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

CHAPTER IV
18/66

The Padre at Regla, we heard, was not given to preaching sermons, but had lately favoured his congregation with a very striking one, to the effect that the Company paid him only three dollars a time for saying mass, and that he ought to have four.
Almost every traveller who visits Mexico enlarges on the dishonesty which is rooted in the character of the people.

That they are worse now in this respect than they were before the Conquest is highly probable.
Their position as a conquered and enslaved people, tended, as it always does, to foster the slavish vices of dissimulation and dishonesty.

The religion brought into the country by the Spanish missionaries concerned itself with their belief, and left their morals to shift for themselves, as it does still.
In the mining-districts stealing is universal.

Public feeling among the Indians does not condemn it in the least, quite the contrary.

To steal successfully is considered a triumph, and to be found out is no disgrace.


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