MATANZAS AND ENVIRONS
Instead of the posada by the water-side,
I take up my quarters at a hotel kept by Ensor, an
American, and his sister. Here the hours, cooking,
and chief arrangements are in the fashion of the country,
as they should be, but there is more of that attention
to guests which we are accustomed to at home than
the Cuban hotels usually give.
The objects to be visited here are
the Cumbre and the valley of the Yumuri.
It is too late for a morning ride, and I put off my
visit until afternoon. Gazzaniga and some of
the opera troupe are here; and several Americans at
the hotel, who were at the opera last night, tell me
that the people of Matanzas made a handsome show,
and are of opinion that there was more beauty in the
boxes than we saw at the Villanueva. It appears,
too, that at the Retreta, in the Plaza de Armas,
when the band plays, and at evening promenades, the
ladies walk about, and do not keep to their carriages
as in Havana.
As soon as the sun began to decline,
I set off for the Cumbre, mounted on a pacer,
with a Negro for a guide, who rode, as I soon discovered,
a better nag than mine. We cross the stone bridges,
and pass the great hospital, which dominates over
the town. A regiment, dressed in seersucker and
straw hats, is drilling, by trumpet call, and drilling
well, too, on the green in front of the barracks while
we take our winding way up the ascent of the Cumbre.
The bay, town, and shipping lie beneath
us; the Pan rises in the distance to the height of
some 3,000 feet; the ocean is before us, rolling against
the outside base of the hills; and, on the inside,
lies the deep, rich, peaceful valley of the Yumuri.
On the top of the Cumbre, commanding the noblest
view of ocean and valley, bay and town, is the ingenio
of a Mr. Jenkes, a merchant bearing a name that would
put Spanish tongues to their trumps to sound, were
it not that they probably take refuge in the Don Guillermo,
or Don Enrique, of his Christian name. The estate
bears the name of La Victoria, and is kindly thrown
open to visitors from the city. It is said to
be a model establishment. The house is large,
in a classic style, and costly, and the Negro quarters,
the store-houses, mechanic shops, and sugar-house are
of dimensions indicating an estate of the first class.
On the way up from the city, several
fine points of sight were occupied by villas, all
of one story, usually in the Roman or Grecian style,
surrounded by gardens and shade-trees, and with every
appearance of taste and wealth.
It is late, but I must not miss the
Yumuri; so we dive down the short, steep descent,
and cross dry brooks and wet brooks, and over stones,
and along bridle-paths, and over fields without paths,
and by wretched hovels, and a few decent cottages,
with yelping dogs and cackling hens and staring children,
and between high, overhanging cliffs, and along the
side of a still lake, and after it is so dark that
we can hardly see stones or paths, we strike a bridle-path,
and then come out upon the road, and, in a few minutes
more, are among the gas-lights and noises of the city.
At the hotel, there is a New York
company who have spent the day at the Yumuri, and
describe a cave not yet fully explored, which is visited
by all who have time abounding in stalactites,
and, though much smaller, reminding one of the Mammoth
Cave of Kentucky.
I cannot leave Matanzas without paying
my respects to the family to whose kindness I owe
so much. Mr. Chartrand lives in a part of the
suburbs called Versailles, near the barracks, in a
large and handsome house, built after the style of
the country. There I spend an agreeable evening,
at a gathering of nearly all the family, sons and daughters,
and the sons-in-law and daughters-in-law. There
is something strangely cosmopolitan in many of the
Cuban families as in this, where are found
French origin, Spanish and American intermarriage,
education in Europe or the United States, home and
property in Cuba, friendships and sympathies and half
a residence in Boston or New York or Charleston, and
three languages at command.
Here I learn that the Thirty Millions
Bill has not passed, and, by the latest dates, is
not likely to pass.
My room at Ensor’s is on a level
with the court-yard, and a horse puts its face into
the grating as I am dressing, and I know of nothing
to prevent his walking in at the door, if he chooses,
so that the Negro may finish rubbing him down by my
looking-glass. Yet the house is neatly furnished
and cared for, and its keepers are attentive and deserving
people.