[Anahuac by Edward Burnett Tylor]@TWC D-Link book
Anahuac

CHAPTER II
9/33

A daub of fresh plaster just outside our bedroom door indicated the spot; and the British Consul's office had a similar decoration.

The Governor of the city could offer no active resistance, but he cut off the supplies from the island, and in three or four days Salcedo--finding himself out of ammunition, and short of water--surrendered in a neat speech, and the revolution ended.
We have but a short time to stay in Vera Cruz, so had better make our observations quickly; for when we come back again there will be a sun nearly in the zenith, and yellow fever--at the present moment hardly showing itself--will have come for the summer; under those circumstances, the unseasoned foreigner had better lie on his back in a cool room, with a cigar in his mouth, and read novels, than go about hunting for useful information.
There are streets of good Spanish houses in Vera Cruz, built of white coral-rock from the reefs near the shore, but they are mildewed and dismal-looking.

Outside the walls is the Alameda; and close by is a line of houses, uninhabited, mouldy, and in ruins.

We asked who built them.

"Los Espanoles," they said.
Even now, when the "nortes" are blowing, and the city is comparatively healthy, Vera Cruz is a melancholy place, with a plague-stricken look about it; but it is from June to October that its name, "the city of the dead"-- la ciudad de los muertos--is really deserved.


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