The intercourse between the Spaniards
and many of the foreigners residing at Manilla is
not very great, as the British here, as everywhere
else, appear to prefer associating with their own
countrymen to frequenting the houses of their Spanish
friends, even although quite sure of a cordial reception
there. The time for visiting is in the evening,
when there are numbers of impromptu conversaziones or
tertulias, as they are called of which the
Dons are very fond, and in which very many of their
evenings are passed.
Any one having a few Spanish acquaintances
is pretty sure to number among them some persons who,
from their own character, or that of some member of
their family, such as a pretty and pleasant wife,
or a handsome daughter, has generally many visitors
at his house, perhaps six, ten, or a dozen of an evening,
who call there without any preconcerted plan, and
sit down to play a round game at cards or gossip with
each other for an hour. Should there be ladies
of the party, music and dancing are probably the amusements
for an hour or two; you may, of course, escape and
go on to the house of some one else should the party
turn out to be dull, which, however, is very seldom
the case when Spaniards are the company, as every one
appears to exert himself to amuse and be amused to
the best of his power.
The time for evening visits is any
time after seven o’clock, for till about that
hour nearly all the white population are enjoying the
cool air on the Calyada, or on some of the other drives,
all of which are crowded with carriages from about
half-past five till that time of the evening.
Some of these équipages are handsome
enough, and are almost universally horsed by a pair
of the country ponies, there being only one or two
people who turn out with a pair of Sydney horses, and
very few who drive a single-horse vehicle, although
it is met with now and then. The only persons
allowed to drive four horses in their carriages are
the Governor and the Archbishop: this regulation
is frequently grumbled at by the Spanish Jehus, and
one gentleman, the colonel of a regiment, having applied
to the government for permission to indulge his taste
in this respect by driving a four-in-hand, was refused
it, so he had to content himself with turning out
with only three in his drag. With that number
of quadrupeds, however, he did a good deal to frighten
and amuse the world, apparently wishing to break his
neck, in which he very nearly succeeded on more than
one occasion; Spanish accomplishments in driving being
by no means equal to those general at home.
A young Spaniard who fills an important
office connected with the commerce of Manilla, a situation
he is said to owe more to the frailty of his mother,
a fair lady at the court of the late King of Spain,
whom he exactly resembles in appearance, temper, and
manners, than to any qualifications especially pointing
him out for the post, used frequently to assert his
royal blood by turning out a neat barouche and pair,
accompanied by two outriders, and certainly he looked
much smarter and better appointed than either of the
authorities driving four horses.
The expense of keeping horses is very
small, so that nearly all, except the very poorest
people, keep carriages, which in that climate are
considered more as necessaries of life than as luxuries,
and to a certain extent really are so; for the sun
most effectually prevents Europeans walking to any
distance during the heat of the day, and should any
one attempt doing so, a month of it is about time enough
seriously to injure or perhaps to kill him. About
sunset everybody is most glad to escape from the impure
air of the town and the crowded narrow streets, to
inhale the fresh breeze from the bay on the Calyada,
which is the most frequented drive.
Formerly all the ladies turned out
to drive without bonnets or coverings of any sort
on the head, but bowled along, seated in open carriages,
in about the same style of evening dress they would
appear in at a tertulia or the theatre, or, in fact,
at a ball-room. They were in the habit of spreading
a sort of gum, which washed easily off, over the hair
after it had been dressed, in order to keep out the
dust, &c.; but within the last two years several bonnets
have made their appearance in the carriages at the
drive, and I fear their general use will supersede
the former fashion, which from its simplicity allowed
their most striking beauties of eyes, hair, &c., to
be seen in a most charming manner.
Many of the Creole girls have very
handsome countenances, and there are not a few who
would be remarked upon as fine women by the side of
any European beauty: but they are generally seen
to most advantage in the evening, as their chief attraction
does not consist in freshness of complexion so much
as in fine features, which are often full of character
and lighted up by eyes as brilliant as they are soft.
Their figures are good, and their feet and ankles
quite unexceptionable, being generally very much more
neatly turned than those of my handsomest countrywomen.
As dress is a study which has a good
deal of their attention, they appear to understand
it pretty well, but show a marked fondness for gay
colours, as no doubt their pale complexions
require their aid more than when ruddy health is upon
their cheeks. In the forenoon the skin of a Creole
or Spanish beauty appears to be rather too pale to
please the general taste; and sometimes their colour
degenerates into sallowness, which I fancy may proceed
from their fondness for chocolate, that being very
largely consumed by all of them. This, and the
want of exercise, communicated a somewhat bilious
look to their appearance.
Many ladies, especially those from
the northern provinces of Spain, have sometimes the
beautiful white skins and the ruddy freshness of complexion
so much admired in my countrywomen; but, unfortunately,
that colour is not very lasting, as the first season
they pass in the Philippines is generally sufficient
to blanch their bloom, but it is very often succeeded
by a soft and delicate-looking paleness, which is
perhaps not a whit less dangerous to amatory bachelors
than the more brilliant colours which preceded it.
Although lively and talkative enough,
Spanish women seldom shine in conversation, which
perhaps is more owing to the narrow and defective
education they too often have in youth than to any
natural want of the quickness and tact to talk well.
Their manners are peculiarly soft
and pleasing, and their lively ingenuousness is extremely
seductive. Their accomplished management of the
fan has made it peculiarly their own weapon, and it
has been converted into an important auxiliary to
their natural good looks, both in attack and defence.
There are few things more striking to a stranger than
to see the ladies use it at the casino, when a number
of them are together, and while there is no want of
men to admire the graceful movement of the hand.
Mere children are constantly seen using it. It
is a ludicrous thing to watch one of these little creatures
going through a set of flirting motions with a fan,
should you look at her, copying no doubt the motions
or play with it from those of some grown-up sister
or gay mamma.
Foreign ladies seldom or never attain
the same degree of dexterity and ease in the use of
their fans, the climate they were born in not requiring
that it should be placed in their hands at an early
age.
The dress of Spanish ladies is becoming
every day more like the French modes, although some
elderly people still continue to use the country dress,
which, from its coolness, is much more comfortable
than the European habit; but it is rapidly going out,
and young Spanish ladies never appear to wear it,
as formerly they frequently did, within doors and
in the country.
The mantilla is very rarely seen,
except perhaps in the morning, when some fair penitent
goes or returns from one of the churches, all of which
are thrown open at a very early hour in the morning,
at or before daylight, to give the people an opportunity
of going there unostentatiously and unnoticed, to
say their prayers and get home again before any one,
but those on an errand similar to their own, is likely
to meet them in the streets.
Nearly all the women, after reaching
thirty years of age, get stout or fall off in flesh
and become very thin, for there apparently is very
little medium between the two degrees, as nearly all
the old women one sees are either very fat or very
thin. Of the two sorts the fat retain their good
looks the longest; for after attaining a certain age,
the thin women are seldom anything but atrociously
ugly, probably caused by the climate more than anything
else, as those Europeans who enjoy good health at
Manilla appear to become stout in that climate, while
those who get thin seldom appear to be well, and are
unable to stand a lengthened residence there.
In youth, however, their natural elasticity
of character prevents delicate girls getting sick,
if moderate care be taken of them, and they are generally
rather more slender figures than English girls, until
reaching about twenty-five, when they begin to get
fat or to become thin; at that age they look very
matronly.
Apropos des dames. Even in
these degenerate days, Spanish blood is as hot and
Castilian gentlemen are as gallant as any of those
of former times. Not long ago the following circumstance
happened at the casino: Don Camilo de T ,
a natural son of the late King of Spain, after dancing
with a female acquaintance, rejoined a group of acquaintances,
who were standing together in a knot, criticising
the appearance of their several fair friends, when
just as he joined them some one happened to say to
another that the lady he had just been dancing with
appeared to have padded her bosom. On hearing
this, Don Camilo took the speaker rather by surprise,
by calling out “It is a lie,” in a tone
loud enough to be heard by all near him, and by saying
that as he had just been dancing with that lady, he
knew that it was not so, and must resent the remark
as a personal affront. A duel took place in consequence,
in which the gallant was wounded in the sword arm,
which, by letting out a little of his hot blood, may
probably prevent a recurrence of such extreme devotion
to his fair acquaintances.