cathedral is rather similar to that experienced
+on entering St. Peter's. There is an atmosphere of loftiness, luxury,
+and cold purity&mdash;like that clinging to the finest classical works. This
+is certainly the triumph of Spanish Renaissance architecture. The effect
+is, of course, utterly different from that of the grand old Gothic fane
+of Seville. Like all Renaissance churches, as it seems to me, it lacks
+the devotional atmosphere. The nave, as usual, is obstructed by the
+choir&mdash;where, by the way, Alonso Cano was buried. The dome above the
+chancel is sublime, the daring of the arches wonderful. The altar is
+completely insulated by the ambulatory.</p>
+
+<p>Before it are the grand sculptured heads of Adam and Eve by Cano. His
+also are seven of the frescoes decorating the upper part of the dome.
+The others are by his pupils. The Cathedral contains much of<a name="page_156" id="page_156"></a> this
+irascible and wayward artist's best work. In the chapel of San Miguel is
+a "Virgen de la Soledad," in whose human beauty and pathos his genius
+finds its highest expression. In the chapel of Jesus Nazareno, Cano's
+"Via Crucis" does not suffer by comparison with three works of Ribera
+and a "St. Francis" by El Greco. The artist's studio may be seen in one
+of the towers flanking the west front of the Cathedral. He was a native
+of Granada, and a lay canon of the chapter. He died in poverty at his
+house in the Albaicin quarter, aged 66 years, on October 5, 1667. He was
+a man of hasty but not ungenerous temper, and in some of his phases of
+character recalls Fuseli. Justice has hardly been done to his great
+talent, of which he himself seems to have entertained an exaggerated
+estimate.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_054" id="ill_054"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_054-granada_old_ayuntamiento_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_054-granada_old_ayuntamiento_sml.jpg" width="379" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;OLD AYUNTAMIENTO" title="GRANADA&mdash;OLD AYUNTAMIENTO" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;OLD AYUNTAMIENTO</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The minor churches of Granada are not of very great interest. The church
+of San Geronimo was built by the Great Captain as a mausoleum for
+himself and his wife, but such of his remains as escaped the ghoulish
+spoliation of the French have been transported to Madrid. The church is
+no longer used as a place of worship. The retablo is remarkable, and in
+it may be traced the dawning of Siloe's ambition to create a true
+Spanish Renaissance style. The church of San Juan de Dios, not far off,
+is filled with tawdry rubbish, petticoated crucifixes, etc. Here is
+buried the titular saint, a Portuguese, Joao de Robles, who in the
+seventeenth century devoted himself with so much energy to the<a name="page_157" id="page_157"></a> sick
+and suffering that his contemporaries esteemed him mad. You may see the
+cage in which he was confined at the hospital founded by Isabella the
+Catholic on the arid, ugly Plaza de Triunfo, near the Bull Ring. A
+column in the middle of the square marks the spot where Doña Mariana
+Pineda was publicly garrotted in 1831. This lady is the great heroine of
+Granada. She perished a victim to the reactionary tendencies then
+prevalent in Spain. Spaniards were then crying "Hurrah for our chains!"
+and Doña Mariana's house was known to be a rendezvous of the Liberals of
+Granada. On raiding her house the police discovered a tricolour flag.
+This was evidence enough, and in the thirty-first year of her age this
+beautiful and accomplished woman suffered a shameful death. A few years
+later, when the nation had recovered its sanity, the magistrate who had
+condemned her was shot, and her remains were transported with great pomp
+to the Cathedral, where they have been interred close to Alonso Cano's.
+A monument has also been raised to her memory in the Campillo Square.</p>
+
+<p>There is another story connected with the Triunfo worth telling, though
+it is not very well authenticated. The remains of royal personages on
+their way to the Capilla Real were here identified by the officers of
+the court. The Duke of Gandia was present on such an occasion, and was
+so impressed by the evidences of mortality when the coffin was opened
+that he vowed he would never again serve an earthly master. He<a name="page_158" id="page_158"></a> entered
+the Society of Jesus, and after his death was canonized under the name
+of St. Francis Borgia. The story is a curious and suggestive one, as
+also is that of the duke praying that his wife might die if it were for
+his soul's good. St. Francis Borgia has always seemed to me an extreme
+example of other-worldliness.</p>
+
+<p>A dusty road through most uninviting surroundings leads to the Cartuja,
+or Charterhouse, founded in 1516 by the Great Captain. The cloisters are
+painted with scenes of the martyrdom of the Carthusian monks in London
+by the minions of Henry VIII.</p>
+
+<p>The church is an extraordinary edifice. Its style is damnable, but it is
+gorgeous and dazzling to a degree which compels admiration. The doors of
+the choir are exquisitely inlaid with ebony, cedar, mother-of-pearl, and
+tortoiseshell. The statue of Bruno is by Cano. In the sanctuary behind
+the altar coloured marbles, twisted and fluted, are combined in
+extravagant magnificence. Some of the slabs are richly veined with
+agate, and the hand of nature has traced some semblances of human and
+animal forms. In the adjoining sacristy are some wonderful inlaid doors
+and presses. They must surely be the finest works of their kind in the
+world. It is strange that so much genius for detail and so much costly
+material should have been combined to produce so tasteless a building.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_055" id="ill_055"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_055-granada_street_old_quarter_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_055-granada_street_old_quarter_sml.jpg" width="340" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;STREET IN THE OLD QUARTER" title="GRANADA&mdash;STREET IN THE OLD QUARTER" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;STREET IN THE OLD QUARTER</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Outside this church there are not many places in the vicinity of Granada
+worth a visit. The church of Sacramonte looms rather prominently in the
+landscape,<a name="page_159" id="page_159"></a> and you are to some extent rewarded for the trouble of a
+pilgrimage thither by the fine view of the city. The hill contains some
+caves in which, in the year 1594, one Hernandez professed to have
+discovered certain books written in Arabic characters on sheets of lead.
+The find was reported to the archbishop, Don Pedro Vaca de Castro, who
+examined the books and declared them to contain the acts of the martyrs,
+Mesito and Hiscius, Tesiphus and Cecilius, put to death by the Romans
+and buried in the caves. His grace's pronouncement was not considered
+final, and theological opinion was sharply divided on the subject for
+many years. At last the continuance of the controversy was forbidden by
+Papal decree. It seems that doubt is now thrown even on the existence of
+the martyrs. The church built over the place of their supposed sepulchre
+was for a time famous as a shrine of pilgrims. The usual rock worn away
+by the kisses of the devout is shown. There is a superstition that a
+person kissing the stone for the first time will be married within the
+year, if single, and released from the conjugal tie if already married.
+As divorce does not exist in Spain it is to be hoped that few
+discontented Benedicts have recourse to this stone.</p>
+
+<p>St. Cecilius, at all events, was known to fame before the alleged
+discovery of his grave; for in the Antequeruela quarter an oratory
+dedicated to him existed throughout the Moorish domination, and was the
+only Christian place of worship within the city. I do not<a name="page_160" id="page_160"></a> think that
+any trace of it is to be detected now. In that part of the city is the
+Casa de los Tiros, where you must apply for tickets for the Generalife;
+it is worth seeing on its own account, and it is the repository of the
+sword of Boabdil, which seems to have more claims to authenticity than
+most of the relics of the Little King. Descending towards the Puerta
+Real we pass the Cuarto de Santo Domingo, a private villa in which is
+incorporated all that remains of an Almohade palace. Near by, against
+the church of Santo Domingo, is an exceedingly picturesque little
+archway where one can fancy a bravo waiting, stiletto in hand. The
+Campillo, in the centre of which rises the statue of Mariana Pineda, is
+a quiet little square enough, referred to (as the Rondilla) by Cervantes
+as a resort of adventurers and desperadoes. These gentry are now more
+likely to be found in the immediately adjacent Alameda, outside the
+hotel of the same name, where the cafés and tables spread in front of
+them seem exceedingly well patronized.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_056" id="ill_056"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_056-granada_generalife_patio_acequia_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_056-granada_generalife_patio_acequia_sml.jpg" width="412" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;THE GENERALIFE: PATIO DE LA ACEQUIA" title="GRANADA&mdash;THE GENERALIFE: PATIO DE LA ACEQUIA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;THE GENERALIFE: PATIO DE LA ACEQUIA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Following the Genil, and leaving the unimpressive monument of Columbus
+and Isabella to the left, you reach, after a walk overpoweringly
+fatiguing in summer, the little Ermita de San Sebastian. This was a
+Moorish oratory in old days, and outside it took place the surrender of
+the keys by Boabdil on the memorable 2nd of January, 1492. If you go
+farther on&mdash;and I doubt if you will be tempted to&mdash;you will come to a
+very old Moorish palace called the Alcazar<a name="page_161" id="page_161"></a> Genil, now the property
+of the Duke of Gor. Here, says Simonet, were lodged the Christian
+princes and knights who so often found an asylum at the court of
+Granada. In the gardens are tanks once used, it is believed, for mimic
+naval fights. In the same direction, I understand, is Zubia. Here
+Isabella the Catholic, reconnoitring the city during the siege, narrowly
+escaped capture by a Moorish patrol. She concealed herself behind a
+laurel bush, which is still pointed out. Another instance of the small
+chances that determine the fate of kingdoms! To commemorate her escape
+the queen built near by a convent, which has long since disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>You may return to the city by the Puerta Verde, near the Bab-en-Neshti
+or Puerta de los Molinos, through which the Spaniards entered after
+Boabdil's submission.</p>
+
+<p>Apart from the Alhambra and the Cathedral buildings, it will have been
+seen that Granada has not many claims on the stranger's interest.
+Considering the expectations formed of it after reading Prescott and
+Irving, most English people will pronounce it to be a disappointment.
+From certain points of view it remains the pleasantest place for a
+protracted stay in Andalusia during the summer. It is only when you come
+to it from Seville or Cordova or Cadiz, that you realize how cool, in
+comparison, is this city on the plateau between the snow-clad mountains.
+Even before the sun has gone down, you can dine very<a name="page_162" id="page_162"></a> pleasantly in the
+open, hearkening to the splash of the fountains, and inhaling the
+fragrance of the rose. There is no need here, as at Seville, to shut
+yourself, till nightfall, within walls three feet thick. By night we
+stroll across the Plaza of the Alhambra, and see the white city gleaming
+with a shimmer reflected in the luminous sky above. Granada resumes her
+aspect of an Oriental city beneath the crescent moon riding triumphant
+over Andalusia.<a name="page_163" id="page_163"></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_057" id="ill_057"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_057-granada_corener_old_quarter_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_057-granada_corener_old_quarter_sml.jpg" width="388" height="550" alt="GRANADA&mdash;A CORNER IN THE OLD QUARTER" title="GRANADA&mdash;A CORNER IN THE OLD QUARTER" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">GRANADA&mdash;A CORNER IN THE OLD QUARTER</span>
+</p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V<br /><br />
+<small>MALAGA</small></h2>
+
+<p class="nind">S<small>ECOND</small> in size among Andalusian cities, Malaga is the least interesting.
+Were it not for the sea, its position would be one of singular
+remoteness. On the extreme verge of Europe, the mighty Sierra Nevada
+rises behind it, and cuts it off from the rest of Spain. Yet as a
+flourishing port it is one of the towns in the Peninsula best known
+among Englishmen. It is beloved by our sailors. From the odd phases of
+life to be seen in and around the harbour, they derive their notions of
+the people and the country. With that utter absence of curiosity
+noticeable in their kind, they never penetrate inland, or even into the
+outskirts of the town. But nothing can dispel Jack's conviction that his
+knowledge of Spain and the Spaniards is intimate and profound.</p>
+
+<p>Malaga is not, as its appearance suggests, a city of purely modern
+growth. It was known to the Ph&oelig;nicians and the Romans, and before it
+became subject to the Almoravides was an independent principality under
+the Hammudiya dynasty. Later it<a name="page_164" id="page_164"></a> shared the fortunes of the Sultanate of
+Granada, and its siege and capture by Ferdinand and Isabella contributed
+to bring about the fall of the capital. This part of its history is
+dealt with in great detail by Prescott. Among the numerous incidents of
+the siege was a determined attempt on the part of a Moor named Ibrahim
+al Gherbi to assassinate the Spanish sovereign. The defence was
+conducted by the indomitable Hemet el Zegri, who yielded to famine
+rather than to the arms of the besiegers. The treatment of the fallen
+city leaves an indelible blot on the fame of the conquerors. The
+population, with the exception of a few hundreds, were sold into
+slavery, presents of the fairest maidens being made to the various
+courts of Europe. A worse fate was reserved for the Jews and renegades,
+who were committed to the flames.</p>
+
+<p>The old Moorish fortress of Gibralfaro still frowns down on the lively
+city to remind us of those days. Some of the walls and towers are
+believed to be of Ph&oelig;nician origin. The stronghold has undergone
+repeated restorations and adaptations to military requirements, but a
+great deal of Moorish work may still be detected. A horseshoe arch
+behind the Paseo de la Alameda serves to identify the Moslems' dockyard
+or Atarazanas, and to indicate how far the sea has receded in the wake
+of the banished race southwards towards Africa.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_058" id="ill_058"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_058-malaga_harbour_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_058-malaga_harbour_sml.jpg" width="550" height="362" alt="MALAGA&mdash;THE HARBOUR" title="MALAGA&mdash;THE HARBOUR" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">MALAGA&mdash;THE HARBOUR</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The Cathedral towers high above all the other<a name="page_165" id="page_165"></a> buildings of the
+city. It is in the Classical style, and though designed by Diego de
+Siloe in 1528, was built for the most part in the early eighteenth
+century. It must be confessed that it looks better at a distance than
+near. The interior is solemn and cold. It is worth visiting for some
+specimens of Cano's art which it contains, and for Mena's magnificent
+carving in the choir. As at Granada, the edifice is adjoined by a
+smaller church called the Sagrario, founded by the Catholic Sovereigns
+in 1488 as the cathedral of the conquered city.</p>
+
+<p>But it is not for its monuments or historical associations that Malaga
+is to be visited. Its interest is of to-day. And in truth it needed not
+the hand of man to embellish a spot where Nature has been so lavish of
+her choicest gifts. The gardens round Malaga abound in the finest
+specimens of tropical flora. Tall india-rubber plants, gigantic
+eucalyptus, great bamboos, the rarest exotics, such as the <i>Pritchardia
+folifera</i>, the araucaria, and the <i>Scaforthia elegans</i>, flourish on this
+favoured shore. The villas of the wealthier classes stand each in a
+veritable Paradise. And everywhere the white flower of the orange, the
+oleander, the vine, and tree-high ferns!</p>
+
+<p>This luxuriant vegetation is the less to be expected since want of water
+is the great drawback to the prosperity of the district. Through the
+middle of the town runs the Guadalmedina&mdash;a broad channel, without a
+drain of water! The new and magnificent promenade,<a name="page_166" id="page_166"></a> planted with palms,
+sweeps round the sea-front, as fine as anything on the Riviera. To drive
+along it in the sensuous southern night is to drink a deep draught of
+the joy of life. At one point the drive descends into the bed of the
+river, along which you may proceed for a mile or more. And yet at times
+the Guadalmedina becomes a roaring torrent, bursting its banks and
+sweeping away farmsteads and stock. It is difficult to say whether flood
+or drought has done most damage to the province.</p>
+
+<p>As at Seville, you find life here focussing in lane-like streets, closed
+to vehicles, and lined with cafés and casinos, among the finest I have
+seen in Spain. Here to an early hour of the morning the men of the city
+gossip in garrulous, intimate groups of nine and ten, all, as it seemed
+to me, talking together. The number of cigarettes smoked during the
+progress of these tremendous conversations must be stupendous. As you
+will see the same group meeting night after night, you wonder what there
+can be in the outwardly uneventful round of life of Malaga to supply
+topics for conversation. To an Englishman there is a mystery about this
+ability to talk for five or six hours about nothing at all. You will see
+the same thing in the dullest provincial towns in France and Italy&mdash;the
+same groups of stout, bald-headed citizens talking with frantic
+animation every evening. Their newspapers afford the slenderest mental
+pabulum&mdash;their contents could be dismissed in ten minutes&mdash;and the
+respectable<a name="page_167" id="page_167"></a> gentlemen in question are never seen to read books. How
+then do they recruit their stock of ideas and find an inexhaustible
+stock of topics for conversation?</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_059" id="ill_059"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_059-malaga_guadalmedina_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_059-malaga_guadalmedina_sml.jpg" width="550" height="376" alt="MALAGA&mdash;THE GUADALMEDINA" title="MALAGA&mdash;THE GUADALMEDINA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">MALAGA&mdash;THE GUADALMEDINA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Women are, of course, conspicuous by their absence. Here we have another
+illustration of the utterly false ideas Englishmen usually entertain
+concerning Latins. To judge from novels written fifty or even thirty
+years ago, John Bull appears to have regarded the foreigner with pitying
+contempt as a mere philanderer, always running after a petticoat; yet no
+one can be in Spain a fortnight without noticing the Spaniard's
+disinclination for female society, or at any rate how perfectly content
+he is without it.</p>
+
+<p>I do not fancy the ladies of Malaga care very much for society either,
+in our acceptation of the word. Looking out of the window appears to be
+their favourite recreation. They do not inherit the habit from the
+Moors, for that people, as I have said, were nearly all expelled at the
+Reconquest, and the town was resettled. All the Andalusian towns were
+wholly or in part emptied of their Mohammedan population when taken by
+the Christians, and repeopled with Castilians and others from Northern
+Spain. This fact is forgotten by those who recognize in every trait of
+the Andalusian a heritage from the Moor. We might as well think we
+derive our chief national characteristics from the Britons or the
+Normans.</p>
+
+<p>East of Malaga lie several coast towns of importance, within whose gates
+the traveller rarely sets foot.<a name="page_168" id="page_168"></a> Motril, Adra, Almeria&mdash;what is there in
+them to reward the fatigue of a journey in a diligence along the parched
+shore, or in some crazy coasting craft, with timbers straining and
+creaking before the lightest breeze? Almeria is now connected directly
+by rail with Madrid and Granada. The prosperity of the whole district is
+bound to be greatly increased by the construction of the line so long
+promised from Guadix to Baza. This short link in the railway system
+would save the traveller from Malaga to Valencia nearly 180 miles, or
+its alternative&mdash;a long and exhausting diligence journey. It would also
+bring the southern parts of Andalusia into direct communication with the
+great commercial centres of eastern Spain and with Marseilles. It would
+supply us with a new route to Gibraltar, moreover. This, with a line
+from Jaca across the Pyrenees into France, and another from Huelva to
+connect with the Portuguese system Villa Real de São Antonio, are links
+of which Spain stands vitally in need.<a name="page_169" id="page_169"></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_060" id="ill_060"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_060-malaga_a_market_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_060-malaga_a_market_sml.jpg" width="550" height="447" alt="MALAGA&mdash;A MARKET" title="MALAGA&mdash;A MARKET" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">MALAGA&mdash;A MARKET</span>
+</p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI<br /><br />
+<small>THE WAY SOUTH</small></h2>
+
+<p class="nind">A<small>T</small> Bobadilla&mdash;the Clapham Junction of Andalusia&mdash;the Spanish railway
+system is joined by the line of that purely British undertaking, the
+Algeciras Railway Company. A Spaniard told me that this line would never
+have been built by one of his countrymen, as no one in Spain had any
+desire to facilitate Gibraltar's communication with England, and the
+country it traversed had been sufficiently opened up. I do not think it
+would be difficult to demonstrate that the line may prove of very
+substantial benefit to Spain, but I will confine myself to thanking the
+promoters for having rendered accessible certainly the most beautiful
+part of Andalusia, and in my opinion one of the most wildly picturesque
+regions of Europe. The country between Ronda and Algeciras is the
+Andalusia dreamt of by the romancers. It is a savage, silent country, of
+warmer browns and greens than the rest of Spain. Here the train takes
+you no longer across the scorched sky-rimmed plains, but along the very
+edge of dizzy ravines, at the foot of which, hundreds of feet below,<a name="page_170" id="page_170"></a>
+angry white torrents foam and froth. Now you are climbing with obvious
+effort the steep shoulder of a mountain, now you are racing headlong
+down into a valley which seems to lie almost vertically beneath you. Now
+you plunge into the bowels of the Sierra and emerge with a shriek of
+triumph in a cauldron-shaped valley, from which Nature has provided no
+egress. There is no want of verdure; the cork-woods, vineyards, and
+olives dot the lower slopes of the tawny hills. And far up against the
+sky-line loom shattered towers and crumbling castles, whence you seem to
+see trains of steel-clad knights issuing forth to do battle with the
+Moor.</p>
+
+<p>The country is reminiscent essentially of the days of chivalry. Perhaps
+the ruined strongholds and the dark gorges are still haunted by the
+knights, who have driven away all other ghosts and will not let us think
+of anyone but them. The Romans were once here, and at Munda, as every
+schoolboy knows, Cæsar defeated with great slaughter the army led by the
+sons of Pompey. That town has now been identified with Ronda, the
+romantic capital of this most romantic region. Here the people have not
+forgotten Rome. They will show you a cave where in the semi-darkness you
+descry awful forms in stone, seeming like a ghostly and gigantic choir
+of monks. These are the Roman priests turned to stone upon the downfall
+of their gods, those of the people who cherish tradition will tell you.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_061" id="ill_061"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_061-malaga_packing_lemons_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_061-malaga_packing_lemons_sml.jpg" width="550" height="440" alt="MALAGA&mdash;PACKING LEMONS" title="MALAGA&mdash;PACKING LEMONS" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">MALAGA&mdash;PACKING LEMONS</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The town itself you will not find very interesting,<a name="page_171" id="page_171"></a> though the
+escutcheons displayed over every second or third house in one quarter
+will evoke some reflections on departed glory and the fall of the
+mighty. In some such <i>solar</i> our novelists Seton Merriman and Mr. Mason
+have laid the scenes of leading episodes in their two charming romances.
+Ronda has had a stirring past. She shared in all the vicissitudes of
+Granada, and towards the end of the long agony of the Reconquest was the
+scene of constant and ferocious border warfare.</p>
+
+<p>It was here that Mohammed V. received the head of his rival Abu Saïd,
+who had been put to death at Seville by Pedro the Cruel. The town was
+taken by the army of Ferdinand and Isabella on May 22, 1485. The people
+of the surrounding mountains were deeply attached to the creed of Islam,
+and rose in revolt in 1501 against their Christian oppressors. Before
+they were crushed they inflicted a severe blow on their adversaries,
+completely wiping out a force under Don Alonso de Aguilar. Westward, on
+the other side of the high mountains, lies Zahara, the capture of which
+one December night by Mulai Hasan was the signal for the last crusade
+against the Spanish Moors of Granada.</p>
+
+<p>But it is to its striking situation that Ronda owes its interest. Fitted
+rather to be the eyrie of eagles than the abode of men, it looks down
+from the verge of precipitous cliffs nearly three thousand feet above
+sea level. Midway, town and rocky hill are cleft asunder by the<a name="page_172" id="page_172"></a> Tajo,
+an awful gorge, two hundred feet across, and twice as much in depth.
+Gazing down into the abyss, you realize with something of a shudder that
+a pebble dropped over the edge of the precipice would fall sheer and
+plumb, without rebound or ricochet, into the river Guadalevin, which
+rushes below, filling the chasm with foam and spray. The ravine is
+spanned by a bridge built in the eighteenth century, a wonderful
+construction, from which when it was near completion its architect fell
+headlong. Access to the river may be obtained by a flight of 365 steps
+called the Mina, hewn through the rock. This singular work was executed
+by the Moors, who thus ensured themselves a supply of water against the
+dangers of a siege. Numerous subterranean chambers are also ascribed to
+them, or rather to their Christian captives.</p>
+
+<p>But the most delightful spot in Ronda is the little Alameda laid out on
+the edge of a perpendicular cliff. Leaning on the railing you may drink
+in the beauty and grandeur of a prospect hardly surpassed in Europe. The
+fair fertile country below is shut in by an amphitheatre of mountains
+which soar upwards to heights of five and six thousand feet. The eye
+seeks in vain for an outlet from the valley, till it discerns the white,
+dusty high-road winding, doubling, and finally disappearing over a dip
+between the ranges. The river, a thousand feet below, swirls and gurgles
+among the rocks, glad to have escaped from the dark gorge to which it
+has so long been confined.<a name="page_173" id="page_173"></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_062" id="ill_062"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_062-ronda_the_tajo_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_062-ronda_the_tajo_sml.jpg" width="436" height="550" alt="RONDA&mdash;THE TAJO" title="RONDA&mdash;THE TAJO" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">RONDA&mdash;THE TAJO</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>In the evenings the air is keen at Ronda, and in summer you may often
+hear English spoken by officers of the garrison of Gibraltar and their
+families, who come here to escape the torrid heat of the Rock. With a
+little capital and energy the place might be developed into a
+flourishing health resort.</p>
+
+<p>But now the way lies south and seaward. Ever downwards slowly travels
+the train. The night gathers over the castled crags and the mysterious
+forests. We detect by their gleam the rivers over which we pass. But now
+a bright starlike light is seen to the southward. It flashes and is
+gone, to reappear the next instant. We are nearing the strait, and the
+searchlight tells us that Britannia watches here with unsleeping eyes
+over the fortunes of her children in two seas and two continents.<a name="page_174" id="page_174"></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII<br /><br />
+<small>THE KINGDOM OF MURCIA</small></h2>
+
+<p><a name="ill_063" id="ill_063"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_063-ronda_roman_bridges_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_063-ronda_roman_bridges_sml.jpg" width="402" height="550" alt="RONDA&mdash;ROMAN BRIDGES" title="RONDA&mdash;ROMAN BRIDGES" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">RONDA&mdash;ROMAN BRIDGES</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="nind">T<small>HE</small> province of Murcia resembles the home of the Arab race more closely
+than does any other part of Europe. It is a wild, fierce region, hot and
+tawny like a lion's hide, furrowed by deep winding ravines, intersected
+by serrated mountains, on whose flanks, for the heat of the sun, no
+green thing can grow. Much of the land is occupied by plateaux, bare and
+rocky like great altars on which all that lives is offered to and
+consumed by the sun. From these uplands you survey vast expanses of
+sheer desert&mdash;fulvid, rocky, and scorching. Your gaze may travel far
+before you descry any fitting resting-place for man. The mountains
+afford no shade, even in the deepest cañons the streams are often
+traceable only by a narrow path of sand and pebbles, yet here and there
+has man successfully wrested from harsh Nature a secure foothold, an
+oasis kept ever green by some more constant rivulet. The waters of the
+Segura and the Sangonera are the life-blood of the province. Wayward and
+Arethusa-like, the rivers have with infinite pains been coaxed into
+conformity with the<a name="page_175" id="page_175"></a> needs of man. To the science of irrigation the
+province owes its existence. Water here is above all things prized and
+sold like treasure to the highest bidder. Mr. Jean Brunhés in a lately
+published work gives some most curious and interesting particulars
+relating to the system of irrigation in force in Murcia and the
+adjoining province of Alicante. The volume of the Monegre is divided
+into old water and new water, the former belonging of right to the
+ancient riparian proprietors, the latter to the owners of the locks and
+reservoirs. A very vicious system prevails at Lorca. There a private
+company is the owner of all the water of the Guadalentin, subject to the
+condition of supplying the old proprietors of the adjoining lands with
+500 litres per second every day. In consequence, in times of drought the
+company is mistress of the situation and can force up prices to a figure
+absolutely ruinous to the cultivators. Only in this way can it make good
+the losses incurred in rainy seasons. The precious fluid being sold,
+too, by public auction, the rich farmer is in a position to deprive his
+poorer rivals of their means of subsistence. To palliate this evil to
+some extent, the rule now obtains that the bidder who has bought the
+first lot can buy as many of the lots following as he may desire at the
+same figure. The price therefore is not forced up too rapidly. Moreover,
+if the company's barrage at a certain point is swept away or broken
+through by the current, the water which thus escapes becomes public
+property. This accident occurs five or<a name="page_176" id="page_176"></a> six times a year, and the
+company is not allowed to make the barrage any stronger when it is
+rebuilt. Notwithstanding these concessions, it seems that the principle
+of private enterprise has been pushed too far in this part of the world.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Brunhés described the sale of water at Lorca in the following words:</p>
+
+<p>"The sale takes place in a badly-lit hall with naked walls, on a level
+with the street, with which it communicates by an immense door almost
+its own breadth. This door remains open during the sale and the crowd of
+bidders stand partly in the street. The hall has no floor&mdash;you stand on
+the bare ground. Opposite the door at the end of the hall is a
+railed-off dais entered by a side door, and without any direct
+communication with the public side. On the dais the secretaries are
+seated at a large table covered by a threadbare green cloth. Behind the
+table are five arm-chairs. In one is seated the presiding officer (a
+civil engineer who must own no land in the 'Vega'). On a stool is
+stationed the crier.</p>
+
+<p>"At eight o'clock in the morning, at a sign from the presiding officer,
+the crier pronounces these words in a singing monotonous voice and
+without any pause between the two phrases: 'In honour of the Holy
+Sacrament of the altar, who buys the first lot of Sotellana?'
+Immediately shouts go up 'Eight, nine, ten reals!' One voice overpowers
+the other, wide-open mouths vociferate loudly, necks are strained,
+muscles grow tense with excitement. The bidders<a name="page_177" id="page_177"></a> press and crush
+each other against the iron railing, for the one nearest has the best
+chance of being heard. The presiding officer listens, and follows the
+frantic shouting with sovereign calm. Suddenly, with a quick gesture, he
+designates the highest bidder. At once the clamour ceases. Amid absolute
+silence the man indicated calls out his name, which the clerks write
+down.</p>
+
+<p>"The men are hatless. Some wear black or dark-coloured handkerchiefs
+bound round their heads, but all hold their broad-brimmed hats in their
+hands. No one smokes or talks till the bidding recommences, and even
+those in the street are silent and bare-headed. It is easy to see that
+all are peasants. Heads are closely cropped; here are no beards or
+moustaches, no one wears a collar, and most carry a cloak other than the
+aristocratic 'Capa' on the shoulders or arm. It is a curious and
+impressive sight enough, these bronzed physiognomies animated by one
+desire to obtain possession as cheaply as may be of the supreme good,
+water."</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_064" id="ill_064"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_064-ronda_at_the_fountain_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_064-ronda_at_the_fountain_sml.jpg" width="437" height="550" alt="RONDA&mdash;AT THE FOUNTAIN" title="RONDA&mdash;AT THE FOUNTAIN" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">RONDA&mdash;AT THE FOUNTAIN</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Before the industry of man had harnessed the wayward streams this hot
+land must have been little better than an arid wilderness, yet it has
+been inhabited from the remotest times, and its possession was keenly
+contested between the great powers of antiquity. The natives were known
+to the ancients as the Mastiani, and are credited with the virtues which
+were so long supposed to have been characteristic of primitive man. This
+simple, blameless race fell an easy victim to the wily Ph&oelig;nicians,
+who scented the precious metals within<a name="page_178" id="page_178"></a> these barren hills. Elche,
+Guadix, and Jijona betray in their etymology a Semitic origin. Next came
+the Greek Vikings from Samos and Rhodes and Phokaia, establishing
+themselves at many points along the eastern shore of the Iberian land.
+The rivalry between the Ph&oelig;nician and Hellenic colonies precipitated
+a contest between their respective allies, the Carthaginians and the
+Romans. Hasdrubal founded the port of New Carthage, the name of which is
+still preserved in Cartagena, whence, with a host of 90,000 foot and
+12,000 horse, Hannibal started on his famous march to Rome. The fall of
+the city, which was bravely defended by Mago against Scipio, entailed
+the destruction of the Punic power in Spain.</p>
+
+<p>Under the Roman yoke Carthago Nova became the capital of the vast
+province of Tarraconensis, and the adjoining district in consequence
+felt the full force of all the attacks made by rebels and barbarians on
+the tottering empire. Under the Visigoths it was erected into a duchy by
+the name of Aurariola. The Duke Theodomir, unlike most of his peers,
+offered a strenuous resistance to the Moslem arms, and when defeated in
+battle and besieged in Orihuela, succeeded by a stratagem in preserving
+his territory. By disguising all the women as warriors and parading them
+on the walls, he so deceived the Moors as to the strength of the
+garrison as to obtain from them a recognition of the independence of the
+duchy, subject to the suzerainty of the khalifa.<a name="page_179" id="page_179"></a></p>
+
+<p>The province became known after its chief by the name of Todmir. It
+endured as an autonomous state for some sixty-eight years, its final
+absorption in the Moslem empire being brought about by the last dukes
+espousing the cause of Charlemagne or his Moorish allies. Arabic
+colonists poured in and soon out-numbered the Christian inhabitants. The
+last province of Spain to bow before the Crescent became rapidly the
+most Moorish of any.</p>
+
+<p>Cartagena and Orihuela, the old Visigothic centres, declined, and
+Murcia, practically a Mohammedan foundation, took their place. The city
+rivalled Toledo and Cordova as a manufactory of arms and munitions of
+war. It underwent the usual vicissitudes of Moorish states, forming now
+part of one kingdom, now of another, at times independent, more often
+subject to Valencia, Granada, or Cordova. Finally, in 1243, Abu Bekr,
+the titular amir of Murcia, acknowledged the suzerainty of Castile, only
+to repudiate it in 1252. The war lasted some time, but the desertion of
+Al Ahmar of Granada left Abu Bekr at the mercy of the Christians. Murcia
+was taken in 1266 by Don Jaime of Aragon, who immediately handed over
+his conquest to his son-in-law, Alfonso of Castile. The step, though
+probably not dictated by motives of policy, was a wise one, for it left
+a sort of buffer state between Aragon and Granada, and preserved the
+frontiers of the former kingdom from molestation by the Moors for the
+next two centuries.<a name="page_180" id="page_180"></a></p>
+
+<p>The town of Murcia has completely rid itself of all outward evidences of
+its erstwhile subjection to Islam. Gone is the Alcazar, where the amirs
+mimicked the state of Cordova and Toledo, gone is the wall which kept
+the Christian out, gone is the mosque wherein thousands of turbaned
+heads were bowed daily towards Mecca. Yet in the narrow dark streets
+like the Sierpes of Seville, across which awnings are stretched, we
+might recognize something of the East, were not such thoroughfares
+equally characteristic of the Christian South. The Calles de la Traperia
+and de la Plateria, however, irresistibly recall Smyrna. They lead into
+one of those dazzling white, dusty squares which every Southern and
+Eastern city boasts, and which is always named in Spain after the
+Constitution, in Italy after Victor Emmanuel, and in France after the
+Republic. Murcia is hotter than Seville, and the passage of this plaza
+between eleven in the forenoon and five in the afternoon requires the
+courage of a Mutius Scævola. In the evening you may join the citizens in
+their promenade upon the Malecon, which affords a charming view of the
+rich "huerta" or vale of the Segura. This is described by Mr. Brunhés as
+"an admirable zone of model agricultural establishments. The soil is
+levelled and prepared for irrigation with geometrical precision. To each
+particular crop corresponds a design with little shelving beds of
+special forms." Not an inch of ground is wasted; on the summit of the
+slopes, for instance, sweet potatoes are<a name="page_181" id="page_181"></a> planted at regular
+intervals. The cereals and vegetables are tended with special care,
+almost individually. The melons are protected by coverings. No one can
+visit the environs of Murcia without being impressed by the
+extraordinary industry and thriftiness of its people. And field labour
+in this climate must be arduous in the extreme. But no doubt the
+mythical "dolce far niente" Spaniard will continue for many years to
+haunt the back streets of literature in company with the big-toothed
+English girl, her red-whiskered parent, and other creations of ignorance
+and prejudice.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_065" id="ill_065"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_065-ronda_a_moorish_gateway_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_065-ronda_a_moorish_gateway_sml.jpg" width="442" height="550" alt="RONDA&mdash;A MOORISH GATEWAY" title="RONDA&mdash;A MOORISH GATEWAY" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">RONDA&mdash;A MOORISH GATEWAY</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Murcia cannot be called an interesting town. It has only one
+"sight"&mdash;and that not of first-class interest&mdash;the Cathedral. This
+occupies, as usual, the site of the mosque, and dates in its oldest part
+from 1368. The west front was restored in the seventeenth century,
+fortunately before the decay of Spanish art had become too conspicuous.
+The interior produces a good effect, though robbed of much of its
+interest by a fire some sixty years ago. The choir stalls are good, as
+they generally are in this country of clever wood-carvers, and came from
+a suppressed monastery in the neighbourhood. The reredos is modern and
+poor. With a glance at the urn containing the internal organs of Alfonso
+the Learned, we pass on to the beautiful and interesting Junteron
+Chapel. This was founded in 1515 by the Archdeacon of Lorca, Don Gil
+Junteron, and is in the most exuberant Renaissance style. It is
+astonishing that where the figures and designs are so<a name="page_182" id="page_182"></a> numerous, so
+intermingled, and so complicated, each should be sculptured with such
+exquisite skill and correctness. The Velez Chapel is a little earlier,
+and was evidently modelled on the Constable's Chapel at Burgos. The
+style, as might be expected, reminds one also of the Chapel Royal at
+Granada. Parts of it, says Don Rodrigo Amador de los Rios, evidence the
+painful caprices and aberrations which announce the death agony of a
+powerful art in its decline. It would be dangerous to express such an
+opinion in Murcia, where the chapel is accounted the eighth and greatest
+wonder of the world. In somewhat more restrained terms the sacristan
+will call your attention to the panelling and lockers in the Sacristy,
+which occupies the centre of the graceful steeple, and certainly
+deserves the epithet of sumptuous, so liberally bestowed in Spain.</p>
+
+<p>Much older than Murcia, Cartagena has preserved even fewer monuments of
+antiquity, though it has not lost the military character first impressed
+upon it by its founder Hasdrubal. For this is the first arsenal of
+Spain, and perhaps its strongest fortress. Its splendid sheltered
+harbour is defended by powerful forts and formidable batteries. Their
+fire has not always been directed upon the enemies of Spain. For many
+months in the year 1873 over them waved the red flag of the
+"Intransigentes," the extreme communistic republicans, who,
+simultaneously with the Carlists of the north, threatened ruin to
+Castelar's government at Madrid. The acquisition of the great national
+arsenal without<a name="page_183" id="page_183"></a> firing a shot was, of course, of the utmost
+advantage to these determined revolutionaries. They disposed of 583
+pieces of ordnance, including twenty-eight Krupp guns, with 180,000
+shells and 4,332 quintals of powder. In addition they were supported by
+the ironclad frigates Numancia, Vittoria, Tetuan, and Mendez Nuñez. The
+garrison, in addition to the enthusiastic population, included several
+revolted battalions of regular troops under the command of General
+Contreras. The communist Junta was presided over by Don Antonio Gálvez.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_066" id="ill_066"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_066-ronda_street_scene_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_066-ronda_street_scene_sml.jpg" width="550" height="403" alt="RONDA&mdash;A STREET SCENE" title="RONDA&mdash;A STREET SCENE" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">RONDA&mdash;A STREET SCENE</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Against this terrible stronghold of the revolution, General Martinez
+Campos advanced with an army from Madrid with orders to reduce the place
+with the utmost despatch. This was easier said than done. Supplies were
+lacking; the advantage in artillery lay entirely with the besieged. The
+Carlists effected diversions in favour of the Intransigentes&mdash;an odd
+coalition. Meantime, three of the revolutionary vessels were seized by
+the Prussian squadron as pirates&mdash;an utterly unjustifiable interference
+with the domestic affairs of another State. We might as reasonably have
+seized the vessels of the Confederate States in 1864. The Prussians and
+Italians exacted, moreover, a war indemnity of 50,000 pesetas from the
+Cantonal Junta, which body became a prey to internal dissensions. One of
+its members was assassinated. Taking advantage of these embarrassments
+of the besieged, the republican troops redoubled their efforts. Señor
+Castelar came<a name="page_184" id="page_184"></a> down from Madrid to assume the supreme command, and
+Martinez Campos was superseded by General Lopéz Dominguez. An incessant
+bombardment was kept up, the besieged responding shell by shell. In
+January the frigate Tetuan was burnt to the water's edge, and a day or
+two later the explosion of the gun park destroyed hundreds of the
+garrison. The end was near. The city had for half a year defied almost
+the whole kingdom, and withstood the covert attacks of foreign Powers.
+Among the revolutionaries were men who burned to emulate the Numantians,
+and to make of themselves, the whole population, and the city, one vast
+blazing hecatomb. Before this desperate resolution could be executed,
+the Government troops forced their way into wretched, blood-drenched
+Cartagena. Gálvez, Contreras, and the leaders of the cantonal movement
+escaped by sea in the ironclad Numancia, which far exceeded the
+Government vessels in speed, and took refuge in Algeria. Thus collapsed
+a movement which was, after the Commune of Paris, the most determined
+organized attempt ever made to subvert the existing constitution of
+European society.</p>
+
+<p>I have given at some length this chapter in the history of Cartagena,
+partly because the town has little interest in itself, and partly
+because these events, though so recent and so significant, are never so
+much as alluded to by most writers of travel books. Out of so much evil
+good came at last, for these wellnigh fatal disorders opened the eyes of
+the Spaniards to the<a name="page_185" id="page_185"></a> instability of the Madrid Government, and
+formed the prelude to the reign of peace inaugurated by the accession to
+the throne of King Alfonso XII.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_067" id="ill_067"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_067-ronda_the_market_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_067-ronda_the_market_sml.jpg" width="550" height="445" alt="RONDA&mdash;THE MARKET" title="RONDA&mdash;THE MARKET" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">RONDA&mdash;THE MARKET</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Apart from its historical associations, Murcia repays the attention of
+the traveller less than any other province of Spain. Fortunately, almost
+the only places of interest it contains&mdash;the ones I have mentioned&mdash;lie
+on or close to the direct route from Granada into the old kingdom of
+Valencia.<a name="page_186" id="page_186"></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII<br /><br />
+<small>IN THE OLD KINGDOM OF VALENCIA</small></h2>
+
+<p class="nind">T<small>HE</small> southernmost position of the ancient kingdom of Valencia belongs
+geographically and historically to Murcia. The huerta in which Orihuela
+stands is a continuation of the huerta of Murcia, and in the town itself
+we recognize the Aurariola which was the capital of the latter kingdom.
+I did not stop at Orihuela, but I understand that it remains distinct
+from all other towns in Valencia, in that its people speak pure
+Castilian. For that variety of the Romance tongue which I may denominate
+Catalan is spoken with local modifications all along the eastern coast
+of Spain, from the mouth of the Segura to the frontier of Rousillon. It
+is not, of course, a mere dialect of Castilian. It is a distinct
+language, believed by most authorities to have been the language of
+those Romanized Spaniards who were driven north of the Pyrenees by the
+Arabic invasion, and who reintroduced it on their reconquest of this
+portion of their old territory. Before Valencia was recovered by James
+I. of Aragon&mdash;Jaime lo Conqueridor&mdash;the Christians of the province
+probably<a name="page_187" id="page_187"></a> spoke Castilian or a tongue akin to it. Catalan was simply
+the language of the new rulers, which the people soon acquired. In the
+province of Aragon itself Catalan, or Limousin as some call it, was
+never spoken. This circumstance no doubt powerfully contributed to the
+adoption of Castilian, in preference to the sister tongue, upon the
+unification of the two kingdoms. But for some reason unknown to
+us&mdash;unless it was merely the proximity of Murcia&mdash;Orihuela resisted the
+Catalanizing influence of its conqueror.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_068" id="ill_068"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_068-orihuela_river_segura_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_068-orihuela_river_segura_sml.jpg" width="550" height="379" alt="ORIHUELA&mdash;ON THE RIVER SEGURA" title="ORIHUELA&mdash;ON THE RIVER SEGURA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">ORIHUELA&mdash;ON THE RIVER SEGURA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Elche, our first stopping-place, famous in its way, is very often
+described and compared to half-a-dozen localities in Asia and Africa. I
+also will venture on a comparison, and say that from certain points of
+view it reminded me of Ismailia. It is completely surrounded by
+magnificent date-palms, the number of which a French author estimates at
+80,000. In the shade of the avenues formed by these majestic trees
+flourish the laurel, the rose, and the geranium; beyond extend crops of
+lucerne and wheat, watered by the carefully regulated Vinalapó. For all
+the shade dispersed by the palms, Elche merits its sobriquet, "the
+frying-pan"! The temperature completes the resemblance with Africa. From
+the summit of the hill on which it is built, the town is seen to be
+situated in a real oasis. Beyond the outer ring of cultivation extends a
+desert as white and as saline as that which borders the Suez Canal. The
+eye rests lovingly on the not far distant sea.</p>
+
+<p>Elche makes an agreeable impression on most<a name="page_188" id="page_188"></a> travellers. Gustave Doré
+has left us his impressions of it&mdash;over-imaginative as usual. Mr. Frank
+Barrett, that entertaining novelist, introduces the town into English
+fiction. In Spain it is not more celebrated for its palms (which are
+exported for religious uses) than for its Passion or Mystery Play, the
+only one of the kind in the kingdom. This institution is explained by
+the following legend. On the night of December 29, 1370, a mounted
+coastguard named Francisco Cantó, while patrolling the shore,
+encountered a man seated on a huge coffer. This stranger entreated the
+guard to carry his burden to Elche, and to deposit it at the first house
+where he saw a light, and having obtained his reluctant consent,
+abruptly disappeared. Cantó, in accordance with the mysterious man's
+instructions, left the chest at the Hermitage of San Sebastian. On
+opening it, it was found to contain an image of the Virgin and the words
+and music of the play as now performed. The image was regarded as
+miraculous, and resisted all attempts to remove it from the hermitage.
+It was not my good fortune to see the play, which takes place every year
+in the Iglesia Mayor, transformed for the purpose into a theatre. The
+representation lasts two days, the subject being the Assumption of the
+Virgin. The words, in the old Valencian dialect, are wedded to old
+Gregorian music. I understand that with a naïveté characteristic of
+medieval institutions, the Supreme Being Himself is personified on the
+stage.<a name="page_189" id="page_189"></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_069" id="ill_069"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_069-elche_a_street_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_069-elche_a_street_sml.jpg" width="550" height="404" alt="ELCHE&mdash;A STREET" title="ELCHE&mdash;A STREET" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">ELCHE&mdash;A STREET</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>A spectacle equally curious but not so picturesque is the daily sale of
+water, which takes place here as at Lorca, but with official calm and
+with none of the excitement to be remarked at the latter place.</p>
+
+<p>From this sweltering climate we hasten to the sea-shore, where at rare
+intervals a refreshing breeze may be felt. Alicante, the second town in
+the kingdom of Valencia, is modern, commercial, and thriving. The
+land-locked harbour is bordered by broad white quays, glistering in the
+sun's rays, with heaps of tarry cordage, and canvas distilling
+characteristically marine odours. Trains of mules pass by dragging
+enormous loads of oranges. In the harbour women are busy loading an
+English craft which flies the Blue Peter; they swarm up and down the
+side like ants, or rather like the colliers so familiar to passengers
+through the Suez Canal. The background to this scene of light and
+animation is formed by the enormous rock, comparable to Gibraltar, which
+is crowned by the ancient castle of Santa Barbara&mdash;so called after the
+saint on whose festival, in the year 1248, it was taken by the
+Castilians. Four years later it was stormed by the Aragonese, King
+Alfonso the Battler being the third to enter the fortress. The Castilian
+governor, with his sword in one hand and his keys in the other, fell
+pierced with wounds at the conqueror's feet. The possession of the town,
+as of Orihuela, was afterwards confirmed to Aragon by treaty.</p>
+
+<p>Alicante is resorted to for sea-bathing during the<a name="page_190" id="page_190"></a> summer. The water, I
+am told, is then lukewarm&mdash;hot enough, according to one account, to
+shave with! The thought of the place in August makes the Northerner
+reach for a cooling drink. But I am assured that the heat is tempered by
+refreshing breezes from the sea, and that in the long shadow of the
+castle rock delicious evenings may be enjoyed.</p>
+
+<p>So we journey northward. The country reveals the results of the most
+systematic and intensive culture. We are told that the Valencians are
+lazy, but if so it must be because the most cleverly devised schemes of
+irrigation and cultivation have set them free of labour.</p>
+
+<p>The province of Alicante&mdash;the southernmost of the three into which the
+ancient kingdom is divided&mdash;contains several important towns. There is
+the beautifully-named Villajoyosa, Benidorm&mdash;so Provençal in sound&mdash;and
+Alcoy, a busy, industrial centre, situated in a blooming orchard
+country. Here is celebrated every April the festival of St. George, when
+a sort of sham fight takes place between peasants arrayed respectively
+as Moors and Christians. From Alcoy a short line runs to Gandía on the
+coast, the cradle of the famous house of Borgia.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_070" id="ill_070"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_070-fisher_girl_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_070-fisher_girl_sml.jpg" width="332" height="550" alt="A FISHER GIRL (COAST OF MALAGA)" title="A FISHER GIRL (COAST OF MALAGA)" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">A FISHER GIRL (COAST OF MALAGA)</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>Every town and village in this thickly peopled region has its historical
+memories. Villena recalls the famous family to which it gave the title
+of marquis; Jativa, a desperate struggle during the War of the Spanish
+Succession, in which much English blood was spilled. This latter town
+was the birthplace of Ribera,<a name="page_191" id="page_191"></a> and, as some say, of Alexander
+Borgia. It is situated in a country which might be described as a
+veritable Mahomet's paradise. The cottages in the neighbourhood are
+almost suffocated by the palm and orange trees. Beneath the golden fruit
+we find our way to the castle, or rather castles&mdash;the new and the
+old&mdash;built side by side upon a hill. Part of the fabric dates from the
+time of the Moors. Later, the stronghold served as a state prison.
+Within its walls languished and died the unhappy Count of Urgel, a
+pretender to the throne of Aragon, and here passed a ten years'
+captivity (1512-22) the Duke of Calabria, the rightful heir to the
+throne of Naples, to leave his prison on his appointment to the
+viceroyalty of the fair province he surveyed from its windows!</p>
+
+<p>The custodian of the castle shows the usual underground chambers, which
+may have been, as he alleges, dungeons, but were quite as likely (as
+they generally were with us) store-rooms and wine cellars.</p>
+
+<p>At Alcira we cross the Jucár, after the Ebro the most important Spanish
+river running into the Mediterranean Sea. It rises within a few miles of
+the source of the Tagus, in the Montes Universales, on the borders of
+Aragon and New Castile, and flows south through the plains of La Mancha
+till it enters the province of Albacete, when it takes an easterly
+course. In the same province of Valencia it has excavated some
+magnificent gorges. It is indeed a strong, impetuous stream, bursting
+its banks again and again and levying<a name="page_192" id="page_192"></a> a heavy tribute on the
+surrounding country. Each time it makes for itself a new channel,
+sweeping away whole villages. The village of Alcocer stood on its banks,
+near its confluence with the Albaida. After countless harvests had been
+devastated and inestimable damage to some extent repaired, the two
+streams swelled with fury and in one day reduced a vast extent of
+country to a flat stretch of mud. Then, by another shifting of its bed,
+the terrible Jucár laid bare the foundations of the homes it had ruined.
+There is no security of tenure within its valley! Where your house
+stands to-day, ships may ride to-morrow. Yet here as everywhere else
+along the prolific shore, the waters form the great source of wealth,
+fertilizing vast rice-fields and heavy-laden orchards. The marshy and
+unhealthy lagoon of the Albufera, from which one of Napoleon's marshals
+took his title, is being gradually filled up by the débris brought down
+from the mountains by the rivers, and will ultimately form a "huerta" of
+untold fertility. Meanwhile every effort is made to encourage the
+afforesting of the rugged hill-sides, in order to check the violence of
+the floods and the denuding of the arid, desiccated soil. As a result of
+these wise measures, the kingdom of Valencia will within a short period
+become one of the two or three richest agricultural districts in all
+Europe.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_071" id="ill_071"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_071-water_carrier_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_071-water_carrier_sml.jpg" width="395" height="550" alt="A WATER CARRIER" title="A WATER CARRIER" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">A WATER CARRIER</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The history of the land is that of its capital. Valencia is first
+mentioned as having been granted by the consul Junius Brutus to the
+warriors of Viriathus<a name="page_193" id="page_193"></a> upon the death of their chief, and their
+consequent surrender. The history of few Roman colonies, as it has
+reached us, is of interest. The province had the usual martyrs under the
+persecutions of Diocletian and Decius, and was the place of banishment
+of the zealot Ermengild. It remained under the Moorish yoke for over
+five hundred years, at one time forming part of the khalifate, at other
+times constituting one or more petty kingdoms.</p>
+
+<p>Don Téodoro Llorente speaks of "The slave kings" of Valencia, and thus
+describes the rulers of uncertain and various origin who, like the
+Janissaries of Turkey, had begun as slaves in the palace of the khalifa
+and won power for themselves with their swords. One of these princes
+added the Balearic Isles to his realms, and unsuccessfully attempted the
+conquest of Sardinia.</p>
+
+<p>The kingdom thus founded by military adventurers was overthrown by the
+most famous of that warlike brood.</p>
+
+<p>The history of the events which brought about the conquest of Valencia
+by the Cid is extremely complex. The king or amir, Kadir, was the puppet
+of the rival powers which aspired to the possession of his dominions,
+and was alternately upheld on his tottering throne by one and the other.
+Weary of this dishonourable tutelage, the people arose under the
+leadership of Ibn Jahhaf. Kadir fled disguised as a woman, but was
+detected and beheaded. That strange anomaly, a Mohammedan republic, was
+formed. In other words,<a name="page_194" id="page_194"></a> Valencia was governed by an assembly of
+notables called the Al Jama, of which Ibn Jahhaf was the president.</p>
+
+<p>The people which arrogates the right to choose its ruler has ever been
+considered a sort of pirate among the nations, and fair game for more
+powerful states. Kadir at the moment of his deposition had been
+nominally under the protection of the Cid. That redoubtable warrior,
+under the pretext of avenging his protégé's death, advanced on Valencia.
+The Almoravides came to his assistance, but precipitately retired.
+Distrusting these allies almost as much as the Christians, Ibn Jahhaf
+amused the Cid with negotiations, but meanwhile made preparations for
+defence. He became the special object of the famous warrior's hatred,
+and when the city fell, was burnt to death at the stake before the eyes
+of his horrified countrymen. The Cid now ruled Valencia as absolute lord
+and despot till his death, five years later, in 1097. The legend need
+not be related here, how his wife defended the city for two years after
+his death, and finally, setting his corpse fully armed upon his
+warhorse, won a victory over the terrified Moors and thus took him to
+his last resting-place at Cardeña.</p>
+
+<p>Valencia was not finally wrested from the yoke of Islam till the
+memorable 28th of September, 1238, when the standard of the victorious
+Jaime I. of Aragon was hoisted over the tower of Ali Bufat. In the
+history of Aragon the conquest ranks with the taking<a name="page_195" id="page_195"></a> of Seville in the
+history of Castile. Granada was the joint conquest of both kingdoms. It
+is curious to compare the ready submission of the Moors, and their
+surrender of whole kingdoms to the Christians, sometimes as the result
+of a single battle, with the tenacious resistance offered by their
+descendants in Algeria in modern times. Enervated by the climate of
+Spain, the Mussulmans of that country were absolutely incapable of
+maintaining a prolonged guerrilla warfare. If a fortified capital was
+taken they at once handed over the whole kingdom to the conqueror. They
+were not, of course, peculiar in this respect. The sentiment of
+nationality and physical courage are characteristic far more of the
+modern than of the ancient world. We have only to compare the resistance
+of the Anglo-Saxons to the Normans with that of the Boers to the
+British, of the French in the Hundred Years' War with that of their
+descendants in 1871, to realize how much more of manliness and endurance
+we possess than did our ancestors. We must go back to the days of
+Leonidas and Regulus to find parallels for the exploits of our own
+Indian army; to Numantia and Saguntum for parallels to Saragossa and
+Gerona. National and individual self-respect withered under feudalism,
+and revived only on the introduction of free institutions.</p>
+
+<p>Valencia to-day, as befits the capital of a rich, prosperous province,
+is a handsome, modern progressive city. There is little or nothing about
+to remind one<a name="page_196" id="page_196"></a> of its erstwhile masters, the Moors, and it has not
+retained more monuments of its past than most other cities. Interesting
+it is not from the sightseer's point of view, nor convenient from a
+stranger's, since indications of the names of the streets are few and
+far between. New avenues are being formed, and in these magnificent
+houses are arising, all happily in different styles, original and
+individual, forming a contrast to the dull uniformity of most
+Continental town perspectives. At two points the town is entered by
+massive gates of the castellated type&mdash;the Torres de Serranos and de
+Cuarte. The former date from the fourteenth century, and have two
+octagonal towers with heavy machicolations at two-thirds of their
+height; the machicolation is continued across the connecting storey,
+which is richly panelled above the narrow archway. The Torres de Cuarte
+are drum towers, similarly flanking a gateway; in this case the parapet
+is itself borne on corbels and machicolated. The work dates from the
+fifteenth century. These towers add much to the picturesqueness of their
+respective quarters. The Citadel, in another part of the town, replaces
+the old temple built in 1238 by the Knights Templars on the spot where
+the Aragonese planted their cross on entering Valencia. It contains the
+chapel where St. Vicente Ferrer, "the Angel of the Judgment," took the
+habit of St. Dominic.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_072" id="ill_072"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_072-malaga_a_picador_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_072-malaga_a_picador_sml.jpg" width="550" height="387" alt="MALAGA&mdash;A PICADOR" title="MALAGA&mdash;A PICADOR" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">MALAGA&mdash;A PICADOR</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>A glance at the Cathedral and the Lonja, and we shall have "done"
+Valencia in the tourist's sense. The former building was founded in the
+year 1262 on the<a name="page_197" id="page_197"></a> site of the principal mosque. In it the Kings of
+Aragon took the oath as Kings of Valencia. Repeatedly restored, and
+"modernized" in 1750, it presents a dreadful jumble of styles, and is
+far behind the cathedrals of Andalusia in beauty and interest. The
+Micalet Tower, however, rising at the end of the Calle de Zaragoza,
+presents a striking appearance. It is the great landmark of the
+district, and the Valencians refer to exile as "losing sight of the
+Micalet." The view from the summit is very fine. The main entrance to
+the Cathedral is poor, but the north door, called the Puerta de los
+Apostoles, richly sculptured and delicately moulded, exhibits the skill
+and imagery of the fourteenth century at its best.</p>
+
+<p>Above the interesting semicircular Puerta del Palau are seen on
+medallions the heads of seven men and seven women&mdash;these representing
+the seven knights of the Conquest and the seven ladies (some say of
+Valencia, and others of Lerida) whom they married. From these alliances
+sprang the nobility of the province. This doorway was evidently
+constructed by the architect who designed the Puerta dels Infants at
+Lerida.</p>
+
+<p>The interior has also suffered by restoration. The pointed arches have
+been rounded, the Gothic columns almost concealed by Corinthian
+pilasters, the walls covered with marbles. The effect is rich ("La Rica"
+is the surname which particularly distinguishes this Cathedral), but
+much of the religious antique air of the place has gone for ever. The
+plan is, as usual<a name="page_198" id="page_198"></a> with Spanish churches, cruciform. The chancel was
+reconstructed in 1682, but the altar was melted down by the French in
+1809. Fortunately the fine panel-shutters made for its protection in the
+sixteenth century have been preserved. They were carved by a carpenter
+named Carles, and are painted with scenes from the lives of Christ and
+the Virgin. These works are ascribed by some to Francisco Pagano and
+Pablo de San Leocadio, by others to Leonardo da Vinci himself. Hanging
+to one of the pillars on the Gospel side may be seen the spurs and
+bridle of Jaime lo Conqueridor, presented by him, on the day he took the
+city, to his master of the horse, Juan de Perthusa.</p>
+
+<p>Over the crossing rises the fine octagonal lantern, built in 1404 and
+restored in 1731. The trophies which once adorned it have long since
+been carried off, among them the flags taken from the Genoese by Ramon
+Corveran, a famous sea-dog of Valencia.</p>
+
+<p>The pulpit, over which is displayed a picture of St. Vicente Ferrer, was
+the one from which that zealous missionary actually preached. It can,
+however, hardly be regarded as a curiosity, as the saint must have
+preached in nearly every church in the Peninsula, France, and Flanders.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_073" id="ill_073"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_073-valencia_santa_catalina_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_073-valencia_santa_catalina_sml.jpg" width="378" height="550" alt="VALENCIA&mdash;SANTA CATALINA" title="VALENCIA&mdash;SANTA CATALINA" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">VALENCIA&mdash;SANTA CATALINA</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The choir is modern, except the rear portion or "trascoro," which dates
+from the end of the fifteenth century; and the chapels contain little
+that is of interest. Tomás de Villanueva, the holy Archbishop of
+Valencia, is entombed in the chapel dedicated to him. The<a name="page_199" id="page_199"></a> chapel of
+another Valencian saint, St. Francis Borgia, is remarkable for a curious
+picture representing his conversion of a dying man. The penitent is
+depicted almost nude, and attended by comically fantastic monsters.
+Another painting shows the saint, as Duke of Gandía, taking leave of his
+relatives when about to embrace the religious state.</p>
+
+<p>Leaving the Cathedral, we visit the noble Gothic Lonja, or Silk
+Exchange, built between the years 1482 and 1498 by Pedro Compte. Though
+not in the purest style, the result is imposing and dignified. A French
+writer (M. Paul Jousset), not addicted to laudatory language, admits
+that this building is worth a visit to Valencia to see. Its square
+tower, its crenellated chimneys, open galleries, and high windows,
+recall the palace-like châteaux of the Loire. Within is a noble hall
+divided into three by rows of spirally-fluted columns. The roof is
+studded with stars, and round the frieze runs the inscription: "He only
+that shall not have deceived nor done usury, shall be worthy of eternal
+life." For the commercial integrity of Valencia it is to be hoped that
+the business men frequenting this exchange keep their eyes fixed on the
+text. Another public building worthy of attention is the Audiencia, in
+good Renaissance style, with grand halls adorned by portraits of eminent
+natives of the province. In the Salon de Cortes, the old provincial
+States assembled till the middle of the eighteenth century.</p>
+
+<p>The minor churches of Valencia are hardly worth<a name="page_200" id="page_200"></a> a visit&mdash;the less so
+that in this climate the stranger is generally well content to "laze"
+his time away. He may do this very pleasantly on the Paseo de la
+Glorieta or Plaza Principe Alfonso, two charming shady spots, where
+numerous trees are reflected in the waters of the cool basins. Further
+off, across the parched Turia, you reach the Alameda, a leafy avenue
+where fountains diffuse a refreshing dew. And if you should chance to
+doze on one of the benches, you need not fear interruption. This
+charming promenade, for some occult reason, is neglected by the
+citizens.</p>
+
+<p>The picture gallery of Valencia is important. It contains fine specimens
+of contemporary Spanish art, including works by Sorolla and Benlliure.
+Ribalta may be studied here, and also the less-known masters of the
+Valencian school, such as Orrente, March, Espinosa, and Juanes. There
+used to be several fine private collections in Valencia, but these have
+all been dispersed.</p>
+
+<p>The country round Valencia is far more interesting than the city. In no
+other part of Spain, says Mr. Brunhés, has man more successfully
+combated and reduced natural aridity by irrigation and cultivation; so
+successfully indeed, that from Gandía to Valencia, for instance, a
+stretch of 100 kilometres, the gardens succeed each other so closely
+that it is easy to forget&mdash;in spite of the naked slopes on the
+horizon&mdash;that these oases occupy a naturally arid soil. This is, in
+short, the best cultivated province in the kingdom.<a name="page_201" id="page_201"></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_074" id="ill_074"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_074-andalusian_dance_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_074-andalusian_dance_sml.jpg" width="437" height="550" alt="AN ANDALUSIAN DANCE" title="AN ANDALUSIAN DANCE" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">AN ANDALUSIAN DANCE</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>The numberless canals and watercourses which intersect the land in all
+directions are fed for the most part by the Jucár and Turia&mdash;the latter
+the local stream of Valencia&mdash;but every possible source is turned to
+account. Here the water supply, comprised in the Canal of Moncada and
+the Seven Canals, belongs to the community, by whom is indirectly
+elected the famous tribunal which meets every Thursday morning at the
+Apostles' Gate of the Cathedral.</p>
+
+<p>The sittings of this singular court are the most interesting sight in
+Valencia. In the plaza a crowd of countryfolk are collected, furiously
+discussing their affairs and pleading their cases in advance, after the
+manner of litigants all the world over. Meanwhile the alguazil of the
+tribunal has disposed an ancient sofa in the shadow of the great Gothic
+portal and marked off a space before it with a railing. Presently the
+seven judges arrive&mdash;one for each canal. They have the air of well-to-do
+peasants, and such they are&mdash;grave, stoutly-built men, with tanned faces
+and close-cropped hair. They wear black, the colour beloved by the
+comfortably-situated working man all the world over; but they have not
+discarded the native handkerchief round their polished brows or the
+<i>espadrilla</i>, or Valencian shoe. Each is known by the name of the canal
+which he represents&mdash;Mislata, Cuarte, and so forth. These
+peasant-magistrates having taken their seats, the oldest pronounces the
+words "Se obri el tribunal" (The tribunal is open). For a moment<a name="page_202" id="page_202"></a>
+absolute silence reigns. Then those who have the right to be heard first
+are introduced within the railing and plead their cause bare-headed
+before the court. Woe to the insolent wight that dare stand covered in
+its presence! The alguazil will tear the handkerchief off his head, and
+he will be mulcted, moreover, in a fine. Anyone who speaks before his
+turn is fined. The discipline is severe. Each must wait till the
+president indicates with his foot that it is his turn to be heard.
+Notwithstanding, the fiery Valencians find it hard to restrain their
+feelings. At every moment there is an explosion of wrath or indignation,
+a heated expostulation from one or the other of the parties. The fines
+thus accumulated must represent a considerable sum. The procedure is
+entirely verbal; even the judgments are not recorded. But no court
+exercises more absolute power than the Tribunal de las Aguas of
+Valencia.</p>
+
+<p>Life in the fertile huerta of Valencia is beautifully described by the
+great novelist, Blasco Ibañez, a native of the city. The following
+roughly translated passages, though they convey little idea of the
+forceful and elegant style of the original, will at least enable the
+reader to picture a summer in the South:</p>
+
+<p>"When the vast plain awakes in the bluish light of dawn, the last of the
+nightingales that have sang through the night breaks off abruptly in his
+final trill, as though he had been stricken by the steely shaft of day.
+Sparrows in whole coveys burst forth<a name="page_203" id="page_203"></a> from the thatched roofs, and
+beneath this aerial rabble preening their wings, the trees shake and
+nod.</p>
+
+<p>"One by one the murmurs of the night subside&mdash;the trickling of
+watercourses, the sighing of the reeds, the barking of the watchful
+dogs. Other sounds belonging to the day grow louder and fill the huerta.
+The crow of the cock is heard from every farm; the village bells re-echo
+the call to prayer borne across from the towers of Valencia, which are
+yet misty in the distance; from the farmyards arises a discordant animal
+concert&mdash;the neighing of horses, the bellowing of oxen, the clucking of
+hens, the bleating of lambs, the grunting of swine&mdash;the sounds produced
+by beasts that scent the keen odour of vegetation in the morning breeze
+and are hungry for the fields.</p>
+
+<p>"The sky is suffused with light, and with light, life inundates the
+plain and penetrates to the interior of human and animal abodes. Doors
+open creaking. In the porches white figures appear, their hands clasped
+behind their necks, scanning the horizon. From the stables issue towards
+the city, milch cows, flocks of goats, manure carts. Bells tinkle
+between the dwarf trees bordering the high road, and every now and again
+is heard the sharp '<i>Arre, Aca!</i>' of the drivers.</p>
+
+<p>"On the thresholds of the cottages those bound for the town exchange
+greetings with those that stay in the fields: '<i>Bon dia nos done Deu!</i>'
+(May God give us a good day!) '<i>Bon dia.</i>'<a name="page_204" id="page_204"></a></p>
+
+<p>"Immense is the energy, the explosion of life, at midsummer, the best
+season of the year, the time of harvest and abundance. Space throbs with
+light and heat. The African sun rains torrents of fire on the land
+already cracked and wrinkled by its burning caresses, and its golden
+beams pierce the dense foliage, beneath which are hidden the canals and
+trenches to save them from the all-powerful vivifying heat.</p>
+
+<p>"The branches of the trees are heavy with fruit. They bend beneath the
+weight of yellow grapes covered with glazed leaves. Like the pink cheeks
+of a child glow the apricots amid the verdure. Children greedily eye the
+luscious burden of the fig trees. From the gardens is wafted the scent
+of the jasmin, and the magnolias dispense their incense in the burning
+air laden with the perfume of the cereals.</p>
+
+<p>"The gleaming scythe has already sheared the land, levelling the golden
+fields of wheat and the tall corn stalks, which bowed beneath their
+heavy load of life. The hay forms yellow hills which reflect the colour
+of the sun. The wheat is winnowed in a whirlwind of dust; in the naked
+fields among the stubble, sparrows hop from spot to spot in search of
+stray gleanings. Everywhere are happiness and joyous labour. Waggons go
+groaning down the road; children frolic in the fields and among the
+sheaves, thinking of the wheaten cakes in prospect and of the lazy,
+pleasant life which begins for the farmer when his barn is filled. Even
+the old horses stride along more gaily, cheered by the smell of<a name="page_205" id="page_205"></a> the
+golden grain which will flow steadily into their mangers as the year
+rolls on.</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill_075" id="ill_075"></a></p>
+
+<p class="figcenter">
+<a href="images/ill_075-courting_lg.jpg">
+<img src="images/ill_075-courting_sml.jpg" width="381" height="550" alt="COURTING" title="COURTING" /></a>
+<br />
+<span class="caption">COURTING</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>"When the harvest has levelled the panorama and cleared the great
+stretches of wheat sprinkled with poppies, the plain seems vast, almost
+illimitable. Farther than the eye can reach stretch its great squares of
+red soil marked off by paths and trenches. The Sunday's rest is
+rigorously observed over the whole countryside. Not a man is seen
+toiling in the fields, not a beast at work on the road. Down the paths
+pass old women with their mantillas drawn over their eyes and their
+little chairs hanging to their arms. In the distance resound, like the
+tearing of linen, the shots fired at the swallows, which fly hither and
+thither in circles. A noise seems to be produced by their wings ruffling
+the crystal firmament. From the canals rises the murmur of clouds of
+almost invisible flies. In a farm all painted blue under an ancient
+arbour there is a whirlwind of gaily coloured shawls and petticoats,
+while the guitars with their drowsy rhythm and the strident cornets
+accompany the measures of the Valencian Jota.</p>
+
+<p>"In the village the little plaza is thronged with the field folk. The
+men are in their shirt sleeves, with black sashes and gorgeous
+handkerchiefs arranged mitre-like on their heads. The old men lean on
+their big Liria sticks. The young men, with sleeves turned up, display
+their red nervous arms and carry mere sprigs of ash between their huge
+knotted fingers.<a name="page_206" id="page_206"></a></p>
+
+<p>"In the afternoon, towards the fountain, along the road bordered with
+poplars which shake their silvered foliage, go groups of girls with
+their pitchers on their heads. Their rhythmical movements and their
+grace recall the Athenian canephoræ. This procession to the well lends
+to the huerta of Valencia something of a biblical character. The Fontana
+de la Reina is the pride of the huerta, condemned to drink the water of
+wells and the red and dirty liquid of the canals. It is esteemed as an
+ancient and valuable work. It has a square basin with walls of reddish
+stone. The water is below the soil. You reach the bottom by means of six
+green and slippery steps. Opposite the steps is a defaced bas-relief,
+probably a Virgin attended by angels&mdash;no doubt an ex-voto of the time of
+the Conquest. Laughter and chatter are not wanting round the well. The
+girls cluster round, eager to fill their pitchers but in no hurry to
+depart. They jostle each other on the steps, their petticoats gathered
+in between their legs, the better to lean forward and to plunge their
+vessels into the basin. The surface of the water is unceasingly troubled
+by the bubbles rising from the sandy bed, which is covered with weeds
+waving in the current."<a name="page_207" id="page_207"></a></p>
+
+<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX</h2>
+
+<p class="nind">
+Abades, No. <a href="#page_006">6</a>, <a href="#page_070">70</a><br />
+Abbad, Mohammed Ben, <a href="#page_022">22</a><br />
+Abdallah, Ahmed Ben, <a href="#page_021">21</a><br />
+Abd-el-Aziz, <a href="#page_019">19</a><br />
+Abd-ur-Rahman, <a href="#page_089">89</a><br />
+Abd-ur-Rahman III., <a href="#page_021">21</a><br />
+Abu-l-Walid, <a href="#page_115">115</a><br />
+Adra, <a href="#page_168">168</a><br />
+Ælii, <a href="#page_016">16</a><br />
+Ahmar, Mohammed al, <a href="#page_027">27</a>, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
+Alarcos, <a href="#page_026">26</a><br />
+Albaicin, <a href="#page_148">148</a><br />
+Alcazaba, <a href="#page_129">129</a><br />
+Alcazares, <a href="#page_035">35</a><br />
+Alcazar Genil, <a href="#page_161">161</a><br />
+Alcoy, <a href="#page_190">190</a><br />
+Alfonso VI., <a href="#page_024">24</a>, <a href="#page_025">25</a>, <a href="#page_098">98</a><br />
+Alfonso X., <a href="#page_114">114</a><br />
+Alfonso the Battler, King, <a href="#page_189">189</a><br />
+Alfonso the Learned, <a href="#page_004">4</a>, <a href="#page_181">181</a><br />
+Al Hakem II., <a href="#page_090">90</a><br />
+Alhama, <a href="#page_121">121</a><br />
+Alhambra, The, <a href="#page_124">124</a><br />
+Alicante, <a href="#page_189">189</a><br />
+Al Mansûr, <a href="#page_090">90</a><br />
+Almeria, <a href="#page_168">168</a><br />
+Almohades, <a href="#page_026">26</a>, <a href="#page_030">30</a>, <a href="#page_112">112</a><br />
+Almoravides, <a href="#page_026">26</a>, <a href="#page_112">112</a>, <a href="#page_194">194</a><br />
+Aragon, Don Jaime of, <a href="#page_179">179</a><br />
+Arfe, Juan de, <a href="#page_060">60</a>, <a href="#page_096">96</a><br />
+Aurariola, <a href="#page_178">178</a><br />
+Az Zahara, <a href="#page_097">97</a><br />
+<br />
+Barbuda, Don Martin de la, <a href="#page_102">102</a>, <a href="#page_119">119</a><br />
+Baths, <a href="#page_143">143</a><br />
+Bekr, Abu, <a href="#page_179">179</a><br />
+Belludo, <a href="#page_145">145</a><br />
+Ben Hud, <a href="#page_027">27</a>, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
+Biblioteca Colombina, <a href="#page_035">35</a><br />
+Boabdil, <a href="#page_121">121</a><br />
+<br />
+Cadiz, <a href="#page_001">1</a><br />
+Cadiz, Marquis of, <a href="#page_121">121</a><br />
+Cæsar, Julius, <a href="#page_016">16</a><br />
+Campaña&mdash;<i>See</i> <a href="#Kempener">Kempener</a><br />
+Campillo, <a href="#page_160">160</a><br />
+Cano, Alonso, <a href="#page_066">66</a>, <a href="#page_075">75</a>, <a href="#page_155">155</a>, <a href="#page_165">165</a><br />
+Caños de Carmona, <a href="#page_081">81</a><br />
+Capilla Real, <a href="#page_152">152</a><br />
+Cartagena, <a href="#page_182">182</a><br />
+Carthaginians, <a href="#page_003">3</a>, <a href="#page_014">14</a>, <a href="#page_015">15</a><br />
+Cartuja, <a href="#page_084">84</a>, <a href="#page_158">158</a><br />
+Casa de Bustos Tavera, <a href="#page_070">70</a><br />
+Casa del Carbon, <a href="#page_147">147</a><br />
+Casa de los Tiros, <a href="#page_160">160</a><br />
+Casa de Pilatos, <a href="#page_066">66</a><br />
+Cathedral, <a href="#page_050">50</a>, <a href="#page_151">151</a>, <a href="#page_155">155</a>, <a href="#page_165">165</a>, <a href="#page_196">196</a><br />
+Cespedes, Pablo de, <a href="#page_075">75</a>, <a href="#page_103">103</a><br />
+Charles V., <a href="#page_095">95</a><br />
+Cid Campeador, Ruy Diaz de Bivar, <a href="#page_112">112</a>, <a href="#page_193">193</a><br />
+Colon, Fernando, <a href="#page_057">57</a><br />
+Columbus, Christopher, <a href="#page_056">56</a>, 160<a name="page_208" id="page_208"></a><br />
+Cordova, <a href="#page_086">86</a><br />
+Cornejo, Duque, <a href="#page_095">95</a>, <a href="#page_096">96</a><br />
+Coronel, Doña Maria, <a href="#page_038">38</a><br />
+Cortes, Hernando, <a href="#page_083">83</a><br />
+Court of the Lions, <a href="#page_137">137</a><br />
+Cuarto de Santo Domingo, <a href="#page_160">160</a><br />
+<br />
+Dance of the Seises, <a href="#page_081">81</a><br />
+Dávalos, Leonor, <a href="#page_038">38</a><br />
+Delicias Gardens, <a href="#page_077">77</a><br />
+Dios, San Juan de, <a href="#page_156">156</a><br />
+Drake, Sir Francis, <a href="#page_004">4</a><br />
+<br />
+Elche, <a href="#page_187">187</a><br />
+El Greco, <a href="#page_060">60</a><br />
+Enrique III., <a href="#page_119">119</a><br />
+Ermengild, <a href="#page_018">18</a>, <a href="#page_193">193</a><br />
+Ermita de San Sebastian, <a href="#page_160">160</a><br />
+"Esperandola del Cielo," <a href="#page_149">149</a><br />
+Essex, Earl of, <a href="#page_005">5</a><br />
+Exilona, <a href="#page_019">19</a><br />
+<br />
+Fadrique, Don, <a href="#page_046">46</a><br />
+Fair of Seville, <a href="#page_079">79</a><br />
+Ferdinand and Isabella, <a href="#page_121">121</a><br />
+Fernandez, Alejo, <a href="#page_085">85</a><br />
+Fernando el Magno, <a href="#page_024">24</a><br />
+Ferrer, St. Vincent, <a href="#page_035">35</a><br />
+Frutet, <a href="#page_075">75</a><br />
+<br />
+Gandía, <a href="#page_190">190</a><br />
+Gandia, Duke of, <a href="#page_157">157</a><br />
+Generalife, The, <a href="#page_146">146</a><br />
+Gibralfaro, <a href="#page_164">164</a><br />
+Gibraltar, <a href="#page_173">173</a><br />
+Giordano, Luca, <a href="#page_058">58</a><br />
+Gipsies, <a href="#page_084">84</a><br />
+Giralda Tower, <a href="#page_031">31</a><br />
+Gongora, <a href="#page_095">95</a><br />
+Goya, <a href="#page_060">60</a><br />
+Granada, <a href="#page_107">107</a><br />
+Great Captain, <a href="#page_102">102</a>, <a href="#page_156">156</a><br />
+Guadalquivir, The, <a href="#page_009">9</a><br />
+Guzman el Bueno, <a href="#page_083">83</a><br />
+<br />
+Hajjaj, Ibrahim Ibn, <a href="#page_020">20</a><br />
+Hall of the Two Sisters, <a href="#page_139">139</a><br />
+Halls of the Abencerrages, <a href="#page_139">139</a><br />
+Hasan, Mulai, <a href="#page_121">121</a><br />
+Hernandez (Gonzalo), de Aguilar y de Cordova, "the Great Captain," <a href="#page_102">102</a>, <a href="#page_156">156</a><br />
+Herrera, <a href="#page_058">58</a>, <a href="#page_061">61</a>, <a href="#page_066">66</a><br />
+Herrera, The Older, <a href="#page_075">75</a><br />
+<br />
+Illiberis, <a href="#page_111">111</a><br />
+"Intransigentes," <a href="#page_182">182</a><br />
+Irrigation, <a href="#page_175">175</a>, <a href="#page_200">200</a><br />
+Isidore, St., <a href="#page_019">19</a><br />
+Ismaïl, Saïd Ben, <a href="#page_121">121</a><br />
+Italica, <a href="#page_015">15</a>, <a href="#page_017">17</a>, <a href="#page_018">18</a>, <a href="#page_082">82</a><br />
+<br />
+Jaime lo Conqueridor, <a href="#page_186">186</a>, <a href="#page_194">194</a>, <a href="#page_198">198</a><br />
+Jativa, <a href="#page_190">190</a><br />
+Jerez, <a href="#page_010">10</a><br />
+Juan II., <a href="#page_016">16</a><br />
+Jucár, <a href="#page_191">191</a><br />
+Junteron, Don Gil, <a href="#page_181">181</a><br />
+<br />
+Kadir, <a href="#page_193">193</a><br />
+<a name="Kempener" id="Kempener"></a>Kempener, Peter, <a href="#page_055">55</a>, <a href="#page_058">58</a>, <a href="#page_059">59</a><br />
+<br />
+La Caridad, <a href="#page_074">74</a><br />
+"Las Navas de Tolosa," <a href="#page_026">26</a><br />
+La Trinidad, <a href="#page_019">19</a><br />
+Leal, Valdés, <a href="#page_058">58</a>, <a href="#page_059">59</a>, <a href="#page_074">74</a>, 75<a name="page_209" id="page_209"></a><br />
+Leander, <a href="#page_018">18</a><br />
+Lebrija, <a href="#page_011">11</a><br />
+Leovgild, <a href="#page_018">18</a><br />
+Levi, Simuel Ben, <a href="#page_037">37</a><br />
+Lonja, <a href="#page_196">196</a>, <a href="#page_199">199</a><br />
+Lorca, <a href="#page_175">175</a><br />
+Lucan, <a href="#page_016">16</a><br />
+<br />
+Majus, <a href="#page_021">21</a><br />
+Malaga, <a href="#page_163">163</a><br />
+Malecon, <a href="#page_180">180</a><br />
+Marana, Miguel de, <a href="#page_073">73</a><br />
+Mena, Juan de, <a href="#page_104">104</a><br />
+Mezquita, <a href="#page_088">88</a><br />
+Mihrab, <a href="#page_144">144</a><br />
+Mirador de "Lindaraja," <a href="#page_142">142</a><br />
+Mohammed II., <a href="#page_114">114</a><br />
+Mohammed III., <a href="#page_114">114</a><br />
+Mohammed IV., <a href="#page_116">116</a><br />
+Mohammed V., <a href="#page_117">117</a>, <a href="#page_171">171</a><br />
+Mohammed VI., <a href="#page_119">119</a><br />
+Mohammed VII., <a href="#page_121">121</a><br />
+Mohammed VIII., <a href="#page_121">121</a><br />
+Mohammedan Paintings, <a href="#page_140">140</a><br />
+Montañez, <a href="#page_058">58</a>, <a href="#page_060">60</a>, <a href="#page_066">66</a>, <a href="#page_075">75</a>, <a href="#page_083">83</a><br />
+Mote'mid, <a href="#page_023">23</a><br />
+Motril, <a href="#page_168">168</a><br />
+Munda, <a href="#page_170">170</a><br />
+Murcia, <a href="#page_174">174</a>, <a href="#page_179">179</a>, <a href="#page_180">180</a><br />
+Murillo, <a href="#page_008">8</a>, <a href="#page_056">56</a>, <a href="#page_058">58</a>, <a href="#page_059">59</a>, <a href="#page_060">60</a>, <a href="#page_061">61</a>, <a href="#page_073">73</a>, <a href="#page_074">74</a>, <a href="#page_075">75</a>, <a href="#page_076">76</a><br />
+Musa, <a href="#page_019">19</a><br />
+Museo of Seville, <a href="#page_074">74</a><br />
+Musset, Alfred de, <a href="#page_007">7</a>, <a href="#page_012">12</a>, <a href="#page_071">71</a><br />
+Mut'adid-billah, Amir, <a href="#page_022">22</a><br />
+Muwallads, <a href="#page_020">20</a><br />
+<br />
+Nasr, Abu-l-Juyyush Muley, <a href="#page_115">115</a><br />
+Northmen, <a href="#page_021">21</a><br />
+<br />
+Omnium Sanctorum, <a href="#page_065">65</a><br />
+Oratory, <a href="#page_144">144</a><br />
+Orihuela, <a href="#page_178">178</a>, <a href="#page_186">186</a><br />
+Osorio, Doña Urraca, <a href="#page_038">38</a><br />
+<br />
+Padilla, Maria de, <a href="#page_046">46</a><br />
+Palace of Charles V., <a href="#page_131">131</a><br />
+Palace of St. Telmo, <a href="#page_076">76</a><br />
+Palacio de las Dueñas, <a href="#page_070">70</a><br />
+Palomino, <a href="#page_095">95</a><br />
+Paredes, Doña Maria de Guzman, <a href="#page_095">95</a><br />
+Patio de Daraxa, <a href="#page_142">142</a><br />
+Patio de la Alberca, <a href="#page_135">135</a><br />
+Patio de las Arrayanes, <a href="#page_135">135</a><br />
+Patio de las Muñecas, <a href="#page_045">45</a><br />
+Patio de los Naranjos, <a href="#page_034">34</a><br />
+Patio "del Mexuar," <a href="#page_134">134</a><br />
+Pedro the Cruel, <a href="#page_036">36</a><br />
+Ph&oelig;nicians, The, <a href="#page_002">2</a>, <a href="#page_014">14</a><br />
+Pineda, Doña Mariana, <a href="#page_157">157</a><br />
+Plaza de Bibarrambla, <a href="#page_151">151</a><br />
+Poore, Lawrence, <a href="#page_028">28</a><br />
+Puerta de Hierro, <a href="#page_144">144</a><br />
+Puerta de la Justicia, <a href="#page_128">128</a><br />
+Puerta del Lagarto, <a href="#page_053">53</a><br />
+Puerta del Perdon, <a href="#page_034">34</a><br />
+Puerta del Vino, <a href="#page_130">130</a><br />
+Puerto Santa Maria, <a href="#page_010">10</a><br />
+Pulgar, Fernando del, Lord of El Salar, <a href="#page_152">152</a><br />
+<br />
+Ramon Bonifaz, <a href="#page_027">27</a><br />
+Recchiarus, <a href="#page_017">17</a><br />
+Ribera, <a href="#page_190">190</a><br />
+Robles, Joao de, <a href="#page_156">156</a><br />
+Roelas, Juan de las, <a href="#page_058">58</a>, <a href="#page_065">65</a>, <a href="#page_075">75</a><br />
+Roldán, Pedro, <a href="#page_061">61</a><br />
+Romanticists, <a href="#page_006">6</a>, 7<a name="page_210" id="page_210"></a><br />
+Ronda, <a href="#page_170">170</a><br />
+Rueda, Lope de, <a href="#page_095">95</a><br />
+<br />
+Sacromonte, <a href="#page_158">158</a><br />
+Saïd, Abu, <a href="#page_037">37</a>, <a href="#page_118">118</a>, <a href="#page_171">171</a><br />
+St. Ferdinand, <a href="#page_027">27</a>, <a href="#page_055">55</a>, <a href="#page_095">95</a><br />
+St. Isidore, <a href="#page_024">24</a><br />
+St. Justa, <a href="#page_084">84</a><br />
+St. Rufina, <a href="#page_084">84</a><br />
+St. Vicente Ferrer, <a href="#page_196">196</a>, <a href="#page_198">198</a><br />
+Sala de la Justicia, <a href="#page_140">140</a><br />
+Sala de los Embajadores, <a href="#page_136">136</a><br />
+Salambo, <a href="#page_015">15</a>, <a href="#page_084">84</a><br />
+Salon de los Embajadores, <a href="#page_044">44</a><br />
+San Geronimo, <a href="#page_156">156</a><br />
+Santa Ana, <a href="#page_085">85</a><br />
+Santa Paula, <a href="#page_064">64</a><br />
+Santo Domingo, <a href="#page_160">160</a><br />
+Scipio, <a href="#page_015">15</a><br />
+Seneca, <a href="#page_016">16</a><br />
+Seville, <a href="#page_012">12</a><br />
+Siloe, Diego de, <a href="#page_156">156</a>, <a href="#page_165">165</a><br />
+Suevi, <a href="#page_017">17</a><br />
+<br />
+Talavera, Archbishop de, <a href="#page_123">123</a><br />
+Tarik, <a href="#page_019">19</a><br />
+Tarshish, <a href="#page_003">3</a><br />
+Tendilla, Count of, <a href="#page_123">123</a><br />
+Theodomir, <a href="#page_178">178</a><br />
+Theudis, <a href="#page_017">17</a><br />
+Theudisel, <a href="#page_017">17</a><br />
+Tocador de la Reina, <a href="#page_143">143</a><br />
+Todmir, <a href="#page_179">179</a><br />
+Torre de Cuarte, <a href="#page_196">196</a><br />
+Torre de Serranos, <a href="#page_196">196</a><br />
+Torre del Agua, <a href="#page_145">145</a><br />
+Torre del Homenage, <a href="#page_130">130</a><br />
+"Torre del Oro," <a href="#page_029">29</a><br />
+Torre de la Cautiva, <a href="#page_145">145</a><br />
+Torre de la Vela, <a href="#page_129">129</a><br />
+Torre de las Damas, <a href="#page_144">144</a><br />
+Torre de las Infantas, <a href="#page_145">145</a><br />
+Torre de los Picos, <a href="#page_144">144</a><br />
+Torre de los Siete Suelos, <a href="#page_145">145</a><br />
+Torres Bermejas, <a href="#page_127">127</a><br />
+Tower of Comares, <a href="#page_136">136</a><br />
+Triana, <a href="#page_084">84</a><br />
+Tribunal de las Aguas, <a href="#page_201">201</a><br />
+Turdetani, <a href="#page_014">14</a><br />
+<br />
+University Church, Seville, <a href="#page_065">65</a><br />
+Utrera, <a href="#page_011">11</a><br />
+<br />
+Valdes, <a href="#page_075">75</a><br />
+Valencia, <a href="#page_192">192</a>, <a href="#page_195">195</a><br />
+Vandals, <a href="#page_016">16</a><br />
+Vargas, Luis de, <a href="#page_034">34</a>, <a href="#page_058">58</a>, <a href="#page_059">59</a>, <a href="#page_075">75</a><br />
+Velazquez, <a href="#page_075">75</a><br />
+Velez Chapel, <a href="#page_182">182</a><br />
+Vermilion Towers, <a href="#page_125">125</a><br />
+Vigarni, <a href="#page_153">153</a><br />
+Visigoths, <a href="#page_017">17</a><br />
+<br />
+Yusuf I., <a href="#page_117">117</a><br />
+Yusuf II., <a href="#page_119">119</a><br />
+Yusuf III., <a href="#page_120">120</a><br />
+Yusuf IV., <a href="#page_121">121</a><br />
+<br />
+Zacatin, <a href="#page_150">150</a><br />
+Zaghal, <a href="#page_122">122</a><br />
+Zahara, <a href="#page_121">121</a>, <a href="#page_171">171</a><br />
+Zayda, <a href="#page_025">25</a><br />
+Zegri, Hamet el, <a href="#page_164">164</a><br />
+Ziryab, <a href="#page_101">101</a><br />
+Zurbaran, <a href="#page_058">58</a>, <a href="#page_060">60</a>, <a href="#page_075">75</a><br />
+</p>
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #37944 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/37944)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Southern Spain, by A.F. Calvert
+
+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: Southern Spain
+
+Author: A.F. Calvert
+
+Illustrator: Trevor Haddon
+
+Release Date: November 6, 2011 [EBook #37944]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOUTHERN SPAIN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: image of the book's cover]
+
+
+
+
+SOUTHERN SPAIN
+PAINTED BY TREVOR
+HADDON DESCRIBED
+BY A. F. CALVERT PUBLISHED
+BY A. & C. BLACK
+LONDON MCMVIII
+
+[Illustration: colophon]
+
+[Illustration: frontispiece]
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+Few travellers have leisure enough to traverse the wide realm of tawny
+Spain in its every part. Those who must confine their attention to a
+single province naturally select Andalusia, where all the Northerner's
+preconceptions of the South find realization. The wild scenery of
+Southern Spain, the gay open-air life of the people, the monuments
+attesting the splendour of the extinct civilization of the Moor, the
+spell of romance which still holds its cities, makes this land one of
+the most interesting and fascinating in Europe to the artist, the
+archæologist, and the dreamer.
+
+The present volume, mainly the embodiment of personal impressions and
+observations, is intended partly to supply the place of a guide-book to
+this part of the Peninsula, and with that object I have brought together
+as much of history, art, and topography as the traveller is likely to
+assimilate. Into the descriptive matter I have introduced a little
+gossip, which will, I hope, be not found altogether irrelevant, and may
+serve to beguile the tedium of a bare recital of facts.
+
+While I have endeavoured to make the book as useful to travellers as
+within the prescribed limits was possible, I have essayed to give it, by
+means of the illustrations, a more permanent value. It is on the brush
+rather than on the pen that I have relied to convey an idea of the
+gorgeous panorama of Southern Spain, and to recall to the returned
+traveller his impressions of the land.
+
+As a _vade-mecum_, then, for the tourist, and as an album and souvenir
+of the fairest portion of the realm of the Catholic King, I hope that
+the present volume will be of use to the public, despite the
+shortcomings it doubtless contains. For rendering these as few as
+possible, I have to thank several friends who have looked through the
+proofs. To one in particular, Mr. E. B. d'Auvergne, I am indebted for
+various scraps of original and entertaining information.
+
+A. F. CALVERT.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+ PAGE
+
+CADIZ 1
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+SEVILLE--THE PEARL OF ANDALUSIA 12
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+CORDOVA 86
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+GRANADA 107
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+MALAGA 163
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE WAY SOUTH 169
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE KINGDOM OF MURCIA 174
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+IN THE OLD KINGDOM OF VALENCIA 186
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+1. Cordova--Fountain in the Patio de los Naranjos _Frontispiece_
+
+ PAGE
+
+2. Ayamonte (The Gateway of Andalusia) 8
+
+3. Seville--A Street 12
+
+4. Seville--The Aceite Gate 20
+
+5. Seville--A Courtyard 24
+
+6. Seville--The Torre del Oro and the Cathedral 28
+
+7. Seville--The Giralda 30
+
+8. Seville--Gardens of the Alcazar 34
+
+9. Seville--Gardens of the Alcazar 40
+
+10. Seville--Patio de las Banderas 44
+
+11. Seville--Gardens of the Alcazar 50
+
+12. Seville--Interior of the Cathedral 56
+
+13. Seville--Patio de los Naranjos 60
+
+14. Seville--Plaza de San Fernando 64
+
+15. Seville--Casa de Pilatos 68
+
+16. Seville--Casa de Pilatos 72
+
+17. Seville--Garden of the Casa de Pilatos 78
+
+18. Seville--The Market Place 80
+
+19. Cordova--A Courtyard 84
+
+20. Cordova--Entrance to the City 86
+
+21. Cordova--Calle Cardinal Herrera 88
+
+22. Cordova--Moorish Mill 90
+
+23. Cordova--Mezquita 92
+
+24. Cordova--Patio de los Naranjos 94
+
+25. Cordova--Outer Wall of the Mosque 96
+
+26. Cordova--A Street Scene 98
+
+27. Cordova--A Street 100
+
+28. Cordova--The Bridge 102
+
+29. Cordova--Courtyard of an Inn 104
+
+30. Cordova--Old Houses near the River 106
+
+31. Granada--From the Generalife 108
+
+32. Granada--Sierra Nevada from the Alhambra Gardens 110
+
+33. Granada--Exterior of the Alhambra 112
+
+34. Granada--A Street in the Albaicin 114
+
+35. Granada--In the Market 116
+
+36. Granada--The Alhambra: The Aqueduct 118
+
+37. Granada--The Court of the Cypresses 120
+
+38. Granada--Villa on the Darro 122
+
+39. Granada--The Alhambra from San Miguel 124
+
+40. Granada--Towers of the Infantas, Alhambra 126
+
+41. Granada--Near the Alhambra 128
+
+42. Granada--Puerta del Vino, Alhambra 130
+
+43. Granada--The Alhambra: Tower of Comares 132
+
+44. Granada--The Court of the Lions: Moonlight 136
+
+45. Granada--The Generalife: Patio de la Acequia 138
+
+46. Granada--The Generalife: Court of the Cypresses 140
+
+47. Granada--Tocador de la Reina 142
+
+48. Granada--Torre de las Damas 144
+
+49. Granada--The Generalife: Court of the Cypresses 146
+
+50. Granada--Casa del Carbon 148
+
+51. Granada--Street in the Albaicin 150
+
+52. Granada--Interior of a Posada 152
+
+53. Granada--Old Houses, Cuesta del Pescado 154
+
+54. Granada--Old Ayuntamiento 156
+
+55. Granada--Street in the Old Quarter 158
+
+56. Granada--The Generalife: Patio de la Acequia 160
+
+57. Granada--A Corner in the Old Quarter 162
+
+58. Malaga--The Harbour 164
+
+59. Malaga--The Guadalmedina 166
+
+60. Malaga--A Market 168
+
+61. Malaga--Packing Lemons 170
+
+62. Ronda--The Tajo 172
+
+63. Ronda--Roman Bridges 174
+
+64. Ronda--At the Fountain 176
+
+65. Ronda--A Moorish Gateway 180
+
+66. Ronda--A Street Scene 182
+
+67. Ronda--The Market 184
+
+68. Orihuela on the River Segura 186
+
+69. Elche--A Street 188
+
+70. A Fisher Girl (Coast of Malaga) 190
+
+71. A Water Carrier 192
+
+72. Malaga--A Picador 196
+
+73. Valencia--Santa Catalina 198
+
+74. An Andalusian Dance 200
+
+75. Courting 204
+
+_Map at end of Volume_
+
+_The Illustrations in this Volume have been engraved and printed in
+England by_ THE MENPES PRESS, _London and Watford_
+
+
+
+
+SOUTHERN SPAIN
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+CADIZ
+
+
+Cadiz was the prettiest of all the towns of Spain, thought Byron. I
+would rather say that she was the most beautiful. She rises out of the
+sea--the boundless salt ocean that stretches from pole to pole--and the
+crests of the waves which lick her feet are not whiter than her walls.
+And these by day are bathed in liquid gold, for the sun seems to linger
+here ere he says good-night to Europe. By night the city gleams like
+washed silver, and her sheen is more magical than that of the dark yet
+phosphorescent water. Of sun and sea, light and air, is Cadiz
+compounded. She is the Gateway of the West, not sultry and southern, but
+salt and windy and dazzling white. It is thus she appears to you,
+especially when you come to her over the sea--that sea which hereabouts
+has so often been splashed with British blood. How often the pale yellow
+cliffs of Spain to the southward, and those of the lovely shore of
+Algarve to the north, have reverberated with the booming of the cannon;
+how often the strand has been littered with dead men, whose gaping
+wounds the kindly ocean had washed clean! Browning's lines recur to the
+memory:
+
+ "Nobly, nobly Cape St. Vincent to the north-west died away,
+ Sunset ran, one glorious blood-red, reeking into Cadiz Bay."
+
+For you can see the lighthouse on Cape Trafalgar, and the Bay of Cadiz
+itself has been the scene of some of England's most glorious and
+desperate feats of arms. There is little stirring now in the wide
+harbour, where the ships ride lazily at anchor, and their crews crowd to
+the bulwarks and exchange pleasantries with your boatman as he pulls you
+towards the quay. And so you step on shore, and enter the fair city.
+
+It looks so fresh and fragrant that you would not think it ancient. But
+Cadiz is the first-born city of Spain, probably the first foothold of
+civilization on the shores of the Atlantic Ocean. It marks a new and
+tremendously important step forward in the world's progress. After
+Heaven knows how many attempts and false starts, the Phoenicians dared
+what no people of the ancient world had dared before. The Pillars of
+Hercules were regarded as the western boundary of the world: beyond was
+nothingness. And one day, with the east wind filling his sails and fear
+in the hearts of his crew, some forgotten Columbus of Sidon or of Tyre
+passed through the strait, and turning northward, beached his little
+galley on the peninsula where we stand. Civilization--arts and letters,
+commerce and social life, and all that makes life dear to modern
+men--had burst the narrow limits of the Middle Sea, and first hoisted
+its flag o'er Cadiz.
+
+The thought is not uninspiring. It is not unreasonable to suppose that
+the first keel that ever ploughed the Atlantic grazed this strand. It is
+likely enough that the fleets of lost Atlantis, if that mystical isle
+possessed a ship, resorted hither, for the copper and precious metals of
+Tarshish. What voyages have begun from this port, from the little
+Phoenician craft setting forth in quest of the Tin Islands of the far
+north, to brave Cervera leading out his squadron to its preordained
+doom!
+
+ "It may be that the gulfs shall wash us down,
+ It may be we shall touch the happy isles."
+
+And careless of fate, all these dauntless sailors have adventured forth
+into the deep.
+
+In after years, the Phoenicians and Carthaginians had settlements
+here, and built great ugly palaces overlooking the sea and the
+estuaries. With their curling black beards I seem to see them, robed in
+the real Tyrian purple, reclining on their terraces even as their
+forefathers are shown in that strange picture in our National Gallery,
+"The Eve of the Deluge."
+
+Their deluge was the Roman Invasion, when, in a good hour for humanity,
+Latin superseded Semitic civilization, and the cruel gods of Sidon bowed
+before the young and beautiful gods of Rome. Gades or Gaddir--I give it
+its two oldest names--did not suffer by its change of masters. Its mart
+was crowded, its merchants known from Britain to the Fortunate Isles,
+from Lusitania to Arabia. Much wealth engendered luxury. Life in Gades
+was feverish and distempered. The people had not forgotten the worship
+of Astarte, and the Gaditane dancing-girls proved themselves worthy
+daughters of the goddess. When the gods were dethroned the sensual city
+pined; and under the austere yoke of Islam it languished and all but
+faded away. It is interesting to note that its Moslem inhabitants were
+drawn from the old race of Philistines, some of whose gods had probably
+been worshipped here in the Punic days.
+
+When Seville fell, the port continued subject to the Almohade Emir of
+Fez. Alfonso the Learned subdued it without difficulty in 1262, and
+filled it with colonists from the north coast of Spain, from such places
+as Santander and Laredo. But the Philistine taint in two senses was
+never eradicated; Cadiz remained ever financial and commercial, and
+cared nothing for art. Her brightest and blackest days followed the
+discovery of America, when she soon eclipsed Seville as the mart for the
+produce of the New Indies. Her wealth, not once but many times, wellnigh
+proved her downfall. Threatened again and again by the Barbary corsairs,
+she saw a far more terrible foe before her walls in 1587, in the person
+of Sir Francis Drake, who inflicted incalculable injury on her shipping.
+Worse was to come nine years later, when the English, under the command
+of the Earl of Essex, scaled the walls, sacked the city from end to
+end, slaughtered the inhabitants, profaned the churches and burnt the
+public buildings, and sailed away with enormous booty. Yet so quickly
+did Cadiz recover from this terrific catastrophe, that she again tempted
+the cupidity of our countrymen in 1625. But this time the Dons were well
+prepared and gave our fleet so warm a reception that we were compelled
+to retire with heavy loss.
+
+The city attained its zenith of opulence in the first quarter of the
+eighteenth century, when it had become almost the exclusive entrepôt for
+the traffic between Southern Europe and the Americas. Numerous royal
+privileges and concessions secured it almost a monopoly of the trade.
+But no one organ can hope to escape an infection attacking the whole
+system. Spain in the eighteenth century was dying from that commonest of
+national diseases--dry-rot. Yet as late as 1770 Adam Smith did not
+hesitate to say that the merchants of London had not yet the wealth to
+compete with those of Cadiz, and a few years later the value of the
+bullion landed at its quays was estimated at 125 millions sterling.
+
+Yet it was this bloated, purse-proud city, strangely enough, that proved
+the ark of refuge for Spain when the innumerable hosts of Napoleon
+swarmed over the land. Here were preserved the insignia of national
+independence, and here, amid the thunder of guns and in the lap of the
+ocean, was born the New and Free Spain. Cadiz proved a second
+Covadonga. The focus of the constitutional movement, she was savagely
+assailed by the Absolutists and their French allies. The defence of
+Trocadero, on the other side of the bay, against the forces of the Duc
+d'Angoulême popularized the name of the place throughout Europe. The
+pages of Balzac abound in allusions to that mischievous and futile
+attempt of the Government of the Restoration to rivet on Spaniards
+fetters that no Frenchman would wear. Then came a French invasion of
+another sort, of the Romanticists--of De Musset and Gautier, and the
+long-haired followers of Byron.
+
+It has often seemed to me that every city belongs to one particular age.
+This being a fancy contrary to fact, I will put it this way--that in
+every city there is always some one period of human history more readily
+recoverable than any other. This may not be the period which has left
+its mark most conspicuously on the physiognomy of the place; more
+probably it will be determined by your own preconceptions, derived from
+study or chance reading. John Addington Symonds observed that an island
+near Venice, the name of which I have forgotten, immediately recalled to
+him not the great days of the Republic with which it had an historical
+connection, but the later and decadent days of bag-wig and hair powder.
+At Cadiz I could have wished to think of the Phoenicians, thus hardily
+adventuring into the wide ocean; or of Drake and his gentlemen
+adventurers, "bound wrist to bar, all for red iniquity"; but instead I
+fancied myself back in the 'thirties of last century, and thought of De
+Musset and his "Andalouse" and his lovely Spanish girls. Is it possible
+that Andalusia in those days of our grandfathers _was_ the Andalusia of
+the Romanticists? At Cadiz, I beguiled myself into believing so--why, I
+cannot explain. Perhaps it was due to the unexpected appearance of a
+native--a distinctively Andalusian--costume in the streets. Nowhere else
+in Spain is the mantilla more conspicuous or more gorgeous. A French
+writer gives a selection of toilettes worn at a _Corrida de toros_,
+which, as I never assisted at one of these functions in Cadiz, I repeat:
+"All pink, coral necklace, white lace mantilla, big bunches of
+carnations in the hair and corsage; a blond head seen beneath a
+transparent mantilla, like a frail spider's web, red corsage and white
+gown; coral ear-rings, with bunches of roses; all black, with a white
+mantilla; all white, with a black mantilla; pale green gown with a blue
+bolero and white roses; shawl draped, brocaded, with a wealth of
+carnations in the hair; black dress and mantilla, violets in the hair;
+gold coloured shawl, embroidered with red roses, comb like a tiara set
+with bright-hued flowers," etc., etc. With confections such as these
+dazzling the eyes, it is no wonder that I began to see visions of
+gentlemen in black silk tights, dark green frock coats, and snowy white
+cravats, stammering Castilian with a Parisian accent.
+
+It would be hard, too, to keep the mind fixed on remoter and more heroic
+ages, for Cadiz is singularly destitute of antiquities. The descendants
+of the Philistines could not be expected to respect ancient monuments!
+But what they spared our freebooter ancestors burned. The old Cathedral,
+built in the thirteenth century, was almost totally consumed by the
+flames. When I say that the new building dates from 1720, I fear that
+your interest in it will expire. But it is at least imposing; and the
+choir stalls are very fine. Then there is the Capuchin Convent, where
+Murillo met his death by falling from a scaffolding while painting the
+picture of the Espousals of St. Catherine. Another picture by the same
+master may be seen in this church--St. Francis receiving the Stigmata.
+The little Academia de Bellas Artes contains some admirable specimens of
+the work of Zurbaran, brought from the Charterhouse of Jerez.
+
+These are the only sights in the tourists' agent's acceptation of the
+word, and it is likely enough that you will think three hours devoted to
+the city amply sufficient. Yet its situation at the end of a narrow spit
+like that at the entrance to the Suez Canal--in mid-sea as it were--its
+associations, and its brightness and cleanliness, make it for some the
+most charming of Spanish towns. Crenellated walls enclose it on all
+sides, the space between them and the water's edge being devoted to
+quays, promenades, and gardens. There are forts at the extremity of the
+peninsula--the Isla de Leon, as it is called. The streets are all
+very straight, very narrow, and very clean. Through the _rejas_ across
+the doorways you obtain glimpses of trim little patios, bedecked with
+flowering plants. Occasionally you come out into a little square,
+prettily laid out with gardens, like the Plaza de Mina, where the
+loungers asleep on the seats irresistibly recall dear old busy London.
+
+[Illustration: AYAMONTE (THE GATEWAY OF ANDALUSIA)]
+
+The charming Parque Genovés, bordering the sea, reminds us of the great
+merchant race of Italy who had their warehouses here. It is exquisite to
+walk by night along the sea wall, which at some points rises sheer
+upwards from the water, and to inhale the breezes blown straight across,
+one would like to think, from the West Indies. You will crave for that
+cool wind afterwards, in the parched interior of Andalusia.
+
+From Cadiz you may go to Seville by steamer up the Guadalquivir, but it
+is far from being an interesting trip. The river is about as
+picturesque, and in the same way, as the Dutch Rhine. However, in these
+days of distorted æsthetics--when all that we thought beautiful we are
+now told is ugly, and _vice versa_--it is quite possible that some
+rapturous travellers will extol the mystical loveliness of the plains of
+the Guadalquivir, rating their charms far above the vulgar, blatant
+scenery of Switzerland and the Riviera, which is at the disadvantage of
+being at once realized by the mere ordinary person. _En passant_ I
+cannot refrain from expressing my wonder why superior people of this
+sort go abroad. If Rhenish and Italian panoramas are suggestive to them
+only of oleographs and Christmas numbers, have we not our Abanas and
+Pharpars in England--the Essex marshes, the treeless downs of Sussex,
+the odoriferous banks of the Mersey, for instance?
+
+But I digress--and I counsel you against doing so, but recommend you to
+proceed to Seville, if that be your destination, by rail direct. The
+journey occupies eight and a half hours, and is not among the most
+agreeable experiences of a lifetime. The railway runs right round the
+bay of Cadiz, touching several towns of importance. That any of them are
+worth a break of journey I doubt. Puerto Santa Maria is said to be much
+resorted to by toreros and their admirers. I have never heard what
+attracts them there, but indeed my interest in bull-killing was never
+more than languid. The country round the bay is marshy. It is traversed
+by the river Guadalete, beside which, it seems, Don Roderic was not
+slain, and the battle never took place. You must look for the scene of
+that epoch-making encounter farther towards the strait near the Rio
+Barbate.
+
+Between Cadiz and Seville you stop at the buffet of Jerez to drink a
+glass of sherry in its native place. As most people know, all the good
+wine comes to England; but at Jerez I think, in all reason, the price of
+the wine might be a little lower and its quality a good deal higher. The
+city, of which I only caught a glimpse, looks like an inland Cadiz,
+very clean, white, sunny, and bright.
+
+And so we creep onwards over dreary country--like the South African
+veld--to Lebrija, an old Moorish town with a great church on a height,
+apparently the only building of note in the place. Further on is Utrera,
+renowned for bulls and for possessing one of the thirty deniers for
+which Judas sold his Master. It should be an interesting town, with its
+Moorish castle and walls still extant. But the same individuality is not
+to be expected of the smaller Spanish as of the lesser Italian cities;
+for the history of the one country has been a record of steady
+centralization; of the other, obstinate decentralization. In Utrera, and
+Moron, and Lebrija--even in Cadiz and Granada--there were no independent
+princes or ambitious municipalities to foster and to reward native art.
+The genius and talent of Spain flocked to great centres like Seville,
+Toledo, Valladolid, and Zaragoza, and became ultimately concentrated in
+Madrid. We read the same story in our own country; and in fact it is
+impossible to resist the dangerous and obvious conclusion that
+centralization and unity are good things for nations but bad things for
+art.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE PEARL OF ANDALUSIA
+
+
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--A STREET]
+
+Seville, in the glory of the Andalusian summer, is a city of white and
+gold. Her brilliancy dazzles you, as it dazzled those who wrote of her,
+a little wildly, as the eighth wonder of the world. Luis Guevara, a poet
+born within her walls, declared that she was not the eighth but the
+first of those wonders. In our own day, men of genius have felt her
+spell. "Seville," says Valdés, "has ever been for me the symbol of
+light, the city of love and joy." So much few northerners would feel
+justified in saying. To them this must be the city that most closely
+corresponds to their preconceived ideas of the sunny and romantic South.
+To Seville belong the sweep of lute-strings, the click of the castanets,
+the serenade, and above all, the bull-fight. There is something feminine
+about the radiant city, compared with the masculine strength of Toledo
+and Avila, and the harsh decadence of Granada. You will agree that no
+town is prettier, except perhaps Cadiz. So Byron said, and by him and
+all the poets of his school--Alfred de Musset for one--the city by the
+Guadalquivir was ardently loved. Yet though so conventionally
+romantic of aspect, Seville is busy, prosperous, and well peopled,
+before all other Andalusian towns. The blood still courses hotly through
+her veins--her vitality intoxicates. If you come from Cordova or
+Granada, you feel as though you were returning to the world. Here is
+life, here is gaiety; yet your driver the next instant takes you into a
+narrow, winding street, no broader than an alley, where absolute silence
+reigns. The windows are shuttered, no one seems to stir in the patios.
+There reigns a Sabbath-like calm. A minute later you are in a broad
+plaza, where electric cars boom and whirr, where all is animation and
+bustle. Such contrasts are very sharp in this city, where the streets
+exist simply for folk to dwell in, the squares and paseos for them to
+gather in and do their business. There are notable exceptions, it is
+true. There is no want of life in the Sierpes, the narrow street which
+is the Strand and Charing Cross of Seville. Here you return again and
+again, feeling it is the focus of the city's life. Little better than a
+lane is the Sierpes, where no wheeled traffic can pass. It is amazingly
+dark in the summer, when awnings are drawn right across it from roof to
+roof, and penetrating into it from the sunny plaza, it is a little time
+before you can accustom your eyes to the shadow. Here are the best
+shops, the banks, and those elegant and ostentatious casinos, where the
+aristocracy and leisured class lounge and smoke, and survey at their
+ease the unceasing procession of passers by. There are cafés here of a
+different sort, some of which are frequented by the bull-fighters and
+their admirers. Here too may be seen in all his glory that peculiar type
+of Andalusian, the "Majo," a curious blend of the English "masher" the
+"sporting man" and the "troubadour"! The people sit in the cafés to see
+the others pass, and the others walk down the street to see the people
+in the cafés. This is a form of amusement and exercise common on the
+Continent, and acclimatized already at our English seaside towns.
+Selling lottery tickets is a great industry in the Sierpes, the sale of
+tickets for the next _Corrida de toros_ even more so. The boot-blacking
+saloons remind the American visitor of his native land. For his
+delectation the _New York Herald_ is displayed in the windows of the few
+booksellers. There is nothing about this gay little thoroughfare to
+remind us of the past. The history of Seville is more easily recoverable
+by the fancy, when you are seated by the Guadalquivir, in sight of the
+Torre del Oro, on the spot perhaps where George Borrow, in an unwonted
+fit of hysteria, wept over the beauty of the scene before him.
+
+Phoenician, Carthaginian, Roman, Vandal, Goth, and Moor--the city has
+known them all and outlived them all. There seems to have been a
+settlement of the Turdetani here, before the first Phoenicians came.
+The name at all events was bestowed by the Tyrian traders, if it is
+really derived from "sephela," a plain. Then came the Carthaginians,
+whom the Spaniards accuse of having corrupted the pure and
+simple-minded natives. The city became known to the little world of
+civilization, and was spoken of by Grecian geographers as "Ispola" and
+"Hispalis." The terrible Hamilcar reduced the greater part of Spain to
+the Punic yoke. He and his successor Hasdrubal filled Andalusia with
+their massive ungainly fortresses. Salambo, the Semitic Venus, was
+worshipped on the banks of the Guadalquivir. From time to time, we doubt
+not, human sacrifices stained the altars of Baal. One wonders if the
+descendants of the Carthaginians became identified with the other great
+Semitic people, and passed as Jews. Certainly it is otherwise a little
+difficult to account for the presence in Spain of the Israelites in such
+numbers at a very early period.
+
+The Carthaginians fought hard for the province of Bætica, but Punic
+force and fraud were alike powerless before the sword of Scipio. The
+dominion of the province of Iberia passed to Rome. When the conquering
+hero turned his face homewards to claim his triumph, he was mindful of
+his warworn veterans. For them the journey back to Italy was too long
+and wearisome; they were content to die in the land they had conquered.
+Outside Hispalis a place of rest and refreshment was found for them in
+the village of Sancios. Scipio laid there the foundation of a colony,
+bestowed it on his veterans, and named it Italica, in memory of their
+fatherland. And thus was founded the first Latin-speaking settlement
+outside Italy. It lies--all that remains of it--on the slopes of the
+hills that bound the prospect westwards.
+
+Hispalis, not overshadowed by its new neighbour, flourished under the
+Roman sway. Julius Cæsar besieged the city, which was garrisoned by
+Pompey's partisans, and inscribed the date of its capture in the
+calendar of the Republic (August 9, B.C. 45). His fleet, they say, lay
+in the river between the Torre del Oro and the Palace of San Telmo. The
+townsfolk were devoted to him, and he renamed the place Julia Romula. As
+a Roman colony the town had a senate and consuls, ediles and censors.
+The wall Cæsar built endured intact until the time of Juan II., so that
+monarch wrote in his Chronicle.
+
+While its Punic physiognomy was hard to efface, Seville soon became in
+spirit a Latin town. All Andalusia was in course of time thoroughly
+Romanized. Seneca, Lucan, the Ælii, as most of us remember, were
+Spaniards--if Spaniards could be said, as yet, to have existed.
+
+Then came the era of persecutions, the establishment of Christianity and
+the disappearance of Astarte and Baal from the forum and the temple--to
+be worshipped, perhaps, for a little while longer in the recesses of the
+mountains, where Islam lingered in after times. Presently came the
+Vandals, and their fury having spent itself, they made Seville their
+capital, though they did _not_ give their name, as some have thought, to
+Andalusia. When they passed over--a whole nation--to Africa, the
+barbarous Suevi took possession of their old camping-ground. The Suevian
+king, Recchiarus, became a Catholic, at the persuasion of Sabinus,
+Bishop of Seville, in the year 448. We next hear of him murdering the
+Byzantine ambassador Censorius, in this city, and of being defeated and
+slain by the Visigoths in 456. Now comes an interregnum of seventy-five
+years. The Suevi were expelled from Seville, but their conquerors did
+not occupy the town. It must have been governed by its Catholic bishops,
+who are spoken of as miracles of wisdom and sanctity. Under Theudis the
+Gothic king, Seville again rose to the rank of a capital--or at any rate
+shared the dignity with Toledo. Here Theudis was assassinated, and his
+son and successor Theudisel also, a few months later. The latter
+sovereign is described as a detestably wicked person. He was of course
+an Aryan, and gave a shocking example of his hard-hearted incredulity.
+Among the hills where lies Italica is a village called San Juan de
+Aznalfarache. Near this in the sixth century was a tank which was
+miraculously filled once a year, when the Catholics resorted to it to
+baptize their catechumens. Theudisel had the tank, when it was dry,
+thoroughly investigated, and, satisfied that it was fed by no spring,
+had a lid fastened over it and sealed with his own seal. But next Easter
+it was full of water! Not to be baffled, the king dug a ditch to the
+depth of twenty-five feet all round the tank, but found no trace of a
+spring. He would perhaps have gone on digging for years had not his
+nobles rid the world of so sceptical a monarch.
+
+We come now to the days of good King Leovgild, who consolidated the
+Visigothic monarchy and warred successfully against the Greeks and
+barbarous Suevi. His son, Ermengild, being sent to govern Seville, was
+converted by Leander, the bishop of the city, to the Catholic faith. The
+prince thought he could give no better proof of his zeal for his new
+creed than by revolting against his father. A bloody war resulted.
+Ermengild was worsted and was shut up in Seville, while his father
+occupied Italica and pressed him closely. The rebels capitulated and
+were treated leniently. The prince afterwards headed a second revolt
+against his father, was captured and executed. He has been enrolled
+among the saints of the Catholic Church.
+
+It is quite conceivable that a man of fanatical temperament should feel
+himself called upon to effect the conversion of his fellows to what he
+believes to be the true faith, even at the cost of his kinsfolk's blood;
+but unfortunately for the Visigothic prince, his interests so coincided
+with his principles that worldly people not unnaturally suggest that the
+desire to wear his father's crown had as much to do with his action as
+the desire to convert his father's subjects.
+
+When Spain from Aryan became Catholic, Seville became the Metropolitan
+See, and Leander its Archbishop. He was succeeded in that office by his
+brother Isidore, a much better man than he, and renowned as a doctor of
+the Church and writer on things generally. But by the end of the seventh
+century the primacy had passed to Toledo, and before the next century
+was fourteen years old the last of the Visigoths had reigned over Spain.
+
+After the victory over Roderic near Jerez, Tarik, the Moorish commander,
+marched straight upon Toledo. The reduction of Seville he left to his
+superior officer, Musa. The citizens offered, it is said, a stout
+resistance, and then retired to Beja, on the other side of the Guadiana.
+During the absence of the Moorish commander they recovered the city,
+only to be dispossessed and finally subjugated by his son, the famous
+Abd-el-Aziz, the Abdalasis of Spanish story. Thenceforward for 536 years
+Seville was known as Ishbiliyah, one of the fairest cities of Islam.
+
+When Musa was recalled to Damascus his son remained beside the
+Guadalquivir (as the river Bætis had now come to be called). He
+espoused, according to tradition, Roderic's widow, Exilona, who, legend
+says, had originally been a Moorish princess. For a brief period he
+dwelt in splendour in the old Acropolis, near where the Convent of La
+Trinidad now stands. But his enemies had been busy far away at the
+khalifa's court. While he was in the act of prayer in the mosque he had
+built adjacent to his palace, the messenger of death appeared. Exilona
+was left a second time a widow, and to the aged Musa was shown, months
+later, the lifeless head of his valiant son. Under Abd-el-Aziz's
+immediate successors the seat of government of the latest province of
+the Moslem Empire was transferred from Seville to Cordova. From all
+parts of the East, but especially from Syria, men came flocking to
+Andalusia. Quarrels arose as to the partition of the conquered land
+between the Berbers, who had composed the hordes of Tarik and Musa, and
+the new Saracen settlers. Finally it was decreed that each tribe or
+nationality should be allotted that region which bore the most
+resemblance to its original place of abode. Under this arrangement
+Ishbiliyah was assigned to the people of Homs, the ancient Emesa, a
+Syrian town on the Orontes. (We are reminded of the parallel between
+Macedon and Monmouth.) But in the course of time the original derivation
+of the Spanish Moslems was half forgotten, and the classification was
+rather into pure-blooded Arabs and Muwallads or half-breeds.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--THE ACEITE GATE]
+
+Here at Seville the young Abd-er-Rahman arrived, to restore the empire
+of his forefathers, the Umeyyas, and under these walls the horde of the
+Abbassides was cut to pieces. Yet despite the prosperity she enjoyed
+under the Western Khalifate, the city murmured against Cordova, and more
+than once essayed to throw off the yoke. In Abdullah's reign (888-912) a
+chief named Ibrahim Ibn Hajjaj assumed semi-regal state at Ishbiliyah.
+When he rode forth he was attended by five hundred cavaliers, and he
+ventured to wear the tiraz, the official insignia of the amirs. He
+was a liberal patron of the arts and letters. "In all the West,"
+exclaimed a delighted bard, "I found no noble man but Ibrahim, and he
+was nobility itself! When you have once lived within his shadow, to live
+elsewhere is misery." Such flattery did not delude Ibrahim into too
+great a confidence in his own power. He readily submitted to the great
+khalifa, Abd-ur-Rahman III., by whom the city was greatly favoured. The
+channel of the Guadalquivir was narrowed and deepened, the palm-tree
+introduced from Africa, and the city adorned with gardens and fine
+edifices. The splendour of the court of Cordova was reflected on
+Seville, which became famous as a seat of learning. In those days
+flourished Ahmed Ben Abdallah, surnamed "El Beji," or "The Sage," the
+author of an Encyclopædia of Sciences which was long esteemed a piece of
+marvellous erudition.
+
+Some strange and unexpected figures about this time flit across the
+stage of Andalusian history. The Northmen, or "Majus" as they were
+called by the Arabs, appeared in the year 844 off Lisbon. After
+spreading dismay through Lusitania they sailed their long ships
+southwards to Cadiz, and disembarked. They vanquished the khalifa's
+troops in three pitched battles, and penetrating into Seville sacked the
+rich city from end to end. Luckily they remained but a day and a night,
+and after sustaining several desperate attacks from the inhabitants of
+the country, with varying results, they retired overland to Lisbon,
+where they re-embarked. They came again fifteen years later, and this
+time sailed up the Guadalquivir, burnt the principal mosque, and threw
+down the Roman walls. Then they made sail for the eastern coasts of
+Spain, where they were attacked and routed by the Saracen fleet. An army
+of demons must these strange uncouth pirates have seemed to the
+Andalusians, who knew not whence they came nor to what race of men they
+belonged.
+
+On the break-up of the Western Khalifate in 1009, the shrewd and
+powerful kadi, Mohammed Ben Abbad, secured the sovereignty of the city
+for himself and his descendants. He contrived to give his usurpation the
+appearance of legality. He espoused the cause of an impostor who
+personated the deposed khalifa, Hisham, and pretended to govern the city
+in his name. His power once firmly established, Ben Abbad disposed of
+his puppet, and announced that the khalifa was dead and had designated
+him his lawful successor. For the second time Seville rose to the rank
+of an independent State.
+
+The dynasty of Abbad, emulous of the glories of Cordova, outshone all
+the other rulers of Spain in elegance and culture. The city was adorned
+with beautiful gardens and buildings. Learning was held in honour, and
+the amir disputed the palm with a swarm of fellow-poets. Walking one day
+with his courtiers, on these very banks of the Guadalquivir, the Amir
+Mut'adid-billah observed the water lying glassy beneath the waving
+light. He improvised a line comparing the surface of the stream to a
+cuirass, and called on the poet Aben Amr to complete the verse. This the
+laureate found some difficulty in doing, and to his chagrin he was
+anticipated by a girl of the people standing by, who contributed these
+lines:
+
+ "A strong cuirass, magnificent in combat,
+ Like water frozen over."
+
+The amir, far from resenting this intrusion of a bystander into the
+royal circle, bade the girl draw nearer and asked her name. She said
+that her name was Romikiwa and that she was the slave of Romiya. The
+prince then asked if she were married. The maiden replied that she was
+not. "It is well," said Mut'adid-billah, "for I propose to buy you and
+to marry you." It is to be presumed that Romiya had no objection to
+offer to this plan.
+
+This monarch, the son of the first Abbadite amir, could do other things
+than make verses. He was a mighty warrior in Islam, and kept a kind of
+garden planted with the skulls of his enemies, in the contemplation of
+which he took great delight. With a view to adding to his collection he
+made extensive conquests in what are now the provinces of Ciudad Real,
+Badajoz, and Alemtejo, and undertook successful expeditions against
+Cordova and Ronda. It was the misfortune of his son and successor,
+Mote'mid, to be the contemporary of those great and vigorous Castilian
+kings, Fernando el Magno and Alfonso VI. Conscious of the weakness of
+his little State, the Amir of Ishbiliyah neglected no means of humouring
+his powerful neighbour. Fernando sent an armed mission to his court to
+demand the body of the holy martyr, Justa. But though Mote'mid eagerly
+extended all the assistance in his power, no trace of the relics could
+be obtained. The mission would have been obliged to return empty-handed
+had not St. Isidore (the brother of St. Leander) appeared in a dream to
+one of the Christian envoys and commanded him to convey his remains to
+Leon, instead of St. Justa's. The venerable prelate's body was
+discovered at Italica and carried off to the north, fragrant with
+balsamic odours and wrapped in costly silks. Mote'mid loudly lamented
+the loss of the remains. "Oh! venerable brother," he was heard to
+exclaim, "dost thou then leave me? Thou knowest what has passed between
+me and thee, and the love I bear thee. I pray thee to forget me never."
+Very remarkable words indeed, to fall from the lips of a Mohammedan
+sovereign in reference to a Catholic saint.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--A COURTYARD]
+
+In truth the Spanish Moslems of that day were sadly wanting in zeal for
+their religion. "In those days," writes an Arab chronicler, "men of
+virtue and principle were rare among the people of Mohammed. The
+majority scrupled not to drink wine and to give themselves up to every
+kind of dissipation. The conquerors of Andalusia disputed about their
+slaves and singing girls, passing their time in debauchery and
+pleasures, wasting the treasure of the State on amusement, and
+oppressing the people with exactions and tributes that they might buy
+the friendship of the tyrant Alfonso with costly presents. So things
+went on among the quarrelsome Mussulman chiefs, until, the conquerors
+and the conquered alike prostrated and the kings and captains having
+lost their pristine worth, the warriors became cowards, the people
+vegetated in misery and dejection, the whole of society became corrupt,
+and the lifeless, soulless body of Islam was only a decaying carcase.
+The Moslems who did not bow beneath the yoke of Alfonso consented to pay
+him annual tributes, constituting themselves in this manner mere tax
+collectors for the Christian king on their own territories. Meanwhile
+the affairs of Islam were directed by Jews, who obtained the offices of
+wizir, hagib, and khatib, reserved in another age to the most
+illustrious of the citizens. The Christians devastated the beautiful
+land of Andalusia, and carried off captives and booty, burning villages
+and threatening the towns."
+
+In pursuance of his policy of conciliation, Mote'mid gave his daughter
+Zayda in marriage to Alfonso VI., her dowry being all the towns Mut'adid
+had conquered in New Castile. Lucas of Tuy says the damsel was taken
+"quasi pro uxore ut præmissam est." But this ambiguous union did not
+avert a serious rupture between the sovereigns a year or two later.
+When the Castilian king sent two ambassadors to Seville to collect his
+tribute, one of them, a Jew, conducted himself so haughtily that the
+exasperated Moslems stabbed him to death, letting the Christians escape
+without serious injury. This outrage meant war. Mote'mid cast about him
+for an ally. No help was to be found in Spain, and with inward
+misgivings, no doubt, the Abbadite amir called on the Almoravides of
+Africa to uphold the cause of Islam. Warned of the danger of this
+course, Mote'mid is said to have replied, "Better be a camel driver in
+the African desert than a swineherd in Castile." The Almoravides came
+and routed the Christians. They returned to Africa, and then came again,
+this time reducing all the petty Mussulman States beneath their sway. In
+1091 Ishbiliyah became a mere provincial centre, the seat of a Berber
+governor. Mote'mid was sent in chains to Africa, where he died four
+years later.
+
+The Almoravide rule was of scant duration. Fifty-five years later all
+Andalusia was annexed to the empire of the Almohades. The third
+sovereign of the new dynasty dealt what seemed a decisive blow to the
+allied Christians at Alarcos in the year 1195. But the conquerors knew
+not how to follow up their victory. The Spaniards rallied, and in 1212
+was fought the battle of "Las Navas de Tolosa." The Mussulmans were
+totally defeated, and left, it is said, six hundred thousand dead upon
+the field. Yet the knell of Ishbiliyah had not yet sounded. The
+authority of the Almohade khalifas was nominally recognized in the city
+sixteen years longer. In 1228 the last of the race of Abd-ul-Mumin to
+rule in Spain was expelled by the famous Ben Hud, who was himself slain
+by his rival Al Ahmar, the founder of the Nasrite dynasty of Granada,
+ten years later. In their despair the people of Seville turned once more
+to the African Almohades. But no new army of Ghazis crossed the strait
+to do battle with the Unbeliever. The Andalusians were left to fight
+their last fight unassisted. Cordova had fallen before St. Ferdinand,
+and the Sevillians provoked his anger by the murder of one of their
+chiefs who was devoted to his interests. At the eleventh hour the
+defence was entrusted--strangely enough for a Mohammedan community--to a
+junta composed of six persons. Their names are worth being recorded: Abu
+Faris Ben Hafs, Sakkaf, Ben Shoayb, Yahya Ben Khaldun, Ben Khiyar, and
+Abu Bekr Ben Sharih.
+
+Thus driven to bay, the Moors offered a determined resistance. They were
+attacked not only by the Castilians, but by their own co-religionists;
+for Al Ahmar, the new Amir of Granada, was serving with his followers
+under the banner of Ferdinand. The siege lasted fifteen months. A fleet
+was brought round from the shores of Biscay under the command of Admiral
+Ramon Bonifaz. The Moorish ships were dispersed and the chain which the
+defenders had stretched across the river broken. The besieged were thus
+cut off from their magazines in the suburb of Triana. Meanwhile all the
+outlying posts had been taken by the Castilians, and the Moors were
+driven to take refuge within the walls. Only when threatened with famine
+did the garrison ask for terms. They offered to capitulate if they were
+allowed to destroy their principal mosque to save it from profanation.
+The Infante Alfonso replied that if a single brick was displaced, the
+whole population would be put to the sword. The terms finally accorded
+the besieged were, for that age, not ungenerous. A limited number of
+families were to be allowed to remain in the city, the lives and
+property of these and of the rest were to be respected, and the means of
+transport to Africa and other parts of the peninsula were to be provided
+for those who were to leave. Probably only a few thousand Moors remained
+in Seville. Abu Faris, magnanimously declining an honourable post
+offered him by the conqueror, retired to Barbary. Thither he was
+followed by thousands of his fellow-townsmen, while others accepted Al
+Ahmar's invitation to settle at Granada.
+
+Ferdinand took possession of the city on December 22, 1248. He took up
+his residence at the Alcazar, and allotted houses and lands to his
+officers, not forgetting even his Moorish auxiliaries. Among his first
+cares was the purification of the mosque and its conversion into a
+Christian church. It is interesting to note that the first of his
+knights to mount the Giralda Tower was a Scotsman named Lawrence Poore.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--THE TORRE DEL ORO AND THE CATHEDRAL]
+
+Seville had remained in the power of the Mussulmans five hundred
+and thirty-six years. We, who see all Spain Spanish and remember it was
+so at the beginning, are apt to look on the Moorish occupation as a mere
+episode or interlude in the history of the country. It is difficult to
+realize that the sway of the Crescent lasted in Seville for as long a
+period as has passed with us since the death of King Edward III.
+
+Yet there are few monuments remaining to-day to commemorate a
+civilization which endured five centuries. The Moors have left their
+impress, it is true, in a scarcely definable way on the city, the
+physiognomy of which is more Oriental than that of Granada, a later seat
+of Mohammedan empire. But this is in great part due to the men who lived
+under the Christian kings, who had caught the spirit of the Moors and
+perpetuated their traditions of art and culture. Here we have no such
+mighty memorials of the vanished race as the Mezquita or the Alhambra.
+Still, a few memorials of that far-off age there are; and we will go in
+search of them.
+
+Here on the quays of the Guadalquivir rises a polygonal tower of three
+storeys, poetically termed the "Torre del Oro." But here we find no
+Danaë awaiting a rescuer, but only the harbour master and his
+assistants. When the Almohades ruled in Seville a great iron chain was
+drawn across the river, and a tower built on either side to support it.
+The tower on the Triana side has long since disappeared, but the "Torre
+del Oro" remains as it was built in 1220--except, indeed, for the small
+turret or superstructure added in the eighteenth century. It is said,
+too, that it was once adorned with beautiful glazed tiles, from which
+(though this seems unlikely) it derived its name. In the days when it
+stood the brunt of the attack from the squadron of Ramon Bonifaz, it was
+connected with the Alcazar by a wall, called, in military language, a
+curtain. This was not demolished until the year 1821. At the same time
+disappeared the main entrance to the Alcazar.
+
+The Almohades did much to embellish and to improve the city during their
+century of sovereignty. The only important Mohammedan work remaining to
+us in Seville belongs to that period, and illustrates the victory of the
+African or Berber over the Byzantine influences traceable in earlier
+Moorish architecture. The new conquerors of Andalusia were a virile,
+hardy race, and there is something vigorous and coarse in their
+handiwork. They developed an excessive fondness for ornamentation which
+mars much of their work, and were too much addicted to the use of
+painted stucco and gilding. To them we owe the stalactite roofing,
+afterwards developed with such success at the Alhambra. "It is certain,"
+says Don Pedro de Madrazo, "that the innovations characteristic of
+Mussulman architecture in Spain during the eleventh and twelfth
+centuries cannot be explained as a natural modification of the Arabic
+art of the Khalifate, or as a prelude to the art of Granada, for
+there is very little similarity between the style called Secondary or
+Mauritanian, and the Arab-Byzantine and Andalusian; while on the other
+hand it is evident that the Saracenic monuments of Fez and Morocco, of
+the reigns of Yusuf Ben Tashfin, Abdul Ben Ali, Al Mansûr, and Nasr,
+partake of the character of the ornamentation introduced by the
+Almohades into Spain."
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--THE GIRALDA]
+
+The most important example of this style is the far-famed Giralda Tower,
+at the north-eastern corner of the Cathedral, the most renowned of
+minarets and one of the strongest buildings in the world. It was built
+in the reign of Yakûb al Mansûr by an architect whose name is variously
+written Gabir, Hever, and Yever. Quantities of Roman remains and
+statuary were used in making the foundations. The wall at the base is
+nine feet in thickness, which increases with the height. The lower part
+is of stone, the upper part of brick. For the first fifteen metres the
+four faces of the tower are plain; at that height begins a series of
+vertical windows, mostly of two lights, some with the horseshoe, others
+with the pointed arch; while on either side the masonry is carved into
+what seem panels of trellis work. There is much in the details of this
+decoration to interest the student of Moorish art, who will recognize in
+them the inception of many forms developed (and not always to advantage)
+at Granada.
+
+But the Giralda as we now see it is a third as high again as it was
+left by the Almohades. In their time it was crowned by a pinnacle to
+which were attached four balls of gilded copper--one of which was so
+large, we are told, that the city gate had to be widened that it might
+be brought hither. The iron bar supporting the balls weighed about ten
+hundredweights, and the whole was cast by a Sicilian Arab named Abu
+Leyth at a cost of about fifty thousand pounds of our money. The balls
+were thrown down by an earthquake in 1395, when their proportions were
+carefully ascertained.
+
+It was not till 1568 that the upper stage of the fabric, a graceful
+Renaissance superstructure, was added by Fernando Ruiz. In the same year
+Morel's great statue of Faith, cast in bronze, was placed on the apex to
+symbolize the triumph of Christianity over the creed of Islam. It is a
+clever piece of workmanship, for though it weighs twenty-five
+hundredweights and measures fourteen feet in height, it sways and turns
+with every wind. Hence the name applied to the Tower--Giralda, from _que
+gira_, "which turns."
+
+The first thing you will be asked to do by the guides at Seville is to
+mount the Giralda, which you do by means of thirty-five inclined planes,
+up which a horse might be ridden with ease to the very top. Each stage
+of the ascent is named: "El Cuerpo de Campañas," after its fine peal of
+bells, one of which weighs eighteen tons; "El Cuerpo del Reloj," after
+the clock first set up in 1400--the earliest tower-clock in Spain. Then
+there are the prettily-named floors of the Lilies and the Stars. Some of
+the rooms are inhabited by the bell-ringers, who may at times be heard
+practising not only the chimes but the peculiar guitar-playing of
+Andalusia.
+
+The view from the summit of the tower I think, on the whole,
+disappointing. The principal buildings of the city are too closely
+grouped below the spectator to give a very fine effect to the panorama,
+and the country round is not beautiful. Looking across the arid region
+beyond the river, it is hard to believe that in Moorish times it was
+renowned for its beauty and fertility and compared by Arabic writers to
+the Garden of Eden. Looking down we scan the white city, a labyrinth of
+lanes and alleys, only here and there a plaza opening like a lake among
+the closely-set roofs. Far away to the north the Sierra Morena limits
+the prospect. How often, when from this tower the muezzin proclaimed the
+Islamic profession of faith, his eyes must have lingered apprehensively
+on those mountains from whose crests the Christian seemed to hurl back
+defiance and repudiation.
+
+For the Giralda was the minaret of the great mosque begun by Yusuf, the
+son of Abd-ur-Rahman, in 1171, and completed by his son and successor,
+Yakub al Mansûr. The earlier mosque on the same site had been destroyed
+by the Normans, but some portions of it seem to appear in the horseshoe
+arches of the Puerta del Lagarto and the northern wall of the Patio de
+los Naranjos. This latter court, which shuts in the Cathedral on the
+north side, contains the fountain at which the devout Moslems performed
+their ablutions. The picturesque Puerta del Perdon, through which you
+pass on your way into the town, is a Mudejar, not a Moorish, horseshoe
+arch, erected by Alfonso XI. to commemorate the victory at the Salado in
+the year 1340. The doors with bronze plates, despite their Arabic
+inscriptions, also date from that time. The gate was restored in the
+sixteenth century and adorned with sculptures. The terra-cotta statues
+of St. Peter and St Paul on the outer side are the work of Miguel
+Florentin, one of the earliest of the apostles of Renaissance sculpture
+to settle in Spain. The relief over the arch, representing the expulsion
+of the money-changers from the Temple, is also by him, and commemorates
+the substitution of the Lonja or Bourse for this gate as a rendezvous
+for merchants. The belfry storey is modern. At the little shrine just
+inside, to the left on entering, may be seen a "Christ bearing the
+Cross," by Luis de Vargas. The money-changers and brokers have gone, but
+this gate remains a favourite haunt of the gossips and loungers of
+Seville, and in the cool of the evening is occupied by some pleasant
+little family groups from the adjoining houses. The southern side of the
+patio is occupied by the Cathedral, the western by the church or chapel
+of the Sagrario. The house on the north side inside the old Moorish
+wall, to the right of the Giralda gate (on entering), is occupied
+by the Biblioteca Colombina, bequeathed by the son of Columbus. The
+pulpit from which St. Vincent Ferrer, the "Angel of the Judgment,"
+thundered forth his terrific fulminations against sinners, Jews, and
+heretics, I omitted to notice.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR]
+
+Everyone who reaches the Patio de los Naranjos for the first time is
+sure to enter the Cathedral, which he should not do until the Alcazar at
+least has been visited. Not that the two great buildings of Seville
+exhibit any transition of style from the one to the other, but because,
+having begun the consideration of Moorish architectural work, we ought
+naturally to pass on immediately to the Mauresque work of the first
+century of Castilian rule.
+
+The group of buildings which for greater clearness we will call, with
+the Spaniards themselves, the Alcazares lie to the south of the
+Cathedral, and are surrounded by an embattled wall built by the Arabs.
+This enclosure, it should be understood, includes a great many private
+houses and open spaces besides the Alcazar proper. Immediately inside
+the wall are two squares called the Patio de las Banderas and Patio de
+la Monteria. At the far end of the former is the office of the governor
+of the palace, and to the right of this is an entrance whence a
+colonnaded passage called the Apeadero leads straight through to the
+gardens, or, by turning to the right, to the Patio del Leon. On one side
+this latter square communicates with the Patio de la Monteria; on the
+other side is the Palace of the Alcazar itself. I hope this will make
+the rather puzzling topography of the place a little more intelligible.
+
+Whether or not the Roman "Arx" stood on this spot, as tradition avers, I
+cannot pretend to say. But there is no room for doubt that a palace
+stood here in the days of the Abbadite amirs, and that this building was
+restored and remodelled by the Almohades. To outward seeming the Alcazar
+is as Moorish a monument as the Alhambra. In reality, few traces remain
+of the palace raised by the Moslem rulers of either dynasty, and the
+present building was mainly the work of the Castilian kings--especially
+of Pedro the Cruel. But though built under and for a Christian monarch,
+it is practically certain that the architects were Moors and good
+Moslems, and that their instructions and intentions were to build a
+Moorish palace. Historically, you may say, the Alcazar is a Christian
+work; artistically, Mohammedan.
+
+The actual palace occupies only a small part of the site of the older
+structures, and incorporates but a few fragments of their fabrics. Since
+Pedro the Cruel's day, so many sovereigns have restored, remodelled, and
+added to the building, that it is far from being homogeneous, though we
+can hardly agree with Contreras that it is "far from being a monument of
+Oriental art."
+
+Pedro built more than one palace, or, more correctly, two or three wings
+of the same palace, in this enclosure. Traces of his Stucco Palace
+(Palacio del Yeso) remain. Pedro looms very large in the history of
+Seville. He plays as prominent a part here as Harûn-al-Rashid in the
+story of Bagdad. He was fond of the Moors, and affected their costumes
+and customs. He also favoured the Jews, and was alleged by his enemies
+to be the changeling child of a Jewess. His treasurer and trusted
+adviser was an Israelite named Simuel Ben Levi. He served the king long
+and faithfully, till one day it was whispered that half the wealth that
+should fill the royal coffers had been diverted into his own. Ben Levi
+was seized without warning and placed on the rack, whereupon he expired,
+not of pain, but of sheer indignation. Under his house--so the story
+goes--was found a cavern in which were three piles of gold and silver,
+twice as high as a man. Pedro on beholding these was much affected. "Had
+Simuel surrendered a third of the least of these piles," he exclaimed,
+"he should have gone free. Why would he rather die than speak?"
+
+Stories innumerable are told of this king, a good many, no doubt, being
+pure inventions. There is no reason to question the account of his
+treatment of Abu Saïd, the Moorish Sultan of Granada. This prince had
+usurped the throne, and being solicitous of Pedro's alliance, came to
+visit him at the Alcazar with a magnificent retinue. The costliest
+presents were offered to the Castilian king, whose heart, however, was
+bent on possessing the superb ruby in the regalia of his guest. Before
+many hours had passed, the Moors were seized in their apartments and
+stripped of their raiment and valuables. Abu Saïd, ridiculously tricked
+out, was mounted on a donkey, and with thirty-six of his courtiers,
+hurried to a field outside the town, where they were bound to posts. A
+train of horsemen appeared, Don Pedro at their head, and transfixed the
+helpless men with darts, the king shouting, as he hurled his missiles at
+his luckless guest: "This for the treaty you made me conclude with
+Aragon! This for the castle you took from me!" The ruby which had been
+the cause of the Moor's death was presented by his murderer to the Black
+Prince, and now adorns the crown of England.
+
+Nor did Pedro confine his fury to the sterner sex. Doña Urraca Osorio,
+because her son was concerned in Don Enrique's uprising, was burned at
+the stake on the Alameda. Her faithful servant, Leonor Dávalos, seeing
+that the flames had consumed her mistress's clothing, threw herself into
+the pyre to cover her nakedness, and was likewise burnt to ashes. Having
+conceived a passion for Doña Maria Coronel, the king caused her husband
+to be executed in the Torre del Oro. The widow, far from yielding to his
+entreaties and threats, took the veil and destroyed her beauty by means
+of vitriol. Pedro at once transferred his attentions to her sister, Doña
+Aldonza, and met with more success. If a chronicler is to be believed,
+he threw his brother Enrique's young daughter naked to the lions, like
+some Christian virgin martyr. The generous (or possibly overfed) brutes
+refused the proffered prey, and the whimsical tyrant ever afterwards
+treated the maiden kindly. In memory of her experience, she was known as
+"Leonor de los Leones."
+
+The misdeeds and eccentricities of this extraordinary monarch have been
+chronicled by Ayala (who was a partisan of Don Enrique), and given a
+wider circulation by the pen of Prosper Mérimée. I cannot very well omit
+the oft-told tale that gives its name to the curious little street, near
+the Casa de los Abades, called Calle Cabeza de Don Pedro. There the
+king's head may be seen in effigy high up on the wall at the corner of
+the street. Pedro, prowling about the town after dark, had a quarrel
+with a passer-by to whom, of course, he was unknown, and whom he
+incontinently ran through the body. Thinking there had been no witness
+to his crime, he stalked back to his palace. Next day he summoned the
+Alcalde of Seville to his presence and asked for news of the town. The
+magistrate told him that the body of a man had been found, murdered by
+whom no one knew. The king would suffer no laxity on the part of his
+officers. If the assassin were not discovered the alcalde must pay the
+penalty of the crime with his own life. Luckily for the magistrate, an
+old dame had beheld the encounter of the previous night, and now
+hastened to him with the surprising news that the man he sought after
+was no other than his majesty. She had recognized him beyond all
+possibility of doubt, not only by his features, but by the peculiar
+clicking of the royal knees. The alcalde hanged the king in effigy and
+invited him to the spectacle. "It is well," said the prince, after an
+ominous pause, "I am satisfied. Justice has been done."
+
+I have told the tale rather hurriedly, as it is far from being well
+authenticated, and because it will doubtless be familiar in some form or
+another to most readers. That Pedro had a sense of humour is shown by
+yet another incident. A priest for murdering a shoemaker was condemned
+by the ecclesiastical tribune to be suspended from his sacerdotal
+functions for the space of twelve months. On hearing this Pedro decreed
+that any tradesman who murdered a priest should be punished by being
+restrained from the exercise of his trade for the like period.
+
+But now let us return to the palace of which the sinister king seems the
+presiding genius.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR]
+
+Crossing the Plaza del Triunfo, which lies between the Cathedral and the
+old Moorish walls, we enter the Patio de las Banderas, so called either
+because a flag was hoisted here when the royal family was in residence,
+or on account of the trophy, composed of the arms of Spain with crossed
+flags, displayed over one of the arches. Pedro was accustomed to
+administer justice, tempered with ferocity, after the Oriental fashion,
+seated on a stone bench in a corner of this square. The surrounding
+private houses occupy the site of the old Palace of the Almohades,
+and one of the halls--the Sala de Justicia--is still visible. It is
+entered from the Patio de la Monteria. Contreras assigns a date to this
+room even earlier than the advent of the Almohades. It is square, and
+measures nine metres across. The stucco ceiling is adorned with stars
+and wreaths, and bordered by a painted frieze. The decorations consist
+chiefly of inscriptions in Cufic characters. The right-angled apertures
+in the walls were closed either by screens of translucent stucco or by
+tapestries, "which must," says Gestoso y Perez, "have made the hall
+appear a miracle of wealth and splendour." It was in this hall, often
+overlooked by visitors, that Don Pedro overheard four judges discussing
+the division of a bribe they had received. The question was abruptly
+solved by the division of the disputants' heads and bodies. Thanks to
+its isolation, the Sala de Justicia escaped the dreadful "restoration"
+effected in the middle of the nineteenth century by the Duc de
+Montpensier. The house No. 3, Patio de las Banderas, formed part, in the
+opinion of Gestoso y Perez, of the Palacio del Yeso, or Stucco Palace,
+of Don Pedro.
+
+Passing through the colonnaded Apeadero, built by Philip III. in 1607,
+and once used as an armoury, we reach the Patio del Leon, where
+tournaments used to be held, and stand in front of the Palace of the
+Alcazar. The façade is gorgeous yet elegant, of a gaudiness that in this
+brilliant city of golden sunshine and white walls is not obtrusive. Yet,
+despite the Moorish character of the decoration, the Arabic capitals
+and pilasters, and the square entrance "in the Persian style," the front
+is not that of an eastern palace; and it is without surprise that we
+read over the portal, in quaint Gothic characters, the legend: "The most
+high, the most noble, the most powerful, and the most victorious Don
+Pedro, commanded these Palaces, these Alcazares, and these entrances to
+be made in the year (of Cæsar) 1402" (1364). Elsewhere on the façade are
+the oft-repeated Cufic inscriptions: "There is no conqueror but Allah,"
+"Glory to our lord the Sultan" (Don Pedro), "Eternal glory to Allah,"
+etc., etc.
+
+This is a very different entrance from that of the Alhambra, the
+building on the model of which the Alcazar was undoubtedly planned. From
+the entrance a passage leads from your left to one extremity of the
+Patio de las Doncellas, the central and principal court of the palace.
+How this patio came to be so named I have never been able to ascertain.
+There is an absurd story to the effect that here were collected the
+girls fabled to have been sent by way of annual tribute by Mauregato to
+the khalifa. Had such a transaction taken place, the tribute would have
+been payable, of course, at Cordova, not at Seville. Moreover this court
+was among the works executed in the fourteenth century.
+
+The Alcazar strikes us (if we have come from Granada) as being on a much
+smaller scale than the Alhambra. It is very much better preserved, as
+it should be, seeing that it is a century younger; and if it vaguely
+strikes one as being fitter for the abode of a court favourite than of a
+monarch, it impresses one as being fresher, more elegant--in a word,
+more artistic--than the older building.
+
+The Patio de las Doncellas is an oblong, and surrounded by an arcade of
+pointed and dentated arches which spring from the capitals of white
+marble columns placed in pairs. The middle arch on each side is higher
+than the others, and springs from oblong imposts resting on the twin
+columns and flanked by the miniature pillars characteristic of the
+Granadine architecture. The spandrils are beautifully adorned with
+stucco work of the trellis pattern. On the frieze above runs a flowing
+scroll with Arabic inscriptions, among them being "Glory to our lord,
+the Sultan Don Pedro," and this very remarkable text: "There is but one
+God; He is eternal; He was not begotten and has never begotten, and He
+has no equal." This inscription, opposed to the tenets of Christianity,
+was evidently designed by a Moslem artificer, who relied (and safely
+relied) on the ignorance of his employers. The frieze is decorated also,
+at intervals, by the escutcheons of Don Pedro and of Ferdinand and
+Isabella, and by the well-known devices of Charles V., the Pillars of
+Hercules with the motto "Plus Oultre." The inside of the arcade is
+ornamented with a high dado of glazed tile mosaic (azulejo),
+brilliantly coloured and with the highly-prized metallic glint. The
+combinations and variations of the designs are very ingenious and
+interesting. This decoration probably dates from Don Pedro's time.
+Behind each central arch is a round-arched doorway, flanked by twin
+windows. These are framed in rich conventional ornamental work. Through
+little oblong windows above the doors light falls and illumines the
+ceilings of the apartments opening into the court. The ceiling of the
+arcade dates from the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella, but was restored
+in 1856. A deep cornice marks the division of the lower part of the
+court from the upper storey, the front of which, with its white marble
+arches, columns and balustrades, was the work of Don Luis de Vega, a
+sixteenth-century architect.
+
+Three recesses in the wall to the left of the entrance are pointed out
+as the audience closets of King Pedro; but they are much more likely to
+be walled-up entrances to formerly existing corridors and chambers
+behind.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--PATIO DE LAS BANDERAS]
+
+The door facing this wall gives access to the Hall of the Ambassadors
+(Salon de los Embajadores), the finest apartment in this fairy palace.
+The doors are magnificent examples of inlay work, and were, according to
+the inscription on them, made by Moorish carpenters from Toledo in the
+year 1364. The hall is about thirty-three feet square, and exhibits a
+splendid combination of the various styles with the Gothic and
+Renaissance. The ornamentation is rich and elaborate almost beyond
+the possibility of description. The magnificent "half-orange" ceiling of
+carved wood rests on a frieze decorated with the Tower and Lion. Then
+come Cufic inscriptions on a blue ground and ugly female heads of the
+sixteenth century. Then, below another band of decoration, is a row of
+fifty-six busts of the Kings of Spain, from Receswinto the Goth to
+Philip III. These date, at earliest, from the sixteenth century. The
+wrought-iron balconies were made by Francisco Lopez in 1592. The
+decoration of this splendid chamber is completed by a high dado of blue,
+white, and green "azulejos." It was in this hall that Abu Saïd is said
+to have been received by his treacherous host.
+
+The Hall of the Ambassadors communicated on each side with the patio and
+adjoining halls by entrances composed of three horseshoe arches,
+supported by graceful pillars and enclosed in a circular arch.
+
+Through the arch facing the entrance from the patio we pass into a long
+narrow apartment, known as the Comedor, where the late Comtesse de Paris
+was born in 1848. To the north of the salon is a small square chamber,
+called the "Cuarto del Techo de Felipe Segundo," with a coffered ceiling
+dating from the time of that king. North of this room is the exquisite
+little Patio de las Muñecas (Court of the Dolls), purely Granadine in
+treatment. The rounded arches are separated by cylindrical pillars--I
+call them so for want of a better word--which rest on slender columns
+of different colours, reminding one of the early or Cordovan style. The
+capitals are rich, the pillars they uphold decorated with vertical lines
+of Cufic inscriptions, many of which, says Contreras, are placed upside
+down. The walls and spandrils are tastefully adorned with stucco work of
+the trellis pattern, tiling and mosaic. This court, though still
+harmonious and beautiful, suffered rather than benefited by its
+restoration in 1843; but the architecture has been not unsuccessfully
+reproduced in the upper storey.
+
+This charming spot is by no means suggestive of deeds of blood and
+violence; yet, just as they point out the Salon de los Embajadores as
+the scene of the arrest of the Red Sultan by Don Pedro, so here do the
+guides place the scene of the murder of Don Fadrique by the truculent
+monarch--a fratricide to be avenged by another fratricide at Montiel.
+The Master of Santiago, to give the Don his usual title, after a
+successful campaign in Murcia, had been graciously received by his
+brother the king, and presently went to pay his respects in another part
+of the palace to the royal favourite, Maria de Padilla. It is said that
+she warned him of his impending fate; perhaps by her manner, if not by
+words, she tried to arouse in him a sense of danger, but the soldier
+prince returned to the king's presence. With a shout, Pedro gave the
+fatal signal. "Kill the Master of Santiago," he cried. Guards fell upon
+the prince. His sword was entangled in his scarf, and he was butchered
+without mercy. His retainers fled in all directions, pursued by Pedro's
+guards. One took refuge in Maria de Padilla's own apartment, and tried
+to screen himself by holding her little daughter, Doña Beatriz, before
+him. Pedro tore the child away, and despatched the unfortunate man with
+his own hand. The murder took place on May 19, 1358.
+
+To the west of the court is a little room, elegantly decorated, and
+named after the Catholic Sovereigns, by whom it was restored. Their
+well-known devices appear, together with the Towers and Lions, among the
+decorations, which reveal the influence of the plateresque style. The
+north side of the patio is occupied by the Cuarto de los Principes, not
+to be confounded with a similarly named apartment on the floor above. At
+either end of this room is an arch, adorned with stucco work, admitting
+to a cabinet or alcove. That to the right has a fine artesonado ceiling,
+and that to the left is decorated in a species of Moorish plateresque
+style. An inscription states that the frieze was made in the year 1543
+by Juan de Simancas, master carpenter.
+
+East of the Patio de las Muñecas, and occupying the north side of the
+Patio de las Doncellas, is the long room called the Dormitorio de los
+Reyes Moros. All the apartments in the Alcazar are fancifully named, but
+the designation of none is quite so stupid and misleading as this. The
+columns of the twin windows on either side of the door appear to date
+from the time of the Khalifate. The doors themselves are richly inlaid
+and painted with geometrical patterns. The three horseshoe arches
+leading to the _al hami_, or alcove, also seem to belong to the early
+period of Spanish-Arabic art. The room is so richly decorated that
+scarce a handbreadth of the surface is free from ornament.
+
+On the opposite side of the central court is the sumptuous Salon de
+Carlos V., the ceiling of which was constructed by order of the emperor,
+and is adorned with classical heads. The tile and stucco work is the
+finest in the palace. There is a legend to the effect that St. Ferdinand
+died in this room--on his knees, with a cord round his neck and a taper
+in his hand--but it is unlikely that this part of the palace existed in
+his time. The guide pointed out the room to the west of this salon as
+the chamber of Maria de Padilla, but this again is, to put it mildly,
+doubtful.
+
+The upper chambers of the Alcazar, which are not accessible to the
+general public, are very handsome. The floor overlooking the Patio del
+Leon is occupied by the Sala del Principe, with its beautiful spring
+windows, polychrome tiling, and columns brought from the old Moorish
+Palace at Valencia. Adjacent is the Oratory, built by order of Ferdinand
+and Isabella in 1504. The tile work is of extraordinary beauty, and
+shows that the Moors had not a monopoly of talent in this kind of
+decoration. The fine Visitation over the altar is signed by Francesco
+Nicoloso, the Italian. On the same floor is the reputed bed-chamber of
+Don Pedro. Over the door may be seen four death's-heads, and over
+another entrance the curious figure of a man who looks back over his
+shoulder at a grinning skull. These gruesome designs commemorate the
+summary execution by the king of four judges whom he overheard
+discussing the division of a bribe. The royal apartments on this floor
+contain some precious works of art; but I abstain from mentioning the
+most remarkable of these, as pictures are so often transferred in Spain
+from one royal residence to another that such indications are often out
+of date before they are printed.
+
+The Alcazar, I think, disappoints most foreigners. The architectural and
+decorative work of the Spanish Moors and their descendants pleases
+people quite inexperienced in the arts by its mere prettiness, its
+brilliance, its originality, and its colour; and it delights still more
+those who are able to appreciate its marvellous combinations of
+geometrical forms, its exquisite epigraphy, and all its subtle details.
+But the average traveller stands between these two classes of observers.
+He looks for grandeur where he should expect only beauty, and his eye is
+wearied by the wealth of conventional ornamentation. What I think is
+conspicuously lacking in the Alcazar, and to almost the same extent in
+the Alhambra, is atmosphere. Memories do not haunt you in these gilded
+halls. There is nothing about them to suggest that anything ever
+happened here. The legends tell us the contrary; but assuredly no one
+was ever less successful in impressing his personality on his abode than
+were the founders and inhabitants of the Alcazar.
+
+The gardens are really the most pleasing spot within the enclosure. They
+form a delicious pleasaunce, where the orange and citron diffuse their
+fragrance, and magic fountains spring up suddenly beneath the
+passenger's feet, sprinkling him with a cooling dew. I noticed some
+flower beds shaped like curiously formed crosses, which the gardener
+told me were the crosses of the orders of Calatrava, Santiago,
+Alcantara, and Montesa. You are also shown the Baths of Maria de
+Padilla, which are approached through a gloomy arched entrance. In the
+favourite's time they had no other roof than the sky, and no further
+protection from prying eyes than that afforded by a screen of orange and
+lemon trees. In Mohammedan times the baths were probably used by the
+ladies of the harem.
+
+But if the Alcazar is a disappointment to the majority of visitors, I
+cannot conceive the Cathedral being so, despite the unfavourable
+criticism to which it has been subjected. The exterior, it is true, is
+unimpressive, and the vastness of the pile is largely responsible for
+the powerful effect proclaimed by the interior. But when the worst has
+been urged, this, the third largest church in Christendom, remains a
+grand, a solemn, and a magnificent temple, thoroughly Christian in
+atmosphere and details.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR]
+
+I like the story of its foundation better than the silly tales about Don
+Pedro, or about crucifixes helping jilted damsels. It has, moreover, the
+very unusual merit of being true. After the conquest by St. Ferdinand
+the old mosque of the Almohades was "purified," and served as the
+cathedral till, towards the end of the fourteenth century, it became
+practically ruined by earthquakes. The dean and chapter took counsel
+together, and at a conclave held in the Court of the Elms, on the south
+side of the mosque, it was resolved to build a new church forthwith.
+Then uprose a zealous prebendary and cried: "Let us build a church so
+great that those who come after us will think us mad to have attempted
+it!" The proposal was adopted with acclamation; and the great-hearted
+priests bound themselves to contribute from their own stipends as much
+money as might be necessary, should the revenue of the See prove unequal
+to the cost of the undertaking. They could never hope to see the fruit
+of their labours. I do not think the name of any one of them has been
+preserved. The architect alike has been forgotten. All concerned sought
+only the greater glorification of their faith. Such greatness of spirit
+deserved a noble monument.[*]
+
+[Note *: Instances of this lofty spirit are frequent in the history
+of the Spanish peoples. When, after their first uprising against the
+mother country, the people of Honduras (Central America) met in Congress
+to frame a Constitution, a priest rose and proposed that before anything
+else was done, every slave in the country should be set free. And the
+measure was carried unanimously and enthusiastically by the Congress,
+which must have included many slaveholders. It took the United States
+forty years to follow this example.]
+
+The Cathedral took one hundred and seventeen years to build, the first
+stone having been laid in 1402 and the lantern having been finished by
+Juan Gil de Hontañon in 1519. Of the mosque certain portions were left:
+the Giralda, the Patio de los Naranjos, and the portal called the Puerta
+del Lagarto. The latter is named after the wooden model of an alligator
+which hangs from the roof. Three or four centuries ago the mummified
+form of a real alligator hung there. It was one of the gifts of an
+Egyptian khalifa to the daughter of a Castilian king, whom he sought in
+marriage. The saurian was accompanied from the banks of the Nile by
+various animals peculiar to that fertile region, but these interesting
+offerings failed to make any impression on the heart of the Infanta.
+Thus the forlorn-looking effigy of the reptile is in reality an
+affecting memorial of unrequited love.
+
+Churches, it has been remarked, were considered in the Middle Ages very
+proper repositories for curiosities of all sorts. The cloister of the
+Lagarto contains also an elephant's tusk, weighing seventy pounds, and a
+horse's bit, said to be that of Babieca, the Cid's charger.
+
+Very grateful is the sudden cool of the great church when you enter it
+from the sun-scorched plaza. Then there comes over you a feeling of
+profound reverence, followed very soon by an infinite restfulness. There
+is no place in Seville where you more willingly linger. A holy calm
+pervades the whole building, and you wonder that it should have
+suggested to Théophile Gautier such fantastic comparisons. If it were
+not the temple of Christ, I could believe it to be the temple of
+Silence.
+
+The Puerta del Lagarto is the favourite entrance, but when the day comes
+for a painstaking examination, you would do well to begin at one of the
+entrances in the west front. Of these there are three: the Puerta Mayor,
+the Puerta del Bautismo, and the Puerta San Miguel. All are enriched
+with good statuary, the graceful and vigorous statues of the side doors
+being the work of Pedro Millán, a fifteenth-century sculptor of renown.
+Entering, we set foot on the fine marble floor and make out the
+stupendous church to be composed of a nave and of two aisles on either
+side. The nave, you are told, is one hundred feet high and fifty feet
+wide. The noble columns, almost free of adornment, which uphold the
+spacious vaults recede in the far distance like trees in an overarching
+avenue. The effect, fine as it is, might have been much finer if the
+centre of the nave had not been blocked up by the choir. The "Trascoro,"
+or screen, facing the west entrance, is richly adorned with red columns.
+Over the altar is a fourteenth-century picture of the Madonna, and a
+painting by Pacheco, the Inquisitor, representing St. Ferdinand
+receiving the keys of Seville. Over one of the beautiful little side
+altars of the choir is one of the rare examples of good Spanish
+sculpture--a Virgin, by Juan Martinez Montañez. On the altar side the
+choir is shut off by a sixteenth-century railing, attributed to Sancho
+Muñoz. This protects from intrusion their reverences the canons, who
+sit in stalls, exquisitely carved between the years 1475 and 1538. The
+patterns and coloured inlaid work of the backs reveal Moorish influence.
+The lectern was the work of Bartolomé Morel. When the lantern collapsed
+in 1888, the choir was severely damaged. The architect who restored the
+fabric proposed to move it considerably nearer the high altar, but the
+proposal was stupidly rejected. A good opportunity for improving the
+appearance of the Cathedral was thus lost.
+
+The retablo of the high altar is the quintessence of late Gothic
+sculpture. It is a marvellous work of extraordinary delicacy and
+elaboration. Each of the forty-five compartments into which it is
+divided contains a subject from the Bible or from the lives of the
+saints, carved, painted, or gilded with the rarest skill. Begun by the
+Fleming Dancart, in 1479, this wonderful triumph of the carver's art was
+completed by Spanish artists in 1526. The earlier work is in the middle.
+Crowning it is a gilt crucifix and the statues of Our Lady and St. John.
+
+There are some very interesting objects in the Sacristy, as it is
+called, between the reredos and the hind wall of the chancel. The
+sacristan will show you the reliquary, shaped like a triptych, which
+came from Constantinople and was presented to the old cathedral by
+Alfonso the Learned. The double folding door is also said to have come
+from the Moorish temple. With a glance at the fine terra-cotta statues
+by Miguel Florentin, Juan Marin, and others, we pass behind the chancel
+wall, and see before us the plateresque Royal Chapel, built by Charles
+V. over the remains of certain of his ancestors. Beneath the altar lies
+the body of St. Ferdinand in crown and royal robes. He lies here in the
+heart of his fairest conquest, even as his descendants, Ferdinand and
+Isabella, sleep in the heart of Granada. You may see his sword, the
+handle of which was denuded of gems by Pedro the Cruel, lest they should
+excite the cupidity of others. That royal humorist also lies here, near
+his saintly ancestor and the one woman whom he ever loved, the gentle
+Maria de Padilla. Then there is to be seen the Vírgen de los Reyes, an
+image presented by St. Louis of France to St. Ferdinand of Castile.
+(Strange that when saints filled the thrones of Europe, things went on
+no better than they do now!) Another relic highly prized is the Vírgen
+de las Batallas, an ivory statuette which St. Ferdinand used to carry at
+his saddle-bow. These memorials of the heroic past give you little time
+or inclination for an examination of the chapel itself, which has a
+lofty dome, and is flanked at the entrance by twelve good statues by
+Peter Kempener--whom Spaniards call Campaña. At least (so I read) he
+drew them on the wall with charcoal for a ducat each, and they were
+executed by Lorenzo del Vao and Campos in 1553.
+
+This chapel and the reredos of the chancel must be called, I suppose,
+the great sights of the Cathedral, though to some its chief treasures
+will be the numerous works of Murillo enshrined in its chapels and
+dependencies. For myself, I like the building for its own sake, or, to
+use a very hard-worked word, for its atmosphere. As you cross the nave,
+looking upwards, where the light streams through the tall clerestory
+windows, you will be tempted to neglect the dark chapels in the aisles,
+and to revel for a while in these exquisite symphonies in coloured
+glass. Few of them are of Spanish workmanship. Master Christopher the
+German (Micer Cristobal Aleman) began the first--the first stained-glass
+window in Seville--in 1504, the work being afterwards carried on by the
+German Heinrich, the Flemings Beernaert of Zeeland and Jan Beernaert,
+Carel of Bruges, and Arnulf of Flanders. The best windows are those
+adorned with the Ascension, St. Mary Magdalen, Lazarus, and the Entry
+into Jerusalem, by Arnulf and his brother, and the Resurrection, by
+Carel of Bruges.
+
+In the south transept is a monument, striking in itself and of very
+recent erection, which will in the course of time attract more pilgrims
+than the soldier saint's shrine. For here are contained the remains of a
+man who added not a Moorish city but a continent to the realm of Leon
+and Castile. The ashes of Christopher Columbus repose in a coffin which
+is borne on the shoulders of four figures of bronze, representing the
+kingdoms of Castile, Leon, Aragon, and Navarre.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL]
+
+These figures are not wanting in majesty and expression. All are crowned
+and wear semi-sacerdotal garb. Castile holds an oar, Leon a cross.
+Behind them come Aragon and Navarre, sombre of countenance, wearing
+shirts of mail. On the bosom of each is displayed the national
+escutcheon: the Towers of Castile, the Lions of Leon, the Bats of
+Aragon, and the Chains of Navarre. The pall bears words traced by
+Isabella herself:
+
+ "A Castilla y Leon,
+ Nuevo mundo dió Colon,"
+
+and round the pedestal is an inscription which relates how the body of
+the immortal Admiral of the Indies was brought here when the "ungrateful
+America" revolted from the Spanish yoke. But however much the Spain of
+to-day may honour Columbus dead, it is hardly for her to reproach any
+land with ingratitude towards him.
+
+Half-way between the main entrance and the choir, the Great Navigator's
+son is buried. An inscription on a slab invites the reader to pray for
+the soul of Don Fernando Colon, who, as Ford very truly says, would have
+been considered a great man if he had been the son of a less great
+father. He rendered important services to literature, and left behind
+him a library of 15,000 volumes, including some manuscripts of extreme
+rarity. It was ultimately acquired by the Crown, and constitutes the
+basis of the Biblioteca Columbina, housed in the Patio de los Naranjos.
+
+The Royal Chapel is flanked by two little chapels, one of which,
+dedicated to St. Peter, contains some Zurbarans, impossible to
+distinguish in the dim light; while in the other (Capilla de la
+Concepcion grande) is a fine monument of Cardinal Cienfuegos and a
+crucifix attributed to Alonso Cano. Opening on to the north side are the
+chapels del Pilar, de las Evangelistas, de las Doncellas, de San
+Francisco, de Santiago, de las Escales, and del Bautisterio. In the
+latter is one of Murillo's most famous works, "The Vision of St. Anthony
+of Padua." Of Cano's works there is a specimen, the "Virgin and Child,"
+over the altar of Belen, adjacent to the Puerta de los Naranjos. Valdés
+Leal and Juan de las Roelas are represented in the chapel of Santiago,
+and Herrera the younger by an ambitious "Apotheosis of St. Francis" in
+the chapel of that saint. In the Capilla de las Escalas are two works of
+Luca Giordano, strong in drawing, colour, and character. The same chapel
+contains the fine tomb of Bishop Baltasar del Rio, dating from about
+1500.
+
+In the south aisle are the chapels of the Mariscal, San Andres, las
+Dolores, la Antigua, San Hermenegildo, San José, Santa Ana, and Santa
+Laureana. These chapels are richer in sculpture than in painting.
+Kempener designed the beautiful altar-piece in the Capilla del Mariscal,
+and Montañez the grand statue of St. Hermenegildo in his chapel. On the
+west side of the Puerta de San Cristobal, over a small altar, is the
+"Generacion" of Luis de Vargas--the much praised "leg" picture which
+has given its name to the chapel. The fresco of St. Christopher that
+faces it is remarkable only for its size. You find such pictures of the
+saint at the entrances to many Spanish churches, the old belief having
+been that those who gazed upon it would not die unpreparedly that day. A
+much more ancient and interesting mural painting in the Byzantine style
+is to be seen in the large chapel of the "Antigua," where it was placed
+in 1578. The retablo of St. Anne's Chapel is also very old, and comes
+from the former cathedral. The next chapel, San José, is adorned by
+Valdés Leal's "Espousals of the Virgin." The Cathedral does not contain
+any fine ancient tombs. One of the best is that of Archbishop Mendoza,
+by Miguel Florentin, in the Antigua Chapel.
+
+As every visitor to Seville professes a special devotion to Murillo, he
+will probably overlook the fine "Nativity" by Luis de Vargas to the
+right, on entering, of the Puerta del Nacimiento, and hurry at once to
+the more famous master's "Guardian Angel," between Puerta Mayor and
+Puerta del Bautismo. His "St. Leander" and "St. Isidore" are to be seen
+in the great Sacristy, where they are eclipsed by Kempener's beautiful
+"Descent from the Cross," before which Murillo himself used to stand for
+hours in rapt contemplation. The French cut this priceless work into
+five pieces, intending to remove it, and although their design was
+frustrated, the subsequent restoration was badly effected. The
+Sacristia de los Calices is a storehouse of art treasures. Here you may
+see Goya's "Saint Justa and Saint Rufina," a "Trinity" by "El Greco,"
+the "Angel de la Guarda" and "St. Dorothy" of Murillo, the "Death of a
+Saint" by Zurbaran, and the superb crucifix of Montañez. A "Conception"
+by Murillo is in the Chapter House, a splendid hall in the Renaissance
+style.
+
+In the great Sacristy is preserved the "treasury" of the Cathedral. It
+includes a wonderful monstrance by that prince of goldsmiths, Juan de
+Arfe; and something more interesting in the shape of keys presented to
+St. Ferdinand on the surrender of the city. The key presented by the
+Jews is iron-gilt and bears the inscription in Hebrew: "The King of
+Kings will open, the King of all earth will enter." The key offered by
+the Moors is silver-gilt, and the Arabic inscription reads: "May Allah
+render eternal the dominion of Islam in this city."
+
+Attached to many (if not to all) Spanish cathedrals, one finds large
+chapels which are the official parish churches of the cities--the
+parochial clergy being distinct from the diocesan chapter. At Seville,
+as at Granada, this chapel is called the "Sagrario," and is built at the
+west end of the Patio de los Naranjos and entered from a door in the
+north aisle of the Cathedral, near the Capilla del Bautisterio. Built
+between 1618 and 1662 by Miguel Zumarraga and Fernando de Iglesias,
+the church is in the Baroque style, and roofed with a single and very
+daring arch. The rich statues that adorn the interior are by Dayne and
+Jose de Arce. There is a notable retablo by Pedro Roldán that came from
+a Franciscan convent now suppressed. In one of the side chapels is a
+fine "Virgin" by Montañez. Beneath this church the Archbishops of
+Seville are now buried.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--PATIO DE LOS NARANJOS]
+
+As we emerge from this vast temple, we remain for a few seconds dazzled
+by the sunlight. Then as we turn to the left we notice a rectangular,
+classic-looking building, standing between the Cathedral and the walls
+of the Alcazar. This is one of the numerous deserted Lonjas or Exchanges
+of Spain. The Patio de los Naranjos was formerly infested by the
+merchants and brokers of the city, to the great scandal of the devout.
+Archbishop de Rojas prevailed upon Philip II. to erect an Exchange or
+Casa de Contratacion, as Sir Thomas Gresham had just done in London. The
+building was begun in 1598, at precisely the moment when the commerce of
+Seville began to decline. It reflects the spirit of Philip II. and of
+his architect, Herrera--stern, sober, simple. There is a fine inner
+court, with Doric and Ionic columns. Here the South American archives
+are deposited, a rich mine for some future historian who shall have the
+patience to examine them. As an exchange, the Lonja soon proved a
+failure. It was early deserted by business men, and is best remembered
+as the seat of Murillo's Academy of Painters.
+
+The spacious days of Charles V. and Philip II. were productive of
+innumerable public buildings, mostly in a quasi-Roman style and all very
+pompous and oppressive. The Town-hall or Ayuntamiento of Seville is an
+extremely ornate structure, in what is called the plateresque or Spanish
+Renaissance style. It stands in the Plaza de la Constitucion, where the
+electric cars perform intricate evolutions. Its effect is lost through
+its being placed on the ground level, without terrace, steps, or
+approach, or even railings to prevent inquisitive urchins staring in at
+the windows. The building is long and remarkably narrow, and of two
+storeys. I have seldom seen a public building more elaborately adorned
+or more badly placed. The interior is more satisfactory. The lower
+council chamber is a magnificent hall, worthy, as a Spanish writer
+remarks, of the Senate of a great republic. A noble staircase, with a
+fine ceiling, leads to the upper council chamber, which has some
+splendid artesonado work. Opposite--that is, on the east side of--this
+building is the Audiencia or Court-house, where I whiled away a hot
+afternoon by assisting at a Spanish trial. The case was of no particular
+interest, but the differences in the procedure and constitution of the
+court from our own were worth noting. There were three judges, who wore
+black silk gowns, without wigs or bands. Over their heads was the arms
+of Spain, and on the desk, facing the president, a large crucifix. The
+jury sat on chairs on each side of the judges. A desk was reserved for
+the public prosecutor, another for the prisoner's advocate. The judges
+took far less part in the proceedings than they do in France. The case
+seemed to be left entirely to the public prosecutor, who, it is just to
+say, allowed the accused to make long rambling statements, without the
+least attempt to interrupt or confuse him. The public at the rear of the
+court appeared to take far more interest in the proceedings than any
+immediately concerned in them.
+
+The Plaza de la Constitucion, outside the court, is the place of
+execution. But the death penalty is very rarely inflicted in Spain. Two
+or three years ago the Crown could find no pretext for pardoning two
+particularly atrocious murderers, who were accordingly put to death by
+the garrote in this square. The people of Seville, not being accustomed
+like the more enlightened Britons to some two dozen executions a year,
+showed their sense of the awful occurrence and of the disgrace to their
+city by donning the deepest mourning.
+
+But the stranger does not come to Seville to visit courts or to hear
+about public executions--unless these happened two or three centuries
+ago, when as Sir W. S. Gilbert somewhere observes, they are looked at
+through the glamour of romance. The searcher for the beautiful is
+usually rewarded here by finding it in unexpected corners of the
+monotonous labyrinth of lanes and alleys. Plunging into the maze of
+white-walled dwellings in the north-eastern quarter of the city, a
+minaret only less beautiful than the Giralda seems to beckon us from
+afar. It appears and reappears, and we lose our way a dozen times before
+we stand at its foot. It is a beautiful tower in the purest Almohade or
+Mauritanian style, without any features borrowed from Christian
+architecture. The highest edifice, this, in Seville, except the Giralda.
+From its summit Cervantes used to scan the streets below, at certain
+hours of the day, for the form of a local beauty of whom he was
+enamoured. Here, of course, stood a mosque in Mussulman days, on the
+site of the adjacent church of San Marcos. The portal is very fine, but
+the Moorish features are the work of Mudejar and not Almohade artisans.
+
+We wander on, and are presently surprised by the superb frontal of the
+convent church of Santa Paula. It is faced with white and blue azulejos,
+the work of Francesco of Pisa and Pedro Millán. Over the arch are
+disposed seven medallions illustrating the birth of Christ and the life
+of St. Paul, the figures white on a blue ground. On the tympanum of the
+arch is displayed the Spanish coat of arms in white marble, flanked by
+the escutcheons of the inevitable and ubiquitous Ferdinand and Isabella.
+Having seen this, it is hardly worth our while to enter the church,
+which contains the tombs of the founders, Dom Joao de Henriquez,
+Constable of Portugal, and his wife Donha Isabel. In the same quarter of
+the city, though some distance away, is a monument of some
+interest--the church of Omnium Sanctorum, built in 1356 on the site of a
+Roman temple. Here again there is a tower graceful enough, in its lower
+storey recalling the Giralda. The church exhibits a rather happy
+combination of the Moorish and Gothic styles. On one of the doors is the
+coat of arms of Portugal, commemorating the pious generosity of Diniz,
+king of that country. This must have belonged to the earlier structure.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--PLAZA DE SAN FERNANDO]
+
+Finding your way back to the Sierpes, you may inspect the interesting
+Church of the University. Here repose the members of the illustrious
+Ribera family, which looms very large in the history of Seville. Their
+remains were brought hither on the suppression of the Cartuja, outside
+the town. The oldest tomb is that of the eldest Ribera, who died in
+1423, aged 105. He thus lived through the reigns of Alfonso XI., Pedro
+the Cruel, Enrique II., Juan I., Enrique III., and Juan II., yet, as is
+usually the case with centenarians, he failed to engrave his name as
+deeply on history as did some of his shorter lived descendants.
+
+The famous Duke of Alcalá, the owner of the Casa de Pilatos, is
+commemorated by a fine bronze effigy--one of the few sepulchral
+monuments of this kind in Spain. At the feet of Don Lorenzo Figueroa a
+dog is sculptured, most probably the symbol of fidelity, but some say,
+his favourite. Over the altar are three good pictures by Roelas, one of
+the ablest interpreters of the Andalusian spirit. Here, too, are a
+couple of works by Alonso Cano, "St. John the Baptist" and "St. John the
+Divine." The statue of St. Ignatius Loyola by Montañez is said to be a
+faithful likeness of the saint. It was coloured by Pacheco the
+Inquisitor.
+
+The adjacent University was originally a Jesuit college, and was built
+in the middle of the sixteenth century, after designs by Herrera. It is
+not very well attended to-day, and from the outside would be taken for
+an inconsiderable college. It seems to have been much more flourishing a
+hundred years ago, when our countryman Blanco White attended its
+courses. The original university was founded by Canon Rodrigo de
+Santuella in 1472, in the Colegio Maese Rodrigo, near the Cathedral.
+
+From the last resting-place of the Riberas in the centre of the town it
+is not far to their old home, the Casa de Pilatos, though Dædalus
+himself might easily get lost in this labyrinth of streets resembling
+each other as closely as those of an American city. The names of some of
+these thoroughfares--Francos, Gallegos, Genovés--remind us of the days
+of St. Ferdinand, when the room of the banished Moors was filled by
+settlers, not only from all parts of Spain, but from the rest of Europe.
+It was the same with all the towns resumed by the Spaniards. These
+foreign colonies had their own laws and customs, and yet they were
+entirely absorbed by the natives and left no trace or influence behind
+them. The Spaniards possessed, in those days at any rate, the same
+wonderful capacity for the absorption of other races displayed by the
+Anglo-Saxons in America. There was nothing new in this; for they had
+absorbed the Visigoths, just as they had absorbed the Romans before
+them. The Castilian tongue is indeed Latin, but I fancy that the people
+of Spain are as much the children of the soil--_autochthones_--as the
+Athenians themselves.
+
+Reflections like these--which I do not expect will profoundly influence
+ethnologists--occupied me as I pursued my tortuous course to the Casa de
+Pilatos. When I at last found it, I was struck by the plain and
+dignified exterior. To the left of the door I observed a plain cross of
+jasper. The story goes that in October, 1521, the Marquis de Tarifa, on
+his return from a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, placed this cross against the
+wall and counted thence the fourteen stations of the Cross, according to
+their order in the Holy City. The last fortuitously coincided with the
+Cruz del Campo, raised near the Caños de Carmona in 1482. I doubt if the
+marquis had any such thought when he raised this jasper cross, for the
+distance from the Prætorium at Jerusalem to the chapel in the Church of
+the Holy Sepulchre that marks the site of Calvary is greatly less than
+the distance between the two points mentioned here in Seville. But why
+the house was called after Pilate is not easy to determine. It was begun
+in 1500 and finished thirty-three years after by Don Per Afan de
+Ribera, first Duke of Alcalá, and sometime Viceroy of Naples. This great
+nobleman was the Mæcenas of his generation. Not only did he enrich his
+house with priceless works of art and a fine library--since removed to
+Madrid--but he made it the rendezvous of all the art and talent of
+Andalusia. Hither came Gongora, the poet, to converse, it is said, with
+Cervantes. Here Pacheco, the artist-inquisitor, discussed the mission of
+art with Herrera. Here came Rioja, Cespedes, Jauregui, and others of
+less note. The example set by the Medici was followed by many of the
+great grandees of Spain at this time. The Velascos presided over a
+coterie of literati at Burgos; the Duke of Villahermosa, at Zaragoza,
+affected to delight in the company of the brilliant and learned. Even so
+small a place as Plasencia had its own patron of the arts in Don Luis de
+Avila, and in Madrid there was "the feast of reason and the flow of
+soul" at the mansion of Don Antonio Perez. But for all its associations,
+like the Alcazar, the Casa de Pilatos remains very much like a museum.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--CASA DE PILATOS]
+
+The building illustrates the fashion of the Mudejar and Renaissance
+styles, almost to the effacement of the former. In the architecture of
+this epoch we usually find an Arabic groundwork nearly concealed by
+ornament of the newer style. The geometrical designs remain, but the
+flowing inscriptions, so important a feature of Moorish decoration, have
+gone. A thousand details would show the veriest tyro that this was
+not the work of Moors, yet the central court bears a general
+resemblance to the Alcazar. Pedro de Madrazo directs attention to the
+harmonious variety of the arches and windows, and compares it to the
+admired disorder of the forest and plantation. I imagine the architect
+had the Court of the Lions, at Granada, in his mind. Here dolphins
+uphold the upper basin of the fountain, and noble statues of the deities
+of Greece and Rome--the gift of Pope Pius V.--stand in the angles of the
+court. Hence you pass into the so-called Prætorium, with its splendid
+coffered ceiling and beautiful tiling, where you may distinguish the
+Spanish azulejos of the best moulds by the designs stamped on them of
+fanciful monsters, grotesques, and escutcheons. Then there is the superb
+staircase with its "half-orange" ceiling, and the chapel with its mixed
+Gothic and Mudejar features. What grandee in Europe has a finer home
+than this? And yet, I am told the owner, His Grace of Medinaceli, comes
+here but seldom.
+
+There are many old mansions in Seville worth a walk on a cool day--and a
+glimpse. They are not great sights, such as those we have already seen
+in the city, or such as are more numerous in Paris and Rome, Brussels
+and Venice. But those visitors who are really interested in Seville, and
+are capable of appreciating Moorish and plateresque art in their various
+imitations and combinations, will enjoy these little excursions. There
+is an interesting old house at No. 6, Abades. It is now a
+boarding-house, and you may live there in princely fashion for six
+francs a day. No one knows how old it is. It belonged at the beginning
+of the fifteenth century to a family of Genoese merchants called Pinelo.
+In 1407 the Infante Fadrique, uncle of Juan II., lodged there. What was
+the occasion of his visit to Seville I forget. Afterwards it became the
+property of the "abbés" or "abades" of the Cathedral. Many of these
+reverend gentlemen still patronize the establishment, and may be seen
+puffing their "Puros" in the court, which is said to be a fine example
+of the Sevillian Renaissance style. That style I conceive to have been
+compounded of all pre-existing styles. Digby Wyatt, however, considered
+the house to be much more Italian than Spanish. It is a vast place,
+where dark corridors seem to lead indefinitely into space.
+
+There is rather less to reward your curiosity at the Palacio de las
+Dueñas, a vast mansion belonging to the Duke of Alba. Once it boasted
+eleven "patios," with nine fountains and one hundred columns of marble.
+A fine court, surrounded by a graceful arcade, remains. The staircase
+recalls that of the Casa de Pilatos. Our countryman Lord Holland stayed
+here a hundred years ago. He was a great admirer of Spanish literature
+at a time when it was hardly as much a matter of interest to foreigners
+as it is at present.
+
+Then there is the Casa de Bustos Tavera, where, according to Lope de
+Vega, Sancho the Brave used to visit the "Star of Seville"; and the
+Casa Olea, in the Calle Guzman el Bueno, with a hall of Mudejar
+workmanship dating from the days of Don Pedro.
+
+It is the romantic aspect of Seville that has impressed some visitors
+much more than its historical or archæological side. Over the poets and
+dramatists of the Romantic school the city exercised a strange
+fascination. Byron and Alfred de Musset found the atmosphere of the
+place most congenial. Through their rose-coloured spectacles every girl
+they met in these narrow white streets seemed "preternaturally pretty."
+The principal business of the inhabitants in the 'twenties and 'thirties
+of last century, to judge by the French poet's descriptions, was
+love-making, strumming the guitar, and duelling. That Spain was ever a
+romantic country in the vulgarly accepted sense of the term, I doubt.
+Roman Catholic customs and institutions forbid that free intermingling
+of the sexes from which result the thousand and one emotions,
+complications, situations, and catastrophes that are the ingredients of
+romance. In countries like Spain, where the canon law obtained, there
+could be, for instance, no runaway matches, no desperate flights in a
+post-chaise to a church (say) over the Portuguese border, with an irate
+father in pursuit. There could not have been, and cannot be at the
+present time, any walks with the beloved down the moonlit grove, any
+trysts by the stile or the ruined keep, any rendezvous among the
+rose-bushes. If a Spanish girl did any of these things, she would
+indeed, in French parlance, have thrown her cap over the mill. The
+affair would no longer have the complexion of a romance but of a sordid
+intrigue. This being so, I was delighted to hear that occasionally
+clandestine marriages are resorted to in Spain, and that fond lovers
+find a means of uniting in defiance of stern parents, even in Andalusia.
+The couple, accompanied by a few friends, contrive to sit next to each
+other in church, as far out of sight of the rest of the worshippers as
+possible. Their troths are plighted in an undertone just loud enough for
+the witnesses to hear, the ring slipped on under cover of the mantilla,
+and the hands joined at the precise moment the all-unconscious celebrant
+turns towards the congregation at the end of the mass and pronounces the
+benediction. In the eyes of the Church the two are married as
+irrevocably as if the Cardinal Lord Archbishop of Toledo had performed
+the ceremony. The vows have been exchanged before witnesses in a sacred
+edifice, and an anointed priest has simultaneously blessed the
+contracting parties from the altar. What can parents do? The Don may
+rage, the Doña may upbraid, but when the Church makes itself an
+accomplice of lovers, even in Spain the law must acquiesce. And there is
+no divorce!
+
+That genuine romance tinges the lives of Spanish men and women, few who
+know them can doubt. But the Andalusia of musical comedy, the creation
+of which is largely due to the poets of the Romantic school, does not
+exist. Seville never was a glorified Cremorne; and persons of a
+Byronic turn would find adventures suitable to their mood more readily
+by the banks of the Thames and the Hudson than by those of the
+Guadalquivir.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--CASA DE PILATOS]
+
+For all that, some romantic stories are told about old Seville, and one
+of these has some foundation of truth. About the middle of the
+seventeenth century, the city re-echoed with reports of the wild and
+desperate doings of a certain wealthy gallant, Don Miguel de Marana by
+name. By some he is called De Mañara. Marriage with the heiress of the
+Mendoza family did not sober him, though an alliance with so solemn a
+thing as money generally brings the most hot-headed Latin youth to his
+senses. Like many other wicked persons, our gallant had a nice taste in
+art, and is said to have encouraged Murillo. Now comes the remarkable
+and the improving part of the story. It is not safe to vouch for the
+accuracy of the details of any part of it. One morning Seville woke up
+to find--no doubt to her unspeakable consolation--the wicked De Marana a
+changed man. He became a saint--an ascetic in the seventeenth-century
+acceptation of the word. The wine-bibber forswore even chocolate as too
+strong a beverage.
+
+What had happened to produce so edifying a change? Accounts vary. The
+most picturesque explanation is that the Don, prowling about the streets
+one night, perceived a funeral procession approaching. Curiosity
+impelled him to look at the face of the corpse, which was uncovered, and
+lo! it was his own.
+
+If you doubt the sincerity of Don Miguel's conversion, you have only to
+visit the Church of La Caridad, which, together with the adjoining
+hospital, he founded and wherein he was buried. I do not think you will
+share the opinion of Sir W. Stirling-Maxwell that this is the most
+elegant church in Seville, but you will be rewarded for the visit by
+seeing some very remarkable works of art. Near the entrance are the two
+extraordinary pictures which proclaim the artist, Valdés Leal, to have
+been a master of realism. One of these exhibits a corpse at which,
+Murillo declared, you must look with your nostrils shut. The church
+contains six canvases by Murillo himself--"Moses Striking the Rock,"
+"The Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes," "The Charity of St. Juan de
+Dios," "The Annunciation," "The Infant Jesus," and "St. John." The third
+is really the finest of these pictures, though the first, commonly
+called "La Sed" (Thirst), is the most generally preferred. The figures
+are, as usual in this master's compositions, ordinary Seville types.
+Over the altar is another great work, "The Descent from the Cross," by
+Pedro Roldán.
+
+The "Caridad" has indeed the most important collection of pictures in
+southern Spain, next to the Museo, as the old Convent of La Merced is
+now called. There, of course, some of the greatest works of art by
+Spanish masters are to be seen. There you may see the "St. Thomas of
+Villanueva" giving alms, Murillo's favourite picture; his beautiful
+"St. Felix of Cantalicio," and "St. Leander and St. Buenaventura," and
+his famous "Vírgen de la Servilleta" which was _not_ painted on a
+serviette. On the south wall hangs his "Saints Justa and Rufina"
+(holding the Giralda), exquisitely coloured, and on the north wall the
+admirable "St. Anthony de Padua." But one grows a little weary of
+Murillo in Seville. Zurbaran, the great painter of monks, is well
+represented by the wonderful "St. Hugh in the Refectory," and
+"Apotheosis of St. Thomas Aquinas." This last picture, I am told, was
+carried off by Soult, and recovered by Wellington at Waterloo. The older
+Herrera's "St. Hermenegild" is good, but by no means Andalusian. The
+native temper finds more truthful expression in the works of Roelas,
+Valdés Leal, Cespedes and Frutet, which may be studied to the best
+advantage here. Curiously enough, the gallery contains not a single work
+by Velazquez, who was born in Seville; nor any paintings by Alonso Cano
+or Luis de Vargas. Spanish sculpture, of which one sees so little, is
+not unworthily represented by a beautiful St. Bruno by Montañez, and by
+some busts and crucifixes of less importance. The students of Andalusian
+art must also visit the Hospital de la Sangre, near the Macarena Gate,
+for some splendid works by Zurbaran and by his less-known forerunner
+Roelas. The three pictures ascribed to the last named are, however, very
+awkwardly placed and difficult to see.
+
+Murillo's house is still standing in the Plaza de Alfaro in the old
+Ghetto. Here he died on April 3, 1682, after his fall from the
+scaffolding at Cadiz. His studio is shown filled with several undoubted
+works of his brush. The house belongs to the executors of the late Dean
+Cepero.
+
+The Duke de Montpensier has a fine collection of pictures at his ugly
+Palace of St. Telmo, near the Torre del Oro. Among them is included a
+sketch by our late Queen, when she was still a princess. The palace
+looks on a parade which is much resorted to by the Sevillanos in the
+summer months. Here you see the boys playing at the inevitable
+bull-fight. One who takes the part of toro has a real bull's horns with
+which he "gores" his comrades with great ferocity. The insistence on
+this brutal "sport" among the Andalusians has taken the form of acute
+monomania. Exasperated strangers have been heard to declare that in
+southern Spain you hear of but two things--Toros y Moros. In another
+corner of the promenade, you will come upon a party of little girls
+going through the peculiar and stately dances, or rather measures, of
+their country, to the accompaniment of a low chant and a clapping of
+hands, in which the boys, looking on from a distance, will join. Boys
+and girls, unless they are quite babies, are seldom seen together. You
+pass on and find a group of citizens seated at the little tables round a
+kiosk, refreshing themselves with lemonade and being entertained by a
+conjuror--a fine-looking man--who sends round the hat after every two
+or three tricks. In the ordinary way you are asked for alms more often
+than in Granada, but not, of course, to anything like the same extent as
+in London. English travellers are given to commenting on the mendicity
+in foreign cities, but I must confess that nowhere have I met with so
+many beggars as in our own capital. In Spain the fraternity chiefly
+haunt the steps of churches, the one spot in our happy country that they
+seem to avoid.
+
+We reach the beginning of the Delicias Gardens, which extend two or
+three miles southward along the river bank. All the rank and fashion of
+Seville--and a great deal besides--turns out in summer evenings to drive
+in the Delicias. The concourse of vehicles is immense, but reminded me
+rather of the return from the Derby than of Rotten Row. The great
+ambition of the Spaniard is to possess a conveyance, and he seems to
+care little how dilapidated or ancient it may be, so long as it goes on
+wheels. Side by side with the handsome equipages of the Sevillian
+aristocracy, you will see a wretched Rosinante painfully dragging what I
+took to be the original "one-hoss shay," or the carriage in which Lord
+Ferrers was driven to the scaffold. It is impossible to restrain a
+smile, but after all a conveyance is a real necessity in a climate like
+this, and if a man cannot afford a good carriage, he must needs put up
+with a bad one. The traffic is well regulated by mounted police. The
+foot-paths are also crowded, and when night falls, everyone adjourns to
+the numerous open-air cafés and kiosks to drink light beer and lemonade.
+Sober, steady Spain! How certain of our reformers at home would love
+you, if they but knew you! Where in the world (except in the East) are
+men more abstemious or women more staid and demure?
+
+If you wish (as of course, being a modern traveller, you are sure to do)
+to study the life of the people, you had better betake yourself to the
+other end of the city--to the Alameda de Hercules, so called after two
+columns which the natives believe were presented by that muscular
+demigod. Here a perpetual fair seems in progress. There are the usual
+booths, with fat ladies, boneless wonders, and dwarfs, and more
+questionable exhibitions. On a platform sat three depressed and underfed
+wretches, who, I thought, were to be immediately garrotted. Suddenly one
+sprang up and gave a very clever rendering of the arrival and departure
+of a train at a country station. He was vociferously applauded, and,
+thus encouraged, danced a sort of "cellar-flap" with great animation to
+the indispensable accompaniment of hand-clapping. In a popular assembly
+of Andalusian town and country folk, the modern observer ought, I am
+well aware, to find many extraordinary and significant phases of
+humanity, exhibiting the striking individuality of the people, their
+race-consciousness, their psychological import, their evolutional
+significance, and so forth. I blush to confess that in the crowds
+applauding the ventriloquist or gaping at the fat lady, I saw only a
+collection of good-humoured ordinary people, enjoying themselves much
+after the fashion of ordinary people in England.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--GARDEN OF THE CASA DE PILATOS]
+
+Perhaps the Sevillano is more his real self on these occasions than when
+disporting himself at the world-famous fair, which begins on the Monday
+after Easter and attracts strangers from all parts of Europe. Though a
+somewhat overrated festival, I think it more distinctive and original in
+certain of its aspects than the gorgeous religious ceremonies by which
+it is preceded. The wealthier families of Seville rig up for themselves
+on the fair-ground "casetas," or temporary residences of wood or canvas,
+with two or more apartments. A great deal of expense is lavished on the
+upholstering and decoration of these pavilions, and those of the four
+principal clubs are fitted up in the most luxurious fashion. In the
+evening the _jeunesse dorée_ of the city drive out to the fair in smart
+traps drawn by dashing little horses with jangling little bells, and
+visits are exchanged at the casetas, where as the evening becomes
+cooler, dancing takes place, to the sound of the piano, the guitar, and
+the castanet. The pretty señoritas of Seville have no objection to going
+through the graceful measures of the South in full view of an uninvited
+audience who crowd round the opening of the tent and from time to time
+give vent to admiring "Olés!" and bursts of hand-clapping. Dancing will
+be interrupted at 8.30, when everyone comes out to look at the firework
+display. Then of course there are the usual popular amusements--the
+inevitable bioscope, the gramophone, and all sorts of shows. Peasantry
+and aristocracy alike dress their very best on this occasion. The
+smartest toilettes and the most picturesque of native costumes are seen
+side by side, the latest confections of Worth and Paquin and costly
+heirlooms handed down from the days of Boabdil and Gonsalvo de Cordova.
+
+Whether such an intermingling of all classes, of the richest and the
+poorest, could take place with mutual enjoyment and comfort in any
+country but Spain, is a matter open to doubt.
+
+The object of the fair is, I believe, the sale of cattle, and about
+eighty thousand beasts are to be seen on the Prado de San Sebastian. To
+say that the most sanguinary bull-fights complete the festivities is
+perhaps superfluous. The most skilful and renowned toreros are engaged
+on this occasion, and the arenas literally smoke with the blood of bulls
+and disembowelled horses. Smithfield and Deptford can show nothing in
+comparison.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--THE MARKET PLACE]
+
+The religious ceremonies, of which travellers talk so much, are not for
+the most part peculiar to Seville, as it ought to be unnecessary to
+remind them. The tableaux in the processions struck me as theatrical,
+but as being on the whole as well represented as similar show-pieces in
+our pageants. The famous Dance of the Seises is reserved for the
+octaves of the Immaculate Conception and Corpus Christi. It has been
+described over and over again. There is nothing irreverent about the
+performance, which is in itself graceful and quaint; only carried out
+before the high altar it strikes one as rather meaningless. So, I
+suppose, most such functions impress those who are unprepared for them
+by temperament and education. There cannot be much doubt that the
+ceremony originated in an attempt to attract the ungodly to church--an
+early and respectable precedent for the methods of the Salvation Army.
+
+Others have it that the dance is a survival of some pagan
+ceremony--which will remind us that we have so far neglected the
+monuments of the Romans which were bequeathed to Seville. These are not
+very numerous or interesting. Only a fragment remains, at the north-east
+angle of the city, of the massive wall which Cæsar built, and which
+completely girdled Seville as late as the reign of Juan II. It was
+strengthened, tradition tells us, by 166 towers, which were freely used
+as prisons by later rulers. The Cordoba Gate marks the site of the
+dungeon of the canonized Hermenegild. Close to it is the Capuchin
+Convent, built upon the foundations of the palace of the Roman governor,
+Diogenianus, and afterwards associated with Murillo. A noble aqueduct
+built by the Romans, and known to-day as the Caños de Carmona, still
+brings water from Alcala de Guadaira to Seville. Everyone who visits
+Seville is expected to make an excursion to the ruins of Italica, a few
+miles on the other side of the Guadalquivir. There is remarkably little
+to see when you get there, and not much is known about the place. There
+were few, if any, private dwellings here, and it existed rather as the
+place of meeting and distributing centre for the colonists scattered
+over the district. It was indeed raised to the dignity of a municipality
+by Augustus, but petitioned to be restored to its old rank of a Roman
+colony. It did not prove unworthy of its connection with the great
+capital. Hence sprang the illustrious line of the Ælii, and many of the
+eminent Roman Spaniards who conferred such lustre on the early empire
+are believed to have been natives. The town was embellished in those
+palmy days with temples, palaces, amphitheatres, and baths, quite out of
+proportion to its population.
+
+Its downfall, like its earlier history, is mysterious. Here Leovigild
+placed his headquarters when besieging Seville. Then came the Arabs, who
+dismantled it and carried off columns and blocks of masonry on which are
+founded the Giralda and other important buildings in the neighbouring
+city. Italica disappeared from history; and all you can see of it to-day
+is a few remains of walls and earthbanks outlining the amphitheatre.
+
+It might not be worth the journey were it not that it can be included in
+an excursion to the villages of Santi Ponce, Castilleja la Cuesta, and
+the Cartuja. The parish church of the first named wretched village is
+remarkable as the last resting-place of the illustrious Guzman el Bueno,
+that Spaniard of the Roman mould who refused to save the life of his son
+at the cost of the fortress of Tarifa, which he held for his king. The
+hero's kneeling effigy dates, as the inscription beneath informs us,
+from the year 1609, the three hundredth anniversary of his death. The
+modern traveller, whose sympathies are usually more with the æsthetic
+than the heroic, will be more interested in the lifelike St. Jerome, one
+of the finest works of Montañez, to be seen over the high altar. The
+saint, regarding a crucifix devoutly, beats his breast with a stone. On
+either side are beautiful bas-reliefs of the Nativity and the Adoration
+of the Magi.
+
+The convent was inhabited first by the Cistercians, next by the Hermits
+of St. Jerome. It presents rather the appearance of a fortified abbey of
+the middle ages. The church is divided into two naves, each of which was
+a distinct church--one, I suspect, belonging to the monastery, the other
+to the parish; a not uncommon medieval arrangement. I almost forgot to
+add that it contains the ashes (literally) of Doña Urraca Osorio, a lady
+burnt to death, as I have said, by Pedro the Cruel.
+
+At Castilleja la Cuesta--a village on the height--is the house where
+Hernando Cortes died in 1547. The house has been converted by the Duc de
+Montpensier into a sort of museum. The Conquistador's bones repose in
+the land which, with so much intrepidity and ruthlessness, he won for
+Spain.
+
+The old Charterhouse or Cartuja is now occupied by the porcelain factory
+of Pickman & Co. It lies on the west bank of the Guadalquivir, a few
+minutes' walk from the railway bridge. It was founded in the first
+decade of the fifteenth century by Archbishop de Mena, and was the
+burial-place of the Riberas, till their remains were transferred to the
+University Church. There is little to see except some stalls carved, if
+I remember aright, by Duque Cornejo, in the little chapel.
+
+You may return to the city through the transpontine quarter of Triana, a
+collection of whitewashed houses inhabited chiefly by gipsies. To
+distinguish these no longer nomadic Bohemians from the lower-class
+Andalusians around them is not an easy task. As at Granada, gipsy dances
+are got up by the guides and hotel people, and here, I am told, they
+possess the merit which a Frenchman denies to those of the other
+city--impropriety. The patron saints of Seville, Saints Justa and
+Rufina, were potters in this quarter. In their time the Carthaginian
+goddess, Astarte or Salambo, was much venerated in the Roman city. The
+commemoration of the death of Adonis took place in the month of July,
+when the image of the goddess was borne in triumph through the streets,
+while the people following with cries and lamentations deplored the
+untimely end of her beloved. A strange survival, this, on soil so
+far to the west, of the hideous Punic rites! The two maidens, newly
+converted to the religion of the Crucified, refused to do reverence to
+the image as it was carried past, and were haled before the governor,
+Diogenianus, in his palace by the Cordova Gate. They were put to death
+in due course, and have received more honour since from architects,
+sculptors, and painters, than Venus-Astarte in all her glory received
+from her devotees.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--A COURTYARD]
+
+Before leaving Triana, visit the Church of Santa Ana, to see the
+exquisite Madonna of Alejo Fernandez, whom Lord Leighton considered the
+most conspicuous among the Gothic painters. There is a regard for beauty
+in the figures, not by any means obtrusive in most of the paintings of
+the period, though the awkward pose of some of the angels shows that the
+artist had not quite emancipated himself from Byzantine influence. And
+the thought occurred to me as I made my way back to the Delicias
+Gardens, where the people were driving out to take the air, and knots
+were collecting round musicians and mountebanks--when the whole city was
+yielding itself up to the sensuous charm of the summer night--that the
+art of Fernandez was expressive of Seville: of a people in whom the
+sense of beauty and the joy of living cannot be extinguished, though at
+the call of religion they reluctantly keep their faces half turned
+towards sad facts and yet more sombre unrealities.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+CORDOVA
+
+ "They say the Lion and the Lizard keep
+ The Courts where Jamshyd gloried and drank deep."
+
+
+The sands of Asia are strewn with the ruins of cities once the gorgeous
+capitals of mighty empires. Here in Spain the followers of the Prophet
+raised a metropolis as splendid as any of the new Babylons of the East;
+and its fall has been wellnigh as great as theirs. We need not credit
+all the assertions of the Arabian writers (for the scribes of that
+nation, as Cervantes remarks, are not a little addicted to fiction). We
+can hardly believe that Cordova in its prime contained 300,000
+inhabitants, 600 mosques, 50 hospitals, 800 public schools, 900 baths,
+600 inns, and a library of 600,000 volumes; but there is evidence enough
+to satisfy us that this was in the tenth century the most magnificent
+and populous city in Europe, Byzantium alone excepted. Now it is a small
+provincial capital, bright, white, and coquettish, utterly without the
+solemnity and majesty which should invest the seats of vanished empires.
+Here greatness has been swallowed up in insignificance, not in
+desolation. The Court of the Khalifas, the Western Mecca, does not lie
+in lordly ruin like a fallen Colossus, but has sunk into mere pettiness.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--ENTRANCE TO THE CITY]
+
+Victor Hugo draws, as only he knew how, in a couple of lines, a
+picturesque sketch of Cordova, but this hardly corresponds to the
+impressions of the modern traveller. The houses may be old (some of them
+certainly are), but in their coats of dazzling whitewash they look
+brand-new. Gautier very sensibly remarks that, thanks to whitewash, the
+wall which was erected a century ago cannot be distinguished from that
+which was erected yesterday. Its general application "imparts a uniform
+tint to all buildings, fills up the architectural lines, effaces all
+their delicate ornamentation, and does not allow you to read their age."
+Cordova, which was formerly a centre of Arabian civilization, is now
+nothing more than a confused mass of small white houses, above which
+rise a few mangrove trees, with their metallic green foliage, or some
+palm trees with their branches spread out like the claws of a crab;
+while the whole town is divided by narrow passages into a number of
+separate blocks, where it would be difficult for two mules to pass
+abreast. Such is Cordova to-day, and I doubt very much if its external
+aspect was a whit more splendid or by any means as pleasing in the days
+of its glory. Some authors write as if they imagined the Mohammedans
+built their capitals on the lines of Paris and Washington. A visit to
+Constantinople or to Cairo would remove that impression. Imagine
+Cordova covering three or four times its present area, its windows
+obscured with lattices, its walls less white, its streets filled with a
+noisy mob of beshawled and beturbaned men--black, brown, and white--with
+noble mosques and elegant minarets here and there, and you will have a
+fair picture of the capital of the Western Khalifate.
+
+Of its outward seeming only. Its culture and refined social life merited
+for Cordova the title of the Athens of the West. When all Europe was
+sunk in barbarism, medicine and chemistry, the natural sciences, the
+arts and philosophy, all found a refuge here. Culture was diffused
+through all classes of the population, if only very superficially, to an
+extent never perhaps equalled elsewhere. And though there was little
+initiative or originality about the scholars at Cordova, their labours
+contributed to keep alive a taste for the humanities which otherwise
+would never have revived in Europe. The comforts and amenities of life
+were carefully studied in the Western Khalifate. All the products which
+minister to luxury were at that time the almost exclusive property of
+the Moslem world, and to the bazaars of Cordova were brought the
+choicest spoils of Egypt, Persia, Arabia, and Hindostan. And at the head
+of this urbane and flourishing commonwealth sat the great Umeyyad
+khalifa, emulous of the glories of Bagdad and Cairo, and eager to
+surpass them in elegance and splendour.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--CALLE CARDINAL HERRERA]
+
+Of those great days all that remains is the Mezquita--and that is much.
+Next to St. Peter's it is the largest of Christian temples, and
+certainly among the most ancient. As a Mohammedan place of worship, it
+ranked in sanctity with the Mosque of Omar at Jerusalem, immediately
+after Mecca, which it was indeed designed to eclipse. It was
+Abd-ur-Rahman's ambition to focus all the interests of Islam at this
+point within his own dominions. Spanish Moslems were taught that a
+pilgrimage to the "Zeka" of Cordova was in all respects equivalent to a
+pilgrimage to Mecca. Hence Sancho Panza's saying, "Andar de Zeca en
+Mecca." That the Umeyyad khalifa succeeded in diverting the Faithful
+from the old shrine to the new is doubtful, but he and his successors
+spared no pains to render their mosque one of the wonders of the world.
+In the year 786, seized, it is said, by a sudden inspiration,
+Abd-ur-Rahman convoked his council and declared his intention of raising
+a temple to Allah on the site of a Christian church. The Moslems had
+already appropriated half of the Basilica of San Vicente to their use,
+suffering the Christians to perform their rites in the adjoining
+portion. The khattib was commanded to approach the unbelievers to
+negotiate the purchase of the whole edifice. The Christians stood out
+for a high price, and got it. They received a sum equal to £400,000 of
+our money, and permission, moreover, to rebuild all their churches in
+the city that had existed at the time of the Conquest. When we remember
+the violent seizure and "purification" of the Church of St. Sophia by
+the Turks, seven hundred years later, we can see how little Islam had
+learnt of toleration in the meantime.
+
+The old basilica was accordingly demolished and the mosque begun. The
+khalifa set apart a portion of his revenues for the work, and laboured
+himself upon it for an hour each day. Thus encouraged, his subjects of
+all ranks made it a point of honour to contribute either their personal
+labour or their money to the great work. Though most of the columns came
+from the marble quarries of the neighbouring town of Cabra, as many as
+possible were brought from the most distant parts of the Mohammedan
+empire, from the works of civilizations which Islam had subdued. The
+mosque was to be a monument to the triumph of the Crescent. Its
+dimensions as projected by the founder were four times less than those
+of the existing building.
+
+The successors of Abd-ur-Rahman obtained the assistance of Byzantine
+craftsmen, and embellished the mosque with rich mosaics. Almost a
+quarter of the actual building was added by Al Hakem II., and the
+eastern half by Al Mansûr. To effect this last expansion, a cottage
+beneath a palm tree had to be acquired. The old lady to whom it belonged
+refused to budge till an exactly similar abode was found for her. This
+was done at last, after a diligent search, and a liberal donation made
+to her to boot.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--MOORISH MILL]
+
+Thus was reared this mighty temple of Islam on European soil, at a time
+when the state of the Christian world went far to justify the exultant
+words of the khalifa: "Let us build the Kaaba of the West upon the
+site of a Christian temple, which we will destroy, so that we may set
+forth how the Cross shall fall and become abased before the True
+Prophet. Allah will never place the world beneath the feet of those who
+make themselves the slaves of drink and sensuality, while they preach
+penitence and the joys of chastity, and while extolling poverty, enrich
+themselves to the loss of their neighbours. For these, the sad and
+silent cloister; for us, the crystalline fountain and the shady grove;
+for them, the rude and unsocial life of dungeon-like strongholds; for
+us, the charm of social life and culture; for them, intolerance and
+tyranny; for us, a ruler who is our father; for them, the darkness of
+ignorance; for us, letters and instruction widespread as our creed; for
+them, the wilderness, celibacy, and the doom of the false martyr; for
+us, plenty, love, brotherhood and eternal joy."
+
+The face of the world has changed somewhat in ten centuries.
+
+It must, I think, be admitted that the Mezquita, to European eyes, is
+fantastic and interesting rather than beautiful. It may be compared to a
+forest of columns or to a seemingly endless series of parallel aisles
+spanned by low horseshoe arches. It does in truth remind one, as one
+writer observes, of a gigantic crypt. The additions of Al Mansûr, may be
+distinguished by the pointed arches. Otherwise there is little of the
+variety insured in Christian churches by the distribution of the parts.
+It is only in the columns themselves that we find any relief from the
+prevailing uniformity. There are interesting differences in their
+capitals, and in their bases also, which are, however, buried
+underground. In the ruder carving is seen an attempt on the part of the
+Moorish masons to copy the work of the more skilled craftsmen of Rome
+and Byzantium. The mean vaulting overhead is modern. It is gradually
+being taken down and replaced by the beautiful carved ceiling of white
+larchwood which Murphy described a hundred years ago. He says: "Above
+the first arch is placed a second, considerably narrower and connecting
+it with the square pillars that support the timber work of the roof,
+which is not less curious in its execution than are the other parts of
+the building. It was put together in the time of Abd-ur-Rahman I., and
+subsists to this day unimpaired, though partially concealed by the
+plaster-work of the modern arches. The beams contain many thousands of
+cubic feet; the bottoms and side of the cross beams have been carved and
+painted with different figures; the rafters also are painted red. Such
+parts as retain the paint are untouched by worms: the other parts, where
+the paint no longer remains, are so little affected that the decay of a
+thousand years is scarcely perceptible; and, what is rarely to be seen
+in an edifice of such antiquity, no cobwebs whatever are to be traced
+here. The timber work of the roof is further covered with lead; and
+the whole has been executed with such precision and taste, that it may
+justly be pronounced a _chef-d'oeuvre_ of art, both with respect to
+the arrangement of the different parts, as well as to the extent and
+solidity of the whole."
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--MEZQUITA]
+
+But what must have lent so much of beauty to the building originally was
+that, instead of being enclosed with walls as it is at present, its long
+arcades opened into the groves of orange trees without, which were
+simply their natural continuation--a graceful and symmetrical plan which
+one would like to see attempted in modern times. Though, too, every
+Mohammedan temple is necessarily simple in plan and can never approach
+the Christian churches in elaboration and gorgeousness, here Moslem art
+exhausted its ingenuity on the embellishment of those more sacred parts
+of the building such as the Sanctuary and the Maksurrah.
+
+The Sanctuary or Zeka has been spared to us. It is a little heptagonal
+recess, paved with white marble and roofed with a shell-like cupola of
+marble of a single block. The sides are formed by dentated horseshoe
+arches which interlace and enclose each other in a beautiful
+complication. Here in the southern wall is the recess which indicated
+the direction of Mecca, and towards which the worshippers turned; it is
+adorned with exquisite mosaic work and with inscriptions from the Koran
+and the names of the architects. In the Sanctuary was preserved for
+several centuries after the Reconquest the superb "mimbar" or pulpit of
+Al Hakem II. "It was of marble," says Señor de Madrazo, "and of the most
+precious woods, such as ebony, red sandal-wood, bakam, Julian aloe,
+etc.; it cost 35,000 dineros and 3 adirames. It had nine steps." We are
+told that it was composed of 36,000 pieces of wood, joined with pins of
+silver and gold, and encrusted with precious stones. Its construction
+lasted seven years, eight artificers being employed upon it daily. This
+tribune was reserved for the khalifa, and in it was deposited the
+principal object of the veneration of the Moslems of Andalusia and Al
+Moghreb--a copy of the Koran supposed to have been written by Othman and
+stained with his precious blood. This treasure was preserved in a
+binding of cloth-of-gold sewn with pearls and rubies, covered with the
+richest red silk, and placed on a lectern of aloe-wood with nails of
+gold. Its weight was extraordinary, and two men could carry it only with
+difficulty. It was placed in the mimbar, when the imam read from it the
+prayer of the Azulah, and was then placed in the treasury with the gold
+and silver vessels used in the ceremonies of the "Ramadan."
+
+The Maksurrah is now transformed into the chapel of Villa Viciosa. Here
+sat the khalifa when not officiating as imam. Little is visible of the
+original decoration, except the cupola, similar to that of the
+Sanctuary. Adjacent to this chapel another has been discovered which it
+is thought will prove to be the treasury to which Madrazo refers.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--PATIO DE LOS NARANJOS]
+
+When Cordova was taken by St. Ferdinand in 1236, the mosque was
+reconsecrated as a Christian cathedral, but little alteration was made
+in the original structure. It was in 1523 that the unfortunate idea
+possessed the bishop, Don Alfonso Manrique, to build a new church in the
+middle of the Mohammedan temple. So proud were the Cordovans of their
+great monument, that the municipality threatened the innovators with
+death if they ventured to carry the project into execution. However,
+this decree was overridden by an order from Charles V., who knew so
+little what he was about that on visiting Cordova a few years later, he
+bitterly expressed his regret at having allowed the mosque to be
+interfered with. Two hundred columns had been swept away to make room
+for the existing chancel, choir, and lateral chapels. Though we resent
+their appearance here, these parts of the church are not wanting in
+taste and richness. The reredos of jasper and bronze is painted by
+Antonio Palomino, and flanks a sumptuous and beautifully moulded
+tabernacle. Not so much praise can be bestowed on the choir, where,
+however, the stalls by Pedro Duque Cornejo reveal skilful workmanship.
+Lope de Rueda, the Spanish Molière, is entombed here. In the Cathedral
+is also buried the poet Gongora, whose style is aptly compared by Mme.
+Dieulafoy to that of Churriguera in architecture. A more interesting
+grave is that of Doña Maria de Guzman de Paredes, a lady celebrated for
+her wit and wisdom in the days of Philip II., and who won every degree
+it was in the power of the University of Alcalá to confer. Duque Cornejo
+is also buried here.
+
+In the Sacristy is a fine monstrance by Juan de Arfe. The chapels do not
+call for particular examination.
+
+If the Mezquita is strange within, it is eminently picturesque without.
+The massive walls are crenellated and supported by stout square
+buttresses. Between these are horseshoe arches, richly decorated, and
+forming originally sixteen entrances, most of which are now blocked up.
+The Puerta del Perdon has been adorned with the arms of Castile and
+Leon, and is secured by bronze doors of an interesting type. An
+inscription upon it runs:--"On the 2nd day of the month of March of the
+era of Cæsar 1415 (1577 A.D.), in the reign of the Most High and Mighty
+Don Enrique, King of Castile."
+
+Of the minaret, once equal to the Giralda and, like it, once surmounted
+by great metal globes, only the lowest storey remains, an earthquake
+having thrown down the superstructure in the sixteenth century. And the
+famous Court of the Orange Trees, on to which the aisles at one time
+opened, has lost much of its charm. The trees are stunted and withered,
+and the soil covered with coarse grass and weeds. On three sides the
+court is surrounded by a gallery, on the fourth by the buildings of the
+chapter. The basin was placed here in 945 by Abd-ur-Rahman, and might
+with advantage be used for its original purpose by some of the
+habitués of the patio. Two Roman columns at the entrance to the
+Cathedral announce the distance to Gades (114 miles) from the Temple of
+Janus, which stood on this site.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--OUTER WALL OF THE MOSQUE]
+
+On the whole the far-famed Mezquita may be pronounced disappointing. It
+must always be so with the simply planned temples of Islam, when they
+are stripped of the innumerable lamps, the rich carpets and handsome
+furniture, still to be seen in them at Cairo, Constantinople, and
+Smyrna.
+
+Of the magnificent Palace of the Khalifas, the wonderful domain of Az
+Zahara, no trace remains. It was built by a Byzantine architect on the
+flanks of a hill, three miles north-east of Cordova, which the khalifa
+at one time thought of levelling. Arab writers declare this to have been
+the largest palace, as of course it was the most magnificent, ever
+raised by the hand of man. The harem (_credat Judæus_) could accommodate
+6,000 women, 3,790 eunuchs, and 1,500 guards. Marble appears to have
+been freely used in the construction, from which it would seem that the
+building bore little resemblance to the Alcazar of a later day. There
+were, of course, thousands--tens of thousands--of columns brought from
+Rome and Tunis, and probably from Carthage, and fine fragments of
+terra-cotta are still unearthed on the site. Aqueducts conducted sweet
+waters to every chamber in the palace, and fountains cooled the air in
+the luxuriantly planted gardens. We are told of the Hall of Ceremonial,
+with its brilliant mosaics and its ceiling of scented wood, in the
+centre of which was set an immense pearl, the gift of the Emperor
+Constantinos Porphyrogenitos. And we hear in addition of basins filled
+with quicksilver for the amusement of the odalisques.
+
+This gorgeous pile owes its existence to a favourite of the Khalifa An
+Nasir, who at her death directed that her immense wealth should be
+employed in ransoming Moslem prisoners in the clutch of the Christian.
+The bereaved potentate sent east, west, north and south in order to
+execute this pious request, only to find to his joy that no such thing
+as a Moslem captive was anywhere to be found. The happy thought then
+came to him to expend the money on the erection of a palace to be named
+after a new favourite, Zahara, whose name it should perpetuate, and in
+whose society he might hope to forget the deceased. This seems to us a
+somewhat queer application of the legacy. The work occupied ten thousand
+men daily for many years, and cost during An Nasir's reign alone seven
+and a half millions of dineros or pieces of gold.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--A STREET SCENE]
+
+The palace seems to have excited, as well it might, the cupidity of
+neighbouring monarchs. Alfonso VI., the conqueror of Toledo, demanded it
+of the Amir Al Mutamed, as a residence for his queen, Doña Constancia,
+whose accouchement he suggested might take place in the mosque. It was
+the Moor's rejection of this original proposal that led to hostilities,
+and threw the Spanish Moslems into the arms of the terrible
+Almorávides. Those fierce sectaries seem to have entirely neglected Az
+Zahara, and under the puritanical Almohades we can easily imagine it
+would be suffered to decay. How little was left of it when Ferdinand
+took the place is shown by his referring to it merely as Cordova la
+Vieja (Old Cordova).
+
+Men who lived in such comfort and luxury might be supposed to have
+regarded their less fortunate fellows with easy good nature and
+tolerance, and according to most historians the khalifas of Cordova were
+benevolent despots, even towards their Christian subjects. Some Spanish
+writers, however, paint the lot of these last in gloomy colours, though,
+if we accept their accounts _in toto_, without the least reservation,
+there can be no question that the lot of the Christian under the Moor
+was very much better than the lot of the Moor under the Christian. But
+that standpoint would not be that of the historians in question. They
+are frankly partisans. The Mohammedans, they would argue, deserved what
+they got, because they worshipped the false Prophet; the Christians were
+in the right. It is more difficult to understand their vehement
+condemnation of the Bishop Recafred, because he forbade his flock to
+seek voluntary martyrdom by publicly cursing Mohammed. To curse the
+Arabian Prophet or anyone else is nowhere laid down as a Christian's
+duty, and on merely prudential grounds the prelate was surely justified
+in dissuading his people from pursuing a course which must finally have
+resulted in their complete extermination. Probably in disgust at the
+ingratitude and imbecility of his flock, Recafred embraced the creed of
+Islam, and died cursed and abominated by the people whose utter
+extinction he had averted. The history of the martyrs of Cordova is a
+curious chapter in the annals of religion.
+
+It was recently remarked of Italy that there was not enough faith to
+generate a heresy, and by a parity of reasoning the lamp of faith must
+have burnt very brightly in the Christian community of Cordova. The
+Saracen authorities were bewildered by the multitude of sects and
+factions which claimed to represent the Church of Christ, and to
+administer its temporalities. Councils of the Christian prelates were
+frequently convoked by the khalifas, but by the defeated side their
+decisions were always branded as schismatical or heretical. Religious
+debate is the favourite occupation of a decaying State, and the
+Mohammedans themselves had their divisions. The doctors of the law, who
+congregated in a special quarter of the capital, constituted themselves
+the critics of their rulers and of public morals. They considered
+culture and luxury incompatible with morality, and preached the creed of
+the Uncomfortable and the Unlovely with the zest of an English Puritan.
+One day there arose a sovereign (Hakem) more sensitive of censure than
+his predecessors. He burnt out the Puritan quarter and forced the
+zealots to take refuge in distant parts where their peculiar talents
+were more in demand.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--A STREET]
+
+The more human side of Islam found an embodiment in the illustrious
+Ziryab, the favourite of Abd-ur-Rahman II. In his case, I suppose, as in
+all else, it is necessary to discount by fifty per cent. all the
+appreciations of Arabic writers; yet through all the cobwebs of
+exaggeration and tradition, we can discern the outlines of a very
+remarkable personality. Ziryab was the Admirable Crichton of his age. He
+combined the attributes of Leonardo da Vinci and Beau Nash. He alone
+could decide on the proper method of eating asparagus and on the
+planning of a city. He could pronounce with finality on the wisdom of a
+move at chess and a far-reaching treaty of state. He had views on the
+organization of armies and aviaries; he was listened to with equal
+respect by statesmen and scullery-maids. And (wonderful to relate) this
+authority on everybody's business was loved by everyone!
+
+The history of Cordova, like that of most capitals, belongs to the
+nation at large, and cannot be more than touched upon here. Memorials of
+ancient days are the picturesque Moorish walls with their flanking
+towers and the grand old bridge of sixteen arches, built by the
+khalifas. It marked the limit of navigation in Roman days, whereas now
+no boat can ascend the Guadalquivir above Seville. The bridge is
+defended on the south side by a very picturesque _tête du pont_ called
+Calahorra, a fine specimen of the medieval barbican. Here a strange
+scene was witnessed in the year 1394, when the prototype of Don
+Quixote, Don Martin de la Barbuda, Grand Master of Calatrava, appeared
+at the head of a few knights and a fanatical rabble on his way to fight
+the Moors of Granada. His enterprise was directly counter to the king's
+orders; the two countries were at peace. The royal officers assembled on
+the bridge expostulated and threatened the crusaders in vain. The Grand
+Master was accompanied by a hermit, who exhorted him to proceed and
+promised him that his victory should be purchased without the loss of a
+single Christian life. The officials were swept aside, and the wild
+cavalcade went on its way to destruction. None of the knights ever
+returned alive across the bridge of Cordova.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--THE BRIDGE]
+
+During the four centuries following the Reconquest, the city boasted
+that it was the home of the finest flower of the European aristocracy.
+Their old mansions have for the most part disappeared, but the name of
+the most distinguished member of the order is treasured in Cordova and
+honoured far beyond the limits of Spain. Gonzalo Hernandez de Aguilar y
+de Cordova, "the Great Captain," is the hero of the city. The principal
+street is named after him, as indeed one might suppose the town to have
+been, from the reverence in which he is held. On the whole, he was the
+greatest soldier this country has produced. With forces hardly superior
+to those with which Cortes and Pizarro conquered a savage foe, he
+vanquished the best equipped troops in Christendom and matched his
+strength successfully against the most brilliant warriors of his day.
+His reward, it is hardly necessary to say of the servant of a
+fifteenth-century king, was ingratitude and neglect. When the odious
+Ferdinand V. demanded from him a statement of his military expenditure,
+he responded with the famous "Cuentas del Gran Capitan," which silenced
+even the venal monarch. The statement ran:
+
+ "200,736 ducats and 9 reals paid to the clergy and the poor who
+ prayed for the victory of the arms of Spain.
+
+ "100 millions in pikes, bullets, and entrenching tools; 100,000 in
+ powder and cannon-balls, 10,000 ducats in scented gloves to
+ preserve the troops from the odour of the enemies' dead left on the
+ battlefield; 100,000 ducats spent in the repair of the bells
+ completely worn out by every day announcing fresh victories gained
+ over our enemies; 50,000 ducats in 'aguardiente' for the troops, on
+ the eve of battle. A million and a half for the safeguarding
+ prisoners and wounded.
+
+ "One million for Masses of Thanksgiving, 700,494 ducats for secret
+ service, etc.
+
+ "And one hundred millions for the patience with which I have
+ listened to the King, who demands an account from the man who has
+ presented him with a kingdom"!
+
+This singular balance-sheet sufficiently shows the temper of the
+grandees of Spain even in the days of the New Monarchy. Cordova has
+reason to be proud of her eponymous hero. She has not been very fruitful
+in great men. She has produced no painters of eminence, unless Pablo de
+Cespedes may be classed among such; but Mme. Dieulafoy reminds us that
+to Juan de Mena, a native of the place and a courtier of Juan II.,
+Spanish poetry is deeply indebted:
+
+ "His great work, 'The Labyrinth,' may in a measure be compared with
+ that part of the 'Divina Commedia' where the Florentine places
+ himself under the protection of Beatrice. Accompanied by a
+ beautiful young woman personifying Providence, the poet witnesses
+ the apparition of the worthies of History and Legend, and amuses
+ himself in sketching their portraits. At times the style becomes
+ heavy and pedantic, at others the touches of the pencil have a
+ vigour and simplicity altogether Dantesque. Before Juan de Mena,
+ the Castilian muse had never taken so daring a flight; and in spite
+ of the defects of the general scheme, the untasteful phraseology,
+ and the measure, 'The Labyrinth' abounds in conceptions and
+ episodes where energy blended with beauty reveals a genius of the
+ first order."
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--COURTYARD OF AN INN]
+
+From poetry to leather the transition may seem abrupt, but it is to be
+feared that our city has derived more renown from the latter than the
+former. The stamped and gilded leather of Cordova was highly esteemed
+all over the civilized world from the fifteenth century to the
+eighteenth. Whether the industry was introduced by the Moors it is idle
+to inquire; long after their departure it formed the principal business
+and source of revenue of the Spaniards of the city. A powerful guild
+laid down strict rules as to apprenticeship, and regulated the quality
+and quantity of the manufacture. Terrible penalties were enforced
+against the tanner who made use of the hides of animals that had died of
+disease. The kings of Spain considered trunks or other objects
+bound in Cordova leather gifts very suitable for their fellow-princes.
+The Catholic kings, absurdly enough, forbade its exportation to the New
+World, not wishing to deprive the mother-country of goods of such price.
+With protection on this scale, we are not surprised to learn that the
+industry began to decline. Cordova was at length surpassed in its own
+line by Venice and other cities. The rich specimens of its work which
+adorned the mansions of its old noblesse were sold and dispersed all
+over the world, upon the general impoverishment of the kingdom in the
+eighteenth century. Then came the sack of the city, a hundred years ago,
+by the army of Dupont. Time has spared the famous race of Cordovan
+horses, and many a poor hidalgo rides into the town on a steed which if
+sold in London might redeem his shattered fortunes.
+
+I have said a great deal about Cordova and its titles to remembrance;
+but it must be confessed that there is little enough to see in it. The
+churches present no features of interest, except the Colegiata de San
+Hipolito, modernized in 1729, which contains the tombs of Ferdinand IV.
+and Alfonso XI. Nor is walking through the city an exercise altogether
+pleasing, as the streets which were the first paved in Europe, in 850,
+might also claim to be the worst paved in the world. The stones are so
+sharp and pointed that in parts you have to skip from one to the other,
+like a bear dancing on hot iron--an original but ungraceful method of
+locomotion. A drive in the surrounding country is productive of more
+pleasure. The neighbourhood is a Paradise of fertility, and sets one
+wondering what becomes of all the money that this must bring in and
+represent. Spain and Greece are very poor countries, but I do not think
+that Spaniards and Greeks are, for the most part, very poor.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--OLD HOUSES NEAR THE RIVER]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+GRANADA
+
+
+Over two thousand feet above the sea stands the ancient city of Granada,
+once the teeming centre of the kingdom of the Moors and now a town of
+memories eloquent of the grandeur of older days. The province bearing
+its name is bounded on the north by sterile ranges, while close to the
+southern seaboard stretch the huge shoulders and serrated peaks of the
+noble Sierra Nevada, rivalling in height the chief summits of the
+Pyrenees. Between these ranges spread fertile vegas, or plains, rising
+here and there to over a thousand feet, a district of vineyards and
+olive groves, and semi-tropical plants find a favourable habitat.
+
+Granada, though on the verge of an arid territory, is in a strip of
+great fertility, watered by the Genil and the Darro, the latter--the
+Hadarro of the Moors--a stream that is heavily taxed by the farmers for
+purposes of irrigation. Théophile Gautier praised the river of Granada
+for its beauty, but since his day the stream has shrunk, and nowadays
+the volume of water is insignificant, especially during a dry summer.
+
+The waters of the Darro have a reputation for their healing qualities,
+and cattle that drink from it are said to recover quickly from diseases.
+Hence, in the ancient speech, the river had the title of "The Salutary
+Bath of Sheep." Under the Moors the environs of Granada were in the
+highest state of cultivation, and they are still very productive. The
+land yields plenteous wine and oil. The chief crops are grains of
+various sorts. Hemp and flax flourish, and oranges, lemons, and figs are
+a source of income to the agriculturists. Granada is also famed for its
+mulberry trees, whose leaves provide food for the silk caterpillar,
+though the silk trade is in a state of sad decay.
+
+The soil around the city never rests. There is no waste of land. Oranges
+and pomegranates grow profusely. The cactus is cultivated for the
+production of the cochineal insect. Clovers yield several cuttings each
+year in this fecund territory.
+
+In the neighbouring mountains there are rich veins of marble, and jasper
+and amethyst are found. Yet the mining industry in the Sierra Nevada
+remains to be developed. The Granadines are hardly a commercial
+population, though numerous crafts are practised in their city.
+Factories for the production of sugar from beetroot have been erected in
+recent years, and it is hoped that this industry will increase.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--FROM THE GENERALIFE]
+
+The life of Granada in its lighter aspects can be well studied on the
+promenade of the Salón, one of the most beautiful parades in
+Europe. Here, under the shade of luxuriant trees, amid handsome
+fountains, and by parterres decked richly with many flowers, the people
+of the city stroll upon summer evenings after the great heat of the day.
+From the Salón you gain a superb view of the purple Sierra Nevada, which
+at sunset wears a wealth of changing hues.
+
+A walk along the promenade precedes the evening gathering in the patios
+of the houses of the upper and middle classes, when to the sound of
+guitar and the rattle of castanets, young and old dance together. At
+these tertulia, or evening parties, singing alternates with dancing the
+bolero and the jota. And later, when the lights are dim, and the
+watchman tramps slowly through the streets, you see the lovers, the
+"novios" waiting beneath the windows of the adored fair ones, or lightly
+strumming serenades on their guitars.
+
+At festival times the city is all animation. The anniversary of the
+taking of Granada is celebrated on January 2, when a procession is
+formed and proceeds to the Cathedral. Corpus Christi is another feast
+day, and there are two fairs during the year, one in June and the other
+in September.
+
+But it is Granada of the past rather than of the present that holds us
+during a sojourn in the city of hills and vistas. It is the scene of
+dreams, a city of meditation. You court serenity rather than hilarity
+amid these haunted streets and silent ruins. The Arabs had a saying,
+referring to one who was sad, "He is thinking of Granada." It is this
+spirit, perhaps, which prevails in the patios of the Alhambra and amid
+the orange trees of the Generalife Gardens. And yet it is not true
+depression. It is a sense of the glory that has been, a meditativeness
+which is induced by the somnolence of the scene, and fostered by the
+languorous atmosphere of the South.
+
+An ancient legend, often rehearsed by chroniclers, ascribed the founding
+of the city to certain descendants of Noah. It stated that Tubal settled
+in Spain and populated the country. There is some evidence that the
+province of Granada was the first district in Spain peopled by aliens.
+The founder of a town on the site of modern Granada is alleged to have
+been the mythical Iberus, who built Illiberis, which has been referred
+to as the original city. At any rate Illiberis existed in the Roman
+days, for it was a municipium under the rule of Augustus. The town was
+also the scene of an ecclesiastical council in the fourth century.
+
+Plundered by the Vandals, and won by the Visigoths, Illiberis was in
+decay at the time of the coming of the Moors to the Iberian Peninsula.
+With the conquest of Andalusia, the town of Granada first came into
+existence.
+
+At this period the Berbers overran the territory, though the Moorish
+authors relate that settlers from Damascus were the first Eastern
+colonizers of Granada.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--SIERRA NEVADA FROM THE ALHAMBRA GARDENS]
+
+The greatest obscurity shrouds the history of the city. It is strange
+that the writers of medieval times so rarely allude to Granada. About
+the year 860, a war raged over Andalusia between the native Moslems and
+their foreign rulers, the chief leader of the former being Omar Ben
+Hafsûn. Under his lieutenant, Nabil, an attack was made on Granada, and
+we read that some exultant verses written by the belligerents were
+attached to an arrow and propelled over the city wall. In these verses
+the words _Kalat-al-hamra_ ("the Red Castle") appear. This first
+reference to Al-Hamra suggests that an edifice for defence stood on the
+hill now occupied by the Alhambra.
+
+In 886 Omar Ben Hafsûn appears to have wrested Granada from the Khalifa
+of Cordova. A few years later Omar was conquered, and retiring to the
+Castle of Bobastro, he embraced the Christian faith, in which he died.
+
+Zawi Ben Ziri, a Berber, first established Granada as a kingdom in 1013.
+Gayangos, the Spanish historian, states that Illiberis--or Elvira, as it
+was called at this time--was a dwindling city and that Habus Ibn
+Makesen, nephew to Zawi Ben Ziri, founded a new town and capital.
+
+Habus was a builder as well as a warrior. He is the putative founder of
+the old Kasba, or citadel, in the Albaicin quarter, which was added to
+by his heir, Badis, who succeeded him in rule. The king is also said to
+have built the Casa del Gallo de Viento, in the same quarter, where he
+probably resided. Badis proved an ambitious and warlike monarch, for he
+enlarged his dominions widely, and even subdued the resolute hillfolk of
+the Alpujarras. He conquered Malaga, and made plans to besiege Seville.
+But his force was routed at Cabra by the famous Cid Campeador, Ruy Diaz
+de Bivar, the ally of the sultan of that city. To Badis is attributed a
+persecution of the Jews, who numbered several thousands in Elvira, and a
+terrible slaughter decimated their ranks.
+
+At the advent of the Almoravides, a fierce sect of Northern Africa,
+Granada was captured (1090) by Abd-ul-Aziz. The city now rose in
+importance. Soon after the Almoravide settlement, the followers of Islam
+in Granada attacked the Christians of the city and destroyed their
+church by fire. The unfortunate Christians appealed for help to Alfonso
+of Aragon, and the king came to their relief at the head of a strong
+army. In the combat at Anzul the Almoravides were worsted. Alfonso
+before retiring laid waste the fertile plain, and left the Christians to
+make the best of their position. His action had little effect upon the
+Almoravides, for in 1126 numbers of Christians were banished to Barbary
+and the rest bitterly oppressed.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--EXTERIOR OF THE ALHAMBRA]
+
+The doom of the Almoravides came in 1148. A mightier host, the rapacious
+and fanatical Almohades, surged over the city. The Moorish inhabitants,
+strengthening their forces with the aid of Christians and Jews, invited
+Ibrahim Ibn Humushk to lead them to the expulsion of the new sectaries.
+The invaders took refuge in the Kasba, and sought relief from
+Africa, whence an army was despatched. This force was beaten by Humushk,
+and the Granadines secured the assistance of the Sultan of Murcia and
+Valencia, whose troops attacked the Kasba, which was held by the
+Almohades. On the arrival of a second army, they made a sally and
+inflicted severe losses upon the soldiers of the sultan and his
+Christian allies. After this success, the Almohades endeavoured to
+pacify the unruly among their neighbours. Their governor, Sidi Abu
+Abrahim Ishak, was a tactful and benevolent leader. He improved the
+city, built a palace for himself, and made the Kasba a stronger
+fortress. The power of the Almohades was, however, insecure. Ben Hud, a
+potent chieftain, who had gained a strip of territory on the coast, now
+discerned that the hour was ripe for an assault upon Cordova, Jaen, and
+Granada. His domination was not permanent. Mohammed al Ahmar, uniting
+with the foes of Ben Hud, held Seville for a brief space, and then drove
+his rival to Almeria, where he was murdered in 1237.
+
+Granada now came under the sway of Al Ahmar, and in the hour of his
+triumph he was proclaimed monarch of a large part of southern Spain. For
+two hundred and fifty years the State founded by him resisted the
+Christian hosts. Granada rose to the zenith of power and prosperity. Its
+first sultan was a man of high character, courteous, dignified, and
+astute. He reigned long, and spent himself in affairs of government and
+in military enterprises, though he used every means to maintain peace.
+
+Al Ahmar's last expedition was undertaken against the Spanish forces and
+the governors of Guadix and Malaga (their allies) when he was eighty
+years of age, and failing in strength through illness. A fall from his
+horse brought him to his end. He expired in the arms of his ally, the
+Infante Don Felipe, and under cover of darkness his body was borne to
+Granada, where it was entombed in the burial ground of Assabica.
+
+The sovereignty now descended to Al Ahmar's son, named Mohammed II., who
+ascended the throne in 1273. He was renowned for his wisdom in the law,
+and during his reign of twenty-nine years he proved a worthy son of a
+great father.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--A STREET IN THE ALBAICIN]
+
+During his negotiations with Alfonso X. at Seville, Mohammed was the
+victim of an artifice of Queen Violante. Upon being asked by the queen a
+favour, he yielded in accordance with the chivalric notions of the time,
+but his chagrin was deep when he learned that he had agreed to a year's
+truce to the rebels within his dominion. Smarting under this device, he
+made plans for the annihilation of his foes. Now the friend of the
+Spaniards against the African, now the ally of his own co-religionists,
+Mohammed's career was one of strife. He died in 1302, able to boast that
+he had not lost a particle of the soil bequeathed to him by his father.
+Mohammed III. was, like his father, a forceful sovereign. He
+applied himself rigorously to the government of his territory, often
+spending the whole twenty-four hours in affairs of State. In 1306 he
+seized Ceuta, and brought a number of the conquered to Granada. But
+reverses came when the governor of Almeria rebelled and joined hands
+with the King of Aragon. Meanwhile the Castilians attacked Algeciras,
+and Mohammed, between two foes, was brought to bay. He extricated
+himself from danger by yielding four fortresses and paying a heavy sum.
+But his troubles were not at an end. Returning to Granada, he was
+surrounded by conspirators in his palace, and forced to yield the throne
+to his brother, Abu-l-Juyyush Muley Nasr. Humiliated and defeated,
+Mohammed retired to Almuñecar, where he lived in seclusion.
+
+Nasr's first coup after seizing the throne was a successful attack upon
+Don Jaime at Almeria. Unfortunately a conspiracy was fomented by his
+nephew Abu-l-Walid. Nasr, who seems to have had a fit of apoplexy, was
+thought to be dead when Mohammed III. was brought back to Granada. He
+was, however, alive upon the return of the lawful sovereign; and on the
+authority of some historians he ordered that his rival should be put to
+death, while other writers assert that Mohammed was again banished to
+Almuñecar.
+
+Soon after, Nasr was assailed by the followers of Abu-l-Walid, and
+forced to yield. As a solatium he was allowed to rule over the town of
+Guadix, whither he retired. Al Khattib relates that Nasr was a
+philosopher, and versed in the sciences of astronomy and mathematics.
+
+Abu-l-Walid was an implacable foe of the Christians. His assault on
+Gibraltar was frustrated; but he gained a signal victory over the
+Castilians in 1319, when the princes Pedro and Juan were killed.
+Following up this success, he marched upon the towns of Martos and Baza,
+and ravaged the country. It was at the latter town that artillery was
+first used in Spain.
+
+Hailed with joy, the victorious Abu-l-Walid returned to Granada bearing
+the spoils of war. Among the captives was a maiden of unusual beauty,
+whom he had wrested from an inferior officer. This act so incensed the
+chieftain that three days after he stabbed his ruler outside the
+Alhambra. Dying from the wound, Abu-l-Walid exacted an oath of fealty
+from the eminent and powerful to his eldest son, Mulai Mohammed Ben
+Ismaïl. This command was fulfilled before the sultan's minister
+disclosed the death of his royal master.
+
+The boy king, Mohammed IV., was soon busy quelling factions in his
+State, and repelling the African army, which took in turn Marbella,
+Algeciras, and Ronda. He also defeated the Castilians in several
+desperate encounters, but lost the day at Gibraltar.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--IN THE MARKET]
+
+Mohammed IV., who was assassinated at Gibraltar by his allies the
+Moroccans, was succeeded in 1333 by his brother Yusuf I. This king
+was a hater of warfare; he sought the peaceful reform of the community
+rather than the expansion of his kingdom. Under his rule Granada
+prospered and the condition of the people was bettered. Yusuf I. was
+disturbed in the tranquillity of his noble palace at Malaga by the
+appeals of the African potentates for his aid in reconquering Spain.
+Compelled to join the invaders, he sustained a severe disaster at the
+Salado, and was forced to acquire peace at the cost of yielding
+Algeciras. He was murdered by a madman in 1358.
+
+Mohammed V. was the next sovereign. He was a worthy son of his
+high-principled father, Yusuf; but fate decreed that his reign should
+not prove peaceful, for soon after his accession, his younger brother
+Ismaïl conspired with certain officers of state and made an attempt to
+gain the throne. Upon a night in August, 1360, about one hundred
+conspirators climbed the walls of the Kasba and after killing the wizir,
+proclaimed Ismaïl as sultan. Mohammed, who was without the palace at the
+time, essayed to enter; but he was received with a flight of arrows, and
+mounting a horse he galloped away to Guadix. Here he was welcomed, and
+from this town he sped to Marbella, thence to Africa, where he received
+the aid of Abu-l-Hasan. With troops lent to him he returned to Spain,
+hoping to crush the usurper. But Abu-l-Hasan capriciously ordered the
+return of his soldiers, and Mohammed retreated to Ronda with a few
+adherents.
+
+Dissension had arisen meanwhile between Ismaïl and Abu Saïd, one of the
+chief conspirators, who was burning to take the reins of government in
+his own hands. Ismaïl was besieged by Abu Saïd, and upon venturing out
+of his palace was slain.
+
+Fresh trouble arose in Granada, for Pedro of Castile came to the
+assistance of the lawful ruler. But Mohammed, witnessing the ravage of
+the district by the Christian army, was far from receiving the invader
+with open arms. "For no empire in the world would I sacrifice my
+country," cried the sultan. Thereupon the King of Castile retired, and
+Abu Saïd, mistaking the reason of his return to Seville, went thither to
+beg his alliance. The story of the sultan's murder, at the instigation
+of Pedro the Cruel, has often been told. Abu Saïd was done to death at
+Seville, and the resplendent ruby which was taken from him was presented
+to the Black Prince of England, and is still preserved among the regalia
+of England.
+
+Mohammed then returned to his capital. With the exception of a rebellion
+under Ali Ben Nasr, he passed twenty years of peace. Granada became a
+more thriving city, and under the sultan's clement administration, it
+was the resort of traders of all nations and the centre of culture in
+the south. According to Mendoza, the inhabitants of Granada numbered
+about 420,000 in the reign of Mohammed V., but it is probable that the
+number was wildly over-estimated.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE ALHAMBRA: THE AQUEDUCT]
+
+Yusuf II. followed Mohammed V. He was suspected of favouring the
+Christians. He certainly released all the captives of that faith, and
+restored them to their own country. This act appears to have incited his
+son Mohammed to rise against the throne. Yusuf was at first disposed to
+relinquish his sovereignty, for he was a lover of peace; but on the
+advice of an ambassador from Morocco he raised an army and advanced on
+Murcia.
+
+At this period the King of Castile was Enrique III., an incapable
+monarch in defiance of whose orders Don Martin de la Barbuda, the Master
+of Calatrava, headed an advance into the kingdom of Yusuf. The force
+was, however, entirely routed by the Moors. Soon after (1395) Yusuf, the
+pacific sovereign, was dead--the victim, it is said, of a poisoned
+potion, in the form of a tonic sent him by the Sultan of Fez.
+
+The first exploit of Yusuf's son Mohammed was a visit to Toledo, with
+twenty-five mounted attendants, where he appeared before Enrique III.
+and besought a renewal of the truce. The armistice was disregarded by
+the governor of Andalusia, who invaded the Moorish dominions, till
+Mohammed, in reprisal, seized the citadel of Ayamonte. At Jijena he was
+defeated, and was forced to plead for peace. He was at the point of
+death, when the idea seized him to secure the government of Granada for
+his son by the assassination of his brother. The governor of Salobreña
+was commanded to put to death the prince whom he had in his keeping.
+The doomed man asked leave to finish the game of chess in which he was
+engaged, and before either player could cry "Checkmate," the news came
+that the prince's brother was dead and that he had been declared sultan.
+Yusuf III. was faced with difficulties immediately upon his accession.
+Antequera fell into the hands of the Castilians, led by the Infante
+Fernando. The defenders were slain, and only about two thousand of the
+townsmen outlived the rigours of the siege. The survivors were allowed
+to settle in Granada, and they gave the name of Antequeruela to the
+suburb.
+
+When the natives of Gibraltar revolted, and declared allegiance to Fez,
+the sultan of that State sent his brother Abu Saïd to secure the town.
+Abu Saïd, being left to the mercy of the enemy, was seized and brought
+to Granada, where he was shown a letter from the ruler of Fez desiring
+that he might be despatched. With this request the generous Yusuf
+refused to comply. He released his captive and furnished him with money
+and troops with which he left for Africa. The brother who had planned
+his death was hurled from the throne, and till Abu Saïd's death Granada
+did not want an ally.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE COURT OF THE CYPRESSES]
+
+In rapid succession sultans now flit across the lurid page of Granada's
+history. It is a gloomy tale of incessant civil strife and of
+unsuccessful warfare with the Christians. Rulers are expelled from their
+thrones by pretenders who themselves fall victims to the poignards
+of their partisans. Sovereigns purchase their disputed crowns by selling
+the honour and independence of their country to the foreigner. To trace
+the miserable vicissitudes of the careers--we cannot call them
+reigns--of Mohammed VII., Mohammed VIII., Yusuf IV., and Saïd Ben
+Ismaïl, would be to weary and disgust you with a nation whose stubborn
+fight against overwhelming odds should command our respect.
+
+The last act in the protracted drama began with the accession of Mulai
+Hasan in the year 1465. With his famous reply to the Castilian
+ambassadors who demanded tribute, "Here we manufacture only iron
+spear-heads for our enemies," the final campaign began. Every incident
+of that war has been made familiar to us Anglo-Saxons by the pen of
+Prescott. In his pages long ago most of us read of the taking of Zahara
+by the Moors and of the brilliant surprise of the fortress of Alhama by
+the gallant Marquis of Cadiz. We have not forgotten the wailing of the
+Moors, "Ay de mi, Alhama!" nor the domestic revolution that followed
+when the old sultan was hurled from his throne by his son Boabdil. Poor
+Boabdil, on whom the blame of all his country's disasters has been laid
+by historians, Christian and Arab! Weak or foolhardy, the "Little King"
+fought like a Trojan against Ferdinand and Isabella for his country, and
+against his father and his uncle for his crown, at one and the same
+time. He was taken prisoner by Ferdinand and is said to have signed a
+treaty surrendering his dominions to the Catholic Sovereigns. This is
+rendered improbable by his comparatively generous treatment at the end
+of the war, when he had resisted the Spaniards to the uttermost, and
+fought them many times after his release from captivity. Desperate deeds
+of valour were done on both sides, though the strategy of the Spanish
+commanders does not appear to have been of a very high order, since,
+with the whole of Spain at their back, it took them eleven years to
+conquer a small kingdom distracted by three rival rulers. The old sultan
+retired from the contest, as finally did his brother, the brave Zaghal.
+When the Christians were preparing a final assault on the doomed city,
+Boabdil rode out from the Alhambra, for the last time, on the morning of
+the memorable 2nd of January, 1492. Ferdinand with a brilliant cavalcade
+awaited him on the banks of the Genil. The keys were handed over, a
+hurried exchange of formal courtesies, and the last ruler of the Spanish
+Moors passed away into exile and obscurity. The rays of the wintry sun
+glinted on the great silver cross which was hoisted on the Torre de la
+Vela in token that the reign of Mohammed was for ever at an end in
+Spain.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--VILLA ON THE DARRO]
+
+Yes, at an end. On that morning, Ferdinand and Isabella accomplished the
+task begun by Pelayo at Covadonga, seven hundred and seventy-four years
+before. The Moorish dominion in Spain had endured little short of eight
+centuries. It was as if the descendants of Harold Godwin were to
+arise and overthrow the existing English monarchy. But what is most
+remarkable is that the petty State of Granada had survived the break-up
+of the great Moorish empire in the west by two hundred and fifty years.
+Such a race deserved a manlier if not a more beautiful monument than the
+Alhambra.
+
+What followed the extinction of the Nasrid monarchy is not pleasant
+reading. The rights and privileges guaranteed the conquered were soon
+swept aside. The mild Archbishop de Talavera, the humane Tendilla, were
+superseded in the government of the city by fanatics more after
+Isabella's heart. Systematic persecution of the luckless Moslems ensued.
+They revolted, and their revolt was quenched with their own blood. They
+were intimidated, browbeaten, imprisoned, condemned, and burned. Their
+language, costume, and creed were banned. They were ordered to embrace
+Christianity under pain of death, and forbidden to quit the country.
+They appealed to Egypt, but it is a long way from the banks of the Genil
+to those of the Nile. Finally (and one hears of it with relief) they
+were all expelled from the country. As a race they perished utterly. The
+art, the civilization, which they had learnt on Spanish soil, they left
+buried in Spanish ground, and it was a long time before it was
+disinterred.
+
+The price Spain paid for national unity was a heavy one, but it was
+worth it. When we turn to Turkey, can anyone say that a united Spain
+would have been possible, with the fairest of her provinces and cities
+and the whole of her southern seaboard in possession of a people alien
+in race, tongue and creed?
+
+With Oriental people, the history of the palace is the history of the
+State. At Granada every traveller turns instinctively towards the
+Alhambra as the point of supreme interest. The famous pile is to the
+city what the Mezquita is to Cordova--not quite, perhaps, since Granada
+contains more than one building of intrinsic interest.
+
+The Alhambra has been so often described (by the present writer among
+others) that it is not easy to say anything new in regard to it, or even
+to avoid identity of language with other writers in the description of
+certain of its parts. Yet it would be impossible to give any account of
+Granada without some notice of this famous building. To begin with, I
+must impress on those about to visit it for the first time that the
+Alhambra is not a single palace, but properly speaking is the name given
+to a fortified eminence lying to the south-east of the city, and
+including two palaces, a citadel, and a multitude of private residences.
+In its nature it may be compared with the Acropolis of Athens and the
+far-distant Castle of Bamborough. The name, as most people are aware, is
+derived from _Kalat al hamra_--"the Red Castle," to adopt a translation
+which I have never seen disputed. (While not pretending to rank as an
+Arabist, I have not failed to notice that an infinite number of
+words put forward as Arabic by writers on the Spanish Moors are
+unintelligible to Syrian and Egyptian Arabs, and, which is more to the
+point, to many Hindu students of Arabic.) In shape the hill has been
+cleverly compared by Ford to a grand piano. Rearward it abuts on the
+Cerro del Sol ("the Mountain of the Sun"), to which Washington Irving
+alludes so often.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE ALHAMBRA FROM SAN MIGUEL]
+
+To the south of the Alhambra hill lies another and a narrower spur,
+which is crowned near the town end by the Vermilion Towers, or Torres
+Bermejas; on the north-east rises the hill of the Generalife, laid out
+in gardens. The townward extremity of the Alhambra is washed at the foot
+by the river Darro, and is crowned by the Torre de la Vela, of which
+more anon.
+
+To reach the Alhambra you ascend from the Plaza Nueva in the heart of
+the town by the steep and narrow Calle Gomeres. This street is laid out
+to attract and cater for tourists, who are greeted here with a civility
+and cordiality not always conspicuous in the rest of the town. Half-way
+up the toilsome ascent you will probably be waylaid by a
+theatrically-attired personage who will accost you in bad French with
+the information that he is the chief of the gipsies. The costume he
+wears was given to his father or grandfather by Fortuny--one of the rare
+examples of artists condescending to manufacture the picturesque. The
+chief will endeavour to engage you in conversation, and will offer you
+his photograph at fifty centimes a copy. If you have a camera he will
+allow you to take his portrait for a consideration. It seems incredible
+that a human being could be so much of a nuisance and yet remain in good
+health and spirits.
+
+The dragon having been successfully circumvented, you enter the
+Hesperides, or in other words, the charming Alamedas of the Alhambra.
+These groves occupy the deep depression between the famous hill and the
+Vermilion Towers. They are planted with magnificent elms, sent hither, I
+believe, from England by the Duke of Wellington. They have thriven well
+in Spanish soil, and harbour a colony of nightingales and other
+singing-birds, unusually numerous for this land of passion, where wines
+are rich and birds are rare. The "bulbul," as certain writers love to
+call it, sings very sweetly in these leafy retreats, a statement some
+travellers who persist in coming at the wrong season will not hesitate
+to contradict. I must admit that the bird is as elusive as the
+"alpengluh," or as the hunter's moon at Tintern. It is always cool here
+on the slope of the Alhambra. Even the fierce rays of the Andalusian sun
+cannot penetrate the thick leafage. Rills bubbling forth from the red
+sides of the hill, or tumbling over its edge, keep the roots of the
+trees perennially moist and feed a dense under-growth. On summer
+afternoons this is the only spot in Granada where you may sit in
+comfort. Meanwhile, up and down in quick succession pass the sandalled
+water-carriers hurrying to fill their skins with the precious fluid
+and to dispense it in the scorched, thirsty town below. "Agua-a-ah!"
+Their prolonged nasal drawling cry comes back to me as I write, and I
+seem to hear the rapid patter of their feet and to see the light cutting
+chequers on the shadow of the trees. A great man is the water-carrier,
+loved and respected by all the people of southern Spain. We who live in
+the humid sea-girt North can little understand the longing for clear,
+cool water, the reverence for its dispensers, that must ever be felt in
+the South. How constantly wells are referred to in the Bible: "As the
+hart panteth after the water brooks," "With joy shall ye draw waters
+from the wells of salvation." How significant are these beautiful
+passages for those that have journeyed to the South!
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--TOWERS OF THE INFANTAS, ALHAMBRA]
+
+Reluctantly withdrawing from this delightful spot, you must climb the
+hill to the right of the entrance--there is a winding path to the
+summit. Here you find the Torres Bermejas--a group of exceedingly
+ancient and not very dilapidated towers, used as a military prison. They
+date, it is believed, from the days before the Zirite dynasty, but you
+will not be tempted to examine them attentively, for the purlieus are of
+the most uninviting description. The adjoining cottages are peopled by
+rascally-looking men and slatternly women, who would be better, one
+would think, inside than just outside a gaol.
+
+In ancient days an embattled wall connected these towers with the
+opposite point of the Alhambra, closing the mouth of the valley, which
+was not then the pleasaunce it is now, but an arid ravine used as the
+burial ground of the fortress. The entrance to the valley is now through
+the Puerta de las Granadas, built by order of Charles V. Taking the path
+to the left, we soon reach the fountain in the Renaissance style,
+erected in 1545 by Pedro Machuca, by order of the Conde de Tendilla. It
+is ornamented with the imperial shield and the heads of the three
+river-gods, Genil, Darro, and Beiro. The medallions represent Alexander
+the Great, Hercules slaying the hydra, Phryxus and Helle, and Daphne
+pursued by Apollo. The laurels growing out of the distressed damsel's
+head give her the appearance of a Sioux brave. A few steps beyond we
+reach the famous Puerta de la Justicia, so called because within it the
+Moorish sultans or their kadis administered justice--or it may have been
+merely law. This entrance is formed by two towers of reddish brick,
+placed back to back, and united by an upper storey. We look at once for
+the hand and key so often referred to by Irving, and distinguish them
+with difficulty--the first over the outermost horseshoe arch, the latter
+over the middle arch. Opinion is divided as to the meaning of these
+symbols. The key is supposed by some to signify the power of God to
+unlock the gate of Heaven to the true believer, while the hand appears
+to have been regarded as a talisman against the evil eye. A winding
+corridor leads through the gate into the citadel, past an
+inscription celebrating the Conquest in 1492, and an altar now enclosed
+within a sort of cupboard.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--NEAR THE ALHAMBRA]
+
+This gate is placed at right angles to the wall which girdles the hill
+and runs along its edge, following all its inequalities of level. It is
+in fairly good preservation, but the rampart walk has disappeared here
+and there. Of the square mural towers a great many remain--some
+hopelessly ruinous, others inhabited by the guardians of the domain or
+their widows and relations. The towers on the south-west side, as far as
+I could judge, were better adapted for defence than those on the
+north-east, where the width of the windows would have greatly
+embarrassed the defence. The area enclosed by the outer wall was
+divided, it seems, by two cross walls into what, in the medieval
+parlance, we would call the outer, middle and inner wards. To the last
+corresponded the citadel proper or Kasba (Alcazaba, the Spaniards call
+it), whose massive walls rise to your left on emerging from the Puerta
+de la Justicia. This is the oldest part of the fortress. It occupies the
+extremity of the plateau, which is marked by the tall, square Torre de
+la Vela, or watch tower, whereon a silver cross was planted by the
+"Tercer Rey," Cardinal Mendoza, to announce the occupation of the
+Alhambra by the Spaniards. Here also is a bell which can be heard as far
+off as Loja, and which, if struck with sufficient force by a maiden, is
+said to have the faculty of procuring her a husband. The view from the
+platform is noble. The dazzling white city is spread out beneath, in
+front stretches the Vega, to the south the eyes rest lovingly on the
+white streaks of the Sierra Nevada.
+
+Upon this tower I met a French entomologist, who announced that he
+should not trouble to visit any other part of the Alhambra, and was, in
+fact, surprised to learn that there was anything more to see. His
+horizon was bounded by the Lepidoptera, on one side, and the Coleoptera
+(I think that is the word) on the other. After all, archæologists take
+no more interest in black beetles than entomologists do in buildings.
+Incidentally, I should think Granada an admirable place for the intimate
+study of insects.
+
+From the Torre de las Armas, a road led from the citadel down the
+declivity to the town, crossing the Darro by the ruined Puente del Cadi.
+On the inner side the citadel is strengthened by the picturesque Torre
+del Homenage--a name often given to towers in Spain. The open space
+before it, where the water-carriers gather round the well, was a
+comparatively deep ravine in Moorish times, and was not levelled up till
+after the fall of Boabdil. On the opposite side--facing the Torre del
+Homenage--it was bounded by what I will call the wall of the middle
+ward, which ran across from the Torre de las Gallinas to near the Puerta
+de la Justicia, and of which only the gatehouse, the beautiful Puerta
+del Vino, remains.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--PUERTA DEL VINO, ALHAMBRA]
+
+This admitted to the area which contained the palaces and also the
+little town of the Alhambra--inhabited by persons attached to the
+court, the ulema, chiefs of such powerful tribes as the Beni Serraj and
+the Beni Theghri, discarded sultanas, ex-favourites, soldiers of
+fortune, plenipotentiaries and envoys, and a crowd of parasites and
+hangers-on. To-day the population is limited chiefly to one little
+street, composed of pensions, photographers' shops and estancos. The
+plan of the whole fortress no doubt varied from age to age, but in the
+main agreed with that according to which most European strongholds were
+constructed. There was the outer wall with its mural towers and
+gatehouses; a strong inner ward, in place of a keep shut off by a ditch
+or ravine; and two or more other enclosures, each defended by a wall
+with a fortified entrance. It does not seem that the portcullis and
+drawbridge were used by the Moorish engineers.
+
+While the Kasba is generally attributed to an earlier dynasty, the outer
+wall and the other Moorish buildings are almost unanimously ascribed to
+Al Ahmar and his successors of the Nasrid dynasty. To reach the Alhambra
+Palace, called pre-eminently by foreigners the Alhambra and by the
+Spaniards the Alcazar, or Palacio Arabe, you pass across the plaza,
+leaving the unfinished Palace of Charles V. to your right. Behind it you
+find not an imposing and gorgeous structure, but what appears to be a
+collection of tile-roofed sheds. A mean, characterless entrance admits
+you to the far-famed palace.
+
+The building belongs to the last stage of Spanish-Arabic art, when the
+seed of Mohammedan ideas and culture had long since taken root in the
+soil and produced a style purely local in many of its features. Some
+authorities trace the first principles of Arabic architecture back to
+the Copts; the Spaniards argue that their style is derived from
+Byzantine works they found before them in Andalusia. The germs of Arabic
+art are certainly not, if travellers' tales be true, to be found in
+Arabia. The Saracen conquerors were warriors, not artists, and their
+ideas of form and ornament were undoubtedly borrowed--like their vaunted
+culture--from the more civilized nations with which they came in
+contact. With Morocco just across the strait, it is not safe to claim
+too much of native genius and refinement for the Moor. Whatever may have
+been the primitive models of Andalusian architecture, as time went by it
+lost much of the dignity and simplicity of its earliest examples--such
+as the Giralda and the Mezquita. The Moors of Granada had wearied of the
+fanaticism and austerity of Islam. If not precisely decadent, they had
+lost the fire and enthusiasm of youth, and wanted to enjoy a comfortable
+old age. If the palace we are about to enter seems in parts more like
+the bower of an odalisque than the seat of royalty, we must remember
+that the sultans wanted to enjoy life here, and had no fancy for the
+stern, military-looking palaces of their Christian rivals. Your
+Oriental, like the cat, values luxury very highly, and yet, from
+our point of view, does not seem to secure it. A European would have
+found himself hopelessly uncomfortable at the court of Al Ahmar and
+Mohammed V.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE ALHAMBRA: TOWER OF COMARES]
+
+Architecturally the Alhambra Palace has little merit. It is impossible
+to trace any order in the distribution of its parts, which ought not of
+course to be expected in a building repeatedly added to in the course of
+two and a half centuries. Moreover, a portion was demolished to make
+room for the Palace of Charles V. The Moorish builders were fond of
+conceits which our taste condemns. They liked to conceal the supports of
+a heavy tower, and to leave it seemingly suspended in the air. There is
+nothing imposing about the edifice, nothing stately. Its great charm
+consists in its decoration, which is wonderful and, in its own line,
+beyond all praise. It is based on the strictest geometrical plan, and
+every design and pattern may be resolved into a symmetrical arrangement
+of lines and curves at regular distances. The intersection of lines at
+various angles is the secret of the system. All these lines flow from a
+parent stem, and nothing accidental or extraneous is permitted. The same
+adhesion to sharply-defined principles is conspicuous in the
+colour-scheme. On the stucco only the primary colours are used; the
+secondary tints being reserved for the dados of mosaic or tile work. The
+green seen on the groundwork was originally blue. To-day, when the white
+parts have assumed the tint of old ivory and time has subdued the vivid
+colouring, the effect is more harmonious than it could have been
+originally.
+
+Epigraphy, or long flowing inscriptions, proclaiming the merits of the
+sultans or of the chambers themselves, enters largely into the
+decoration. Those who can read these at a glance must find the halls
+less monotonous than most people are likely to do. The beauty of the
+ornamentation consists in its exquisite symmetry, and this is not
+apparent to every comer, who may fail to realize with Mr. Lomas "that
+the exact relation between the irregular widths of cloistering on the
+long and short sides of the court [of the Lions] is that of the squares
+upon the sides of a right-angled triangle"!
+
+The inscription that most frequently recurs in the decoration is the
+famous "There is no conqueror but God"--the words used by Al Ahmar on
+his return from the siege of Seville, in deprecation of the acclamations
+of his subjects. The newer parts are readily recognizable by the yoke
+and sheaf of arrows, the favourite devices of Ferdinand and Isabella,
+whose initials, F and Y, are also seen; and by the Pillars of Hercules
+and the motto "Plus Oultre," denoting work executed by order of Charles
+V.
+
+The oldest part of the building--by which I mean that which appears to
+have been the least altered--is round about the Patio de la Mezquita,
+more properly named "del Mexuar," after the divan or "meshwâr" that held
+its sittings here. The southern façade of this small court reminds one
+very much of the front of the Alcazar at Seville. From this you enter
+the disused chapel, an uninteresting apartment consecrated in 1629. The
+Moorish decoration has almost completely disappeared, but much of the
+work in the little apartment adjacent, called the Sultan's Oratory,
+seems to be original. There never was a mosque here, but there may have
+been a private praying-place. Yusuf I. is supposed to have been stabbed
+here. The tragic deed was more probably done at the great mosque outside
+the palace where the Alhambra parish church now stands. From the Patio
+del Mexuar a tunnel called the Viaducto leads to the Patio de la Reja,
+the Baths, and the Garden of Daraxa.
+
+The Court of the Myrtles (Patio de las Arrayanes, or de la Alberca) is
+the first entered by the visitor. It is an oblong space, the middle of
+which is occupied by a tank of bright green water. This is bordered by
+trimly kept hedges of myrtle. The side walls are modern, and do not
+deserve attention. The front to the right on entering is very beautiful.
+It is composed of two arcaded galleries, one above the other, with a
+smaller closed gallery--a sort of triforium--interposed. The arches
+spring from marble columns, with variously decorated capitals. The
+central arch of the lowest gallery rises nearly to the cornice, and is
+decorated in a style which Contreras thought suggestive of Indian
+architecture. Fine lattice work closes the seven windows of the
+triforium. The upper gallery is equally graceful, but looks in imminent
+danger of collapse. Above a similar but single arcade at the opposite
+end of the court rises the square massive upper storey of the Tower of
+Comares, with its crenellated summit. To reach its interior we cross the
+gallery beneath a little dome painted with stars on a blue ground, and a
+long parallel apartment (Sala de la Barca) gutted by fire in 1890, and
+enter the spacious Hall of the Ambassadors (Sala de los Embajadores),
+the largest hall in the Alhambra. Here was held the final council which
+decided the fate of Islam in Spain. Looking upwards we behold the
+glorious airy dome of larch-wood with painted stars. The decoration is
+magnificent--mostly in red and black--and may be divided into four
+zones: (1) a dado of mosaic tiles or azulejos; (2) stucco work in eight
+horizontal bands, each of a different design; (3) a row of five windows
+once filled with stained glass on each side; (4) a carved wooden
+cornice, supporting the roof. On three sides of the hall are alcoves,
+each with a window, the one opposite the entrance having been near the
+Sultan's throne.
+
+The Hall of the Ambassadors probably never looked very different from
+what it is now. It was never a private apartment. We can imagine it
+occupied, when no function was proceeding, by a few slaves dozing on
+mats or reclining dog-like on the richly carpeted floor, ready, however,
+to spring up and make the lowest of salaams as some bearded dignity
+entered.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE COURT OF THE LIONS: MOONLIGHT]
+
+This splendid hall and the other apartments adjacent to the Court of the
+Myrtles are supposed (I know not on what authority) to have
+constituted the official or public part of the royal residence, together
+with the apartments demolished to make room for the Palace of Charles V.
+The rest of the building, on this supposition, was the private or harem
+quarter. A narrow passage leads from the Court of the Myrtles to the
+Court of the Lions. "There is no part of the edifice that gives us a
+more complete idea of its original beauty and magnificence than this,"
+says Washington Irving, "for none has suffered so little from the
+ravages of time. In the centre stands the fountain famous in song and
+story. The alabaster basins still shed their diamond drops; and the
+twelve lions which support them cast forth their crystal streams as in
+the days of Boabdil. [The fountain nowadays plays only once a year.] The
+architecture, like that of all other parts of the palace, is
+characterized by elegance rather than grandeur; bespeaking a delicate
+and a graceful taste, and a disposition to indolent enjoyment. When one
+looks upon the fairy tracery of the peristyles, and the apparently
+fragile fretwork of the walls, it is difficult to believe that so much
+has survived the wear and tear of centuries, the shocks of earthquakes,
+the violence of war, and the quiet though no less baneful pilferings of
+the tasteful traveller; it is almost sufficient to excuse the popular
+tradition that the whole is protected by a magic charm."
+
+I fancy that the gifted American was himself responsible for that
+tradition, for the Spaniards, as Lady Louisa Tenison observed sixty odd
+years ago, are not an imaginative race, and whatever legends or
+traditions are current relate almost exclusively to the Virgin and
+saints. Spanish folk-lore knows nothing of fairies and goblins. The
+palace which Irving tells us the people regarded as enchanted had been
+used by them for years as a factory, as store-rooms, as a laundry, as a
+caravanserai. This hardly suggests that it was looked upon with
+superstitious awe. The truth is that the palace had enchanted Washington
+Irving, as it has done many others--not natives--since.
+
+The Court of the Lions is an oblong, surrounded by a gallery formed by
+124 marble columns, eleven feet in height and placed irregularly, some
+in pairs, some single. The arches exhibit a similar variety of curve,
+and the capitals are of various designs. The tile roofing of the
+galleries rather mars the effect, but the stucco work within them is of
+the richest and finest description. In the centre of the short sides are
+two charming little pavilions, with "half-orange" domes and basins in
+their marble flooring. The court is gravelled, and derives its name from
+the twelve marble animals that support the basin of the central
+fountain. These creatures are called lions, but why I am at a loss to
+understand. They look more like poodles than any other living
+quadrupeds. Ford humorously remarks: "Their faces are barbecued, and
+their manes cut like the scales of a griffin, and their legs like
+bedposts, while water-pipes stuck in their mouths do not add to their
+dignity." An Arabic inscription reminds us that nothing need be
+feared from them, as life is wanting to enable them to show their fury.
+That fury would no doubt have been directed in the first instance at the
+sculptor who had made of the unfortunate creatures such grotesque
+caricatures.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE GENERALIFE: PATIO DE LA ACEQUIA]
+
+The court is surrounded by four splendid rooms--the halls of the
+Mocarabes, the Abencerrages, the Two Sisters, and of Justice. The second
+and third resemble each other, and are covered with the most marvellous
+specimens of the artesonado or carved wood ceiling. The stalactites or
+pendants, though in reality following a strict geometrical plan, exhibit
+complications and varieties that it is impossible for the eye to follow.
+The style may well have been suggested by the honey-comb. It is
+confusing, beautiful, glorious--certainly the most remarkable
+achievement of the art of the Spanish Moor. The walls are covered with
+lace-work in stucco of the most exquisite pattern, with mosaic dados,
+and friezes decorated with inscriptions in praise of Mohammed V. At the
+sides of the rooms are the alcoves characteristic of Oriental domestic
+architecture.
+
+The Hall of the Two Sisters is so called from a couple of slabs of
+marble let into the flooring. The other chamber derives its name from
+the thirty-six chiefs of the Beni Serraj tribe, fabled to have been
+decapitated within it by order of Boabdil. The story was a pure
+invention of a Ginés Perez de Hita, a writer who lived in the sixteenth
+century. It has now spread through all lands, thanks to the version of
+Chateaubriand. The tribe is supposed in this story to have espoused the
+"Little King's" cause against his father, Mulai Hasan. Later on their
+chief, Hamet, was suspected of intriguing with the Castilians; and, what
+was still more criminal in the eyes of a Moslem, of carrying on a love
+affair with one of the sultanas. A cypress in the gardens of the
+Generalife is pointed out as the lovers' trysting-place. The sultan
+resolved to make an end of this pestilent brood, but Hamet himself,
+warned at the eleventh hour, escaped the fate of his kinsmen. The frail
+sultana would have shared their fate, had not four champions presented
+themselves and vindicated her reputation against all comers in the
+lists. Thus the affair ended happily--except for the thirty-six chiefs.
+Thus the story. I hope it will stimulate your imagination. For myself,
+there is an utter absence of the personal and human note about these
+gorgeous Moorish halls. It is certainly easier to believe that they
+sprang into existence at the bidding of an enchanter than that they were
+ever the scenes of men's loves and hates, hopes and fears.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE GENERALIFE: COURT OF THE CYPRESSES]
+
+The Hall of Justice (Sala de la Justicia), at the far side of the Court
+of Lions, is a long apartment, divided into alcoves specially remarkable
+for the paintings on its ceiling. These have been the subject of endless
+controversy. To begin with, it was doubted if a Mohammedan could have
+painted them, since the representation of living objects is contrary to
+the injunctions of the Koran. I have it on the authority of a very
+learned Moslem friend, a recognized authority on Mohammedan law, that
+the plastic arts are not forbidden by the Prophet, but merely pointed
+out as a possible snare and stumbling-block in the way of the believer.
+Painting has been a recognized art in Persia for centuries, and I have
+seen some pictures from that country which reveal no mean degree of
+skill. There is therefore no good reason to doubt that these curious
+works were executed by Moorish artists at the end of the fourteenth
+century. They are done on leather prepared with gypsum and nailed to the
+wooden ceiling. The colours (red, green, gold, etc.) are still vivid,
+but mildew is covering them in parts, and in places the gypsum is
+peeling off. These valuable specimens of Moorish art ought to have been
+taken down and placed under glass long ago. The first of the three
+represents ten bearded, robed, and turbaned personages, who may with
+some degree of probability be identified with the first sultans of the
+Nasrid dynasty. According to Oliver, the Moor in the green costume
+occupying the middle of one side is Al Ahmar, the founder of the race.
+Then, counting from his right, come Mohammed II., Nasr Abu-l-Juyyush,
+Mohammed IV., Saïd Ismaïl, Mohammed V. (in the red robe), Yusuf II.,
+Yusuf I., Abu-l-Walid, and Mohammed III. The family likeness between
+these potentates is striking, and the red beards suggest a liberal use
+of the dye still largely used by the Oriental man of middle age. The
+other pictures are more interesting. The first represents hunting
+scenes. Moors are seen chasing the wild boar, while Spanish knights are
+in pursuit of the lion and the bear. In another part of the composition
+the huntsmen are seen returning and offering the spoils of the chase to
+their ladies. The Moor greets his sultana with a benign and
+condescending air, the Christian on his knees offers his prize to his
+lady. In the next picture is another hunting scene, with a page, with
+sword and shield, leaning against a tree, awaiting his master's return.
+In another quarter of the picture his master (presumably) is rescuing a
+distressed damsel from a wild-looking creature who is quite undismayed
+by the tame lion accompanying his captive. Further on, the same knight
+is unhorsed and overthrown by a Moorish huntsman, two ladies from a
+castle in the background most ungratefully applauding the Christian's
+discomfiture. The pictures evidently were intended to record the
+incidents of a border warfare not dissimilar to those commemorated in
+our ballad of Chevy Chase.
+
+In this hall a temporary chapel was set up, and mass was celebrated, on
+the taking of the city by the Spaniards.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--TOCADOR DE LA REINA]
+
+Crossing the Hall of the Two Sisters, we enter the beautiful Mirador de
+"Lindaraja," the most charming and elegant of all the apartments in the
+palace. Through three tall windows, once filled with coloured crystals,
+we look down into the pretty Patio de Daraxa, which, like the chamber,
+does not derive its name from an imaginary sultana, but from a word
+meaning "vestibule." It is a delightful garden, where shade is always to
+be obtained between the closely planted cypresses, orange, and peach
+trees, rising between twin hedges of box and bushes of rose and myrtle.
+In the centre is a seventeenth-century fountain. Here you will always
+find some artist committing to canvas his impressions of one of the
+fairest gardens men have fashioned for themselves.
+
+The rooms on the other side of the patio were built by Charles V., and
+include the Tocador de la Reina, or Queen's Boudoir, a prettily
+decorated belvedere affording an entrancing view. It was in this room
+that Washington Irving took up his quarters. Théophile Gautier slept
+sometimes in the hall of the Abencerrages, sometimes in that of the Two
+Sisters, and was impressed by the eerieness of the palace at night. Yet
+there is not a manor-house in England or a château in France that is not
+more suggestive of the spectral and uncanny than these gilded halls and
+open courts. However, everyone has his own preconceptions of the weird
+and the picturesque.
+
+From the Patio de Daraxa we enter the very interesting Baths, ably
+restored by the late Don Rafael Contreras. The Sala de las Camas, or
+chamber of repose, is among the most brilliantly decorated rooms in the
+palace, yet, as elsewhere in this neglected pile, the gilding is being
+suffered to fade and the tiling in the niches, I noticed, is loosening
+and breaking up. From a gallery running round the chamber, the music of
+the odalisques was wafted down to the sultan reclining in one of the
+divans below. He must have been in no hurry to leave this spot, where he
+dreamily puffed at his hubble-bubble and watched the play of the
+fountain. The light came from apertures in the superb artesonado
+ceiling. Without, on a stone seat, the eunuchs mounted guard and
+preserved their lord's repose from interruption. The actual baths are
+contained in two adjacent chambers. A staircase ascended to the Hall of
+the Two Sisters above, for the use, not improbably, of the ladies of the
+harem. On leaving the baths you may follow the tunnel across the
+uninteresting Patio de la Reja and beneath the Tower of Comares, to the
+Patio del Mexuar.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--TORRE DE LAS DAMAS]
+
+No visitor to the Alhambra must omit to walk round the outer wall or
+enceinte, and to inspect the towers. The Torre de las Damas, a fortified
+tower dating from the time of Yusuf I., was inhabited by Ismaïl, the
+brother of Mohammed V., and marked the palace limits on this side. It
+contains a tastefully decorated hall. Adjacent to it is a beautiful if
+gaudy little Mohammedan mihrab or oratory, approached through a private
+garden. Here was the house of Anastasio de Bracamonte, the esquire of
+the Conde de Tendilla, to whom was assigned the custody of the Alhambra
+at the Reconquest. The Puerta de Hierro, a little further on, was
+restored at the same time, and faces the gate and path leading to the
+Generalife. Passing the Torre de los Picos, we reach the Torre de
+la Cautiva, which contains a beautiful chamber, over which a lovely rosy
+tint is diffused by the tiles and stucco. The Torre de las Infantas,
+built by Mohammed VII., is a perfect example of an Oriental
+dwelling-house. Through the usual zigzag vestibule you reach a hall with
+a fountain in the centre and alcoves in three of the sides. The
+decoration is perhaps over elaborate. The towers on the other side of
+the enceinte were, as I have said, intended mainly for defence. Near the
+ruinous Torre del Agua, at the south-east extremity, a viaduct crosses
+the ravine from the Generalife, and some of the water precipitates
+itself over the brow of the hill in a mass of vivid living greenery.
+Further on, towards the Gate of Justice, is the Torre de los Siete
+Suelos, through which Boabdil is said to have made his last exit. It is
+supposed to extend far underground, and to contain much buried treasure.
+So at least Irving was told by the inhabitants, or possibly told them!
+Hence issues the Belludo, the spectral pack, which traverses the streets
+of Granada by night--also according to legend. This story of the Wild
+Huntsman crops up, in one form or another, in every part of Europe.
+There are the Dandy Dogs in Cornwall, the Wild Huntsman in Germany,
+Thibaut le Tricheur in the valley of the Loire, the Chasseur Noir of
+Fontainebleau, and so on. Folk-lore of this sort is easily fabricated.
+Foreigners in search of the picturesque ask the natives of such a place
+as this if ghosts do not haunt the ruins. The guide, anxious to please,
+says "Doubtless!" The foreigner goes on to tell him of spectres that
+affect this particular class of building at home; and the guide readily
+devises a local version of the yarn for the benefit of the next
+stranger. I have found that the peasantry in most European countries
+hear of their local traditions and folk-lore first through the medium of
+books. And these remarks apply with especial force to the people of
+Latin countries, whom, contrary to the received opinion, I know to be
+less imaginative and less superstitious than northerners. It is natural
+that the gloomy forests of Germany and Sweden, rather than the sunlit
+plains of Andalusia, should generate dark fancies.
+
+Strictly speaking the Generalife, the Trianon of the Moorish kings, is a
+more beautiful place than the Alhambra, though it has no architectural
+merit. It became the property at the Reconquest of a Christianized Moor,
+Don Pedro de Granada, who claimed to be descended from the famous Ben
+Hud, and from whose family it passed into the possession of the
+Marquises of Campotejar. The approach lies along a magnificent avenue of
+cypresses and tall shrubs. Arrived at the entrance you are admitted by a
+very comely damsel, and allowed to wander about the lovely gardens by
+yourself and to stay there all day if you like. At the far end of the
+first court is a poor collection of portraits, among which is one--No.
+11--absurdly supposed to be a portrait of Ben Hud (died about 1237),
+though the person is dressed in the costume of the fifteenth century.
+This is the portrait which English travellers, and even the usually
+correct Baedeker, persist in mistaking for Boabdil's.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE GENERALIFE: COURT OF THE CYPRESSES]
+
+The gardens of the Generalife are beyond all praise. Water bubbles up
+everywhere, and moistens the roots of gorgeous oleanders, myrtles,
+orange trees, cedars, and cypresses--the tallest trees in Spain. Beneath
+one of these--that to the right as you reach the head of the first
+flight of steps--the sultana is alleged to have kept her tryst with
+Hamet, the Abencerrage. Not a bad place, this, for a lovers' meeting.
+You rise from one flower-laden terrace to another till you reach the
+ugly belvedere--scribbled all over with idiots' names--whence you obtain
+a ravishing view of the Alhambra, the city, the Vega, and the mountains.
+The hours spent in the Generalife Gardens will be remembered as among
+the pleasantest of one's lifetime.
+
+It may be, as a French writer states, impossible to tickle the surface
+of Granada without discovering Moorish remains, but certainly, outside
+the Alhambra, very few are to be seen above ground. The most conspicuous
+of them in the lower town is, on the whole, the Casa del Carbon, a
+dilapidated structure with a bold horseshoe archway which confronts you
+as you cross the Reyes Catolicos near the Post Office. The house is now
+used as a coal depot, but beneath the thick coating of grime you may
+discern the traces of graceful decorative work. The building is said to
+have been a corn exchange in Moorish days. More interesting are the
+vestiges of the ancient walls that girdled the oldest quarter, _el
+viejo Albaicin_. They were built in great part by Christian
+captives--perhaps by those whose chains are hung up on the walls of San
+Juan de los Reyes at Toledo. The Moors of Granada grew embittered by
+their reverses, and treated their Christian subjects harshly. The
+martyrs whom the monument on the Alhambra hill commemorates are not
+merely the creatures of pious imagination. There is an ugly story, too,
+of an unfortunate monk accused of heretical doctrines, who took refuge
+at Granada and was burnt at the stake by the Moslems.
+
+Two of the old gatehouses on this side of the city are still standing.
+They are massive crenellated towers, pierced with round-headed archways.
+I do not consider them entrancingly picturesque; they form the northern
+entrances to the Albaicin quarter, which is now a perplexing congeries
+of squalid houses, formless convents, and churches tottering to their
+fall. Whatever interest its antiquity may excite is lost in disgust at
+its wretchedness. On the outskirts dwell the gipsies--mostly in
+semi-underground burrows, and left very much to themselves by the local
+authority. These are the poor creatures who are dragged out to bore
+visitors with their wearisome dances, the fee charged for which goes
+almost entirely into the pockets of the guides. The gipsies of Spain are
+not nomadic. There are people in Granada who wish they were.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--CASA DEL CARBON]
+
+In the Albaicin the Zirite sultans had their palaces, one of which was
+called the House of the Weathercock, from the bronze figure of a
+horseman that surmounted it and served as a vane. Washington Irving has
+written a story about it. Fragments of all these ancient buildings are
+incorporated with modern houses, and may be identified by those who care
+to take the trouble. Romantic legends (of the precise nature of which I
+am ignorant) cluster round the Casa de las Tres Estrellas, possibly
+because it affords ingress to a subterranean passage leading no man
+knows whither. But I do not think you will be tempted to linger long in
+this odoriferous, wormeaten quarter. You may be said to have escaped
+from it when you reach the picturesque Carrera de Darro, the embankment
+of that narrow stream facing the Alhambra. Here may be seen a Moorish
+bath at one of the private houses, and--much more delightful to the
+artist--a broken Moorish bridge, the Puente del Cadi, to which a path
+led down from the Torre de las Armas. Against the little church near
+this point you will notice a white corner house with a handsome doorway
+in the Renaissance style. At the angle of the house is a balcony,
+bearing the odd inscription, "Esperandola del Cielo" ("Waiting for it
+from Heaven"). The words are accounted for by the following story: The
+house was built by Hernando de Zafra, the astute secretary of Ferdinand
+and Isabella, and the negotiator of the capitulation of Granada. He
+suspected his daughter of a love affair with an unknown cavalier. To
+satisfy his doubts he surprised her one day, and found his page
+assisting the lover to escape by the window. Baulked of his prey the
+enraged father turned upon the lad. "Mercy," implored the page. "Look
+for it in Heaven!" answered the Don, as he hurled his daughter's
+accomplice after her lover into the street below. There are those who
+say that De Zafra had no daughter, and that he has been libelled in this
+matter. But the episode is more probable than the foreign-made yarns
+about the Alhambra.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--STREET IN THE ALBAICIN]
+
+The rivers of Granada are more spoken of than seen. At the foot of the
+Alhambra the Darro disappears, its channel through the town having been
+roofed over at different epochs. Till the middle of the last century the
+houses of the Zacatin looked at the back upon the stream, as may be seen
+from a picture by Roberts in the South Kensington Galleries. There was a
+local proverb which said "Ugly as the back of the Zacatin," an evidence
+of the persistent confusion of the ugly and the picturesque. This part
+of the stream is now covered by the Reyes Catolicos Street. The famous
+Zacatin--a lane-like thoroughfare, like those we have seen in
+Seville--was once the principal street in Granada, and seems to have
+been full of animation in Gautier's time. That brilliant Frenchman
+speaks of meeting there parties of students from Salamanca, playing as
+they went on the guitar, triangles, and castanets--truly a singular mode
+of taking one's walks abroad, such as even the Spaniards of the
+'thirties and 'forties must have marvelled at exceedingly. Are we
+to understand by this remarkable passage that the alumni of Salamanca
+formed processions like those of the Salvation Army, whenever they met
+by chance in the public street, or that, like the fine lady of Banbury
+Cross, they were determined to move nowhere without a musical
+accompaniment? At all events, the Zacatin is quiet enough nowadays. It
+still contains some of the best shops in the town and is one of the few
+comparatively shady walks outside the precincts of the Alhambra. It
+leads you to the far-famed Plaza de Bibarrambla, with the name of which
+we have been familiarized by Byron's rendering of the Spanish ballad,
+"Ay de mi, Alhama!" The square, like so much else in Granada, has been
+so completely modernized that nothing remains to recall the days when
+the sultans here assisted at pageants and tournaments, wherein
+Christians often took part. It is edifying to learn that Spanish
+knights, forbidden in their own country to cut each other's throats,
+often resorted hither to do so, by gracious permission of his Moorish
+Majesty.
+
+We are now in the neighbourhood of the second great sight of
+Granada--the Cathedral with its adjoining buildings. The church called
+the Sagrario is an eighteenth-century structure immediately adjoining
+the west front of the Cathedral, on the south side, which served for a
+time as the metropolitan church of Granada. The interior is sombre,
+heavy, and Churrigueresque--a style which, it always strikes me, might
+have been devised by an undertaker accustomed to a high-class business.
+One of the chapels, however, is interesting. It contains the bones of
+"the magnificent cavalier, Fernando del Pulgar, Lord of El Salar," as
+the inscription records. This gallant knight, during the last siege of
+Granada, penetrated into the city with fifteen horsemen, and nailed a
+paper bearing the Ave Maria on the door of the mosque. This brave
+exploit earned for him and his descendants the right of remaining
+covered in the Cathedral and before the king. In Philip II.'s time the
+Marqués del Salar, the representative of the family, was fined for
+appearing covered before the High Court of Granada. He appealed to the
+king, invoking the privilege conferred on his ancestor. "Not so,"
+replied Philip; "you may wear your bonnet in the presence of the king,
+but not in the sacred presence of Justice." With the fine was built the
+staircase in the Audiencia in the Plaza Nueva.
+
+Behind the Sagrario is the mausoleum of Ferdinand and Isabella--the
+Capilla Real--a temple peculiarly sacred in the eyes of all good
+Spaniards. The two great sovereigns lie here in the heart of the city
+which they recovered for Christendom, even as many great soldiers have
+caused their remains to be buried on the sites of their greatest
+victories. The chapel, founded in 1504 and completed in 1517, is a noble
+example of late Gothic. The exterior is very simple, the decoration
+consisting mainly of two highly ornate balustrades, surmounting each of
+the two stages. The well-known devices and monograms of the
+founders are interwoven with the decoration. Through a portal flanked by
+the figures of heralds we enter the chapel--plain, bright, and airy. The
+chancel is railed off by a magnificent grille of gilt ironwork, wrought
+by Maestre Bartolomé of Jaen, in 1522. Between this and the altar are
+the superb tombs of Ferdinand and Isabella, and of their daughter Joanna
+and her husband, Philip I. The former is ascribed to a Florentine
+sculptor, Domenico Fancelli.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--INTERIOR OF A POSADA]
+
+The recumbent effigies of the Reyes Catolicos are full of expression and
+majesty. Both wear their crowns, and Ferdinand is in full armour. At the
+angles of the tomb are seated figures, and the sides are sculptured with
+medallions and escutcheons and the figures of angels and saints. The
+figures of the unhappy Joanna and her Flemish consort are less lifelike,
+and the decoration is much more florid. It must be admitted that the
+Renaissance character of these sepulchral monuments contrasts rather
+oddly with the Gothic surroundings. The kneeling statues of the founders
+at the sides of the altar are believed to be actual likenesses. The
+reliefs on the retablo, by Vigarni, represent the surrender of Granada
+and the subsequent baptism of the Moors. In the former, both the
+sovereigns are shown, in the company of Cardinal Mendoza, receiving the
+keys from Boabdil; in the latter, we note that the candidates for
+baptism are so many that the rite is being administered by means of a
+syringe.
+
+Beneath the tombs is the vault containing all that was mortal of the
+makers of Modern Spain. The sacristan thrusts a lighted taper forward
+into the gloomy abode of death, and you are able to distinguish five
+coffins--those of Ferdinand and Isabella, Philip, Joanna, and the
+Infante Miguel. Philip's coffin, it will be remembered, was carried
+about by his lovesick widow till she had to be parted from it by force.
+The coffins are rude, bulging, and almost shapeless. One only, that of
+Ferdinand, can be identified, and this only by the simple letter F upon
+it. Might not this stand as well for Felipe?
+
+The sacristan next shows you the treasury of the chapel. Among the
+relics are the crown, sceptre, and mirror of Isabella, her missal
+beautifully illuminated, and the standard embroidered by her that
+floated over the city. A casket is shown which was filled with jewels
+which she pawned to procure funds for Columbus's first voyage of
+discovery. Few investments have proved more profitable, as far as
+material wealth is concerned. You may also see Ferdinand's sword, rather
+interesting to those curious in ancient weapons.
+
+The Royal Chapel is quite independent of the immediately adjacent
+Cathedral. The chaplains have a right of way across the Cathedral
+transept to the Puerta del Perdon, a privilege deeply resented by the
+chapter. Once when the Archbishop wished to visit the chapel, his
+attendant canons were refused admission. The irate prelate caused the
+chaplains to be arrested for this affront, and a long lawsuit
+followed. But all this happened a long time ago, and it is to be hoped
+that the two bodies of clergy now live upon good terms with each other.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--OLD HOUSES, CUESTA DEL PESCADO]
+
+A very beautiful arch, richly and tastefully adorned with statues,
+admits to the Cathedral. This church, described by Fergusson as one of
+the finest in Europe, was begun by Diego de Siloe, about 1525, and not
+completed till 1703. The exterior is far from corresponding to the
+majesty of the interior, though the Puerto del Perdon, already referred
+to, on the north side, is a beautiful piece of work. The impression
+produced on entering the Cathedral is rather similar to that experienced
+on entering St. Peter's. There is an atmosphere of loftiness, luxury,
+and cold purity--like that clinging to the finest classical works. This
+is certainly the triumph of Spanish Renaissance architecture. The effect
+is, of course, utterly different from that of the grand old Gothic fane
+of Seville. Like all Renaissance churches, as it seems to me, it lacks
+the devotional atmosphere. The nave, as usual, is obstructed by the
+choir--where, by the way, Alonso Cano was buried. The dome above the
+chancel is sublime, the daring of the arches wonderful. The altar is
+completely insulated by the ambulatory.
+
+Before it are the grand sculptured heads of Adam and Eve by Cano. His
+also are seven of the frescoes decorating the upper part of the dome.
+The others are by his pupils. The Cathedral contains much of this
+irascible and wayward artist's best work. In the chapel of San Miguel is
+a "Virgen de la Soledad," in whose human beauty and pathos his genius
+finds its highest expression. In the chapel of Jesus Nazareno, Cano's
+"Via Crucis" does not suffer by comparison with three works of Ribera
+and a "St. Francis" by El Greco. The artist's studio may be seen in one
+of the towers flanking the west front of the Cathedral. He was a native
+of Granada, and a lay canon of the chapter. He died in poverty at his
+house in the Albaicin quarter, aged 66 years, on October 5, 1667. He was
+a man of hasty but not ungenerous temper, and in some of his phases of
+character recalls Fuseli. Justice has hardly been done to his great
+talent, of which he himself seems to have entertained an exaggerated
+estimate.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--OLD AYUNTAMIENTO]
+
+The minor churches of Granada are not of very great interest. The church
+of San Geronimo was built by the Great Captain as a mausoleum for
+himself and his wife, but such of his remains as escaped the ghoulish
+spoliation of the French have been transported to Madrid. The church is
+no longer used as a place of worship. The retablo is remarkable, and in
+it may be traced the dawning of Siloe's ambition to create a true
+Spanish Renaissance style. The church of San Juan de Dios, not far off,
+is filled with tawdry rubbish, petticoated crucifixes, etc. Here is
+buried the titular saint, a Portuguese, Joao de Robles, who in the
+seventeenth century devoted himself with so much energy to the sick
+and suffering that his contemporaries esteemed him mad. You may see the
+cage in which he was confined at the hospital founded by Isabella the
+Catholic on the arid, ugly Plaza de Triunfo, near the Bull Ring. A
+column in the middle of the square marks the spot where Doña Mariana
+Pineda was publicly garrotted in 1831. This lady is the great heroine of
+Granada. She perished a victim to the reactionary tendencies then
+prevalent in Spain. Spaniards were then crying "Hurrah for our chains!"
+and Doña Mariana's house was known to be a rendezvous of the Liberals of
+Granada. On raiding her house the police discovered a tricolour flag.
+This was evidence enough, and in the thirty-first year of her age this
+beautiful and accomplished woman suffered a shameful death. A few years
+later, when the nation had recovered its sanity, the magistrate who had
+condemned her was shot, and her remains were transported with great pomp
+to the Cathedral, where they have been interred close to Alonso Cano's.
+A monument has also been raised to her memory in the Campillo Square.
+
+There is another story connected with the Triunfo worth telling, though
+it is not very well authenticated. The remains of royal personages on
+their way to the Capilla Real were here identified by the officers of
+the court. The Duke of Gandia was present on such an occasion, and was
+so impressed by the evidences of mortality when the coffin was opened
+that he vowed he would never again serve an earthly master. He entered
+the Society of Jesus, and after his death was canonized under the name
+of St. Francis Borgia. The story is a curious and suggestive one, as
+also is that of the duke praying that his wife might die if it were for
+his soul's good. St. Francis Borgia has always seemed to me an extreme
+example of other-worldliness.
+
+A dusty road through most uninviting surroundings leads to the Cartuja,
+or Charterhouse, founded in 1516 by the Great Captain. The cloisters are
+painted with scenes of the martyrdom of the Carthusian monks in London
+by the minions of Henry VIII.
+
+The church is an extraordinary edifice. Its style is damnable, but it is
+gorgeous and dazzling to a degree which compels admiration. The doors of
+the choir are exquisitely inlaid with ebony, cedar, mother-of-pearl, and
+tortoiseshell. The statue of Bruno is by Cano. In the sanctuary behind
+the altar coloured marbles, twisted and fluted, are combined in
+extravagant magnificence. Some of the slabs are richly veined with
+agate, and the hand of nature has traced some semblances of human and
+animal forms. In the adjoining sacristy are some wonderful inlaid doors
+and presses. They must surely be the finest works of their kind in the
+world. It is strange that so much genius for detail and so much costly
+material should have been combined to produce so tasteless a building.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--STREET IN THE OLD QUARTER]
+
+Outside this church there are not many places in the vicinity of Granada
+worth a visit. The church of Sacramonte looms rather prominently in the
+landscape, and you are to some extent rewarded for the trouble of a
+pilgrimage thither by the fine view of the city. The hill contains some
+caves in which, in the year 1594, one Hernandez professed to have
+discovered certain books written in Arabic characters on sheets of lead.
+The find was reported to the archbishop, Don Pedro Vaca de Castro, who
+examined the books and declared them to contain the acts of the martyrs,
+Mesito and Hiscius, Tesiphus and Cecilius, put to death by the Romans
+and buried in the caves. His grace's pronouncement was not considered
+final, and theological opinion was sharply divided on the subject for
+many years. At last the continuance of the controversy was forbidden by
+Papal decree. It seems that doubt is now thrown even on the existence of
+the martyrs. The church built over the place of their supposed sepulchre
+was for a time famous as a shrine of pilgrims. The usual rock worn away
+by the kisses of the devout is shown. There is a superstition that a
+person kissing the stone for the first time will be married within the
+year, if single, and released from the conjugal tie if already married.
+As divorce does not exist in Spain it is to be hoped that few
+discontented Benedicts have recourse to this stone.
+
+St. Cecilius, at all events, was known to fame before the alleged
+discovery of his grave; for in the Antequeruela quarter an oratory
+dedicated to him existed throughout the Moorish domination, and was the
+only Christian place of worship within the city. I do not think that
+any trace of it is to be detected now. In that part of the city is the
+Casa de los Tiros, where you must apply for tickets for the Generalife;
+it is worth seeing on its own account, and it is the repository of the
+sword of Boabdil, which seems to have more claims to authenticity than
+most of the relics of the Little King. Descending towards the Puerta
+Real we pass the Cuarto de Santo Domingo, a private villa in which is
+incorporated all that remains of an Almohade palace. Near by, against
+the church of Santo Domingo, is an exceedingly picturesque little
+archway where one can fancy a bravo waiting, stiletto in hand. The
+Campillo, in the centre of which rises the statue of Mariana Pineda, is
+a quiet little square enough, referred to (as the Rondilla) by Cervantes
+as a resort of adventurers and desperadoes. These gentry are now more
+likely to be found in the immediately adjacent Alameda, outside the
+hotel of the same name, where the cafés and tables spread in front of
+them seem exceedingly well patronized.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE GENERALIFE: PATIO DE LA ACEQUIA]
+
+Following the Genil, and leaving the unimpressive monument of Columbus
+and Isabella to the left, you reach, after a walk overpoweringly
+fatiguing in summer, the little Ermita de San Sebastian. This was a
+Moorish oratory in old days, and outside it took place the surrender of
+the keys by Boabdil on the memorable 2nd of January, 1492. If you go
+farther on--and I doubt if you will be tempted to--you will come to a
+very old Moorish palace called the Alcazar Genil, now the property
+of the Duke of Gor. Here, says Simonet, were lodged the Christian
+princes and knights who so often found an asylum at the court of
+Granada. In the gardens are tanks once used, it is believed, for mimic
+naval fights. In the same direction, I understand, is Zubia. Here
+Isabella the Catholic, reconnoitring the city during the siege, narrowly
+escaped capture by a Moorish patrol. She concealed herself behind a
+laurel bush, which is still pointed out. Another instance of the small
+chances that determine the fate of kingdoms! To commemorate her escape
+the queen built near by a convent, which has long since disappeared.
+
+You may return to the city by the Puerta Verde, near the Bab-en-Neshti
+or Puerta de los Molinos, through which the Spaniards entered after
+Boabdil's submission.
+
+Apart from the Alhambra and the Cathedral buildings, it will have been
+seen that Granada has not many claims on the stranger's interest.
+Considering the expectations formed of it after reading Prescott and
+Irving, most English people will pronounce it to be a disappointment.
+From certain points of view it remains the pleasantest place for a
+protracted stay in Andalusia during the summer. It is only when you come
+to it from Seville or Cordova or Cadiz, that you realize how cool, in
+comparison, is this city on the plateau between the snow-clad mountains.
+Even before the sun has gone down, you can dine very pleasantly in the
+open, hearkening to the splash of the fountains, and inhaling the
+fragrance of the rose. There is no need here, as at Seville, to shut
+yourself, till nightfall, within walls three feet thick. By night we
+stroll across the Plaza of the Alhambra, and see the white city gleaming
+with a shimmer reflected in the luminous sky above. Granada resumes her
+aspect of an Oriental city beneath the crescent moon riding triumphant
+over Andalusia.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--A CORNER IN THE OLD QUARTER]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+MALAGA
+
+
+Second in size among Andalusian cities, Malaga is the least interesting.
+Were it not for the sea, its position would be one of singular
+remoteness. On the extreme verge of Europe, the mighty Sierra Nevada
+rises behind it, and cuts it off from the rest of Spain. Yet as a
+flourishing port it is one of the towns in the Peninsula best known
+among Englishmen. It is beloved by our sailors. From the odd phases of
+life to be seen in and around the harbour, they derive their notions of
+the people and the country. With that utter absence of curiosity
+noticeable in their kind, they never penetrate inland, or even into the
+outskirts of the town. But nothing can dispel Jack's conviction that his
+knowledge of Spain and the Spaniards is intimate and profound.
+
+Malaga is not, as its appearance suggests, a city of purely modern
+growth. It was known to the Phoenicians and the Romans, and before it
+became subject to the Almoravides was an independent principality under
+the Hammudiya dynasty. Later it shared the fortunes of the Sultanate of
+Granada, and its siege and capture by Ferdinand and Isabella contributed
+to bring about the fall of the capital. This part of its history is
+dealt with in great detail by Prescott. Among the numerous incidents of
+the siege was a determined attempt on the part of a Moor named Ibrahim
+al Gherbi to assassinate the Spanish sovereign. The defence was
+conducted by the indomitable Hemet el Zegri, who yielded to famine
+rather than to the arms of the besiegers. The treatment of the fallen
+city leaves an indelible blot on the fame of the conquerors. The
+population, with the exception of a few hundreds, were sold into
+slavery, presents of the fairest maidens being made to the various
+courts of Europe. A worse fate was reserved for the Jews and renegades,
+who were committed to the flames.
+
+The old Moorish fortress of Gibralfaro still frowns down on the lively
+city to remind us of those days. Some of the walls and towers are
+believed to be of Phoenician origin. The stronghold has undergone
+repeated restorations and adaptations to military requirements, but a
+great deal of Moorish work may still be detected. A horseshoe arch
+behind the Paseo de la Alameda serves to identify the Moslems' dockyard
+or Atarazanas, and to indicate how far the sea has receded in the wake
+of the banished race southwards towards Africa.
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--THE HARBOUR]
+
+The Cathedral towers high above all the other buildings of the
+city. It is in the Classical style, and though designed by Diego de
+Siloe in 1528, was built for the most part in the early eighteenth
+century. It must be confessed that it looks better at a distance than
+near. The interior is solemn and cold. It is worth visiting for some
+specimens of Cano's art which it contains, and for Mena's magnificent
+carving in the choir. As at Granada, the edifice is adjoined by a
+smaller church called the Sagrario, founded by the Catholic Sovereigns
+in 1488 as the cathedral of the conquered city.
+
+But it is not for its monuments or historical associations that Malaga
+is to be visited. Its interest is of to-day. And in truth it needed not
+the hand of man to embellish a spot where Nature has been so lavish of
+her choicest gifts. The gardens round Malaga abound in the finest
+specimens of tropical flora. Tall india-rubber plants, gigantic
+eucalyptus, great bamboos, the rarest exotics, such as the _Pritchardia
+folifera_, the araucaria, and the _Scaforthia elegans_, flourish on this
+favoured shore. The villas of the wealthier classes stand each in a
+veritable Paradise. And everywhere the white flower of the orange, the
+oleander, the vine, and tree-high ferns!
+
+This luxuriant vegetation is the less to be expected since want of water
+is the great drawback to the prosperity of the district. Through the
+middle of the town runs the Guadalmedina--a broad channel, without a
+drain of water! The new and magnificent promenade, planted with palms,
+sweeps round the sea-front, as fine as anything on the Riviera. To drive
+along it in the sensuous southern night is to drink a deep draught of
+the joy of life. At one point the drive descends into the bed of the
+river, along which you may proceed for a mile or more. And yet at times
+the Guadalmedina becomes a roaring torrent, bursting its banks and
+sweeping away farmsteads and stock. It is difficult to say whether flood
+or drought has done most damage to the province.
+
+As at Seville, you find life here focussing in lane-like streets, closed
+to vehicles, and lined with cafés and casinos, among the finest I have
+seen in Spain. Here to an early hour of the morning the men of the city
+gossip in garrulous, intimate groups of nine and ten, all, as it seemed
+to me, talking together. The number of cigarettes smoked during the
+progress of these tremendous conversations must be stupendous. As you
+will see the same group meeting night after night, you wonder what there
+can be in the outwardly uneventful round of life of Malaga to supply
+topics for conversation. To an Englishman there is a mystery about this
+ability to talk for five or six hours about nothing at all. You will see
+the same thing in the dullest provincial towns in France and Italy--the
+same groups of stout, bald-headed citizens talking with frantic
+animation every evening. Their newspapers afford the slenderest mental
+pabulum--their contents could be dismissed in ten minutes--and the
+respectable gentlemen in question are never seen to read books. How
+then do they recruit their stock of ideas and find an inexhaustible
+stock of topics for conversation?
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--THE GUADALMEDINA]
+
+Women are, of course, conspicuous by their absence. Here we have another
+illustration of the utterly false ideas Englishmen usually entertain
+concerning Latins. To judge from novels written fifty or even thirty
+years ago, John Bull appears to have regarded the foreigner with pitying
+contempt as a mere philanderer, always running after a petticoat; yet no
+one can be in Spain a fortnight without noticing the Spaniard's
+disinclination for female society, or at any rate how perfectly content
+he is without it.
+
+I do not fancy the ladies of Malaga care very much for society either,
+in our acceptation of the word. Looking out of the window appears to be
+their favourite recreation. They do not inherit the habit from the
+Moors, for that people, as I have said, were nearly all expelled at the
+Reconquest, and the town was resettled. All the Andalusian towns were
+wholly or in part emptied of their Mohammedan population when taken by
+the Christians, and repeopled with Castilians and others from Northern
+Spain. This fact is forgotten by those who recognize in every trait of
+the Andalusian a heritage from the Moor. We might as well think we
+derive our chief national characteristics from the Britons or the
+Normans.
+
+East of Malaga lie several coast towns of importance, within whose gates
+the traveller rarely sets foot. Motril, Adra, Almeria--what is there in
+them to reward the fatigue of a journey in a diligence along the parched
+shore, or in some crazy coasting craft, with timbers straining and
+creaking before the lightest breeze? Almeria is now connected directly
+by rail with Madrid and Granada. The prosperity of the whole district is
+bound to be greatly increased by the construction of the line so long
+promised from Guadix to Baza. This short link in the railway system
+would save the traveller from Malaga to Valencia nearly 180 miles, or
+its alternative--a long and exhausting diligence journey. It would also
+bring the southern parts of Andalusia into direct communication with the
+great commercial centres of eastern Spain and with Marseilles. It would
+supply us with a new route to Gibraltar, moreover. This, with a line
+from Jaca across the Pyrenees into France, and another from Huelva to
+connect with the Portuguese system Villa Real de São Antonio, are links
+of which Spain stands vitally in need.
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--A MARKET]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE WAY SOUTH
+
+
+At Bobadilla--the Clapham Junction of Andalusia--the Spanish railway
+system is joined by the line of that purely British undertaking, the
+Algeciras Railway Company. A Spaniard told me that this line would never
+have been built by one of his countrymen, as no one in Spain had any
+desire to facilitate Gibraltar's communication with England, and the
+country it traversed had been sufficiently opened up. I do not think it
+would be difficult to demonstrate that the line may prove of very
+substantial benefit to Spain, but I will confine myself to thanking the
+promoters for having rendered accessible certainly the most beautiful
+part of Andalusia, and in my opinion one of the most wildly picturesque
+regions of Europe. The country between Ronda and Algeciras is the
+Andalusia dreamt of by the romancers. It is a savage, silent country, of
+warmer browns and greens than the rest of Spain. Here the train takes
+you no longer across the scorched sky-rimmed plains, but along the very
+edge of dizzy ravines, at the foot of which, hundreds of feet below,
+angry white torrents foam and froth. Now you are climbing with obvious
+effort the steep shoulder of a mountain, now you are racing headlong
+down into a valley which seems to lie almost vertically beneath you. Now
+you plunge into the bowels of the Sierra and emerge with a shriek of
+triumph in a cauldron-shaped valley, from which Nature has provided no
+egress. There is no want of verdure; the cork-woods, vineyards, and
+olives dot the lower slopes of the tawny hills. And far up against the
+sky-line loom shattered towers and crumbling castles, whence you seem to
+see trains of steel-clad knights issuing forth to do battle with the
+Moor.
+
+The country is reminiscent essentially of the days of chivalry. Perhaps
+the ruined strongholds and the dark gorges are still haunted by the
+knights, who have driven away all other ghosts and will not let us think
+of anyone but them. The Romans were once here, and at Munda, as every
+schoolboy knows, Cæsar defeated with great slaughter the army led by the
+sons of Pompey. That town has now been identified with Ronda, the
+romantic capital of this most romantic region. Here the people have not
+forgotten Rome. They will show you a cave where in the semi-darkness you
+descry awful forms in stone, seeming like a ghostly and gigantic choir
+of monks. These are the Roman priests turned to stone upon the downfall
+of their gods, those of the people who cherish tradition will tell you.
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--PACKING LEMONS]
+
+The town itself you will not find very interesting, though the
+escutcheons displayed over every second or third house in one quarter
+will evoke some reflections on departed glory and the fall of the
+mighty. In some such _solar_ our novelists Seton Merriman and Mr. Mason
+have laid the scenes of leading episodes in their two charming romances.
+Ronda has had a stirring past. She shared in all the vicissitudes of
+Granada, and towards the end of the long agony of the Reconquest was the
+scene of constant and ferocious border warfare.
+
+It was here that Mohammed V. received the head of his rival Abu Saïd,
+who had been put to death at Seville by Pedro the Cruel. The town was
+taken by the army of Ferdinand and Isabella on May 22, 1485. The people
+of the surrounding mountains were deeply attached to the creed of Islam,
+and rose in revolt in 1501 against their Christian oppressors. Before
+they were crushed they inflicted a severe blow on their adversaries,
+completely wiping out a force under Don Alonso de Aguilar. Westward, on
+the other side of the high mountains, lies Zahara, the capture of which
+one December night by Mulai Hasan was the signal for the last crusade
+against the Spanish Moors of Granada.
+
+But it is to its striking situation that Ronda owes its interest. Fitted
+rather to be the eyrie of eagles than the abode of men, it looks down
+from the verge of precipitous cliffs nearly three thousand feet above
+sea level. Midway, town and rocky hill are cleft asunder by the Tajo,
+an awful gorge, two hundred feet across, and twice as much in depth.
+Gazing down into the abyss, you realize with something of a shudder that
+a pebble dropped over the edge of the precipice would fall sheer and
+plumb, without rebound or ricochet, into the river Guadalevin, which
+rushes below, filling the chasm with foam and spray. The ravine is
+spanned by a bridge built in the eighteenth century, a wonderful
+construction, from which when it was near completion its architect fell
+headlong. Access to the river may be obtained by a flight of 365 steps
+called the Mina, hewn through the rock. This singular work was executed
+by the Moors, who thus ensured themselves a supply of water against the
+dangers of a siege. Numerous subterranean chambers are also ascribed to
+them, or rather to their Christian captives.
+
+But the most delightful spot in Ronda is the little Alameda laid out on
+the edge of a perpendicular cliff. Leaning on the railing you may drink
+in the beauty and grandeur of a prospect hardly surpassed in Europe. The
+fair fertile country below is shut in by an amphitheatre of mountains
+which soar upwards to heights of five and six thousand feet. The eye
+seeks in vain for an outlet from the valley, till it discerns the white,
+dusty high-road winding, doubling, and finally disappearing over a dip
+between the ranges. The river, a thousand feet below, swirls and gurgles
+among the rocks, glad to have escaped from the dark gorge to which it
+has so long been confined.
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--THE TAJO]
+
+In the evenings the air is keen at Ronda, and in summer you may often
+hear English spoken by officers of the garrison of Gibraltar and their
+families, who come here to escape the torrid heat of the Rock. With a
+little capital and energy the place might be developed into a
+flourishing health resort.
+
+But now the way lies south and seaward. Ever downwards slowly travels
+the train. The night gathers over the castled crags and the mysterious
+forests. We detect by their gleam the rivers over which we pass. But now
+a bright starlike light is seen to the southward. It flashes and is
+gone, to reappear the next instant. We are nearing the strait, and the
+searchlight tells us that Britannia watches here with unsleeping eyes
+over the fortunes of her children in two seas and two continents.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE KINGDOM OF MURCIA
+
+
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--ROMAN BRIDGES]
+
+The province of Murcia resembles the home of the Arab race more closely
+than does any other part of Europe. It is a wild, fierce region, hot and
+tawny like a lion's hide, furrowed by deep winding ravines, intersected
+by serrated mountains, on whose flanks, for the heat of the sun, no
+green thing can grow. Much of the land is occupied by plateaux, bare and
+rocky like great altars on which all that lives is offered to and
+consumed by the sun. From these uplands you survey vast expanses of
+sheer desert--fulvid, rocky, and scorching. Your gaze may travel far
+before you descry any fitting resting-place for man. The mountains
+afford no shade, even in the deepest cañons the streams are often
+traceable only by a narrow path of sand and pebbles, yet here and there
+has man successfully wrested from harsh Nature a secure foothold, an
+oasis kept ever green by some more constant rivulet. The waters of the
+Segura and the Sangonera are the life-blood of the province. Wayward and
+Arethusa-like, the rivers have with infinite pains been coaxed into
+conformity with the needs of man. To the science of irrigation the
+province owes its existence. Water here is above all things prized and
+sold like treasure to the highest bidder. Mr. Jean Brunhés in a lately
+published work gives some most curious and interesting particulars
+relating to the system of irrigation in force in Murcia and the
+adjoining province of Alicante. The volume of the Monegre is divided
+into old water and new water, the former belonging of right to the
+ancient riparian proprietors, the latter to the owners of the locks and
+reservoirs. A very vicious system prevails at Lorca. There a private
+company is the owner of all the water of the Guadalentin, subject to the
+condition of supplying the old proprietors of the adjoining lands with
+500 litres per second every day. In consequence, in times of drought the
+company is mistress of the situation and can force up prices to a figure
+absolutely ruinous to the cultivators. Only in this way can it make good
+the losses incurred in rainy seasons. The precious fluid being sold,
+too, by public auction, the rich farmer is in a position to deprive his
+poorer rivals of their means of subsistence. To palliate this evil to
+some extent, the rule now obtains that the bidder who has bought the
+first lot can buy as many of the lots following as he may desire at the
+same figure. The price therefore is not forced up too rapidly. Moreover,
+if the company's barrage at a certain point is swept away or broken
+through by the current, the water which thus escapes becomes public
+property. This accident occurs five or six times a year, and the
+company is not allowed to make the barrage any stronger when it is
+rebuilt. Notwithstanding these concessions, it seems that the principle
+of private enterprise has been pushed too far in this part of the world.
+
+Mr. Brunhés described the sale of water at Lorca in the following words:
+
+"The sale takes place in a badly-lit hall with naked walls, on a level
+with the street, with which it communicates by an immense door almost
+its own breadth. This door remains open during the sale and the crowd of
+bidders stand partly in the street. The hall has no floor--you stand on
+the bare ground. Opposite the door at the end of the hall is a
+railed-off dais entered by a side door, and without any direct
+communication with the public side. On the dais the secretaries are
+seated at a large table covered by a threadbare green cloth. Behind the
+table are five arm-chairs. In one is seated the presiding officer (a
+civil engineer who must own no land in the 'Vega'). On a stool is
+stationed the crier.
+
+"At eight o'clock in the morning, at a sign from the presiding officer,
+the crier pronounces these words in a singing monotonous voice and
+without any pause between the two phrases: 'In honour of the Holy
+Sacrament of the altar, who buys the first lot of Sotellana?'
+Immediately shouts go up 'Eight, nine, ten reals!' One voice overpowers
+the other, wide-open mouths vociferate loudly, necks are strained,
+muscles grow tense with excitement. The bidders press and crush
+each other against the iron railing, for the one nearest has the best
+chance of being heard. The presiding officer listens, and follows the
+frantic shouting with sovereign calm. Suddenly, with a quick gesture, he
+designates the highest bidder. At once the clamour ceases. Amid absolute
+silence the man indicated calls out his name, which the clerks write
+down.
+
+"The men are hatless. Some wear black or dark-coloured handkerchiefs
+bound round their heads, but all hold their broad-brimmed hats in their
+hands. No one smokes or talks till the bidding recommences, and even
+those in the street are silent and bare-headed. It is easy to see that
+all are peasants. Heads are closely cropped; here are no beards or
+moustaches, no one wears a collar, and most carry a cloak other than the
+aristocratic 'Capa' on the shoulders or arm. It is a curious and
+impressive sight enough, these bronzed physiognomies animated by one
+desire to obtain possession as cheaply as may be of the supreme good,
+water."
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--AT THE FOUNTAIN]
+
+Before the industry of man had harnessed the wayward streams this hot
+land must have been little better than an arid wilderness, yet it has
+been inhabited from the remotest times, and its possession was keenly
+contested between the great powers of antiquity. The natives were known
+to the ancients as the Mastiani, and are credited with the virtues which
+were so long supposed to have been characteristic of primitive man. This
+simple, blameless race fell an easy victim to the wily Phoenicians,
+who scented the precious metals within these barren hills. Elche,
+Guadix, and Jijona betray in their etymology a Semitic origin. Next came
+the Greek Vikings from Samos and Rhodes and Phokaia, establishing
+themselves at many points along the eastern shore of the Iberian land.
+The rivalry between the Phoenician and Hellenic colonies precipitated
+a contest between their respective allies, the Carthaginians and the
+Romans. Hasdrubal founded the port of New Carthage, the name of which is
+still preserved in Cartagena, whence, with a host of 90,000 foot and
+12,000 horse, Hannibal started on his famous march to Rome. The fall of
+the city, which was bravely defended by Mago against Scipio, entailed
+the destruction of the Punic power in Spain.
+
+Under the Roman yoke Carthago Nova became the capital of the vast
+province of Tarraconensis, and the adjoining district in consequence
+felt the full force of all the attacks made by rebels and barbarians on
+the tottering empire. Under the Visigoths it was erected into a duchy by
+the name of Aurariola. The Duke Theodomir, unlike most of his peers,
+offered a strenuous resistance to the Moslem arms, and when defeated in
+battle and besieged in Orihuela, succeeded by a stratagem in preserving
+his territory. By disguising all the women as warriors and parading them
+on the walls, he so deceived the Moors as to the strength of the
+garrison as to obtain from them a recognition of the independence of the
+duchy, subject to the suzerainty of the khalifa.
+
+The province became known after its chief by the name of Todmir. It
+endured as an autonomous state for some sixty-eight years, its final
+absorption in the Moslem empire being brought about by the last dukes
+espousing the cause of Charlemagne or his Moorish allies. Arabic
+colonists poured in and soon out-numbered the Christian inhabitants. The
+last province of Spain to bow before the Crescent became rapidly the
+most Moorish of any.
+
+Cartagena and Orihuela, the old Visigothic centres, declined, and
+Murcia, practically a Mohammedan foundation, took their place. The city
+rivalled Toledo and Cordova as a manufactory of arms and munitions of
+war. It underwent the usual vicissitudes of Moorish states, forming now
+part of one kingdom, now of another, at times independent, more often
+subject to Valencia, Granada, or Cordova. Finally, in 1243, Abu Bekr,
+the titular amir of Murcia, acknowledged the suzerainty of Castile, only
+to repudiate it in 1252. The war lasted some time, but the desertion of
+Al Ahmar of Granada left Abu Bekr at the mercy of the Christians. Murcia
+was taken in 1266 by Don Jaime of Aragon, who immediately handed over
+his conquest to his son-in-law, Alfonso of Castile. The step, though
+probably not dictated by motives of policy, was a wise one, for it left
+a sort of buffer state between Aragon and Granada, and preserved the
+frontiers of the former kingdom from molestation by the Moors for the
+next two centuries.
+
+The town of Murcia has completely rid itself of all outward evidences of
+its erstwhile subjection to Islam. Gone is the Alcazar, where the amirs
+mimicked the state of Cordova and Toledo, gone is the wall which kept
+the Christian out, gone is the mosque wherein thousands of turbaned
+heads were bowed daily towards Mecca. Yet in the narrow dark streets
+like the Sierpes of Seville, across which awnings are stretched, we
+might recognize something of the East, were not such thoroughfares
+equally characteristic of the Christian South. The Calles de la Traperia
+and de la Plateria, however, irresistibly recall Smyrna. They lead into
+one of those dazzling white, dusty squares which every Southern and
+Eastern city boasts, and which is always named in Spain after the
+Constitution, in Italy after Victor Emmanuel, and in France after the
+Republic. Murcia is hotter than Seville, and the passage of this plaza
+between eleven in the forenoon and five in the afternoon requires the
+courage of a Mutius Scævola. In the evening you may join the citizens in
+their promenade upon the Malecon, which affords a charming view of the
+rich "huerta" or vale of the Segura. This is described by Mr. Brunhés as
+"an admirable zone of model agricultural establishments. The soil is
+levelled and prepared for irrigation with geometrical precision. To each
+particular crop corresponds a design with little shelving beds of
+special forms." Not an inch of ground is wasted; on the summit of the
+slopes, for instance, sweet potatoes are planted at regular
+intervals. The cereals and vegetables are tended with special care,
+almost individually. The melons are protected by coverings. No one can
+visit the environs of Murcia without being impressed by the
+extraordinary industry and thriftiness of its people. And field labour
+in this climate must be arduous in the extreme. But no doubt the
+mythical "dolce far niente" Spaniard will continue for many years to
+haunt the back streets of literature in company with the big-toothed
+English girl, her red-whiskered parent, and other creations of ignorance
+and prejudice.
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--A MOORISH GATEWAY]
+
+Murcia cannot be called an interesting town. It has only one
+"sight"--and that not of first-class interest--the Cathedral. This
+occupies, as usual, the site of the mosque, and dates in its oldest part
+from 1368. The west front was restored in the seventeenth century,
+fortunately before the decay of Spanish art had become too conspicuous.
+The interior produces a good effect, though robbed of much of its
+interest by a fire some sixty years ago. The choir stalls are good, as
+they generally are in this country of clever wood-carvers, and came from
+a suppressed monastery in the neighbourhood. The reredos is modern and
+poor. With a glance at the urn containing the internal organs of Alfonso
+the Learned, we pass on to the beautiful and interesting Junteron
+Chapel. This was founded in 1515 by the Archdeacon of Lorca, Don Gil
+Junteron, and is in the most exuberant Renaissance style. It is
+astonishing that where the figures and designs are so numerous, so
+intermingled, and so complicated, each should be sculptured with such
+exquisite skill and correctness. The Velez Chapel is a little earlier,
+and was evidently modelled on the Constable's Chapel at Burgos. The
+style, as might be expected, reminds one also of the Chapel Royal at
+Granada. Parts of it, says Don Rodrigo Amador de los Rios, evidence the
+painful caprices and aberrations which announce the death agony of a
+powerful art in its decline. It would be dangerous to express such an
+opinion in Murcia, where the chapel is accounted the eighth and greatest
+wonder of the world. In somewhat more restrained terms the sacristan
+will call your attention to the panelling and lockers in the Sacristy,
+which occupies the centre of the graceful steeple, and certainly
+deserves the epithet of sumptuous, so liberally bestowed in Spain.
+
+Much older than Murcia, Cartagena has preserved even fewer monuments of
+antiquity, though it has not lost the military character first impressed
+upon it by its founder Hasdrubal. For this is the first arsenal of
+Spain, and perhaps its strongest fortress. Its splendid sheltered
+harbour is defended by powerful forts and formidable batteries. Their
+fire has not always been directed upon the enemies of Spain. For many
+months in the year 1873 over them waved the red flag of the
+"Intransigentes," the extreme communistic republicans, who,
+simultaneously with the Carlists of the north, threatened ruin to
+Castelar's government at Madrid. The acquisition of the great national
+arsenal without firing a shot was, of course, of the utmost
+advantage to these determined revolutionaries. They disposed of 583
+pieces of ordnance, including twenty-eight Krupp guns, with 180,000
+shells and 4,332 quintals of powder. In addition they were supported by
+the ironclad frigates Numancia, Vittoria, Tetuan, and Mendez Nuñez. The
+garrison, in addition to the enthusiastic population, included several
+revolted battalions of regular troops under the command of General
+Contreras. The communist Junta was presided over by Don Antonio Gálvez.
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--A STREET SCENE]
+
+Against this terrible stronghold of the revolution, General Martinez
+Campos advanced with an army from Madrid with orders to reduce the place
+with the utmost despatch. This was easier said than done. Supplies were
+lacking; the advantage in artillery lay entirely with the besieged. The
+Carlists effected diversions in favour of the Intransigentes--an odd
+coalition. Meantime, three of the revolutionary vessels were seized by
+the Prussian squadron as pirates--an utterly unjustifiable interference
+with the domestic affairs of another State. We might as reasonably have
+seized the vessels of the Confederate States in 1864. The Prussians and
+Italians exacted, moreover, a war indemnity of 50,000 pesetas from the
+Cantonal Junta, which body became a prey to internal dissensions. One of
+its members was assassinated. Taking advantage of these embarrassments
+of the besieged, the republican troops redoubled their efforts. Señor
+Castelar came down from Madrid to assume the supreme command, and
+Martinez Campos was superseded by General Lopéz Dominguez. An incessant
+bombardment was kept up, the besieged responding shell by shell. In
+January the frigate Tetuan was burnt to the water's edge, and a day or
+two later the explosion of the gun park destroyed hundreds of the
+garrison. The end was near. The city had for half a year defied almost
+the whole kingdom, and withstood the covert attacks of foreign Powers.
+Among the revolutionaries were men who burned to emulate the Numantians,
+and to make of themselves, the whole population, and the city, one vast
+blazing hecatomb. Before this desperate resolution could be executed,
+the Government troops forced their way into wretched, blood-drenched
+Cartagena. Gálvez, Contreras, and the leaders of the cantonal movement
+escaped by sea in the ironclad Numancia, which far exceeded the
+Government vessels in speed, and took refuge in Algeria. Thus collapsed
+a movement which was, after the Commune of Paris, the most determined
+organized attempt ever made to subvert the existing constitution of
+European society.
+
+I have given at some length this chapter in the history of Cartagena,
+partly because the town has little interest in itself, and partly
+because these events, though so recent and so significant, are never so
+much as alluded to by most writers of travel books. Out of so much evil
+good came at last, for these wellnigh fatal disorders opened the eyes of
+the Spaniards to the instability of the Madrid Government, and
+formed the prelude to the reign of peace inaugurated by the accession to
+the throne of King Alfonso XII.
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--THE MARKET]
+
+Apart from its historical associations, Murcia repays the attention of
+the traveller less than any other province of Spain. Fortunately, almost
+the only places of interest it contains--the ones I have mentioned--lie
+on or close to the direct route from Granada into the old kingdom of
+Valencia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+IN THE OLD KINGDOM OF VALENCIA
+
+
+The southernmost position of the ancient kingdom of Valencia belongs
+geographically and historically to Murcia. The huerta in which Orihuela
+stands is a continuation of the huerta of Murcia, and in the town itself
+we recognize the Aurariola which was the capital of the latter kingdom.
+I did not stop at Orihuela, but I understand that it remains distinct
+from all other towns in Valencia, in that its people speak pure
+Castilian. For that variety of the Romance tongue which I may denominate
+Catalan is spoken with local modifications all along the eastern coast
+of Spain, from the mouth of the Segura to the frontier of Rousillon. It
+is not, of course, a mere dialect of Castilian. It is a distinct
+language, believed by most authorities to have been the language of
+those Romanized Spaniards who were driven north of the Pyrenees by the
+Arabic invasion, and who reintroduced it on their reconquest of this
+portion of their old territory. Before Valencia was recovered by James
+I. of Aragon--Jaime lo Conqueridor--the Christians of the province
+probably spoke Castilian or a tongue akin to it. Catalan was simply
+the language of the new rulers, which the people soon acquired. In the
+province of Aragon itself Catalan, or Limousin as some call it, was
+never spoken. This circumstance no doubt powerfully contributed to the
+adoption of Castilian, in preference to the sister tongue, upon the
+unification of the two kingdoms. But for some reason unknown to
+us--unless it was merely the proximity of Murcia--Orihuela resisted the
+Catalanizing influence of its conqueror.
+
+[Illustration: ORIHUELA--ON THE RIVER SEGURA]
+
+Elche, our first stopping-place, famous in its way, is very often
+described and compared to half-a-dozen localities in Asia and Africa. I
+also will venture on a comparison, and say that from certain points of
+view it reminded me of Ismailia. It is completely surrounded by
+magnificent date-palms, the number of which a French author estimates at
+80,000. In the shade of the avenues formed by these majestic trees
+flourish the laurel, the rose, and the geranium; beyond extend crops of
+lucerne and wheat, watered by the carefully regulated Vinalapó. For all
+the shade dispersed by the palms, Elche merits its sobriquet, "the
+frying-pan"! The temperature completes the resemblance with Africa. From
+the summit of the hill on which it is built, the town is seen to be
+situated in a real oasis. Beyond the outer ring of cultivation extends a
+desert as white and as saline as that which borders the Suez Canal. The
+eye rests lovingly on the not far distant sea.
+
+Elche makes an agreeable impression on most travellers. Gustave Doré
+has left us his impressions of it--over-imaginative as usual. Mr. Frank
+Barrett, that entertaining novelist, introduces the town into English
+fiction. In Spain it is not more celebrated for its palms (which are
+exported for religious uses) than for its Passion or Mystery Play, the
+only one of the kind in the kingdom. This institution is explained by
+the following legend. On the night of December 29, 1370, a mounted
+coastguard named Francisco Cantó, while patrolling the shore,
+encountered a man seated on a huge coffer. This stranger entreated the
+guard to carry his burden to Elche, and to deposit it at the first house
+where he saw a light, and having obtained his reluctant consent,
+abruptly disappeared. Cantó, in accordance with the mysterious man's
+instructions, left the chest at the Hermitage of San Sebastian. On
+opening it, it was found to contain an image of the Virgin and the words
+and music of the play as now performed. The image was regarded as
+miraculous, and resisted all attempts to remove it from the hermitage.
+It was not my good fortune to see the play, which takes place every year
+in the Iglesia Mayor, transformed for the purpose into a theatre. The
+representation lasts two days, the subject being the Assumption of the
+Virgin. The words, in the old Valencian dialect, are wedded to old
+Gregorian music. I understand that with a naïveté characteristic of
+medieval institutions, the Supreme Being Himself is personified on the
+stage.
+
+[Illustration: ELCHE--A STREET]
+
+A spectacle equally curious but not so picturesque is the daily sale of
+water, which takes place here as at Lorca, but with official calm and
+with none of the excitement to be remarked at the latter place.
+
+From this sweltering climate we hasten to the sea-shore, where at rare
+intervals a refreshing breeze may be felt. Alicante, the second town in
+the kingdom of Valencia, is modern, commercial, and thriving. The
+land-locked harbour is bordered by broad white quays, glistering in the
+sun's rays, with heaps of tarry cordage, and canvas distilling
+characteristically marine odours. Trains of mules pass by dragging
+enormous loads of oranges. In the harbour women are busy loading an
+English craft which flies the Blue Peter; they swarm up and down the
+side like ants, or rather like the colliers so familiar to passengers
+through the Suez Canal. The background to this scene of light and
+animation is formed by the enormous rock, comparable to Gibraltar, which
+is crowned by the ancient castle of Santa Barbara--so called after the
+saint on whose festival, in the year 1248, it was taken by the
+Castilians. Four years later it was stormed by the Aragonese, King
+Alfonso the Battler being the third to enter the fortress. The Castilian
+governor, with his sword in one hand and his keys in the other, fell
+pierced with wounds at the conqueror's feet. The possession of the town,
+as of Orihuela, was afterwards confirmed to Aragon by treaty.
+
+Alicante is resorted to for sea-bathing during the summer. The water, I
+am told, is then lukewarm--hot enough, according to one account, to
+shave with! The thought of the place in August makes the Northerner
+reach for a cooling drink. But I am assured that the heat is tempered by
+refreshing breezes from the sea, and that in the long shadow of the
+castle rock delicious evenings may be enjoyed.
+
+So we journey northward. The country reveals the results of the most
+systematic and intensive culture. We are told that the Valencians are
+lazy, but if so it must be because the most cleverly devised schemes of
+irrigation and cultivation have set them free of labour.
+
+The province of Alicante--the southernmost of the three into which the
+ancient kingdom is divided--contains several important towns. There is
+the beautifully-named Villajoyosa, Benidorm--so Provençal in sound--and
+Alcoy, a busy, industrial centre, situated in a blooming orchard
+country. Here is celebrated every April the festival of St. George, when
+a sort of sham fight takes place between peasants arrayed respectively
+as Moors and Christians. From Alcoy a short line runs to Gandía on the
+coast, the cradle of the famous house of Borgia.
+
+[Illustration: A FISHER GIRL (COAST OF MALAGA)]
+
+Every town and village in this thickly peopled region has its historical
+memories. Villena recalls the famous family to which it gave the title
+of marquis; Jativa, a desperate struggle during the War of the Spanish
+Succession, in which much English blood was spilled. This latter town
+was the birthplace of Ribera, and, as some say, of Alexander
+Borgia. It is situated in a country which might be described as a
+veritable Mahomet's paradise. The cottages in the neighbourhood are
+almost suffocated by the palm and orange trees. Beneath the golden fruit
+we find our way to the castle, or rather castles--the new and the
+old--built side by side upon a hill. Part of the fabric dates from the
+time of the Moors. Later, the stronghold served as a state prison.
+Within its walls languished and died the unhappy Count of Urgel, a
+pretender to the throne of Aragon, and here passed a ten years'
+captivity (1512-22) the Duke of Calabria, the rightful heir to the
+throne of Naples, to leave his prison on his appointment to the
+viceroyalty of the fair province he surveyed from its windows!
+
+The custodian of the castle shows the usual underground chambers, which
+may have been, as he alleges, dungeons, but were quite as likely (as
+they generally were with us) store-rooms and wine cellars.
+
+At Alcira we cross the Jucár, after the Ebro the most important Spanish
+river running into the Mediterranean Sea. It rises within a few miles of
+the source of the Tagus, in the Montes Universales, on the borders of
+Aragon and New Castile, and flows south through the plains of La Mancha
+till it enters the province of Albacete, when it takes an easterly
+course. In the same province of Valencia it has excavated some
+magnificent gorges. It is indeed a strong, impetuous stream, bursting
+its banks again and again and levying a heavy tribute on the
+surrounding country. Each time it makes for itself a new channel,
+sweeping away whole villages. The village of Alcocer stood on its banks,
+near its confluence with the Albaida. After countless harvests had been
+devastated and inestimable damage to some extent repaired, the two
+streams swelled with fury and in one day reduced a vast extent of
+country to a flat stretch of mud. Then, by another shifting of its bed,
+the terrible Jucár laid bare the foundations of the homes it had ruined.
+There is no security of tenure within its valley! Where your house
+stands to-day, ships may ride to-morrow. Yet here as everywhere else
+along the prolific shore, the waters form the great source of wealth,
+fertilizing vast rice-fields and heavy-laden orchards. The marshy and
+unhealthy lagoon of the Albufera, from which one of Napoleon's marshals
+took his title, is being gradually filled up by the débris brought down
+from the mountains by the rivers, and will ultimately form a "huerta" of
+untold fertility. Meanwhile every effort is made to encourage the
+afforesting of the rugged hill-sides, in order to check the violence of
+the floods and the denuding of the arid, desiccated soil. As a result of
+these wise measures, the kingdom of Valencia will within a short period
+become one of the two or three richest agricultural districts in all
+Europe.
+
+[Illustration: A WATER CARRIER]
+
+The history of the land is that of its capital. Valencia is first
+mentioned as having been granted by the consul Junius Brutus to the
+warriors of Viriathus upon the death of their chief, and their
+consequent surrender. The history of few Roman colonies, as it has
+reached us, is of interest. The province had the usual martyrs under the
+persecutions of Diocletian and Decius, and was the place of banishment
+of the zealot Ermengild. It remained under the Moorish yoke for over
+five hundred years, at one time forming part of the khalifate, at other
+times constituting one or more petty kingdoms.
+
+Don Téodoro Llorente speaks of "The slave kings" of Valencia, and thus
+describes the rulers of uncertain and various origin who, like the
+Janissaries of Turkey, had begun as slaves in the palace of the khalifa
+and won power for themselves with their swords. One of these princes
+added the Balearic Isles to his realms, and unsuccessfully attempted the
+conquest of Sardinia.
+
+The kingdom thus founded by military adventurers was overthrown by the
+most famous of that warlike brood.
+
+The history of the events which brought about the conquest of Valencia
+by the Cid is extremely complex. The king or amir, Kadir, was the puppet
+of the rival powers which aspired to the possession of his dominions,
+and was alternately upheld on his tottering throne by one and the other.
+Weary of this dishonourable tutelage, the people arose under the
+leadership of Ibn Jahhaf. Kadir fled disguised as a woman, but was
+detected and beheaded. That strange anomaly, a Mohammedan republic, was
+formed. In other words, Valencia was governed by an assembly of
+notables called the Al Jama, of which Ibn Jahhaf was the president.
+
+The people which arrogates the right to choose its ruler has ever been
+considered a sort of pirate among the nations, and fair game for more
+powerful states. Kadir at the moment of his deposition had been
+nominally under the protection of the Cid. That redoubtable warrior,
+under the pretext of avenging his protégé's death, advanced on Valencia.
+The Almoravides came to his assistance, but precipitately retired.
+Distrusting these allies almost as much as the Christians, Ibn Jahhaf
+amused the Cid with negotiations, but meanwhile made preparations for
+defence. He became the special object of the famous warrior's hatred,
+and when the city fell, was burnt to death at the stake before the eyes
+of his horrified countrymen. The Cid now ruled Valencia as absolute lord
+and despot till his death, five years later, in 1097. The legend need
+not be related here, how his wife defended the city for two years after
+his death, and finally, setting his corpse fully armed upon his
+warhorse, won a victory over the terrified Moors and thus took him to
+his last resting-place at Cardeña.
+
+Valencia was not finally wrested from the yoke of Islam till the
+memorable 28th of September, 1238, when the standard of the victorious
+Jaime I. of Aragon was hoisted over the tower of Ali Bufat. In the
+history of Aragon the conquest ranks with the taking of Seville in the
+history of Castile. Granada was the joint conquest of both kingdoms. It
+is curious to compare the ready submission of the Moors, and their
+surrender of whole kingdoms to the Christians, sometimes as the result
+of a single battle, with the tenacious resistance offered by their
+descendants in Algeria in modern times. Enervated by the climate of
+Spain, the Mussulmans of that country were absolutely incapable of
+maintaining a prolonged guerrilla warfare. If a fortified capital was
+taken they at once handed over the whole kingdom to the conqueror. They
+were not, of course, peculiar in this respect. The sentiment of
+nationality and physical courage are characteristic far more of the
+modern than of the ancient world. We have only to compare the resistance
+of the Anglo-Saxons to the Normans with that of the Boers to the
+British, of the French in the Hundred Years' War with that of their
+descendants in 1871, to realize how much more of manliness and endurance
+we possess than did our ancestors. We must go back to the days of
+Leonidas and Regulus to find parallels for the exploits of our own
+Indian army; to Numantia and Saguntum for parallels to Saragossa and
+Gerona. National and individual self-respect withered under feudalism,
+and revived only on the introduction of free institutions.
+
+Valencia to-day, as befits the capital of a rich, prosperous province,
+is a handsome, modern progressive city. There is little or nothing about
+to remind one of its erstwhile masters, the Moors, and it has not
+retained more monuments of its past than most other cities. Interesting
+it is not from the sightseer's point of view, nor convenient from a
+stranger's, since indications of the names of the streets are few and
+far between. New avenues are being formed, and in these magnificent
+houses are arising, all happily in different styles, original and
+individual, forming a contrast to the dull uniformity of most
+Continental town perspectives. At two points the town is entered by
+massive gates of the castellated type--the Torres de Serranos and de
+Cuarte. The former date from the fourteenth century, and have two
+octagonal towers with heavy machicolations at two-thirds of their
+height; the machicolation is continued across the connecting storey,
+which is richly panelled above the narrow archway. The Torres de Cuarte
+are drum towers, similarly flanking a gateway; in this case the parapet
+is itself borne on corbels and machicolated. The work dates from the
+fifteenth century. These towers add much to the picturesqueness of their
+respective quarters. The Citadel, in another part of the town, replaces
+the old temple built in 1238 by the Knights Templars on the spot where
+the Aragonese planted their cross on entering Valencia. It contains the
+chapel where St. Vicente Ferrer, "the Angel of the Judgment," took the
+habit of St. Dominic.
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--A PICADOR]
+
+A glance at the Cathedral and the Lonja, and we shall have "done"
+Valencia in the tourist's sense. The former building was founded in the
+year 1262 on the site of the principal mosque. In it the Kings of
+Aragon took the oath as Kings of Valencia. Repeatedly restored, and
+"modernized" in 1750, it presents a dreadful jumble of styles, and is
+far behind the cathedrals of Andalusia in beauty and interest. The
+Micalet Tower, however, rising at the end of the Calle de Zaragoza,
+presents a striking appearance. It is the great landmark of the
+district, and the Valencians refer to exile as "losing sight of the
+Micalet." The view from the summit is very fine. The main entrance to
+the Cathedral is poor, but the north door, called the Puerta de los
+Apostoles, richly sculptured and delicately moulded, exhibits the skill
+and imagery of the fourteenth century at its best.
+
+Above the interesting semicircular Puerta del Palau are seen on
+medallions the heads of seven men and seven women--these representing
+the seven knights of the Conquest and the seven ladies (some say of
+Valencia, and others of Lerida) whom they married. From these alliances
+sprang the nobility of the province. This doorway was evidently
+constructed by the architect who designed the Puerta dels Infants at
+Lerida.
+
+The interior has also suffered by restoration. The pointed arches have
+been rounded, the Gothic columns almost concealed by Corinthian
+pilasters, the walls covered with marbles. The effect is rich ("La Rica"
+is the surname which particularly distinguishes this Cathedral), but
+much of the religious antique air of the place has gone for ever. The
+plan is, as usual with Spanish churches, cruciform. The chancel was
+reconstructed in 1682, but the altar was melted down by the French in
+1809. Fortunately the fine panel-shutters made for its protection in the
+sixteenth century have been preserved. They were carved by a carpenter
+named Carles, and are painted with scenes from the lives of Christ and
+the Virgin. These works are ascribed by some to Francisco Pagano and
+Pablo de San Leocadio, by others to Leonardo da Vinci himself. Hanging
+to one of the pillars on the Gospel side may be seen the spurs and
+bridle of Jaime lo Conqueridor, presented by him, on the day he took the
+city, to his master of the horse, Juan de Perthusa.
+
+Over the crossing rises the fine octagonal lantern, built in 1404 and
+restored in 1731. The trophies which once adorned it have long since
+been carried off, among them the flags taken from the Genoese by Ramon
+Corveran, a famous sea-dog of Valencia.
+
+The pulpit, over which is displayed a picture of St. Vicente Ferrer, was
+the one from which that zealous missionary actually preached. It can,
+however, hardly be regarded as a curiosity, as the saint must have
+preached in nearly every church in the Peninsula, France, and Flanders.
+
+[Illustration: VALENCIA--SANTA CATALINA]
+
+The choir is modern, except the rear portion or "trascoro," which dates
+from the end of the fifteenth century; and the chapels contain little
+that is of interest. Tomás de Villanueva, the holy Archbishop of
+Valencia, is entombed in the chapel dedicated to him. The chapel of
+another Valencian saint, St. Francis Borgia, is remarkable for a curious
+picture representing his conversion of a dying man. The penitent is
+depicted almost nude, and attended by comically fantastic monsters.
+Another painting shows the saint, as Duke of Gandía, taking leave of his
+relatives when about to embrace the religious state.
+
+Leaving the Cathedral, we visit the noble Gothic Lonja, or Silk
+Exchange, built between the years 1482 and 1498 by Pedro Compte. Though
+not in the purest style, the result is imposing and dignified. A French
+writer (M. Paul Jousset), not addicted to laudatory language, admits
+that this building is worth a visit to Valencia to see. Its square
+tower, its crenellated chimneys, open galleries, and high windows,
+recall the palace-like châteaux of the Loire. Within is a noble hall
+divided into three by rows of spirally-fluted columns. The roof is
+studded with stars, and round the frieze runs the inscription: "He only
+that shall not have deceived nor done usury, shall be worthy of eternal
+life." For the commercial integrity of Valencia it is to be hoped that
+the business men frequenting this exchange keep their eyes fixed on the
+text. Another public building worthy of attention is the Audiencia, in
+good Renaissance style, with grand halls adorned by portraits of eminent
+natives of the province. In the Salon de Cortes, the old provincial
+States assembled till the middle of the eighteenth century.
+
+The minor churches of Valencia are hardly worth a visit--the less so
+that in this climate the stranger is generally well content to "laze"
+his time away. He may do this very pleasantly on the Paseo de la
+Glorieta or Plaza Principe Alfonso, two charming shady spots, where
+numerous trees are reflected in the waters of the cool basins. Further
+off, across the parched Turia, you reach the Alameda, a leafy avenue
+where fountains diffuse a refreshing dew. And if you should chance to
+doze on one of the benches, you need not fear interruption. This
+charming promenade, for some occult reason, is neglected by the
+citizens.
+
+The picture gallery of Valencia is important. It contains fine specimens
+of contemporary Spanish art, including works by Sorolla and Benlliure.
+Ribalta may be studied here, and also the less-known masters of the
+Valencian school, such as Orrente, March, Espinosa, and Juanes. There
+used to be several fine private collections in Valencia, but these have
+all been dispersed.
+
+The country round Valencia is far more interesting than the city. In no
+other part of Spain, says Mr. Brunhés, has man more successfully
+combated and reduced natural aridity by irrigation and cultivation; so
+successfully indeed, that from Gandía to Valencia, for instance, a
+stretch of 100 kilometres, the gardens succeed each other so closely
+that it is easy to forget--in spite of the naked slopes on the
+horizon--that these oases occupy a naturally arid soil. This is, in
+short, the best cultivated province in the kingdom.
+
+[Illustration: AN ANDALUSIAN DANCE]
+
+The numberless canals and watercourses which intersect the land in all
+directions are fed for the most part by the Jucár and Turia--the latter
+the local stream of Valencia--but every possible source is turned to
+account. Here the water supply, comprised in the Canal of Moncada and
+the Seven Canals, belongs to the community, by whom is indirectly
+elected the famous tribunal which meets every Thursday morning at the
+Apostles' Gate of the Cathedral.
+
+The sittings of this singular court are the most interesting sight in
+Valencia. In the plaza a crowd of countryfolk are collected, furiously
+discussing their affairs and pleading their cases in advance, after the
+manner of litigants all the world over. Meanwhile the alguazil of the
+tribunal has disposed an ancient sofa in the shadow of the great Gothic
+portal and marked off a space before it with a railing. Presently the
+seven judges arrive--one for each canal. They have the air of well-to-do
+peasants, and such they are--grave, stoutly-built men, with tanned faces
+and close-cropped hair. They wear black, the colour beloved by the
+comfortably-situated working man all the world over; but they have not
+discarded the native handkerchief round their polished brows or the
+_espadrilla_, or Valencian shoe. Each is known by the name of the canal
+which he represents--Mislata, Cuarte, and so forth. These
+peasant-magistrates having taken their seats, the oldest pronounces the
+words "Se obri el tribunal" (The tribunal is open). For a moment
+absolute silence reigns. Then those who have the right to be heard first
+are introduced within the railing and plead their cause bare-headed
+before the court. Woe to the insolent wight that dare stand covered in
+its presence! The alguazil will tear the handkerchief off his head, and
+he will be mulcted, moreover, in a fine. Anyone who speaks before his
+turn is fined. The discipline is severe. Each must wait till the
+president indicates with his foot that it is his turn to be heard.
+Notwithstanding, the fiery Valencians find it hard to restrain their
+feelings. At every moment there is an explosion of wrath or indignation,
+a heated expostulation from one or the other of the parties. The fines
+thus accumulated must represent a considerable sum. The procedure is
+entirely verbal; even the judgments are not recorded. But no court
+exercises more absolute power than the Tribunal de las Aguas of
+Valencia.
+
+Life in the fertile huerta of Valencia is beautifully described by the
+great novelist, Blasco Ibañez, a native of the city. The following
+roughly translated passages, though they convey little idea of the
+forceful and elegant style of the original, will at least enable the
+reader to picture a summer in the South:
+
+"When the vast plain awakes in the bluish light of dawn, the last of the
+nightingales that have sang through the night breaks off abruptly in his
+final trill, as though he had been stricken by the steely shaft of day.
+Sparrows in whole coveys burst forth from the thatched roofs, and
+beneath this aerial rabble preening their wings, the trees shake and
+nod.
+
+"One by one the murmurs of the night subside--the trickling of
+watercourses, the sighing of the reeds, the barking of the watchful
+dogs. Other sounds belonging to the day grow louder and fill the huerta.
+The crow of the cock is heard from every farm; the village bells re-echo
+the call to prayer borne across from the towers of Valencia, which are
+yet misty in the distance; from the farmyards arises a discordant animal
+concert--the neighing of horses, the bellowing of oxen, the clucking of
+hens, the bleating of lambs, the grunting of swine--the sounds produced
+by beasts that scent the keen odour of vegetation in the morning breeze
+and are hungry for the fields.
+
+"The sky is suffused with light, and with light, life inundates the
+plain and penetrates to the interior of human and animal abodes. Doors
+open creaking. In the porches white figures appear, their hands clasped
+behind their necks, scanning the horizon. From the stables issue towards
+the city, milch cows, flocks of goats, manure carts. Bells tinkle
+between the dwarf trees bordering the high road, and every now and again
+is heard the sharp '_Arre, Aca!_' of the drivers.
+
+"On the thresholds of the cottages those bound for the town exchange
+greetings with those that stay in the fields: '_Bon dia nos done Deu!_'
+(May God give us a good day!) '_Bon dia._'
+
+"Immense is the energy, the explosion of life, at midsummer, the best
+season of the year, the time of harvest and abundance. Space throbs with
+light and heat. The African sun rains torrents of fire on the land
+already cracked and wrinkled by its burning caresses, and its golden
+beams pierce the dense foliage, beneath which are hidden the canals and
+trenches to save them from the all-powerful vivifying heat.
+
+"The branches of the trees are heavy with fruit. They bend beneath the
+weight of yellow grapes covered with glazed leaves. Like the pink cheeks
+of a child glow the apricots amid the verdure. Children greedily eye the
+luscious burden of the fig trees. From the gardens is wafted the scent
+of the jasmin, and the magnolias dispense their incense in the burning
+air laden with the perfume of the cereals.
+
+"The gleaming scythe has already sheared the land, levelling the golden
+fields of wheat and the tall corn stalks, which bowed beneath their
+heavy load of life. The hay forms yellow hills which reflect the colour
+of the sun. The wheat is winnowed in a whirlwind of dust; in the naked
+fields among the stubble, sparrows hop from spot to spot in search of
+stray gleanings. Everywhere are happiness and joyous labour. Waggons go
+groaning down the road; children frolic in the fields and among the
+sheaves, thinking of the wheaten cakes in prospect and of the lazy,
+pleasant life which begins for the farmer when his barn is filled. Even
+the old horses stride along more gaily, cheered by the smell of the
+golden grain which will flow steadily into their mangers as the year
+rolls on.
+
+[Illustration: COURTING]
+
+"When the harvest has levelled the panorama and cleared the great
+stretches of wheat sprinkled with poppies, the plain seems vast, almost
+illimitable. Farther than the eye can reach stretch its great squares of
+red soil marked off by paths and trenches. The Sunday's rest is
+rigorously observed over the whole countryside. Not a man is seen
+toiling in the fields, not a beast at work on the road. Down the paths
+pass old women with their mantillas drawn over their eyes and their
+little chairs hanging to their arms. In the distance resound, like the
+tearing of linen, the shots fired at the swallows, which fly hither and
+thither in circles. A noise seems to be produced by their wings ruffling
+the crystal firmament. From the canals rises the murmur of clouds of
+almost invisible flies. In a farm all painted blue under an ancient
+arbour there is a whirlwind of gaily coloured shawls and petticoats,
+while the guitars with their drowsy rhythm and the strident cornets
+accompany the measures of the Valencian Jota.
+
+"In the village the little plaza is thronged with the field folk. The
+men are in their shirt sleeves, with black sashes and gorgeous
+handkerchiefs arranged mitre-like on their heads. The old men lean on
+their big Liria sticks. The young men, with sleeves turned up, display
+their red nervous arms and carry mere sprigs of ash between their huge
+knotted fingers.
+
+"In the afternoon, towards the fountain, along the road bordered with
+poplars which shake their silvered foliage, go groups of girls with
+their pitchers on their heads. Their rhythmical movements and their
+grace recall the Athenian canephoræ. This procession to the well lends
+to the huerta of Valencia something of a biblical character. The Fontana
+de la Reina is the pride of the huerta, condemned to drink the water of
+wells and the red and dirty liquid of the canals. It is esteemed as an
+ancient and valuable work. It has a square basin with walls of reddish
+stone. The water is below the soil. You reach the bottom by means of six
+green and slippery steps. Opposite the steps is a defaced bas-relief,
+probably a Virgin attended by angels--no doubt an ex-voto of the time of
+the Conquest. Laughter and chatter are not wanting round the well. The
+girls cluster round, eager to fill their pitchers but in no hurry to
+depart. They jostle each other on the steps, their petticoats gathered
+in between their legs, the better to lean forward and to plunge their
+vessels into the basin. The surface of the water is unceasingly troubled
+by the bubbles rising from the sandy bed, which is covered with weeds
+waving in the current."
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+Abades, No. 6, 70
+
+Abbad, Mohammed Ben, 22
+
+Abdallah, Ahmed Ben, 21
+
+Abd-el-Aziz, 19
+
+Abd-ur-Rahman, 89
+
+Abd-ur-Rahman III., 21
+
+Abu-l-Walid, 115
+
+Adra, 168
+
+Ælii, 16
+
+Ahmar, Mohammed al, 27, 113
+
+Alarcos, 26
+
+Albaicin, 148
+
+Alcazaba, 129
+
+Alcazares, 35
+
+Alcazar Genil, 161
+
+Alcoy, 190
+
+Alfonso VI., 24, 25, 98
+
+Alfonso X., 114
+
+Alfonso the Battler, King, 189
+
+Alfonso the Learned, 4, 181
+
+Al Hakem II., 90
+
+Alhama, 121
+
+Alhambra, The, 124
+
+Alicante, 189
+
+Al Mansûr, 90
+
+Almeria, 168
+
+Almohades, 26, 30, 112
+
+Almoravides, 26, 112, 194
+
+Aragon, Don Jaime of, 179
+
+Arfe, Juan de, 60, 96
+
+Aurariola, 178
+
+Az Zahara, 97
+
+
+Barbuda, Don Martin de la, 102, 119
+
+Baths, 143
+
+Bekr, Abu, 179
+
+Belludo, 145
+
+Ben Hud, 27, 113
+
+Biblioteca Colombina, 35
+
+Boabdil, 121
+
+
+Cadiz, 1
+
+Cadiz, Marquis of, 121
+
+Cæsar, Julius, 16
+
+Campaña--_See_ Kempener
+
+Campillo, 160
+
+Cano, Alonso, 66, 75, 155, 165
+
+Caños de Carmona, 81
+
+Capilla Real, 152
+
+Cartagena, 182
+
+Carthaginians, 3, 14, 15
+
+Cartuja, 84, 158
+
+Casa de Bustos Tavera, 70
+
+Casa del Carbon, 147
+
+Casa de los Tiros, 160
+
+Casa de Pilatos, 66
+
+Cathedral, 50, 151, 155, 165, 196
+
+Cespedes, Pablo de, 75, 103
+
+Charles V., 95
+
+Cid Campeador, Ruy Diaz de Bivar, 112, 193
+
+Colon, Fernando, 57
+
+Columbus, Christopher, 56, 160
+
+Cordova, 86
+
+Cornejo, Duque, 95, 96
+
+Coronel, Doña Maria, 38
+
+Cortes, Hernando, 83
+
+Court of the Lions, 137
+
+Cuarto de Santo Domingo, 160
+
+
+Dance of the Seises, 81
+
+Dávalos, Leonor, 38
+
+Delicias Gardens, 77
+
+Dios, San Juan de, 156
+
+Drake, Sir Francis, 4
+
+
+Elche, 187
+
+El Greco, 60
+
+Enrique III., 119
+
+Ermengild, 18, 193
+
+Ermita de San Sebastian, 160
+
+"Esperandola del Cielo," 149
+
+Essex, Earl of, 5
+
+Exilona, 19
+
+
+Fadrique, Don, 46
+
+Fair of Seville, 79
+
+Ferdinand and Isabella, 121
+
+Fernandez, Alejo, 85
+
+Fernando el Magno, 24
+
+Ferrer, St. Vincent, 35
+
+Frutet, 75
+
+
+Gandía, 190
+
+Gandia, Duke of, 157
+
+Generalife, The, 146
+
+Gibralfaro, 164
+
+Gibraltar, 173
+
+Giordano, Luca, 58
+
+Gipsies, 84
+
+Giralda Tower, 31
+
+Gongora, 95
+
+Goya, 60
+
+Granada, 107
+
+Great Captain, 102, 156
+
+Guadalquivir, The, 9
+
+Guzman el Bueno, 83
+
+
+Hajjaj, Ibrahim Ibn, 20
+
+Hall of the Two Sisters, 139
+
+Halls of the Abencerrages, 139
+
+Hasan, Mulai, 121
+
+Hernandez (Gonzalo), de Aguilar y de Cordova,
+ "the Great Captain," 102, 156
+
+Herrera, 58, 61, 66
+
+Herrera, The Older, 75
+
+
+Illiberis, 111
+
+"Intransigentes," 182
+
+Irrigation, 175, 200
+
+Isidore, St., 19
+
+Ismaïl, Saïd Ben, 121
+
+Italica, 15, 17, 18, 82
+
+
+Jaime lo Conqueridor, 186, 194, 198
+
+Jativa, 190
+
+Jerez, 10
+
+Juan II., 16
+
+Jucár, 191
+
+Junteron, Don Gil, 181
+
+
+Kadir, 193
+
+Kempener, Peter, 55, 58, 59
+
+
+La Caridad, 74
+
+"Las Navas de Tolosa," 26
+
+La Trinidad, 19
+
+Leal, Valdés, 58, 59, 74, 75
+
+Leander, 18
+
+Lebrija, 11
+
+Leovgild, 18
+
+Levi, Simuel Ben, 37
+
+Lonja, 196, 199
+
+Lorca, 175
+
+Lucan, 16
+
+
+Majus, 21
+
+Malaga, 163
+
+Malecon, 180
+
+Marana, Miguel de, 73
+
+Mena, Juan de, 104
+
+Mezquita, 88
+
+Mihrab, 144
+
+Mirador de "Lindaraja," 142
+
+Mohammed II., 114
+
+Mohammed III., 114
+
+Mohammed IV., 116
+
+Mohammed V., 117, 171
+
+Mohammed VI., 119
+
+Mohammed VII., 121
+
+Mohammed VIII., 121
+
+Mohammedan Paintings, 140
+
+Montañez, 58, 60, 66, 75, 83
+
+Mote'mid, 23
+
+Motril, 168
+
+Munda, 170
+
+Murcia, 174, 179, 180
+
+Murillo, 8, 56, 58, 59, 60, 61, 73, 74, 75, 76
+
+Musa, 19
+
+Museo of Seville, 74
+
+Musset, Alfred de, 7, 12, 71
+
+Mut'adid-billah, Amir, 22
+
+Muwallads, 20
+
+
+Nasr, Abu-l-Juyyush Muley, 115
+
+Northmen, 21
+
+
+Omnium Sanctorum, 65
+
+Oratory, 144
+
+Orihuela, 178, 186
+
+Osorio, Doña Urraca, 38
+
+
+Padilla, Maria de, 46
+
+Palace of Charles V., 131
+
+Palace of St. Telmo, 76
+
+Palacio de las Dueñas, 70
+
+Palomino, 95
+
+Paredes, Doña Maria de Guzman, 95
+
+Patio de Daraxa, 142
+
+Patio de la Alberca, 135
+
+Patio de las Arrayanes, 135
+
+Patio de las Muñecas, 45
+
+Patio de los Naranjos, 34
+
+Patio "del Mexuar," 134
+
+Pedro the Cruel, 36
+
+Phoenicians, The, 2, 14
+
+Pineda, Doña Mariana, 157
+
+Plaza de Bibarrambla, 151
+
+Poore, Lawrence, 28
+
+Puerta de Hierro, 144
+
+Puerta de la Justicia, 128
+
+Puerta del Lagarto, 53
+
+Puerta del Perdon, 34
+
+Puerta del Vino, 130
+
+Puerto Santa Maria, 10
+
+Pulgar, Fernando del, Lord of El Salar, 152
+
+
+Ramon Bonifaz, 27
+
+Recchiarus, 17
+
+Ribera, 190
+
+Robles, Joao de, 156
+
+Roelas, Juan de las, 58, 65, 75
+
+Roldán, Pedro, 61
+
+Romanticists, 6, 7
+
+Ronda, 170
+
+Rueda, Lope de, 95
+
+
+Sacromonte, 158
+
+Saïd, Abu, 37, 118, 171
+
+St. Ferdinand, 27, 55, 95
+
+St. Isidore, 24
+
+St. Justa, 84
+
+St. Rufina, 84
+
+St. Vicente Ferrer, 196, 198
+
+Sala de la Justicia, 140
+
+Sala de los Embajadores, 136
+
+Salambo, 15, 84
+
+Salon de los Embajadores, 44
+
+San Geronimo, 156
+
+Santa Ana, 85
+
+Santa Paula, 64
+
+Santo Domingo, 160
+
+Scipio, 15
+
+Seneca, 16
+
+Seville, 12
+
+Siloe, Diego de, 156, 165
+
+Suevi, 17
+
+
+Talavera, Archbishop de, 123
+
+Tarik, 19
+
+Tarshish, 3
+
+Tendilla, Count of, 123
+
+Theodomir, 178
+
+Theudis, 17
+
+Theudisel, 17
+
+Tocador de la Reina, 143
+
+Todmir, 179
+
+Torre de Cuarte, 196
+
+Torre de Serranos, 196
+
+Torre del Agua, 145
+
+Torre del Homenage, 130
+
+"Torre del Oro," 29
+
+Torre de la Cautiva, 145
+
+Torre de la Vela, 129
+
+Torre de las Damas, 144
+
+Torre de las Infantas, 145
+
+Torre de los Picos, 144
+
+Torre de los Siete Suelos, 145
+
+Torres Bermejas, 127
+
+Tower of Comares, 136
+
+Triana, 84
+
+Tribunal de las Aguas, 201
+
+Turdetani, 14
+
+
+University Church, Seville, 65
+
+Utrera, 11
+
+
+Valdes, 75
+
+Valencia, 192, 195
+
+Vandals, 16
+
+Vargas, Luis de, 34, 58, 59, 75
+
+Velazquez, 75
+
+Velez Chapel, 182
+
+Vermilion Towers, 125
+
+Vigarni, 153
+
+Visigoths, 17
+
+
+Yusuf I., 117
+
+Yusuf II., 119
+
+Yusuf III., 120
+
+Yusuf IV., 121
+
+
+Zacatin, 150
+
+Zaghal, 122
+
+Zahara, 121, 171
+
+Zayda, 25
+
+Zegri, Hamet el, 164
+
+Ziryab, 101
+
+Zurbaran, 58, 60, 75
+
+[Illustration: MAP ACCOMPANYING "SOUTHERN SPAIN" BY TREVOR HADDEN AND A.
+F. CALVERT. (A. & C. BLACK)]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Southern Spain, by A.F. Calvert
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOUTHERN SPAIN ***
+
+***** This file should be named 37944-8.txt or 37944-8.zip *****
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Southern Spain, by A.F. Calvert
+
+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: Southern Spain
+
+Author: A.F. Calvert
+
+Illustrator: Trevor Haddon
+
+Release Date: November 6, 2011 [EBook #37944]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOUTHERN SPAIN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: image of the book's cover]
+
+
+
+
+SOUTHERN SPAIN
+PAINTED BY TREVOR
+HADDON DESCRIBED
+BY A. F. CALVERT PUBLISHED
+BY A. & C. BLACK
+LONDON MCMVIII
+
+[Illustration: colophon]
+
+[Illustration: frontispiece]
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+Few travellers have leisure enough to traverse the wide realm of tawny
+Spain in its every part. Those who must confine their attention to a
+single province naturally select Andalusia, where all the Northerner's
+preconceptions of the South find realization. The wild scenery of
+Southern Spain, the gay open-air life of the people, the monuments
+attesting the splendour of the extinct civilization of the Moor, the
+spell of romance which still holds its cities, makes this land one of
+the most interesting and fascinating in Europe to the artist, the
+archaeologist, and the dreamer.
+
+The present volume, mainly the embodiment of personal impressions and
+observations, is intended partly to supply the place of a guide-book to
+this part of the Peninsula, and with that object I have brought together
+as much of history, art, and topography as the traveller is likely to
+assimilate. Into the descriptive matter I have introduced a little
+gossip, which will, I hope, be not found altogether irrelevant, and may
+serve to beguile the tedium of a bare recital of facts.
+
+While I have endeavoured to make the book as useful to travellers as
+within the prescribed limits was possible, I have essayed to give it, by
+means of the illustrations, a more permanent value. It is on the brush
+rather than on the pen that I have relied to convey an idea of the
+gorgeous panorama of Southern Spain, and to recall to the returned
+traveller his impressions of the land.
+
+As a _vade-mecum_, then, for the tourist, and as an album and souvenir
+of the fairest portion of the realm of the Catholic King, I hope that
+the present volume will be of use to the public, despite the
+shortcomings it doubtless contains. For rendering these as few as
+possible, I have to thank several friends who have looked through the
+proofs. To one in particular, Mr. E. B. d'Auvergne, I am indebted for
+various scraps of original and entertaining information.
+
+A. F. CALVERT.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+ PAGE
+
+CADIZ 1
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+SEVILLE--THE PEARL OF ANDALUSIA 12
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+CORDOVA 86
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+GRANADA 107
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+MALAGA 163
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE WAY SOUTH 169
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE KINGDOM OF MURCIA 174
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+IN THE OLD KINGDOM OF VALENCIA 186
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+1. Cordova--Fountain in the Patio de los Naranjos _Frontispiece_
+
+ PAGE
+
+2. Ayamonte (The Gateway of Andalusia) 8
+
+3. Seville--A Street 12
+
+4. Seville--The Aceite Gate 20
+
+5. Seville--A Courtyard 24
+
+6. Seville--The Torre del Oro and the Cathedral 28
+
+7. Seville--The Giralda 30
+
+8. Seville--Gardens of the Alcazar 34
+
+9. Seville--Gardens of the Alcazar 40
+
+10. Seville--Patio de las Banderas 44
+
+11. Seville--Gardens of the Alcazar 50
+
+12. Seville--Interior of the Cathedral 56
+
+13. Seville--Patio de los Naranjos 60
+
+14. Seville--Plaza de San Fernando 64
+
+15. Seville--Casa de Pilatos 68
+
+16. Seville--Casa de Pilatos 72
+
+17. Seville--Garden of the Casa de Pilatos 78
+
+18. Seville--The Market Place 80
+
+19. Cordova--A Courtyard 84
+
+20. Cordova--Entrance to the City 86
+
+21. Cordova--Calle Cardinal Herrera 88
+
+22. Cordova--Moorish Mill 90
+
+23. Cordova--Mezquita 92
+
+24. Cordova--Patio de los Naranjos 94
+
+25. Cordova--Outer Wall of the Mosque 96
+
+26. Cordova--A Street Scene 98
+
+27. Cordova--A Street 100
+
+28. Cordova--The Bridge 102
+
+29. Cordova--Courtyard of an Inn 104
+
+30. Cordova--Old Houses near the River 106
+
+31. Granada--From the Generalife 108
+
+32. Granada--Sierra Nevada from the Alhambra Gardens 110
+
+33. Granada--Exterior of the Alhambra 112
+
+34. Granada--A Street in the Albaicin 114
+
+35. Granada--In the Market 116
+
+36. Granada--The Alhambra: The Aqueduct 118
+
+37. Granada--The Court of the Cypresses 120
+
+38. Granada--Villa on the Darro 122
+
+39. Granada--The Alhambra from San Miguel 124
+
+40. Granada--Towers of the Infantas, Alhambra 126
+
+41. Granada--Near the Alhambra 128
+
+42. Granada--Puerta del Vino, Alhambra 130
+
+43. Granada--The Alhambra: Tower of Comares 132
+
+44. Granada--The Court of the Lions: Moonlight 136
+
+45. Granada--The Generalife: Patio de la Acequia 138
+
+46. Granada--The Generalife: Court of the Cypresses 140
+
+47. Granada--Tocador de la Reina 142
+
+48. Granada--Torre de las Damas 144
+
+49. Granada--The Generalife: Court of the Cypresses 146
+
+50. Granada--Casa del Carbon 148
+
+51. Granada--Street in the Albaicin 150
+
+52. Granada--Interior of a Posada 152
+
+53. Granada--Old Houses, Cuesta del Pescado 154
+
+54. Granada--Old Ayuntamiento 156
+
+55. Granada--Street in the Old Quarter 158
+
+56. Granada--The Generalife: Patio de la Acequia 160
+
+57. Granada--A Corner in the Old Quarter 162
+
+58. Malaga--The Harbour 164
+
+59. Malaga--The Guadalmedina 166
+
+60. Malaga--A Market 168
+
+61. Malaga--Packing Lemons 170
+
+62. Ronda--The Tajo 172
+
+63. Ronda--Roman Bridges 174
+
+64. Ronda--At the Fountain 176
+
+65. Ronda--A Moorish Gateway 180
+
+66. Ronda--A Street Scene 182
+
+67. Ronda--The Market 184
+
+68. Orihuela on the River Segura 186
+
+69. Elche--A Street 188
+
+70. A Fisher Girl (Coast of Malaga) 190
+
+71. A Water Carrier 192
+
+72. Malaga--A Picador 196
+
+73. Valencia--Santa Catalina 198
+
+74. An Andalusian Dance 200
+
+75. Courting 204
+
+_Map at end of Volume_
+
+_The Illustrations in this Volume have been engraved and printed in
+England by_ THE MENPES PRESS, _London and Watford_
+
+
+
+
+SOUTHERN SPAIN
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+CADIZ
+
+
+Cadiz was the prettiest of all the towns of Spain, thought Byron. I
+would rather say that she was the most beautiful. She rises out of the
+sea--the boundless salt ocean that stretches from pole to pole--and the
+crests of the waves which lick her feet are not whiter than her walls.
+And these by day are bathed in liquid gold, for the sun seems to linger
+here ere he says good-night to Europe. By night the city gleams like
+washed silver, and her sheen is more magical than that of the dark yet
+phosphorescent water. Of sun and sea, light and air, is Cadiz
+compounded. She is the Gateway of the West, not sultry and southern, but
+salt and windy and dazzling white. It is thus she appears to you,
+especially when you come to her over the sea--that sea which hereabouts
+has so often been splashed with British blood. How often the pale yellow
+cliffs of Spain to the southward, and those of the lovely shore of
+Algarve to the north, have reverberated with the booming of the cannon;
+how often the strand has been littered with dead men, whose gaping
+wounds the kindly ocean had washed clean! Browning's lines recur to the
+memory:
+
+ "Nobly, nobly Cape St. Vincent to the north-west died away,
+ Sunset ran, one glorious blood-red, reeking into Cadiz Bay."
+
+For you can see the lighthouse on Cape Trafalgar, and the Bay of Cadiz
+itself has been the scene of some of England's most glorious and
+desperate feats of arms. There is little stirring now in the wide
+harbour, where the ships ride lazily at anchor, and their crews crowd to
+the bulwarks and exchange pleasantries with your boatman as he pulls you
+towards the quay. And so you step on shore, and enter the fair city.
+
+It looks so fresh and fragrant that you would not think it ancient. But
+Cadiz is the first-born city of Spain, probably the first foothold of
+civilization on the shores of the Atlantic Ocean. It marks a new and
+tremendously important step forward in the world's progress. After
+Heaven knows how many attempts and false starts, the Phoenicians dared
+what no people of the ancient world had dared before. The Pillars of
+Hercules were regarded as the western boundary of the world: beyond was
+nothingness. And one day, with the east wind filling his sails and fear
+in the hearts of his crew, some forgotten Columbus of Sidon or of Tyre
+passed through the strait, and turning northward, beached his little
+galley on the peninsula where we stand. Civilization--arts and letters,
+commerce and social life, and all that makes life dear to modern
+men--had burst the narrow limits of the Middle Sea, and first hoisted
+its flag o'er Cadiz.
+
+The thought is not uninspiring. It is not unreasonable to suppose that
+the first keel that ever ploughed the Atlantic grazed this strand. It is
+likely enough that the fleets of lost Atlantis, if that mystical isle
+possessed a ship, resorted hither, for the copper and precious metals of
+Tarshish. What voyages have begun from this port, from the little
+Phoenician craft setting forth in quest of the Tin Islands of the far
+north, to brave Cervera leading out his squadron to its preordained
+doom!
+
+ "It may be that the gulfs shall wash us down,
+ It may be we shall touch the happy isles."
+
+And careless of fate, all these dauntless sailors have adventured forth
+into the deep.
+
+In after years, the Phoenicians and Carthaginians had settlements
+here, and built great ugly palaces overlooking the sea and the
+estuaries. With their curling black beards I seem to see them, robed in
+the real Tyrian purple, reclining on their terraces even as their
+forefathers are shown in that strange picture in our National Gallery,
+"The Eve of the Deluge."
+
+Their deluge was the Roman Invasion, when, in a good hour for humanity,
+Latin superseded Semitic civilization, and the cruel gods of Sidon bowed
+before the young and beautiful gods of Rome. Gades or Gaddir--I give it
+its two oldest names--did not suffer by its change of masters. Its mart
+was crowded, its merchants known from Britain to the Fortunate Isles,
+from Lusitania to Arabia. Much wealth engendered luxury. Life in Gades
+was feverish and distempered. The people had not forgotten the worship
+of Astarte, and the Gaditane dancing-girls proved themselves worthy
+daughters of the goddess. When the gods were dethroned the sensual city
+pined; and under the austere yoke of Islam it languished and all but
+faded away. It is interesting to note that its Moslem inhabitants were
+drawn from the old race of Philistines, some of whose gods had probably
+been worshipped here in the Punic days.
+
+When Seville fell, the port continued subject to the Almohade Emir of
+Fez. Alfonso the Learned subdued it without difficulty in 1262, and
+filled it with colonists from the north coast of Spain, from such places
+as Santander and Laredo. But the Philistine taint in two senses was
+never eradicated; Cadiz remained ever financial and commercial, and
+cared nothing for art. Her brightest and blackest days followed the
+discovery of America, when she soon eclipsed Seville as the mart for the
+produce of the New Indies. Her wealth, not once but many times, wellnigh
+proved her downfall. Threatened again and again by the Barbary corsairs,
+she saw a far more terrible foe before her walls in 1587, in the person
+of Sir Francis Drake, who inflicted incalculable injury on her shipping.
+Worse was to come nine years later, when the English, under the command
+of the Earl of Essex, scaled the walls, sacked the city from end to
+end, slaughtered the inhabitants, profaned the churches and burnt the
+public buildings, and sailed away with enormous booty. Yet so quickly
+did Cadiz recover from this terrific catastrophe, that she again tempted
+the cupidity of our countrymen in 1625. But this time the Dons were well
+prepared and gave our fleet so warm a reception that we were compelled
+to retire with heavy loss.
+
+The city attained its zenith of opulence in the first quarter of the
+eighteenth century, when it had become almost the exclusive entrepot for
+the traffic between Southern Europe and the Americas. Numerous royal
+privileges and concessions secured it almost a monopoly of the trade.
+But no one organ can hope to escape an infection attacking the whole
+system. Spain in the eighteenth century was dying from that commonest of
+national diseases--dry-rot. Yet as late as 1770 Adam Smith did not
+hesitate to say that the merchants of London had not yet the wealth to
+compete with those of Cadiz, and a few years later the value of the
+bullion landed at its quays was estimated at 125 millions sterling.
+
+Yet it was this bloated, purse-proud city, strangely enough, that proved
+the ark of refuge for Spain when the innumerable hosts of Napoleon
+swarmed over the land. Here were preserved the insignia of national
+independence, and here, amid the thunder of guns and in the lap of the
+ocean, was born the New and Free Spain. Cadiz proved a second
+Covadonga. The focus of the constitutional movement, she was savagely
+assailed by the Absolutists and their French allies. The defence of
+Trocadero, on the other side of the bay, against the forces of the Duc
+d'Angouleme popularized the name of the place throughout Europe. The
+pages of Balzac abound in allusions to that mischievous and futile
+attempt of the Government of the Restoration to rivet on Spaniards
+fetters that no Frenchman would wear. Then came a French invasion of
+another sort, of the Romanticists--of De Musset and Gautier, and the
+long-haired followers of Byron.
+
+It has often seemed to me that every city belongs to one particular age.
+This being a fancy contrary to fact, I will put it this way--that in
+every city there is always some one period of human history more readily
+recoverable than any other. This may not be the period which has left
+its mark most conspicuously on the physiognomy of the place; more
+probably it will be determined by your own preconceptions, derived from
+study or chance reading. John Addington Symonds observed that an island
+near Venice, the name of which I have forgotten, immediately recalled to
+him not the great days of the Republic with which it had an historical
+connection, but the later and decadent days of bag-wig and hair powder.
+At Cadiz I could have wished to think of the Phoenicians, thus hardily
+adventuring into the wide ocean; or of Drake and his gentlemen
+adventurers, "bound wrist to bar, all for red iniquity"; but instead I
+fancied myself back in the 'thirties of last century, and thought of De
+Musset and his "Andalouse" and his lovely Spanish girls. Is it possible
+that Andalusia in those days of our grandfathers _was_ the Andalusia of
+the Romanticists? At Cadiz, I beguiled myself into believing so--why, I
+cannot explain. Perhaps it was due to the unexpected appearance of a
+native--a distinctively Andalusian--costume in the streets. Nowhere else
+in Spain is the mantilla more conspicuous or more gorgeous. A French
+writer gives a selection of toilettes worn at a _Corrida de toros_,
+which, as I never assisted at one of these functions in Cadiz, I repeat:
+"All pink, coral necklace, white lace mantilla, big bunches of
+carnations in the hair and corsage; a blond head seen beneath a
+transparent mantilla, like a frail spider's web, red corsage and white
+gown; coral ear-rings, with bunches of roses; all black, with a white
+mantilla; all white, with a black mantilla; pale green gown with a blue
+bolero and white roses; shawl draped, brocaded, with a wealth of
+carnations in the hair; black dress and mantilla, violets in the hair;
+gold coloured shawl, embroidered with red roses, comb like a tiara set
+with bright-hued flowers," etc., etc. With confections such as these
+dazzling the eyes, it is no wonder that I began to see visions of
+gentlemen in black silk tights, dark green frock coats, and snowy white
+cravats, stammering Castilian with a Parisian accent.
+
+It would be hard, too, to keep the mind fixed on remoter and more heroic
+ages, for Cadiz is singularly destitute of antiquities. The descendants
+of the Philistines could not be expected to respect ancient monuments!
+But what they spared our freebooter ancestors burned. The old Cathedral,
+built in the thirteenth century, was almost totally consumed by the
+flames. When I say that the new building dates from 1720, I fear that
+your interest in it will expire. But it is at least imposing; and the
+choir stalls are very fine. Then there is the Capuchin Convent, where
+Murillo met his death by falling from a scaffolding while painting the
+picture of the Espousals of St. Catherine. Another picture by the same
+master may be seen in this church--St. Francis receiving the Stigmata.
+The little Academia de Bellas Artes contains some admirable specimens of
+the work of Zurbaran, brought from the Charterhouse of Jerez.
+
+These are the only sights in the tourists' agent's acceptation of the
+word, and it is likely enough that you will think three hours devoted to
+the city amply sufficient. Yet its situation at the end of a narrow spit
+like that at the entrance to the Suez Canal--in mid-sea as it were--its
+associations, and its brightness and cleanliness, make it for some the
+most charming of Spanish towns. Crenellated walls enclose it on all
+sides, the space between them and the water's edge being devoted to
+quays, promenades, and gardens. There are forts at the extremity of the
+peninsula--the Isla de Leon, as it is called. The streets are all
+very straight, very narrow, and very clean. Through the _rejas_ across
+the doorways you obtain glimpses of trim little patios, bedecked with
+flowering plants. Occasionally you come out into a little square,
+prettily laid out with gardens, like the Plaza de Mina, where the
+loungers asleep on the seats irresistibly recall dear old busy London.
+
+[Illustration: AYAMONTE (THE GATEWAY OF ANDALUSIA)]
+
+The charming Parque Genoves, bordering the sea, reminds us of the great
+merchant race of Italy who had their warehouses here. It is exquisite to
+walk by night along the sea wall, which at some points rises sheer
+upwards from the water, and to inhale the breezes blown straight across,
+one would like to think, from the West Indies. You will crave for that
+cool wind afterwards, in the parched interior of Andalusia.
+
+From Cadiz you may go to Seville by steamer up the Guadalquivir, but it
+is far from being an interesting trip. The river is about as
+picturesque, and in the same way, as the Dutch Rhine. However, in these
+days of distorted aesthetics--when all that we thought beautiful we are
+now told is ugly, and _vice versa_--it is quite possible that some
+rapturous travellers will extol the mystical loveliness of the plains of
+the Guadalquivir, rating their charms far above the vulgar, blatant
+scenery of Switzerland and the Riviera, which is at the disadvantage of
+being at once realized by the mere ordinary person. _En passant_ I
+cannot refrain from expressing my wonder why superior people of this
+sort go abroad. If Rhenish and Italian panoramas are suggestive to them
+only of oleographs and Christmas numbers, have we not our Abanas and
+Pharpars in England--the Essex marshes, the treeless downs of Sussex,
+the odoriferous banks of the Mersey, for instance?
+
+But I digress--and I counsel you against doing so, but recommend you to
+proceed to Seville, if that be your destination, by rail direct. The
+journey occupies eight and a half hours, and is not among the most
+agreeable experiences of a lifetime. The railway runs right round the
+bay of Cadiz, touching several towns of importance. That any of them are
+worth a break of journey I doubt. Puerto Santa Maria is said to be much
+resorted to by toreros and their admirers. I have never heard what
+attracts them there, but indeed my interest in bull-killing was never
+more than languid. The country round the bay is marshy. It is traversed
+by the river Guadalete, beside which, it seems, Don Roderic was not
+slain, and the battle never took place. You must look for the scene of
+that epoch-making encounter farther towards the strait near the Rio
+Barbate.
+
+Between Cadiz and Seville you stop at the buffet of Jerez to drink a
+glass of sherry in its native place. As most people know, all the good
+wine comes to England; but at Jerez I think, in all reason, the price of
+the wine might be a little lower and its quality a good deal higher. The
+city, of which I only caught a glimpse, looks like an inland Cadiz,
+very clean, white, sunny, and bright.
+
+And so we creep onwards over dreary country--like the South African
+veld--to Lebrija, an old Moorish town with a great church on a height,
+apparently the only building of note in the place. Further on is Utrera,
+renowned for bulls and for possessing one of the thirty deniers for
+which Judas sold his Master. It should be an interesting town, with its
+Moorish castle and walls still extant. But the same individuality is not
+to be expected of the smaller Spanish as of the lesser Italian cities;
+for the history of the one country has been a record of steady
+centralization; of the other, obstinate decentralization. In Utrera, and
+Moron, and Lebrija--even in Cadiz and Granada--there were no independent
+princes or ambitious municipalities to foster and to reward native art.
+The genius and talent of Spain flocked to great centres like Seville,
+Toledo, Valladolid, and Zaragoza, and became ultimately concentrated in
+Madrid. We read the same story in our own country; and in fact it is
+impossible to resist the dangerous and obvious conclusion that
+centralization and unity are good things for nations but bad things for
+art.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE PEARL OF ANDALUSIA
+
+
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--A STREET]
+
+Seville, in the glory of the Andalusian summer, is a city of white and
+gold. Her brilliancy dazzles you, as it dazzled those who wrote of her,
+a little wildly, as the eighth wonder of the world. Luis Guevara, a poet
+born within her walls, declared that she was not the eighth but the
+first of those wonders. In our own day, men of genius have felt her
+spell. "Seville," says Valdes, "has ever been for me the symbol of
+light, the city of love and joy." So much few northerners would feel
+justified in saying. To them this must be the city that most closely
+corresponds to their preconceived ideas of the sunny and romantic South.
+To Seville belong the sweep of lute-strings, the click of the castanets,
+the serenade, and above all, the bull-fight. There is something feminine
+about the radiant city, compared with the masculine strength of Toledo
+and Avila, and the harsh decadence of Granada. You will agree that no
+town is prettier, except perhaps Cadiz. So Byron said, and by him and
+all the poets of his school--Alfred de Musset for one--the city by the
+Guadalquivir was ardently loved. Yet though so conventionally
+romantic of aspect, Seville is busy, prosperous, and well peopled,
+before all other Andalusian towns. The blood still courses hotly through
+her veins--her vitality intoxicates. If you come from Cordova or
+Granada, you feel as though you were returning to the world. Here is
+life, here is gaiety; yet your driver the next instant takes you into a
+narrow, winding street, no broader than an alley, where absolute silence
+reigns. The windows are shuttered, no one seems to stir in the patios.
+There reigns a Sabbath-like calm. A minute later you are in a broad
+plaza, where electric cars boom and whirr, where all is animation and
+bustle. Such contrasts are very sharp in this city, where the streets
+exist simply for folk to dwell in, the squares and paseos for them to
+gather in and do their business. There are notable exceptions, it is
+true. There is no want of life in the Sierpes, the narrow street which
+is the Strand and Charing Cross of Seville. Here you return again and
+again, feeling it is the focus of the city's life. Little better than a
+lane is the Sierpes, where no wheeled traffic can pass. It is amazingly
+dark in the summer, when awnings are drawn right across it from roof to
+roof, and penetrating into it from the sunny plaza, it is a little time
+before you can accustom your eyes to the shadow. Here are the best
+shops, the banks, and those elegant and ostentatious casinos, where the
+aristocracy and leisured class lounge and smoke, and survey at their
+ease the unceasing procession of passers by. There are cafes here of a
+different sort, some of which are frequented by the bull-fighters and
+their admirers. Here too may be seen in all his glory that peculiar type
+of Andalusian, the "Majo," a curious blend of the English "masher" the
+"sporting man" and the "troubadour"! The people sit in the cafes to see
+the others pass, and the others walk down the street to see the people
+in the cafes. This is a form of amusement and exercise common on the
+Continent, and acclimatized already at our English seaside towns.
+Selling lottery tickets is a great industry in the Sierpes, the sale of
+tickets for the next _Corrida de toros_ even more so. The boot-blacking
+saloons remind the American visitor of his native land. For his
+delectation the _New York Herald_ is displayed in the windows of the few
+booksellers. There is nothing about this gay little thoroughfare to
+remind us of the past. The history of Seville is more easily recoverable
+by the fancy, when you are seated by the Guadalquivir, in sight of the
+Torre del Oro, on the spot perhaps where George Borrow, in an unwonted
+fit of hysteria, wept over the beauty of the scene before him.
+
+Phoenician, Carthaginian, Roman, Vandal, Goth, and Moor--the city has
+known them all and outlived them all. There seems to have been a
+settlement of the Turdetani here, before the first Phoenicians came.
+The name at all events was bestowed by the Tyrian traders, if it is
+really derived from "sephela," a plain. Then came the Carthaginians,
+whom the Spaniards accuse of having corrupted the pure and
+simple-minded natives. The city became known to the little world of
+civilization, and was spoken of by Grecian geographers as "Ispola" and
+"Hispalis." The terrible Hamilcar reduced the greater part of Spain to
+the Punic yoke. He and his successor Hasdrubal filled Andalusia with
+their massive ungainly fortresses. Salambo, the Semitic Venus, was
+worshipped on the banks of the Guadalquivir. From time to time, we doubt
+not, human sacrifices stained the altars of Baal. One wonders if the
+descendants of the Carthaginians became identified with the other great
+Semitic people, and passed as Jews. Certainly it is otherwise a little
+difficult to account for the presence in Spain of the Israelites in such
+numbers at a very early period.
+
+The Carthaginians fought hard for the province of Baetica, but Punic
+force and fraud were alike powerless before the sword of Scipio. The
+dominion of the province of Iberia passed to Rome. When the conquering
+hero turned his face homewards to claim his triumph, he was mindful of
+his warworn veterans. For them the journey back to Italy was too long
+and wearisome; they were content to die in the land they had conquered.
+Outside Hispalis a place of rest and refreshment was found for them in
+the village of Sancios. Scipio laid there the foundation of a colony,
+bestowed it on his veterans, and named it Italica, in memory of their
+fatherland. And thus was founded the first Latin-speaking settlement
+outside Italy. It lies--all that remains of it--on the slopes of the
+hills that bound the prospect westwards.
+
+Hispalis, not overshadowed by its new neighbour, flourished under the
+Roman sway. Julius Caesar besieged the city, which was garrisoned by
+Pompey's partisans, and inscribed the date of its capture in the
+calendar of the Republic (August 9, B.C. 45). His fleet, they say, lay
+in the river between the Torre del Oro and the Palace of San Telmo. The
+townsfolk were devoted to him, and he renamed the place Julia Romula. As
+a Roman colony the town had a senate and consuls, ediles and censors.
+The wall Caesar built endured intact until the time of Juan II., so that
+monarch wrote in his Chronicle.
+
+While its Punic physiognomy was hard to efface, Seville soon became in
+spirit a Latin town. All Andalusia was in course of time thoroughly
+Romanized. Seneca, Lucan, the AElii, as most of us remember, were
+Spaniards--if Spaniards could be said, as yet, to have existed.
+
+Then came the era of persecutions, the establishment of Christianity and
+the disappearance of Astarte and Baal from the forum and the temple--to
+be worshipped, perhaps, for a little while longer in the recesses of the
+mountains, where Islam lingered in after times. Presently came the
+Vandals, and their fury having spent itself, they made Seville their
+capital, though they did _not_ give their name, as some have thought, to
+Andalusia. When they passed over--a whole nation--to Africa, the
+barbarous Suevi took possession of their old camping-ground. The Suevian
+king, Recchiarus, became a Catholic, at the persuasion of Sabinus,
+Bishop of Seville, in the year 448. We next hear of him murdering the
+Byzantine ambassador Censorius, in this city, and of being defeated and
+slain by the Visigoths in 456. Now comes an interregnum of seventy-five
+years. The Suevi were expelled from Seville, but their conquerors did
+not occupy the town. It must have been governed by its Catholic bishops,
+who are spoken of as miracles of wisdom and sanctity. Under Theudis the
+Gothic king, Seville again rose to the rank of a capital--or at any rate
+shared the dignity with Toledo. Here Theudis was assassinated, and his
+son and successor Theudisel also, a few months later. The latter
+sovereign is described as a detestably wicked person. He was of course
+an Aryan, and gave a shocking example of his hard-hearted incredulity.
+Among the hills where lies Italica is a village called San Juan de
+Aznalfarache. Near this in the sixth century was a tank which was
+miraculously filled once a year, when the Catholics resorted to it to
+baptize their catechumens. Theudisel had the tank, when it was dry,
+thoroughly investigated, and, satisfied that it was fed by no spring,
+had a lid fastened over it and sealed with his own seal. But next Easter
+it was full of water! Not to be baffled, the king dug a ditch to the
+depth of twenty-five feet all round the tank, but found no trace of a
+spring. He would perhaps have gone on digging for years had not his
+nobles rid the world of so sceptical a monarch.
+
+We come now to the days of good King Leovgild, who consolidated the
+Visigothic monarchy and warred successfully against the Greeks and
+barbarous Suevi. His son, Ermengild, being sent to govern Seville, was
+converted by Leander, the bishop of the city, to the Catholic faith. The
+prince thought he could give no better proof of his zeal for his new
+creed than by revolting against his father. A bloody war resulted.
+Ermengild was worsted and was shut up in Seville, while his father
+occupied Italica and pressed him closely. The rebels capitulated and
+were treated leniently. The prince afterwards headed a second revolt
+against his father, was captured and executed. He has been enrolled
+among the saints of the Catholic Church.
+
+It is quite conceivable that a man of fanatical temperament should feel
+himself called upon to effect the conversion of his fellows to what he
+believes to be the true faith, even at the cost of his kinsfolk's blood;
+but unfortunately for the Visigothic prince, his interests so coincided
+with his principles that worldly people not unnaturally suggest that the
+desire to wear his father's crown had as much to do with his action as
+the desire to convert his father's subjects.
+
+When Spain from Aryan became Catholic, Seville became the Metropolitan
+See, and Leander its Archbishop. He was succeeded in that office by his
+brother Isidore, a much better man than he, and renowned as a doctor of
+the Church and writer on things generally. But by the end of the seventh
+century the primacy had passed to Toledo, and before the next century
+was fourteen years old the last of the Visigoths had reigned over Spain.
+
+After the victory over Roderic near Jerez, Tarik, the Moorish commander,
+marched straight upon Toledo. The reduction of Seville he left to his
+superior officer, Musa. The citizens offered, it is said, a stout
+resistance, and then retired to Beja, on the other side of the Guadiana.
+During the absence of the Moorish commander they recovered the city,
+only to be dispossessed and finally subjugated by his son, the famous
+Abd-el-Aziz, the Abdalasis of Spanish story. Thenceforward for 536 years
+Seville was known as Ishbiliyah, one of the fairest cities of Islam.
+
+When Musa was recalled to Damascus his son remained beside the
+Guadalquivir (as the river Baetis had now come to be called). He
+espoused, according to tradition, Roderic's widow, Exilona, who, legend
+says, had originally been a Moorish princess. For a brief period he
+dwelt in splendour in the old Acropolis, near where the Convent of La
+Trinidad now stands. But his enemies had been busy far away at the
+khalifa's court. While he was in the act of prayer in the mosque he had
+built adjacent to his palace, the messenger of death appeared. Exilona
+was left a second time a widow, and to the aged Musa was shown, months
+later, the lifeless head of his valiant son. Under Abd-el-Aziz's
+immediate successors the seat of government of the latest province of
+the Moslem Empire was transferred from Seville to Cordova. From all
+parts of the East, but especially from Syria, men came flocking to
+Andalusia. Quarrels arose as to the partition of the conquered land
+between the Berbers, who had composed the hordes of Tarik and Musa, and
+the new Saracen settlers. Finally it was decreed that each tribe or
+nationality should be allotted that region which bore the most
+resemblance to its original place of abode. Under this arrangement
+Ishbiliyah was assigned to the people of Homs, the ancient Emesa, a
+Syrian town on the Orontes. (We are reminded of the parallel between
+Macedon and Monmouth.) But in the course of time the original derivation
+of the Spanish Moslems was half forgotten, and the classification was
+rather into pure-blooded Arabs and Muwallads or half-breeds.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--THE ACEITE GATE]
+
+Here at Seville the young Abd-er-Rahman arrived, to restore the empire
+of his forefathers, the Umeyyas, and under these walls the horde of the
+Abbassides was cut to pieces. Yet despite the prosperity she enjoyed
+under the Western Khalifate, the city murmured against Cordova, and more
+than once essayed to throw off the yoke. In Abdullah's reign (888-912) a
+chief named Ibrahim Ibn Hajjaj assumed semi-regal state at Ishbiliyah.
+When he rode forth he was attended by five hundred cavaliers, and he
+ventured to wear the tiraz, the official insignia of the amirs. He
+was a liberal patron of the arts and letters. "In all the West,"
+exclaimed a delighted bard, "I found no noble man but Ibrahim, and he
+was nobility itself! When you have once lived within his shadow, to live
+elsewhere is misery." Such flattery did not delude Ibrahim into too
+great a confidence in his own power. He readily submitted to the great
+khalifa, Abd-ur-Rahman III., by whom the city was greatly favoured. The
+channel of the Guadalquivir was narrowed and deepened, the palm-tree
+introduced from Africa, and the city adorned with gardens and fine
+edifices. The splendour of the court of Cordova was reflected on
+Seville, which became famous as a seat of learning. In those days
+flourished Ahmed Ben Abdallah, surnamed "El Beji," or "The Sage," the
+author of an Encyclopaedia of Sciences which was long esteemed a piece of
+marvellous erudition.
+
+Some strange and unexpected figures about this time flit across the
+stage of Andalusian history. The Northmen, or "Majus" as they were
+called by the Arabs, appeared in the year 844 off Lisbon. After
+spreading dismay through Lusitania they sailed their long ships
+southwards to Cadiz, and disembarked. They vanquished the khalifa's
+troops in three pitched battles, and penetrating into Seville sacked the
+rich city from end to end. Luckily they remained but a day and a night,
+and after sustaining several desperate attacks from the inhabitants of
+the country, with varying results, they retired overland to Lisbon,
+where they re-embarked. They came again fifteen years later, and this
+time sailed up the Guadalquivir, burnt the principal mosque, and threw
+down the Roman walls. Then they made sail for the eastern coasts of
+Spain, where they were attacked and routed by the Saracen fleet. An army
+of demons must these strange uncouth pirates have seemed to the
+Andalusians, who knew not whence they came nor to what race of men they
+belonged.
+
+On the break-up of the Western Khalifate in 1009, the shrewd and
+powerful kadi, Mohammed Ben Abbad, secured the sovereignty of the city
+for himself and his descendants. He contrived to give his usurpation the
+appearance of legality. He espoused the cause of an impostor who
+personated the deposed khalifa, Hisham, and pretended to govern the city
+in his name. His power once firmly established, Ben Abbad disposed of
+his puppet, and announced that the khalifa was dead and had designated
+him his lawful successor. For the second time Seville rose to the rank
+of an independent State.
+
+The dynasty of Abbad, emulous of the glories of Cordova, outshone all
+the other rulers of Spain in elegance and culture. The city was adorned
+with beautiful gardens and buildings. Learning was held in honour, and
+the amir disputed the palm with a swarm of fellow-poets. Walking one day
+with his courtiers, on these very banks of the Guadalquivir, the Amir
+Mut'adid-billah observed the water lying glassy beneath the waving
+light. He improvised a line comparing the surface of the stream to a
+cuirass, and called on the poet Aben Amr to complete the verse. This the
+laureate found some difficulty in doing, and to his chagrin he was
+anticipated by a girl of the people standing by, who contributed these
+lines:
+
+ "A strong cuirass, magnificent in combat,
+ Like water frozen over."
+
+The amir, far from resenting this intrusion of a bystander into the
+royal circle, bade the girl draw nearer and asked her name. She said
+that her name was Romikiwa and that she was the slave of Romiya. The
+prince then asked if she were married. The maiden replied that she was
+not. "It is well," said Mut'adid-billah, "for I propose to buy you and
+to marry you." It is to be presumed that Romiya had no objection to
+offer to this plan.
+
+This monarch, the son of the first Abbadite amir, could do other things
+than make verses. He was a mighty warrior in Islam, and kept a kind of
+garden planted with the skulls of his enemies, in the contemplation of
+which he took great delight. With a view to adding to his collection he
+made extensive conquests in what are now the provinces of Ciudad Real,
+Badajoz, and Alemtejo, and undertook successful expeditions against
+Cordova and Ronda. It was the misfortune of his son and successor,
+Mote'mid, to be the contemporary of those great and vigorous Castilian
+kings, Fernando el Magno and Alfonso VI. Conscious of the weakness of
+his little State, the Amir of Ishbiliyah neglected no means of humouring
+his powerful neighbour. Fernando sent an armed mission to his court to
+demand the body of the holy martyr, Justa. But though Mote'mid eagerly
+extended all the assistance in his power, no trace of the relics could
+be obtained. The mission would have been obliged to return empty-handed
+had not St. Isidore (the brother of St. Leander) appeared in a dream to
+one of the Christian envoys and commanded him to convey his remains to
+Leon, instead of St. Justa's. The venerable prelate's body was
+discovered at Italica and carried off to the north, fragrant with
+balsamic odours and wrapped in costly silks. Mote'mid loudly lamented
+the loss of the remains. "Oh! venerable brother," he was heard to
+exclaim, "dost thou then leave me? Thou knowest what has passed between
+me and thee, and the love I bear thee. I pray thee to forget me never."
+Very remarkable words indeed, to fall from the lips of a Mohammedan
+sovereign in reference to a Catholic saint.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--A COURTYARD]
+
+In truth the Spanish Moslems of that day were sadly wanting in zeal for
+their religion. "In those days," writes an Arab chronicler, "men of
+virtue and principle were rare among the people of Mohammed. The
+majority scrupled not to drink wine and to give themselves up to every
+kind of dissipation. The conquerors of Andalusia disputed about their
+slaves and singing girls, passing their time in debauchery and
+pleasures, wasting the treasure of the State on amusement, and
+oppressing the people with exactions and tributes that they might buy
+the friendship of the tyrant Alfonso with costly presents. So things
+went on among the quarrelsome Mussulman chiefs, until, the conquerors
+and the conquered alike prostrated and the kings and captains having
+lost their pristine worth, the warriors became cowards, the people
+vegetated in misery and dejection, the whole of society became corrupt,
+and the lifeless, soulless body of Islam was only a decaying carcase.
+The Moslems who did not bow beneath the yoke of Alfonso consented to pay
+him annual tributes, constituting themselves in this manner mere tax
+collectors for the Christian king on their own territories. Meanwhile
+the affairs of Islam were directed by Jews, who obtained the offices of
+wizir, hagib, and khatib, reserved in another age to the most
+illustrious of the citizens. The Christians devastated the beautiful
+land of Andalusia, and carried off captives and booty, burning villages
+and threatening the towns."
+
+In pursuance of his policy of conciliation, Mote'mid gave his daughter
+Zayda in marriage to Alfonso VI., her dowry being all the towns Mut'adid
+had conquered in New Castile. Lucas of Tuy says the damsel was taken
+"quasi pro uxore ut praemissam est." But this ambiguous union did not
+avert a serious rupture between the sovereigns a year or two later.
+When the Castilian king sent two ambassadors to Seville to collect his
+tribute, one of them, a Jew, conducted himself so haughtily that the
+exasperated Moslems stabbed him to death, letting the Christians escape
+without serious injury. This outrage meant war. Mote'mid cast about him
+for an ally. No help was to be found in Spain, and with inward
+misgivings, no doubt, the Abbadite amir called on the Almoravides of
+Africa to uphold the cause of Islam. Warned of the danger of this
+course, Mote'mid is said to have replied, "Better be a camel driver in
+the African desert than a swineherd in Castile." The Almoravides came
+and routed the Christians. They returned to Africa, and then came again,
+this time reducing all the petty Mussulman States beneath their sway. In
+1091 Ishbiliyah became a mere provincial centre, the seat of a Berber
+governor. Mote'mid was sent in chains to Africa, where he died four
+years later.
+
+The Almoravide rule was of scant duration. Fifty-five years later all
+Andalusia was annexed to the empire of the Almohades. The third
+sovereign of the new dynasty dealt what seemed a decisive blow to the
+allied Christians at Alarcos in the year 1195. But the conquerors knew
+not how to follow up their victory. The Spaniards rallied, and in 1212
+was fought the battle of "Las Navas de Tolosa." The Mussulmans were
+totally defeated, and left, it is said, six hundred thousand dead upon
+the field. Yet the knell of Ishbiliyah had not yet sounded. The
+authority of the Almohade khalifas was nominally recognized in the city
+sixteen years longer. In 1228 the last of the race of Abd-ul-Mumin to
+rule in Spain was expelled by the famous Ben Hud, who was himself slain
+by his rival Al Ahmar, the founder of the Nasrite dynasty of Granada,
+ten years later. In their despair the people of Seville turned once more
+to the African Almohades. But no new army of Ghazis crossed the strait
+to do battle with the Unbeliever. The Andalusians were left to fight
+their last fight unassisted. Cordova had fallen before St. Ferdinand,
+and the Sevillians provoked his anger by the murder of one of their
+chiefs who was devoted to his interests. At the eleventh hour the
+defence was entrusted--strangely enough for a Mohammedan community--to a
+junta composed of six persons. Their names are worth being recorded: Abu
+Faris Ben Hafs, Sakkaf, Ben Shoayb, Yahya Ben Khaldun, Ben Khiyar, and
+Abu Bekr Ben Sharih.
+
+Thus driven to bay, the Moors offered a determined resistance. They were
+attacked not only by the Castilians, but by their own co-religionists;
+for Al Ahmar, the new Amir of Granada, was serving with his followers
+under the banner of Ferdinand. The siege lasted fifteen months. A fleet
+was brought round from the shores of Biscay under the command of Admiral
+Ramon Bonifaz. The Moorish ships were dispersed and the chain which the
+defenders had stretched across the river broken. The besieged were thus
+cut off from their magazines in the suburb of Triana. Meanwhile all the
+outlying posts had been taken by the Castilians, and the Moors were
+driven to take refuge within the walls. Only when threatened with famine
+did the garrison ask for terms. They offered to capitulate if they were
+allowed to destroy their principal mosque to save it from profanation.
+The Infante Alfonso replied that if a single brick was displaced, the
+whole population would be put to the sword. The terms finally accorded
+the besieged were, for that age, not ungenerous. A limited number of
+families were to be allowed to remain in the city, the lives and
+property of these and of the rest were to be respected, and the means of
+transport to Africa and other parts of the peninsula were to be provided
+for those who were to leave. Probably only a few thousand Moors remained
+in Seville. Abu Faris, magnanimously declining an honourable post
+offered him by the conqueror, retired to Barbary. Thither he was
+followed by thousands of his fellow-townsmen, while others accepted Al
+Ahmar's invitation to settle at Granada.
+
+Ferdinand took possession of the city on December 22, 1248. He took up
+his residence at the Alcazar, and allotted houses and lands to his
+officers, not forgetting even his Moorish auxiliaries. Among his first
+cares was the purification of the mosque and its conversion into a
+Christian church. It is interesting to note that the first of his
+knights to mount the Giralda Tower was a Scotsman named Lawrence Poore.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--THE TORRE DEL ORO AND THE CATHEDRAL]
+
+Seville had remained in the power of the Mussulmans five hundred
+and thirty-six years. We, who see all Spain Spanish and remember it was
+so at the beginning, are apt to look on the Moorish occupation as a mere
+episode or interlude in the history of the country. It is difficult to
+realize that the sway of the Crescent lasted in Seville for as long a
+period as has passed with us since the death of King Edward III.
+
+Yet there are few monuments remaining to-day to commemorate a
+civilization which endured five centuries. The Moors have left their
+impress, it is true, in a scarcely definable way on the city, the
+physiognomy of which is more Oriental than that of Granada, a later seat
+of Mohammedan empire. But this is in great part due to the men who lived
+under the Christian kings, who had caught the spirit of the Moors and
+perpetuated their traditions of art and culture. Here we have no such
+mighty memorials of the vanished race as the Mezquita or the Alhambra.
+Still, a few memorials of that far-off age there are; and we will go in
+search of them.
+
+Here on the quays of the Guadalquivir rises a polygonal tower of three
+storeys, poetically termed the "Torre del Oro." But here we find no
+Danae awaiting a rescuer, but only the harbour master and his
+assistants. When the Almohades ruled in Seville a great iron chain was
+drawn across the river, and a tower built on either side to support it.
+The tower on the Triana side has long since disappeared, but the "Torre
+del Oro" remains as it was built in 1220--except, indeed, for the small
+turret or superstructure added in the eighteenth century. It is said,
+too, that it was once adorned with beautiful glazed tiles, from which
+(though this seems unlikely) it derived its name. In the days when it
+stood the brunt of the attack from the squadron of Ramon Bonifaz, it was
+connected with the Alcazar by a wall, called, in military language, a
+curtain. This was not demolished until the year 1821. At the same time
+disappeared the main entrance to the Alcazar.
+
+The Almohades did much to embellish and to improve the city during their
+century of sovereignty. The only important Mohammedan work remaining to
+us in Seville belongs to that period, and illustrates the victory of the
+African or Berber over the Byzantine influences traceable in earlier
+Moorish architecture. The new conquerors of Andalusia were a virile,
+hardy race, and there is something vigorous and coarse in their
+handiwork. They developed an excessive fondness for ornamentation which
+mars much of their work, and were too much addicted to the use of
+painted stucco and gilding. To them we owe the stalactite roofing,
+afterwards developed with such success at the Alhambra. "It is certain,"
+says Don Pedro de Madrazo, "that the innovations characteristic of
+Mussulman architecture in Spain during the eleventh and twelfth
+centuries cannot be explained as a natural modification of the Arabic
+art of the Khalifate, or as a prelude to the art of Granada, for
+there is very little similarity between the style called Secondary or
+Mauritanian, and the Arab-Byzantine and Andalusian; while on the other
+hand it is evident that the Saracenic monuments of Fez and Morocco, of
+the reigns of Yusuf Ben Tashfin, Abdul Ben Ali, Al Mansur, and Nasr,
+partake of the character of the ornamentation introduced by the
+Almohades into Spain."
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--THE GIRALDA]
+
+The most important example of this style is the far-famed Giralda Tower,
+at the north-eastern corner of the Cathedral, the most renowned of
+minarets and one of the strongest buildings in the world. It was built
+in the reign of Yakub al Mansur by an architect whose name is variously
+written Gabir, Hever, and Yever. Quantities of Roman remains and
+statuary were used in making the foundations. The wall at the base is
+nine feet in thickness, which increases with the height. The lower part
+is of stone, the upper part of brick. For the first fifteen metres the
+four faces of the tower are plain; at that height begins a series of
+vertical windows, mostly of two lights, some with the horseshoe, others
+with the pointed arch; while on either side the masonry is carved into
+what seem panels of trellis work. There is much in the details of this
+decoration to interest the student of Moorish art, who will recognize in
+them the inception of many forms developed (and not always to advantage)
+at Granada.
+
+But the Giralda as we now see it is a third as high again as it was
+left by the Almohades. In their time it was crowned by a pinnacle to
+which were attached four balls of gilded copper--one of which was so
+large, we are told, that the city gate had to be widened that it might
+be brought hither. The iron bar supporting the balls weighed about ten
+hundredweights, and the whole was cast by a Sicilian Arab named Abu
+Leyth at a cost of about fifty thousand pounds of our money. The balls
+were thrown down by an earthquake in 1395, when their proportions were
+carefully ascertained.
+
+It was not till 1568 that the upper stage of the fabric, a graceful
+Renaissance superstructure, was added by Fernando Ruiz. In the same year
+Morel's great statue of Faith, cast in bronze, was placed on the apex to
+symbolize the triumph of Christianity over the creed of Islam. It is a
+clever piece of workmanship, for though it weighs twenty-five
+hundredweights and measures fourteen feet in height, it sways and turns
+with every wind. Hence the name applied to the Tower--Giralda, from _que
+gira_, "which turns."
+
+The first thing you will be asked to do by the guides at Seville is to
+mount the Giralda, which you do by means of thirty-five inclined planes,
+up which a horse might be ridden with ease to the very top. Each stage
+of the ascent is named: "El Cuerpo de Campanas," after its fine peal of
+bells, one of which weighs eighteen tons; "El Cuerpo del Reloj," after
+the clock first set up in 1400--the earliest tower-clock in Spain. Then
+there are the prettily-named floors of the Lilies and the Stars. Some of
+the rooms are inhabited by the bell-ringers, who may at times be heard
+practising not only the chimes but the peculiar guitar-playing of
+Andalusia.
+
+The view from the summit of the tower I think, on the whole,
+disappointing. The principal buildings of the city are too closely
+grouped below the spectator to give a very fine effect to the panorama,
+and the country round is not beautiful. Looking across the arid region
+beyond the river, it is hard to believe that in Moorish times it was
+renowned for its beauty and fertility and compared by Arabic writers to
+the Garden of Eden. Looking down we scan the white city, a labyrinth of
+lanes and alleys, only here and there a plaza opening like a lake among
+the closely-set roofs. Far away to the north the Sierra Morena limits
+the prospect. How often, when from this tower the muezzin proclaimed the
+Islamic profession of faith, his eyes must have lingered apprehensively
+on those mountains from whose crests the Christian seemed to hurl back
+defiance and repudiation.
+
+For the Giralda was the minaret of the great mosque begun by Yusuf, the
+son of Abd-ur-Rahman, in 1171, and completed by his son and successor,
+Yakub al Mansur. The earlier mosque on the same site had been destroyed
+by the Normans, but some portions of it seem to appear in the horseshoe
+arches of the Puerta del Lagarto and the northern wall of the Patio de
+los Naranjos. This latter court, which shuts in the Cathedral on the
+north side, contains the fountain at which the devout Moslems performed
+their ablutions. The picturesque Puerta del Perdon, through which you
+pass on your way into the town, is a Mudejar, not a Moorish, horseshoe
+arch, erected by Alfonso XI. to commemorate the victory at the Salado in
+the year 1340. The doors with bronze plates, despite their Arabic
+inscriptions, also date from that time. The gate was restored in the
+sixteenth century and adorned with sculptures. The terra-cotta statues
+of St. Peter and St Paul on the outer side are the work of Miguel
+Florentin, one of the earliest of the apostles of Renaissance sculpture
+to settle in Spain. The relief over the arch, representing the expulsion
+of the money-changers from the Temple, is also by him, and commemorates
+the substitution of the Lonja or Bourse for this gate as a rendezvous
+for merchants. The belfry storey is modern. At the little shrine just
+inside, to the left on entering, may be seen a "Christ bearing the
+Cross," by Luis de Vargas. The money-changers and brokers have gone, but
+this gate remains a favourite haunt of the gossips and loungers of
+Seville, and in the cool of the evening is occupied by some pleasant
+little family groups from the adjoining houses. The southern side of the
+patio is occupied by the Cathedral, the western by the church or chapel
+of the Sagrario. The house on the north side inside the old Moorish
+wall, to the right of the Giralda gate (on entering), is occupied
+by the Biblioteca Colombina, bequeathed by the son of Columbus. The
+pulpit from which St. Vincent Ferrer, the "Angel of the Judgment,"
+thundered forth his terrific fulminations against sinners, Jews, and
+heretics, I omitted to notice.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR]
+
+Everyone who reaches the Patio de los Naranjos for the first time is
+sure to enter the Cathedral, which he should not do until the Alcazar at
+least has been visited. Not that the two great buildings of Seville
+exhibit any transition of style from the one to the other, but because,
+having begun the consideration of Moorish architectural work, we ought
+naturally to pass on immediately to the Mauresque work of the first
+century of Castilian rule.
+
+The group of buildings which for greater clearness we will call, with
+the Spaniards themselves, the Alcazares lie to the south of the
+Cathedral, and are surrounded by an embattled wall built by the Arabs.
+This enclosure, it should be understood, includes a great many private
+houses and open spaces besides the Alcazar proper. Immediately inside
+the wall are two squares called the Patio de las Banderas and Patio de
+la Monteria. At the far end of the former is the office of the governor
+of the palace, and to the right of this is an entrance whence a
+colonnaded passage called the Apeadero leads straight through to the
+gardens, or, by turning to the right, to the Patio del Leon. On one side
+this latter square communicates with the Patio de la Monteria; on the
+other side is the Palace of the Alcazar itself. I hope this will make
+the rather puzzling topography of the place a little more intelligible.
+
+Whether or not the Roman "Arx" stood on this spot, as tradition avers, I
+cannot pretend to say. But there is no room for doubt that a palace
+stood here in the days of the Abbadite amirs, and that this building was
+restored and remodelled by the Almohades. To outward seeming the Alcazar
+is as Moorish a monument as the Alhambra. In reality, few traces remain
+of the palace raised by the Moslem rulers of either dynasty, and the
+present building was mainly the work of the Castilian kings--especially
+of Pedro the Cruel. But though built under and for a Christian monarch,
+it is practically certain that the architects were Moors and good
+Moslems, and that their instructions and intentions were to build a
+Moorish palace. Historically, you may say, the Alcazar is a Christian
+work; artistically, Mohammedan.
+
+The actual palace occupies only a small part of the site of the older
+structures, and incorporates but a few fragments of their fabrics. Since
+Pedro the Cruel's day, so many sovereigns have restored, remodelled, and
+added to the building, that it is far from being homogeneous, though we
+can hardly agree with Contreras that it is "far from being a monument of
+Oriental art."
+
+Pedro built more than one palace, or, more correctly, two or three wings
+of the same palace, in this enclosure. Traces of his Stucco Palace
+(Palacio del Yeso) remain. Pedro looms very large in the history of
+Seville. He plays as prominent a part here as Harun-al-Rashid in the
+story of Bagdad. He was fond of the Moors, and affected their costumes
+and customs. He also favoured the Jews, and was alleged by his enemies
+to be the changeling child of a Jewess. His treasurer and trusted
+adviser was an Israelite named Simuel Ben Levi. He served the king long
+and faithfully, till one day it was whispered that half the wealth that
+should fill the royal coffers had been diverted into his own. Ben Levi
+was seized without warning and placed on the rack, whereupon he expired,
+not of pain, but of sheer indignation. Under his house--so the story
+goes--was found a cavern in which were three piles of gold and silver,
+twice as high as a man. Pedro on beholding these was much affected. "Had
+Simuel surrendered a third of the least of these piles," he exclaimed,
+"he should have gone free. Why would he rather die than speak?"
+
+Stories innumerable are told of this king, a good many, no doubt, being
+pure inventions. There is no reason to question the account of his
+treatment of Abu Said, the Moorish Sultan of Granada. This prince had
+usurped the throne, and being solicitous of Pedro's alliance, came to
+visit him at the Alcazar with a magnificent retinue. The costliest
+presents were offered to the Castilian king, whose heart, however, was
+bent on possessing the superb ruby in the regalia of his guest. Before
+many hours had passed, the Moors were seized in their apartments and
+stripped of their raiment and valuables. Abu Said, ridiculously tricked
+out, was mounted on a donkey, and with thirty-six of his courtiers,
+hurried to a field outside the town, where they were bound to posts. A
+train of horsemen appeared, Don Pedro at their head, and transfixed the
+helpless men with darts, the king shouting, as he hurled his missiles at
+his luckless guest: "This for the treaty you made me conclude with
+Aragon! This for the castle you took from me!" The ruby which had been
+the cause of the Moor's death was presented by his murderer to the Black
+Prince, and now adorns the crown of England.
+
+Nor did Pedro confine his fury to the sterner sex. Dona Urraca Osorio,
+because her son was concerned in Don Enrique's uprising, was burned at
+the stake on the Alameda. Her faithful servant, Leonor Davalos, seeing
+that the flames had consumed her mistress's clothing, threw herself into
+the pyre to cover her nakedness, and was likewise burnt to ashes. Having
+conceived a passion for Dona Maria Coronel, the king caused her husband
+to be executed in the Torre del Oro. The widow, far from yielding to his
+entreaties and threats, took the veil and destroyed her beauty by means
+of vitriol. Pedro at once transferred his attentions to her sister, Dona
+Aldonza, and met with more success. If a chronicler is to be believed,
+he threw his brother Enrique's young daughter naked to the lions, like
+some Christian virgin martyr. The generous (or possibly overfed) brutes
+refused the proffered prey, and the whimsical tyrant ever afterwards
+treated the maiden kindly. In memory of her experience, she was known as
+"Leonor de los Leones."
+
+The misdeeds and eccentricities of this extraordinary monarch have been
+chronicled by Ayala (who was a partisan of Don Enrique), and given a
+wider circulation by the pen of Prosper Merimee. I cannot very well omit
+the oft-told tale that gives its name to the curious little street, near
+the Casa de los Abades, called Calle Cabeza de Don Pedro. There the
+king's head may be seen in effigy high up on the wall at the corner of
+the street. Pedro, prowling about the town after dark, had a quarrel
+with a passer-by to whom, of course, he was unknown, and whom he
+incontinently ran through the body. Thinking there had been no witness
+to his crime, he stalked back to his palace. Next day he summoned the
+Alcalde of Seville to his presence and asked for news of the town. The
+magistrate told him that the body of a man had been found, murdered by
+whom no one knew. The king would suffer no laxity on the part of his
+officers. If the assassin were not discovered the alcalde must pay the
+penalty of the crime with his own life. Luckily for the magistrate, an
+old dame had beheld the encounter of the previous night, and now
+hastened to him with the surprising news that the man he sought after
+was no other than his majesty. She had recognized him beyond all
+possibility of doubt, not only by his features, but by the peculiar
+clicking of the royal knees. The alcalde hanged the king in effigy and
+invited him to the spectacle. "It is well," said the prince, after an
+ominous pause, "I am satisfied. Justice has been done."
+
+I have told the tale rather hurriedly, as it is far from being well
+authenticated, and because it will doubtless be familiar in some form or
+another to most readers. That Pedro had a sense of humour is shown by
+yet another incident. A priest for murdering a shoemaker was condemned
+by the ecclesiastical tribune to be suspended from his sacerdotal
+functions for the space of twelve months. On hearing this Pedro decreed
+that any tradesman who murdered a priest should be punished by being
+restrained from the exercise of his trade for the like period.
+
+But now let us return to the palace of which the sinister king seems the
+presiding genius.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR]
+
+Crossing the Plaza del Triunfo, which lies between the Cathedral and the
+old Moorish walls, we enter the Patio de las Banderas, so called either
+because a flag was hoisted here when the royal family was in residence,
+or on account of the trophy, composed of the arms of Spain with crossed
+flags, displayed over one of the arches. Pedro was accustomed to
+administer justice, tempered with ferocity, after the Oriental fashion,
+seated on a stone bench in a corner of this square. The surrounding
+private houses occupy the site of the old Palace of the Almohades,
+and one of the halls--the Sala de Justicia--is still visible. It is
+entered from the Patio de la Monteria. Contreras assigns a date to this
+room even earlier than the advent of the Almohades. It is square, and
+measures nine metres across. The stucco ceiling is adorned with stars
+and wreaths, and bordered by a painted frieze. The decorations consist
+chiefly of inscriptions in Cufic characters. The right-angled apertures
+in the walls were closed either by screens of translucent stucco or by
+tapestries, "which must," says Gestoso y Perez, "have made the hall
+appear a miracle of wealth and splendour." It was in this hall, often
+overlooked by visitors, that Don Pedro overheard four judges discussing
+the division of a bribe they had received. The question was abruptly
+solved by the division of the disputants' heads and bodies. Thanks to
+its isolation, the Sala de Justicia escaped the dreadful "restoration"
+effected in the middle of the nineteenth century by the Duc de
+Montpensier. The house No. 3, Patio de las Banderas, formed part, in the
+opinion of Gestoso y Perez, of the Palacio del Yeso, or Stucco Palace,
+of Don Pedro.
+
+Passing through the colonnaded Apeadero, built by Philip III. in 1607,
+and once used as an armoury, we reach the Patio del Leon, where
+tournaments used to be held, and stand in front of the Palace of the
+Alcazar. The facade is gorgeous yet elegant, of a gaudiness that in this
+brilliant city of golden sunshine and white walls is not obtrusive. Yet,
+despite the Moorish character of the decoration, the Arabic capitals
+and pilasters, and the square entrance "in the Persian style," the front
+is not that of an eastern palace; and it is without surprise that we
+read over the portal, in quaint Gothic characters, the legend: "The most
+high, the most noble, the most powerful, and the most victorious Don
+Pedro, commanded these Palaces, these Alcazares, and these entrances to
+be made in the year (of Caesar) 1402" (1364). Elsewhere on the facade are
+the oft-repeated Cufic inscriptions: "There is no conqueror but Allah,"
+"Glory to our lord the Sultan" (Don Pedro), "Eternal glory to Allah,"
+etc., etc.
+
+This is a very different entrance from that of the Alhambra, the
+building on the model of which the Alcazar was undoubtedly planned. From
+the entrance a passage leads from your left to one extremity of the
+Patio de las Doncellas, the central and principal court of the palace.
+How this patio came to be so named I have never been able to ascertain.
+There is an absurd story to the effect that here were collected the
+girls fabled to have been sent by way of annual tribute by Mauregato to
+the khalifa. Had such a transaction taken place, the tribute would have
+been payable, of course, at Cordova, not at Seville. Moreover this court
+was among the works executed in the fourteenth century.
+
+The Alcazar strikes us (if we have come from Granada) as being on a much
+smaller scale than the Alhambra. It is very much better preserved, as
+it should be, seeing that it is a century younger; and if it vaguely
+strikes one as being fitter for the abode of a court favourite than of a
+monarch, it impresses one as being fresher, more elegant--in a word,
+more artistic--than the older building.
+
+The Patio de las Doncellas is an oblong, and surrounded by an arcade of
+pointed and dentated arches which spring from the capitals of white
+marble columns placed in pairs. The middle arch on each side is higher
+than the others, and springs from oblong imposts resting on the twin
+columns and flanked by the miniature pillars characteristic of the
+Granadine architecture. The spandrils are beautifully adorned with
+stucco work of the trellis pattern. On the frieze above runs a flowing
+scroll with Arabic inscriptions, among them being "Glory to our lord,
+the Sultan Don Pedro," and this very remarkable text: "There is but one
+God; He is eternal; He was not begotten and has never begotten, and He
+has no equal." This inscription, opposed to the tenets of Christianity,
+was evidently designed by a Moslem artificer, who relied (and safely
+relied) on the ignorance of his employers. The frieze is decorated also,
+at intervals, by the escutcheons of Don Pedro and of Ferdinand and
+Isabella, and by the well-known devices of Charles V., the Pillars of
+Hercules with the motto "Plus Oultre." The inside of the arcade is
+ornamented with a high dado of glazed tile mosaic (azulejo),
+brilliantly coloured and with the highly-prized metallic glint. The
+combinations and variations of the designs are very ingenious and
+interesting. This decoration probably dates from Don Pedro's time.
+Behind each central arch is a round-arched doorway, flanked by twin
+windows. These are framed in rich conventional ornamental work. Through
+little oblong windows above the doors light falls and illumines the
+ceilings of the apartments opening into the court. The ceiling of the
+arcade dates from the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella, but was restored
+in 1856. A deep cornice marks the division of the lower part of the
+court from the upper storey, the front of which, with its white marble
+arches, columns and balustrades, was the work of Don Luis de Vega, a
+sixteenth-century architect.
+
+Three recesses in the wall to the left of the entrance are pointed out
+as the audience closets of King Pedro; but they are much more likely to
+be walled-up entrances to formerly existing corridors and chambers
+behind.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--PATIO DE LAS BANDERAS]
+
+The door facing this wall gives access to the Hall of the Ambassadors
+(Salon de los Embajadores), the finest apartment in this fairy palace.
+The doors are magnificent examples of inlay work, and were, according to
+the inscription on them, made by Moorish carpenters from Toledo in the
+year 1364. The hall is about thirty-three feet square, and exhibits a
+splendid combination of the various styles with the Gothic and
+Renaissance. The ornamentation is rich and elaborate almost beyond
+the possibility of description. The magnificent "half-orange" ceiling of
+carved wood rests on a frieze decorated with the Tower and Lion. Then
+come Cufic inscriptions on a blue ground and ugly female heads of the
+sixteenth century. Then, below another band of decoration, is a row of
+fifty-six busts of the Kings of Spain, from Receswinto the Goth to
+Philip III. These date, at earliest, from the sixteenth century. The
+wrought-iron balconies were made by Francisco Lopez in 1592. The
+decoration of this splendid chamber is completed by a high dado of blue,
+white, and green "azulejos." It was in this hall that Abu Said is said
+to have been received by his treacherous host.
+
+The Hall of the Ambassadors communicated on each side with the patio and
+adjoining halls by entrances composed of three horseshoe arches,
+supported by graceful pillars and enclosed in a circular arch.
+
+Through the arch facing the entrance from the patio we pass into a long
+narrow apartment, known as the Comedor, where the late Comtesse de Paris
+was born in 1848. To the north of the salon is a small square chamber,
+called the "Cuarto del Techo de Felipe Segundo," with a coffered ceiling
+dating from the time of that king. North of this room is the exquisite
+little Patio de las Munecas (Court of the Dolls), purely Granadine in
+treatment. The rounded arches are separated by cylindrical pillars--I
+call them so for want of a better word--which rest on slender columns
+of different colours, reminding one of the early or Cordovan style. The
+capitals are rich, the pillars they uphold decorated with vertical lines
+of Cufic inscriptions, many of which, says Contreras, are placed upside
+down. The walls and spandrils are tastefully adorned with stucco work of
+the trellis pattern, tiling and mosaic. This court, though still
+harmonious and beautiful, suffered rather than benefited by its
+restoration in 1843; but the architecture has been not unsuccessfully
+reproduced in the upper storey.
+
+This charming spot is by no means suggestive of deeds of blood and
+violence; yet, just as they point out the Salon de los Embajadores as
+the scene of the arrest of the Red Sultan by Don Pedro, so here do the
+guides place the scene of the murder of Don Fadrique by the truculent
+monarch--a fratricide to be avenged by another fratricide at Montiel.
+The Master of Santiago, to give the Don his usual title, after a
+successful campaign in Murcia, had been graciously received by his
+brother the king, and presently went to pay his respects in another part
+of the palace to the royal favourite, Maria de Padilla. It is said that
+she warned him of his impending fate; perhaps by her manner, if not by
+words, she tried to arouse in him a sense of danger, but the soldier
+prince returned to the king's presence. With a shout, Pedro gave the
+fatal signal. "Kill the Master of Santiago," he cried. Guards fell upon
+the prince. His sword was entangled in his scarf, and he was butchered
+without mercy. His retainers fled in all directions, pursued by Pedro's
+guards. One took refuge in Maria de Padilla's own apartment, and tried
+to screen himself by holding her little daughter, Dona Beatriz, before
+him. Pedro tore the child away, and despatched the unfortunate man with
+his own hand. The murder took place on May 19, 1358.
+
+To the west of the court is a little room, elegantly decorated, and
+named after the Catholic Sovereigns, by whom it was restored. Their
+well-known devices appear, together with the Towers and Lions, among the
+decorations, which reveal the influence of the plateresque style. The
+north side of the patio is occupied by the Cuarto de los Principes, not
+to be confounded with a similarly named apartment on the floor above. At
+either end of this room is an arch, adorned with stucco work, admitting
+to a cabinet or alcove. That to the right has a fine artesonado ceiling,
+and that to the left is decorated in a species of Moorish plateresque
+style. An inscription states that the frieze was made in the year 1543
+by Juan de Simancas, master carpenter.
+
+East of the Patio de las Munecas, and occupying the north side of the
+Patio de las Doncellas, is the long room called the Dormitorio de los
+Reyes Moros. All the apartments in the Alcazar are fancifully named, but
+the designation of none is quite so stupid and misleading as this. The
+columns of the twin windows on either side of the door appear to date
+from the time of the Khalifate. The doors themselves are richly inlaid
+and painted with geometrical patterns. The three horseshoe arches
+leading to the _al hami_, or alcove, also seem to belong to the early
+period of Spanish-Arabic art. The room is so richly decorated that
+scarce a handbreadth of the surface is free from ornament.
+
+On the opposite side of the central court is the sumptuous Salon de
+Carlos V., the ceiling of which was constructed by order of the emperor,
+and is adorned with classical heads. The tile and stucco work is the
+finest in the palace. There is a legend to the effect that St. Ferdinand
+died in this room--on his knees, with a cord round his neck and a taper
+in his hand--but it is unlikely that this part of the palace existed in
+his time. The guide pointed out the room to the west of this salon as
+the chamber of Maria de Padilla, but this again is, to put it mildly,
+doubtful.
+
+The upper chambers of the Alcazar, which are not accessible to the
+general public, are very handsome. The floor overlooking the Patio del
+Leon is occupied by the Sala del Principe, with its beautiful spring
+windows, polychrome tiling, and columns brought from the old Moorish
+Palace at Valencia. Adjacent is the Oratory, built by order of Ferdinand
+and Isabella in 1504. The tile work is of extraordinary beauty, and
+shows that the Moors had not a monopoly of talent in this kind of
+decoration. The fine Visitation over the altar is signed by Francesco
+Nicoloso, the Italian. On the same floor is the reputed bed-chamber of
+Don Pedro. Over the door may be seen four death's-heads, and over
+another entrance the curious figure of a man who looks back over his
+shoulder at a grinning skull. These gruesome designs commemorate the
+summary execution by the king of four judges whom he overheard
+discussing the division of a bribe. The royal apartments on this floor
+contain some precious works of art; but I abstain from mentioning the
+most remarkable of these, as pictures are so often transferred in Spain
+from one royal residence to another that such indications are often out
+of date before they are printed.
+
+The Alcazar, I think, disappoints most foreigners. The architectural and
+decorative work of the Spanish Moors and their descendants pleases
+people quite inexperienced in the arts by its mere prettiness, its
+brilliance, its originality, and its colour; and it delights still more
+those who are able to appreciate its marvellous combinations of
+geometrical forms, its exquisite epigraphy, and all its subtle details.
+But the average traveller stands between these two classes of observers.
+He looks for grandeur where he should expect only beauty, and his eye is
+wearied by the wealth of conventional ornamentation. What I think is
+conspicuously lacking in the Alcazar, and to almost the same extent in
+the Alhambra, is atmosphere. Memories do not haunt you in these gilded
+halls. There is nothing about them to suggest that anything ever
+happened here. The legends tell us the contrary; but assuredly no one
+was ever less successful in impressing his personality on his abode than
+were the founders and inhabitants of the Alcazar.
+
+The gardens are really the most pleasing spot within the enclosure. They
+form a delicious pleasaunce, where the orange and citron diffuse their
+fragrance, and magic fountains spring up suddenly beneath the
+passenger's feet, sprinkling him with a cooling dew. I noticed some
+flower beds shaped like curiously formed crosses, which the gardener
+told me were the crosses of the orders of Calatrava, Santiago,
+Alcantara, and Montesa. You are also shown the Baths of Maria de
+Padilla, which are approached through a gloomy arched entrance. In the
+favourite's time they had no other roof than the sky, and no further
+protection from prying eyes than that afforded by a screen of orange and
+lemon trees. In Mohammedan times the baths were probably used by the
+ladies of the harem.
+
+But if the Alcazar is a disappointment to the majority of visitors, I
+cannot conceive the Cathedral being so, despite the unfavourable
+criticism to which it has been subjected. The exterior, it is true, is
+unimpressive, and the vastness of the pile is largely responsible for
+the powerful effect proclaimed by the interior. But when the worst has
+been urged, this, the third largest church in Christendom, remains a
+grand, a solemn, and a magnificent temple, thoroughly Christian in
+atmosphere and details.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--GARDENS OF THE ALCAZAR]
+
+I like the story of its foundation better than the silly tales about Don
+Pedro, or about crucifixes helping jilted damsels. It has, moreover, the
+very unusual merit of being true. After the conquest by St. Ferdinand
+the old mosque of the Almohades was "purified," and served as the
+cathedral till, towards the end of the fourteenth century, it became
+practically ruined by earthquakes. The dean and chapter took counsel
+together, and at a conclave held in the Court of the Elms, on the south
+side of the mosque, it was resolved to build a new church forthwith.
+Then uprose a zealous prebendary and cried: "Let us build a church so
+great that those who come after us will think us mad to have attempted
+it!" The proposal was adopted with acclamation; and the great-hearted
+priests bound themselves to contribute from their own stipends as much
+money as might be necessary, should the revenue of the See prove unequal
+to the cost of the undertaking. They could never hope to see the fruit
+of their labours. I do not think the name of any one of them has been
+preserved. The architect alike has been forgotten. All concerned sought
+only the greater glorification of their faith. Such greatness of spirit
+deserved a noble monument.[*]
+
+[Note *: Instances of this lofty spirit are frequent in the history
+of the Spanish peoples. When, after their first uprising against the
+mother country, the people of Honduras (Central America) met in Congress
+to frame a Constitution, a priest rose and proposed that before anything
+else was done, every slave in the country should be set free. And the
+measure was carried unanimously and enthusiastically by the Congress,
+which must have included many slaveholders. It took the United States
+forty years to follow this example.]
+
+The Cathedral took one hundred and seventeen years to build, the first
+stone having been laid in 1402 and the lantern having been finished by
+Juan Gil de Hontanon in 1519. Of the mosque certain portions were left:
+the Giralda, the Patio de los Naranjos, and the portal called the Puerta
+del Lagarto. The latter is named after the wooden model of an alligator
+which hangs from the roof. Three or four centuries ago the mummified
+form of a real alligator hung there. It was one of the gifts of an
+Egyptian khalifa to the daughter of a Castilian king, whom he sought in
+marriage. The saurian was accompanied from the banks of the Nile by
+various animals peculiar to that fertile region, but these interesting
+offerings failed to make any impression on the heart of the Infanta.
+Thus the forlorn-looking effigy of the reptile is in reality an
+affecting memorial of unrequited love.
+
+Churches, it has been remarked, were considered in the Middle Ages very
+proper repositories for curiosities of all sorts. The cloister of the
+Lagarto contains also an elephant's tusk, weighing seventy pounds, and a
+horse's bit, said to be that of Babieca, the Cid's charger.
+
+Very grateful is the sudden cool of the great church when you enter it
+from the sun-scorched plaza. Then there comes over you a feeling of
+profound reverence, followed very soon by an infinite restfulness. There
+is no place in Seville where you more willingly linger. A holy calm
+pervades the whole building, and you wonder that it should have
+suggested to Theophile Gautier such fantastic comparisons. If it were
+not the temple of Christ, I could believe it to be the temple of
+Silence.
+
+The Puerta del Lagarto is the favourite entrance, but when the day comes
+for a painstaking examination, you would do well to begin at one of the
+entrances in the west front. Of these there are three: the Puerta Mayor,
+the Puerta del Bautismo, and the Puerta San Miguel. All are enriched
+with good statuary, the graceful and vigorous statues of the side doors
+being the work of Pedro Millan, a fifteenth-century sculptor of renown.
+Entering, we set foot on the fine marble floor and make out the
+stupendous church to be composed of a nave and of two aisles on either
+side. The nave, you are told, is one hundred feet high and fifty feet
+wide. The noble columns, almost free of adornment, which uphold the
+spacious vaults recede in the far distance like trees in an overarching
+avenue. The effect, fine as it is, might have been much finer if the
+centre of the nave had not been blocked up by the choir. The "Trascoro,"
+or screen, facing the west entrance, is richly adorned with red columns.
+Over the altar is a fourteenth-century picture of the Madonna, and a
+painting by Pacheco, the Inquisitor, representing St. Ferdinand
+receiving the keys of Seville. Over one of the beautiful little side
+altars of the choir is one of the rare examples of good Spanish
+sculpture--a Virgin, by Juan Martinez Montanez. On the altar side the
+choir is shut off by a sixteenth-century railing, attributed to Sancho
+Munoz. This protects from intrusion their reverences the canons, who
+sit in stalls, exquisitely carved between the years 1475 and 1538. The
+patterns and coloured inlaid work of the backs reveal Moorish influence.
+The lectern was the work of Bartolome Morel. When the lantern collapsed
+in 1888, the choir was severely damaged. The architect who restored the
+fabric proposed to move it considerably nearer the high altar, but the
+proposal was stupidly rejected. A good opportunity for improving the
+appearance of the Cathedral was thus lost.
+
+The retablo of the high altar is the quintessence of late Gothic
+sculpture. It is a marvellous work of extraordinary delicacy and
+elaboration. Each of the forty-five compartments into which it is
+divided contains a subject from the Bible or from the lives of the
+saints, carved, painted, or gilded with the rarest skill. Begun by the
+Fleming Dancart, in 1479, this wonderful triumph of the carver's art was
+completed by Spanish artists in 1526. The earlier work is in the middle.
+Crowning it is a gilt crucifix and the statues of Our Lady and St. John.
+
+There are some very interesting objects in the Sacristy, as it is
+called, between the reredos and the hind wall of the chancel. The
+sacristan will show you the reliquary, shaped like a triptych, which
+came from Constantinople and was presented to the old cathedral by
+Alfonso the Learned. The double folding door is also said to have come
+from the Moorish temple. With a glance at the fine terra-cotta statues
+by Miguel Florentin, Juan Marin, and others, we pass behind the chancel
+wall, and see before us the plateresque Royal Chapel, built by Charles
+V. over the remains of certain of his ancestors. Beneath the altar lies
+the body of St. Ferdinand in crown and royal robes. He lies here in the
+heart of his fairest conquest, even as his descendants, Ferdinand and
+Isabella, sleep in the heart of Granada. You may see his sword, the
+handle of which was denuded of gems by Pedro the Cruel, lest they should
+excite the cupidity of others. That royal humorist also lies here, near
+his saintly ancestor and the one woman whom he ever loved, the gentle
+Maria de Padilla. Then there is to be seen the Virgen de los Reyes, an
+image presented by St. Louis of France to St. Ferdinand of Castile.
+(Strange that when saints filled the thrones of Europe, things went on
+no better than they do now!) Another relic highly prized is the Virgen
+de las Batallas, an ivory statuette which St. Ferdinand used to carry at
+his saddle-bow. These memorials of the heroic past give you little time
+or inclination for an examination of the chapel itself, which has a
+lofty dome, and is flanked at the entrance by twelve good statues by
+Peter Kempener--whom Spaniards call Campana. At least (so I read) he
+drew them on the wall with charcoal for a ducat each, and they were
+executed by Lorenzo del Vao and Campos in 1553.
+
+This chapel and the reredos of the chancel must be called, I suppose,
+the great sights of the Cathedral, though to some its chief treasures
+will be the numerous works of Murillo enshrined in its chapels and
+dependencies. For myself, I like the building for its own sake, or, to
+use a very hard-worked word, for its atmosphere. As you cross the nave,
+looking upwards, where the light streams through the tall clerestory
+windows, you will be tempted to neglect the dark chapels in the aisles,
+and to revel for a while in these exquisite symphonies in coloured
+glass. Few of them are of Spanish workmanship. Master Christopher the
+German (Micer Cristobal Aleman) began the first--the first stained-glass
+window in Seville--in 1504, the work being afterwards carried on by the
+German Heinrich, the Flemings Beernaert of Zeeland and Jan Beernaert,
+Carel of Bruges, and Arnulf of Flanders. The best windows are those
+adorned with the Ascension, St. Mary Magdalen, Lazarus, and the Entry
+into Jerusalem, by Arnulf and his brother, and the Resurrection, by
+Carel of Bruges.
+
+In the south transept is a monument, striking in itself and of very
+recent erection, which will in the course of time attract more pilgrims
+than the soldier saint's shrine. For here are contained the remains of a
+man who added not a Moorish city but a continent to the realm of Leon
+and Castile. The ashes of Christopher Columbus repose in a coffin which
+is borne on the shoulders of four figures of bronze, representing the
+kingdoms of Castile, Leon, Aragon, and Navarre.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--INTERIOR OF THE CATHEDRAL]
+
+These figures are not wanting in majesty and expression. All are crowned
+and wear semi-sacerdotal garb. Castile holds an oar, Leon a cross.
+Behind them come Aragon and Navarre, sombre of countenance, wearing
+shirts of mail. On the bosom of each is displayed the national
+escutcheon: the Towers of Castile, the Lions of Leon, the Bats of
+Aragon, and the Chains of Navarre. The pall bears words traced by
+Isabella herself:
+
+ "A Castilla y Leon,
+ Nuevo mundo dio Colon,"
+
+and round the pedestal is an inscription which relates how the body of
+the immortal Admiral of the Indies was brought here when the "ungrateful
+America" revolted from the Spanish yoke. But however much the Spain of
+to-day may honour Columbus dead, it is hardly for her to reproach any
+land with ingratitude towards him.
+
+Half-way between the main entrance and the choir, the Great Navigator's
+son is buried. An inscription on a slab invites the reader to pray for
+the soul of Don Fernando Colon, who, as Ford very truly says, would have
+been considered a great man if he had been the son of a less great
+father. He rendered important services to literature, and left behind
+him a library of 15,000 volumes, including some manuscripts of extreme
+rarity. It was ultimately acquired by the Crown, and constitutes the
+basis of the Biblioteca Columbina, housed in the Patio de los Naranjos.
+
+The Royal Chapel is flanked by two little chapels, one of which,
+dedicated to St. Peter, contains some Zurbarans, impossible to
+distinguish in the dim light; while in the other (Capilla de la
+Concepcion grande) is a fine monument of Cardinal Cienfuegos and a
+crucifix attributed to Alonso Cano. Opening on to the north side are the
+chapels del Pilar, de las Evangelistas, de las Doncellas, de San
+Francisco, de Santiago, de las Escales, and del Bautisterio. In the
+latter is one of Murillo's most famous works, "The Vision of St. Anthony
+of Padua." Of Cano's works there is a specimen, the "Virgin and Child,"
+over the altar of Belen, adjacent to the Puerta de los Naranjos. Valdes
+Leal and Juan de las Roelas are represented in the chapel of Santiago,
+and Herrera the younger by an ambitious "Apotheosis of St. Francis" in
+the chapel of that saint. In the Capilla de las Escalas are two works of
+Luca Giordano, strong in drawing, colour, and character. The same chapel
+contains the fine tomb of Bishop Baltasar del Rio, dating from about
+1500.
+
+In the south aisle are the chapels of the Mariscal, San Andres, las
+Dolores, la Antigua, San Hermenegildo, San Jose, Santa Ana, and Santa
+Laureana. These chapels are richer in sculpture than in painting.
+Kempener designed the beautiful altar-piece in the Capilla del Mariscal,
+and Montanez the grand statue of St. Hermenegildo in his chapel. On the
+west side of the Puerta de San Cristobal, over a small altar, is the
+"Generacion" of Luis de Vargas--the much praised "leg" picture which
+has given its name to the chapel. The fresco of St. Christopher that
+faces it is remarkable only for its size. You find such pictures of the
+saint at the entrances to many Spanish churches, the old belief having
+been that those who gazed upon it would not die unpreparedly that day. A
+much more ancient and interesting mural painting in the Byzantine style
+is to be seen in the large chapel of the "Antigua," where it was placed
+in 1578. The retablo of St. Anne's Chapel is also very old, and comes
+from the former cathedral. The next chapel, San Jose, is adorned by
+Valdes Leal's "Espousals of the Virgin." The Cathedral does not contain
+any fine ancient tombs. One of the best is that of Archbishop Mendoza,
+by Miguel Florentin, in the Antigua Chapel.
+
+As every visitor to Seville professes a special devotion to Murillo, he
+will probably overlook the fine "Nativity" by Luis de Vargas to the
+right, on entering, of the Puerta del Nacimiento, and hurry at once to
+the more famous master's "Guardian Angel," between Puerta Mayor and
+Puerta del Bautismo. His "St. Leander" and "St. Isidore" are to be seen
+in the great Sacristy, where they are eclipsed by Kempener's beautiful
+"Descent from the Cross," before which Murillo himself used to stand for
+hours in rapt contemplation. The French cut this priceless work into
+five pieces, intending to remove it, and although their design was
+frustrated, the subsequent restoration was badly effected. The
+Sacristia de los Calices is a storehouse of art treasures. Here you may
+see Goya's "Saint Justa and Saint Rufina," a "Trinity" by "El Greco,"
+the "Angel de la Guarda" and "St. Dorothy" of Murillo, the "Death of a
+Saint" by Zurbaran, and the superb crucifix of Montanez. A "Conception"
+by Murillo is in the Chapter House, a splendid hall in the Renaissance
+style.
+
+In the great Sacristy is preserved the "treasury" of the Cathedral. It
+includes a wonderful monstrance by that prince of goldsmiths, Juan de
+Arfe; and something more interesting in the shape of keys presented to
+St. Ferdinand on the surrender of the city. The key presented by the
+Jews is iron-gilt and bears the inscription in Hebrew: "The King of
+Kings will open, the King of all earth will enter." The key offered by
+the Moors is silver-gilt, and the Arabic inscription reads: "May Allah
+render eternal the dominion of Islam in this city."
+
+Attached to many (if not to all) Spanish cathedrals, one finds large
+chapels which are the official parish churches of the cities--the
+parochial clergy being distinct from the diocesan chapter. At Seville,
+as at Granada, this chapel is called the "Sagrario," and is built at the
+west end of the Patio de los Naranjos and entered from a door in the
+north aisle of the Cathedral, near the Capilla del Bautisterio. Built
+between 1618 and 1662 by Miguel Zumarraga and Fernando de Iglesias,
+the church is in the Baroque style, and roofed with a single and very
+daring arch. The rich statues that adorn the interior are by Dayne and
+Jose de Arce. There is a notable retablo by Pedro Roldan that came from
+a Franciscan convent now suppressed. In one of the side chapels is a
+fine "Virgin" by Montanez. Beneath this church the Archbishops of
+Seville are now buried.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--PATIO DE LOS NARANJOS]
+
+As we emerge from this vast temple, we remain for a few seconds dazzled
+by the sunlight. Then as we turn to the left we notice a rectangular,
+classic-looking building, standing between the Cathedral and the walls
+of the Alcazar. This is one of the numerous deserted Lonjas or Exchanges
+of Spain. The Patio de los Naranjos was formerly infested by the
+merchants and brokers of the city, to the great scandal of the devout.
+Archbishop de Rojas prevailed upon Philip II. to erect an Exchange or
+Casa de Contratacion, as Sir Thomas Gresham had just done in London. The
+building was begun in 1598, at precisely the moment when the commerce of
+Seville began to decline. It reflects the spirit of Philip II. and of
+his architect, Herrera--stern, sober, simple. There is a fine inner
+court, with Doric and Ionic columns. Here the South American archives
+are deposited, a rich mine for some future historian who shall have the
+patience to examine them. As an exchange, the Lonja soon proved a
+failure. It was early deserted by business men, and is best remembered
+as the seat of Murillo's Academy of Painters.
+
+The spacious days of Charles V. and Philip II. were productive of
+innumerable public buildings, mostly in a quasi-Roman style and all very
+pompous and oppressive. The Town-hall or Ayuntamiento of Seville is an
+extremely ornate structure, in what is called the plateresque or Spanish
+Renaissance style. It stands in the Plaza de la Constitucion, where the
+electric cars perform intricate evolutions. Its effect is lost through
+its being placed on the ground level, without terrace, steps, or
+approach, or even railings to prevent inquisitive urchins staring in at
+the windows. The building is long and remarkably narrow, and of two
+storeys. I have seldom seen a public building more elaborately adorned
+or more badly placed. The interior is more satisfactory. The lower
+council chamber is a magnificent hall, worthy, as a Spanish writer
+remarks, of the Senate of a great republic. A noble staircase, with a
+fine ceiling, leads to the upper council chamber, which has some
+splendid artesonado work. Opposite--that is, on the east side of--this
+building is the Audiencia or Court-house, where I whiled away a hot
+afternoon by assisting at a Spanish trial. The case was of no particular
+interest, but the differences in the procedure and constitution of the
+court from our own were worth noting. There were three judges, who wore
+black silk gowns, without wigs or bands. Over their heads was the arms
+of Spain, and on the desk, facing the president, a large crucifix. The
+jury sat on chairs on each side of the judges. A desk was reserved for
+the public prosecutor, another for the prisoner's advocate. The judges
+took far less part in the proceedings than they do in France. The case
+seemed to be left entirely to the public prosecutor, who, it is just to
+say, allowed the accused to make long rambling statements, without the
+least attempt to interrupt or confuse him. The public at the rear of the
+court appeared to take far more interest in the proceedings than any
+immediately concerned in them.
+
+The Plaza de la Constitucion, outside the court, is the place of
+execution. But the death penalty is very rarely inflicted in Spain. Two
+or three years ago the Crown could find no pretext for pardoning two
+particularly atrocious murderers, who were accordingly put to death by
+the garrote in this square. The people of Seville, not being accustomed
+like the more enlightened Britons to some two dozen executions a year,
+showed their sense of the awful occurrence and of the disgrace to their
+city by donning the deepest mourning.
+
+But the stranger does not come to Seville to visit courts or to hear
+about public executions--unless these happened two or three centuries
+ago, when as Sir W. S. Gilbert somewhere observes, they are looked at
+through the glamour of romance. The searcher for the beautiful is
+usually rewarded here by finding it in unexpected corners of the
+monotonous labyrinth of lanes and alleys. Plunging into the maze of
+white-walled dwellings in the north-eastern quarter of the city, a
+minaret only less beautiful than the Giralda seems to beckon us from
+afar. It appears and reappears, and we lose our way a dozen times before
+we stand at its foot. It is a beautiful tower in the purest Almohade or
+Mauritanian style, without any features borrowed from Christian
+architecture. The highest edifice, this, in Seville, except the Giralda.
+From its summit Cervantes used to scan the streets below, at certain
+hours of the day, for the form of a local beauty of whom he was
+enamoured. Here, of course, stood a mosque in Mussulman days, on the
+site of the adjacent church of San Marcos. The portal is very fine, but
+the Moorish features are the work of Mudejar and not Almohade artisans.
+
+We wander on, and are presently surprised by the superb frontal of the
+convent church of Santa Paula. It is faced with white and blue azulejos,
+the work of Francesco of Pisa and Pedro Millan. Over the arch are
+disposed seven medallions illustrating the birth of Christ and the life
+of St. Paul, the figures white on a blue ground. On the tympanum of the
+arch is displayed the Spanish coat of arms in white marble, flanked by
+the escutcheons of the inevitable and ubiquitous Ferdinand and Isabella.
+Having seen this, it is hardly worth our while to enter the church,
+which contains the tombs of the founders, Dom Joao de Henriquez,
+Constable of Portugal, and his wife Donha Isabel. In the same quarter of
+the city, though some distance away, is a monument of some
+interest--the church of Omnium Sanctorum, built in 1356 on the site of a
+Roman temple. Here again there is a tower graceful enough, in its lower
+storey recalling the Giralda. The church exhibits a rather happy
+combination of the Moorish and Gothic styles. On one of the doors is the
+coat of arms of Portugal, commemorating the pious generosity of Diniz,
+king of that country. This must have belonged to the earlier structure.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--PLAZA DE SAN FERNANDO]
+
+Finding your way back to the Sierpes, you may inspect the interesting
+Church of the University. Here repose the members of the illustrious
+Ribera family, which looms very large in the history of Seville. Their
+remains were brought hither on the suppression of the Cartuja, outside
+the town. The oldest tomb is that of the eldest Ribera, who died in
+1423, aged 105. He thus lived through the reigns of Alfonso XI., Pedro
+the Cruel, Enrique II., Juan I., Enrique III., and Juan II., yet, as is
+usually the case with centenarians, he failed to engrave his name as
+deeply on history as did some of his shorter lived descendants.
+
+The famous Duke of Alcala, the owner of the Casa de Pilatos, is
+commemorated by a fine bronze effigy--one of the few sepulchral
+monuments of this kind in Spain. At the feet of Don Lorenzo Figueroa a
+dog is sculptured, most probably the symbol of fidelity, but some say,
+his favourite. Over the altar are three good pictures by Roelas, one of
+the ablest interpreters of the Andalusian spirit. Here, too, are a
+couple of works by Alonso Cano, "St. John the Baptist" and "St. John the
+Divine." The statue of St. Ignatius Loyola by Montanez is said to be a
+faithful likeness of the saint. It was coloured by Pacheco the
+Inquisitor.
+
+The adjacent University was originally a Jesuit college, and was built
+in the middle of the sixteenth century, after designs by Herrera. It is
+not very well attended to-day, and from the outside would be taken for
+an inconsiderable college. It seems to have been much more flourishing a
+hundred years ago, when our countryman Blanco White attended its
+courses. The original university was founded by Canon Rodrigo de
+Santuella in 1472, in the Colegio Maese Rodrigo, near the Cathedral.
+
+From the last resting-place of the Riberas in the centre of the town it
+is not far to their old home, the Casa de Pilatos, though Daedalus
+himself might easily get lost in this labyrinth of streets resembling
+each other as closely as those of an American city. The names of some of
+these thoroughfares--Francos, Gallegos, Genoves--remind us of the days
+of St. Ferdinand, when the room of the banished Moors was filled by
+settlers, not only from all parts of Spain, but from the rest of Europe.
+It was the same with all the towns resumed by the Spaniards. These
+foreign colonies had their own laws and customs, and yet they were
+entirely absorbed by the natives and left no trace or influence behind
+them. The Spaniards possessed, in those days at any rate, the same
+wonderful capacity for the absorption of other races displayed by the
+Anglo-Saxons in America. There was nothing new in this; for they had
+absorbed the Visigoths, just as they had absorbed the Romans before
+them. The Castilian tongue is indeed Latin, but I fancy that the people
+of Spain are as much the children of the soil--_autochthones_--as the
+Athenians themselves.
+
+Reflections like these--which I do not expect will profoundly influence
+ethnologists--occupied me as I pursued my tortuous course to the Casa de
+Pilatos. When I at last found it, I was struck by the plain and
+dignified exterior. To the left of the door I observed a plain cross of
+jasper. The story goes that in October, 1521, the Marquis de Tarifa, on
+his return from a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, placed this cross against the
+wall and counted thence the fourteen stations of the Cross, according to
+their order in the Holy City. The last fortuitously coincided with the
+Cruz del Campo, raised near the Canos de Carmona in 1482. I doubt if the
+marquis had any such thought when he raised this jasper cross, for the
+distance from the Praetorium at Jerusalem to the chapel in the Church of
+the Holy Sepulchre that marks the site of Calvary is greatly less than
+the distance between the two points mentioned here in Seville. But why
+the house was called after Pilate is not easy to determine. It was begun
+in 1500 and finished thirty-three years after by Don Per Afan de
+Ribera, first Duke of Alcala, and sometime Viceroy of Naples. This great
+nobleman was the Maecenas of his generation. Not only did he enrich his
+house with priceless works of art and a fine library--since removed to
+Madrid--but he made it the rendezvous of all the art and talent of
+Andalusia. Hither came Gongora, the poet, to converse, it is said, with
+Cervantes. Here Pacheco, the artist-inquisitor, discussed the mission of
+art with Herrera. Here came Rioja, Cespedes, Jauregui, and others of
+less note. The example set by the Medici was followed by many of the
+great grandees of Spain at this time. The Velascos presided over a
+coterie of literati at Burgos; the Duke of Villahermosa, at Zaragoza,
+affected to delight in the company of the brilliant and learned. Even so
+small a place as Plasencia had its own patron of the arts in Don Luis de
+Avila, and in Madrid there was "the feast of reason and the flow of
+soul" at the mansion of Don Antonio Perez. But for all its associations,
+like the Alcazar, the Casa de Pilatos remains very much like a museum.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--CASA DE PILATOS]
+
+The building illustrates the fashion of the Mudejar and Renaissance
+styles, almost to the effacement of the former. In the architecture of
+this epoch we usually find an Arabic groundwork nearly concealed by
+ornament of the newer style. The geometrical designs remain, but the
+flowing inscriptions, so important a feature of Moorish decoration, have
+gone. A thousand details would show the veriest tyro that this was
+not the work of Moors, yet the central court bears a general
+resemblance to the Alcazar. Pedro de Madrazo directs attention to the
+harmonious variety of the arches and windows, and compares it to the
+admired disorder of the forest and plantation. I imagine the architect
+had the Court of the Lions, at Granada, in his mind. Here dolphins
+uphold the upper basin of the fountain, and noble statues of the deities
+of Greece and Rome--the gift of Pope Pius V.--stand in the angles of the
+court. Hence you pass into the so-called Praetorium, with its splendid
+coffered ceiling and beautiful tiling, where you may distinguish the
+Spanish azulejos of the best moulds by the designs stamped on them of
+fanciful monsters, grotesques, and escutcheons. Then there is the superb
+staircase with its "half-orange" ceiling, and the chapel with its mixed
+Gothic and Mudejar features. What grandee in Europe has a finer home
+than this? And yet, I am told the owner, His Grace of Medinaceli, comes
+here but seldom.
+
+There are many old mansions in Seville worth a walk on a cool day--and a
+glimpse. They are not great sights, such as those we have already seen
+in the city, or such as are more numerous in Paris and Rome, Brussels
+and Venice. But those visitors who are really interested in Seville, and
+are capable of appreciating Moorish and plateresque art in their various
+imitations and combinations, will enjoy these little excursions. There
+is an interesting old house at No. 6, Abades. It is now a
+boarding-house, and you may live there in princely fashion for six
+francs a day. No one knows how old it is. It belonged at the beginning
+of the fifteenth century to a family of Genoese merchants called Pinelo.
+In 1407 the Infante Fadrique, uncle of Juan II., lodged there. What was
+the occasion of his visit to Seville I forget. Afterwards it became the
+property of the "abbes" or "abades" of the Cathedral. Many of these
+reverend gentlemen still patronize the establishment, and may be seen
+puffing their "Puros" in the court, which is said to be a fine example
+of the Sevillian Renaissance style. That style I conceive to have been
+compounded of all pre-existing styles. Digby Wyatt, however, considered
+the house to be much more Italian than Spanish. It is a vast place,
+where dark corridors seem to lead indefinitely into space.
+
+There is rather less to reward your curiosity at the Palacio de las
+Duenas, a vast mansion belonging to the Duke of Alba. Once it boasted
+eleven "patios," with nine fountains and one hundred columns of marble.
+A fine court, surrounded by a graceful arcade, remains. The staircase
+recalls that of the Casa de Pilatos. Our countryman Lord Holland stayed
+here a hundred years ago. He was a great admirer of Spanish literature
+at a time when it was hardly as much a matter of interest to foreigners
+as it is at present.
+
+Then there is the Casa de Bustos Tavera, where, according to Lope de
+Vega, Sancho the Brave used to visit the "Star of Seville"; and the
+Casa Olea, in the Calle Guzman el Bueno, with a hall of Mudejar
+workmanship dating from the days of Don Pedro.
+
+It is the romantic aspect of Seville that has impressed some visitors
+much more than its historical or archaeological side. Over the poets and
+dramatists of the Romantic school the city exercised a strange
+fascination. Byron and Alfred de Musset found the atmosphere of the
+place most congenial. Through their rose-coloured spectacles every girl
+they met in these narrow white streets seemed "preternaturally pretty."
+The principal business of the inhabitants in the 'twenties and 'thirties
+of last century, to judge by the French poet's descriptions, was
+love-making, strumming the guitar, and duelling. That Spain was ever a
+romantic country in the vulgarly accepted sense of the term, I doubt.
+Roman Catholic customs and institutions forbid that free intermingling
+of the sexes from which result the thousand and one emotions,
+complications, situations, and catastrophes that are the ingredients of
+romance. In countries like Spain, where the canon law obtained, there
+could be, for instance, no runaway matches, no desperate flights in a
+post-chaise to a church (say) over the Portuguese border, with an irate
+father in pursuit. There could not have been, and cannot be at the
+present time, any walks with the beloved down the moonlit grove, any
+trysts by the stile or the ruined keep, any rendezvous among the
+rose-bushes. If a Spanish girl did any of these things, she would
+indeed, in French parlance, have thrown her cap over the mill. The
+affair would no longer have the complexion of a romance but of a sordid
+intrigue. This being so, I was delighted to hear that occasionally
+clandestine marriages are resorted to in Spain, and that fond lovers
+find a means of uniting in defiance of stern parents, even in Andalusia.
+The couple, accompanied by a few friends, contrive to sit next to each
+other in church, as far out of sight of the rest of the worshippers as
+possible. Their troths are plighted in an undertone just loud enough for
+the witnesses to hear, the ring slipped on under cover of the mantilla,
+and the hands joined at the precise moment the all-unconscious celebrant
+turns towards the congregation at the end of the mass and pronounces the
+benediction. In the eyes of the Church the two are married as
+irrevocably as if the Cardinal Lord Archbishop of Toledo had performed
+the ceremony. The vows have been exchanged before witnesses in a sacred
+edifice, and an anointed priest has simultaneously blessed the
+contracting parties from the altar. What can parents do? The Don may
+rage, the Dona may upbraid, but when the Church makes itself an
+accomplice of lovers, even in Spain the law must acquiesce. And there is
+no divorce!
+
+That genuine romance tinges the lives of Spanish men and women, few who
+know them can doubt. But the Andalusia of musical comedy, the creation
+of which is largely due to the poets of the Romantic school, does not
+exist. Seville never was a glorified Cremorne; and persons of a
+Byronic turn would find adventures suitable to their mood more readily
+by the banks of the Thames and the Hudson than by those of the
+Guadalquivir.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--CASA DE PILATOS]
+
+For all that, some romantic stories are told about old Seville, and one
+of these has some foundation of truth. About the middle of the
+seventeenth century, the city re-echoed with reports of the wild and
+desperate doings of a certain wealthy gallant, Don Miguel de Marana by
+name. By some he is called De Manara. Marriage with the heiress of the
+Mendoza family did not sober him, though an alliance with so solemn a
+thing as money generally brings the most hot-headed Latin youth to his
+senses. Like many other wicked persons, our gallant had a nice taste in
+art, and is said to have encouraged Murillo. Now comes the remarkable
+and the improving part of the story. It is not safe to vouch for the
+accuracy of the details of any part of it. One morning Seville woke up
+to find--no doubt to her unspeakable consolation--the wicked De Marana a
+changed man. He became a saint--an ascetic in the seventeenth-century
+acceptation of the word. The wine-bibber forswore even chocolate as too
+strong a beverage.
+
+What had happened to produce so edifying a change? Accounts vary. The
+most picturesque explanation is that the Don, prowling about the streets
+one night, perceived a funeral procession approaching. Curiosity
+impelled him to look at the face of the corpse, which was uncovered, and
+lo! it was his own.
+
+If you doubt the sincerity of Don Miguel's conversion, you have only to
+visit the Church of La Caridad, which, together with the adjoining
+hospital, he founded and wherein he was buried. I do not think you will
+share the opinion of Sir W. Stirling-Maxwell that this is the most
+elegant church in Seville, but you will be rewarded for the visit by
+seeing some very remarkable works of art. Near the entrance are the two
+extraordinary pictures which proclaim the artist, Valdes Leal, to have
+been a master of realism. One of these exhibits a corpse at which,
+Murillo declared, you must look with your nostrils shut. The church
+contains six canvases by Murillo himself--"Moses Striking the Rock,"
+"The Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes," "The Charity of St. Juan de
+Dios," "The Annunciation," "The Infant Jesus," and "St. John." The third
+is really the finest of these pictures, though the first, commonly
+called "La Sed" (Thirst), is the most generally preferred. The figures
+are, as usual in this master's compositions, ordinary Seville types.
+Over the altar is another great work, "The Descent from the Cross," by
+Pedro Roldan.
+
+The "Caridad" has indeed the most important collection of pictures in
+southern Spain, next to the Museo, as the old Convent of La Merced is
+now called. There, of course, some of the greatest works of art by
+Spanish masters are to be seen. There you may see the "St. Thomas of
+Villanueva" giving alms, Murillo's favourite picture; his beautiful
+"St. Felix of Cantalicio," and "St. Leander and St. Buenaventura," and
+his famous "Virgen de la Servilleta" which was _not_ painted on a
+serviette. On the south wall hangs his "Saints Justa and Rufina"
+(holding the Giralda), exquisitely coloured, and on the north wall the
+admirable "St. Anthony de Padua." But one grows a little weary of
+Murillo in Seville. Zurbaran, the great painter of monks, is well
+represented by the wonderful "St. Hugh in the Refectory," and
+"Apotheosis of St. Thomas Aquinas." This last picture, I am told, was
+carried off by Soult, and recovered by Wellington at Waterloo. The older
+Herrera's "St. Hermenegild" is good, but by no means Andalusian. The
+native temper finds more truthful expression in the works of Roelas,
+Valdes Leal, Cespedes and Frutet, which may be studied to the best
+advantage here. Curiously enough, the gallery contains not a single work
+by Velazquez, who was born in Seville; nor any paintings by Alonso Cano
+or Luis de Vargas. Spanish sculpture, of which one sees so little, is
+not unworthily represented by a beautiful St. Bruno by Montanez, and by
+some busts and crucifixes of less importance. The students of Andalusian
+art must also visit the Hospital de la Sangre, near the Macarena Gate,
+for some splendid works by Zurbaran and by his less-known forerunner
+Roelas. The three pictures ascribed to the last named are, however, very
+awkwardly placed and difficult to see.
+
+Murillo's house is still standing in the Plaza de Alfaro in the old
+Ghetto. Here he died on April 3, 1682, after his fall from the
+scaffolding at Cadiz. His studio is shown filled with several undoubted
+works of his brush. The house belongs to the executors of the late Dean
+Cepero.
+
+The Duke de Montpensier has a fine collection of pictures at his ugly
+Palace of St. Telmo, near the Torre del Oro. Among them is included a
+sketch by our late Queen, when she was still a princess. The palace
+looks on a parade which is much resorted to by the Sevillanos in the
+summer months. Here you see the boys playing at the inevitable
+bull-fight. One who takes the part of toro has a real bull's horns with
+which he "gores" his comrades with great ferocity. The insistence on
+this brutal "sport" among the Andalusians has taken the form of acute
+monomania. Exasperated strangers have been heard to declare that in
+southern Spain you hear of but two things--Toros y Moros. In another
+corner of the promenade, you will come upon a party of little girls
+going through the peculiar and stately dances, or rather measures, of
+their country, to the accompaniment of a low chant and a clapping of
+hands, in which the boys, looking on from a distance, will join. Boys
+and girls, unless they are quite babies, are seldom seen together. You
+pass on and find a group of citizens seated at the little tables round a
+kiosk, refreshing themselves with lemonade and being entertained by a
+conjuror--a fine-looking man--who sends round the hat after every two
+or three tricks. In the ordinary way you are asked for alms more often
+than in Granada, but not, of course, to anything like the same extent as
+in London. English travellers are given to commenting on the mendicity
+in foreign cities, but I must confess that nowhere have I met with so
+many beggars as in our own capital. In Spain the fraternity chiefly
+haunt the steps of churches, the one spot in our happy country that they
+seem to avoid.
+
+We reach the beginning of the Delicias Gardens, which extend two or
+three miles southward along the river bank. All the rank and fashion of
+Seville--and a great deal besides--turns out in summer evenings to drive
+in the Delicias. The concourse of vehicles is immense, but reminded me
+rather of the return from the Derby than of Rotten Row. The great
+ambition of the Spaniard is to possess a conveyance, and he seems to
+care little how dilapidated or ancient it may be, so long as it goes on
+wheels. Side by side with the handsome equipages of the Sevillian
+aristocracy, you will see a wretched Rosinante painfully dragging what I
+took to be the original "one-hoss shay," or the carriage in which Lord
+Ferrers was driven to the scaffold. It is impossible to restrain a
+smile, but after all a conveyance is a real necessity in a climate like
+this, and if a man cannot afford a good carriage, he must needs put up
+with a bad one. The traffic is well regulated by mounted police. The
+foot-paths are also crowded, and when night falls, everyone adjourns to
+the numerous open-air cafes and kiosks to drink light beer and lemonade.
+Sober, steady Spain! How certain of our reformers at home would love
+you, if they but knew you! Where in the world (except in the East) are
+men more abstemious or women more staid and demure?
+
+If you wish (as of course, being a modern traveller, you are sure to do)
+to study the life of the people, you had better betake yourself to the
+other end of the city--to the Alameda de Hercules, so called after two
+columns which the natives believe were presented by that muscular
+demigod. Here a perpetual fair seems in progress. There are the usual
+booths, with fat ladies, boneless wonders, and dwarfs, and more
+questionable exhibitions. On a platform sat three depressed and underfed
+wretches, who, I thought, were to be immediately garrotted. Suddenly one
+sprang up and gave a very clever rendering of the arrival and departure
+of a train at a country station. He was vociferously applauded, and,
+thus encouraged, danced a sort of "cellar-flap" with great animation to
+the indispensable accompaniment of hand-clapping. In a popular assembly
+of Andalusian town and country folk, the modern observer ought, I am
+well aware, to find many extraordinary and significant phases of
+humanity, exhibiting the striking individuality of the people, their
+race-consciousness, their psychological import, their evolutional
+significance, and so forth. I blush to confess that in the crowds
+applauding the ventriloquist or gaping at the fat lady, I saw only a
+collection of good-humoured ordinary people, enjoying themselves much
+after the fashion of ordinary people in England.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--GARDEN OF THE CASA DE PILATOS]
+
+Perhaps the Sevillano is more his real self on these occasions than when
+disporting himself at the world-famous fair, which begins on the Monday
+after Easter and attracts strangers from all parts of Europe. Though a
+somewhat overrated festival, I think it more distinctive and original in
+certain of its aspects than the gorgeous religious ceremonies by which
+it is preceded. The wealthier families of Seville rig up for themselves
+on the fair-ground "casetas," or temporary residences of wood or canvas,
+with two or more apartments. A great deal of expense is lavished on the
+upholstering and decoration of these pavilions, and those of the four
+principal clubs are fitted up in the most luxurious fashion. In the
+evening the _jeunesse doree_ of the city drive out to the fair in smart
+traps drawn by dashing little horses with jangling little bells, and
+visits are exchanged at the casetas, where as the evening becomes
+cooler, dancing takes place, to the sound of the piano, the guitar, and
+the castanet. The pretty senoritas of Seville have no objection to going
+through the graceful measures of the South in full view of an uninvited
+audience who crowd round the opening of the tent and from time to time
+give vent to admiring "Oles!" and bursts of hand-clapping. Dancing will
+be interrupted at 8.30, when everyone comes out to look at the firework
+display. Then of course there are the usual popular amusements--the
+inevitable bioscope, the gramophone, and all sorts of shows. Peasantry
+and aristocracy alike dress their very best on this occasion. The
+smartest toilettes and the most picturesque of native costumes are seen
+side by side, the latest confections of Worth and Paquin and costly
+heirlooms handed down from the days of Boabdil and Gonsalvo de Cordova.
+
+Whether such an intermingling of all classes, of the richest and the
+poorest, could take place with mutual enjoyment and comfort in any
+country but Spain, is a matter open to doubt.
+
+The object of the fair is, I believe, the sale of cattle, and about
+eighty thousand beasts are to be seen on the Prado de San Sebastian. To
+say that the most sanguinary bull-fights complete the festivities is
+perhaps superfluous. The most skilful and renowned toreros are engaged
+on this occasion, and the arenas literally smoke with the blood of bulls
+and disembowelled horses. Smithfield and Deptford can show nothing in
+comparison.
+
+[Illustration: SEVILLE--THE MARKET PLACE]
+
+The religious ceremonies, of which travellers talk so much, are not for
+the most part peculiar to Seville, as it ought to be unnecessary to
+remind them. The tableaux in the processions struck me as theatrical,
+but as being on the whole as well represented as similar show-pieces in
+our pageants. The famous Dance of the Seises is reserved for the
+octaves of the Immaculate Conception and Corpus Christi. It has been
+described over and over again. There is nothing irreverent about the
+performance, which is in itself graceful and quaint; only carried out
+before the high altar it strikes one as rather meaningless. So, I
+suppose, most such functions impress those who are unprepared for them
+by temperament and education. There cannot be much doubt that the
+ceremony originated in an attempt to attract the ungodly to church--an
+early and respectable precedent for the methods of the Salvation Army.
+
+Others have it that the dance is a survival of some pagan
+ceremony--which will remind us that we have so far neglected the
+monuments of the Romans which were bequeathed to Seville. These are not
+very numerous or interesting. Only a fragment remains, at the north-east
+angle of the city, of the massive wall which Caesar built, and which
+completely girdled Seville as late as the reign of Juan II. It was
+strengthened, tradition tells us, by 166 towers, which were freely used
+as prisons by later rulers. The Cordoba Gate marks the site of the
+dungeon of the canonized Hermenegild. Close to it is the Capuchin
+Convent, built upon the foundations of the palace of the Roman governor,
+Diogenianus, and afterwards associated with Murillo. A noble aqueduct
+built by the Romans, and known to-day as the Canos de Carmona, still
+brings water from Alcala de Guadaira to Seville. Everyone who visits
+Seville is expected to make an excursion to the ruins of Italica, a few
+miles on the other side of the Guadalquivir. There is remarkably little
+to see when you get there, and not much is known about the place. There
+were few, if any, private dwellings here, and it existed rather as the
+place of meeting and distributing centre for the colonists scattered
+over the district. It was indeed raised to the dignity of a municipality
+by Augustus, but petitioned to be restored to its old rank of a Roman
+colony. It did not prove unworthy of its connection with the great
+capital. Hence sprang the illustrious line of the AElii, and many of the
+eminent Roman Spaniards who conferred such lustre on the early empire
+are believed to have been natives. The town was embellished in those
+palmy days with temples, palaces, amphitheatres, and baths, quite out of
+proportion to its population.
+
+Its downfall, like its earlier history, is mysterious. Here Leovigild
+placed his headquarters when besieging Seville. Then came the Arabs, who
+dismantled it and carried off columns and blocks of masonry on which are
+founded the Giralda and other important buildings in the neighbouring
+city. Italica disappeared from history; and all you can see of it to-day
+is a few remains of walls and earthbanks outlining the amphitheatre.
+
+It might not be worth the journey were it not that it can be included in
+an excursion to the villages of Santi Ponce, Castilleja la Cuesta, and
+the Cartuja. The parish church of the first named wretched village is
+remarkable as the last resting-place of the illustrious Guzman el Bueno,
+that Spaniard of the Roman mould who refused to save the life of his son
+at the cost of the fortress of Tarifa, which he held for his king. The
+hero's kneeling effigy dates, as the inscription beneath informs us,
+from the year 1609, the three hundredth anniversary of his death. The
+modern traveller, whose sympathies are usually more with the aesthetic
+than the heroic, will be more interested in the lifelike St. Jerome, one
+of the finest works of Montanez, to be seen over the high altar. The
+saint, regarding a crucifix devoutly, beats his breast with a stone. On
+either side are beautiful bas-reliefs of the Nativity and the Adoration
+of the Magi.
+
+The convent was inhabited first by the Cistercians, next by the Hermits
+of St. Jerome. It presents rather the appearance of a fortified abbey of
+the middle ages. The church is divided into two naves, each of which was
+a distinct church--one, I suspect, belonging to the monastery, the other
+to the parish; a not uncommon medieval arrangement. I almost forgot to
+add that it contains the ashes (literally) of Dona Urraca Osorio, a lady
+burnt to death, as I have said, by Pedro the Cruel.
+
+At Castilleja la Cuesta--a village on the height--is the house where
+Hernando Cortes died in 1547. The house has been converted by the Duc de
+Montpensier into a sort of museum. The Conquistador's bones repose in
+the land which, with so much intrepidity and ruthlessness, he won for
+Spain.
+
+The old Charterhouse or Cartuja is now occupied by the porcelain factory
+of Pickman & Co. It lies on the west bank of the Guadalquivir, a few
+minutes' walk from the railway bridge. It was founded in the first
+decade of the fifteenth century by Archbishop de Mena, and was the
+burial-place of the Riberas, till their remains were transferred to the
+University Church. There is little to see except some stalls carved, if
+I remember aright, by Duque Cornejo, in the little chapel.
+
+You may return to the city through the transpontine quarter of Triana, a
+collection of whitewashed houses inhabited chiefly by gipsies. To
+distinguish these no longer nomadic Bohemians from the lower-class
+Andalusians around them is not an easy task. As at Granada, gipsy dances
+are got up by the guides and hotel people, and here, I am told, they
+possess the merit which a Frenchman denies to those of the other
+city--impropriety. The patron saints of Seville, Saints Justa and
+Rufina, were potters in this quarter. In their time the Carthaginian
+goddess, Astarte or Salambo, was much venerated in the Roman city. The
+commemoration of the death of Adonis took place in the month of July,
+when the image of the goddess was borne in triumph through the streets,
+while the people following with cries and lamentations deplored the
+untimely end of her beloved. A strange survival, this, on soil so
+far to the west, of the hideous Punic rites! The two maidens, newly
+converted to the religion of the Crucified, refused to do reverence to
+the image as it was carried past, and were haled before the governor,
+Diogenianus, in his palace by the Cordova Gate. They were put to death
+in due course, and have received more honour since from architects,
+sculptors, and painters, than Venus-Astarte in all her glory received
+from her devotees.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--A COURTYARD]
+
+Before leaving Triana, visit the Church of Santa Ana, to see the
+exquisite Madonna of Alejo Fernandez, whom Lord Leighton considered the
+most conspicuous among the Gothic painters. There is a regard for beauty
+in the figures, not by any means obtrusive in most of the paintings of
+the period, though the awkward pose of some of the angels shows that the
+artist had not quite emancipated himself from Byzantine influence. And
+the thought occurred to me as I made my way back to the Delicias
+Gardens, where the people were driving out to take the air, and knots
+were collecting round musicians and mountebanks--when the whole city was
+yielding itself up to the sensuous charm of the summer night--that the
+art of Fernandez was expressive of Seville: of a people in whom the
+sense of beauty and the joy of living cannot be extinguished, though at
+the call of religion they reluctantly keep their faces half turned
+towards sad facts and yet more sombre unrealities.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+CORDOVA
+
+ "They say the Lion and the Lizard keep
+ The Courts where Jamshyd gloried and drank deep."
+
+
+The sands of Asia are strewn with the ruins of cities once the gorgeous
+capitals of mighty empires. Here in Spain the followers of the Prophet
+raised a metropolis as splendid as any of the new Babylons of the East;
+and its fall has been wellnigh as great as theirs. We need not credit
+all the assertions of the Arabian writers (for the scribes of that
+nation, as Cervantes remarks, are not a little addicted to fiction). We
+can hardly believe that Cordova in its prime contained 300,000
+inhabitants, 600 mosques, 50 hospitals, 800 public schools, 900 baths,
+600 inns, and a library of 600,000 volumes; but there is evidence enough
+to satisfy us that this was in the tenth century the most magnificent
+and populous city in Europe, Byzantium alone excepted. Now it is a small
+provincial capital, bright, white, and coquettish, utterly without the
+solemnity and majesty which should invest the seats of vanished empires.
+Here greatness has been swallowed up in insignificance, not in
+desolation. The Court of the Khalifas, the Western Mecca, does not lie
+in lordly ruin like a fallen Colossus, but has sunk into mere pettiness.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--ENTRANCE TO THE CITY]
+
+Victor Hugo draws, as only he knew how, in a couple of lines, a
+picturesque sketch of Cordova, but this hardly corresponds to the
+impressions of the modern traveller. The houses may be old (some of them
+certainly are), but in their coats of dazzling whitewash they look
+brand-new. Gautier very sensibly remarks that, thanks to whitewash, the
+wall which was erected a century ago cannot be distinguished from that
+which was erected yesterday. Its general application "imparts a uniform
+tint to all buildings, fills up the architectural lines, effaces all
+their delicate ornamentation, and does not allow you to read their age."
+Cordova, which was formerly a centre of Arabian civilization, is now
+nothing more than a confused mass of small white houses, above which
+rise a few mangrove trees, with their metallic green foliage, or some
+palm trees with their branches spread out like the claws of a crab;
+while the whole town is divided by narrow passages into a number of
+separate blocks, where it would be difficult for two mules to pass
+abreast. Such is Cordova to-day, and I doubt very much if its external
+aspect was a whit more splendid or by any means as pleasing in the days
+of its glory. Some authors write as if they imagined the Mohammedans
+built their capitals on the lines of Paris and Washington. A visit to
+Constantinople or to Cairo would remove that impression. Imagine
+Cordova covering three or four times its present area, its windows
+obscured with lattices, its walls less white, its streets filled with a
+noisy mob of beshawled and beturbaned men--black, brown, and white--with
+noble mosques and elegant minarets here and there, and you will have a
+fair picture of the capital of the Western Khalifate.
+
+Of its outward seeming only. Its culture and refined social life merited
+for Cordova the title of the Athens of the West. When all Europe was
+sunk in barbarism, medicine and chemistry, the natural sciences, the
+arts and philosophy, all found a refuge here. Culture was diffused
+through all classes of the population, if only very superficially, to an
+extent never perhaps equalled elsewhere. And though there was little
+initiative or originality about the scholars at Cordova, their labours
+contributed to keep alive a taste for the humanities which otherwise
+would never have revived in Europe. The comforts and amenities of life
+were carefully studied in the Western Khalifate. All the products which
+minister to luxury were at that time the almost exclusive property of
+the Moslem world, and to the bazaars of Cordova were brought the
+choicest spoils of Egypt, Persia, Arabia, and Hindostan. And at the head
+of this urbane and flourishing commonwealth sat the great Umeyyad
+khalifa, emulous of the glories of Bagdad and Cairo, and eager to
+surpass them in elegance and splendour.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--CALLE CARDINAL HERRERA]
+
+Of those great days all that remains is the Mezquita--and that is much.
+Next to St. Peter's it is the largest of Christian temples, and
+certainly among the most ancient. As a Mohammedan place of worship, it
+ranked in sanctity with the Mosque of Omar at Jerusalem, immediately
+after Mecca, which it was indeed designed to eclipse. It was
+Abd-ur-Rahman's ambition to focus all the interests of Islam at this
+point within his own dominions. Spanish Moslems were taught that a
+pilgrimage to the "Zeka" of Cordova was in all respects equivalent to a
+pilgrimage to Mecca. Hence Sancho Panza's saying, "Andar de Zeca en
+Mecca." That the Umeyyad khalifa succeeded in diverting the Faithful
+from the old shrine to the new is doubtful, but he and his successors
+spared no pains to render their mosque one of the wonders of the world.
+In the year 786, seized, it is said, by a sudden inspiration,
+Abd-ur-Rahman convoked his council and declared his intention of raising
+a temple to Allah on the site of a Christian church. The Moslems had
+already appropriated half of the Basilica of San Vicente to their use,
+suffering the Christians to perform their rites in the adjoining
+portion. The khattib was commanded to approach the unbelievers to
+negotiate the purchase of the whole edifice. The Christians stood out
+for a high price, and got it. They received a sum equal to L400,000 of
+our money, and permission, moreover, to rebuild all their churches in
+the city that had existed at the time of the Conquest. When we remember
+the violent seizure and "purification" of the Church of St. Sophia by
+the Turks, seven hundred years later, we can see how little Islam had
+learnt of toleration in the meantime.
+
+The old basilica was accordingly demolished and the mosque begun. The
+khalifa set apart a portion of his revenues for the work, and laboured
+himself upon it for an hour each day. Thus encouraged, his subjects of
+all ranks made it a point of honour to contribute either their personal
+labour or their money to the great work. Though most of the columns came
+from the marble quarries of the neighbouring town of Cabra, as many as
+possible were brought from the most distant parts of the Mohammedan
+empire, from the works of civilizations which Islam had subdued. The
+mosque was to be a monument to the triumph of the Crescent. Its
+dimensions as projected by the founder were four times less than those
+of the existing building.
+
+The successors of Abd-ur-Rahman obtained the assistance of Byzantine
+craftsmen, and embellished the mosque with rich mosaics. Almost a
+quarter of the actual building was added by Al Hakem II., and the
+eastern half by Al Mansur. To effect this last expansion, a cottage
+beneath a palm tree had to be acquired. The old lady to whom it belonged
+refused to budge till an exactly similar abode was found for her. This
+was done at last, after a diligent search, and a liberal donation made
+to her to boot.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--MOORISH MILL]
+
+Thus was reared this mighty temple of Islam on European soil, at a time
+when the state of the Christian world went far to justify the exultant
+words of the khalifa: "Let us build the Kaaba of the West upon the
+site of a Christian temple, which we will destroy, so that we may set
+forth how the Cross shall fall and become abased before the True
+Prophet. Allah will never place the world beneath the feet of those who
+make themselves the slaves of drink and sensuality, while they preach
+penitence and the joys of chastity, and while extolling poverty, enrich
+themselves to the loss of their neighbours. For these, the sad and
+silent cloister; for us, the crystalline fountain and the shady grove;
+for them, the rude and unsocial life of dungeon-like strongholds; for
+us, the charm of social life and culture; for them, intolerance and
+tyranny; for us, a ruler who is our father; for them, the darkness of
+ignorance; for us, letters and instruction widespread as our creed; for
+them, the wilderness, celibacy, and the doom of the false martyr; for
+us, plenty, love, brotherhood and eternal joy."
+
+The face of the world has changed somewhat in ten centuries.
+
+It must, I think, be admitted that the Mezquita, to European eyes, is
+fantastic and interesting rather than beautiful. It may be compared to a
+forest of columns or to a seemingly endless series of parallel aisles
+spanned by low horseshoe arches. It does in truth remind one, as one
+writer observes, of a gigantic crypt. The additions of Al Mansur, may be
+distinguished by the pointed arches. Otherwise there is little of the
+variety insured in Christian churches by the distribution of the parts.
+It is only in the columns themselves that we find any relief from the
+prevailing uniformity. There are interesting differences in their
+capitals, and in their bases also, which are, however, buried
+underground. In the ruder carving is seen an attempt on the part of the
+Moorish masons to copy the work of the more skilled craftsmen of Rome
+and Byzantium. The mean vaulting overhead is modern. It is gradually
+being taken down and replaced by the beautiful carved ceiling of white
+larchwood which Murphy described a hundred years ago. He says: "Above
+the first arch is placed a second, considerably narrower and connecting
+it with the square pillars that support the timber work of the roof,
+which is not less curious in its execution than are the other parts of
+the building. It was put together in the time of Abd-ur-Rahman I., and
+subsists to this day unimpaired, though partially concealed by the
+plaster-work of the modern arches. The beams contain many thousands of
+cubic feet; the bottoms and side of the cross beams have been carved and
+painted with different figures; the rafters also are painted red. Such
+parts as retain the paint are untouched by worms: the other parts, where
+the paint no longer remains, are so little affected that the decay of a
+thousand years is scarcely perceptible; and, what is rarely to be seen
+in an edifice of such antiquity, no cobwebs whatever are to be traced
+here. The timber work of the roof is further covered with lead; and
+the whole has been executed with such precision and taste, that it may
+justly be pronounced a _chef-d'oeuvre_ of art, both with respect to
+the arrangement of the different parts, as well as to the extent and
+solidity of the whole."
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--MEZQUITA]
+
+But what must have lent so much of beauty to the building originally was
+that, instead of being enclosed with walls as it is at present, its long
+arcades opened into the groves of orange trees without, which were
+simply their natural continuation--a graceful and symmetrical plan which
+one would like to see attempted in modern times. Though, too, every
+Mohammedan temple is necessarily simple in plan and can never approach
+the Christian churches in elaboration and gorgeousness, here Moslem art
+exhausted its ingenuity on the embellishment of those more sacred parts
+of the building such as the Sanctuary and the Maksurrah.
+
+The Sanctuary or Zeka has been spared to us. It is a little heptagonal
+recess, paved with white marble and roofed with a shell-like cupola of
+marble of a single block. The sides are formed by dentated horseshoe
+arches which interlace and enclose each other in a beautiful
+complication. Here in the southern wall is the recess which indicated
+the direction of Mecca, and towards which the worshippers turned; it is
+adorned with exquisite mosaic work and with inscriptions from the Koran
+and the names of the architects. In the Sanctuary was preserved for
+several centuries after the Reconquest the superb "mimbar" or pulpit of
+Al Hakem II. "It was of marble," says Senor de Madrazo, "and of the most
+precious woods, such as ebony, red sandal-wood, bakam, Julian aloe,
+etc.; it cost 35,000 dineros and 3 adirames. It had nine steps." We are
+told that it was composed of 36,000 pieces of wood, joined with pins of
+silver and gold, and encrusted with precious stones. Its construction
+lasted seven years, eight artificers being employed upon it daily. This
+tribune was reserved for the khalifa, and in it was deposited the
+principal object of the veneration of the Moslems of Andalusia and Al
+Moghreb--a copy of the Koran supposed to have been written by Othman and
+stained with his precious blood. This treasure was preserved in a
+binding of cloth-of-gold sewn with pearls and rubies, covered with the
+richest red silk, and placed on a lectern of aloe-wood with nails of
+gold. Its weight was extraordinary, and two men could carry it only with
+difficulty. It was placed in the mimbar, when the imam read from it the
+prayer of the Azulah, and was then placed in the treasury with the gold
+and silver vessels used in the ceremonies of the "Ramadan."
+
+The Maksurrah is now transformed into the chapel of Villa Viciosa. Here
+sat the khalifa when not officiating as imam. Little is visible of the
+original decoration, except the cupola, similar to that of the
+Sanctuary. Adjacent to this chapel another has been discovered which it
+is thought will prove to be the treasury to which Madrazo refers.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--PATIO DE LOS NARANJOS]
+
+When Cordova was taken by St. Ferdinand in 1236, the mosque was
+reconsecrated as a Christian cathedral, but little alteration was made
+in the original structure. It was in 1523 that the unfortunate idea
+possessed the bishop, Don Alfonso Manrique, to build a new church in the
+middle of the Mohammedan temple. So proud were the Cordovans of their
+great monument, that the municipality threatened the innovators with
+death if they ventured to carry the project into execution. However,
+this decree was overridden by an order from Charles V., who knew so
+little what he was about that on visiting Cordova a few years later, he
+bitterly expressed his regret at having allowed the mosque to be
+interfered with. Two hundred columns had been swept away to make room
+for the existing chancel, choir, and lateral chapels. Though we resent
+their appearance here, these parts of the church are not wanting in
+taste and richness. The reredos of jasper and bronze is painted by
+Antonio Palomino, and flanks a sumptuous and beautifully moulded
+tabernacle. Not so much praise can be bestowed on the choir, where,
+however, the stalls by Pedro Duque Cornejo reveal skilful workmanship.
+Lope de Rueda, the Spanish Moliere, is entombed here. In the Cathedral
+is also buried the poet Gongora, whose style is aptly compared by Mme.
+Dieulafoy to that of Churriguera in architecture. A more interesting
+grave is that of Dona Maria de Guzman de Paredes, a lady celebrated for
+her wit and wisdom in the days of Philip II., and who won every degree
+it was in the power of the University of Alcala to confer. Duque Cornejo
+is also buried here.
+
+In the Sacristy is a fine monstrance by Juan de Arfe. The chapels do not
+call for particular examination.
+
+If the Mezquita is strange within, it is eminently picturesque without.
+The massive walls are crenellated and supported by stout square
+buttresses. Between these are horseshoe arches, richly decorated, and
+forming originally sixteen entrances, most of which are now blocked up.
+The Puerta del Perdon has been adorned with the arms of Castile and
+Leon, and is secured by bronze doors of an interesting type. An
+inscription upon it runs:--"On the 2nd day of the month of March of the
+era of Caesar 1415 (1577 A.D.), in the reign of the Most High and Mighty
+Don Enrique, King of Castile."
+
+Of the minaret, once equal to the Giralda and, like it, once surmounted
+by great metal globes, only the lowest storey remains, an earthquake
+having thrown down the superstructure in the sixteenth century. And the
+famous Court of the Orange Trees, on to which the aisles at one time
+opened, has lost much of its charm. The trees are stunted and withered,
+and the soil covered with coarse grass and weeds. On three sides the
+court is surrounded by a gallery, on the fourth by the buildings of the
+chapter. The basin was placed here in 945 by Abd-ur-Rahman, and might
+with advantage be used for its original purpose by some of the
+habitues of the patio. Two Roman columns at the entrance to the
+Cathedral announce the distance to Gades (114 miles) from the Temple of
+Janus, which stood on this site.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--OUTER WALL OF THE MOSQUE]
+
+On the whole the far-famed Mezquita may be pronounced disappointing. It
+must always be so with the simply planned temples of Islam, when they
+are stripped of the innumerable lamps, the rich carpets and handsome
+furniture, still to be seen in them at Cairo, Constantinople, and
+Smyrna.
+
+Of the magnificent Palace of the Khalifas, the wonderful domain of Az
+Zahara, no trace remains. It was built by a Byzantine architect on the
+flanks of a hill, three miles north-east of Cordova, which the khalifa
+at one time thought of levelling. Arab writers declare this to have been
+the largest palace, as of course it was the most magnificent, ever
+raised by the hand of man. The harem (_credat Judaeus_) could accommodate
+6,000 women, 3,790 eunuchs, and 1,500 guards. Marble appears to have
+been freely used in the construction, from which it would seem that the
+building bore little resemblance to the Alcazar of a later day. There
+were, of course, thousands--tens of thousands--of columns brought from
+Rome and Tunis, and probably from Carthage, and fine fragments of
+terra-cotta are still unearthed on the site. Aqueducts conducted sweet
+waters to every chamber in the palace, and fountains cooled the air in
+the luxuriantly planted gardens. We are told of the Hall of Ceremonial,
+with its brilliant mosaics and its ceiling of scented wood, in the
+centre of which was set an immense pearl, the gift of the Emperor
+Constantinos Porphyrogenitos. And we hear in addition of basins filled
+with quicksilver for the amusement of the odalisques.
+
+This gorgeous pile owes its existence to a favourite of the Khalifa An
+Nasir, who at her death directed that her immense wealth should be
+employed in ransoming Moslem prisoners in the clutch of the Christian.
+The bereaved potentate sent east, west, north and south in order to
+execute this pious request, only to find to his joy that no such thing
+as a Moslem captive was anywhere to be found. The happy thought then
+came to him to expend the money on the erection of a palace to be named
+after a new favourite, Zahara, whose name it should perpetuate, and in
+whose society he might hope to forget the deceased. This seems to us a
+somewhat queer application of the legacy. The work occupied ten thousand
+men daily for many years, and cost during An Nasir's reign alone seven
+and a half millions of dineros or pieces of gold.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--A STREET SCENE]
+
+The palace seems to have excited, as well it might, the cupidity of
+neighbouring monarchs. Alfonso VI., the conqueror of Toledo, demanded it
+of the Amir Al Mutamed, as a residence for his queen, Dona Constancia,
+whose accouchement he suggested might take place in the mosque. It was
+the Moor's rejection of this original proposal that led to hostilities,
+and threw the Spanish Moslems into the arms of the terrible
+Almoravides. Those fierce sectaries seem to have entirely neglected Az
+Zahara, and under the puritanical Almohades we can easily imagine it
+would be suffered to decay. How little was left of it when Ferdinand
+took the place is shown by his referring to it merely as Cordova la
+Vieja (Old Cordova).
+
+Men who lived in such comfort and luxury might be supposed to have
+regarded their less fortunate fellows with easy good nature and
+tolerance, and according to most historians the khalifas of Cordova were
+benevolent despots, even towards their Christian subjects. Some Spanish
+writers, however, paint the lot of these last in gloomy colours, though,
+if we accept their accounts _in toto_, without the least reservation,
+there can be no question that the lot of the Christian under the Moor
+was very much better than the lot of the Moor under the Christian. But
+that standpoint would not be that of the historians in question. They
+are frankly partisans. The Mohammedans, they would argue, deserved what
+they got, because they worshipped the false Prophet; the Christians were
+in the right. It is more difficult to understand their vehement
+condemnation of the Bishop Recafred, because he forbade his flock to
+seek voluntary martyrdom by publicly cursing Mohammed. To curse the
+Arabian Prophet or anyone else is nowhere laid down as a Christian's
+duty, and on merely prudential grounds the prelate was surely justified
+in dissuading his people from pursuing a course which must finally have
+resulted in their complete extermination. Probably in disgust at the
+ingratitude and imbecility of his flock, Recafred embraced the creed of
+Islam, and died cursed and abominated by the people whose utter
+extinction he had averted. The history of the martyrs of Cordova is a
+curious chapter in the annals of religion.
+
+It was recently remarked of Italy that there was not enough faith to
+generate a heresy, and by a parity of reasoning the lamp of faith must
+have burnt very brightly in the Christian community of Cordova. The
+Saracen authorities were bewildered by the multitude of sects and
+factions which claimed to represent the Church of Christ, and to
+administer its temporalities. Councils of the Christian prelates were
+frequently convoked by the khalifas, but by the defeated side their
+decisions were always branded as schismatical or heretical. Religious
+debate is the favourite occupation of a decaying State, and the
+Mohammedans themselves had their divisions. The doctors of the law, who
+congregated in a special quarter of the capital, constituted themselves
+the critics of their rulers and of public morals. They considered
+culture and luxury incompatible with morality, and preached the creed of
+the Uncomfortable and the Unlovely with the zest of an English Puritan.
+One day there arose a sovereign (Hakem) more sensitive of censure than
+his predecessors. He burnt out the Puritan quarter and forced the
+zealots to take refuge in distant parts where their peculiar talents
+were more in demand.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--A STREET]
+
+The more human side of Islam found an embodiment in the illustrious
+Ziryab, the favourite of Abd-ur-Rahman II. In his case, I suppose, as in
+all else, it is necessary to discount by fifty per cent. all the
+appreciations of Arabic writers; yet through all the cobwebs of
+exaggeration and tradition, we can discern the outlines of a very
+remarkable personality. Ziryab was the Admirable Crichton of his age. He
+combined the attributes of Leonardo da Vinci and Beau Nash. He alone
+could decide on the proper method of eating asparagus and on the
+planning of a city. He could pronounce with finality on the wisdom of a
+move at chess and a far-reaching treaty of state. He had views on the
+organization of armies and aviaries; he was listened to with equal
+respect by statesmen and scullery-maids. And (wonderful to relate) this
+authority on everybody's business was loved by everyone!
+
+The history of Cordova, like that of most capitals, belongs to the
+nation at large, and cannot be more than touched upon here. Memorials of
+ancient days are the picturesque Moorish walls with their flanking
+towers and the grand old bridge of sixteen arches, built by the
+khalifas. It marked the limit of navigation in Roman days, whereas now
+no boat can ascend the Guadalquivir above Seville. The bridge is
+defended on the south side by a very picturesque _tete du pont_ called
+Calahorra, a fine specimen of the medieval barbican. Here a strange
+scene was witnessed in the year 1394, when the prototype of Don
+Quixote, Don Martin de la Barbuda, Grand Master of Calatrava, appeared
+at the head of a few knights and a fanatical rabble on his way to fight
+the Moors of Granada. His enterprise was directly counter to the king's
+orders; the two countries were at peace. The royal officers assembled on
+the bridge expostulated and threatened the crusaders in vain. The Grand
+Master was accompanied by a hermit, who exhorted him to proceed and
+promised him that his victory should be purchased without the loss of a
+single Christian life. The officials were swept aside, and the wild
+cavalcade went on its way to destruction. None of the knights ever
+returned alive across the bridge of Cordova.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--THE BRIDGE]
+
+During the four centuries following the Reconquest, the city boasted
+that it was the home of the finest flower of the European aristocracy.
+Their old mansions have for the most part disappeared, but the name of
+the most distinguished member of the order is treasured in Cordova and
+honoured far beyond the limits of Spain. Gonzalo Hernandez de Aguilar y
+de Cordova, "the Great Captain," is the hero of the city. The principal
+street is named after him, as indeed one might suppose the town to have
+been, from the reverence in which he is held. On the whole, he was the
+greatest soldier this country has produced. With forces hardly superior
+to those with which Cortes and Pizarro conquered a savage foe, he
+vanquished the best equipped troops in Christendom and matched his
+strength successfully against the most brilliant warriors of his day.
+His reward, it is hardly necessary to say of the servant of a
+fifteenth-century king, was ingratitude and neglect. When the odious
+Ferdinand V. demanded from him a statement of his military expenditure,
+he responded with the famous "Cuentas del Gran Capitan," which silenced
+even the venal monarch. The statement ran:
+
+ "200,736 ducats and 9 reals paid to the clergy and the poor who
+ prayed for the victory of the arms of Spain.
+
+ "100 millions in pikes, bullets, and entrenching tools; 100,000 in
+ powder and cannon-balls, 10,000 ducats in scented gloves to
+ preserve the troops from the odour of the enemies' dead left on the
+ battlefield; 100,000 ducats spent in the repair of the bells
+ completely worn out by every day announcing fresh victories gained
+ over our enemies; 50,000 ducats in 'aguardiente' for the troops, on
+ the eve of battle. A million and a half for the safeguarding
+ prisoners and wounded.
+
+ "One million for Masses of Thanksgiving, 700,494 ducats for secret
+ service, etc.
+
+ "And one hundred millions for the patience with which I have
+ listened to the King, who demands an account from the man who has
+ presented him with a kingdom"!
+
+This singular balance-sheet sufficiently shows the temper of the
+grandees of Spain even in the days of the New Monarchy. Cordova has
+reason to be proud of her eponymous hero. She has not been very fruitful
+in great men. She has produced no painters of eminence, unless Pablo de
+Cespedes may be classed among such; but Mme. Dieulafoy reminds us that
+to Juan de Mena, a native of the place and a courtier of Juan II.,
+Spanish poetry is deeply indebted:
+
+ "His great work, 'The Labyrinth,' may in a measure be compared with
+ that part of the 'Divina Commedia' where the Florentine places
+ himself under the protection of Beatrice. Accompanied by a
+ beautiful young woman personifying Providence, the poet witnesses
+ the apparition of the worthies of History and Legend, and amuses
+ himself in sketching their portraits. At times the style becomes
+ heavy and pedantic, at others the touches of the pencil have a
+ vigour and simplicity altogether Dantesque. Before Juan de Mena,
+ the Castilian muse had never taken so daring a flight; and in spite
+ of the defects of the general scheme, the untasteful phraseology,
+ and the measure, 'The Labyrinth' abounds in conceptions and
+ episodes where energy blended with beauty reveals a genius of the
+ first order."
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--COURTYARD OF AN INN]
+
+From poetry to leather the transition may seem abrupt, but it is to be
+feared that our city has derived more renown from the latter than the
+former. The stamped and gilded leather of Cordova was highly esteemed
+all over the civilized world from the fifteenth century to the
+eighteenth. Whether the industry was introduced by the Moors it is idle
+to inquire; long after their departure it formed the principal business
+and source of revenue of the Spaniards of the city. A powerful guild
+laid down strict rules as to apprenticeship, and regulated the quality
+and quantity of the manufacture. Terrible penalties were enforced
+against the tanner who made use of the hides of animals that had died of
+disease. The kings of Spain considered trunks or other objects
+bound in Cordova leather gifts very suitable for their fellow-princes.
+The Catholic kings, absurdly enough, forbade its exportation to the New
+World, not wishing to deprive the mother-country of goods of such price.
+With protection on this scale, we are not surprised to learn that the
+industry began to decline. Cordova was at length surpassed in its own
+line by Venice and other cities. The rich specimens of its work which
+adorned the mansions of its old noblesse were sold and dispersed all
+over the world, upon the general impoverishment of the kingdom in the
+eighteenth century. Then came the sack of the city, a hundred years ago,
+by the army of Dupont. Time has spared the famous race of Cordovan
+horses, and many a poor hidalgo rides into the town on a steed which if
+sold in London might redeem his shattered fortunes.
+
+I have said a great deal about Cordova and its titles to remembrance;
+but it must be confessed that there is little enough to see in it. The
+churches present no features of interest, except the Colegiata de San
+Hipolito, modernized in 1729, which contains the tombs of Ferdinand IV.
+and Alfonso XI. Nor is walking through the city an exercise altogether
+pleasing, as the streets which were the first paved in Europe, in 850,
+might also claim to be the worst paved in the world. The stones are so
+sharp and pointed that in parts you have to skip from one to the other,
+like a bear dancing on hot iron--an original but ungraceful method of
+locomotion. A drive in the surrounding country is productive of more
+pleasure. The neighbourhood is a Paradise of fertility, and sets one
+wondering what becomes of all the money that this must bring in and
+represent. Spain and Greece are very poor countries, but I do not think
+that Spaniards and Greeks are, for the most part, very poor.
+
+[Illustration: CORDOVA--OLD HOUSES NEAR THE RIVER]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+GRANADA
+
+
+Over two thousand feet above the sea stands the ancient city of Granada,
+once the teeming centre of the kingdom of the Moors and now a town of
+memories eloquent of the grandeur of older days. The province bearing
+its name is bounded on the north by sterile ranges, while close to the
+southern seaboard stretch the huge shoulders and serrated peaks of the
+noble Sierra Nevada, rivalling in height the chief summits of the
+Pyrenees. Between these ranges spread fertile vegas, or plains, rising
+here and there to over a thousand feet, a district of vineyards and
+olive groves, and semi-tropical plants find a favourable habitat.
+
+Granada, though on the verge of an arid territory, is in a strip of
+great fertility, watered by the Genil and the Darro, the latter--the
+Hadarro of the Moors--a stream that is heavily taxed by the farmers for
+purposes of irrigation. Theophile Gautier praised the river of Granada
+for its beauty, but since his day the stream has shrunk, and nowadays
+the volume of water is insignificant, especially during a dry summer.
+
+The waters of the Darro have a reputation for their healing qualities,
+and cattle that drink from it are said to recover quickly from diseases.
+Hence, in the ancient speech, the river had the title of "The Salutary
+Bath of Sheep." Under the Moors the environs of Granada were in the
+highest state of cultivation, and they are still very productive. The
+land yields plenteous wine and oil. The chief crops are grains of
+various sorts. Hemp and flax flourish, and oranges, lemons, and figs are
+a source of income to the agriculturists. Granada is also famed for its
+mulberry trees, whose leaves provide food for the silk caterpillar,
+though the silk trade is in a state of sad decay.
+
+The soil around the city never rests. There is no waste of land. Oranges
+and pomegranates grow profusely. The cactus is cultivated for the
+production of the cochineal insect. Clovers yield several cuttings each
+year in this fecund territory.
+
+In the neighbouring mountains there are rich veins of marble, and jasper
+and amethyst are found. Yet the mining industry in the Sierra Nevada
+remains to be developed. The Granadines are hardly a commercial
+population, though numerous crafts are practised in their city.
+Factories for the production of sugar from beetroot have been erected in
+recent years, and it is hoped that this industry will increase.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--FROM THE GENERALIFE]
+
+The life of Granada in its lighter aspects can be well studied on the
+promenade of the Salon, one of the most beautiful parades in
+Europe. Here, under the shade of luxuriant trees, amid handsome
+fountains, and by parterres decked richly with many flowers, the people
+of the city stroll upon summer evenings after the great heat of the day.
+From the Salon you gain a superb view of the purple Sierra Nevada, which
+at sunset wears a wealth of changing hues.
+
+A walk along the promenade precedes the evening gathering in the patios
+of the houses of the upper and middle classes, when to the sound of
+guitar and the rattle of castanets, young and old dance together. At
+these tertulia, or evening parties, singing alternates with dancing the
+bolero and the jota. And later, when the lights are dim, and the
+watchman tramps slowly through the streets, you see the lovers, the
+"novios" waiting beneath the windows of the adored fair ones, or lightly
+strumming serenades on their guitars.
+
+At festival times the city is all animation. The anniversary of the
+taking of Granada is celebrated on January 2, when a procession is
+formed and proceeds to the Cathedral. Corpus Christi is another feast
+day, and there are two fairs during the year, one in June and the other
+in September.
+
+But it is Granada of the past rather than of the present that holds us
+during a sojourn in the city of hills and vistas. It is the scene of
+dreams, a city of meditation. You court serenity rather than hilarity
+amid these haunted streets and silent ruins. The Arabs had a saying,
+referring to one who was sad, "He is thinking of Granada." It is this
+spirit, perhaps, which prevails in the patios of the Alhambra and amid
+the orange trees of the Generalife Gardens. And yet it is not true
+depression. It is a sense of the glory that has been, a meditativeness
+which is induced by the somnolence of the scene, and fostered by the
+languorous atmosphere of the South.
+
+An ancient legend, often rehearsed by chroniclers, ascribed the founding
+of the city to certain descendants of Noah. It stated that Tubal settled
+in Spain and populated the country. There is some evidence that the
+province of Granada was the first district in Spain peopled by aliens.
+The founder of a town on the site of modern Granada is alleged to have
+been the mythical Iberus, who built Illiberis, which has been referred
+to as the original city. At any rate Illiberis existed in the Roman
+days, for it was a municipium under the rule of Augustus. The town was
+also the scene of an ecclesiastical council in the fourth century.
+
+Plundered by the Vandals, and won by the Visigoths, Illiberis was in
+decay at the time of the coming of the Moors to the Iberian Peninsula.
+With the conquest of Andalusia, the town of Granada first came into
+existence.
+
+At this period the Berbers overran the territory, though the Moorish
+authors relate that settlers from Damascus were the first Eastern
+colonizers of Granada.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--SIERRA NEVADA FROM THE ALHAMBRA GARDENS]
+
+The greatest obscurity shrouds the history of the city. It is strange
+that the writers of medieval times so rarely allude to Granada. About
+the year 860, a war raged over Andalusia between the native Moslems and
+their foreign rulers, the chief leader of the former being Omar Ben
+Hafsun. Under his lieutenant, Nabil, an attack was made on Granada, and
+we read that some exultant verses written by the belligerents were
+attached to an arrow and propelled over the city wall. In these verses
+the words _Kalat-al-hamra_ ("the Red Castle") appear. This first
+reference to Al-Hamra suggests that an edifice for defence stood on the
+hill now occupied by the Alhambra.
+
+In 886 Omar Ben Hafsun appears to have wrested Granada from the Khalifa
+of Cordova. A few years later Omar was conquered, and retiring to the
+Castle of Bobastro, he embraced the Christian faith, in which he died.
+
+Zawi Ben Ziri, a Berber, first established Granada as a kingdom in 1013.
+Gayangos, the Spanish historian, states that Illiberis--or Elvira, as it
+was called at this time--was a dwindling city and that Habus Ibn
+Makesen, nephew to Zawi Ben Ziri, founded a new town and capital.
+
+Habus was a builder as well as a warrior. He is the putative founder of
+the old Kasba, or citadel, in the Albaicin quarter, which was added to
+by his heir, Badis, who succeeded him in rule. The king is also said to
+have built the Casa del Gallo de Viento, in the same quarter, where he
+probably resided. Badis proved an ambitious and warlike monarch, for he
+enlarged his dominions widely, and even subdued the resolute hillfolk of
+the Alpujarras. He conquered Malaga, and made plans to besiege Seville.
+But his force was routed at Cabra by the famous Cid Campeador, Ruy Diaz
+de Bivar, the ally of the sultan of that city. To Badis is attributed a
+persecution of the Jews, who numbered several thousands in Elvira, and a
+terrible slaughter decimated their ranks.
+
+At the advent of the Almoravides, a fierce sect of Northern Africa,
+Granada was captured (1090) by Abd-ul-Aziz. The city now rose in
+importance. Soon after the Almoravide settlement, the followers of Islam
+in Granada attacked the Christians of the city and destroyed their
+church by fire. The unfortunate Christians appealed for help to Alfonso
+of Aragon, and the king came to their relief at the head of a strong
+army. In the combat at Anzul the Almoravides were worsted. Alfonso
+before retiring laid waste the fertile plain, and left the Christians to
+make the best of their position. His action had little effect upon the
+Almoravides, for in 1126 numbers of Christians were banished to Barbary
+and the rest bitterly oppressed.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--EXTERIOR OF THE ALHAMBRA]
+
+The doom of the Almoravides came in 1148. A mightier host, the rapacious
+and fanatical Almohades, surged over the city. The Moorish inhabitants,
+strengthening their forces with the aid of Christians and Jews, invited
+Ibrahim Ibn Humushk to lead them to the expulsion of the new sectaries.
+The invaders took refuge in the Kasba, and sought relief from
+Africa, whence an army was despatched. This force was beaten by Humushk,
+and the Granadines secured the assistance of the Sultan of Murcia and
+Valencia, whose troops attacked the Kasba, which was held by the
+Almohades. On the arrival of a second army, they made a sally and
+inflicted severe losses upon the soldiers of the sultan and his
+Christian allies. After this success, the Almohades endeavoured to
+pacify the unruly among their neighbours. Their governor, Sidi Abu
+Abrahim Ishak, was a tactful and benevolent leader. He improved the
+city, built a palace for himself, and made the Kasba a stronger
+fortress. The power of the Almohades was, however, insecure. Ben Hud, a
+potent chieftain, who had gained a strip of territory on the coast, now
+discerned that the hour was ripe for an assault upon Cordova, Jaen, and
+Granada. His domination was not permanent. Mohammed al Ahmar, uniting
+with the foes of Ben Hud, held Seville for a brief space, and then drove
+his rival to Almeria, where he was murdered in 1237.
+
+Granada now came under the sway of Al Ahmar, and in the hour of his
+triumph he was proclaimed monarch of a large part of southern Spain. For
+two hundred and fifty years the State founded by him resisted the
+Christian hosts. Granada rose to the zenith of power and prosperity. Its
+first sultan was a man of high character, courteous, dignified, and
+astute. He reigned long, and spent himself in affairs of government and
+in military enterprises, though he used every means to maintain peace.
+
+Al Ahmar's last expedition was undertaken against the Spanish forces and
+the governors of Guadix and Malaga (their allies) when he was eighty
+years of age, and failing in strength through illness. A fall from his
+horse brought him to his end. He expired in the arms of his ally, the
+Infante Don Felipe, and under cover of darkness his body was borne to
+Granada, where it was entombed in the burial ground of Assabica.
+
+The sovereignty now descended to Al Ahmar's son, named Mohammed II., who
+ascended the throne in 1273. He was renowned for his wisdom in the law,
+and during his reign of twenty-nine years he proved a worthy son of a
+great father.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--A STREET IN THE ALBAICIN]
+
+During his negotiations with Alfonso X. at Seville, Mohammed was the
+victim of an artifice of Queen Violante. Upon being asked by the queen a
+favour, he yielded in accordance with the chivalric notions of the time,
+but his chagrin was deep when he learned that he had agreed to a year's
+truce to the rebels within his dominion. Smarting under this device, he
+made plans for the annihilation of his foes. Now the friend of the
+Spaniards against the African, now the ally of his own co-religionists,
+Mohammed's career was one of strife. He died in 1302, able to boast that
+he had not lost a particle of the soil bequeathed to him by his father.
+Mohammed III. was, like his father, a forceful sovereign. He
+applied himself rigorously to the government of his territory, often
+spending the whole twenty-four hours in affairs of State. In 1306 he
+seized Ceuta, and brought a number of the conquered to Granada. But
+reverses came when the governor of Almeria rebelled and joined hands
+with the King of Aragon. Meanwhile the Castilians attacked Algeciras,
+and Mohammed, between two foes, was brought to bay. He extricated
+himself from danger by yielding four fortresses and paying a heavy sum.
+But his troubles were not at an end. Returning to Granada, he was
+surrounded by conspirators in his palace, and forced to yield the throne
+to his brother, Abu-l-Juyyush Muley Nasr. Humiliated and defeated,
+Mohammed retired to Almunecar, where he lived in seclusion.
+
+Nasr's first coup after seizing the throne was a successful attack upon
+Don Jaime at Almeria. Unfortunately a conspiracy was fomented by his
+nephew Abu-l-Walid. Nasr, who seems to have had a fit of apoplexy, was
+thought to be dead when Mohammed III. was brought back to Granada. He
+was, however, alive upon the return of the lawful sovereign; and on the
+authority of some historians he ordered that his rival should be put to
+death, while other writers assert that Mohammed was again banished to
+Almunecar.
+
+Soon after, Nasr was assailed by the followers of Abu-l-Walid, and
+forced to yield. As a solatium he was allowed to rule over the town of
+Guadix, whither he retired. Al Khattib relates that Nasr was a
+philosopher, and versed in the sciences of astronomy and mathematics.
+
+Abu-l-Walid was an implacable foe of the Christians. His assault on
+Gibraltar was frustrated; but he gained a signal victory over the
+Castilians in 1319, when the princes Pedro and Juan were killed.
+Following up this success, he marched upon the towns of Martos and Baza,
+and ravaged the country. It was at the latter town that artillery was
+first used in Spain.
+
+Hailed with joy, the victorious Abu-l-Walid returned to Granada bearing
+the spoils of war. Among the captives was a maiden of unusual beauty,
+whom he had wrested from an inferior officer. This act so incensed the
+chieftain that three days after he stabbed his ruler outside the
+Alhambra. Dying from the wound, Abu-l-Walid exacted an oath of fealty
+from the eminent and powerful to his eldest son, Mulai Mohammed Ben
+Ismail. This command was fulfilled before the sultan's minister
+disclosed the death of his royal master.
+
+The boy king, Mohammed IV., was soon busy quelling factions in his
+State, and repelling the African army, which took in turn Marbella,
+Algeciras, and Ronda. He also defeated the Castilians in several
+desperate encounters, but lost the day at Gibraltar.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--IN THE MARKET]
+
+Mohammed IV., who was assassinated at Gibraltar by his allies the
+Moroccans, was succeeded in 1333 by his brother Yusuf I. This king
+was a hater of warfare; he sought the peaceful reform of the community
+rather than the expansion of his kingdom. Under his rule Granada
+prospered and the condition of the people was bettered. Yusuf I. was
+disturbed in the tranquillity of his noble palace at Malaga by the
+appeals of the African potentates for his aid in reconquering Spain.
+Compelled to join the invaders, he sustained a severe disaster at the
+Salado, and was forced to acquire peace at the cost of yielding
+Algeciras. He was murdered by a madman in 1358.
+
+Mohammed V. was the next sovereign. He was a worthy son of his
+high-principled father, Yusuf; but fate decreed that his reign should
+not prove peaceful, for soon after his accession, his younger brother
+Ismail conspired with certain officers of state and made an attempt to
+gain the throne. Upon a night in August, 1360, about one hundred
+conspirators climbed the walls of the Kasba and after killing the wizir,
+proclaimed Ismail as sultan. Mohammed, who was without the palace at the
+time, essayed to enter; but he was received with a flight of arrows, and
+mounting a horse he galloped away to Guadix. Here he was welcomed, and
+from this town he sped to Marbella, thence to Africa, where he received
+the aid of Abu-l-Hasan. With troops lent to him he returned to Spain,
+hoping to crush the usurper. But Abu-l-Hasan capriciously ordered the
+return of his soldiers, and Mohammed retreated to Ronda with a few
+adherents.
+
+Dissension had arisen meanwhile between Ismail and Abu Said, one of the
+chief conspirators, who was burning to take the reins of government in
+his own hands. Ismail was besieged by Abu Said, and upon venturing out
+of his palace was slain.
+
+Fresh trouble arose in Granada, for Pedro of Castile came to the
+assistance of the lawful ruler. But Mohammed, witnessing the ravage of
+the district by the Christian army, was far from receiving the invader
+with open arms. "For no empire in the world would I sacrifice my
+country," cried the sultan. Thereupon the King of Castile retired, and
+Abu Said, mistaking the reason of his return to Seville, went thither to
+beg his alliance. The story of the sultan's murder, at the instigation
+of Pedro the Cruel, has often been told. Abu Said was done to death at
+Seville, and the resplendent ruby which was taken from him was presented
+to the Black Prince of England, and is still preserved among the regalia
+of England.
+
+Mohammed then returned to his capital. With the exception of a rebellion
+under Ali Ben Nasr, he passed twenty years of peace. Granada became a
+more thriving city, and under the sultan's clement administration, it
+was the resort of traders of all nations and the centre of culture in
+the south. According to Mendoza, the inhabitants of Granada numbered
+about 420,000 in the reign of Mohammed V., but it is probable that the
+number was wildly over-estimated.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE ALHAMBRA: THE AQUEDUCT]
+
+Yusuf II. followed Mohammed V. He was suspected of favouring the
+Christians. He certainly released all the captives of that faith, and
+restored them to their own country. This act appears to have incited his
+son Mohammed to rise against the throne. Yusuf was at first disposed to
+relinquish his sovereignty, for he was a lover of peace; but on the
+advice of an ambassador from Morocco he raised an army and advanced on
+Murcia.
+
+At this period the King of Castile was Enrique III., an incapable
+monarch in defiance of whose orders Don Martin de la Barbuda, the Master
+of Calatrava, headed an advance into the kingdom of Yusuf. The force
+was, however, entirely routed by the Moors. Soon after (1395) Yusuf, the
+pacific sovereign, was dead--the victim, it is said, of a poisoned
+potion, in the form of a tonic sent him by the Sultan of Fez.
+
+The first exploit of Yusuf's son Mohammed was a visit to Toledo, with
+twenty-five mounted attendants, where he appeared before Enrique III.
+and besought a renewal of the truce. The armistice was disregarded by
+the governor of Andalusia, who invaded the Moorish dominions, till
+Mohammed, in reprisal, seized the citadel of Ayamonte. At Jijena he was
+defeated, and was forced to plead for peace. He was at the point of
+death, when the idea seized him to secure the government of Granada for
+his son by the assassination of his brother. The governor of Salobrena
+was commanded to put to death the prince whom he had in his keeping.
+The doomed man asked leave to finish the game of chess in which he was
+engaged, and before either player could cry "Checkmate," the news came
+that the prince's brother was dead and that he had been declared sultan.
+Yusuf III. was faced with difficulties immediately upon his accession.
+Antequera fell into the hands of the Castilians, led by the Infante
+Fernando. The defenders were slain, and only about two thousand of the
+townsmen outlived the rigours of the siege. The survivors were allowed
+to settle in Granada, and they gave the name of Antequeruela to the
+suburb.
+
+When the natives of Gibraltar revolted, and declared allegiance to Fez,
+the sultan of that State sent his brother Abu Said to secure the town.
+Abu Said, being left to the mercy of the enemy, was seized and brought
+to Granada, where he was shown a letter from the ruler of Fez desiring
+that he might be despatched. With this request the generous Yusuf
+refused to comply. He released his captive and furnished him with money
+and troops with which he left for Africa. The brother who had planned
+his death was hurled from the throne, and till Abu Said's death Granada
+did not want an ally.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE COURT OF THE CYPRESSES]
+
+In rapid succession sultans now flit across the lurid page of Granada's
+history. It is a gloomy tale of incessant civil strife and of
+unsuccessful warfare with the Christians. Rulers are expelled from their
+thrones by pretenders who themselves fall victims to the poignards
+of their partisans. Sovereigns purchase their disputed crowns by selling
+the honour and independence of their country to the foreigner. To trace
+the miserable vicissitudes of the careers--we cannot call them
+reigns--of Mohammed VII., Mohammed VIII., Yusuf IV., and Said Ben
+Ismail, would be to weary and disgust you with a nation whose stubborn
+fight against overwhelming odds should command our respect.
+
+The last act in the protracted drama began with the accession of Mulai
+Hasan in the year 1465. With his famous reply to the Castilian
+ambassadors who demanded tribute, "Here we manufacture only iron
+spear-heads for our enemies," the final campaign began. Every incident
+of that war has been made familiar to us Anglo-Saxons by the pen of
+Prescott. In his pages long ago most of us read of the taking of Zahara
+by the Moors and of the brilliant surprise of the fortress of Alhama by
+the gallant Marquis of Cadiz. We have not forgotten the wailing of the
+Moors, "Ay de mi, Alhama!" nor the domestic revolution that followed
+when the old sultan was hurled from his throne by his son Boabdil. Poor
+Boabdil, on whom the blame of all his country's disasters has been laid
+by historians, Christian and Arab! Weak or foolhardy, the "Little King"
+fought like a Trojan against Ferdinand and Isabella for his country, and
+against his father and his uncle for his crown, at one and the same
+time. He was taken prisoner by Ferdinand and is said to have signed a
+treaty surrendering his dominions to the Catholic Sovereigns. This is
+rendered improbable by his comparatively generous treatment at the end
+of the war, when he had resisted the Spaniards to the uttermost, and
+fought them many times after his release from captivity. Desperate deeds
+of valour were done on both sides, though the strategy of the Spanish
+commanders does not appear to have been of a very high order, since,
+with the whole of Spain at their back, it took them eleven years to
+conquer a small kingdom distracted by three rival rulers. The old sultan
+retired from the contest, as finally did his brother, the brave Zaghal.
+When the Christians were preparing a final assault on the doomed city,
+Boabdil rode out from the Alhambra, for the last time, on the morning of
+the memorable 2nd of January, 1492. Ferdinand with a brilliant cavalcade
+awaited him on the banks of the Genil. The keys were handed over, a
+hurried exchange of formal courtesies, and the last ruler of the Spanish
+Moors passed away into exile and obscurity. The rays of the wintry sun
+glinted on the great silver cross which was hoisted on the Torre de la
+Vela in token that the reign of Mohammed was for ever at an end in
+Spain.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--VILLA ON THE DARRO]
+
+Yes, at an end. On that morning, Ferdinand and Isabella accomplished the
+task begun by Pelayo at Covadonga, seven hundred and seventy-four years
+before. The Moorish dominion in Spain had endured little short of eight
+centuries. It was as if the descendants of Harold Godwin were to
+arise and overthrow the existing English monarchy. But what is most
+remarkable is that the petty State of Granada had survived the break-up
+of the great Moorish empire in the west by two hundred and fifty years.
+Such a race deserved a manlier if not a more beautiful monument than the
+Alhambra.
+
+What followed the extinction of the Nasrid monarchy is not pleasant
+reading. The rights and privileges guaranteed the conquered were soon
+swept aside. The mild Archbishop de Talavera, the humane Tendilla, were
+superseded in the government of the city by fanatics more after
+Isabella's heart. Systematic persecution of the luckless Moslems ensued.
+They revolted, and their revolt was quenched with their own blood. They
+were intimidated, browbeaten, imprisoned, condemned, and burned. Their
+language, costume, and creed were banned. They were ordered to embrace
+Christianity under pain of death, and forbidden to quit the country.
+They appealed to Egypt, but it is a long way from the banks of the Genil
+to those of the Nile. Finally (and one hears of it with relief) they
+were all expelled from the country. As a race they perished utterly. The
+art, the civilization, which they had learnt on Spanish soil, they left
+buried in Spanish ground, and it was a long time before it was
+disinterred.
+
+The price Spain paid for national unity was a heavy one, but it was
+worth it. When we turn to Turkey, can anyone say that a united Spain
+would have been possible, with the fairest of her provinces and cities
+and the whole of her southern seaboard in possession of a people alien
+in race, tongue and creed?
+
+With Oriental people, the history of the palace is the history of the
+State. At Granada every traveller turns instinctively towards the
+Alhambra as the point of supreme interest. The famous pile is to the
+city what the Mezquita is to Cordova--not quite, perhaps, since Granada
+contains more than one building of intrinsic interest.
+
+The Alhambra has been so often described (by the present writer among
+others) that it is not easy to say anything new in regard to it, or even
+to avoid identity of language with other writers in the description of
+certain of its parts. Yet it would be impossible to give any account of
+Granada without some notice of this famous building. To begin with, I
+must impress on those about to visit it for the first time that the
+Alhambra is not a single palace, but properly speaking is the name given
+to a fortified eminence lying to the south-east of the city, and
+including two palaces, a citadel, and a multitude of private residences.
+In its nature it may be compared with the Acropolis of Athens and the
+far-distant Castle of Bamborough. The name, as most people are aware, is
+derived from _Kalat al hamra_--"the Red Castle," to adopt a translation
+which I have never seen disputed. (While not pretending to rank as an
+Arabist, I have not failed to notice that an infinite number of
+words put forward as Arabic by writers on the Spanish Moors are
+unintelligible to Syrian and Egyptian Arabs, and, which is more to the
+point, to many Hindu students of Arabic.) In shape the hill has been
+cleverly compared by Ford to a grand piano. Rearward it abuts on the
+Cerro del Sol ("the Mountain of the Sun"), to which Washington Irving
+alludes so often.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE ALHAMBRA FROM SAN MIGUEL]
+
+To the south of the Alhambra hill lies another and a narrower spur,
+which is crowned near the town end by the Vermilion Towers, or Torres
+Bermejas; on the north-east rises the hill of the Generalife, laid out
+in gardens. The townward extremity of the Alhambra is washed at the foot
+by the river Darro, and is crowned by the Torre de la Vela, of which
+more anon.
+
+To reach the Alhambra you ascend from the Plaza Nueva in the heart of
+the town by the steep and narrow Calle Gomeres. This street is laid out
+to attract and cater for tourists, who are greeted here with a civility
+and cordiality not always conspicuous in the rest of the town. Half-way
+up the toilsome ascent you will probably be waylaid by a
+theatrically-attired personage who will accost you in bad French with
+the information that he is the chief of the gipsies. The costume he
+wears was given to his father or grandfather by Fortuny--one of the rare
+examples of artists condescending to manufacture the picturesque. The
+chief will endeavour to engage you in conversation, and will offer you
+his photograph at fifty centimes a copy. If you have a camera he will
+allow you to take his portrait for a consideration. It seems incredible
+that a human being could be so much of a nuisance and yet remain in good
+health and spirits.
+
+The dragon having been successfully circumvented, you enter the
+Hesperides, or in other words, the charming Alamedas of the Alhambra.
+These groves occupy the deep depression between the famous hill and the
+Vermilion Towers. They are planted with magnificent elms, sent hither, I
+believe, from England by the Duke of Wellington. They have thriven well
+in Spanish soil, and harbour a colony of nightingales and other
+singing-birds, unusually numerous for this land of passion, where wines
+are rich and birds are rare. The "bulbul," as certain writers love to
+call it, sings very sweetly in these leafy retreats, a statement some
+travellers who persist in coming at the wrong season will not hesitate
+to contradict. I must admit that the bird is as elusive as the
+"alpengluh," or as the hunter's moon at Tintern. It is always cool here
+on the slope of the Alhambra. Even the fierce rays of the Andalusian sun
+cannot penetrate the thick leafage. Rills bubbling forth from the red
+sides of the hill, or tumbling over its edge, keep the roots of the
+trees perennially moist and feed a dense under-growth. On summer
+afternoons this is the only spot in Granada where you may sit in
+comfort. Meanwhile, up and down in quick succession pass the sandalled
+water-carriers hurrying to fill their skins with the precious fluid
+and to dispense it in the scorched, thirsty town below. "Agua-a-ah!"
+Their prolonged nasal drawling cry comes back to me as I write, and I
+seem to hear the rapid patter of their feet and to see the light cutting
+chequers on the shadow of the trees. A great man is the water-carrier,
+loved and respected by all the people of southern Spain. We who live in
+the humid sea-girt North can little understand the longing for clear,
+cool water, the reverence for its dispensers, that must ever be felt in
+the South. How constantly wells are referred to in the Bible: "As the
+hart panteth after the water brooks," "With joy shall ye draw waters
+from the wells of salvation." How significant are these beautiful
+passages for those that have journeyed to the South!
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--TOWERS OF THE INFANTAS, ALHAMBRA]
+
+Reluctantly withdrawing from this delightful spot, you must climb the
+hill to the right of the entrance--there is a winding path to the
+summit. Here you find the Torres Bermejas--a group of exceedingly
+ancient and not very dilapidated towers, used as a military prison. They
+date, it is believed, from the days before the Zirite dynasty, but you
+will not be tempted to examine them attentively, for the purlieus are of
+the most uninviting description. The adjoining cottages are peopled by
+rascally-looking men and slatternly women, who would be better, one
+would think, inside than just outside a gaol.
+
+In ancient days an embattled wall connected these towers with the
+opposite point of the Alhambra, closing the mouth of the valley, which
+was not then the pleasaunce it is now, but an arid ravine used as the
+burial ground of the fortress. The entrance to the valley is now through
+the Puerta de las Granadas, built by order of Charles V. Taking the path
+to the left, we soon reach the fountain in the Renaissance style,
+erected in 1545 by Pedro Machuca, by order of the Conde de Tendilla. It
+is ornamented with the imperial shield and the heads of the three
+river-gods, Genil, Darro, and Beiro. The medallions represent Alexander
+the Great, Hercules slaying the hydra, Phryxus and Helle, and Daphne
+pursued by Apollo. The laurels growing out of the distressed damsel's
+head give her the appearance of a Sioux brave. A few steps beyond we
+reach the famous Puerta de la Justicia, so called because within it the
+Moorish sultans or their kadis administered justice--or it may have been
+merely law. This entrance is formed by two towers of reddish brick,
+placed back to back, and united by an upper storey. We look at once for
+the hand and key so often referred to by Irving, and distinguish them
+with difficulty--the first over the outermost horseshoe arch, the latter
+over the middle arch. Opinion is divided as to the meaning of these
+symbols. The key is supposed by some to signify the power of God to
+unlock the gate of Heaven to the true believer, while the hand appears
+to have been regarded as a talisman against the evil eye. A winding
+corridor leads through the gate into the citadel, past an
+inscription celebrating the Conquest in 1492, and an altar now enclosed
+within a sort of cupboard.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--NEAR THE ALHAMBRA]
+
+This gate is placed at right angles to the wall which girdles the hill
+and runs along its edge, following all its inequalities of level. It is
+in fairly good preservation, but the rampart walk has disappeared here
+and there. Of the square mural towers a great many remain--some
+hopelessly ruinous, others inhabited by the guardians of the domain or
+their widows and relations. The towers on the south-west side, as far as
+I could judge, were better adapted for defence than those on the
+north-east, where the width of the windows would have greatly
+embarrassed the defence. The area enclosed by the outer wall was
+divided, it seems, by two cross walls into what, in the medieval
+parlance, we would call the outer, middle and inner wards. To the last
+corresponded the citadel proper or Kasba (Alcazaba, the Spaniards call
+it), whose massive walls rise to your left on emerging from the Puerta
+de la Justicia. This is the oldest part of the fortress. It occupies the
+extremity of the plateau, which is marked by the tall, square Torre de
+la Vela, or watch tower, whereon a silver cross was planted by the
+"Tercer Rey," Cardinal Mendoza, to announce the occupation of the
+Alhambra by the Spaniards. Here also is a bell which can be heard as far
+off as Loja, and which, if struck with sufficient force by a maiden, is
+said to have the faculty of procuring her a husband. The view from the
+platform is noble. The dazzling white city is spread out beneath, in
+front stretches the Vega, to the south the eyes rest lovingly on the
+white streaks of the Sierra Nevada.
+
+Upon this tower I met a French entomologist, who announced that he
+should not trouble to visit any other part of the Alhambra, and was, in
+fact, surprised to learn that there was anything more to see. His
+horizon was bounded by the Lepidoptera, on one side, and the Coleoptera
+(I think that is the word) on the other. After all, archaeologists take
+no more interest in black beetles than entomologists do in buildings.
+Incidentally, I should think Granada an admirable place for the intimate
+study of insects.
+
+From the Torre de las Armas, a road led from the citadel down the
+declivity to the town, crossing the Darro by the ruined Puente del Cadi.
+On the inner side the citadel is strengthened by the picturesque Torre
+del Homenage--a name often given to towers in Spain. The open space
+before it, where the water-carriers gather round the well, was a
+comparatively deep ravine in Moorish times, and was not levelled up till
+after the fall of Boabdil. On the opposite side--facing the Torre del
+Homenage--it was bounded by what I will call the wall of the middle
+ward, which ran across from the Torre de las Gallinas to near the Puerta
+de la Justicia, and of which only the gatehouse, the beautiful Puerta
+del Vino, remains.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--PUERTA DEL VINO, ALHAMBRA]
+
+This admitted to the area which contained the palaces and also the
+little town of the Alhambra--inhabited by persons attached to the
+court, the ulema, chiefs of such powerful tribes as the Beni Serraj and
+the Beni Theghri, discarded sultanas, ex-favourites, soldiers of
+fortune, plenipotentiaries and envoys, and a crowd of parasites and
+hangers-on. To-day the population is limited chiefly to one little
+street, composed of pensions, photographers' shops and estancos. The
+plan of the whole fortress no doubt varied from age to age, but in the
+main agreed with that according to which most European strongholds were
+constructed. There was the outer wall with its mural towers and
+gatehouses; a strong inner ward, in place of a keep shut off by a ditch
+or ravine; and two or more other enclosures, each defended by a wall
+with a fortified entrance. It does not seem that the portcullis and
+drawbridge were used by the Moorish engineers.
+
+While the Kasba is generally attributed to an earlier dynasty, the outer
+wall and the other Moorish buildings are almost unanimously ascribed to
+Al Ahmar and his successors of the Nasrid dynasty. To reach the Alhambra
+Palace, called pre-eminently by foreigners the Alhambra and by the
+Spaniards the Alcazar, or Palacio Arabe, you pass across the plaza,
+leaving the unfinished Palace of Charles V. to your right. Behind it you
+find not an imposing and gorgeous structure, but what appears to be a
+collection of tile-roofed sheds. A mean, characterless entrance admits
+you to the far-famed palace.
+
+The building belongs to the last stage of Spanish-Arabic art, when the
+seed of Mohammedan ideas and culture had long since taken root in the
+soil and produced a style purely local in many of its features. Some
+authorities trace the first principles of Arabic architecture back to
+the Copts; the Spaniards argue that their style is derived from
+Byzantine works they found before them in Andalusia. The germs of Arabic
+art are certainly not, if travellers' tales be true, to be found in
+Arabia. The Saracen conquerors were warriors, not artists, and their
+ideas of form and ornament were undoubtedly borrowed--like their vaunted
+culture--from the more civilized nations with which they came in
+contact. With Morocco just across the strait, it is not safe to claim
+too much of native genius and refinement for the Moor. Whatever may have
+been the primitive models of Andalusian architecture, as time went by it
+lost much of the dignity and simplicity of its earliest examples--such
+as the Giralda and the Mezquita. The Moors of Granada had wearied of the
+fanaticism and austerity of Islam. If not precisely decadent, they had
+lost the fire and enthusiasm of youth, and wanted to enjoy a comfortable
+old age. If the palace we are about to enter seems in parts more like
+the bower of an odalisque than the seat of royalty, we must remember
+that the sultans wanted to enjoy life here, and had no fancy for the
+stern, military-looking palaces of their Christian rivals. Your
+Oriental, like the cat, values luxury very highly, and yet, from
+our point of view, does not seem to secure it. A European would have
+found himself hopelessly uncomfortable at the court of Al Ahmar and
+Mohammed V.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE ALHAMBRA: TOWER OF COMARES]
+
+Architecturally the Alhambra Palace has little merit. It is impossible
+to trace any order in the distribution of its parts, which ought not of
+course to be expected in a building repeatedly added to in the course of
+two and a half centuries. Moreover, a portion was demolished to make
+room for the Palace of Charles V. The Moorish builders were fond of
+conceits which our taste condemns. They liked to conceal the supports of
+a heavy tower, and to leave it seemingly suspended in the air. There is
+nothing imposing about the edifice, nothing stately. Its great charm
+consists in its decoration, which is wonderful and, in its own line,
+beyond all praise. It is based on the strictest geometrical plan, and
+every design and pattern may be resolved into a symmetrical arrangement
+of lines and curves at regular distances. The intersection of lines at
+various angles is the secret of the system. All these lines flow from a
+parent stem, and nothing accidental or extraneous is permitted. The same
+adhesion to sharply-defined principles is conspicuous in the
+colour-scheme. On the stucco only the primary colours are used; the
+secondary tints being reserved for the dados of mosaic or tile work. The
+green seen on the groundwork was originally blue. To-day, when the white
+parts have assumed the tint of old ivory and time has subdued the vivid
+colouring, the effect is more harmonious than it could have been
+originally.
+
+Epigraphy, or long flowing inscriptions, proclaiming the merits of the
+sultans or of the chambers themselves, enters largely into the
+decoration. Those who can read these at a glance must find the halls
+less monotonous than most people are likely to do. The beauty of the
+ornamentation consists in its exquisite symmetry, and this is not
+apparent to every comer, who may fail to realize with Mr. Lomas "that
+the exact relation between the irregular widths of cloistering on the
+long and short sides of the court [of the Lions] is that of the squares
+upon the sides of a right-angled triangle"!
+
+The inscription that most frequently recurs in the decoration is the
+famous "There is no conqueror but God"--the words used by Al Ahmar on
+his return from the siege of Seville, in deprecation of the acclamations
+of his subjects. The newer parts are readily recognizable by the yoke
+and sheaf of arrows, the favourite devices of Ferdinand and Isabella,
+whose initials, F and Y, are also seen; and by the Pillars of Hercules
+and the motto "Plus Oultre," denoting work executed by order of Charles
+V.
+
+The oldest part of the building--by which I mean that which appears to
+have been the least altered--is round about the Patio de la Mezquita,
+more properly named "del Mexuar," after the divan or "meshwar" that held
+its sittings here. The southern facade of this small court reminds one
+very much of the front of the Alcazar at Seville. From this you enter
+the disused chapel, an uninteresting apartment consecrated in 1629. The
+Moorish decoration has almost completely disappeared, but much of the
+work in the little apartment adjacent, called the Sultan's Oratory,
+seems to be original. There never was a mosque here, but there may have
+been a private praying-place. Yusuf I. is supposed to have been stabbed
+here. The tragic deed was more probably done at the great mosque outside
+the palace where the Alhambra parish church now stands. From the Patio
+del Mexuar a tunnel called the Viaducto leads to the Patio de la Reja,
+the Baths, and the Garden of Daraxa.
+
+The Court of the Myrtles (Patio de las Arrayanes, or de la Alberca) is
+the first entered by the visitor. It is an oblong space, the middle of
+which is occupied by a tank of bright green water. This is bordered by
+trimly kept hedges of myrtle. The side walls are modern, and do not
+deserve attention. The front to the right on entering is very beautiful.
+It is composed of two arcaded galleries, one above the other, with a
+smaller closed gallery--a sort of triforium--interposed. The arches
+spring from marble columns, with variously decorated capitals. The
+central arch of the lowest gallery rises nearly to the cornice, and is
+decorated in a style which Contreras thought suggestive of Indian
+architecture. Fine lattice work closes the seven windows of the
+triforium. The upper gallery is equally graceful, but looks in imminent
+danger of collapse. Above a similar but single arcade at the opposite
+end of the court rises the square massive upper storey of the Tower of
+Comares, with its crenellated summit. To reach its interior we cross the
+gallery beneath a little dome painted with stars on a blue ground, and a
+long parallel apartment (Sala de la Barca) gutted by fire in 1890, and
+enter the spacious Hall of the Ambassadors (Sala de los Embajadores),
+the largest hall in the Alhambra. Here was held the final council which
+decided the fate of Islam in Spain. Looking upwards we behold the
+glorious airy dome of larch-wood with painted stars. The decoration is
+magnificent--mostly in red and black--and may be divided into four
+zones: (1) a dado of mosaic tiles or azulejos; (2) stucco work in eight
+horizontal bands, each of a different design; (3) a row of five windows
+once filled with stained glass on each side; (4) a carved wooden
+cornice, supporting the roof. On three sides of the hall are alcoves,
+each with a window, the one opposite the entrance having been near the
+Sultan's throne.
+
+The Hall of the Ambassadors probably never looked very different from
+what it is now. It was never a private apartment. We can imagine it
+occupied, when no function was proceeding, by a few slaves dozing on
+mats or reclining dog-like on the richly carpeted floor, ready, however,
+to spring up and make the lowest of salaams as some bearded dignity
+entered.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE COURT OF THE LIONS: MOONLIGHT]
+
+This splendid hall and the other apartments adjacent to the Court of the
+Myrtles are supposed (I know not on what authority) to have
+constituted the official or public part of the royal residence, together
+with the apartments demolished to make room for the Palace of Charles V.
+The rest of the building, on this supposition, was the private or harem
+quarter. A narrow passage leads from the Court of the Myrtles to the
+Court of the Lions. "There is no part of the edifice that gives us a
+more complete idea of its original beauty and magnificence than this,"
+says Washington Irving, "for none has suffered so little from the
+ravages of time. In the centre stands the fountain famous in song and
+story. The alabaster basins still shed their diamond drops; and the
+twelve lions which support them cast forth their crystal streams as in
+the days of Boabdil. [The fountain nowadays plays only once a year.] The
+architecture, like that of all other parts of the palace, is
+characterized by elegance rather than grandeur; bespeaking a delicate
+and a graceful taste, and a disposition to indolent enjoyment. When one
+looks upon the fairy tracery of the peristyles, and the apparently
+fragile fretwork of the walls, it is difficult to believe that so much
+has survived the wear and tear of centuries, the shocks of earthquakes,
+the violence of war, and the quiet though no less baneful pilferings of
+the tasteful traveller; it is almost sufficient to excuse the popular
+tradition that the whole is protected by a magic charm."
+
+I fancy that the gifted American was himself responsible for that
+tradition, for the Spaniards, as Lady Louisa Tenison observed sixty odd
+years ago, are not an imaginative race, and whatever legends or
+traditions are current relate almost exclusively to the Virgin and
+saints. Spanish folk-lore knows nothing of fairies and goblins. The
+palace which Irving tells us the people regarded as enchanted had been
+used by them for years as a factory, as store-rooms, as a laundry, as a
+caravanserai. This hardly suggests that it was looked upon with
+superstitious awe. The truth is that the palace had enchanted Washington
+Irving, as it has done many others--not natives--since.
+
+The Court of the Lions is an oblong, surrounded by a gallery formed by
+124 marble columns, eleven feet in height and placed irregularly, some
+in pairs, some single. The arches exhibit a similar variety of curve,
+and the capitals are of various designs. The tile roofing of the
+galleries rather mars the effect, but the stucco work within them is of
+the richest and finest description. In the centre of the short sides are
+two charming little pavilions, with "half-orange" domes and basins in
+their marble flooring. The court is gravelled, and derives its name from
+the twelve marble animals that support the basin of the central
+fountain. These creatures are called lions, but why I am at a loss to
+understand. They look more like poodles than any other living
+quadrupeds. Ford humorously remarks: "Their faces are barbecued, and
+their manes cut like the scales of a griffin, and their legs like
+bedposts, while water-pipes stuck in their mouths do not add to their
+dignity." An Arabic inscription reminds us that nothing need be
+feared from them, as life is wanting to enable them to show their fury.
+That fury would no doubt have been directed in the first instance at the
+sculptor who had made of the unfortunate creatures such grotesque
+caricatures.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE GENERALIFE: PATIO DE LA ACEQUIA]
+
+The court is surrounded by four splendid rooms--the halls of the
+Mocarabes, the Abencerrages, the Two Sisters, and of Justice. The second
+and third resemble each other, and are covered with the most marvellous
+specimens of the artesonado or carved wood ceiling. The stalactites or
+pendants, though in reality following a strict geometrical plan, exhibit
+complications and varieties that it is impossible for the eye to follow.
+The style may well have been suggested by the honey-comb. It is
+confusing, beautiful, glorious--certainly the most remarkable
+achievement of the art of the Spanish Moor. The walls are covered with
+lace-work in stucco of the most exquisite pattern, with mosaic dados,
+and friezes decorated with inscriptions in praise of Mohammed V. At the
+sides of the rooms are the alcoves characteristic of Oriental domestic
+architecture.
+
+The Hall of the Two Sisters is so called from a couple of slabs of
+marble let into the flooring. The other chamber derives its name from
+the thirty-six chiefs of the Beni Serraj tribe, fabled to have been
+decapitated within it by order of Boabdil. The story was a pure
+invention of a Gines Perez de Hita, a writer who lived in the sixteenth
+century. It has now spread through all lands, thanks to the version of
+Chateaubriand. The tribe is supposed in this story to have espoused the
+"Little King's" cause against his father, Mulai Hasan. Later on their
+chief, Hamet, was suspected of intriguing with the Castilians; and, what
+was still more criminal in the eyes of a Moslem, of carrying on a love
+affair with one of the sultanas. A cypress in the gardens of the
+Generalife is pointed out as the lovers' trysting-place. The sultan
+resolved to make an end of this pestilent brood, but Hamet himself,
+warned at the eleventh hour, escaped the fate of his kinsmen. The frail
+sultana would have shared their fate, had not four champions presented
+themselves and vindicated her reputation against all comers in the
+lists. Thus the affair ended happily--except for the thirty-six chiefs.
+Thus the story. I hope it will stimulate your imagination. For myself,
+there is an utter absence of the personal and human note about these
+gorgeous Moorish halls. It is certainly easier to believe that they
+sprang into existence at the bidding of an enchanter than that they were
+ever the scenes of men's loves and hates, hopes and fears.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE GENERALIFE: COURT OF THE CYPRESSES]
+
+The Hall of Justice (Sala de la Justicia), at the far side of the Court
+of Lions, is a long apartment, divided into alcoves specially remarkable
+for the paintings on its ceiling. These have been the subject of endless
+controversy. To begin with, it was doubted if a Mohammedan could have
+painted them, since the representation of living objects is contrary to
+the injunctions of the Koran. I have it on the authority of a very
+learned Moslem friend, a recognized authority on Mohammedan law, that
+the plastic arts are not forbidden by the Prophet, but merely pointed
+out as a possible snare and stumbling-block in the way of the believer.
+Painting has been a recognized art in Persia for centuries, and I have
+seen some pictures from that country which reveal no mean degree of
+skill. There is therefore no good reason to doubt that these curious
+works were executed by Moorish artists at the end of the fourteenth
+century. They are done on leather prepared with gypsum and nailed to the
+wooden ceiling. The colours (red, green, gold, etc.) are still vivid,
+but mildew is covering them in parts, and in places the gypsum is
+peeling off. These valuable specimens of Moorish art ought to have been
+taken down and placed under glass long ago. The first of the three
+represents ten bearded, robed, and turbaned personages, who may with
+some degree of probability be identified with the first sultans of the
+Nasrid dynasty. According to Oliver, the Moor in the green costume
+occupying the middle of one side is Al Ahmar, the founder of the race.
+Then, counting from his right, come Mohammed II., Nasr Abu-l-Juyyush,
+Mohammed IV., Said Ismail, Mohammed V. (in the red robe), Yusuf II.,
+Yusuf I., Abu-l-Walid, and Mohammed III. The family likeness between
+these potentates is striking, and the red beards suggest a liberal use
+of the dye still largely used by the Oriental man of middle age. The
+other pictures are more interesting. The first represents hunting
+scenes. Moors are seen chasing the wild boar, while Spanish knights are
+in pursuit of the lion and the bear. In another part of the composition
+the huntsmen are seen returning and offering the spoils of the chase to
+their ladies. The Moor greets his sultana with a benign and
+condescending air, the Christian on his knees offers his prize to his
+lady. In the next picture is another hunting scene, with a page, with
+sword and shield, leaning against a tree, awaiting his master's return.
+In another quarter of the picture his master (presumably) is rescuing a
+distressed damsel from a wild-looking creature who is quite undismayed
+by the tame lion accompanying his captive. Further on, the same knight
+is unhorsed and overthrown by a Moorish huntsman, two ladies from a
+castle in the background most ungratefully applauding the Christian's
+discomfiture. The pictures evidently were intended to record the
+incidents of a border warfare not dissimilar to those commemorated in
+our ballad of Chevy Chase.
+
+In this hall a temporary chapel was set up, and mass was celebrated, on
+the taking of the city by the Spaniards.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--TOCADOR DE LA REINA]
+
+Crossing the Hall of the Two Sisters, we enter the beautiful Mirador de
+"Lindaraja," the most charming and elegant of all the apartments in the
+palace. Through three tall windows, once filled with coloured crystals,
+we look down into the pretty Patio de Daraxa, which, like the chamber,
+does not derive its name from an imaginary sultana, but from a word
+meaning "vestibule." It is a delightful garden, where shade is always to
+be obtained between the closely planted cypresses, orange, and peach
+trees, rising between twin hedges of box and bushes of rose and myrtle.
+In the centre is a seventeenth-century fountain. Here you will always
+find some artist committing to canvas his impressions of one of the
+fairest gardens men have fashioned for themselves.
+
+The rooms on the other side of the patio were built by Charles V., and
+include the Tocador de la Reina, or Queen's Boudoir, a prettily
+decorated belvedere affording an entrancing view. It was in this room
+that Washington Irving took up his quarters. Theophile Gautier slept
+sometimes in the hall of the Abencerrages, sometimes in that of the Two
+Sisters, and was impressed by the eerieness of the palace at night. Yet
+there is not a manor-house in England or a chateau in France that is not
+more suggestive of the spectral and uncanny than these gilded halls and
+open courts. However, everyone has his own preconceptions of the weird
+and the picturesque.
+
+From the Patio de Daraxa we enter the very interesting Baths, ably
+restored by the late Don Rafael Contreras. The Sala de las Camas, or
+chamber of repose, is among the most brilliantly decorated rooms in the
+palace, yet, as elsewhere in this neglected pile, the gilding is being
+suffered to fade and the tiling in the niches, I noticed, is loosening
+and breaking up. From a gallery running round the chamber, the music of
+the odalisques was wafted down to the sultan reclining in one of the
+divans below. He must have been in no hurry to leave this spot, where he
+dreamily puffed at his hubble-bubble and watched the play of the
+fountain. The light came from apertures in the superb artesonado
+ceiling. Without, on a stone seat, the eunuchs mounted guard and
+preserved their lord's repose from interruption. The actual baths are
+contained in two adjacent chambers. A staircase ascended to the Hall of
+the Two Sisters above, for the use, not improbably, of the ladies of the
+harem. On leaving the baths you may follow the tunnel across the
+uninteresting Patio de la Reja and beneath the Tower of Comares, to the
+Patio del Mexuar.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--TORRE DE LAS DAMAS]
+
+No visitor to the Alhambra must omit to walk round the outer wall or
+enceinte, and to inspect the towers. The Torre de las Damas, a fortified
+tower dating from the time of Yusuf I., was inhabited by Ismail, the
+brother of Mohammed V., and marked the palace limits on this side. It
+contains a tastefully decorated hall. Adjacent to it is a beautiful if
+gaudy little Mohammedan mihrab or oratory, approached through a private
+garden. Here was the house of Anastasio de Bracamonte, the esquire of
+the Conde de Tendilla, to whom was assigned the custody of the Alhambra
+at the Reconquest. The Puerta de Hierro, a little further on, was
+restored at the same time, and faces the gate and path leading to the
+Generalife. Passing the Torre de los Picos, we reach the Torre de
+la Cautiva, which contains a beautiful chamber, over which a lovely rosy
+tint is diffused by the tiles and stucco. The Torre de las Infantas,
+built by Mohammed VII., is a perfect example of an Oriental
+dwelling-house. Through the usual zigzag vestibule you reach a hall with
+a fountain in the centre and alcoves in three of the sides. The
+decoration is perhaps over elaborate. The towers on the other side of
+the enceinte were, as I have said, intended mainly for defence. Near the
+ruinous Torre del Agua, at the south-east extremity, a viaduct crosses
+the ravine from the Generalife, and some of the water precipitates
+itself over the brow of the hill in a mass of vivid living greenery.
+Further on, towards the Gate of Justice, is the Torre de los Siete
+Suelos, through which Boabdil is said to have made his last exit. It is
+supposed to extend far underground, and to contain much buried treasure.
+So at least Irving was told by the inhabitants, or possibly told them!
+Hence issues the Belludo, the spectral pack, which traverses the streets
+of Granada by night--also according to legend. This story of the Wild
+Huntsman crops up, in one form or another, in every part of Europe.
+There are the Dandy Dogs in Cornwall, the Wild Huntsman in Germany,
+Thibaut le Tricheur in the valley of the Loire, the Chasseur Noir of
+Fontainebleau, and so on. Folk-lore of this sort is easily fabricated.
+Foreigners in search of the picturesque ask the natives of such a place
+as this if ghosts do not haunt the ruins. The guide, anxious to please,
+says "Doubtless!" The foreigner goes on to tell him of spectres that
+affect this particular class of building at home; and the guide readily
+devises a local version of the yarn for the benefit of the next
+stranger. I have found that the peasantry in most European countries
+hear of their local traditions and folk-lore first through the medium of
+books. And these remarks apply with especial force to the people of
+Latin countries, whom, contrary to the received opinion, I know to be
+less imaginative and less superstitious than northerners. It is natural
+that the gloomy forests of Germany and Sweden, rather than the sunlit
+plains of Andalusia, should generate dark fancies.
+
+Strictly speaking the Generalife, the Trianon of the Moorish kings, is a
+more beautiful place than the Alhambra, though it has no architectural
+merit. It became the property at the Reconquest of a Christianized Moor,
+Don Pedro de Granada, who claimed to be descended from the famous Ben
+Hud, and from whose family it passed into the possession of the
+Marquises of Campotejar. The approach lies along a magnificent avenue of
+cypresses and tall shrubs. Arrived at the entrance you are admitted by a
+very comely damsel, and allowed to wander about the lovely gardens by
+yourself and to stay there all day if you like. At the far end of the
+first court is a poor collection of portraits, among which is one--No.
+11--absurdly supposed to be a portrait of Ben Hud (died about 1237),
+though the person is dressed in the costume of the fifteenth century.
+This is the portrait which English travellers, and even the usually
+correct Baedeker, persist in mistaking for Boabdil's.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE GENERALIFE: COURT OF THE CYPRESSES]
+
+The gardens of the Generalife are beyond all praise. Water bubbles up
+everywhere, and moistens the roots of gorgeous oleanders, myrtles,
+orange trees, cedars, and cypresses--the tallest trees in Spain. Beneath
+one of these--that to the right as you reach the head of the first
+flight of steps--the sultana is alleged to have kept her tryst with
+Hamet, the Abencerrage. Not a bad place, this, for a lovers' meeting.
+You rise from one flower-laden terrace to another till you reach the
+ugly belvedere--scribbled all over with idiots' names--whence you obtain
+a ravishing view of the Alhambra, the city, the Vega, and the mountains.
+The hours spent in the Generalife Gardens will be remembered as among
+the pleasantest of one's lifetime.
+
+It may be, as a French writer states, impossible to tickle the surface
+of Granada without discovering Moorish remains, but certainly, outside
+the Alhambra, very few are to be seen above ground. The most conspicuous
+of them in the lower town is, on the whole, the Casa del Carbon, a
+dilapidated structure with a bold horseshoe archway which confronts you
+as you cross the Reyes Catolicos near the Post Office. The house is now
+used as a coal depot, but beneath the thick coating of grime you may
+discern the traces of graceful decorative work. The building is said to
+have been a corn exchange in Moorish days. More interesting are the
+vestiges of the ancient walls that girdled the oldest quarter, _el
+viejo Albaicin_. They were built in great part by Christian
+captives--perhaps by those whose chains are hung up on the walls of San
+Juan de los Reyes at Toledo. The Moors of Granada grew embittered by
+their reverses, and treated their Christian subjects harshly. The
+martyrs whom the monument on the Alhambra hill commemorates are not
+merely the creatures of pious imagination. There is an ugly story, too,
+of an unfortunate monk accused of heretical doctrines, who took refuge
+at Granada and was burnt at the stake by the Moslems.
+
+Two of the old gatehouses on this side of the city are still standing.
+They are massive crenellated towers, pierced with round-headed archways.
+I do not consider them entrancingly picturesque; they form the northern
+entrances to the Albaicin quarter, which is now a perplexing congeries
+of squalid houses, formless convents, and churches tottering to their
+fall. Whatever interest its antiquity may excite is lost in disgust at
+its wretchedness. On the outskirts dwell the gipsies--mostly in
+semi-underground burrows, and left very much to themselves by the local
+authority. These are the poor creatures who are dragged out to bore
+visitors with their wearisome dances, the fee charged for which goes
+almost entirely into the pockets of the guides. The gipsies of Spain are
+not nomadic. There are people in Granada who wish they were.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--CASA DEL CARBON]
+
+In the Albaicin the Zirite sultans had their palaces, one of which was
+called the House of the Weathercock, from the bronze figure of a
+horseman that surmounted it and served as a vane. Washington Irving has
+written a story about it. Fragments of all these ancient buildings are
+incorporated with modern houses, and may be identified by those who care
+to take the trouble. Romantic legends (of the precise nature of which I
+am ignorant) cluster round the Casa de las Tres Estrellas, possibly
+because it affords ingress to a subterranean passage leading no man
+knows whither. But I do not think you will be tempted to linger long in
+this odoriferous, wormeaten quarter. You may be said to have escaped
+from it when you reach the picturesque Carrera de Darro, the embankment
+of that narrow stream facing the Alhambra. Here may be seen a Moorish
+bath at one of the private houses, and--much more delightful to the
+artist--a broken Moorish bridge, the Puente del Cadi, to which a path
+led down from the Torre de las Armas. Against the little church near
+this point you will notice a white corner house with a handsome doorway
+in the Renaissance style. At the angle of the house is a balcony,
+bearing the odd inscription, "Esperandola del Cielo" ("Waiting for it
+from Heaven"). The words are accounted for by the following story: The
+house was built by Hernando de Zafra, the astute secretary of Ferdinand
+and Isabella, and the negotiator of the capitulation of Granada. He
+suspected his daughter of a love affair with an unknown cavalier. To
+satisfy his doubts he surprised her one day, and found his page
+assisting the lover to escape by the window. Baulked of his prey the
+enraged father turned upon the lad. "Mercy," implored the page. "Look
+for it in Heaven!" answered the Don, as he hurled his daughter's
+accomplice after her lover into the street below. There are those who
+say that De Zafra had no daughter, and that he has been libelled in this
+matter. But the episode is more probable than the foreign-made yarns
+about the Alhambra.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--STREET IN THE ALBAICIN]
+
+The rivers of Granada are more spoken of than seen. At the foot of the
+Alhambra the Darro disappears, its channel through the town having been
+roofed over at different epochs. Till the middle of the last century the
+houses of the Zacatin looked at the back upon the stream, as may be seen
+from a picture by Roberts in the South Kensington Galleries. There was a
+local proverb which said "Ugly as the back of the Zacatin," an evidence
+of the persistent confusion of the ugly and the picturesque. This part
+of the stream is now covered by the Reyes Catolicos Street. The famous
+Zacatin--a lane-like thoroughfare, like those we have seen in
+Seville--was once the principal street in Granada, and seems to have
+been full of animation in Gautier's time. That brilliant Frenchman
+speaks of meeting there parties of students from Salamanca, playing as
+they went on the guitar, triangles, and castanets--truly a singular mode
+of taking one's walks abroad, such as even the Spaniards of the
+'thirties and 'forties must have marvelled at exceedingly. Are we
+to understand by this remarkable passage that the alumni of Salamanca
+formed processions like those of the Salvation Army, whenever they met
+by chance in the public street, or that, like the fine lady of Banbury
+Cross, they were determined to move nowhere without a musical
+accompaniment? At all events, the Zacatin is quiet enough nowadays. It
+still contains some of the best shops in the town and is one of the few
+comparatively shady walks outside the precincts of the Alhambra. It
+leads you to the far-famed Plaza de Bibarrambla, with the name of which
+we have been familiarized by Byron's rendering of the Spanish ballad,
+"Ay de mi, Alhama!" The square, like so much else in Granada, has been
+so completely modernized that nothing remains to recall the days when
+the sultans here assisted at pageants and tournaments, wherein
+Christians often took part. It is edifying to learn that Spanish
+knights, forbidden in their own country to cut each other's throats,
+often resorted hither to do so, by gracious permission of his Moorish
+Majesty.
+
+We are now in the neighbourhood of the second great sight of
+Granada--the Cathedral with its adjoining buildings. The church called
+the Sagrario is an eighteenth-century structure immediately adjoining
+the west front of the Cathedral, on the south side, which served for a
+time as the metropolitan church of Granada. The interior is sombre,
+heavy, and Churrigueresque--a style which, it always strikes me, might
+have been devised by an undertaker accustomed to a high-class business.
+One of the chapels, however, is interesting. It contains the bones of
+"the magnificent cavalier, Fernando del Pulgar, Lord of El Salar," as
+the inscription records. This gallant knight, during the last siege of
+Granada, penetrated into the city with fifteen horsemen, and nailed a
+paper bearing the Ave Maria on the door of the mosque. This brave
+exploit earned for him and his descendants the right of remaining
+covered in the Cathedral and before the king. In Philip II.'s time the
+Marques del Salar, the representative of the family, was fined for
+appearing covered before the High Court of Granada. He appealed to the
+king, invoking the privilege conferred on his ancestor. "Not so,"
+replied Philip; "you may wear your bonnet in the presence of the king,
+but not in the sacred presence of Justice." With the fine was built the
+staircase in the Audiencia in the Plaza Nueva.
+
+Behind the Sagrario is the mausoleum of Ferdinand and Isabella--the
+Capilla Real--a temple peculiarly sacred in the eyes of all good
+Spaniards. The two great sovereigns lie here in the heart of the city
+which they recovered for Christendom, even as many great soldiers have
+caused their remains to be buried on the sites of their greatest
+victories. The chapel, founded in 1504 and completed in 1517, is a noble
+example of late Gothic. The exterior is very simple, the decoration
+consisting mainly of two highly ornate balustrades, surmounting each of
+the two stages. The well-known devices and monograms of the
+founders are interwoven with the decoration. Through a portal flanked by
+the figures of heralds we enter the chapel--plain, bright, and airy. The
+chancel is railed off by a magnificent grille of gilt ironwork, wrought
+by Maestre Bartolome of Jaen, in 1522. Between this and the altar are
+the superb tombs of Ferdinand and Isabella, and of their daughter Joanna
+and her husband, Philip I. The former is ascribed to a Florentine
+sculptor, Domenico Fancelli.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--INTERIOR OF A POSADA]
+
+The recumbent effigies of the Reyes Catolicos are full of expression and
+majesty. Both wear their crowns, and Ferdinand is in full armour. At the
+angles of the tomb are seated figures, and the sides are sculptured with
+medallions and escutcheons and the figures of angels and saints. The
+figures of the unhappy Joanna and her Flemish consort are less lifelike,
+and the decoration is much more florid. It must be admitted that the
+Renaissance character of these sepulchral monuments contrasts rather
+oddly with the Gothic surroundings. The kneeling statues of the founders
+at the sides of the altar are believed to be actual likenesses. The
+reliefs on the retablo, by Vigarni, represent the surrender of Granada
+and the subsequent baptism of the Moors. In the former, both the
+sovereigns are shown, in the company of Cardinal Mendoza, receiving the
+keys from Boabdil; in the latter, we note that the candidates for
+baptism are so many that the rite is being administered by means of a
+syringe.
+
+Beneath the tombs is the vault containing all that was mortal of the
+makers of Modern Spain. The sacristan thrusts a lighted taper forward
+into the gloomy abode of death, and you are able to distinguish five
+coffins--those of Ferdinand and Isabella, Philip, Joanna, and the
+Infante Miguel. Philip's coffin, it will be remembered, was carried
+about by his lovesick widow till she had to be parted from it by force.
+The coffins are rude, bulging, and almost shapeless. One only, that of
+Ferdinand, can be identified, and this only by the simple letter F upon
+it. Might not this stand as well for Felipe?
+
+The sacristan next shows you the treasury of the chapel. Among the
+relics are the crown, sceptre, and mirror of Isabella, her missal
+beautifully illuminated, and the standard embroidered by her that
+floated over the city. A casket is shown which was filled with jewels
+which she pawned to procure funds for Columbus's first voyage of
+discovery. Few investments have proved more profitable, as far as
+material wealth is concerned. You may also see Ferdinand's sword, rather
+interesting to those curious in ancient weapons.
+
+The Royal Chapel is quite independent of the immediately adjacent
+Cathedral. The chaplains have a right of way across the Cathedral
+transept to the Puerta del Perdon, a privilege deeply resented by the
+chapter. Once when the Archbishop wished to visit the chapel, his
+attendant canons were refused admission. The irate prelate caused the
+chaplains to be arrested for this affront, and a long lawsuit
+followed. But all this happened a long time ago, and it is to be hoped
+that the two bodies of clergy now live upon good terms with each other.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--OLD HOUSES, CUESTA DEL PESCADO]
+
+A very beautiful arch, richly and tastefully adorned with statues,
+admits to the Cathedral. This church, described by Fergusson as one of
+the finest in Europe, was begun by Diego de Siloe, about 1525, and not
+completed till 1703. The exterior is far from corresponding to the
+majesty of the interior, though the Puerto del Perdon, already referred
+to, on the north side, is a beautiful piece of work. The impression
+produced on entering the Cathedral is rather similar to that experienced
+on entering St. Peter's. There is an atmosphere of loftiness, luxury,
+and cold purity--like that clinging to the finest classical works. This
+is certainly the triumph of Spanish Renaissance architecture. The effect
+is, of course, utterly different from that of the grand old Gothic fane
+of Seville. Like all Renaissance churches, as it seems to me, it lacks
+the devotional atmosphere. The nave, as usual, is obstructed by the
+choir--where, by the way, Alonso Cano was buried. The dome above the
+chancel is sublime, the daring of the arches wonderful. The altar is
+completely insulated by the ambulatory.
+
+Before it are the grand sculptured heads of Adam and Eve by Cano. His
+also are seven of the frescoes decorating the upper part of the dome.
+The others are by his pupils. The Cathedral contains much of this
+irascible and wayward artist's best work. In the chapel of San Miguel is
+a "Virgen de la Soledad," in whose human beauty and pathos his genius
+finds its highest expression. In the chapel of Jesus Nazareno, Cano's
+"Via Crucis" does not suffer by comparison with three works of Ribera
+and a "St. Francis" by El Greco. The artist's studio may be seen in one
+of the towers flanking the west front of the Cathedral. He was a native
+of Granada, and a lay canon of the chapter. He died in poverty at his
+house in the Albaicin quarter, aged 66 years, on October 5, 1667. He was
+a man of hasty but not ungenerous temper, and in some of his phases of
+character recalls Fuseli. Justice has hardly been done to his great
+talent, of which he himself seems to have entertained an exaggerated
+estimate.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--OLD AYUNTAMIENTO]
+
+The minor churches of Granada are not of very great interest. The church
+of San Geronimo was built by the Great Captain as a mausoleum for
+himself and his wife, but such of his remains as escaped the ghoulish
+spoliation of the French have been transported to Madrid. The church is
+no longer used as a place of worship. The retablo is remarkable, and in
+it may be traced the dawning of Siloe's ambition to create a true
+Spanish Renaissance style. The church of San Juan de Dios, not far off,
+is filled with tawdry rubbish, petticoated crucifixes, etc. Here is
+buried the titular saint, a Portuguese, Joao de Robles, who in the
+seventeenth century devoted himself with so much energy to the sick
+and suffering that his contemporaries esteemed him mad. You may see the
+cage in which he was confined at the hospital founded by Isabella the
+Catholic on the arid, ugly Plaza de Triunfo, near the Bull Ring. A
+column in the middle of the square marks the spot where Dona Mariana
+Pineda was publicly garrotted in 1831. This lady is the great heroine of
+Granada. She perished a victim to the reactionary tendencies then
+prevalent in Spain. Spaniards were then crying "Hurrah for our chains!"
+and Dona Mariana's house was known to be a rendezvous of the Liberals of
+Granada. On raiding her house the police discovered a tricolour flag.
+This was evidence enough, and in the thirty-first year of her age this
+beautiful and accomplished woman suffered a shameful death. A few years
+later, when the nation had recovered its sanity, the magistrate who had
+condemned her was shot, and her remains were transported with great pomp
+to the Cathedral, where they have been interred close to Alonso Cano's.
+A monument has also been raised to her memory in the Campillo Square.
+
+There is another story connected with the Triunfo worth telling, though
+it is not very well authenticated. The remains of royal personages on
+their way to the Capilla Real were here identified by the officers of
+the court. The Duke of Gandia was present on such an occasion, and was
+so impressed by the evidences of mortality when the coffin was opened
+that he vowed he would never again serve an earthly master. He entered
+the Society of Jesus, and after his death was canonized under the name
+of St. Francis Borgia. The story is a curious and suggestive one, as
+also is that of the duke praying that his wife might die if it were for
+his soul's good. St. Francis Borgia has always seemed to me an extreme
+example of other-worldliness.
+
+A dusty road through most uninviting surroundings leads to the Cartuja,
+or Charterhouse, founded in 1516 by the Great Captain. The cloisters are
+painted with scenes of the martyrdom of the Carthusian monks in London
+by the minions of Henry VIII.
+
+The church is an extraordinary edifice. Its style is damnable, but it is
+gorgeous and dazzling to a degree which compels admiration. The doors of
+the choir are exquisitely inlaid with ebony, cedar, mother-of-pearl, and
+tortoiseshell. The statue of Bruno is by Cano. In the sanctuary behind
+the altar coloured marbles, twisted and fluted, are combined in
+extravagant magnificence. Some of the slabs are richly veined with
+agate, and the hand of nature has traced some semblances of human and
+animal forms. In the adjoining sacristy are some wonderful inlaid doors
+and presses. They must surely be the finest works of their kind in the
+world. It is strange that so much genius for detail and so much costly
+material should have been combined to produce so tasteless a building.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--STREET IN THE OLD QUARTER]
+
+Outside this church there are not many places in the vicinity of Granada
+worth a visit. The church of Sacramonte looms rather prominently in the
+landscape, and you are to some extent rewarded for the trouble of a
+pilgrimage thither by the fine view of the city. The hill contains some
+caves in which, in the year 1594, one Hernandez professed to have
+discovered certain books written in Arabic characters on sheets of lead.
+The find was reported to the archbishop, Don Pedro Vaca de Castro, who
+examined the books and declared them to contain the acts of the martyrs,
+Mesito and Hiscius, Tesiphus and Cecilius, put to death by the Romans
+and buried in the caves. His grace's pronouncement was not considered
+final, and theological opinion was sharply divided on the subject for
+many years. At last the continuance of the controversy was forbidden by
+Papal decree. It seems that doubt is now thrown even on the existence of
+the martyrs. The church built over the place of their supposed sepulchre
+was for a time famous as a shrine of pilgrims. The usual rock worn away
+by the kisses of the devout is shown. There is a superstition that a
+person kissing the stone for the first time will be married within the
+year, if single, and released from the conjugal tie if already married.
+As divorce does not exist in Spain it is to be hoped that few
+discontented Benedicts have recourse to this stone.
+
+St. Cecilius, at all events, was known to fame before the alleged
+discovery of his grave; for in the Antequeruela quarter an oratory
+dedicated to him existed throughout the Moorish domination, and was the
+only Christian place of worship within the city. I do not think that
+any trace of it is to be detected now. In that part of the city is the
+Casa de los Tiros, where you must apply for tickets for the Generalife;
+it is worth seeing on its own account, and it is the repository of the
+sword of Boabdil, which seems to have more claims to authenticity than
+most of the relics of the Little King. Descending towards the Puerta
+Real we pass the Cuarto de Santo Domingo, a private villa in which is
+incorporated all that remains of an Almohade palace. Near by, against
+the church of Santo Domingo, is an exceedingly picturesque little
+archway where one can fancy a bravo waiting, stiletto in hand. The
+Campillo, in the centre of which rises the statue of Mariana Pineda, is
+a quiet little square enough, referred to (as the Rondilla) by Cervantes
+as a resort of adventurers and desperadoes. These gentry are now more
+likely to be found in the immediately adjacent Alameda, outside the
+hotel of the same name, where the cafes and tables spread in front of
+them seem exceedingly well patronized.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--THE GENERALIFE: PATIO DE LA ACEQUIA]
+
+Following the Genil, and leaving the unimpressive monument of Columbus
+and Isabella to the left, you reach, after a walk overpoweringly
+fatiguing in summer, the little Ermita de San Sebastian. This was a
+Moorish oratory in old days, and outside it took place the surrender of
+the keys by Boabdil on the memorable 2nd of January, 1492. If you go
+farther on--and I doubt if you will be tempted to--you will come to a
+very old Moorish palace called the Alcazar Genil, now the property
+of the Duke of Gor. Here, says Simonet, were lodged the Christian
+princes and knights who so often found an asylum at the court of
+Granada. In the gardens are tanks once used, it is believed, for mimic
+naval fights. In the same direction, I understand, is Zubia. Here
+Isabella the Catholic, reconnoitring the city during the siege, narrowly
+escaped capture by a Moorish patrol. She concealed herself behind a
+laurel bush, which is still pointed out. Another instance of the small
+chances that determine the fate of kingdoms! To commemorate her escape
+the queen built near by a convent, which has long since disappeared.
+
+You may return to the city by the Puerta Verde, near the Bab-en-Neshti
+or Puerta de los Molinos, through which the Spaniards entered after
+Boabdil's submission.
+
+Apart from the Alhambra and the Cathedral buildings, it will have been
+seen that Granada has not many claims on the stranger's interest.
+Considering the expectations formed of it after reading Prescott and
+Irving, most English people will pronounce it to be a disappointment.
+From certain points of view it remains the pleasantest place for a
+protracted stay in Andalusia during the summer. It is only when you come
+to it from Seville or Cordova or Cadiz, that you realize how cool, in
+comparison, is this city on the plateau between the snow-clad mountains.
+Even before the sun has gone down, you can dine very pleasantly in the
+open, hearkening to the splash of the fountains, and inhaling the
+fragrance of the rose. There is no need here, as at Seville, to shut
+yourself, till nightfall, within walls three feet thick. By night we
+stroll across the Plaza of the Alhambra, and see the white city gleaming
+with a shimmer reflected in the luminous sky above. Granada resumes her
+aspect of an Oriental city beneath the crescent moon riding triumphant
+over Andalusia.
+
+[Illustration: GRANADA--A CORNER IN THE OLD QUARTER]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+MALAGA
+
+
+Second in size among Andalusian cities, Malaga is the least interesting.
+Were it not for the sea, its position would be one of singular
+remoteness. On the extreme verge of Europe, the mighty Sierra Nevada
+rises behind it, and cuts it off from the rest of Spain. Yet as a
+flourishing port it is one of the towns in the Peninsula best known
+among Englishmen. It is beloved by our sailors. From the odd phases of
+life to be seen in and around the harbour, they derive their notions of
+the people and the country. With that utter absence of curiosity
+noticeable in their kind, they never penetrate inland, or even into the
+outskirts of the town. But nothing can dispel Jack's conviction that his
+knowledge of Spain and the Spaniards is intimate and profound.
+
+Malaga is not, as its appearance suggests, a city of purely modern
+growth. It was known to the Phoenicians and the Romans, and before it
+became subject to the Almoravides was an independent principality under
+the Hammudiya dynasty. Later it shared the fortunes of the Sultanate of
+Granada, and its siege and capture by Ferdinand and Isabella contributed
+to bring about the fall of the capital. This part of its history is
+dealt with in great detail by Prescott. Among the numerous incidents of
+the siege was a determined attempt on the part of a Moor named Ibrahim
+al Gherbi to assassinate the Spanish sovereign. The defence was
+conducted by the indomitable Hemet el Zegri, who yielded to famine
+rather than to the arms of the besiegers. The treatment of the fallen
+city leaves an indelible blot on the fame of the conquerors. The
+population, with the exception of a few hundreds, were sold into
+slavery, presents of the fairest maidens being made to the various
+courts of Europe. A worse fate was reserved for the Jews and renegades,
+who were committed to the flames.
+
+The old Moorish fortress of Gibralfaro still frowns down on the lively
+city to remind us of those days. Some of the walls and towers are
+believed to be of Phoenician origin. The stronghold has undergone
+repeated restorations and adaptations to military requirements, but a
+great deal of Moorish work may still be detected. A horseshoe arch
+behind the Paseo de la Alameda serves to identify the Moslems' dockyard
+or Atarazanas, and to indicate how far the sea has receded in the wake
+of the banished race southwards towards Africa.
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--THE HARBOUR]
+
+The Cathedral towers high above all the other buildings of the
+city. It is in the Classical style, and though designed by Diego de
+Siloe in 1528, was built for the most part in the early eighteenth
+century. It must be confessed that it looks better at a distance than
+near. The interior is solemn and cold. It is worth visiting for some
+specimens of Cano's art which it contains, and for Mena's magnificent
+carving in the choir. As at Granada, the edifice is adjoined by a
+smaller church called the Sagrario, founded by the Catholic Sovereigns
+in 1488 as the cathedral of the conquered city.
+
+But it is not for its monuments or historical associations that Malaga
+is to be visited. Its interest is of to-day. And in truth it needed not
+the hand of man to embellish a spot where Nature has been so lavish of
+her choicest gifts. The gardens round Malaga abound in the finest
+specimens of tropical flora. Tall india-rubber plants, gigantic
+eucalyptus, great bamboos, the rarest exotics, such as the _Pritchardia
+folifera_, the araucaria, and the _Scaforthia elegans_, flourish on this
+favoured shore. The villas of the wealthier classes stand each in a
+veritable Paradise. And everywhere the white flower of the orange, the
+oleander, the vine, and tree-high ferns!
+
+This luxuriant vegetation is the less to be expected since want of water
+is the great drawback to the prosperity of the district. Through the
+middle of the town runs the Guadalmedina--a broad channel, without a
+drain of water! The new and magnificent promenade, planted with palms,
+sweeps round the sea-front, as fine as anything on the Riviera. To drive
+along it in the sensuous southern night is to drink a deep draught of
+the joy of life. At one point the drive descends into the bed of the
+river, along which you may proceed for a mile or more. And yet at times
+the Guadalmedina becomes a roaring torrent, bursting its banks and
+sweeping away farmsteads and stock. It is difficult to say whether flood
+or drought has done most damage to the province.
+
+As at Seville, you find life here focussing in lane-like streets, closed
+to vehicles, and lined with cafes and casinos, among the finest I have
+seen in Spain. Here to an early hour of the morning the men of the city
+gossip in garrulous, intimate groups of nine and ten, all, as it seemed
+to me, talking together. The number of cigarettes smoked during the
+progress of these tremendous conversations must be stupendous. As you
+will see the same group meeting night after night, you wonder what there
+can be in the outwardly uneventful round of life of Malaga to supply
+topics for conversation. To an Englishman there is a mystery about this
+ability to talk for five or six hours about nothing at all. You will see
+the same thing in the dullest provincial towns in France and Italy--the
+same groups of stout, bald-headed citizens talking with frantic
+animation every evening. Their newspapers afford the slenderest mental
+pabulum--their contents could be dismissed in ten minutes--and the
+respectable gentlemen in question are never seen to read books. How
+then do they recruit their stock of ideas and find an inexhaustible
+stock of topics for conversation?
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--THE GUADALMEDINA]
+
+Women are, of course, conspicuous by their absence. Here we have another
+illustration of the utterly false ideas Englishmen usually entertain
+concerning Latins. To judge from novels written fifty or even thirty
+years ago, John Bull appears to have regarded the foreigner with pitying
+contempt as a mere philanderer, always running after a petticoat; yet no
+one can be in Spain a fortnight without noticing the Spaniard's
+disinclination for female society, or at any rate how perfectly content
+he is without it.
+
+I do not fancy the ladies of Malaga care very much for society either,
+in our acceptation of the word. Looking out of the window appears to be
+their favourite recreation. They do not inherit the habit from the
+Moors, for that people, as I have said, were nearly all expelled at the
+Reconquest, and the town was resettled. All the Andalusian towns were
+wholly or in part emptied of their Mohammedan population when taken by
+the Christians, and repeopled with Castilians and others from Northern
+Spain. This fact is forgotten by those who recognize in every trait of
+the Andalusian a heritage from the Moor. We might as well think we
+derive our chief national characteristics from the Britons or the
+Normans.
+
+East of Malaga lie several coast towns of importance, within whose gates
+the traveller rarely sets foot. Motril, Adra, Almeria--what is there in
+them to reward the fatigue of a journey in a diligence along the parched
+shore, or in some crazy coasting craft, with timbers straining and
+creaking before the lightest breeze? Almeria is now connected directly
+by rail with Madrid and Granada. The prosperity of the whole district is
+bound to be greatly increased by the construction of the line so long
+promised from Guadix to Baza. This short link in the railway system
+would save the traveller from Malaga to Valencia nearly 180 miles, or
+its alternative--a long and exhausting diligence journey. It would also
+bring the southern parts of Andalusia into direct communication with the
+great commercial centres of eastern Spain and with Marseilles. It would
+supply us with a new route to Gibraltar, moreover. This, with a line
+from Jaca across the Pyrenees into France, and another from Huelva to
+connect with the Portuguese system Villa Real de Sao Antonio, are links
+of which Spain stands vitally in need.
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--A MARKET]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE WAY SOUTH
+
+
+At Bobadilla--the Clapham Junction of Andalusia--the Spanish railway
+system is joined by the line of that purely British undertaking, the
+Algeciras Railway Company. A Spaniard told me that this line would never
+have been built by one of his countrymen, as no one in Spain had any
+desire to facilitate Gibraltar's communication with England, and the
+country it traversed had been sufficiently opened up. I do not think it
+would be difficult to demonstrate that the line may prove of very
+substantial benefit to Spain, but I will confine myself to thanking the
+promoters for having rendered accessible certainly the most beautiful
+part of Andalusia, and in my opinion one of the most wildly picturesque
+regions of Europe. The country between Ronda and Algeciras is the
+Andalusia dreamt of by the romancers. It is a savage, silent country, of
+warmer browns and greens than the rest of Spain. Here the train takes
+you no longer across the scorched sky-rimmed plains, but along the very
+edge of dizzy ravines, at the foot of which, hundreds of feet below,
+angry white torrents foam and froth. Now you are climbing with obvious
+effort the steep shoulder of a mountain, now you are racing headlong
+down into a valley which seems to lie almost vertically beneath you. Now
+you plunge into the bowels of the Sierra and emerge with a shriek of
+triumph in a cauldron-shaped valley, from which Nature has provided no
+egress. There is no want of verdure; the cork-woods, vineyards, and
+olives dot the lower slopes of the tawny hills. And far up against the
+sky-line loom shattered towers and crumbling castles, whence you seem to
+see trains of steel-clad knights issuing forth to do battle with the
+Moor.
+
+The country is reminiscent essentially of the days of chivalry. Perhaps
+the ruined strongholds and the dark gorges are still haunted by the
+knights, who have driven away all other ghosts and will not let us think
+of anyone but them. The Romans were once here, and at Munda, as every
+schoolboy knows, Caesar defeated with great slaughter the army led by the
+sons of Pompey. That town has now been identified with Ronda, the
+romantic capital of this most romantic region. Here the people have not
+forgotten Rome. They will show you a cave where in the semi-darkness you
+descry awful forms in stone, seeming like a ghostly and gigantic choir
+of monks. These are the Roman priests turned to stone upon the downfall
+of their gods, those of the people who cherish tradition will tell you.
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--PACKING LEMONS]
+
+The town itself you will not find very interesting, though the
+escutcheons displayed over every second or third house in one quarter
+will evoke some reflections on departed glory and the fall of the
+mighty. In some such _solar_ our novelists Seton Merriman and Mr. Mason
+have laid the scenes of leading episodes in their two charming romances.
+Ronda has had a stirring past. She shared in all the vicissitudes of
+Granada, and towards the end of the long agony of the Reconquest was the
+scene of constant and ferocious border warfare.
+
+It was here that Mohammed V. received the head of his rival Abu Said,
+who had been put to death at Seville by Pedro the Cruel. The town was
+taken by the army of Ferdinand and Isabella on May 22, 1485. The people
+of the surrounding mountains were deeply attached to the creed of Islam,
+and rose in revolt in 1501 against their Christian oppressors. Before
+they were crushed they inflicted a severe blow on their adversaries,
+completely wiping out a force under Don Alonso de Aguilar. Westward, on
+the other side of the high mountains, lies Zahara, the capture of which
+one December night by Mulai Hasan was the signal for the last crusade
+against the Spanish Moors of Granada.
+
+But it is to its striking situation that Ronda owes its interest. Fitted
+rather to be the eyrie of eagles than the abode of men, it looks down
+from the verge of precipitous cliffs nearly three thousand feet above
+sea level. Midway, town and rocky hill are cleft asunder by the Tajo,
+an awful gorge, two hundred feet across, and twice as much in depth.
+Gazing down into the abyss, you realize with something of a shudder that
+a pebble dropped over the edge of the precipice would fall sheer and
+plumb, without rebound or ricochet, into the river Guadalevin, which
+rushes below, filling the chasm with foam and spray. The ravine is
+spanned by a bridge built in the eighteenth century, a wonderful
+construction, from which when it was near completion its architect fell
+headlong. Access to the river may be obtained by a flight of 365 steps
+called the Mina, hewn through the rock. This singular work was executed
+by the Moors, who thus ensured themselves a supply of water against the
+dangers of a siege. Numerous subterranean chambers are also ascribed to
+them, or rather to their Christian captives.
+
+But the most delightful spot in Ronda is the little Alameda laid out on
+the edge of a perpendicular cliff. Leaning on the railing you may drink
+in the beauty and grandeur of a prospect hardly surpassed in Europe. The
+fair fertile country below is shut in by an amphitheatre of mountains
+which soar upwards to heights of five and six thousand feet. The eye
+seeks in vain for an outlet from the valley, till it discerns the white,
+dusty high-road winding, doubling, and finally disappearing over a dip
+between the ranges. The river, a thousand feet below, swirls and gurgles
+among the rocks, glad to have escaped from the dark gorge to which it
+has so long been confined.
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--THE TAJO]
+
+In the evenings the air is keen at Ronda, and in summer you may often
+hear English spoken by officers of the garrison of Gibraltar and their
+families, who come here to escape the torrid heat of the Rock. With a
+little capital and energy the place might be developed into a
+flourishing health resort.
+
+But now the way lies south and seaward. Ever downwards slowly travels
+the train. The night gathers over the castled crags and the mysterious
+forests. We detect by their gleam the rivers over which we pass. But now
+a bright starlike light is seen to the southward. It flashes and is
+gone, to reappear the next instant. We are nearing the strait, and the
+searchlight tells us that Britannia watches here with unsleeping eyes
+over the fortunes of her children in two seas and two continents.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE KINGDOM OF MURCIA
+
+
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--ROMAN BRIDGES]
+
+The province of Murcia resembles the home of the Arab race more closely
+than does any other part of Europe. It is a wild, fierce region, hot and
+tawny like a lion's hide, furrowed by deep winding ravines, intersected
+by serrated mountains, on whose flanks, for the heat of the sun, no
+green thing can grow. Much of the land is occupied by plateaux, bare and
+rocky like great altars on which all that lives is offered to and
+consumed by the sun. From these uplands you survey vast expanses of
+sheer desert--fulvid, rocky, and scorching. Your gaze may travel far
+before you descry any fitting resting-place for man. The mountains
+afford no shade, even in the deepest canyons the streams are often
+traceable only by a narrow path of sand and pebbles, yet here and there
+has man successfully wrested from harsh Nature a secure foothold, an
+oasis kept ever green by some more constant rivulet. The waters of the
+Segura and the Sangonera are the life-blood of the province. Wayward and
+Arethusa-like, the rivers have with infinite pains been coaxed into
+conformity with the needs of man. To the science of irrigation the
+province owes its existence. Water here is above all things prized and
+sold like treasure to the highest bidder. Mr. Jean Brunhes in a lately
+published work gives some most curious and interesting particulars
+relating to the system of irrigation in force in Murcia and the
+adjoining province of Alicante. The volume of the Monegre is divided
+into old water and new water, the former belonging of right to the
+ancient riparian proprietors, the latter to the owners of the locks and
+reservoirs. A very vicious system prevails at Lorca. There a private
+company is the owner of all the water of the Guadalentin, subject to the
+condition of supplying the old proprietors of the adjoining lands with
+500 litres per second every day. In consequence, in times of drought the
+company is mistress of the situation and can force up prices to a figure
+absolutely ruinous to the cultivators. Only in this way can it make good
+the losses incurred in rainy seasons. The precious fluid being sold,
+too, by public auction, the rich farmer is in a position to deprive his
+poorer rivals of their means of subsistence. To palliate this evil to
+some extent, the rule now obtains that the bidder who has bought the
+first lot can buy as many of the lots following as he may desire at the
+same figure. The price therefore is not forced up too rapidly. Moreover,
+if the company's barrage at a certain point is swept away or broken
+through by the current, the water which thus escapes becomes public
+property. This accident occurs five or six times a year, and the
+company is not allowed to make the barrage any stronger when it is
+rebuilt. Notwithstanding these concessions, it seems that the principle
+of private enterprise has been pushed too far in this part of the world.
+
+Mr. Brunhes described the sale of water at Lorca in the following words:
+
+"The sale takes place in a badly-lit hall with naked walls, on a level
+with the street, with which it communicates by an immense door almost
+its own breadth. This door remains open during the sale and the crowd of
+bidders stand partly in the street. The hall has no floor--you stand on
+the bare ground. Opposite the door at the end of the hall is a
+railed-off dais entered by a side door, and without any direct
+communication with the public side. On the dais the secretaries are
+seated at a large table covered by a threadbare green cloth. Behind the
+table are five arm-chairs. In one is seated the presiding officer (a
+civil engineer who must own no land in the 'Vega'). On a stool is
+stationed the crier.
+
+"At eight o'clock in the morning, at a sign from the presiding officer,
+the crier pronounces these words in a singing monotonous voice and
+without any pause between the two phrases: 'In honour of the Holy
+Sacrament of the altar, who buys the first lot of Sotellana?'
+Immediately shouts go up 'Eight, nine, ten reals!' One voice overpowers
+the other, wide-open mouths vociferate loudly, necks are strained,
+muscles grow tense with excitement. The bidders press and crush
+each other against the iron railing, for the one nearest has the best
+chance of being heard. The presiding officer listens, and follows the
+frantic shouting with sovereign calm. Suddenly, with a quick gesture, he
+designates the highest bidder. At once the clamour ceases. Amid absolute
+silence the man indicated calls out his name, which the clerks write
+down.
+
+"The men are hatless. Some wear black or dark-coloured handkerchiefs
+bound round their heads, but all hold their broad-brimmed hats in their
+hands. No one smokes or talks till the bidding recommences, and even
+those in the street are silent and bare-headed. It is easy to see that
+all are peasants. Heads are closely cropped; here are no beards or
+moustaches, no one wears a collar, and most carry a cloak other than the
+aristocratic 'Capa' on the shoulders or arm. It is a curious and
+impressive sight enough, these bronzed physiognomies animated by one
+desire to obtain possession as cheaply as may be of the supreme good,
+water."
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--AT THE FOUNTAIN]
+
+Before the industry of man had harnessed the wayward streams this hot
+land must have been little better than an arid wilderness, yet it has
+been inhabited from the remotest times, and its possession was keenly
+contested between the great powers of antiquity. The natives were known
+to the ancients as the Mastiani, and are credited with the virtues which
+were so long supposed to have been characteristic of primitive man. This
+simple, blameless race fell an easy victim to the wily Phoenicians,
+who scented the precious metals within these barren hills. Elche,
+Guadix, and Jijona betray in their etymology a Semitic origin. Next came
+the Greek Vikings from Samos and Rhodes and Phokaia, establishing
+themselves at many points along the eastern shore of the Iberian land.
+The rivalry between the Phoenician and Hellenic colonies precipitated
+a contest between their respective allies, the Carthaginians and the
+Romans. Hasdrubal founded the port of New Carthage, the name of which is
+still preserved in Cartagena, whence, with a host of 90,000 foot and
+12,000 horse, Hannibal started on his famous march to Rome. The fall of
+the city, which was bravely defended by Mago against Scipio, entailed
+the destruction of the Punic power in Spain.
+
+Under the Roman yoke Carthago Nova became the capital of the vast
+province of Tarraconensis, and the adjoining district in consequence
+felt the full force of all the attacks made by rebels and barbarians on
+the tottering empire. Under the Visigoths it was erected into a duchy by
+the name of Aurariola. The Duke Theodomir, unlike most of his peers,
+offered a strenuous resistance to the Moslem arms, and when defeated in
+battle and besieged in Orihuela, succeeded by a stratagem in preserving
+his territory. By disguising all the women as warriors and parading them
+on the walls, he so deceived the Moors as to the strength of the
+garrison as to obtain from them a recognition of the independence of the
+duchy, subject to the suzerainty of the khalifa.
+
+The province became known after its chief by the name of Todmir. It
+endured as an autonomous state for some sixty-eight years, its final
+absorption in the Moslem empire being brought about by the last dukes
+espousing the cause of Charlemagne or his Moorish allies. Arabic
+colonists poured in and soon out-numbered the Christian inhabitants. The
+last province of Spain to bow before the Crescent became rapidly the
+most Moorish of any.
+
+Cartagena and Orihuela, the old Visigothic centres, declined, and
+Murcia, practically a Mohammedan foundation, took their place. The city
+rivalled Toledo and Cordova as a manufactory of arms and munitions of
+war. It underwent the usual vicissitudes of Moorish states, forming now
+part of one kingdom, now of another, at times independent, more often
+subject to Valencia, Granada, or Cordova. Finally, in 1243, Abu Bekr,
+the titular amir of Murcia, acknowledged the suzerainty of Castile, only
+to repudiate it in 1252. The war lasted some time, but the desertion of
+Al Ahmar of Granada left Abu Bekr at the mercy of the Christians. Murcia
+was taken in 1266 by Don Jaime of Aragon, who immediately handed over
+his conquest to his son-in-law, Alfonso of Castile. The step, though
+probably not dictated by motives of policy, was a wise one, for it left
+a sort of buffer state between Aragon and Granada, and preserved the
+frontiers of the former kingdom from molestation by the Moors for the
+next two centuries.
+
+The town of Murcia has completely rid itself of all outward evidences of
+its erstwhile subjection to Islam. Gone is the Alcazar, where the amirs
+mimicked the state of Cordova and Toledo, gone is the wall which kept
+the Christian out, gone is the mosque wherein thousands of turbaned
+heads were bowed daily towards Mecca. Yet in the narrow dark streets
+like the Sierpes of Seville, across which awnings are stretched, we
+might recognize something of the East, were not such thoroughfares
+equally characteristic of the Christian South. The Calles de la Traperia
+and de la Plateria, however, irresistibly recall Smyrna. They lead into
+one of those dazzling white, dusty squares which every Southern and
+Eastern city boasts, and which is always named in Spain after the
+Constitution, in Italy after Victor Emmanuel, and in France after the
+Republic. Murcia is hotter than Seville, and the passage of this plaza
+between eleven in the forenoon and five in the afternoon requires the
+courage of a Mutius Scaevola. In the evening you may join the citizens in
+their promenade upon the Malecon, which affords a charming view of the
+rich "huerta" or vale of the Segura. This is described by Mr. Brunhes as
+"an admirable zone of model agricultural establishments. The soil is
+levelled and prepared for irrigation with geometrical precision. To each
+particular crop corresponds a design with little shelving beds of
+special forms." Not an inch of ground is wasted; on the summit of the
+slopes, for instance, sweet potatoes are planted at regular
+intervals. The cereals and vegetables are tended with special care,
+almost individually. The melons are protected by coverings. No one can
+visit the environs of Murcia without being impressed by the
+extraordinary industry and thriftiness of its people. And field labour
+in this climate must be arduous in the extreme. But no doubt the
+mythical "dolce far niente" Spaniard will continue for many years to
+haunt the back streets of literature in company with the big-toothed
+English girl, her red-whiskered parent, and other creations of ignorance
+and prejudice.
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--A MOORISH GATEWAY]
+
+Murcia cannot be called an interesting town. It has only one
+"sight"--and that not of first-class interest--the Cathedral. This
+occupies, as usual, the site of the mosque, and dates in its oldest part
+from 1368. The west front was restored in the seventeenth century,
+fortunately before the decay of Spanish art had become too conspicuous.
+The interior produces a good effect, though robbed of much of its
+interest by a fire some sixty years ago. The choir stalls are good, as
+they generally are in this country of clever wood-carvers, and came from
+a suppressed monastery in the neighbourhood. The reredos is modern and
+poor. With a glance at the urn containing the internal organs of Alfonso
+the Learned, we pass on to the beautiful and interesting Junteron
+Chapel. This was founded in 1515 by the Archdeacon of Lorca, Don Gil
+Junteron, and is in the most exuberant Renaissance style. It is
+astonishing that where the figures and designs are so numerous, so
+intermingled, and so complicated, each should be sculptured with such
+exquisite skill and correctness. The Velez Chapel is a little earlier,
+and was evidently modelled on the Constable's Chapel at Burgos. The
+style, as might be expected, reminds one also of the Chapel Royal at
+Granada. Parts of it, says Don Rodrigo Amador de los Rios, evidence the
+painful caprices and aberrations which announce the death agony of a
+powerful art in its decline. It would be dangerous to express such an
+opinion in Murcia, where the chapel is accounted the eighth and greatest
+wonder of the world. In somewhat more restrained terms the sacristan
+will call your attention to the panelling and lockers in the Sacristy,
+which occupies the centre of the graceful steeple, and certainly
+deserves the epithet of sumptuous, so liberally bestowed in Spain.
+
+Much older than Murcia, Cartagena has preserved even fewer monuments of
+antiquity, though it has not lost the military character first impressed
+upon it by its founder Hasdrubal. For this is the first arsenal of
+Spain, and perhaps its strongest fortress. Its splendid sheltered
+harbour is defended by powerful forts and formidable batteries. Their
+fire has not always been directed upon the enemies of Spain. For many
+months in the year 1873 over them waved the red flag of the
+"Intransigentes," the extreme communistic republicans, who,
+simultaneously with the Carlists of the north, threatened ruin to
+Castelar's government at Madrid. The acquisition of the great national
+arsenal without firing a shot was, of course, of the utmost
+advantage to these determined revolutionaries. They disposed of 583
+pieces of ordnance, including twenty-eight Krupp guns, with 180,000
+shells and 4,332 quintals of powder. In addition they were supported by
+the ironclad frigates Numancia, Vittoria, Tetuan, and Mendez Nunez. The
+garrison, in addition to the enthusiastic population, included several
+revolted battalions of regular troops under the command of General
+Contreras. The communist Junta was presided over by Don Antonio Galvez.
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--A STREET SCENE]
+
+Against this terrible stronghold of the revolution, General Martinez
+Campos advanced with an army from Madrid with orders to reduce the place
+with the utmost despatch. This was easier said than done. Supplies were
+lacking; the advantage in artillery lay entirely with the besieged. The
+Carlists effected diversions in favour of the Intransigentes--an odd
+coalition. Meantime, three of the revolutionary vessels were seized by
+the Prussian squadron as pirates--an utterly unjustifiable interference
+with the domestic affairs of another State. We might as reasonably have
+seized the vessels of the Confederate States in 1864. The Prussians and
+Italians exacted, moreover, a war indemnity of 50,000 pesetas from the
+Cantonal Junta, which body became a prey to internal dissensions. One of
+its members was assassinated. Taking advantage of these embarrassments
+of the besieged, the republican troops redoubled their efforts. Senor
+Castelar came down from Madrid to assume the supreme command, and
+Martinez Campos was superseded by General Lopez Dominguez. An incessant
+bombardment was kept up, the besieged responding shell by shell. In
+January the frigate Tetuan was burnt to the water's edge, and a day or
+two later the explosion of the gun park destroyed hundreds of the
+garrison. The end was near. The city had for half a year defied almost
+the whole kingdom, and withstood the covert attacks of foreign Powers.
+Among the revolutionaries were men who burned to emulate the Numantians,
+and to make of themselves, the whole population, and the city, one vast
+blazing hecatomb. Before this desperate resolution could be executed,
+the Government troops forced their way into wretched, blood-drenched
+Cartagena. Galvez, Contreras, and the leaders of the cantonal movement
+escaped by sea in the ironclad Numancia, which far exceeded the
+Government vessels in speed, and took refuge in Algeria. Thus collapsed
+a movement which was, after the Commune of Paris, the most determined
+organized attempt ever made to subvert the existing constitution of
+European society.
+
+I have given at some length this chapter in the history of Cartagena,
+partly because the town has little interest in itself, and partly
+because these events, though so recent and so significant, are never so
+much as alluded to by most writers of travel books. Out of so much evil
+good came at last, for these wellnigh fatal disorders opened the eyes of
+the Spaniards to the instability of the Madrid Government, and
+formed the prelude to the reign of peace inaugurated by the accession to
+the throne of King Alfonso XII.
+
+[Illustration: RONDA--THE MARKET]
+
+Apart from its historical associations, Murcia repays the attention of
+the traveller less than any other province of Spain. Fortunately, almost
+the only places of interest it contains--the ones I have mentioned--lie
+on or close to the direct route from Granada into the old kingdom of
+Valencia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+IN THE OLD KINGDOM OF VALENCIA
+
+
+The southernmost position of the ancient kingdom of Valencia belongs
+geographically and historically to Murcia. The huerta in which Orihuela
+stands is a continuation of the huerta of Murcia, and in the town itself
+we recognize the Aurariola which was the capital of the latter kingdom.
+I did not stop at Orihuela, but I understand that it remains distinct
+from all other towns in Valencia, in that its people speak pure
+Castilian. For that variety of the Romance tongue which I may denominate
+Catalan is spoken with local modifications all along the eastern coast
+of Spain, from the mouth of the Segura to the frontier of Rousillon. It
+is not, of course, a mere dialect of Castilian. It is a distinct
+language, believed by most authorities to have been the language of
+those Romanized Spaniards who were driven north of the Pyrenees by the
+Arabic invasion, and who reintroduced it on their reconquest of this
+portion of their old territory. Before Valencia was recovered by James
+I. of Aragon--Jaime lo Conqueridor--the Christians of the province
+probably spoke Castilian or a tongue akin to it. Catalan was simply
+the language of the new rulers, which the people soon acquired. In the
+province of Aragon itself Catalan, or Limousin as some call it, was
+never spoken. This circumstance no doubt powerfully contributed to the
+adoption of Castilian, in preference to the sister tongue, upon the
+unification of the two kingdoms. But for some reason unknown to
+us--unless it was merely the proximity of Murcia--Orihuela resisted the
+Catalanizing influence of its conqueror.
+
+[Illustration: ORIHUELA--ON THE RIVER SEGURA]
+
+Elche, our first stopping-place, famous in its way, is very often
+described and compared to half-a-dozen localities in Asia and Africa. I
+also will venture on a comparison, and say that from certain points of
+view it reminded me of Ismailia. It is completely surrounded by
+magnificent date-palms, the number of which a French author estimates at
+80,000. In the shade of the avenues formed by these majestic trees
+flourish the laurel, the rose, and the geranium; beyond extend crops of
+lucerne and wheat, watered by the carefully regulated Vinalapo. For all
+the shade dispersed by the palms, Elche merits its sobriquet, "the
+frying-pan"! The temperature completes the resemblance with Africa. From
+the summit of the hill on which it is built, the town is seen to be
+situated in a real oasis. Beyond the outer ring of cultivation extends a
+desert as white and as saline as that which borders the Suez Canal. The
+eye rests lovingly on the not far distant sea.
+
+Elche makes an agreeable impression on most travellers. Gustave Dore
+has left us his impressions of it--over-imaginative as usual. Mr. Frank
+Barrett, that entertaining novelist, introduces the town into English
+fiction. In Spain it is not more celebrated for its palms (which are
+exported for religious uses) than for its Passion or Mystery Play, the
+only one of the kind in the kingdom. This institution is explained by
+the following legend. On the night of December 29, 1370, a mounted
+coastguard named Francisco Canto, while patrolling the shore,
+encountered a man seated on a huge coffer. This stranger entreated the
+guard to carry his burden to Elche, and to deposit it at the first house
+where he saw a light, and having obtained his reluctant consent,
+abruptly disappeared. Canto, in accordance with the mysterious man's
+instructions, left the chest at the Hermitage of San Sebastian. On
+opening it, it was found to contain an image of the Virgin and the words
+and music of the play as now performed. The image was regarded as
+miraculous, and resisted all attempts to remove it from the hermitage.
+It was not my good fortune to see the play, which takes place every year
+in the Iglesia Mayor, transformed for the purpose into a theatre. The
+representation lasts two days, the subject being the Assumption of the
+Virgin. The words, in the old Valencian dialect, are wedded to old
+Gregorian music. I understand that with a naivete characteristic of
+medieval institutions, the Supreme Being Himself is personified on the
+stage.
+
+[Illustration: ELCHE--A STREET]
+
+A spectacle equally curious but not so picturesque is the daily sale of
+water, which takes place here as at Lorca, but with official calm and
+with none of the excitement to be remarked at the latter place.
+
+From this sweltering climate we hasten to the sea-shore, where at rare
+intervals a refreshing breeze may be felt. Alicante, the second town in
+the kingdom of Valencia, is modern, commercial, and thriving. The
+land-locked harbour is bordered by broad white quays, glistering in the
+sun's rays, with heaps of tarry cordage, and canvas distilling
+characteristically marine odours. Trains of mules pass by dragging
+enormous loads of oranges. In the harbour women are busy loading an
+English craft which flies the Blue Peter; they swarm up and down the
+side like ants, or rather like the colliers so familiar to passengers
+through the Suez Canal. The background to this scene of light and
+animation is formed by the enormous rock, comparable to Gibraltar, which
+is crowned by the ancient castle of Santa Barbara--so called after the
+saint on whose festival, in the year 1248, it was taken by the
+Castilians. Four years later it was stormed by the Aragonese, King
+Alfonso the Battler being the third to enter the fortress. The Castilian
+governor, with his sword in one hand and his keys in the other, fell
+pierced with wounds at the conqueror's feet. The possession of the town,
+as of Orihuela, was afterwards confirmed to Aragon by treaty.
+
+Alicante is resorted to for sea-bathing during the summer. The water, I
+am told, is then lukewarm--hot enough, according to one account, to
+shave with! The thought of the place in August makes the Northerner
+reach for a cooling drink. But I am assured that the heat is tempered by
+refreshing breezes from the sea, and that in the long shadow of the
+castle rock delicious evenings may be enjoyed.
+
+So we journey northward. The country reveals the results of the most
+systematic and intensive culture. We are told that the Valencians are
+lazy, but if so it must be because the most cleverly devised schemes of
+irrigation and cultivation have set them free of labour.
+
+The province of Alicante--the southernmost of the three into which the
+ancient kingdom is divided--contains several important towns. There is
+the beautifully-named Villajoyosa, Benidorm--so Provencal in sound--and
+Alcoy, a busy, industrial centre, situated in a blooming orchard
+country. Here is celebrated every April the festival of St. George, when
+a sort of sham fight takes place between peasants arrayed respectively
+as Moors and Christians. From Alcoy a short line runs to Gandia on the
+coast, the cradle of the famous house of Borgia.
+
+[Illustration: A FISHER GIRL (COAST OF MALAGA)]
+
+Every town and village in this thickly peopled region has its historical
+memories. Villena recalls the famous family to which it gave the title
+of marquis; Jativa, a desperate struggle during the War of the Spanish
+Succession, in which much English blood was spilled. This latter town
+was the birthplace of Ribera, and, as some say, of Alexander
+Borgia. It is situated in a country which might be described as a
+veritable Mahomet's paradise. The cottages in the neighbourhood are
+almost suffocated by the palm and orange trees. Beneath the golden fruit
+we find our way to the castle, or rather castles--the new and the
+old--built side by side upon a hill. Part of the fabric dates from the
+time of the Moors. Later, the stronghold served as a state prison.
+Within its walls languished and died the unhappy Count of Urgel, a
+pretender to the throne of Aragon, and here passed a ten years'
+captivity (1512-22) the Duke of Calabria, the rightful heir to the
+throne of Naples, to leave his prison on his appointment to the
+viceroyalty of the fair province he surveyed from its windows!
+
+The custodian of the castle shows the usual underground chambers, which
+may have been, as he alleges, dungeons, but were quite as likely (as
+they generally were with us) store-rooms and wine cellars.
+
+At Alcira we cross the Jucar, after the Ebro the most important Spanish
+river running into the Mediterranean Sea. It rises within a few miles of
+the source of the Tagus, in the Montes Universales, on the borders of
+Aragon and New Castile, and flows south through the plains of La Mancha
+till it enters the province of Albacete, when it takes an easterly
+course. In the same province of Valencia it has excavated some
+magnificent gorges. It is indeed a strong, impetuous stream, bursting
+its banks again and again and levying a heavy tribute on the
+surrounding country. Each time it makes for itself a new channel,
+sweeping away whole villages. The village of Alcocer stood on its banks,
+near its confluence with the Albaida. After countless harvests had been
+devastated and inestimable damage to some extent repaired, the two
+streams swelled with fury and in one day reduced a vast extent of
+country to a flat stretch of mud. Then, by another shifting of its bed,
+the terrible Jucar laid bare the foundations of the homes it had ruined.
+There is no security of tenure within its valley! Where your house
+stands to-day, ships may ride to-morrow. Yet here as everywhere else
+along the prolific shore, the waters form the great source of wealth,
+fertilizing vast rice-fields and heavy-laden orchards. The marshy and
+unhealthy lagoon of the Albufera, from which one of Napoleon's marshals
+took his title, is being gradually filled up by the debris brought down
+from the mountains by the rivers, and will ultimately form a "huerta" of
+untold fertility. Meanwhile every effort is made to encourage the
+afforesting of the rugged hill-sides, in order to check the violence of
+the floods and the denuding of the arid, desiccated soil. As a result of
+these wise measures, the kingdom of Valencia will within a short period
+become one of the two or three richest agricultural districts in all
+Europe.
+
+[Illustration: A WATER CARRIER]
+
+The history of the land is that of its capital. Valencia is first
+mentioned as having been granted by the consul Junius Brutus to the
+warriors of Viriathus upon the death of their chief, and their
+consequent surrender. The history of few Roman colonies, as it has
+reached us, is of interest. The province had the usual martyrs under the
+persecutions of Diocletian and Decius, and was the place of banishment
+of the zealot Ermengild. It remained under the Moorish yoke for over
+five hundred years, at one time forming part of the khalifate, at other
+times constituting one or more petty kingdoms.
+
+Don Teodoro Llorente speaks of "The slave kings" of Valencia, and thus
+describes the rulers of uncertain and various origin who, like the
+Janissaries of Turkey, had begun as slaves in the palace of the khalifa
+and won power for themselves with their swords. One of these princes
+added the Balearic Isles to his realms, and unsuccessfully attempted the
+conquest of Sardinia.
+
+The kingdom thus founded by military adventurers was overthrown by the
+most famous of that warlike brood.
+
+The history of the events which brought about the conquest of Valencia
+by the Cid is extremely complex. The king or amir, Kadir, was the puppet
+of the rival powers which aspired to the possession of his dominions,
+and was alternately upheld on his tottering throne by one and the other.
+Weary of this dishonourable tutelage, the people arose under the
+leadership of Ibn Jahhaf. Kadir fled disguised as a woman, but was
+detected and beheaded. That strange anomaly, a Mohammedan republic, was
+formed. In other words, Valencia was governed by an assembly of
+notables called the Al Jama, of which Ibn Jahhaf was the president.
+
+The people which arrogates the right to choose its ruler has ever been
+considered a sort of pirate among the nations, and fair game for more
+powerful states. Kadir at the moment of his deposition had been
+nominally under the protection of the Cid. That redoubtable warrior,
+under the pretext of avenging his protege's death, advanced on Valencia.
+The Almoravides came to his assistance, but precipitately retired.
+Distrusting these allies almost as much as the Christians, Ibn Jahhaf
+amused the Cid with negotiations, but meanwhile made preparations for
+defence. He became the special object of the famous warrior's hatred,
+and when the city fell, was burnt to death at the stake before the eyes
+of his horrified countrymen. The Cid now ruled Valencia as absolute lord
+and despot till his death, five years later, in 1097. The legend need
+not be related here, how his wife defended the city for two years after
+his death, and finally, setting his corpse fully armed upon his
+warhorse, won a victory over the terrified Moors and thus took him to
+his last resting-place at Cardena.
+
+Valencia was not finally wrested from the yoke of Islam till the
+memorable 28th of September, 1238, when the standard of the victorious
+Jaime I. of Aragon was hoisted over the tower of Ali Bufat. In the
+history of Aragon the conquest ranks with the taking of Seville in the
+history of Castile. Granada was the joint conquest of both kingdoms. It
+is curious to compare the ready submission of the Moors, and their
+surrender of whole kingdoms to the Christians, sometimes as the result
+of a single battle, with the tenacious resistance offered by their
+descendants in Algeria in modern times. Enervated by the climate of
+Spain, the Mussulmans of that country were absolutely incapable of
+maintaining a prolonged guerrilla warfare. If a fortified capital was
+taken they at once handed over the whole kingdom to the conqueror. They
+were not, of course, peculiar in this respect. The sentiment of
+nationality and physical courage are characteristic far more of the
+modern than of the ancient world. We have only to compare the resistance
+of the Anglo-Saxons to the Normans with that of the Boers to the
+British, of the French in the Hundred Years' War with that of their
+descendants in 1871, to realize how much more of manliness and endurance
+we possess than did our ancestors. We must go back to the days of
+Leonidas and Regulus to find parallels for the exploits of our own
+Indian army; to Numantia and Saguntum for parallels to Saragossa and
+Gerona. National and individual self-respect withered under feudalism,
+and revived only on the introduction of free institutions.
+
+Valencia to-day, as befits the capital of a rich, prosperous province,
+is a handsome, modern progressive city. There is little or nothing about
+to remind one of its erstwhile masters, the Moors, and it has not
+retained more monuments of its past than most other cities. Interesting
+it is not from the sightseer's point of view, nor convenient from a
+stranger's, since indications of the names of the streets are few and
+far between. New avenues are being formed, and in these magnificent
+houses are arising, all happily in different styles, original and
+individual, forming a contrast to the dull uniformity of most
+Continental town perspectives. At two points the town is entered by
+massive gates of the castellated type--the Torres de Serranos and de
+Cuarte. The former date from the fourteenth century, and have two
+octagonal towers with heavy machicolations at two-thirds of their
+height; the machicolation is continued across the connecting storey,
+which is richly panelled above the narrow archway. The Torres de Cuarte
+are drum towers, similarly flanking a gateway; in this case the parapet
+is itself borne on corbels and machicolated. The work dates from the
+fifteenth century. These towers add much to the picturesqueness of their
+respective quarters. The Citadel, in another part of the town, replaces
+the old temple built in 1238 by the Knights Templars on the spot where
+the Aragonese planted their cross on entering Valencia. It contains the
+chapel where St. Vicente Ferrer, "the Angel of the Judgment," took the
+habit of St. Dominic.
+
+[Illustration: MALAGA--A PICADOR]
+
+A glance at the Cathedral and the Lonja, and we shall have "done"
+Valencia in the tourist's sense. The former building was founded in the
+year 1262 on the site of the principal mosque. In it the Kings of
+Aragon took the oath as Kings of Valencia. Repeatedly restored, and
+"modernized" in 1750, it presents a dreadful jumble of styles, and is
+far behind the cathedrals of Andalusia in beauty and interest. The
+Micalet Tower, however, rising at the end of the Calle de Zaragoza,
+presents a striking appearance. It is the great landmark of the
+district, and the Valencians refer to exile as "losing sight of the
+Micalet." The view from the summit is very fine. The main entrance to
+the Cathedral is poor, but the north door, called the Puerta de los
+Apostoles, richly sculptured and delicately moulded, exhibits the skill
+and imagery of the fourteenth century at its best.
+
+Above the interesting semicircular Puerta del Palau are seen on
+medallions the heads of seven men and seven women--these representing
+the seven knights of the Conquest and the seven ladies (some say of
+Valencia, and others of Lerida) whom they married. From these alliances
+sprang the nobility of the province. This doorway was evidently
+constructed by the architect who designed the Puerta dels Infants at
+Lerida.
+
+The interior has also suffered by restoration. The pointed arches have
+been rounded, the Gothic columns almost concealed by Corinthian
+pilasters, the walls covered with marbles. The effect is rich ("La Rica"
+is the surname which particularly distinguishes this Cathedral), but
+much of the religious antique air of the place has gone for ever. The
+plan is, as usual with Spanish churches, cruciform. The chancel was
+reconstructed in 1682, but the altar was melted down by the French in
+1809. Fortunately the fine panel-shutters made for its protection in the
+sixteenth century have been preserved. They were carved by a carpenter
+named Carles, and are painted with scenes from the lives of Christ and
+the Virgin. These works are ascribed by some to Francisco Pagano and
+Pablo de San Leocadio, by others to Leonardo da Vinci himself. Hanging
+to one of the pillars on the Gospel side may be seen the spurs and
+bridle of Jaime lo Conqueridor, presented by him, on the day he took the
+city, to his master of the horse, Juan de Perthusa.
+
+Over the crossing rises the fine octagonal lantern, built in 1404 and
+restored in 1731. The trophies which once adorned it have long since
+been carried off, among them the flags taken from the Genoese by Ramon
+Corveran, a famous sea-dog of Valencia.
+
+The pulpit, over which is displayed a picture of St. Vicente Ferrer, was
+the one from which that zealous missionary actually preached. It can,
+however, hardly be regarded as a curiosity, as the saint must have
+preached in nearly every church in the Peninsula, France, and Flanders.
+
+[Illustration: VALENCIA--SANTA CATALINA]
+
+The choir is modern, except the rear portion or "trascoro," which dates
+from the end of the fifteenth century; and the chapels contain little
+that is of interest. Tomas de Villanueva, the holy Archbishop of
+Valencia, is entombed in the chapel dedicated to him. The chapel of
+another Valencian saint, St. Francis Borgia, is remarkable for a curious
+picture representing his conversion of a dying man. The penitent is
+depicted almost nude, and attended by comically fantastic monsters.
+Another painting shows the saint, as Duke of Gandia, taking leave of his
+relatives when about to embrace the religious state.
+
+Leaving the Cathedral, we visit the noble Gothic Lonja, or Silk
+Exchange, built between the years 1482 and 1498 by Pedro Compte. Though
+not in the purest style, the result is imposing and dignified. A French
+writer (M. Paul Jousset), not addicted to laudatory language, admits
+that this building is worth a visit to Valencia to see. Its square
+tower, its crenellated chimneys, open galleries, and high windows,
+recall the palace-like chateaux of the Loire. Within is a noble hall
+divided into three by rows of spirally-fluted columns. The roof is
+studded with stars, and round the frieze runs the inscription: "He only
+that shall not have deceived nor done usury, shall be worthy of eternal
+life." For the commercial integrity of Valencia it is to be hoped that
+the business men frequenting this exchange keep their eyes fixed on the
+text. Another public building worthy of attention is the Audiencia, in
+good Renaissance style, with grand halls adorned by portraits of eminent
+natives of the province. In the Salon de Cortes, the old provincial
+States assembled till the middle of the eighteenth century.
+
+The minor churches of Valencia are hardly worth a visit--the less so
+that in this climate the stranger is generally well content to "laze"
+his time away. He may do this very pleasantly on the Paseo de la
+Glorieta or Plaza Principe Alfonso, two charming shady spots, where
+numerous trees are reflected in the waters of the cool basins. Further
+off, across the parched Turia, you reach the Alameda, a leafy avenue
+where fountains diffuse a refreshing dew. And if you should chance to
+doze on one of the benches, you need not fear interruption. This
+charming promenade, for some occult reason, is neglected by the
+citizens.
+
+The picture gallery of Valencia is important. It contains fine specimens
+of contemporary Spanish art, including works by Sorolla and Benlliure.
+Ribalta may be studied here, and also the less-known masters of the
+Valencian school, such as Orrente, March, Espinosa, and Juanes. There
+used to be several fine private collections in Valencia, but these have
+all been dispersed.
+
+The country round Valencia is far more interesting than the city. In no
+other part of Spain, says Mr. Brunhes, has man more successfully
+combated and reduced natural aridity by irrigation and cultivation; so
+successfully indeed, that from Gandia to Valencia, for instance, a
+stretch of 100 kilometres, the gardens succeed each other so closely
+that it is easy to forget--in spite of the naked slopes on the
+horizon--that these oases occupy a naturally arid soil. This is, in
+short, the best cultivated province in the kingdom.
+
+[Illustration: AN ANDALUSIAN DANCE]
+
+The numberless canals and watercourses which intersect the land in all
+directions are fed for the most part by the Jucar and Turia--the latter
+the local stream of Valencia--but every possible source is turned to
+account. Here the water supply, comprised in the Canal of Moncada and
+the Seven Canals, belongs to the community, by whom is indirectly
+elected the famous tribunal which meets every Thursday morning at the
+Apostles' Gate of the Cathedral.
+
+The sittings of this singular court are the most interesting sight in
+Valencia. In the plaza a crowd of countryfolk are collected, furiously
+discussing their affairs and pleading their cases in advance, after the
+manner of litigants all the world over. Meanwhile the alguazil of the
+tribunal has disposed an ancient sofa in the shadow of the great Gothic
+portal and marked off a space before it with a railing. Presently the
+seven judges arrive--one for each canal. They have the air of well-to-do
+peasants, and such they are--grave, stoutly-built men, with tanned faces
+and close-cropped hair. They wear black, the colour beloved by the
+comfortably-situated working man all the world over; but they have not
+discarded the native handkerchief round their polished brows or the
+_espadrilla_, or Valencian shoe. Each is known by the name of the canal
+which he represents--Mislata, Cuarte, and so forth. These
+peasant-magistrates having taken their seats, the oldest pronounces the
+words "Se obri el tribunal" (The tribunal is open). For a moment
+absolute silence reigns. Then those who have the right to be heard first
+are introduced within the railing and plead their cause bare-headed
+before the court. Woe to the insolent wight that dare stand covered in
+its presence! The alguazil will tear the handkerchief off his head, and
+he will be mulcted, moreover, in a fine. Anyone who speaks before his
+turn is fined. The discipline is severe. Each must wait till the
+president indicates with his foot that it is his turn to be heard.
+Notwithstanding, the fiery Valencians find it hard to restrain their
+feelings. At every moment there is an explosion of wrath or indignation,
+a heated expostulation from one or the other of the parties. The fines
+thus accumulated must represent a considerable sum. The procedure is
+entirely verbal; even the judgments are not recorded. But no court
+exercises more absolute power than the Tribunal de las Aguas of
+Valencia.
+
+Life in the fertile huerta of Valencia is beautifully described by the
+great novelist, Blasco Ibanez, a native of the city. The following
+roughly translated passages, though they convey little idea of the
+forceful and elegant style of the original, will at least enable the
+reader to picture a summer in the South:
+
+"When the vast plain awakes in the bluish light of dawn, the last of the
+nightingales that have sang through the night breaks off abruptly in his
+final trill, as though he had been stricken by the steely shaft of day.
+Sparrows in whole coveys burst forth from the thatched roofs, and
+beneath this aerial rabble preening their wings, the trees shake and
+nod.
+
+"One by one the murmurs of the night subside--the trickling of
+watercourses, the sighing of the reeds, the barking of the watchful
+dogs. Other sounds belonging to the day grow louder and fill the huerta.
+The crow of the cock is heard from every farm; the village bells re-echo
+the call to prayer borne across from the towers of Valencia, which are
+yet misty in the distance; from the farmyards arises a discordant animal
+concert--the neighing of horses, the bellowing of oxen, the clucking of
+hens, the bleating of lambs, the grunting of swine--the sounds produced
+by beasts that scent the keen odour of vegetation in the morning breeze
+and are hungry for the fields.
+
+"The sky is suffused with light, and with light, life inundates the
+plain and penetrates to the interior of human and animal abodes. Doors
+open creaking. In the porches white figures appear, their hands clasped
+behind their necks, scanning the horizon. From the stables issue towards
+the city, milch cows, flocks of goats, manure carts. Bells tinkle
+between the dwarf trees bordering the high road, and every now and again
+is heard the sharp '_Arre, Aca!_' of the drivers.
+
+"On the thresholds of the cottages those bound for the town exchange
+greetings with those that stay in the fields: '_Bon dia nos done Deu!_'
+(May God give us a good day!) '_Bon dia._'
+
+"Immense is the energy, the explosion of life, at midsummer, the best
+season of the year, the time of harvest and abundance. Space throbs with
+light and heat. The African sun rains torrents of fire on the land
+already cracked and wrinkled by its burning caresses, and its golden
+beams pierce the dense foliage, beneath which are hidden the canals and
+trenches to save them from the all-powerful vivifying heat.
+
+"The branches of the trees are heavy with fruit. They bend beneath the
+weight of yellow grapes covered with glazed leaves. Like the pink cheeks
+of a child glow the apricots amid the verdure. Children greedily eye the
+luscious burden of the fig trees. From the gardens is wafted the scent
+of the jasmin, and the magnolias dispense their incense in the burning
+air laden with the perfume of the cereals.
+
+"The gleaming scythe has already sheared the land, levelling the golden
+fields of wheat and the tall corn stalks, which bowed beneath their
+heavy load of life. The hay forms yellow hills which reflect the colour
+of the sun. The wheat is winnowed in a whirlwind of dust; in the naked
+fields among the stubble, sparrows hop from spot to spot in search of
+stray gleanings. Everywhere are happiness and joyous labour. Waggons go
+groaning down the road; children frolic in the fields and among the
+sheaves, thinking of the wheaten cakes in prospect and of the lazy,
+pleasant life which begins for the farmer when his barn is filled. Even
+the old horses stride along more gaily, cheered by the smell of the
+golden grain which will flow steadily into their mangers as the year
+rolls on.
+
+[Illustration: COURTING]
+
+"When the harvest has levelled the panorama and cleared the great
+stretches of wheat sprinkled with poppies, the plain seems vast, almost
+illimitable. Farther than the eye can reach stretch its great squares of
+red soil marked off by paths and trenches. The Sunday's rest is
+rigorously observed over the whole countryside. Not a man is seen
+toiling in the fields, not a beast at work on the road. Down the paths
+pass old women with their mantillas drawn over their eyes and their
+little chairs hanging to their arms. In the distance resound, like the
+tearing of linen, the shots fired at the swallows, which fly hither and
+thither in circles. A noise seems to be produced by their wings ruffling
+the crystal firmament. From the canals rises the murmur of clouds of
+almost invisible flies. In a farm all painted blue under an ancient
+arbour there is a whirlwind of gaily coloured shawls and petticoats,
+while the guitars with their drowsy rhythm and the strident cornets
+accompany the measures of the Valencian Jota.
+
+"In the village the little plaza is thronged with the field folk. The
+men are in their shirt sleeves, with black sashes and gorgeous
+handkerchiefs arranged mitre-like on their heads. The old men lean on
+their big Liria sticks. The young men, with sleeves turned up, display
+their red nervous arms and carry mere sprigs of ash between their huge
+knotted fingers.
+
+"In the afternoon, towards the fountain, along the road bordered with
+poplars which shake their silvered foliage, go groups of girls with
+their pitchers on their heads. Their rhythmical movements and their
+grace recall the Athenian canephorae. This procession to the well lends
+to the huerta of Valencia something of a biblical character. The Fontana
+de la Reina is the pride of the huerta, condemned to drink the water of
+wells and the red and dirty liquid of the canals. It is esteemed as an
+ancient and valuable work. It has a square basin with walls of reddish
+stone. The water is below the soil. You reach the bottom by means of six
+green and slippery steps. Opposite the steps is a defaced bas-relief,
+probably a Virgin attended by angels--no doubt an ex-voto of the time of
+the Conquest. Laughter and chatter are not wanting round the well. The
+girls cluster round, eager to fill their pitchers but in no hurry to
+depart. They jostle each other on the steps, their petticoats gathered
+in between their legs, the better to lean forward and to plunge their
+vessels into the basin. The surface of the water is unceasingly troubled
+by the bubbles rising from the sandy bed, which is covered with weeds
+waving in the current."
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+Abades, No. 6, 70
+
+Abbad, Mohammed Ben, 22
+
+Abdallah, Ahmed Ben, 21
+
+Abd-el-Aziz, 19
+
+Abd-ur-Rahman, 89
+
+Abd-ur-Rahman III., 21
+
+Abu-l-Walid, 115
+
+Adra, 168
+
+AElii, 16
+
+Ahmar, Mohammed al, 27, 113
+
+Alarcos, 26
+
+Albaicin, 148
+
+Alcazaba, 129
+
+Alcazares, 35
+
+Alcazar Genil, 161
+
+Alcoy, 190
+
+Alfonso VI., 24, 25, 98
+
+Alfonso X., 114
+
+Alfonso the Battler, King, 189
+
+Alfonso the Learned, 4, 181
+
+Al Hakem II., 90
+
+Alhama, 121
+
+Alhambra, The, 124
+
+Alicante, 189
+
+Al Mansur, 90
+
+Almeria, 168
+
+Almohades, 26, 30, 112
+
+Almoravides, 26, 112, 194
+
+Aragon, Don Jaime of, 179
+
+Arfe, Juan de, 60, 96
+
+Aurariola, 178
+
+Az Zahara, 97
+
+
+Barbuda, Don Martin de la, 102, 119
+
+Baths, 143
+
+Bekr, Abu, 179
+
+Belludo, 145
+
+Ben Hud, 27, 113
+
+Biblioteca Colombina, 35
+
+Boabdil, 121
+
+
+Cadiz, 1
+
+Cadiz, Marquis of, 121
+
+Caesar, Julius, 16
+
+Campana--_See_ Kempener
+
+Campillo, 160
+
+Cano, Alonso, 66, 75, 155, 165
+
+Canos de Carmona, 81
+
+Capilla Real, 152
+
+Cartagena, 182
+
+Carthaginians, 3, 14, 15
+
+Cartuja, 84, 158
+
+Casa de Bustos Tavera, 70
+
+Casa del Carbon, 147
+
+Casa de los Tiros, 160
+
+Casa de Pilatos, 66
+
+Cathedral, 50, 151, 155, 165, 196
+
+Cespedes, Pablo de, 75, 103
+
+Charles V., 95
+
+Cid Campeador, Ruy Diaz de Bivar, 112, 193
+
+Colon, Fernando, 57
+
+Columbus, Christopher, 56, 160
+
+Cordova, 86
+
+Cornejo, Duque, 95, 96
+
+Coronel, Dona Maria, 38
+
+Cortes, Hernando, 83
+
+Court of the Lions, 137
+
+Cuarto de Santo Domingo, 160
+
+
+Dance of the Seises, 81
+
+Davalos, Leonor, 38
+
+Delicias Gardens, 77
+
+Dios, San Juan de, 156
+
+Drake, Sir Francis, 4
+
+
+Elche, 187
+
+El Greco, 60
+
+Enrique III., 119
+
+Ermengild, 18, 193
+
+Ermita de San Sebastian, 160
+
+"Esperandola del Cielo," 149
+
+Essex, Earl of, 5
+
+Exilona, 19
+
+
+Fadrique, Don, 46
+
+Fair of Seville, 79
+
+Ferdinand and Isabella, 121
+
+Fernandez, Alejo, 85
+
+Fernando el Magno, 24
+
+Ferrer, St. Vincent, 35
+
+Frutet, 75
+
+
+Gandia, 190
+
+Gandia, Duke of, 157
+
+Generalife, The, 146
+
+Gibralfaro, 164
+
+Gibraltar, 173
+
+Giordano, Luca, 58
+
+Gipsies, 84
+
+Giralda Tower, 31
+
+Gongora, 95
+
+Goya, 60
+
+Granada, 107
+
+Great Captain, 102, 156
+
+Guadalquivir, The, 9
+
+Guzman el Bueno, 83
+
+
+Hajjaj, Ibrahim Ibn, 20
+
+Hall of the Two Sisters, 139
+
+Halls of the Abencerrages, 139
+
+Hasan, Mulai, 121
+
+Hernandez (Gonzalo), de Aguilar y de Cordova,
+ "the Great Captain," 102, 156
+
+Herrera, 58, 61, 66
+
+Herrera, The Older, 75
+
+
+Illiberis, 111
+
+"Intransigentes," 182
+
+Irrigation, 175, 200
+
+Isidore, St., 19
+
+Ismail, Said Ben, 121
+
+Italica, 15, 17, 18, 82
+
+
+Jaime lo Conqueridor, 186, 194, 198
+
+Jativa, 190
+
+Jerez, 10
+
+Juan II., 16
+
+Jucar, 191
+
+Junteron, Don Gil, 181
+
+
+Kadir, 193
+
+Kempener, Peter, 55, 58, 59
+
+
+La Caridad, 74
+
+"Las Navas de Tolosa," 26
+
+La Trinidad, 19
+
+Leal, Valdes, 58, 59, 74, 75
+
+Leander, 18
+
+Lebrija, 11
+
+Leovgild, 18
+
+Levi, Simuel Ben, 37
+
+Lonja, 196, 199
+
+Lorca, 175
+
+Lucan, 16
+
+
+Majus, 21
+
+Malaga, 163
+
+Malecon, 180
+
+Marana, Miguel de, 73
+
+Mena, Juan de, 104
+
+Mezquita, 88
+
+Mihrab, 144
+
+Mirador de "Lindaraja," 142
+
+Mohammed II., 114
+
+Mohammed III., 114
+
+Mohammed IV., 116
+
+Mohammed V., 117, 171
+
+Mohammed VI., 119
+
+Mohammed VII., 121
+
+Mohammed VIII., 121
+
+Mohammedan Paintings, 140
+
+Montanez, 58, 60, 66, 75, 83
+
+Mote'mid, 23
+
+Motril, 168
+
+Munda, 170
+
+Murcia, 174, 179, 180
+
+Murillo, 8, 56, 58, 59, 60, 61, 73, 74, 75, 76
+
+Musa, 19
+
+Museo of Seville, 74
+
+Musset, Alfred de, 7, 12, 71
+
+Mut'adid-billah, Amir, 22
+
+Muwallads, 20
+
+
+Nasr, Abu-l-Juyyush Muley, 115
+
+Northmen, 21
+
+
+Omnium Sanctorum, 65
+
+Oratory, 144
+
+Orihuela, 178, 186
+
+Osorio, Dona Urraca, 38
+
+
+Padilla, Maria de, 46
+
+Palace of Charles V., 131
+
+Palace of St. Telmo, 76
+
+Palacio de las Duenas, 70
+
+Palomino, 95
+
+Paredes, Dona Maria de Guzman, 95
+
+Patio de Daraxa, 142
+
+Patio de la Alberca, 135
+
+Patio de las Arrayanes, 135
+
+Patio de las Munecas, 45
+
+Patio de los Naranjos, 34
+
+Patio "del Mexuar," 134
+
+Pedro the Cruel, 36
+
+Phoenicians, The, 2, 14
+
+Pineda, Dona Mariana, 157
+
+Plaza de Bibarrambla, 151
+
+Poore, Lawrence, 28
+
+Puerta de Hierro, 144
+
+Puerta de la Justicia, 128
+
+Puerta del Lagarto, 53
+
+Puerta del Perdon, 34
+
+Puerta del Vino, 130
+
+Puerto Santa Maria, 10
+
+Pulgar, Fernando del, Lord of El Salar, 152
+
+
+Ramon Bonifaz, 27
+
+Recchiarus, 17
+
+Ribera, 190
+
+Robles, Joao de, 156
+
+Roelas, Juan de las, 58, 65, 75
+
+Roldan, Pedro, 61
+
+Romanticists, 6, 7
+
+Ronda, 170
+
+Rueda, Lope de, 95
+
+
+Sacromonte, 158
+
+Said, Abu, 37, 118, 171
+
+St. Ferdinand, 27, 55, 95
+
+St. Isidore, 24
+
+St. Justa, 84
+
+St. Rufina, 84
+
+St. Vicente Ferrer, 196, 198
+
+Sala de la Justicia, 140
+
+Sala de los Embajadores, 136
+
+Salambo, 15, 84
+
+Salon de los Embajadores, 44
+
+San Geronimo, 156
+
+Santa Ana, 85
+
+Santa Paula, 64
+
+Santo Domingo, 160
+
+Scipio, 15
+
+Seneca, 16
+
+Seville, 12
+
+Siloe, Diego de, 156, 165
+
+Suevi, 17
+
+
+Talavera, Archbishop de, 123
+
+Tarik, 19
+
+Tarshish, 3
+
+Tendilla, Count of, 123
+
+Theodomir, 178
+
+Theudis, 17
+
+Theudisel, 17
+
+Tocador de la Reina, 143
+
+Todmir, 179
+
+Torre de Cuarte, 196
+
+Torre de Serranos, 196
+
+Torre del Agua, 145
+
+Torre del Homenage, 130
+
+"Torre del Oro," 29
+
+Torre de la Cautiva, 145
+
+Torre de la Vela, 129
+
+Torre de las Damas, 144
+
+Torre de las Infantas, 145
+
+Torre de los Picos, 144
+
+Torre de los Siete Suelos, 145
+
+Torres Bermejas, 127
+
+Tower of Comares, 136
+
+Triana, 84
+
+Tribunal de las Aguas, 201
+
+Turdetani, 14
+
+
+University Church, Seville, 65
+
+Utrera, 11
+
+
+Valdes, 75
+
+Valencia, 192, 195
+
+Vandals, 16
+
+Vargas, Luis de, 34, 58, 59, 75
+
+Velazquez, 75
+
+Velez Chapel, 182
+
+Vermilion Towers, 125
+
+Vigarni, 153
+
+Visigoths, 17
+
+
+Yusuf I., 117
+
+Yusuf II., 119
+
+Yusuf III., 120
+
+Yusuf IV., 121
+
+
+Zacatin, 150
+
+Zaghal, 122
+
+Zahara, 121, 171
+
+Zayda, 25
+
+Zegri, Hamet el, 164
+
+Ziryab, 101
+
+Zurbaran, 58, 60, 75
+
+[Illustration: MAP ACCOMPANYING "SOUTHERN SPAIN" BY TREVOR HADDEN AND A.
+F. CALVERT. (A. & C. BLACK)]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Southern Spain, by A.F. Calvert
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOUTHERN SPAIN ***
+
+***** This file should be named 37944.txt or 37944.zip *****
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