• Complain

Flandrau Charles Macomb - Viva Mexico!

Here you can read online Flandrau Charles Macomb - Viva Mexico! full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. City: New York;Mexico, year: 2012, publisher: Eland Publishing, genre: Detective and thriller. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

Flandrau Charles Macomb Viva Mexico!

Viva Mexico!: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Viva Mexico!" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

Flandrau was a rich young American with an individual sense of humour and no prejudices, except against Western uniformity. His travel book, first published in 1908, is more than a ramble among the Mexican people. Based on his brothers coffee plantation, he spent the best part of five years in a country which he describes as?one long carelessly written but absorbing romance. His insights into the customs and character of rural Mexicans, and expatriate gringos, apply to this day.

Flandrau Charles Macomb: author's other books


Who wrote Viva Mexico!? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

Viva Mexico! — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Viva Mexico!" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

TO
DON GUILLERMO
OF THE FINCO DE SANTA MARGARITA

Viva Mexico N EITHER TOURISTS NOR persons of fashion seem to have - photo 1
Viva Mexico!

N EITHER TOURISTS NOR persons of fashion seem to have discovered that the trip by water from New York to Vera Cruz is both interesting and agreeable. But perhaps to tourists and persons of fashion it wouldnt be. For, although the former enjoy having travelled, they rarely enjoy travelling, and the travels of the latter would be pointless, as a rule, if they failed to involve the constant hope of social activity and its occasional fulfilment. By tourists I mean and without disparagement of at least their preference persons who prefer to visit a country in bands of from fifteen to five hundred rather than in a manner less expeditionary; and persons of fashion I am able even more accurately to define to my own satisfaction by saying they are the kind of persons to whom the wives of American ambassadors in Europe are polite. Probably to neither of these globetrotting but alien classes would the voyage from New York to Vera Cruz appeal. For the tourist it is too slow and long. There are whole days when there is nothing for the man in charge of him to expound through his megaphone; whole days when there is nothing to do but contemplate a cloudless sky and a semitropical sea. Thoroughly to delight in the protracted contemplation of such spacious blueness overhead and of so much placid green water underneath, one must be either very lazy or very contemplative. Tourists, of course, are neither, and while persons of fashion are sometimes both, they are given to contemplating the beauties of nature from points of vantage favourable also to the contemplation of one another.

Emphatically the deck of a Ward line steamer is not one of these. A preliminary investigation just before the ship sails rarely results in the discovery of what a certain type of American classifies as nice people. When nice people take sea voyages they usually go to Europe; and so there is an additional anticipatory thrill on embarking for Mexico in the certainty that there wont be any merely nice people on board. The ship will be crowded so crowded, in fact, that at Havana and Progreso (which is the port of Merida in the Mexican State of Yucatan) the companys agents will distractedly swoop down on you and try to convince you that it is to your everlasting advantage to abandon a lower berth in the stateroom long experience has enabled you to select, for an upper berth in a room you happen to know is small, hot and near the steerage. If you are amiable you laugh at them, but if, as is customary, you and the company have had a fierce disgusto before sailing and you are therefore not amiable, you express yourself without restraint and then run to the rail to watch the agents depart in their launch, with gestures that more literally resemble the traditional tearing of hair, wringing of hands, and rending of garments than any you have yet observed.

The ships are crowded, but not with the kind of people who set sail in search of pleasure, or the Bayreuth festival, or health, or the London season, or clothes, or the Kiel regatta, or merely because they are temporarily hard up and have to economise for a time by dismissing the servants, closing all three houses, and living very simply in nine ballrooms at Claridges or the Ritz. With people bound for Latin America, Fate somehow seems more actively occupied, on more intimate, more intrusive terms than it is with people on the way to somewhere else. Most of them are going, one gradually discovers, not just to see what it is like, or because they have seen and have chosen to return, but because circumstances in their wonderful, lucid way have combined to send them there.

My room-mates I cant afford a whole stateroom have usually detested their destinations from experience or dreaded them from hearsay. One, a silent, earnest-looking young man who was fond of playing solitaire and reading the poems of Edgar Allan Poe, always spent his winters in the hot countries, not because he liked them, but because his profession of looping the loop on a bicycle could be continuously pursued only in climates salubrious to the circus. Another, a grizzled old Wisconsin timber cruiser, was being sent, much against his will, to make a report on some Cuban forest lands.

It is a queer, strange thing, he confided in me when we parted in Havana harbour, that a man of my age and morals wont be able even to get drunk without the help o that and he nodded towards the ladylike little interpreter who had come out to meet him and take charge of him during his stay.

Still another struck me at first as a provincial and tedious New Englander until I found out his mission. His inside coat pocket was stuffed with photographs of his numerous children, and he had a horror of snakes and tarantulas that he often expressed much as one of Miss Wilkinss heroines might express her horror of mice. Like all persons who share the same dread and are about to make a first visit to the tropics, he conferred on reptiles and poisonous insects a kind of civic importance that they themselves under no circumstances assume. He had a haunting idea that the entire toxical population of Guatemala would be lined up at the railway station to receive him. But when it came out that he was being sent twenty-six hundred miles for the sole purpose of splicing a rope a matter, he said, of a few hours at the most I was compelled to see him in a light not only different but almost romantic. Somewhere in darkest Guatemala there was a rope four and a half miles long. It broke, and my room-mate, who had never been farther south than Summer Street nor farther west than West Newton localities between which he had vibrated daily for many years was, it seemed, the one human being among all the human beings from Guatemala to Boston who was capable of splicing it. As the rope had cost three thousand dollars it was distinctly less expensive to import a West Newtonian than to import another rope.

Then, too, I once between Havana and Vera Cruz had as a roommate a confidence man a broadening and therefore a valuable experience. One is not often given the privilege of living for five days with a confidence man on terms of confidence. He was a tall, lank, sandy-haired creature of about forty, with a Roman nose, a splendid moustache, unemotional, grey-green eyes, a diamond ring, and braces, as well as a belt; the sort of looking person whom twenty-five years ago British playwrights would have seized upon as a typical American. In a bloodless fashion his whole existence was a carnival of crime a succession of scurvy tricks, heartless swindles, lies, frauds and, now and then, candid, undisguised thefts. Sometimes, as when he sold jewellery and bric-a-brac at auction, his dealings were with the semi-intelligent well-to-do, but more often he exerted himself among the credulous poor, as when he unloaded brass watch cases filled with tacks on negroes at Texas fairs. His marked playing cards and loaded dice, which he showed and explained to me with much amiable vanity, were very ingenious, and I found our long, cheerful discussions on the technic of his art most helpful. His contributions to them, in fact, threw upon certain phases of sociology a brilliant and authoritative light that I defy anyone to get out of a book or put into it. From instinct, from habit, from love of the work, he was an almost thoroughly consistent scoundrel, and it was a shock to discover by the end of the voyage that the thing about him I most objected to was his wearing braces as well as a belt.

There is always a brave and hopeful little band of actors on board usually an American stock company on the way to its financial and artistic doom in the City of Mexico. And it is invariably named after the beautiful young lady who has hypnotised some middle-aged Mexican patron saint of the drama into guaranteeing everybody six weeks salary and a return ticket. If it isnt the Beryl Smith Company it is sure to be the Company of Hazel Jones or Gladys Robinson, and Beryl (or Hazel or Gladys) is so beautiful that she can stand unhatted and unveiled in the midday sunlight of the Gulf beauty knows no more merciless test without making you wish she wouldnt. Furthermore, you continue to think her hair the loveliest colour you have ever seen, even after with an extremely elegant gesture she tosses her chewing gum overboard and languidly tells you how she does it.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Viva Mexico!»

Look at similar books to Viva Mexico!. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Reviews about «Viva Mexico!»

Discussion, reviews of the book Viva Mexico! and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.