第 27 节
作者:南方网      更新:2021-02-19 00:20      字数:9322
  to Nacogdoches。  Mexicans are not blind moles; and they have
  their intelligence; you know。  All the States who have helped
  these outrageous ingrates are to be devastated; and you will
  see that your famous Washington will be turned into a heap of
  stories。  I have seen these words in print; Roberto。  I assure
  you; that it is not just a little breathwhat one or another
  saysit is the printed orders of the Mexican government。
  That is something these Americans will have to pay attention
  to。〃
  The doctor sighed; and answered the sorrowful; credulous woman
  with a kiss。  What was the use of reasoning with simplicity so
  ignorant and so confident?  He turned the conversation to a
  subject that always roused her best and kindest feelingsher
  son Jack。
  〃I have just seen young Dewees; Maria。  He and Jack left San
  Felipe together。  Dewees brought instructions to General
  Burleson; and Jack carried others to Fannin; at Goliad。〃
  She took her husband's hands and kissed them。  〃That indeed!
  Oh; Roberto!  If I could only see my Jack once more!  I have
  had a constant accusation to bear about him。  Till I kiss my
  boy again; the world will be all dark before my face。  If Our
  Lady will grant me this miraculous favor; I will always
  afterwards be exceedingly religious。  I will give all my
  desires to the other world。〃
  〃Dearest Maria; God did not put us in this world to be always
  desiring another。  There is no need; mi queridita; to give up
  this life as a bad affair。  We shall be very happy again;
  soon。
  〃As you say。  If I could only see Jack!  For that; I would
  promise God Almighty and you Roberto to be happy。  I would
  forgive the rebels and the hereticsfor they are well
  acquainted with hell road; and will guide each other there
  without my wish。〃
  〃I am sure if Jack has one day he will come to you。  And when
  he hears of the surrender of General Cos〃
  〃Well now; it was God's will that General Cos should
  surrender。  What more can be said?  It is sufficient。〃
  〃Let me call Antonia。  She is miserable at your displeasure;
  and it is not Antonia's fault。〃
  〃Pardon me; Roberto。  I have seen Antonia。  She is not
  agreeable and obedient to Fray Ignatius。〃
  〃She has been very wickedly used by him; and I fear he intends
  to do her evil。〃
  〃It is not convenient to discuss the subject now。  I will see
  Isabel; she is a good childmy only comfort。  Paciencia!
  there is Luis Alveda singing; Isabel will now be deaf to all
  else〃; and she rose with a sigh and walked towards the
  casement looking into the garden。
  Luis was coming up the oleander walk。  The pretty trees were
  thinner now; and had only a pink blossom here and there。  But
  the bright winter sun shone through them; and fell upon Luis
  and Isabel。  For she had also seen him coming; and had gone to
  meet him; with a little rainbow…tinted shawl over her head。
  She looked so piquant and so happy。  She seemed such a proper
  mate for the handsome youth at her side that a word of dissent
  was not possible。  The doctor said only; 〃She is so like you;
  Maria。  I remember when you were still more lovely; and
  when from your balcony you made me with a smile the happiest
  man in the world。〃
  Such words were never lost ones; for the Senora had a true and
  great love for her husband。  She gave him again a smile; she
  put her hand in his; and then there were no further
  conciliations required。  They stood in the sunshine of their
  own hearts; and listened a moment to the gay youth; singing;
  how at
  The strong old Alamo
  Two hundred men; with rifles true;
  Shot down a thousand of the foe;
  And broke the triple ramparts through;
  And dropped the flag as black as night;
  For Freedom's green and red and white。'3'
  '3' The flag of the Mexican Republic of 1824 was green; red
  and white in color。
  CHAPTER XI。
  A HAPPY TRUCE。
  〃Well; honor is the subject of my story;
  I cannot tell what you and other men
  Think of this life; but for my single self;
  I had as lief not be; as live to be
  In awe of such a thing as I myself。〃
  〃Two truths are told
  As happy prologues to the swelling act;
  Of the imperial theme。〃
  〃This is the eve of Christmas;
  No sleep from night to morn;
  The Virgin is in travail;
  At twelve will the Child be born。〃
  Cities have not only a certain physiognomy; they have also a
  decided mental and moral character; and a definite political
  tendency。  There are good and bad cities; artistic and
  commercial cities; scholarly and manufacturing cities;
  aristocratic and radical cities。  San Antonio; in its
  political and social character; was a thoroughly radical city。
  Its population; composed in a large measure of
  adventurous units from various nationalities; had
  that fluid rather than fixed character; which is susceptible
  to new ideas。  For they were generally men who had found the
  restraints of the centuries behind them to be intolerablemen
  to whom freedom was the grand ideal of life。
  It maybe easily undertood{sic} that this element in the
  population of San Antonio was a powerful one; and that a
  little of such leaven would stir into activity a people who;
  beneath the crust of their formal piety; had still something
  left of that pride and adventurous spirit which distinguished
  the Spain of Ferdinand and Isabel。
  In fact; no city on the American continent has such a bloody
  record as San Antonio。  From its settlement by the warlike
  monks of 1692; to its final capture by the Americans in 1836;
  it was well named 〃the city of the sword。〃  The Comanche and
  the white man fought around its walls their forty years'
  battle for supremacy。  From 1810 to 1821 its streets were
  constantly bloody with the fight between the royalists and
  republicans; and the city and the citadel passed from; one
  party to the other continually。  And when it came to the
  question of freedom and American domination; San Antonio
  was; as it had ever been; the great Texan battle…field。
  Its citizens then were well used to the fortunes and changes
  of war。  Men were living who had seen the horrors of the auto
  da fe and the splendors of viceregal authority。  Insurgent
  nobles; fighting priests; revolutionizing Americans; all sorts
  and conditions of men; all chances and changes of religious
  and military power; had ruled it with a temporary absolutism
  during their generation。
  In the main there was a favorable feeling regarding its
  occupation by the Americans。  The most lawless of them were
  law…abiding in comparison with any kind of victorious
  Mexicans。  Americans protected private property; they honored
  women; they observed the sanctity of every man's home; 〃and;
  as for being heretics; that was an affair for the saints and
  the priests; the comfortable benefits of the Holy Catholic
  Church; had not been vouchsafed to all nations。〃
  Political changes are favorable to religious tolerance; and
  the priests themselves had been sensible of a great decrease
  in their influence during the pending struggle。  Prominent
  Mexicans had given aid and comfort to the Americans in
  spite of their spiritual orders; and there were many men who;
  like Lopez Navarro; did not dare to go to confession; because
  they would have been compelled to acknowledge themselves
  rebels。
  When the doctor and Dare and Luis reached the Plaza; the
  morning after the surrender; they found the city already
  astir。  Thousands of women were in the churches saying masses
  for the dead; the men stood at their store doors or sat
  smoking on their balconies; chatting with the passers…by or
  watching the movements of the victorious army and the
  evacuation of the conquered one。
  Nearly all of the brave two hundred occupied the Plaza。 They
  were still greatly excited by the miraculous ecstacy of
  victory。  But when soldiers in the death…pang rejoice under
  its influence; what wonder that the living feel its
  intoxicating rapture?  They talked and walked as if they
  already walked the streets of Mexico。  All things seemed
  possible to them。  The royalty of their carriage; the
  authority in their faces; gave dignity even to their deerskin
  clothing。  Its primitive character was its distinction;
  and the wearers looked like the demi…gods of the heroic stage
  of history。
  Lopez Navarro touched the doctor and directed his attention to
  them。  〃Does the world; Senor; contain the stuff to make their
  counterparts?〃
  〃They are Americans; Navarro。  And though there are a variety
  of Americans; they have only one opinion about submitting to
  tyrantsTHEY WON'T DO IT!〃
  This was the conversation interrupted by Ortiz and the message
  he brought; and the doctor was thoroughly sobered by the
  events following。  He was not inclined to believe; as the
  majority of the troops did; that Mexico was conquered。  He
  expected that the Senora's prediction would be verified。  And
  the personal enmity which the priesthood felt to him induced
  a depressing sense of personal disaster。
  Nothing in the house or the city seemed inclined to settle。
  It took a few days to draw up the articles of capitulation and
  clear the town of General Cos and the Mexican tro