warfare, and not unfrequently under no
pretence at all, have
committed the most
frightful excesses, plundering and murdering the
defenceless. Such a state of things would have afforded the
Gitanos a favourable opportunity to resume their former kind of
life, and to levy contributions as
formerly, wandering about in
bands. Certain it is, however, that they have not sought to repeat
their ancient excesses,
takingadvantage of the troubles of the
country; they have gone on, with a few exceptions, quietly pursuing
that part of their
system to which they still cling, their
jockeyism, which, though based on fraud and
robbery, is far
preferable to wandering brigandage, which
necessarily involves the
frequent shedding of blood. Can better proof be adduced, that
Gitanismo owes its decline, in Spain, not to force, not to
persecution, not to any want of opportunity of exercising it, but
to some other cause? - and we repeat that we consider the principal
if not the only cause of the decline of Gitanismo to be the
conferring on the Gitanos the rights and privileges of other
subjects.
We have said that the Gitanos have not much availed themselves of
the
permission, which the law grants them, of embarking in various
spheres of life. They remain jockeys, but they have ceased to be
wanderers; and the grand object of the law is
accomplished. The
law forbids them to be jockeys, or to follow the trade of trimming
and shearing animals, without some other
visible mode of
subsistence. This
provision, except in a few isolated
instances,
they evade; and the law seeks not, and perhaps
wisely, to disturb
them, content with having achieved so much. The chief evils of
Gitanismo which still remain consist in the
systematic frauds of
the Gypsy jockeys and the tricks of the women. It is incurring
considerable risk to purchase a horse or a mule, even from the most
respectable Gitano, without a
previous knowledge of the animal and
his former possessor, the chances being that it is either diseased
or
stolen from a distance. Of the practices of the
females,
something will be said in particular in a future chapter.
The Gitanos in general are very poor, a pair of large cachas and
various
scissors of a smaller
description constituting their whole
capital;
occasionally a good hit is made, as they call it, but the
money does not last long, being quickly squandered in feasting and
revelry. He who has
habitually in his house a couple of donkeys is
considered a thriving Gitano; there are some, however, who are
wealthy in the
strict sense of the word, and carry on a very
extensive trade in horses and mules. These,
occasionally, visit
the most distant fairs, traversing the greatest part of Spain.
There is a
celebrated cattle-fair held at Leon on St. John's or
Midsummer Day, and on one of these occasions, being present, I
observed a small family of Gitanos, consisting of a man of about
fifty, a
female of the same age, and a handsome young Gypsy, who
was their son; they were
richly dressed after the Gypsy fashion,
the men wearing zamarras with massy clasps and knobs of silver, and
the woman a
species of riding-dress with much gold
embroidery, and
having
immense gold rings attached to her ears. They came from
Murcia, a distance of one hundred leagues and
upwards. Some
merchants, to whom I was recommended, informed me that they had
credit on their house to the
amount of twenty thousand dollars.
They
experienced rough
treatment in the fair, and on a very
singular
account: immediately on their appearing on the ground,
the horses in the fair, which, perhaps,
amounted to three thousand,
were seized with a sudden and
universal panic; it was one of those
strange incidents for which it is difficult to
assign a rational
cause; but a panic there was
amongst the brutes, and a
mighty one;
the horses neighed, screamed, and plunged, endeavouring to escape
in all directions; some appeared
absolutely possessed, stamping and
tearing, their manes and tails
stiffly erect, like the bristles of
the wild boar - many a rider lost his seat. When the panic had
ceased, and it did cease almost as suddenly as it had
arisen, the
Gitanos were
forthwith accused as the authors of it; it was said
that they intended to steal the best horses during the confusion,
and the keepers of the ground,
assisted by a rabble of chalans, who
had their private reasons for hating the Gitanos, drove them off
the field with sticks and cudgels. So much for having a bad name.
These
wealthy Gitanos, when they are not
ashamed of their blood or
descent, and are not addicted to proud fancies, or 'barbales,' as
they are called, possess great influence with the rest of their
brethren, almost as much as the rabbins
amongst the Jews; their
bidding is considered law, and the other Gitanos are at their
devotion. On the
contrary, when they prefer the society of the
Busne to that of their own race, and refuse to
assist their less
fortunate brethren in
poverty or in prison, they are regarded with
unbounded
contempt and abhorrence, as in the case of the rich Gypsy
of Badajoz, and are not unfrequently doomed to
destruction: such
characters are mentioned in their couplets:-
'The Gypsy fiend of Manga mead,
Who never gave a straw,
He would destroy, for very greed,
The good Egyptian law.
'The false Juanito day and night
Had best with
caution go;
The Gypsy carles of Yeira height
Have sworn to lay him low.'
However some of the Gitanos may
complain that there is no longer
union to be found
amongst them, there is still much of that fellow-
feeling which springs from a
consciousness of
proceeding from one
common
origin, or, as they love to term it, 'blood.' At present
their
system exhibits less of a
commonwealth than when they roamed
in bands
amongst the wilds, and
principally subsisted by foraging,
each individual contributing to the common stock, according to his
success. The interests of individuals are now more
distinct, and
that close
connection is of course dissolved which existed when
they wandered about, and their dangers, gains, and losses were felt
in common; and it can never be too often
repeated that they are no
longer a proscribed race, with no rights nor safety save what they
gained by a close and
intimate union. Nevertheless, the Gitano,
though he naturally prefers his own interest to that of his
brother, and envies him his gain when he does not expect to share
in it, is at all times ready to side with him against the Busno,
because the latter is not a Gitano, but of a different blood, and
for no other reason. When one Gitano confides his plans to
another, he is in no fear that they will be betrayed to the Busno,
for whom there is no
sympathy, and when a plan is to be executed
which requires co-operation, they seek not the
fellowship of the
Busne, but of each other, and if successful, share the gain like
brothers.
As a proof of the
fraternal feeling which is not unfrequently
displayed
amongst the Gitanos, I shall
relate a circumstance which
occurred at Cordova a year or two before I first visited it. One
of the poorest of the Gitanos murdered a Spaniard with the fatal
Manchegan knife; for this crime he was seized, tried, and found
guilty. Blood-shedding in Spain is not looked upon with much
abhorrence, and the life of the
culprit is seldom taken, provided
he can offer a bribe sufficient to induce the notary public to
report
favourably upon his case; but in this
instance money was of
no avail; the murdered individual left behind him powerful friends
and
connections, who were determined that justice should take its
course. It was in vain that the Gitanos exerted all their
influence with the authorities in
behalf of their comrade, and such
influence was not slight; it was in vain that they offered
extravagant sums that the
punishment of death might be commuted to
perpetual
slavery in the
dreary presidio of Ceuta; I was credibly
informed that one of the richest Gitanos, by name Fruto, offered
for his own share of the
ransom the sum of five thousand crowns,
whilst there was not an individual but contributed according to his
means -
nought availed, and the Gypsy was executed in the Plaza.
The day before the
execution, the Gitanos, perceiving that the fate
of their brother was sealed, one and all quitted Cordova, shutting
up their houses and carrying with them their horses, their mules,