HAVANA: Social, Religious and Judicial Tidbits
The warm bath round the corner is
a refreshment after a day’s railroad ride in
such heat; and there, in the front room, the man in
his shirt sleeves is serving out liquor, as before,
and the usual company of Créoles is gathered
about the billiard tables. After a dinner in the
handsome, airy restaurant of Le Grand’s, I drive
into the city in the evening, to the close streets
of the Extramuros, and pay a visit to the lady
whom I failed to see on my arrival. I am so fortunate
as to meet her, and beside the pleasure to be found
in her society, I am glad to be able to give her personal
information from her attached and sympathizing friends,
at the North.
While I am there, a tinkling sound
of bells is heard in the streets, and lights flash
by. It is a procession, going to carry the viaticum,
the last sacrament, to a dying person.
From this house, I drove towards the
water-side, past the Plaza de Armas, the old Plaza
de San Francisco, with its monastery turned into an
almacén (a store-house of merchandise,) through
the Calle de los Oficios, to the
boarding-house of Madame Almy, to call upon Dr. and
Mrs. Howe. Mr. Parker left Havana, as he intended,
last Tuesday, for Santa Cruz. He found Havana
rather too hot for his comfort, and Santa Cruz, the
most healthful and temperate of the islands, had always
been his destination. He had visited a few places
in the city, and among others, the College of Belen,
where he had been courteously received by the Jesuits.
I found that they knew his reputation as a scholar
and writer, and a leading champion of modern Theism
in America. Dr. Howe had called at Le Grand’s,
yesterday, to invite me to go with him to attend a
trial, at the Audiencia, which attracted a good
deal of interest among the Créoles. The
story, as told by the friends of Senor Maestri, the
defendant, is that in the performance of a judicial
duty, he discharged a person against whom the government
was proceeding illegally, and that this lead to a
correspondence between him and the authorities, which
resulted in his being deposed and brought to trial,
before the Audiencia, on a charge of disrespect to the Captain-General.
I have no means of learning the correctness of this statement, at present
“I say the tale as
’twas said to me.”
The cause has, at all events, excited
a deep interest among the Créoles, who see in
it another proof of the unlimited character of the
centralized power that governs them. I regret
that I missed a scene of so much interest and instruction.
Dr. Howe told me that Maestri’s counsel, Senor
Azcarate, a young lawyer, defended his friend courageously;
but the evidence being all in writing, without the
exciting conflicts and vicissitudes of oral testimony,
and the written arguments being delivered sitting;
there was not much in the proceedings to stimulate
the Creole excitability. No decision was given,
the Court taking time to deliberate. It seems
to have been a Montalembert trial, on a small theater.
To-night there is again a mascara
at the next door, but my room is now more remote,
and I am able to sleep through it. Once I awoke.
It was nearly five o’clock. The music was
still going on, but in softer and more subdued tones.
The drums and trumpets were hushed, and all had fallen,
as if by the magic touch of the approaching dawn, into
a trance of sound, a rondo of constantly returning
delicious melody, as nearly irresistible to the charmed
sense as sound can be conceived to be just
bordering on the fusing state between sense and spirit.
It is a contradanza of Cuba. The great bells
beat five, over the city; and instantly the music
ceases, and is heard no more. The watchmen cry
the hour, and the bells of the hospitals and convents
sound their matins, though it is yet dark.