'Midday, to-morrow, is the hour in which they have determined to
make the attempt. There is no time to be lost; let us,
therefore,
warn those of our townsmen who still
survive, in order that they
may make preparations for their defence.'
Whereupon the two friends proceeded to the chief magistrate, who
had been but
slightlyaffected by the
disorder; he heard the tale
of the bookseller with
horror and
astonishment, and
instantly took
the best measures possible for frustrating the designs of the
Gitanos; all the men
capable of
bearing arms in Logrono were
assembled, and weapons of every
description put in their hands. By
the advice of the bookseller all the gates of the town were shut,
with the
exception of the
principal one; and the little band of
defenders, which
barely amounted to sixty men, was stationed in the
great square, to which, he said, it was the
intention of the
Gitanos to
penetrate in the first
instance, and then, dividing
themselves into various parties, to sack the place. The bookseller
was, by general desire, constituted leader of the guardians of the
town.
It was
considerably past noon; the sky was overcast, and
tempestclouds,
fraught with
lightning and
thunder, were
hanging black and
horrid over the town of Logrono. The little troop, resting on
their arms, stood awaiting the
arrival of their
unnatural enemies;
rage fired their minds as they thought of the deaths of their
fathers, their sons, and their dearest relatives, who had perished,
not by the hand of God, but, like infected cattle, by the hellish
arts of Egyptian sorcerers. They longed for their appearance,
determined to wreak upon them a
bloodyrevenge; not a word was
uttered, and
profound silence reigned around, only interrupted by
the
occasional muttering of the
thunder-clouds. Suddenly, Alvarez,
who had been
intently listening, raised his hand with a significant
gesture;
presently, a sound was heard - a rustling like the waving
of trees, or the rushing of distant water; it gradually increased,
and seemed to proceed from the narrow street which led from the
principal gate into the square. All eyes were turned in that
direction. . . .
That night there was repique or ringing of bells in the towers of
Logrono, and the few priests who had escaped from the
pestilencesang litanies to God and the Virgin for the
salvation of the town
from the hands of the
heathen. The attempt of the Gitanos had been
most signally defeated, and the great square and the street were
strewn with their corpses. Oh! what
frightful objects: there lay
grim men more black than mulattos, with fury and rage in their
stiffened features; wild women in
extraordinary dresses, their
hair, black and long as the tail of the horse, spread all
dishevelled upon the ground; and gaunt and naked children grasping
knives and
daggers in their tiny hands. Of the
patriotic troop not
one appeared to have fallen; and when, after their enemies had
retreated with howlings of fiendish
despair, they told their
numbers, only one man was
missing, who was never seen again, and
that man was Alvarez.
In the midst of the
combat, the
tempest, which had for a long time
been
gathering, burst over Logrono, in
lightning,
thunder,
darkness, and
vehement hail.
A man of the town asserted that the last time he had seen Alvarez,
the latter was far in advance of his companions, defending himself
desperately against three powerful young
heathen, who seemed to be
acting under the direction of a tall woman who stood nigh, covered
with barbaric ornaments, and wearing on her head a rude silver
crown. (18)
Such is the tale of the Bookseller of Logrono, and such is the
narrative of the attempt of the Gitanos to sack the town in the
time of
pestilence, which is
alluded to by many Spanish authors,
but more particularly by the
learned Francisco de Cordova, in his
DIDASCALIA, one of the most curious and
instructive books within
the
circle of
universal literature.
CHAPTER IV
THE Moors, after their subjugation, and
previous to their expulsion
from Spain, generally
resided apart,
principally in the suburbs of
the towns, where they kept each other in
countenance, being hated
and despised by the Spaniards, and persecuted on all occasions. By
this means they preserved, to a certain
extent, the Arabic
language, though the use of it was
strictlyforbidden, and
encouraged each other in the secret exercise of the rites of the
Mohammedan religion, so that, until the moment of their final
expulsion, they continued Moors in almost every sense of the word.
Such places were called Morerias, or quarters of the Moors.
In like manner there were Gitanerias, or quarters of the Gitanos,
in many of the towns of Spain; and in more than one
instanceparticular barrios or districts are still known by this name,
though the Gitanos themselves have long since disappeared. Even in
the town of Oviedo, in the heart of the Asturias, a
province never
famous for Gitanos, there is a place called the Gitaneria, though
no Gitano has been known to
reside in the town within the memory of
man, nor indeed been seen, save, perhaps, as a chance
visitor at a
fair.
The exact period when the Gitanos first formed these colonies
within the towns is not known; the laws, however, which commanded
them to
abandon their wandering life under
penalty of banishment
and death, and to become
stationary in towns, may have induced them
first to take such a step. By the first of these laws, which was
made by Ferdinand and Isabella as far back as the year 1499, they
are commanded to seek out for themselves masters. This injunction
they utterly disregarded. Some of them for fear of the law, or
from the hope of bettering their condition, may have settled down
in the towns, cities, and villages for a time, but to expect that a
people, in whose bosoms was so deeply rooted the love of lawless
independence, would subject themselves to the yoke of servitude,
from any
motivewhatever, was going too far; as well might it have
been expected, according to the words of the great poet of Persia,
THAT THEY WOULD HAVE WASHED THEIR SKINS WHITE.
In these Gitanerias,
therefore, many Gypsy families
resided, but
ever in the Gypsy fashion, in filth and in
misery, with little of
the fear of man, and nothing of the fear of God before their eyes.
Here the
swarthy children basked naked in the sun before the doors;
here the women prepared love draughts, or told the buena ventura;
and here the men plied the trade of the
blacksmith, a
forbiddenoccupation, or prepared for sale, by disguising them, animals
stolen by themselves or their accomplices. In these places were
harboured the strange Gitanos on their
arrival, and here were
discussed in the Rommany language, which, like the Arabic, was
forbidden under
severe penalties, plans of fraud and
plunder, which
were perhaps intended to be carried into effect in a distant
province and a distant city.
The great body, however, of the Gypsy race in Spain continued
independent wanderers of the plains and the mountains, and indeed
the denizens of the Gitanerias were
continually" target="_blank" title="ad.不断地,频繁地">
continually sallying forth,
either for the purpose of reuniting themselves with the wandering
tribes, or of strolling about from town to town, and from fair to
fair. Hence the
continualcomplaints in the Spanish laws against
the Gitanos who have left their places of domicile, from doing
which they were interdicted, even as they were interdicted from
speaking their language and following the occupations of the
blacksmith and horse-dealer, in which they still
persist even at
the present day.
The Gitanerias at evening fall were frequently resorted to by
individuals widely differing in station from the inmates of these
places - we
allude to the young and dissolute
nobility and hidalgos
of Spain. This was generally the time of mirth and
festival, and
the Gitanos, male and
female, danced and sang in the Gypsy fashion
beneath the smile of the moon. The Gypsy women and girls were the
principal attractions to these
visitors; wild and
singular as these
females are in their appearance, there can be no doubt, for the
fact has been frequently proved, that they are
capable of exciting
passion of the most
ardentdescription, particularly in the bosoms
of those who are not of their race, which
passion of course becomes
the more
violent when the almost utter
impossibility of gratifying
it is known. No
females in the world can be more licentious in