Away over the dark, wild waves of
the rolling Atlantic-away beyond the summer
islands of the Western Ind-lies a lovely
land. Its surface-aspect carries the hue of
the emerald; its sky is sapphire; its sun is a globe
of gold. It is the land of Anahuac!
The tourist turns his face to the
Orient-the poet sings the gone glories
of Greece-the painter elaborates the hackneyed
pictures of Apennine and Alp-the novelist
turns the skulking thief of Italy into a picturesque
bandit, or, Don Quixote-like, betaking himself into
the misty middle age, entertains the romantic miss
and milliner’s apprentice with stories of raven
steeds, of plumed and impossible heroes. All-
painter, poet, tourist, and novelist-in
search of the bright and beautiful, the poetic and
the picturesque-turn their backs upon this
lovely land.
Shall we? No! Westward,
like the Genoese, we boldly venture-over
the dark wild waves of the rolling Atlantic; through
among the sunny islands of Ind-westward
to the land of Anahuac. Let us debark upon its
shores; let us pierce the secret depths of its forests;
let us climb its mighty mountains, and traverse its
table-plains.
Go with us, tourist! Fear not.
You shall look upon scenes grand and gloomy, bright
and beautiful. Poet! you shall find themes for
poesy worthy its loftiest strains. Painter!
for you there are pictures fresh from the hand of
God. Writer! there are stories still untold by
the author-artist-legends of love and hate,
of gratitude and revenge, of falsehood and devotion,
of noble virtue and ignoble crime-legends
redolent of romance, rich in reality.
Thither we steer, over the dark wild
waves of the rolling Atlantic; through the summer
islands of the Western Ind; onward-onward
to the shores of Anahuac!
Varied is the aspect of that picture-land,
abounding in scenes that change like the tints of
the opal. Varied is the surface which these
pictures adorn. Valleys that open deep into the
earth; mountains that lead the eye far up into heaven;
plains that stretch to the horizon’s verge,
until the rim of the blue canopy seems to rest upon
their limitless level; “rolling” landscapes,
whose softly-turned ridges remind one of the wavy
billows of the ocean.
Alas! word-painting can give but a
faint idea of these scenes. The pen can but
feebly portray the grand and sublime effect produced
upon the mind of him who gazes down into the deep
valleys, or glances upward to the mighty mountains
of Mexico.
Though feeble be the effort, I shall
attempt a series of sketches from memory. They
are the panoramic views that present themselves during
a single “Jornada.”
I stand upon the shores of the Mexican
Gulf. The waves lip gently up to my feet upon
a beach of silvery sand. The water is pure and
translucent, of azure blue, here and there crested
with the pearly froth of coral breakers. I look
to the eastward, and behold a summer sea that seems
to invite navigation. But where are the messengers
of commerce with their white wings? The solitary
skiff of the savage “pescador” is
making its way through the surf; a lone “polacca”
beats up the coast with its half-smuggler crew; a
“piragua” swings at anchor in a neighbouring
cove: this is all! Far as eye or glass can
reach, no other sail is in sight. The beautiful
sea before me is almost unfurrowed by the keels of
commerce.
From this I draw ideas of the land
and its inhabitants-unfavourable ideas
of their moral and material condition. No commerce-no
industry- no prosperity. Stay!
What see I yonder? Perhaps I have been wronging
them. A dark, tower-like object looms up against
the horizon. It is the smoke of a steamer-sign
of advanced civilisation-emblem of active
life. She nears the shore. Ha! a foreign
flag-the flag of another land trails over
her taffrail; a foreign flag floats at her peak; foreign
faces appear above her bulwarks, and foreign words
issue from the lips of her commander. She is
not of the land. My first conjecture was right.
She makes for the principal port.
She lands a small parcel of letters and papers, a
few bales of merchandise, half a dozen slightly-formed
cadaverous men; and then, putting about, a gun is fired,
and she is off again. She soon disappears away
upon the wide ocean; and the waves once more roll
silently in-their glistening surface broken
only by the flapping of the albatross or the plunge
of the osprey.
I direct my eyes northward.
I behold a belt of white sand skirting the blue water.
I turn towards the south, and in this direction perceive
a similar belt. To both points it extends beyond
the reach of vision- hundreds of miles
beyond-forming, like a ribbon of silver,
the selvage of the Mexican Sea. It separates
the turquoise blue of the water from the emerald green
of the forest, contrasting with each by its dazzling
whiteness. Its surface is far from being level,
as is usual with the ocean-strand. On the contrary,
its millions of sparkling atoms, rendered light by
the burning sun of the tropic, have been lifted on
the wings of the wind, and thrown into hills and ridges
hundreds of feet in height, and trending in every
direction like the wreaths of a great snow-drift.
I advance with difficulty over these naked ridges,
where no vegetation finds nourishment in the inorganic
heap. I drag myself wearily along, sinking deeply
at every step. I climb sand-hills of strange
and fantastic shapes, cones, and domes, and roof-like
ridges, where the sportive wind seems to have played
with the plastic mass, as children with potter’s
clay. I encounter huge basins like the craters
of volcanoes, formed by the circling swirl; deep chasms
and valleys, whose sides are walls of sand, steep,
often vertical, and not unfrequently impending with
comb-like escarpments.
All these features may be changed
in a single night, by the magical breath of the “norther”.
The hill to-day may become the valley to-morrow,
and the elevated ridge have given place to the sunken
chasm.
Upon the summits of these sand-heights
I am fanned by the cool breeze from the Gulf.
I descend into the sheltered gorges, and am burned
by a tropic sun, whose beams, reflected from a thousand
crystals, torture my eyes and brain. In these
parts the traveller is often the victim of the coup-de-soleil.
Yonder comes the “norte”
Along the northern horizon the sky suddenly changes
from light blue to a dark lead colour. Sometimes
rumbling thunder with arrowy lightning portends the
change; but if neither seen nor heard, it is soon
felt. The hot atmosphere, that, but a moment
before, encased me in its glowing embrace, is suddenly
pierced by a chill breeze, that causes my skin to
creep and my frame to shiver. In its icy breath
there is fever-there is death; for it carries
on its wings the dreaded “vomito”.
The breeze becomes a strong wind-a tempest.
The sand is lifted upwards, and floats through the
air in dun clouds, here settling down, and there rising
up again. I dare not face it, any more than
I would the blast of the simoom. I should be
blinded if I did, or blistered by the “scud”
of the angular atoms. The “norther”
continues for hours, sometimes for days. It departs
as suddenly as it came, carrying its baneful influence
to lands farther south.
It is past, and the sand-hills have
assumed a different shape. The ridges trend
differently. Some have disappeared, and valleys
yawn open where they stood!
Such are the shores of Anahuac-the
shores of the Mexican Sea. Without commerce-almost
harbourless-a waste of sand; but a waste
of striking appearance and picturesque beauty.
To horse and inwards! Adieu
to the bright blue waters of the Gulf!
We have crossed the sand-ridges of
the coast, and are riding through the shadowy aisles
of the forest. It is a tropical forest.
The outlines of the leaves, their breadth, their
glowing colours all reveal this. The eye roams
with delight over a frondage that partakes equally
of the gold and the green. It revels along waxen
leaves, as those of the magnolia, the plantain, and
the banana. It is led upward by the rounded trunks
of the palms, that like columns appear to support
the leafy canopy above. It penetrates the network
of vines, or follows the diagonal direction of gigantic
llianas, that creep like monster serpents from tree
to tree. It gazes with pleased wonder upon the
huge bamboo-briars and tree-ferns. Wherever it
turns, flowers open their corollas to meet its delighted
glance-tropical tree-flowers, blossoms of
the scarlet vine, and trumpet-shaped tubes of the
bignonia.
I turn my eyes to every side, and
gaze upon a flora to me strange and interesting.
I behold the tall stems of the palma real,
rising one hundred feet without leaf or branch, and
supporting a parachute of feathery fronds that wave
to the slightest impulse of the breeze. Beside
it I see its constant companion, the Indian cane-a
small palm-tree, whose slender trunk and low stature
contrast oddly with the colossal proportions of its
lordly protector. I behold the corozo-of
the same genus with the palma real-its
light feathery frondage streaming outwards and bending
downwards, as if to protect from the hot sun the globe-shaped
nuts that hang in grape-like clusters beneath.
I see the abanico, with its enormous fan-shaped
leaves; the wax-palm distilling its resinous gum;
and the acrocomia, with its thorny trunk and
enormous racemes of golden fruits. By the side
of the stream I guide my horse among the columnar
stems of the noble coeva, which has been enthusiastically
but appropriately termed the “bread of life”
(pan de vida).
I gaze with wonder upon the ferns,
those strange creatures of the vegetable world, that
upon the hillsides of my own far island-home scarce
reach the knee in height. Here they are arborescent-
tree-ferns-rivalling their cousins the palms
in stature, and like them, with their tall, straight
stems and lobed leaves, contributing to the picturesqueness
of the landscape. I admire the beautiful mammey
with its great oval fruit and saffron pulp.
I ride under the spreading limbs of the mahogany-tree,
marking its oval pinnate leaves, and the egg-like
seed capsules that hang from its branches; thinking
as well of the brilliant surfaces that lie concealed
within its dark and knotty trunk. Onward I ride,
through glistening foliage and glowing flowers, that,
under the beams of a tropic sun, present the varying
hues of the rainbow.
There is no wind-scarcely
a breath stirring; yet here and there the leaves are
in motion. The wings of bright birds flash before
the eye, passing from tree to tree. The gaudy
tanagers, that cannot be tamed- the noisy
lories, the resplendent trogons, the toucans with
their huge clumsy bills, and the tiny bee-birds (the
trochili and colibri)-all
glance through the sunny vistas.
The carpenter-bird-the
great woodpecker-hangs against the decayed
trunk of some dead tree, beating the hollow bark, and
now and then sounding his clarion note, which is heard
to the distance of a mile. Out of the underwood
springs the crested curassow; or, basking in the sun-lit
glades, with outspread wings gleaming with metallic
lustre, may be seen the beautiful turkey of Honduras.
The graceful roe (Gervus Mexicanus)
bounds forward, startled by the tread of the advancing
horse. The caiman crawls lazily along the bank,
or hides his hideous body under the water of a sluggish
stream, and the not less hideous form of the iguana,
recognised by its serrated crest, is seen crawling
up the tree-trunk or lying along the slope of a lliana.
The green lizard scuttles along the path-the
basilisk looks with glistening eyes from the dark
interstices of some corrugated vine-the
biting peckotin glides among the dry leaves in pursuit
of its insect prey-and the chameleon advances
sluggishly along the branches, while it assumes their
colour to deceive its victims.
Serpent forms present themselves:
now and then the huge boa and the macaurel, twining
the trees. The great tiger-snake is seen with
its head raised half a yard from the surface; the
cascabel, too, coiled like a cable; and the coral-snake
with his red and ringed body stretched at full length
along the ground. The two last, though inferior
in size to the boas, are more to be dreaded; and my
horse springs back when he sees the one glistening
through the grass, or hears the “skir-r-r-r”
of the other threatening to strike.
Quadrupeds and quadrumana appear.
The red monkey (Mono Colorado) runs at the
traveller’s approach, and, flinging himself from
limb to limb, hides among the vines and Tillandsia
on the high tree-tops; and the tiny ouistiti,
with its pretty, child-like countenance, peers innocently
through the leaves; while the ferocious zambo
fills the woods with its hideous, half-human voice.
The jaguar is not far distant, “laired”
in the secret depths of the impenetrable jungle.
His activity is nocturnal, and his beautiful spotted
body may not be seen except by the silver light of
the moon. Roused by accident, or pressed by the
dogs of the hunter, he may cross my path. So,
too, may the ocelot and the lynx; or, as I ride silently
on, I may chance to view the long, tawny form of the
Mexican lion, crouched upon a horizontal limb, and
watching for the timid stag that must pass beneath.
I turn prudently aside, and leave him to his hungry
vigil.
Night brings a change. The beautiful
birds-the parrots, the toucans, and
the trogons-all go to rest at an early hour;
and other winged creatures take possession of the
air. Some need not fear the darkness, for their
very life is light. Such are the “cocuyos”,
whose brilliant lamps of green and gold and flame,
gleam through the aisles of the forest, until the
air seems on fire. Such, too, are the “gusanitos”,
the female of which-a wingless insect, like
a glow-worm-lies along the leaf, while
her mate whirrs gaily around, shedding his most captivating
gleams as he woos her upon the wing. But, though
light is the life of these beautiful creatures, it
is often the cause of their death. It guides
their enemies-the night-hawk and the “whip-poor-will”,
the bat, and the owl. Of these last, the hideous
vampire may be seen flapping his broad dark wings
in quick, irregular turnings, and the great “lechuza”
(Strix Mexicana), issuing from his dark tree-cave,
utters his fearful notes, that resemble the moanings
of one who is being hanged. Now may be heard
the scream of the cougar, and the hoarser voice of
the Mexican tiger. Now may be heard the wild,
disagreeable cries of the howling monkeys (alouattes),
and the barking of the dog-wolf; and, blending with
these, the croaking of the tree-toads and the shrill
tinkling of the bell-frog. Perhaps the air is
no longer, as in the daytime, filled with sweet perfumes.
The aroma of a thousand flowers has yielded to the
fetid odour of the skunk (Mephitis chinga)-for
that singular creature is abroad, and, having quarrelled
with one of the forest denizens, has caused all of
them to feel the power of its resentment.
Such are some of the features of the
tropical forest that lies between the Gulf and the
Mexican mountains. But the aspect of this region
is not all wild. There are cultivated districts-settlements,
though far apart.
The forest opens, and the scene suddenly
changes. Before me is a plantation-the
hacienda of a “rico”. There
are wide fields tilled by peon serfs, who labour and
sing; but their song is sad. Its music is melancholy.
It is the voice of a conquered race.
Yet the scene around them is gay and
joyful. All but the people appears to prosper.
Vegetation luxuriates in its fullest growth.
Both fruit and flower exhibit the hues of a perfect
development. Man alone seems stunted in his
outlines.
There is a beautiful stream meandering
through the open fields. Its waters are clear
and cool. They are the melted snows of Orizava.
Upon its banks grow clumps of the cocoa-palm and
the majestic plantain. There are gardens upon
its banks, and orchards filled with the fruit-trees
of the tropics. I see the orange with its golden
globes, the sweet lime, the shaddock, and the guava-tree.
I ride under the shade of the aguacate (Laurus
Persea), and pluck the luscious fruits of the
cherimolla. The breeze blowing over fields carries
on its wings the aroma of the coffee-tree, the indigo-plant,
the vanilla bean, or the wholesome cacao (Theobroma
Cacao); and, far as the eye can reach, I see glancing
gaily in the sun the green spears and golden tassels
of the sugar-cane.
Interesting is the aspect of the tropical
forest. Not less so is that of the tropical
field.
I ride onward and inward into the
land. I am gradually ascending from the sea-level.
I no longer travel upon horizontal paths, but over
hills and steep ridges, across deep valleys and ravines.
The hoof of my horse no longer sinks in light sand
or dark alluvion. It rings upon rocks of amygdaloid
and porphyry. The soil is changed; the scenery
has undergone a change, and even the atmosphere that
surrounds me. The last is perceptibly cooler,
but not yet cold. I am still in the piedmont
lands-the tierras calientes.
The templadas are yet far higher. I
am only a thousand yards or so above sea-level.
I am in the “foot-hills” of the Northern
Andes.
How sudden is this change! It
is less than an hour since I parted from the plains
below, and yet the surface-aspect around me is like
that of another land. I halt in a wild spot,
and survey it with eyes that wander and wonder.
The leaf is less broad, the foliage less dense, the
jungle more open. There are ridges whose sides
are nearly naked of tree-timber. The palms have
disappeared, but in their place grow kindred forms
that in many respects resemble them. They are,
in fact, the palms of the mountains. I behold
the great palmetto (Chamcerops), with its fan-like
fronds standing out upon long pétioles from
its lofty summit; the yuccas, with their bayonet-shaped
leaves, ungraceful, but picturesque, with ponderous
clusters of green and pulpy capsules. I behold
the pita aloe, with its tall flower-stalk and
thorny sun-scorched leaves. I behold strange
forms of the cactus, with their glorious wax-like
blossoms; the cochineal, the tuna, the opuntias-the
great tree-cactus “Foconoztle” (Opuntia
arborescens), and the tall “pitahaya”
(Cereus giganteus), with columnar shafts and
straight upright arms, like the branches of gigantic
candelabra; the echino-cacti, too-those
huge mammals of the vegetable world, resting their
globular or egg-shaped forms, without trunk or stalk,
upon the surface of the earth.
There, too, I behold gigantic thistles
(cardonales) and mimosas, both shrubby
and arborescent-the tree-mimosa, and the
sensitive-plant (Mimosa frutescens), that shrinks
at my approach, and closes its delicate leaflets until
I have passed out of sight. This is the favourite
land of the acacia; and immense tracts, covered with
its various species, form impenetrable thickets (chapparals).
I distinguish in these thickets the honey-locust,
with its long purple legumes, the “algarobo”
(carob-tree), and the thorny “mezquite”;
and, rising over all the rest, I descry the tall,
slender stem of the Fouquiera splendens, with
panicles of cube-shaped crimson flowers.
There is less of animal life here;
but even these wild ridges have their denizens.
The cochineal insect crawls upon the cactus leaf,
and huge winged ants build their clay nests upon the
branches of the acacia-tree. The ant-bear squats
upon the ground, and projects his glutinous tongue
over the beaten highway, where the busy insects rob
the mimosse of their aromatic leaves. The armadillo,
with his bands and rhomboidal scales, takes refuge
in the dry recesses of the rocks, or, clewing himself
up, rolls over the cliff to escape his pursuer.
Herds of cattle, half wild, roam through the glassy
glades or over the tufted ridges, lowing for water;
and black vultures (zopilotes) sail through the
cloudless heavens, waiting for some scene of death
to be enacted in the thickets below.
Here, too, I pass through scenes of
cultivation. Here is the hut of the peon and
the rancho of the small proprietor; but they are structures
of a more substantial kind than in the region of the
palm. They are of stone. Here, too, is
the hacienda, with its low white walls and prison-like
windows; and the pueblita, with its church and cross
and gaily-painted steeple. Here the Indian corn
takes the place of the sugarcane, and I ride through
wide fields of the broad-leafed tobacco-plant.
Here grow the jalap and the guaiacum, the sweet-scented
sassafras and the sanitary copaiba.
I ride onward, climbing steep ridges
and descending into chasms (barrancas) that
yawn deeply and gloomily. Many of these are
thousands of feet in depth; and the road that enables
me to reach their bottoms is often no more than a
narrow ledge of the impending cliff, running terrace-like
over a foaming torrent.
Still onward and upward I go, until
the “foot-hills” are passed, and I enter
a defile of the mountains themselves-a pass
of the Mexican Andes.
I ride through, under the shadow of
dark forests and rocks of blue porphyry. I emerge
upon the other side of the sierra. A new scene
opens before my eyes-a scene of such soft
loveliness that I suddenly rein up my horse, and gaze
upon it with mingled feelings of admiration and astonishment.
I am looking upon one of the “valles”
of Mexico, those great table-plains that lie within
the Cordilleras of the Andes, thousands of feet above
ocean-level, and, along with these mountains, stretching
from the tropic almost to the shores of the Arctic
Sea.
The plain before me is level, as though
its surface were liquid. I see mountains bounding
it on all sides; but there are passes through them
that lead into other plains (valus). These
mountains have no foot-hills. They stand
up directly from the plain itself, sometimes with
sloping conical sides-sometimes in precipitous
cliffs.
I ride into the plain and survey its
features. There is no resemblance to the land
I have left-the tierra caliente.
I am now in the tierra templada. New
objects present themselves-a new aspect
is before, a new atmosphere around me. The air
is colder, but it is only the temperature of spring.
To me it feels chilly, coming so lately from the
hot lands below; and I fold my cloak closely around
me, and ride on.
The view is open, for the valu
is almost treeless. The scene is no longer wild.
The earth has a cultivated aspect-an aspect
of civilisation: for these high plateaux-the
tierras templadas-are the seat of
Mexican civilisation. Here are the towns-the
great cities, with their rich cathedrals and convents-here
dwells the bulk of the population. Here the
rancho is built of unburnt bricks (adobe’s)-a
mud cabin, often inclosed by hedges of the columnar
cactus. Here are whole villages of such huts,
inhabited by the dark-skinned descendants of the ancient
Aztecs.
Fertile fields are around me.
I behold the maguey of culture (Agave Americana),
in all its giant proportions. The lance-like
blades of the zea maize wave with a rich rustling
in the breeze, for here that beautiful plant grows
in its greatest luxuriance. Immense plains are
covered with wheat, with capsicum, and the Spanish
bean (frijoles). My eyes are gladdened
by the sight of roses climbing along the wall or twining
the portal. Here, too, the potato (Solanum
tuberosum) flourishes in its native soil; the
pear and the pomegranate, the quince and the apple,
are seen in the orchard; and the cereals of the temperate
zone grow side by side with the Cucurbitacece
of the tropics.
I pass from one valu into another,
by crossing a low ridge of the dividing mountains.
Mark the change! A surface of green is before
me, reaching on all sides to the mountain foot; and
upon this roam countless herds, tended by mounted
“vaqueros” (herdsmen).
I pass another ridge, and another
valid stretches before me. Again a change!
A desert of sand, over the surface of which move tall
dun columns of swirling dust, like the gigantic phantoms
of some spirit-world. I look into another valle,
and behold shining waters- lakes like inland
seas-with sedgy shores and surrounded by
green savannas, and vast swamps covered with reeds
and “tulares” (bulrush).
Still another plain, black with lava
and the scoriae of extinct volcanoes-black,
treeless, and herbless-with not an atom
of organic matter upon its desolate surface.
Such are the features of the plateau-land-varied,
and vast, and full of wild interest.
I leave it and climb higher-nearer
to the sky-up the steep sides of the Cordilleras-up
to the tierra fria.
I stand ten thousand feet above the
level of the ocean. I am under the deep shadows
of a forest. Huge trunks grow around me, hindering
a distant view. Where am I? Not in the
tropic, surely, for these trees are of a northern
sylva. I recognise the gnarled limbs and
lobed leaves of the oak, the silvery branches of the
mountain-ash, the cones and needles of the pine.
The wind, as it swirls among the dead leaves, causes
me to shiver; and high up among the twigs there is
the music of winter in its moaning. Yet I am
in the torrid zone; and the same sun that now glances
coldly through the boughs of the oak, but a few hours
before scorched me as it glistened from the fronds
of the palm-tree.
The forest opens, and I behold hills
under culture-fields of hemp and flax,
and the hardy cereals of the frigid zone. The
rancho of the husbandman is a log cabin, with shingled
roof and long projecting eaves, unlike the dwellings
either of the great valus or the tierras
calientes. I pass the smoking pits of the
“carbonero”, and I meet the “arriero”
with his “atajo” of mules heavily
laden with ice of the glaciers. They are passing
with their cargoes, to cool the wine-cups in the great
cities of the plains.
Upward and upward! The oak is
left behind, and the pine grows stunted and dwarfish.
The wind blows colder and colder. A wintry aspect
is around me.
Upward still. The pine disappears.
No vegetable form is seen save the mosses and lichens
that cling to the rocks, as within the Arctic Circle.
I am on the selvage of the snow-the eternal
snow. I walk upon glaciers, and through their
translucent mass I behold the lichens growing beneath.
The scene is bleak and desolate, and
I am chilled to the marrow of my bones.
Excelsior! excelsior!
The highest point is not yet reached. Through
drifts of snow and over fields of ice, up steep ledges,
along the slippery escarpment that overhangs the giddy
abysm, with wearied knees, and panting breath, and
frozen fingers, onward and upward I go. Ha!
I have won the goal. I am on the summit!
I stand on the “cumbre”
of Orizava-the mountain of the “burning
star”- more than three miles above
the ocean level. My face is turned to the east,
and I look downward. The snow, the cincture of
lichens and naked rocks, the dark belt of pines, the
lighter foliage of the oaks, the fields of barley,
the waving maize, the thickets of yucca and acacia
trees, the palm forest, the shore, the sea itself with
its azure waves- all these at a single
vision! From the summit of Orizava to the shores
of the Mexican Sea, I glance through every gradation
of the thermal line. I am looking, as it were,
from the pole to the equator!
I am alone. My brain is giddy.
My pulse vibrates irregularly, and my heart beats
with an audible distinctness. I am oppressed
with a sense of my own nothingness-an atom,
almost invisible, upon the breast of the mighty earth.
I gaze and listen. I see, but
I hear not. Here is sight, but no sound.
Around me reigns an awful stillness-the
sublime silence of the Omnipotent, who alone is here.
Hark! the silence is broken!
Was it the rumbling of thunder? No. It
was the crash of the falling avalanche. I tremble
at its voice. It is the voice of the Invisible-the
whisper of a God!
I tremble and worship.
Reader, could you thus stand upon
the summit of Orizava, and look down to the shores
of the Mexican Gulf, you would have before you, as
on a map, the scene of our “adventures.”