[Anahuac by Edward Burnett Tylor]@TWC D-Link bookAnahuac CHAPTER V 2/27
They were all either suppressed, or converted into the merest mouthpieces of the government.
The telegraph was under the strictest surveillance, and no messages were allowed to be sent which the government did not consider favourable to their interests; a precaution which rather defeated itself, as the people soon ceased to believe any public news at all.
In all these mean little shifts, which we in England consider as the special property of despotic governments, the authorities of the Mexican Republic showed themselves great proficients. We were left, therefore, to form what idea we could of the real state of Mexican affairs, from the private information received by our friends.
Just for once it may be worth while to give a few details, not because the people engaged were specially interesting, but because the affair may serve to give an idea of the condition of the country. President Comonfort, not a bad sort of man, as it seemed, but not "strong enough for the place," and with an empty treasury, tried to make a stand against the clergy and the army, who stood firm against any attempt at reform--knowing, with a certain instinct, that, if any real reform once began, their own unreasonable privileges would soon be attacked.
So the clergy and part of the army set up an anti-president, one Haro; and he installed himself at Puebla, which is the second city of the Republic, and there Comonfort besieged him.
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