登陆注册
5238600000045

第45章 CHAPTER XI. A HAPPY TRUCE.(1)

"Well, honor is the subject of my story;

I cannot tell what you and other men Think of this life; but for my single self, I had as lief not be, as live to be In awe of such a thing as I myself."

"Two truths are told As happy prologues to the swelling act, Of the imperial theme."

"This is the eve of Christmas, No sleep from night to morn;

The Virgin is in travail, At twelve will the Child be born."

Cities have not only a certain physiognomy; they have also a decided mental and moral character, and a definite political tendency. There are good and bad cities, artistic and commercial cities, scholarly and manufacturing cities, aristocratic and radical cities. San Antonio, in its political and social character, was a thoroughly radical city.

Its population, composed in a large measure of adventurous units from various nationalities, had that fluid rather than fixed character, which is susceptible to new ideas. For they were generally men who had found the restraints of the centuries behind them to be intolerable--men to whom freedom was the grand ideal of life.

It maybe easily undertood{sic} that this element in the population of San Antonio was a powerful one, and that a little of such leaven would stir into activity a people who, beneath the crust of their formal piety, had still something left of that pride and adventurous spirit which distinguished the Spain of Ferdinand and Isabel.

In fact, no city on the American continent has such a bloody record as San Antonio. From its settlement by the warlike monks of 1692, to its final capture by the Americans in 1836, it was well named "the city of the sword." The Comanche and the white man fought around its walls their forty years' battle for supremacy. From 1810 to 1821 its streets were constantly bloody with the fight between the royalists and republicans, and the city and the citadel passed from, one party to the other continually. And when it came to the question of freedom and American domination, San Antonio was, as it had ever been, the great Texan battle-field.

Its citizens then were well used to the fortunes and changes of war. Men were living who had seen the horrors of the auto da fe and the splendors of viceregal authority. Insurgent nobles, fighting priests, revolutionizing Americans, all sorts and conditions of men, all chances and changes of religious and military power, had ruled it with a temporary absolutism during their generation.

In the main there was a favorable feeling regarding its occupation by the Americans. The most lawless of them were law-abiding in comparison with any kind of victorious Mexicans. Americans protected private property, they honored women, they observed the sanctity of every man's home; "and, as for being heretics, that was an affair for the saints and the priests; the comfortable benefits of the Holy Catholic Church, had not been vouchsafed to all nations."

Political changes are favorable to religious tolerance, and the priests themselves had been sensible of a great decrease in their influence during the pending struggle. Prominent Mexicans had given aid and comfort to the Americans in spite of their spiritual orders, and there were many men who, like Lopez Navarro, did not dare to go to confession, because they would have been compelled to acknowledge themselves rebels.

When the doctor and Dare and Luis reached the Plaza, the morning after the surrender, they found the city already astir. Thousands of women were in the churches saying masses for the dead; the men stood at their store doors or sat smoking on their balconies, chatting with the passers-by or watching the movements of the victorious army and the evacuation of the conquered one.

Nearly all of the brave two hundred occupied the Plaza. They were still greatly excited by the miraculous ecstacy of victory. But when soldiers in the death-pang rejoice under its influence, what wonder that the living feel its intoxicating rapture? They talked and walked as if they already walked the streets of Mexico. All things seemed possible to them. The royalty of their carriage, the authority in their faces, gave dignity even to their deerskin clothing. Its primitive character was its distinction, and the wearers looked like the demi-gods of the heroic stage of history.

Lopez Navarro touched the doctor and directed his attention to them. "Does the world, Senor, contain the stuff to make their counterparts?"

"They are Americans, Navarro. And though there are a variety of Americans, they have only one opinion about submitting to tyrants--THEY WON'T DO IT!"

This was the conversation interrupted by Ortiz and the message he brought, and the doctor was thoroughly sobered by the events following. He was not inclined to believe, as the majority of the troops did, that Mexico was conquered. He expected that the Senora's prediction would be verified. And the personal enmity which the priesthood felt to him induced a depressing sense of personal disaster.

Nothing in the house or the city seemed inclined to settle.

It took a few days to draw up the articles of capitulation and clear the town of General Cos and the Mexican troops. And he had no faith in their agreement to "retire from Texas, and never again carry arms against the Americans." He knew that they did not consider it any sin to make "a mental reservation" against a heretic. He was quite sure that if Cos met reinforcements, he would have to be fought over again immediately.

And amid these public cares and considerations, he had serious private ones. The Senora was still under the control of Fray Ignatius. It required all the influence of his own personal presence and affection to break the spiritual captivity in which he held her. He knew that the priest had long been his enemy.

He saw that Antonia was hated by him. He was in the shadow of a terror worse than death--that of a long, hopeless captivity.

A dungeon and a convent might become to them a living grave, in which cruelty and despair would slowly gnaw life away.

同类推荐
  • 要修科仪戒律钞

    要修科仪戒律钞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 南疆绎史

    南疆绎史

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 吾吾类稿

    吾吾类稿

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 十三日备尝记

    十三日备尝记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 明伦汇编宫闱典宫女部

    明伦汇编宫闱典宫女部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 神级影视大穿越

    神级影视大穿越

    这是一个爷们儿在无尽位面中不停行走的故事。他可以上一秒为了保护一些与他无关的人以一敌百无惧生死,也可以在转头遭受诽谤、排挤、陷害的时候,亲手将刚刚拼死救下来的人大卸八块送进地狱。他可以为了灵儿的一滴眼泪,战拜月、杀水魔兽,以一己之力护南诏周全。而一切的故事,都要从战狼2,跟着冷锋从枪林弹雨中并肩前行开始!
  • 日头落去的余霞

    日头落去的余霞

    雾气腾腾的车厢里,我是那样与众不同,心神不宁。这些年我忙碌起来了,忙工作,忙恋爱,后来结了婚。我忙得忘了许多事,甚至忘记了祖母。然而在这次回乡途中,我忽然忆起祖母最后一次对我的凝视。那眼神是如此秘密,唯有我与她之间才能心领神会,其中还包含着一些温暖的成分,宛如日头落去后的余霞。虽然没有任何人留意到我的脆弱,一如没有人会留意到祖父母悲怆的一生,但这又有什么关系呢?两个月后,我离婚了。
  • 跳楼价:腹黑奶爸5块钱

    跳楼价:腹黑奶爸5块钱

    婚礼上,新郎结婚了,新娘不是你?怎么破?某小白女抱着宝宝冲上了婚礼“都不许动!老娘是来抢亲的!”某宝宝“妈咪,你这架势分明是来抢银行的……”某女瞬间顿悟“都不许动!老娘是来抢银行的!”某男和某宝宝一脸黑线,“粑粑,我们还是走吧,我不认识她……”
  • 学治臆说

    学治臆说

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 甜心丫头撞入怀

    甜心丫头撞入怀

    (1VS1甜蜜宠文已完结)一场乌龙,叶朵朵惹上了学院最大势力家族的继承者,那个如同恶魔般的校草上官景辰。明明全校女生眼里又拽又酷的超级大帅哥,为什么偏偏到了她这里就成了超级任性,霸道又爱吃她豆腐的幼稚小男生。不仅在学校里对她又搂又抱,玩暧昧,让她成为学校所有女生的公敌,还公然宣称她是他的女朋友,害得她一直都没有人敢追。靠,不就是仗着自己长得帅点,家里又很有钱嘛,居然敢和她玩阴的。臭小子,老虎不发威,你当姐是hellokitty啊,敢惹我,你死定了。
  • 你是我忘不了的忧伤

    你是我忘不了的忧伤

    一场阴谋,他将她从别人怀里夺过来,步步算计唯独漏算了自己的心,从此便在宠妻的路上放飞自我,越奔越远。“靳先生,你就这么喜欢我?”“难道不是你主动送上门的?”“既然这样,那我可以走了。”他再次将她圈入怀里,“要走可以,先把我打包了,一起带走。”
  • The Oakdale Affair

    The Oakdale Affair

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 穿越后我被君主大人缠上了

    穿越后我被君主大人缠上了

    夜紫晴从来没想过自己会穿越,还是穿在了一个和她长得一模一样的花痴大小姐身上,嚣张了24年的夜紫晴开启了虐渣模式,手撕绿茶渣男,揭开伪善姨娘真面目,收小弟,当战神…
  • 这世界啊,随他去吧

    这世界啊,随他去吧

    十个月,十五个国家,从东南亚到南亚,从中东到中亚,这是一场穿越亚非陆地的奔走;所以,这并不是一本普通意义的旅行观光猎奇书,作者诚恳地叙述着三十岁来临前的旅途中山河过目的内心转变。等到风景看透长路走完,他逃出困顿,重获新生。这段人生中刻骨铭心的成长,是三十岁到来前最好的礼物。
  • 你知道火影吗

    你知道火影吗

    当拥有火影系统的主角穿越到另一个世界将是一个怎样的情景?什么?这个世界和原本的世界不同?竟然是武侠的世界?也不是,在这之上还有修真者。主角扶着额头:我应该何去何从?…………且看主角带着火影忍者系统在修真者的世界里如何闯荡。