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

CHAPTER V
4/27

The termination of the affair, according to the newspapers, was, that the rebel army were incorporated with the constitutional troops; that their officers--500 in number--were reduced to the ranks for a term of years; that a hot pursuit was made after the fugitive Haro; and that, as it was notorious that the clergy had found the money for the rebellion, it was considered suitable that they should pay the expenses of the other side too; and an order was made on the church-estates of the district to that effect.

Of course, it was an understood thing that the officers thus degraded would desert at the first opportunity, and thus the Government would be rid of them.

As for Haro, it is not probable that they ever intended to catch him; and they were very glad when he disguised himself in sailor's clothes, and shipped himself off somewhere.

When the Mexicans first took to civil wars, the victorious leader used to finish the contest by having his adversary shot.

At the time of our visit, this fashion had gone out; and the victor treated the vanquished with great leniency, not unmindful of the time when he might be in a like situation himself.
Whether the President ever got much of the forced contribution from the clergy, I cannot say.


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