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

CHAPTER VII
20/47

The _piece de resistance_ was a stew, bright red with tomatas, and hot as fire with chile; and then came the _frijoles_--the black beans--without which no Mexican, high or low, considers a meal complete.

The walls of the room were decorated with highly coloured engravings, one of which represented an engagement between a Spanish and an English fleet, in which the English ships are being boarded by the victorious Spaniards, or are being blown up in the background.
Where the engagement was I cannot recollect.

People in Mexico, to whom I mentioned this remarkable historical event, assured me that there are still to be seen pictures of the destruction of the English fleet by the French and Spaniards in the Bay of Trafalgar! Mexico was always, until the establishment of the republic, profoundly ignorant of European affairs.

In the old times, when the intercourse with the mother-country was by the great ship, "el nao," which came once a year, the government at home could have just such news circulated through the country as seemed proper and convenient to them.
We see in our own times how despotic governments can mystify their subjects, and distort contemporary history into what shape they please.
But in Spanish America the system was worked to a greater extent than in any other country I have heard of; and the undercurrent of popular talk, which spreads in France and Russia things and opinions not to be found in the newspapers, had in Mexico but little influence.

Scarcely any Mexican travelled, scarcely any foreigner visited the country, and the Spaniards who came to hold offices and make fortunes were all in the interest of the old country; so the Mexicans went on, until the beginning of this century, believing that Spain still occupied the same position among the nations of Europe that it had held in the days of Charles the Fifth.
While my companion was outside the Diligence, Don Guillermo and I were left to the conversation of an Italian fellow-passenger.


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