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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Hispanic Nations of the New World
+by William R. Shepherd
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+Title: The Hispanic Nations of the New World
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+Author: William R. Shepherd
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Hispanic Nations of the New World
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+
+
+
+Title: The Hispanic Nations of the New World, A Chronicle of our
+Southern Neighbors
+
+Author: William R. Shepherd
+
+THIS BOOK, VOLUME 50 IN THE CHRONICLES OF AMERICA SERIES, ALLEN
+JOHNSON, EDITOR, WAS DONATED TO PROJECT GUTENBERG BY THE JAMES J.
+KELLY LIBRARY OF ST. GREGORY'S UNIVERSITY; THANKS TO ALEV AKMAN.
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+Scanned by Dianne Bean. Proofed by Joseph Buersmeyer.
+
+
+THE HISPANIC NATIONS OF THE NEW WORLD, A CHRONICLE OF OUR
+SOUTHERN NEIGHBORS
+
+BY WILLIAM R. SHEPHERD
+
+NEW HAVEN: YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS
+TORONTO: GLASGOW, BROOK & CO.
+LONDON: HUMPHREY MILFORD
+OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
+
+1919
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+I. THE HERITAGE FROM SPAIN AND PORTUGAL
+
+II. "OUR OLD KING OR NONE"
+
+III. "INDEPENDENCE OR DEATH"
+
+IV. PLOUGHING THE SEA
+
+V. THE AGE OF THE DICTATORS
+
+VI. PERIL FROM ABROAD
+
+VII. GREATER STATES AND LESSER
+
+VIII. "ON THE MARGIN OF INTERNATIONAL LIFE"
+
+IX. THE REPUBLICS OF SOUTH AMERICA
+
+X. MEXICO IN REVOLUTION
+
+XI. THE REPUBLICS OF THE CARIBBEAN
+
+XII. PAN-AMERICANISM AND THE GREAT WAR
+
+BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
+
+
+
+THE HISPANIC NATIONS OF THE NEW WORLD
+
+CHAPTER I. THE HERITAGE FROM SPAIN AND PORTUGAL
+
+At the time of the American Revolution most of the New World
+still belonged to Spain and Portugal, whose captains and
+conquerors had been the first to come to its shores. Spain had
+the lion's share, but Portugal held Brazil, in itself a vast land
+of unsuspected resources. No empire mankind had ever yet known
+rivaled in size the illimitable domains of Spain and Portugal in
+the New World; and none displayed such remarkable contrasts in
+land and people. Boundless plains and forests, swamps and
+deserts, mighty mountain chains, torrential streams and majestic
+rivers, marked the surface of the country. This vast territory
+stretched from the temperate prairies west of the Mississippi
+down to the steaming lowlands of Central America, then up through
+tablelands in the southern continent to high plateaus, miles
+above sea level, where the sun blazed and the cold, dry air was
+hard to breathe, and then higher still to the lofty peaks of the
+Andes, clad in eternal snow or pouring fire and smoke from their
+summits in the clouds, and thence to the lower temperate valleys,
+grassy pampas, and undulating hills of the far south.
+
+Scattered over these vast colonial domains in the Western World
+were somewhere between 12,000,000 and 19,000,000 people subject
+to Spain, and perhaps 3,000,000, to Portugal; the great majority
+of them were Indians and negroes, the latter predominating in the
+lands bordering on the Caribbean Sea and along the shores of
+Brazil. Possibly one-fourth of the inhabitants came of European
+stock, including not only Spaniards and their descendants but
+also the folk who spoke English in the Floridas and French in
+Louisiana.
+
+During the centuries which had elapsed since the entry of the
+Spaniards and Portuguese into these regions an extraordinary
+fusion of races had taken place. White, red, and black had
+mingled to such an extent that the bulk of the settled population
+became half-caste. Only in the more temperate regions of the far
+north and south, where the aborigines were comparatively few or
+had disappeared altogether, did the whites remain racially
+distinct. Socially the Indian and the negro counted for little.
+They constituted the laboring class on whom all the burdens fell
+and for whom advantages in the body politic were scant. Legally
+the Indian under Spanish rule stood on a footing of equality with
+his white fellows, and many a gifted native came to be reckoned a
+force in the community, though his social position remained a
+subordinate one. Most of the negroes were slaves and were more
+kindly treated by the Spaniards than by the Portuguese.
+
+Though divided among themselves, the Europeans were everywhere
+politically dominant. The Spaniard was always an individualist.
+Besides, he often brought from the Old World petty provincial
+traditions which were intensified in the New. The inhabitants of
+towns, many of which had been founded quite independently of one
+another, knew little about their remote neighbors and often were
+quite willing to convert their ignorance into prejudice: The
+dweller in the uplands and the resident on the coast were wont to
+view each other with disfavor. The one was thought heavy and
+stupid, the other frivolous and lazy. Native Spaniards regarded
+the Creoles, or American born, as persons who had degenerated
+more or less by their contact with the aborigines and the
+wilderness. For their part, the Creoles looked upon the Spaniards
+as upstarts and intruders, whose sole claim to consideration lay
+in the privileges dispensed them by the home government. In
+testimony of this attitude they coined for their oversea kindred
+numerous nicknames which were more expressive than complimentary.
+While the Creoles held most of the wealth and of the lower
+offices, the Spaniards enjoyed the perquisites and emoluments of
+the higher posts.
+
+Though objects of disdain to both these masters, the Indians
+generally preferred the Spaniard to the Creole. The Spaniard
+represented a distant authority interested in the welfare of its
+humbler subjects and came less into actual daily contact with the
+natives. While it would hardly be correct to say that the
+Spaniard was viewed as a protector and the Creole as an
+oppressor, yet the aborigines unconsciously made some such hazy
+distinction if indeed they did not view all Europeans with
+suspicion and dislike. In Brazil the relation of classes was much
+the same, except that here the native element was much less
+conspicuous as a social factor.
+
+These distinctions were all the more accentuated by the absence
+both of other European peoples and of a definite middle class of
+any race. Everywhere in the areas tenanted originally by
+Spaniards and Portuguese the European of alien stock was
+unwelcome, even though he obtained a grudging permission from the
+home governments to remain a colonist. In Brazil, owing to the
+close commercial connections between Great Britain and Portugal,
+foreigners were not so rigidly excluded as in Spanish America.
+The Spaniard was unwilling that lands so rich in natural
+treasures should be thrown open to exploitation by others, even
+if the newcomer professed the Catholic faith. The heretic was
+denied admission as a matter of course. Had the foreigner been
+allowed to enter, the risk of such exploitation doubtless would
+have been increased, but a middle class might have arisen to weld
+the the discordant factions into a society which had common
+desires and aspirations. With the development of commerce and
+industry, with the growth of activities which bring men into
+touch with each other in everyday affairs, something like a
+solidarity of sentiment might have been awakened. In its absence
+the only bond among the dominant whites was their sense of
+superiority to the colored masses beneath them.
+
+Manual labor and trade had never attracted the Spaniards and the
+Portuguese. The army, the church, and the law were the three
+callings that offered the greatest opportunity for distinction.
+Agriculture, grazing, and mining they did not disdain, provided
+that superintendence and not actual work was the main requisite.
+The economic organization which the Spaniards and Portuguese
+established in America was naturally a more or less faithful
+reproduction of that to which they had been accustomed at home.
+Agriculture and grazing became the chief occupations. Domestic
+animals and many kinds of plants brought from Europe throve
+wonderfully in their new home. Huge estates were the rule; small
+farms, the exception. On the ranches and plantations vast droves
+of cattle, sheep, and horses were raised, as well as immense
+crops. Mining, once so much in vogue, had become an occupation of
+secondary importance.
+
+On their estates the planter, the ranchman, and the mine owner
+lived like feudal overlords, waited upon by Indian and negro
+peasants who also tilled the fields, tended the droves, and dug
+the earth for precious metals and stones. Originally the natives
+had been forced to work under conditions approximating actual
+servitude, but gradually the harsher features of this system had
+given way to a mode of service closely resembling peonage. Paid a
+pitifully small wage, provided with a hut of reeds or sundried
+mud and a tiny patch of soil on which to grow a few hills of the
+corn and beans that were his usual nourishment, the ordinary
+Indian or half-caste laborer was scarcely more than a beast of
+burden, a creature in whom civic virtues of a high order were not
+likely to develop. If he betook himself to the town his possible
+usefulness lessened in proportion as he fell into drunken or
+dissolute habits, or lapsed into a state of lazy and vacuous
+dreaminess, enlivened only by chatter or the rolling of a
+cigarette. On the other hand, when employed in a capacity where
+native talent might be tested, he often revealed a power of
+action which, if properly guided, could be turned to excellent
+account. As a cowboy, for example, he became a capital horseman,
+brave, alert, skillful, and daring.
+
+Commerce with Portugal and Spain was long confined to yearly
+fairs and occasional trading fleets that plied between fixed
+points. But when liberal decrees threw open numerous ports in the
+mother countries to traffic and the several colonies were given
+also the privilege of exchanging their products among themselves,
+the volume of exports and imports increased and gave an impetus
+to activity which brought a notable release from the torpor and
+vegetation characterizing earlier days. Yet, even so,
+communication was difficult and irregular. By sea the distances
+were great and the vessels slow. Overland the natural obstacles
+to transportation were so numerous and the methods of conveyance
+so cumbersome and expensive that the people of one province were
+practically strangers to their neighbors.
+
+Matters of the mind and of the soul were under the guardianship
+of the Church. More than merely a spiritual mentor, it controlled
+education and determined in large measure the course of
+intellectual life. Possessed of vast wealth in lands and
+revenues, its monasteries and priories, its hospitals and
+asylums, its residences of ecclesiastics, were the finest
+buildings in every community, adorned with the masterpieces of
+sculptors and painters. A village might boast of only a few
+squalid huts, yet there in the "plaza," or central square, loomed
+up a massively imposing edifice of worship, its towers pointing
+heavenward, the sign and symbol of triumphant power.
+
+The Church, in fact, was the greatest civilizing agency that
+Spain and Portugal had at their disposal. It inculcated a
+reverence for the monarch and his ministers and fostered a
+deep-rooted sentiment of conservatism which made disloyalty and
+innovation almost sacrilegious. In the Spanish colonies in
+particular the Church not only protected the natives against the
+rapacity of many a white master but taught them the rudiments of
+the Christian faith, as well as useful arts and trades. In remote
+places, secluded so far as possible from contact with Europeans,
+missionary pioneers gathered together groups of neophytes whom
+they rendered docile and industrious, it is true, but whom they
+often deprived of initiative and selfreliance and kept illiterate
+and superstitious.
+
+Education was reserved commonly for members of the ruling class.
+As imparted in the universities and schools, it savored strongly
+of medievalism. Though some attention was devoted to the natural
+sciences, experimental methods were not encouraged and found no
+place in lectures and textbooks. Books, periodicals, and other
+publications came under ecclesiastical inspection, and a vigilant
+censorship determined what was fit for the public to read.
+
+Supreme over all the colonial domains was the government of their
+majesties, the monarchs of Spain and Portugal. A ministry and a
+council managed the affairs of the inhabitants of America and
+guarded their destinies in accordance with the theories of
+enlightened despotism then prevailing in Europe. The Spanish
+dominions were divided into viceroyalties and subdivided into
+captaincies general, presidencies, and intendancies. Associated
+with the high officials who ruled them were audiencias, or
+boards, which were at once judicial and administrative. Below
+these individuals and bodies were a host of lesser functionaries
+who, like their superiors, held their posts by appointment. In
+Brazil the governor general bore the title of viceroy and carried
+on the administration assisted by provincial captains, supreme
+courts, and local officers.
+
+This control was by no means so autocratic as it might seem.
+Portugal had too many interests elsewhere, and was too feeble
+besides, to keep tight rein over a territory so vast and a
+population so much inclined as the Brazilian to form itself into
+provincial units, jealous of the central authority. Spain, on its
+part, had always practised the good old Roman rule of "divide and
+govern." Its policy was to hold the balance among officials,
+civil and ecclesiastical, and inhabitants, white and colored. It
+knew how strongly individualistic the Spaniard was and realized
+the full force of the adage, "I obey, but I do not fulfill! "
+Legislatures and other agencies of government directly
+representative of the people did not exist in Spanish or
+Portuguese America. The Spanish cabildo, or town council,
+however, afforded an opportunity for the expression of the
+popular will and often proved intractable. Its membership was
+appointive, elective, hereditary, and even purchasable, but the
+form did not affect the substance. The Spanish Americans had an
+instinct for politics. "Here all men govern," declared one of the
+viceroys; "the people have more part in political discussions
+than in any other provinces in the world; a council of war sits
+in every house."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II. "OUR OLD KING OR NONE"
+
+The movement which led eventually to the emancipation of the
+colonies differed from the local uprisings which occurred in
+various parts of South America during the eighteenth century.
+Either the arbitrary conduct of individual governors or excessive
+taxation had caused the earlier revolts. To the final revolution
+foreign nations and foreign ideas gave the necessary impulse. A
+few members of the intellectual class had read in secret the
+writings of French and English philosophers. Othershad traveled
+abroad and came home to whisper to their countrymen what they had
+seen and heard in lands more progressive than Spain and Portugal.
+The commercial relations, both licit and illicit, which Great
+Britain had maintained with several of the colonies had served to
+diffuse among them some notions of what went on in the busy world
+outside.
+
+By gaining its independence, the United States had set a
+practical example of what might be done elsewhere in America.
+Translated into French, the Declaration of Independence was read
+and commented upon by enthusiasts who dreamed of the possibility
+of applying its principles in their own lands. More powerful
+still were the ideas liberated by the French Revolution and
+Napoleon. Borne across the ocean, the doctrines of "Liberty,
+Fraternity, Equality "stirred the ardent-minded to thoughts of
+action, though the Spanish and Portuguese Americans who schemed
+and plotted were the merest handful. The seed they planted was
+slow to germinate among peoples who had been taught to regard
+things foreign as outlandish and heretical. Many years therefore
+elapsed before the ideas of the few became the convictions of the
+masses, for the conservatism and loyalty of the common people
+were unbelieveably steadfast.
+
+Not Spanish and Portuguese America, but Santo Domingo, an island
+which had been under French rule since 1795 and which was
+tenanted chiefly by ignorant and brutalized negro slaves, was the
+scene of the first effectual assertion of independence in the
+lands originally colonized by Spain. Rising in revolt against
+their masters, the negroes had won complete control under their
+remarkable commander, Toussaint L'Ouverture, when Napoleon
+Bonaparte, then First Consul, decided to restore the old regime.
+But the huge expedition which was sent to reduce the island ended
+in absolute failure. After a ruthless racial warfare,
+characterized by ferocity on both sides, the French retired. In
+1804 the negro leaders proclaimed the independence of the island
+as the "Republic of Haiti," under a President who, appreciative
+of the example just set by Napoleon, informed his followers that
+he too had assumed the august title of "Emperor"! His immediate
+successor in African royalty was the notorious Henri Christophe,
+who gathered about him a nobility garish in color and taste--
+including their sable lordships, the "Duke of Marmalade" and the
+"Count of Lemonade"; and who built the palace of "Sans Souci" and
+the countryseats of "Queen's Delight" and "King's Beautiful
+View," about which cluster tales of barbaric pleasure that rival
+the grim legends clinging to the parapets and enshrouding the
+dungeons of his mountain fortress of "La Ferriere." None of these
+black or mulatto potentates, however, could expel French
+authority from the eastern part of Santo Domingo. That task was
+taken in hand by the inhabitants themselves, and in 1809 they
+succeeded in restoring the control of Spain. Meanwhile events
+which had been occurring in South America prepared the way for
+the movement that was ultimately to banish the flags of both
+Spain and Portugal from the continents of the New World. As the
+one country had fallen more or less tinder the influence of
+France, so the other had become practically dependent upon Great
+Britain. Interested in the expansion of its commerce and viewing
+the outlying possessions of peoples who submitted to French
+guidance as legitimate objects for seizure, Great Britain in 1797
+wrested Trinidad from the feeble grip of Spain and thus acquired
+a strategic position very near South America itself. Haiti,
+Trinidad, and Jamaica, in fact, all became Centers of
+revolutionary agitation and havens of refuge for. Spanish
+American radicals in the troublous years to follow.
+
+Foremost among the early conspirators was the Venezuelan,
+Francisco de Miranda, known to his fellow Americans of Spanish
+stock as the "Precursor." Napoleon once remarked of him: "He is a
+Don Quixote, with this difference--he is not crazy . . . . The
+man has sacred fire in his soul." An officer in the armies of
+Spain and of revolutionary France and later a resident of London,
+Miranda devoted thirty years of his adventurous life to the cause
+of independence for his countrymen. With officials of the British
+Government he labored long and zealously, eliciting from them
+vague promises of armed support and some financial aid. It was in
+London, also, that he organized a group of sympathizers into the
+secret society called the "Grand Lodge of America." With it, or
+with its branches in France and Spain, many of the leaders of the
+subsequent revolution came to be identified.
+
+In 1806, availing himself of the negligence of the United States
+and having the connivance of the British authorities in Trinidad,
+Miranda headed two expeditions to the coast of Venezuela. He had
+hoped that his appearance would be the signal for a general
+uprising; instead, he was treated with indifference. His
+countrymen seemed to regard him as a tool of Great Britain, and
+no one felt disposed to accept the blessings of liberty under
+that guise. Humiliated, but not despairing, Miranda returned to
+London to await a happier day.
+
+Two British expeditions which attempted to conquer the region
+about the Rio de la Plata in 1806 and 1807 were also frustrated
+by this same stubborn loyalty. When the Spanish viceroy fled, the
+inhabitants themselves rallied to the defense of the country and
+drove out the invaders. Thereupon the people of Buenos Aires,
+assembled in cabildo abierto, or town meeting, deposed the
+viceroy and chose their victorious leader in his stead until a
+successor could be regularly appointed.
+
+Then, in 1808, fell the blow which was to shatter the bonds
+uniting Spain to its continental dominions in America. The
+discord and corruption which prevailed in that unfortunate
+country afforded Napoleon an opportunity to oust its feeble king
+and his incompetent son, Ferdinand, and to place Joseph Bonaparte
+on the throne. But the master of Europe underestimated the
+fighting ability of Spaniards. Instead of humbly complying with
+his mandate, they rose in arms against the usurper and created a
+central junta, or revolutionary committee, to govern in the name
+of Ferdinand VII, as their rightful ruler.
+
+The news of this French aggression aroused in the colonies a
+spirit of resistance as vehement as that in the mother country.
+Both Spaniards and Creoles repudiated the "intruder king."
+Believing, as did their comrades oversea, that Ferdinand was a
+helpless victim in the hands of Napoleon, they recognized the
+revolutionary government and sent great sums of money to Spain to
+aid in the struggle against the French. Envoys from Joseph
+Bonaparte seeking an acknowledgment of his rule were angrily
+rejected and were forced to leave.
+
+The situation on both sides of the ocean was now an extraordinary
+one. Just as the junta in Spain had no legal right to govern, so
+the officials in the colonies, holding their posts by appointment
+from a deposed king, had no legal authority, and the people would
+not allow them to accept new commissions from a usurper. The
+Church, too, detesting Napoleon as the heir of a revolution that
+had undermined the Catholic faith and regarding him as a godless
+despot who had made the Pope a captive, refused to recognize the
+French pretender. Until Ferdinand VII could be restored to his
+throne, therefore, the colonists had to choose whether they would
+carry on the administration under the guidance of the
+self-constituted authorities in Spain, or should themselves
+create similar organizations in each of the colonies to take
+charge of affairs. The former course was favored by the official
+element and its supporters among the conservative classes, the
+latter by the liberals, who felt that they had as much right as
+the people of the mother country to choose the form of government
+best suited to their interests.
+
+Each party viewed the other with distrust. Opposition to the more
+democratic procedure, it was felt, could mean nothing less than
+secret submission to the pretensions of Joseph Bonaparte; whereas
+the establishment in America of any organizations like those in
+Spain surely indicated a spirit of disloyalty toward Ferdinand
+VII himself. Under circumstances like these, when the junta and
+its successor, the council of regency, refused to make
+substantial concessions to the colonies, both parties were
+inevitably drifting toward independence. In the phrase of Manuel
+Belgrano, one of the great leaders in the viceroyalty of La
+Plata, "our old King or none" became the watchword that gradually
+shaped the thoughts of Spanish Americans.
+
+When, therefore, in 1810, the news came that the French army had
+overrun Spain, democratic ideas so long cherished in secret and
+propagated so industriously by Miranda and his followers at last
+found expression in a series of uprisings in the four
+viceroyalties of La Plata, Peru, New Granada, and New Spain. But
+in each of these viceroyalties the revolution ran a different
+course. Sometimes it was the capital city that led off; sometimes
+a provincial town; sometimes a group of individuals in the
+country districts. Among the actual participants in the various
+movements very little harmony was to be found. Here a particular
+leader claimed obedience; there a board of self-chosen
+magistrates held sway; elsewhere a town or province refused to
+acknowledge the central authority. To add to these complications,
+in 1812, a revolutionary Cortes, or legislative body, assembled
+at Cadiz, adopted for Spain and its dominions a constitution
+providing for direct representation of the colonies in oversea
+administration. Since arrangements of this sort contented many of
+the Spanish Americans who had protested against existing abuses,
+they were quite unwilling to press their grievances further.
+Given all these evidences of division in activity and counsel,
+one does not find it difficult to foresee the outcome.
+
+On May 25, 1810, popular agitation at Buenos Aires forced the
+Spanish viceroy of La Plata to resign. The central authority was
+thereupon vested in an elected junta that was to govern in the
+name of Ferdinand VII. Opposition broke out immediately. The
+northern and eastern parts of the viceroyalty showed themselves
+quite unwilling to obey these upstarts. Meantime, urged on by
+radicals who revived the Jacobin doctrines of revolutionary
+France, the junta strove to suppress in rigorous fashion any
+symptoms of disaffection; but it could do nothing to stem the
+tide of separation in the rest of the viceroyalty--in Charcas
+(Bolivia), Paraguay, and the Banda Oriental, or East Bank, of the
+Uruguay.
+
+At Buenos Aires acute difference of opinion--about the extent to
+which the movement should be carried and about the permanent form
+of government to be adopted as well as the method of establishing
+it--produced a series of political commotions little short of
+anarchy. Triumvirates followed the junta into power; supreme
+directors alternated with triumvirates; and constituent asmblies
+came and went. Under one authority or another the name of the
+viceroyalty was changed to "United Provinces of La Plata River";
+a seal, a flag ,and a coat of arms were chosen; and numerous
+features of the Spanish regime were abolished, including titles
+of nobility, the Inquisition, the slave trade, and restrictions
+on the press. But so chaotic were the conditions within and so
+disastrous the campaigns without, that eventually commissioners
+were sent to Europe, bearing instructions to seek a king for the
+distracted country.
+
+When Charcas fell under the control of the viceroy of Peru,
+Paraguay set up a regime for itself. At Asuncion, the capital, a
+revolutionary outbreak in 1811 replaced the Spanish intendant by
+a triumvirate, of which the most prominent member was Dr. Jose
+Gaspar Rodriguez de Francia. A lawyer by profession, familiar
+with the history of Rome, an admirer of France and Napoleon, a
+misanthrope and a recluse, possessing a blind faith in himself
+and actuated by a sense of implacable hatred for all who might
+venture to thwart his will, this extraordinary personage speedily
+made himself master of the country. A population composed chiefly
+of Indians, docile in temperament and submissive for many years
+to the paternal rule of Jesuit missionaries, could not fail to
+become pliant instruments in his hands. At his direction,
+therefore, Paraguay declared itself independent of both Spain and
+La Plata. This done, an obedient Congress elected Francia consul
+of the republic and later invested him with the title of
+dictator. In the Banda Oriental two distinct movements appeared.
+Montevideo, the capital, long a center of royalist sympathies and
+for some years hostile to the revolutionary government in Buenos
+Aires, was reunited with La Plata in 1814. Elsewhere the people
+of the province followed the fortunes of Jose Gervasio Artigas,
+an able and valiant cavalry officer, who roamed through it at
+will, bidding defiance to any authority not his own. Most of the
+former viceroyalty of La Plata had thus, to all intents and
+purposes, thrown off the yoke of Spain.
+
+Chile was the only other province that for a while gave promise
+of similar action. Here again it was the capital city that took
+the lead. On receipt of the news of the occurrences at Buenos
+Aires in May, 1810, the people of Santiago forced the captain
+general to resign and, on the 18th of September, replaced him by
+a junta of their own choosing. But neither this body, nor its
+successors, nor even the Congress that assembled the following
+year, could establish a permanent and effective government.
+Nowhere in Spanish America, perhaps, did the lower classes count
+for so little, and the upper class for so much, as in Chile.
+Though the great landholders were disposed to favor a reasonable
+amount of local autonomy for the country, they refused to heed
+the demands of the radicals for complete independence and the
+establishwent of a republic. Accordingly, in proportion as their
+opponents resorted to measures of compulsion, the gentry
+gradually withdrew their support and offered little resistance
+when troops dispatched by the viceroy of Peru restored the
+Spanish regime in 1814. The irreconcilable among the patriots
+fled over the Andes to the western part of La Plata, where they
+found hospitable refuge.
+
+But of all the Spanish dominions in South America none witnessed
+so desperate a struggle for emancipation as the viceroyalty of
+New Granada. Learning of the catastrophe that had befallen the
+mother country, the leading citizens of Caracas, acting in
+conjunction with the cabildo, deposed the captain general on
+April 19, 1810, and created a junta in his stead. The example was
+quickly followed by most of the smaller divisions of the
+province. Then when Miranda returned from England to head the
+revolutionary movement, a Congress, on July 5, 1811, declared
+Venezuela independent of Spain. Carried away, also, by the
+enthusiasm of the moment, and forgetful of the utter
+unpreparedness of the country, the Congress promulgated a federal
+constitution modeled on that of the United States, which set
+forth all the approved doctrines of the rights of man.
+
+Neither Miranda nor his youthful coadjutor, Simon Bolivar, soon
+to become famous in the annals of Spanish American history,
+approved of this plunge into democracy. Ardent as their
+patriotism was, they knew that the country needed centralized
+control and not experiments in confederation or theoretical
+liberty. They speedily found out, also, that they could not count
+on the support of the people at large. Then, almost as if Nature
+herself disapproved of the whole proceeding, a frightful
+earthquake in the following year shook many a Venezuelan town
+into ruins. Everywhere the royalists took heart. Dissensions
+broke out between Miranda and his subordinates. Betrayed into the
+hands of his enemies, the old warrior himself was sent away to
+die in a Spanish dungeon. And so the "earthquake" republic
+collapsed.
+
+But the rigorous measures adopted by the royalists to sustain
+their triumph enabled Bolivar to renew the struggle in 1813. He
+entered upon a campaign which was signalized by acts of barbarity
+on both sides. His declaration of "war to the death" was answered
+in kind. Wholesale slaughter of prisoners, indiscriminate
+pillage, and wanton destruction of property spread terror and
+desolation throughout the country. Acclaimed "Liberator of
+Venezuela" and made dictator by the people of Caracas, Bolivar
+strove in vain to overcome the half-savage llaneros, or cowboys
+of the plains, who despised the innovating aristocrats of the
+capital. Though he won a few victories, he did not make the cause
+of independence popular, and, realizing his failure, he retired
+into New Granada.
+
+In this region an astounding series of revolutions and
+counter-revolutions had taken place. Unmindful of pleas for
+cooperation, the Creole leaders in town and district, from 1810
+onward, seized control of affairs in a fashion that betokened a
+speedy disintegration of the country. Though the viceroy was
+deposed and a general Congress was summoned to meet at the
+capital, Bogota, efforts at centralization encountered opposition
+in every quarter. Only the royalists managed to preserve a
+semblance of unity. Separate republics sprang into being and in
+1813 declared their independence of Spain. Presidents and
+congresses were pitted against one another. Towns fought among
+themselves. Even parishes demanded local autonomy. For a while
+the services of Bolivar were invoked to force rebellious areas
+into obedience to the principle of confederation, but with scant
+result. Unable to agree with his fellow officers and displaying
+traits of moral weakness which at this time as on previous
+occasions showed that he had not yet risen to a full sense of
+responsibility, the Liberator renounced the task and fled to
+Jamaica.
+
+The scene now shifts northward to the viceroyalty of New Spain.
+Unlike the struggles already described, the uprisings that began
+in 1810 in central Mexico were substantially revolts of Indians
+and half-castes against white domination. On the 16th of
+September, a crowd of natives rose under the leadership of Miguel
+Hidalgo, a parish priest of the village of Dolores. Bearing on
+their banners the slogan, "Long live Ferdinand VII and down with
+bad government, " the undisciplined crowd, soon to number tens of
+thousands, aroused such terror by their behavior that the whites
+were compelled to unite in self-defense. It mattered not whether
+Hidalgo hoped to establish a republic or simply to secure for his
+followers relief from oppression: in either case the whites could
+expect only Indian domination. Before the trained forces of the
+whites a horde of natives, so ignorant of modern warfare that
+some of them tried to stop cannon balls by clapping their straw
+hats over the mouths of the guns, could not stand their ground.
+Hidalgo was captured and shot, but he was succeeded by Jose Maria
+Morelos, also a priest. Reviving the old Aztec name for central
+Mexico, he summoned a "Congress of Anahuac," which in 1813
+asserted that dependence on the throne of Spain was "forever
+broken and dissolved." Abler and more humane than Hidalgo, he set
+up a revolutionary government that the authorities of Mexico
+failed for a while to suppress.
+
+In 1814, therefore, Spain still held the bulk of its dominions.
+Trinidad, to be sure, had been lost to Great Britain, and both
+Louisiana and West Florida to the United States. Royalist
+control, furthermore, had ceased in parts of the viceroyalties of
+La Plata and New Granada. To regain Trinidad and Louisiana was
+hopeless: but a wise policy conciliation or an overwheming
+display of armed force might yet restore Spanish rule where it
+had been merely suspended.
+
+Very different was the course of events in Brazil. Strangely
+enough, the first impulse toward independence was given by the
+Portuguese royal family. Terrified by the prospective invasion of
+the country by a French army, late in 1807 the Prince Regent, the
+royal family, and a host of Portuguese nobles and commoners took
+passage on British vessels and sailed to Rio de Janeiro. Brazil
+thereupon became the seat of royal government and immediately
+assumed an importance which it could never have attained as a
+mere dependency. Acting under the advice of the British minister,
+the Prince Regent threw open the ports of the colony to the ships
+of all nations friendly to Portugal, gave his sanction to a
+variety of reforms beneficial to commerce and industry, and even
+permitted a printing press to be set up, though only for official
+purposes. From all these benevolent activities Brazil derived
+great advantages. On the other hand, the Prince Regent's aversion
+to popular education or anything that might savor of democracy
+and the greed of his followers for place and distinction
+alienated his colonial subjects. They could not fail to contrast
+autocracy in Brazil with the liberal ideas that had made headway
+elsewhere in Spanish America. As a consequence a spirit of unrest
+arose which boded ill for the maintenance of Portuguese rule.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III "INDEPNDENCE OR DEATH"
+
+The restoration of Ferdinand VII to his throne in 1814 encouraged
+the liberals of Spain, no less than the loyalists of Spanish
+America, to hope that the "old King" would now grant a new
+dispensation. Freedom of commerce and a fair measure of popular
+representation in government, it was believed, would compensate
+both the mother country for the suffering which it had undergone
+during the Peninsular War and the colonies for the trials to
+which loyalty had been subjected. But Ferdinand VII was a typical
+Bourbon. Nothing less than an absolute reestablishment of the
+earlier regime would satisfy him. On both sides of the Atlantic,
+therefore, the liberals were forced into opposition to the crown,
+although they were so far apart that they could not cooperate
+with each other. Independence was to be the fortune of the
+Spanish Americans, and a continuance of despotism, for a while,
+the lot of the Spaniards.
+
+As the region of the viceroyalty of La Plata had been the first
+to cast off the authority of the home government, so it was the
+first to complete its separation from Spain. Despite the fact
+that disorder was rampant everywhere and that most of the local
+districts could not or would not send deputies, a congress that
+assembled at Tucuman voted on July 9, 1816, to declare the
+"United Provinces in South America" independent. Comprehensive
+though the expression was, it applied only to the central part of
+the former viceroyalty, and even there it was little more than an
+aspiration. Mistrust of the authorities at Buenos Aires,
+insistence upon provincial autonomy, failure to agree upon a
+particular kind of republican government, and a lingering
+inclination to monarchy made progress toward national unity
+impossible. In 1819, to be sure, a constitution was adopted,
+providing for a centralized government, but in the country at
+large it encountered too much resistance from those who favored a
+federal government to become effective.
+
+In the Banda Oriental, over most of which Artigas and his
+horsemen held sway, chaotic conditions invited aggression from
+the direction of Brazil. This East Bank of the Uruguay had long
+been disputed territory between Spain and Portugal; and now its
+definite acquisition by the latter seemed an easy undertaking.
+Instead, however, the task turned out to be a truly formidable
+one. Montevideo, feebly defended by the forces of the Government
+at Buenos Aires, soon capitulated, but four years elapsed before
+the rest of the country could be subdued. Artigas fled to
+Paraguay, where he fell into the clutches of Francia, never to
+escape. In 1821 the Banda Oriental was annexed to Brazil as the
+Cisplatine Province.
+
+Over Paraguay that grim and somber potentate, known as "The
+Supreme One"--El Supremo--presided with iron hand. In 1817
+Francia set up a despotism unique in the annals of South America.
+Fearful lest contact with the outer world might weaken his
+tenacious grip upon his subjects, whom he terrorized into
+obedience, he barred approach to the country and suffered no one
+to leave it. He organized and drilled an army obedient to his
+will.. When he went forth by day, attended by an escort of
+cavalry, the doors and windows of houses had to be kept closed
+and no one was allowed on the streets. Night he spent till a late
+hour in reading and study, changing his bedroom frequently to
+avoid assassination. Religious functions that might disturb the
+public peace he forbade. Compelling the bishop of Asuncion to
+resign on account of senile debility, Francia himself assumed the
+episcopal office. Even intermarriage among the old colonial
+families he prohibited, so as to reduce all to a common social
+level. He attained his object. Paraguay became a quiet state,
+whatever might be said of its neighbors!
+
+Elsewhere in southern Spanish America a brilliant feat of arms
+brought to the fore its most distinguished soldier. This was Jose
+de San Martin of La Plata. Like Miranda, he had been an officer
+in the Spanish army and had returned to his native land an ardent
+apostle of independence. Quick to realize the fact that, so long
+as Chile remained under royalist control, the possibility of an
+attack from that quarter was a constant menace to the safety of
+the newly constituted republic, he conceived the bold plan of
+organizing near the western frontier an army--composed partly of
+Chilean refugees and partly of his own countrymen--with which he
+proposed to cross the Andes and meet the enemy on his own ground.
+Among these fugitives was the able and valiant Bernardo
+O'Higgins, son of an Irish officer who had been viceroy of Peru.
+Cooperating with O'Higgins, San Martin fixed his headquarters at
+Mendoza and began to gather and train the four thousand men whom
+he judged needful for the enterprise.
+
+By January, 1817, the "Army of the Andes" was ready. To cross the
+mountains meant to transport men, horses, artillery, and stores
+to an altitude of thirteen thousand feet, where the Uspallata
+Pass afforded an outlet to Chilean soil. This pass was nearly a
+mile higher than the Great St. Bernard in the Alps, the crossing
+of which gave Napoleon Bonaparte such renown. On the 12th of
+February the hosts of San Martin hurled themselves upon the
+royalists entrenched on the slopes of Chacabuco and routed them
+utterly. The battle proved decisive not of the fortunes of Chile
+alone but of those of all Spanish South America. As a viceroy of
+Peru later confessed, "it marked the moment when the cause of
+Spain in the Indies began to recede."
+
+Named supreme director by the people of Santiago, O'Higgins
+fought vigorously though ineffectually to drive out the royalists
+who, reinforced from Peru, held the region south of the capital.
+That he failed did not deter him from having a vote taken under
+military auspices, on the strength of which, on February 12,
+1818, he declared Chile an independent nation, the date of the
+proclamation being changed to the 1st of January, so as to make
+the inauguration of the new era coincident with the entry of the
+new year. San Martin, meanwhile, had been collecting
+reinforcements with which to strike the final blow. On the 5th of
+April, the Battle of Maipo gave him the victory he desired.
+Except for a few isolated points to the southward, the power of
+Spain had fallen.
+
+Until the fall of Napoleon in 1815 it had been the native
+loyalists who had supported the cause of the mother country in
+the Spanish dominions. Henceforth, free from the menace of the
+European dictator, Spain could look to her affairs in America,
+and during the next three years dispatched twenty-five thousand
+men to bring the eolonies to obedience. These soldiers began
+their task in the northern part of South America, and there they
+ended it--in failure. To this failure the defection of native
+royalists contributed, for they were alienated not so much by the
+presence of the Spanish troops as by the often merciless severity
+that marked their conduct. The atrocities may have been provoked
+by the behavior of their opponents; but, be this as it may, the
+patriots gained recruits after each victory.
+
+A Spanish army of more than ten thousand, under the command of
+Pablo Morillo, arrived in Venezuela in April, 1815. He found the
+province relatively tranquil and even disposed to welcome the
+full restoration of royal government. Leaving a garrison
+sufficient for the purpose of military occupation, Morillo sailed
+for Cartagena, the key to New Granada. Besieged by land and sea,
+the inhabitants of the town maintained for upwards of three
+months a resistance which, in its heroism, privation, and
+sacrifice, recalled the memorable defense of Saragossa in the
+mother country against the French seven years before. With
+Cartagena taken, regulars and loyalists united to stamp out the
+rebellion elsewhere. At Bogoth, in particular, the new Spanish
+viceroy installed by Morillo waged a savage war on all suspected
+of aiding the patriot cause. He did not spare even women, and one
+of his victims was a young heroine, Policarpa Salavarrieta by
+name. Though for her execution three thousand soldiers were
+detailed, the girl was unterrified by her doom and was earnestly
+beseeching the loyalists among them to turn their arms against
+the enemies of their country when a volley stretched her lifeless
+on the ground.
+
+Meanwhile Bolivar had been fitting out, in Haiti and in the Dutch
+island of Curacao, an expedition to take up anew the work of
+freeing Venezuela. Hardly had the Liberator landed in May, 1816,
+when dissensions with his fellow officers frustrated any prospect
+of success. Indeed they obliged him to seek refuge once more in
+Haiti. Eventually, however, most of the patriot leaders became
+convinced that, if they were to entertain a hope of success, they
+must entrust their fortunes to Bolivar as supreme commander.
+Their chances of success were increased furthermore by the
+support of the llaneros who had been won over to the cause of
+independence. Under their redoubtable chieftain, Jose Antonio
+Paez, these fierce and ruthless horsemen performed many a feat of
+valor in the campaigns which followed.
+
+Once again on Venezuelan soil, Bolivar determined to transfer his
+operations to the eastern part of the country, which seemed to
+offer better strategic advantages than the region about Caracas.
+But even here the jealousy of his officers, the insubordination
+of the free lances, the stubborn resistance of the loyalists--
+upheld by the wealthy and conservative classes and the able
+generalship of Morillo, who had returned from New Granada--made
+the situation of the Liberator all through 1817 and 1818
+extremely precarious. Happily for his fading fortunes, his hands
+were strengthened from abroad. The United States had recognized
+the belligerency of several of the revolutionary governments in
+South America and had sent diplomatic agents to them. Great
+Britain had blocked every attempt of Ferdinand VII to obtain help
+from the Holy Alliance in reconquering his dominions. And
+Ferdinand had contributed to his own undoing by failing to heed
+the urgent requests of Morillo for reinforcements to fill his
+dwindling ranks. More decisive still were the services of some
+five thousand British, Irish, French, and German volunteers, who
+were often the mainstay of Bolivar and his lieutenants during the
+later phases of the struggle, both in Venezuela and elsewhere.
+
+For some time the Liberator had been evolving a plan of attack
+upon the royalists in New Granada, similar to the offensive
+campaign which San Martin had conducted in Chile. More than that,
+he had conceived the idea, once independence had been attained,
+of uniting the western part of the viceroyalty with Venezuela
+into a single republic. The latter plan he laid down before a
+Congress which assembled at Angostura in February, 1819, and
+which promptly chose him President of the republic and vested him
+with the powers of dictator. In June, at the head of 2100 men, he
+started on his perilous journey over the Andes.
+
+Up through the passes and across bleak plateaus the little army
+struggled till it reached the banks of the rivulet of Boyaca, in
+the very heart of New Granada. Here, on the 7th of August,
+Bolivar inflicted on the royalist forces a tremendous defeat that
+gave the deathblow to the domination of Spain in northern South
+America. On his triumphal return to Angostura, the Congress
+signalized the victory by declaring the whole of the viceroyalty
+an independent state under the name of the "Republic of Colombia"
+and chose the Liberator as its provisional President. Two years
+later, a fundamental law it had adopted was ratified with certain
+changes by another Congress assembled at Rosario de Cucuta, and
+Bolivar was made permanent President.
+
+Southward of Colombia lay the viceroyalty of Peru, the oldest,
+richest, and most conservative of the larger Spanish dominions on
+the continent. Intact, except for the loss of Chile, it had found
+territorial compensation by stretching its power over the
+provinces of Quito and Charcas, the one wrenched off from the
+former New Granada, the other torn away from what had been La
+Plata. Predominantly royalist in sentiment, it was like a huge
+wedge thrust in between the two independent areas. By thus
+cutting off the patriots of the north from their comrades in the
+south, it threatened both with destruction of their liberty.
+
+Again fortune intervened from abroad, this time directly from
+Spain itself. Ferdinand VII, who had gathered an army of twenty
+thousand men at Cadiz, was ready to deliver a crushing blow at
+the colonies when in January, 1890, a mutiny among the troops and
+revolution throughout the country entirely frustrated the plan.
+But although that reactionary monarch was compelled to accept the
+Constitution of 1819, the Spanish liberals were unwilling to
+concede to their fellows in America anything more substantial
+than representation in the Cortes. Independence they would not
+tolerate. On the other hand, the example of the mother country in
+arms against its King in the name of liberty could not fail to
+give heart to the cause of liberation in the provinces oversea
+and to hasten its achievement.
+
+The first important efforts to profit by this situation were made
+by the patriots in Chile. Both San Martin and O'Higgins had
+perceived that the only effective way to eliminate the Peruvian
+wedge was to gain control of its approaches by sea. The Chileans
+had already won some success in this direction when the fiery and
+imperious Scotch sailor, Thomas Cochrane, Earl of Dundonald,
+appeared on the scene and offered to organize a navy. At length a
+squadron was put under his command. With upwards of four thousand
+troops in charge of San Martin the expedition set sail for Peru
+late in August, 1820.
+
+While Cochrane busied himself in destroying the Spanish blockade,
+his comrade in arms marched up to the very gates of Lima, the
+capital, and everywhere aroused enthusiasm for emancipation. When
+negotiations, which had been begun by the viceroy and continued
+by a special commissioner from Spain, failed to swerve the
+patriot leader from his demand for a recognition of independence,
+the royalists decided to evacuate the town and to withdraw into
+the mountainous region of the interior. San Martin, thereupon,
+entered the capital at the head of his army of liberation and
+summoned the inhabitants to a town meeting at which they might
+determine for themselves what action should be taken. The result
+was easily foreseen. On July 28, 1821, Peru was declared
+independent, and a few days later San Martin was invested with
+supreme command under the title of "Protector."
+
+But the triumph of the new Protector did not last long. For some
+reason he failed to understand that the withdrawal of the
+royalists from the neighborhood of the coast was merely a
+strategic retreat that made the occupation of the capital a more
+or less empty performance. This blunder and a variety of other
+mishaps proved destined to blight his military career.
+Unfortunate in the choice of his subordinates and unable to
+retain their confidence; accused of irresolution and even of
+cowardice; abandoned by Cochrane, who sailed off to Chile and
+left the army stranded; incapable of restraining his soldiers
+from indulgence in the pleasures of Lima; now severe, now lax in
+an administration that alienated the sympathies of the
+influential class, San Martin was indeed an unhappy figure. It
+soon became clear that he must abandon all hope of ever
+conquering the citadel of Spanish power in South America unless
+he could prevail upon Bolivar to help him.
+
+A junction of the forces of the two great leaders was perfectly
+feasible, after the last important foothold of the Spaniards on
+the coast of Venezuela had been broken by the Battle of Carabobo,
+on July 24, 1821. Whether such a union would be made, however,
+depended upon two things: the ultimate disposition of the
+province of Quito, lying between Colombia and Peru, and the
+attitude which Bolivar and San Martin themselves should assume
+toward each other. A revolution of the previous year at the
+seaport town of Guayaquil in that province had installed an
+independent government which besought the Liberator to sustain
+its existence. Prompt to avail himself of so auspicious an
+opportunity of uniting this former division of the viceroyalty of
+New Granada to his republic of Colombia, Bolivar appointed
+Antonio Jose de Sucre, his ablest lieutenant and probably the
+most efficient of all Spanish American soldiers of the time, to
+assume charge of the campaign. On his arrival at Guayaquil, this
+officer found the inhabitants at odds among themselves. Some,
+hearkening to the pleas of an agent of San Martin, favored union
+with Peru; others, yielding to the arguments of a representative
+of Bolivar, urged annexation to Colombia; still others regarded
+absolute independence as most desirable. Under these
+circumstances Sucre for a while made little headway against the
+royalists concentrated in the mountainous parts of the country
+despite the partial support he received from troops which were
+sent by the southern commander. At length, on May 24, 1822,
+scaling the flanks of the volcano of Pichincha, near the capital
+town of Quito itself, he delivered the blow for freedom. Here
+Bolivar, who had fought his way overland amid tremendous
+difficulties, joined him and started for Guayaquil, where he and
+San Martin were to hold their memorable interview.
+
+No characters in Spanish American history have called forth so
+much controversy about their respective merits and demerits as
+these two heroes of independence--Bolivar and San Martin. Even
+now it seems quite impossible to obtain from the admirers of
+either an opinion that does full justice to both; and foreigners
+who venture to pass judgment are almost certain to provoke
+criticism from one set of partisans or the other. Both Bolivar
+and San Martin were sons of country gentlemen, aristocratic by
+lineage and devoted to the cause of independence. Bolivar was
+alert, dauntless, brilliant, impetuous, vehemently patriotic, and
+yet often capricious, domineering, vain, ostentatious, and
+disdainful of moral considerations--a masterful man, fertile in
+intellect, fluent in speech and with pen, an inspiring leader and
+one born to command in state and army. Quite as earnest, equally
+courageous, and upholding in private life a higher standard of
+morals, San Martin was relatively calm, cautious, almost taciturn
+in manner, and slower in thought and action. He was primarily a
+soldier, fitted to organize and conduct expeditions, rather than,
+a man endowed with that supreme confidence in himself which
+brings enthusiasm, affection, and loyalty in its train.
+
+When San Martin arrived at Guayaquil, late in July, 1822, his
+hope of annexing the province of Quito to Peru was rudely
+shattered by the news that Bolivar had already declared it a part
+of Colombia. Though it was outwardly cordial and even effusive,
+the meeting of the two men held out no prospect of accord. In an
+interchange of views which lasted but a few hours, mutual
+suspicion, jealousy, and resentment prevented their reaching an
+effective understanding. The Protector, it would seem, thought
+the Liberator actuated by a boundless ambition that would not
+endure resistance. Bolivar fancied San Martin a crafty schemer
+plotting for his own advancement. They failed to agree on the
+three fundamental points essential to their further cooperation.
+Bolivar declined to give up the province of Quito. He refused
+also to send an army into Peru unless he could command it in
+person, and then he declined to undertake the expedition on the
+ground that as President of Colombia he ought not to leave the
+territory of the republic. Divining this pretext, San Martin
+offered to serve under his orders--a feint that Bolivar parried
+by protesting that he would not hear of any such self-denial on
+the part of a brother officer.
+
+Above all, the two men differed about the political form to be
+adopted for the new independent states. Both of them realized
+that anything like genuine democracies was quite impossible of
+attainment for many years to come, and that strong
+administrations would be needful to tide the Spanish Americans
+over from the political inexperience of colonial days and the
+disorders of revolution to intelligent self-government, which
+could come only after a practical acquaintance with public
+concerns on a large scale. San Martin believed that a limited
+monarchy was the best form of government under the circumstances.
+Bolivar held fast to the idea of a centralized or unitary
+republic, in which actual power should be exercised by a life
+president and an hereditary senate until the people, represented
+in a lower house, should have gained a sufficient amount of
+political experience.
+
+When San Martin returned to Lima he found affairs in a worse
+state than ever. The tyrannical conduct of the officer he had
+left in charge had provoked an uprising that made his position
+insupportable. Conscious that his mission had come to an end and
+certain that, unless he gave way, a collision with Bolivar was
+inevitable, San Martin resolved to sacrifice himself lest harm
+befall the common cause in which both had done such yeoman
+service. Accordingly he resigned his power into the hands of a
+constituent congress and left the country. But when he found that
+no happier fortune awaited him in Chile and in his own native
+land, San Martin decided to abandon Spanish America forever and
+go into selfimposed exile. Broken in health and spirit, he took
+up his residence in France, a recipient of bounty from a Spaniard
+who had once been his comrade in arms.
+
+Meanwhile in the Mexican part of the viceroyalty of New Spain the
+cry of independence raised by Morelos and his bands of Indian
+followers had been stifled by the capture and execution of the
+leader. But the cause of independence was not dead even if its
+achievement was to be entrusted to other hands. Eager to emulate
+the example of their brethren in South America, small parties of
+Spaniards and Creoles fought to overturn the despotic rule of
+Ferdinand VII, only to encounter defeat from the royalists. Then
+came the Revolution of 1820 in the mother country. Forthwith
+demands were heard for a recognition of the liberal regime.
+Fearful of being displaced from power, the viceroy with the
+support of the clergy and aristocracy ordered Agustin de
+Iturbide, a Creole officer who had been an active royalist, to
+quell an insurrection in the southern part of the country.
+
+The choice of this soldier was unfortunate. Personally ambitious
+and cherishing in secret the thought of independence, Iturbide,
+faithless to his trust, entered into negotiations with the
+insurgents which culminated February 24, 1821, in what was called
+the "Plan of Iguala." It contained three main provisions, or
+"guarantees," as they were termed: the maintenance of the
+Catholic religion to the exclusion of all others; the
+establishment of a constitutional monarchy separate from Spain
+and ruled by Ferdinand himself, or, if he declined the honor, by
+some other European prince; and the union of Mexicans and
+Spaniards without distinction of caste or privilege. A temporary
+government also, in the form of a junta presided over by the
+viceroy, was to be created; and provision was made for the
+organization of an "Army of the Three Guarantees."
+
+Despite opposition from the royalists, the plan won increasing
+favor. Powerless to thwart it and inclined besides to a policy of
+conciliation, the new viceroy, Juan O'Donoju, agreed to ratify it
+on condition--in obedience to a suggestion from Iturbide--that
+the parties concerned should be at liberty, if they desired, to
+choose any one as emperor, whether he were of a reigning family
+or not. Thereupon, on the 28th of September, the provisional
+government installed at the city of Mexico announced the
+consummation of an "enterprise rendered eternally memorable,
+which a genius beyond all admiration and eulogy, love and glory
+of his country, began at Iguala, prosecuted and carried into
+effect, overcoming obstacles almost insuparable"--and declared
+the independence of a "Mexican Empire." The act was followed by
+the appointment of a regency to govern until the accession of
+Ferdinand VII, or some other personage, to the imperial throne.
+Of this body Iturbide assumed the presidency, which carried with
+it the powers of commander in chief and a salary of 120,000
+pesos, paid from the day on which the Plan of Iguala was signed.
+O'Donoju contented himself with membership on the board and a
+salary of one-twelfth that amount, until his speedy demise
+removed from the scene the last of the Spanish viceroys in North
+America.
+
+One step more was needed. Learning that the Cortes in Spain had
+rejected the entire scheme, Iturbide allowed his soldiers to
+acclaim him emperor, and an unwilling Congress saw itself obliged
+to ratify the choice. On July 21, 1822, the destinies of the
+country were committed to the charge of Agustin the First.
+
+As in the area of Mexico proper, so in the Central American part
+of the viceroyalty of New Spain, the Spanish Revolution of 1820
+had unexpected results. Here in the five little provinces
+composing the captaincy general of Guatemala there was much
+unrest, but nothing of a serious nature occurred until after news
+had been brought of the Plan of Iguala and its immediate outcome.
+Thereupon a popular assembly met at the capital town of
+Guatemala, and on September 15, 1821, declared the country an
+independent state. This radical act accomplished, the patriot
+leaders were unable to proceed further. Demands for the
+establishment of a federation, for a recognition of local
+autonomy, for annexation to Mexico, were all heard, and none,
+except the last, was answered. While the "Imperialists" and
+"Republicans" were arguing it out, a message from Emperor Agustin
+announced that he would not allow the new state to remain
+independent. On submission of the matter to a vote of the
+cabildos, most of them approved reunion with the northern
+neighbor. Salvador alone among the provinces held out until
+troops from Mexico overcame its resistance.
+
+On the continents of America, Spain had now lost nearly all its
+its possessions. In 1822 the United States had already acquired
+East Florida on its own account, led off in recognizing the
+independence of the several republics. Only in Peru and Charcas
+the royalists still battled on behalf of the mother country. In
+the West Indies, Santo Domingo followed the lead of its sister
+colonies on the mainland by asserting in 1821 its independence;
+but its brief independent life was snuffed out by the negroes of
+Haiti, once more a republic, who spread their control over the
+entire island. Cuba also felt the impulse of the times. But,
+apart from the agitation of secret societies like the "Rays and
+Suns of Bolivar," which was soon checked, the colony remained
+tranquil.
+
+In Portuguese America the knowledge of what had occurred
+throughout the Spanish dominions could not fail to awaken a
+desire for independence. The Prince Regent was well aware of the
+discontent of the Brazilians, but he thought to allay it by
+substantial concessions. In 1815 he proceeded to elevate the
+colony to substantial equality with the mother country by joining
+them under the title of "United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and
+the Algarves." The next year the Prince Regent himself became
+King under the name of John IV. The flame of discontent,
+nevertheless, continued to smolder. Republican outbreaks, though
+quelled without much difficulty, recurred. Even the reforms which
+had been instituted by John himself while Regent, and which had
+assured freer communication with the world at large, only
+emphasized more and more the absurdity of permitting a feeble
+little land like Portugal to retain its hold upon a region so
+extensive and valuable as Brazil.
+
+The events of 1820 in Portugal hastened the movement toward
+independence. Fired by the success of their Spanish comrades, the
+Portuguese liberals forthwith rose in revolt, demanded the
+establishment of a limited monarchy, and insisted that the King
+return to his people. In similar fashion, also, they drew up a
+constitution which provided for the representation of Brazil by
+deputies in a future Cortes. Beyond this they would concede no
+special privileges to the colony. Indeed their idea seems to have
+been that, with the King once more in Lisbon, their own liberties
+would be secure and those of Brazil would be reduced to what were
+befitting a mere dependency. Yielding to the inevitable, the King
+decided to return to Portugal, leaving the young Crown Prince to
+act as Regent in the colony. A critical moment for the little
+country and its big dominion oversea had indubitably arrived.
+John understood the trend of the times, for on the eve of his
+departure he said to his son: "Pedro, if Brazil is to separate
+itself from Portugal, as seems likely, you take the crown
+yourself before any one else gets it!"
+
+Pedro was liberal in sentiment, popular among the Brazilians, and
+well-disposed toward the aspirations of the country for a larger
+measure of freedom, and yet not blind to the interests of the
+dynasty of Braganza. He readily listened to the urgent pleas of
+the leaders of the separatist party against obeying the
+repressive mandaes of the Cortes. Laws which abolished the
+central government of the colony and made the various provinces
+individually subject to Portugal he declined to notice. With
+equal promptness he refused to heed an order bidding him return
+to Portugal immediately. To a delegation of prominent Brazilians
+he said emphatically: "For the good of all and the general
+welfare of the nation, I shall stay." More than that, in May,
+1822, he accepted from the municipality of Rio de Janeiro the
+title of "Perpetual and Constitutional Defender of Brazil, " and
+in a series of proclamations urged the people of the country to
+begin the great work of emancipation by forcibly resisting, if
+needful, any attempt at coercion.
+
+Pedro now believed the moment had come to take the final step.
+While on a journey through the province of Sao Paulo, he was
+overtaken on the 7th of September, near a little stream called
+the Ypiranga, by messengers with dispatches from Portugal.
+Finding that the Cortes had annulled his acts and declared his
+ministers guilty of treason, Pedro forthwith proclaimed Brazil an
+independent state. The "cry of Ypiranga" was echoed with
+tremendous enthusiasm throughout the country. When Pedro appeared
+in the theater at Rio de Janeiro, a few days later, wearing on
+his arm a ribbon on which were inscribed the words "Independence
+or Death," he was given a tumultuous ovation. On the first day of
+December the youthful monarch assumed the title of Emperor, and
+Brazil thereupon took its place among the nations of America.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV. PLOUGHING THE SEA
+
+When the La Plata Congress at Tucuman took the decisive action
+that severed the bond with Spain, it uttered a prophecy for all
+Spanish America. To quote its language: "Vast and fertile
+regions, climates benign and varied, abundant means of
+subsistence, treasures of gold and silver . . . and fine
+productions of every sort will attract to our continent
+innumerable thousands of immigrants, to whom we shall open a safe
+place of refuge and extend a beneficent protection." More hopeful
+still were the words of a spokesman for another independent
+country: "United, neither the empire of the Assyrians, the Medes
+or the Persians, the Macedonian or the Roman Empire, can ever be
+compared with this colossal republic."
+
+Very different was the vision of Bolivar. While a refugee in
+Jamaica he wrote: "We are a little human species; we possess a
+world apart . . . new in almost all the arts and sciences, and
+yet old, after a fashion, in the uses of civil society. . . .
+Neither Indians nor Europeans, we are a species that lies midway
+. . . . Is it conceivable that a people recently freed of its
+chains can launch itself into the sphere of liberty without
+shattering its wings, like Icarus, and plunging into the abyss?
+Such a prodigy is inconceivable, never beheld." Toward the close
+of his career he declared: "The majority are mestizos, mulattoes,
+Indians, and negroes. An ignorant people is a blunt instrument
+for its own destruction. To it liberty means license, patriotism
+means disloyalty, and justice means vengeance." "Independence,"
+he exclaimed, "is the only good we have achieved, at the cost of
+everything else."
+
+Whether the abounding confidence of the prophecy or the anxious
+doubt of the vision would come true, only the future could tell.
+In 1822, at all events, optimism was the watchword and the total
+exclusion of Spain from South America the goal of Bolivar and his
+lieutenants, as they started southward to complete the work of
+emancipation which had been begun by San Martin.
+
+The patriots of Peru, indeed, had fallen into straits so
+desperate that an appeal to the Liberator offered the only hope
+of salvation. While the royalists under their able and vigilant
+leader, Jose Canterac, continued to strengthen their grasp upon
+the interior of the country and to uphold the power of the
+viceroy, the President chosen by the Congress had been driven by
+the enemy from Lima. A number of the legislators in wrath
+thereupon declared the President deposed. Not to be outdone, that
+functionary on his part declared the Congress dissolved. The
+malcontents immediately proceeded to elect a new chief
+magistrate, thus bringing two Presidents into the field and
+inaugurating a spectacle destined to become all too common in the
+subsequent annals of Spanish America.
+
+When Bolivar arrived at Callao, the seaport of Lima, in
+September, 1823, he acted with prompt vigor. He expelled one
+President, converted the other into a passive instrument of his
+will, declined to promulgate a constitution that the Congress had
+prepared, and, after obtaining from that body an appointment to
+supreme command, dissolved the Congress without further ado.
+Unfortunately none of these radical measures had any perceptible
+effect upon the military situation. Though Bolivar gathered
+together an army made up of Colombians, Peruvians, and remnants
+of San Martin's force, many months elapsed before he could
+venture upon a serious campaign. Then events in Spain played into
+his hands. The reaction that had followed the restoration of
+Ferdinand VII to absolute power crossed the ocean and split the
+royalists into opposing factions. Quick to seize the chance thus
+afforded, Bolivar marched over the Andes to the plain of Junin.
+There, on August 6, 1824, he repelled an onslaught by Canterac
+and drove that leader back in headlong flight. Believing,
+however, that the position he held was too perilous to risk an
+offensive, he entrusted the military command to Sucre and
+returned to headquarters.
+
+The royalists had now come to realize that only a supreme effort
+could save them. They must overwhelm Sucre before reinforcements
+could reach him, and to this end an army of upwards of ten
+thousand was assembled. On the 9th of December it encountered
+Sucre and his six thousand soldiers in the valley of Ayacucho, or
+"Corner of Death," where the patriot general had entrenched his
+army with admirable skill. The result was a total defeat for the
+royalists--the Waterloo of Spain in South America. The battle
+thus won by ragged and hungry soldiers--whose countersign the
+night before had been "bread and cheese"--threw off the yoke of
+the mother country forever. The viceroy fell wounded into their
+hands and Canterac surrendered. On receipt of the glorious news,
+the people of Lima greeted Bolivar with wild enthusiasm. A
+Congress prolonged his dictatorship amid adulations that bordered
+on the grotesque.
+
+Eastward of Peru in the vast mountainous region of Charcas, on
+the very heights of South America, the royalists still found a
+refuge. In January, 1825, a patriot general at the town of La Paz
+undertook on his own responsibility to declare the entire
+province independent, alike of Spain, Peru, and the United
+Provinces of La Plata. This action was too precipitous, not to
+say presumptuous, to suit Bolivar and Sucre. The better to
+control the situation, the former went up to La Paz and the
+latter to Chuquisaca, the capital, where a Congress was to
+assemble for the purpose of imparting a more orderly turn to
+affairs. Under the direction of the "Marshal of Ayacucho," as
+Sucre was now called, the Congress issued on the 6th of August a
+formal declaration of independence. In honor of the Liberator it
+christened the new republic "Bolivar"--later Latinized into
+"Bolivia"--and conferred upon him the presidency so long as he
+might choose to remain. In November, 1896, a new Congress which
+had been summoned to draft a constitution accepted, with slight
+modifications, an instrument that the Liberator himself had
+prepared. That body also renamed the capital "Sucre" and chose
+the hero of Ayacucho as President of the republic.
+
+Now, the Liberator thought, was the opportune moment to impose
+upon his territorial namesake a constitution embodying his ideas
+of a stable government which would give Spanish Americans
+eventually the political experience they needed. Providing for an
+autocracy represented by a life President, it ran the gamut of
+aristocracy and democracy, all the way from "censors" for life,
+who were to watch over the due enforcement of the laws, down to
+senators and "tribunes" chosen by electors, who in turn were to
+be named by a select citizenry. Whenever actually present in the
+territory of the republic, the Liberator was to enjoy supreme
+command, in case he wished to exercise it.
+
+In 1826 Simon Bolivar stood at the zenith of his glory and power.
+No adherents of the Spanish regime were left in South America to
+menace the freedom of its independent states. In January a
+resistance kept up for nine years by a handful of royalists
+lodged on the remote island of Chiloe, off the southern coast of
+Chile, had been broken, and the garrison at the fortress of
+Callao had laid down its arms after a valiant struggle. Among
+Spanish Americans no one was comparable to the marvelous man who
+had founded three great republics stretching from the Caribbean
+Sea to the Tropic of Capricorn. Hailed as the "Liberator" and the
+"Terror of Despots," he was also acclaimed by the people as the
+"Redeemer, the First-Born Son of the New World!" National
+destinies were committed to his charge, and equestrian statues
+were erected in his honor. In the popular imagination he was
+ranked with Napoleon as a peerless conqueror, and with Washington
+as the father of his country. That megalomania should have seized
+the mind of the Liberator under circumstances like these is not
+strange.
+
+Ever a zealous advocate of large states, Bolivar was an equally
+ardent partisan of confederation. As president of three
+republics--of Colombia actually, and of its satellites, Peru and
+Bolivia, through his lieutenants--he could afford now to carry
+out the plan that he had long since cherished of assembling at
+the town of Panama, on Colombian soil, an "august congress"
+representative of the independent countries of America. Here, on
+the isthmus created by nature to join the continents, the nations
+created by men should foregather and proclaim fraternal accord.
+Presenting to the autocratic governments of Europe a solid front
+of resistance to their pretensions as well as a visible symbol of
+unity in sentiment, such a Congress by meeting periodically would
+also promote friendship among the republics of the western
+hemisphere and supply a convenient means of settling their
+disputes.
+
+At this time the United States was regarded by its sister
+republics with all the affection which gratitude for services
+rendered to the cause of emancipation could evoke. Was it not
+itself a republic, its people a democracy, its development
+astounding, and its future radiant with hope? The pronouncement
+of President Monroe, in 1823, protesting against interference on
+the part of European powers with the liberties of independent
+America, afforded the clearest possible proof that the great
+northern republic was a natural protector, guide, and friend
+whose advice and cooperation ought to be invoked. The United
+States was accordingly asked to take part in the assembly--not to
+concert military measures, but simply to join its fellows to the
+southward in a solemn proclamation of the Monroe Doctrine by
+America at large and to discuss means of suppressing the slave
+trade.
+
+The Congress that met at Panama, in June, 1826, afforded scant
+encouragement to Bolivar's roseate hope of interAmerican
+solidarity. Whether because of the difficulties of travel, or
+because of internal dissensions, or because of the suspicion that
+the megalomania of the Liberator had awakened in Spanish America,
+only the four continental countries nearest the isthmus--Mexico,
+Central America, Colombia, and Peru--were represented. The
+delegates, nevertheless, signed a compact of "perpetual union,
+league, and confederation," provided for mutual assistance to be
+rendered by the several nations in time of war, and arranged to
+have the Areopagus of the Americas transferred to Mexico. None of
+the acts of this Congress was ratified by the republics
+concerned, except the agreement for union, which was adopted by
+Colombia.
+
+Disheartening to Bolivar as this spectacle was, it proved merely
+the first of a series of calamities which were to overshadow the
+later years of the Liberator. His grandiose political structure
+began to crumble, for it was built on the shifting sands of a
+fickle popularity. The more he urged a general acceptance of the
+principles of his autocratic constitution, the surer were his
+followers that he coveted royal honors. In December he imposed
+his instrument upon Peru. Then he learned that a meeting in
+Venezuela, presided over by Paez, had declared itself in favor of
+separation from Colombia. Hardly had he left Peru to check this
+movement when an uprising at Lima deposed his representative and
+led to the summons of a Congress which, in June, 1827, restored
+the former constitution and chose a new President. In Quito,
+also, the government of the unstable dictator was overthrown.
+
+Alarmed by symptoms of disaffection which also appeared in the
+western part of the republic, Bolivar hurried to Bogota. There in
+the hope of removing the growing antagonism, he offered his
+"irrevocable" resignation, as he had done on more than one
+occasion before. Though the malcontents declined to accept his
+withdrawal from office, they insisted upon his calling a
+constitutional convention. Meeting at Ocana, in April, 1828, that
+body proceeded to abolish the life tenure of the presidency, to
+limit the powers of the executive, and to increase those of the
+legislature. Bolivar managed to quell the opposition in
+dictatorial fashion; but his prestige had by this time fallen so
+low that an attempt was made to assassinate him. The severity
+with which he punished the conspirators served only to diminish
+still more the popular confidence which he had once enjoyed. Even
+in Bolivia his star of destiny had set. An outbreak of Colombian
+troops at the capital forced the faithful Sucre to resign and
+leave the country. The constitution was then modified to meet the
+demand for a less autocratic government, and a new chief
+magistrate was installed.
+
+Desperately the Liberator strove to ward off the impending
+collapse. Tkough he recovered possession of the division of
+Quito, a year of warfare failed to win back Peru, and he was
+compelled to renounce all pretense of governing it. Feeble in
+body and distracted in mind, he condemned bitterly the
+machinations of his enemies. "There is no good faith in
+Colombia," he exclaimed, "neither among men nor among nations.
+Treaties are paper; constitutions, books; elections, combats;
+liberty, anarchy, and life itself a torment."
+
+But the hardest blow was yet to fall. Late in December, 1829, an
+assembly at Caracas declared Venezuela a separate state. The
+great republic was rent in twain, and even what was left soon
+split apart. In May, 1830, came the final crash. The Congress at
+Bogota drafted a constitution, providing for a separate republic
+to bear the old Spanish name of "New Granada," accepted
+definitely the resignation of Bolivar, and granted him a pension.
+Venezuela, his native land, set up a congress of its own and
+demanded that he be exiled. The division of Quito declared itself
+independent, under the name of the "Republic of the Equator"
+(Ecuador). Everywhere the artificial handiwork of the Liberator
+lay in ruins. "America is ungovernable. Those who have served in
+the revolution have ploughed the sea, " was his despairing cry.
+
+Stricken to death, the fallen hero retired to an estate near
+Santa Marta. Here, like his famous rival, San Martin, in France,
+he found hospitality at the hands of a Spaniard. On December 17,
+1830, the Liberator gave up his troubled soul.
+
+While Bolivar's great republic was falling apart, the United
+Provinces of La Plata had lost practically all semblance of
+cohesion. So broad were their notions of liberty that the several
+provinces maintained a substantial independence of one another,
+while within each province the caudillos, or partisan chieftains,
+fought among themselves.
+
+Buenos Aires alone managed to preserve a measure of stability.
+This comparative peace was due to the financial and commercial
+measures devised by Bernardino Rivadavia, one of the most capable
+statesmen of the time, and to the energetic manner in which
+disorder was suppressed by Juan Manuel de Rosas, commander of the
+gaucho, or cowboy, militia. Thanks also to the former leader, the
+provinces were induced in 1826 to join in framing a constitution
+of a unitary character, which vested in the administration at
+Buenos Aires the power of appointing the local governors and of
+controlling foreign affairs. The name of the country was at the
+same time changed to that of the "Argentine Confederation"(c)-a
+Latin rendering of "La Plata."
+
+No sooner had Rivadavia assumed the presidency under the new
+order of things than dissension at home and warfare abroad
+threatened to destroy all that he had accomplished. Ignoring the
+terms of the constitution, the provinces had already begun to
+reject the supremacy of Buenos Aires, when the outbreak of a
+struggle with Brazil forced the contending parties for a while to
+unite in the face of the common enemy. As before, the object of
+international dispute was the region of the Banda Oriental. The
+rule of Brazil had not been oppressive, but the people of its
+Cisplatine Province, attached by language and sympathy to their
+western neighbors, longed nevertheless to be free of foreign
+control. In April, 1825, a band of thirty-three refugees arrived
+from Buenos Aires and started a revolution which spread
+throughout the country. Organizing a provisional government, the
+insurgents proclaimed independence of Brazil and incorporation
+with the United Provinces of La Plata. As soon as the authorities
+at Buenos Aires had approved this action, war was inevitable.
+Though the Brazilians were decisively beaten at the Battle of
+Ituzaingo, on February 20, 1827, the struggle lasted until August
+28, 1828, when mediation by Great Britain led to the conclusion
+of a treaty at Rio de Janeiro, by which both Brazil and the
+Argentine Confederation recognized the absolute independence of
+the disputed province as the republic of Uruguay.
+
+Instead of quieting the discord that prevailed among the
+Argentinos, these victories only fomented trouble. The
+federalists had ousted Rivadavia and discarded the constitution,
+but the federal idea for which they stood had several meanings.
+To an inhabitant of Buenos Aires federalism meant domination by
+the capital, not only over the province of the same name but over
+the other provinces; whereas, to the people of the provinces, and
+even to many of federalist faith in the province of Buenos Aires
+itself, the term stood for the idea of a loose confederation in
+which each provincial governor or chieftain should be practically
+supreme in his own district, so long as he could maintain
+himself. The Unitaries were opponents of both, except in so far
+as their insistence upon a centralized form of government for the
+nation would necessarily lead to the location of that government
+at Buenos Aires. This peculiar dual contest between the town and
+the province of Buenos Aires, and of the other provinces against
+either or both, persisted for the next sixty years. In 1829,
+however, a prolonged lull set in, when Rosas, the gaucho leader,
+having won in company with other caudillos a decisive triumph
+over the Unitaries, entered the capital and took supreme command.
+
+In Chile the course of events had assumed quite a different
+aspect. Here, in 1818, a species of constitution had been adopted
+by popular vote in a manner that appeared to show remarkable
+unanimity, for the books in which the "ayes" and "noes" were to
+be recorded contained no entries in the negative! What the
+records really prove is that O'Higgins, the Supreme Director,
+enjoyed the confidence of the ruling class. In exercise of the
+autocratic power entrusted to him, he now proceeded to introduce
+a variety of administrative reforms of signal advantage to the
+moral and material welfare of the country. But as the danger of
+conquest from any quarter lessened, the demand for a more
+democratic organization grew louder, until in 1822 it became so
+persistent that O'Higgins called a convention to draft a new
+fundamental law. But its provisions suited neither himself nor
+his opponents. Thereupon, realizing that his views of the
+political capacity of the people resembled those of Bolivar and
+were no longer applicable, and that his reforms had aroused too
+much hostility, the Supreme Director resigned his post and
+retired to Peru. Thus another hero of emancipation had met the
+ingratitude for which republics are notorious.
+
+Political convulsions in the country followed the abdication of
+O'Higgins. Not only had the spirit of the strife between
+Unitaries and Federalists been communicated to Chile from the
+neighboring republic to the eastward, but two other parties or
+factions, divided on still different lines, had arisen. These
+were the Conservative and the Liberal, or Bigwigs (pelucones) and
+Greenhorns (pipiolos), as the adherents of the one derisively
+dubbed the partisans of the other. Although in the ups and downs
+of the struggle two constitutions were adopted, neither sufficed
+to quiet the agitation. Not until 1830, when the Liberals
+sustained an utter defeat on the field of battle, did the country
+enter upon a period of quiet progress along conservative lines.
+>From that time onward it presented a surprising contrast to its
+fellow republics, which were beset with afflictions.
+
+Far to the northward, the Empire of Mexico set up by Iturbide in
+1822 was doomed to a speedy fall. "Emperor by divine providence,"
+that ambitious adventurer inscribed on his coins, but his
+countrymen knew that the bayonets of his soldiers were the actual
+mainstay of his pretentious title. Neither his earlier career nor
+the size of his following was sufficiently impressive to assure
+him popular support if the military prop gave way. His lavish
+expenditures, furthermore, and his arbitrary replacement of the
+Congress by a docile body which would authorize forced loans at
+his command, steadily undermined his position. Apart from the
+faults of Iturbide himself, the popular sentiment of a country
+bordering immediately upon the United States could not fail to be
+colored by the ideas and institutions of its great neighbor. So,
+too, the example of what had been accomplished, in form at least,
+by their kinsmen elsewhere in America was bound to wield a potent
+influence on the minds of the Mexicans. As a result, their desire
+for a republic grew stronger from day to day.
+
+Iturbide, in fact, had not enjoyed his exalted rank five months
+when Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, a young officer destined later
+to become a conspicuous figure in Mexican history, started a
+revolt to replace the "Empire" by a republic. Though he failed in
+his object, two of Iturbide's generals joined the insurgents in
+demanding a restoration of the Congress--an act which, as the
+hapless "Emperor" perceived, would amount to his dethronement.
+Realizing his impotence, Iturbide summoned the Congress and
+announced his abdication. But instead of recognizing this
+procedure, that body declared his accession itself null and void;
+it agreed, however, to grant him a pension if he would leave the
+country and reside in Italy. With this disposition of his person
+Iturbide complied; but he soon wearied of exile and persuaded
+himself that he would not lack supporters if he tried to regain
+his former control in Mexico. This venture he decided to make in
+complete ignorance of a decree ordering his summary execution if
+he dared to set foot again on Mexican soil. He had hardly landed
+in July, 1824, when he was seized and shot.
+
+Since a constituent assembly had declared itself in favor of
+establishing a federal form of republic patterned after that of
+the United States, the promulgation of a constitution followed on
+October 4, 1824, and Guadalupe Victoria, one of the leaders in
+the revolt against Iturbide, was chosen President of the United
+Mexican States. Though considerable unrest prevailed toward the
+close of his term, the new President managed to retain his office
+for the allotted four years. In most respects, however, the new
+order of things opened auspiciously. In November, 1825, the
+surrender of the fortress of San Juan de Ulua, in the harbor of
+Vera Cruz, banished the last remnant of Spanish power, and two
+years later the suppression of plots for the restoration of
+Ferdinand VII, coupled with the expulsion of a large number of
+Spaniards, helped to restore calm. There were those even who
+dared to hope that the federal system would operate as smoothly
+in Mexico as it had done in the United States.
+
+But the political organization of a country so different from its
+northern neighbor in population, traditions, and practices, could
+not rest merely on a basis of imitation, even more or less
+modified. The artificiality of the fabric became apparent enough
+as soon as ambitious individuals and groups of malcontents
+concerted measures to mold it into a likeness of reality. Two
+main political factions soon appeared. For the form they assumed
+British and American influences were responsible. Adopting a kind
+of Masonic organization, the Conservatives and Centralists called
+themselves Escoceses (Scottish-Rite Men), whereas the Radicals
+and Federalists took the name of Yorkinos (York-Rite Men).
+Whatever their respective slogans and professions of political
+faith, they were little more than personal followers of rival
+generals or politicians who yearned to occupy the presidential
+chair.
+
+Upon the downfall of Iturbide, the malcontents in Central America
+bestirred themselves to throw off the Mexican yoke. On July
+1,1823, a Congress declared the region an independent republic
+under the name of the "United Provinces of Central America." In
+November of the next year, following the precedent established in
+Mexico, and obedient also to local demand, the new republic
+issued a constitution, in accordance with which the five little
+divisions of Guatemala, Honduras, Salvador, Nicaragua, and Costa
+Rica were to become states of a federal union, each having the
+privilege of choosing its own local authorities. Immediately
+Federalists and Centralists, Radicals and Conservatives, all
+wished, it would seem, to impose their particular viewpoint upon
+their fellows. The situation was not unlike that in the Argentine
+Confederation. The efforts of Guatemala--the province in which
+power had been concentrated under the colonial regime--to assert
+supremacy over its fellow states, and their refusal to respect
+either the federal bond or one another's rights made civil war
+inevitable. The struggle which broke out among Guatemala,
+Salvador, and Honduras, lasted until 1829, when Francisco
+Morazan, at the head of the "Allied Army, Upholder of the Law,"
+entered the capital of the republic and assumed dictatorial
+power.
+
+Of all the Hispanic nations, however, Brazil was easily the most
+stable. Here the leaders, while clinging to independence, strove
+to avoid dangerous innovations in government. Rather than create
+a political system for which the country was not prepared, they
+established a constitutional monarchy. But Brazil itself was too
+vast and its interior too difficult of access to allow it to
+become all at once a unit, either in organization or in spirit.
+The idea of national solidarity had as yet made scant progress.
+The old rivalry which existed between the provinces of the north,
+dominated by Bahia or Pernambuco, and those of the south,
+controlled by Rio de Janeiro or Sao Paulo, still made itself
+felt. What the Empire amounted to, therefore, was an
+agglomeration of provinces, held together by the personal
+prestige of a young monarch.
+
+Since the mother country still held parts of northern Brazil, the
+Emperor entrusted the energetic Cochrane, who had performed such
+valiant service for Chile and Peru, with the task of expelling
+the foreign soldiery. When this had been accomplished and a
+republican outbreak in the same region had been suppressed, the
+more difficult task of satisfying all parties by a constitution
+had to be undertaken. There were partisans of monarchy and
+advocates of republicanism, men of conservative and of liberal
+sympathies; disagreements, also, between the Brazilians and the
+native Portuguese residents were frequent. So far as possible
+Pedro desired to meet popular desires, and yet without imposing
+too many limitations on the monarchy itself. But in the assembly
+called to draft the constitution the liberal members made a
+determined effort to introduce republican forms. Pedro thereupon
+dissolved that body and in 1826 promulgated a constitution of his
+own.
+
+The popularity of the Emperor thereafter soon began to wane,
+partly because of the scandalous character of his private life,
+and partly because he declined to observe constitutional
+restrictions and chose his ministers at will. His insistent war
+in Portugal to uphold the claims of his daughter to the throne
+betrayed, or seemed to betray, dynastic ambitions. His inability
+to hold Uruguay as a Brazilian province, and his continued
+retention of foreign soldiers who had been employed in the
+struggle with the Argentine Confederation, for the apparent
+purpose of quelling possible insurrections in the future, bred
+much discontent. So also did the restraints he laid upon the
+press, which had been infected by the liberal movements in
+neighboring republics. When he failed to subdue these outbreaks,
+his rule became all the more discredited. Thereupon, menaced by a
+dangerous uprising at Rio de Janeiro in 1831, he abdicated the
+throne in favor of his son, Pedro, then five years of age, and
+set sail for Portugal.
+
+Under the influence of Great Britain the small European mother
+country had in 1825 recognized the independence of its big
+transatlantic dominion; but it was not until 1836 that the Cortes
+of Spain authorized the Crown to enter upon negotiations looking
+to the same action in regard to the eleven republics which had
+sprung out of its colonial domain. Even then many years elapsed
+before the mother country acknowledged the independence of them
+all.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V. THE AGE OF THE DICTATORS
+
+Independence without liberty and statehood without respect for
+law are phrases which sum up the situation in Spanish America
+after the failure of Bolivar's "great design." The outcome was a
+collection of crude republics, racked by internal dissension and
+torn by mutual jealousy--patrias bobas, or "foolish fatherlands,"
+as one of their own writers has termed them.
+
+Now that the bond of unity once supplied by Spain had been
+broken, the entire region which had been its continental domain
+in America dissolved awhile into its elements. The Spanish
+language, the traditions and customs of the dominant class, and a
+"republican" form of government, were practically the sole ties
+which remained. Laws, to be sure, had been enacted, providing for
+the immediate or gradual abolition of negro slavery and for an
+improvement in the status of the Indian and half-caste; but the
+bulk of the inhabitants, as in colonial times, remained outside
+of the body politic and social. Though the so-called
+"constitutions" might confer upon the colored inhabitants all the
+privileges and immunities of citizens if they could read and
+write, and even a chance to hold office if they could show
+possession of a sufficient income or of a professional title of
+some sort, their usual inability to do either made their
+privileges illusory. Their only share in public concerns lay in
+performing military service at the behest of their superiors.
+Even where the language of the constitutions did not exclude the
+colored inhabitants directly or indirectly, practical authority
+was exercised by dictators who played the autocrat, or by
+"liberators" who aimed at the enjoyment of that function
+themselves.
+
+Not all the dictators, however, were selfish tyrants, nor all the
+liberators mere pretenders. Disturbed conditions bred by twenty
+years of warfare, antique methods of industry, a backward
+commerce, inadequate means of communication, and a population
+ignorant, superstitious, and scant, made a strong ruler more or
+less indispensable. Whatever his official designation, the
+dictator was the logical successor of the Spanish viceroy or
+captain general, but without the sense of responsibility or the
+legal restraint of either. These circumstances account for that
+curious political phase in the development of the Spanish
+American nations--the presidential despotism.
+
+On the other hand, the men who denounced oppression,
+unscrupulousness, and venality, and who in rhetorical
+pronunciamentos urged the "people" to overthrow the dictators,
+were often actuated by motives of patriotism, even though they
+based their declarations on assumptions and assertions, rather
+than on principles and facts. Not infrequently a liberator of
+this sort became "provisional president" until he himself, or
+some person of his choice, could be elected "constitutional
+president"--two other institutions more or less peculiar to
+Spanish America.
+
+In an atmosphere of political theorizing mingled with ambition
+for personal advancement, both leaders and followers were
+professed devotees of constitutions. No people, it was thought,
+could maintain a real republic and be a true democracy if they
+did not possess a written constitution. The longer this was, the
+more precise its definition of powers and liberties, the more
+authentic the republic and the more genuine the democracy was
+thought to be. In some countries the notion was carried still
+farther by an insistence upon frequent changes in the fundamental
+law or in the actual form of government, not so much to meet
+imperative needs as to satisfy a zest for experimentation or to
+suit the whims of mercurial temperaments. The congresses,
+constituent assemblies, and the like, which drew these
+instruments, were supposed to be faithful reproductions of
+similar bodies abroad and to represent the popular will. In fact,
+however, they were substantially colonial cabildos, enlarged into
+the semblance of a legislature, intent upon local or personal
+concerns, and lacking any national consciousness. In any case the
+members were apt to be creatures of a republican despot or else
+delegates of politicians or petty factions.
+
+Assuming that the leaders had a fairly clear conception of what
+they wanted, even if the mass of their adherents did not, it is
+possible to aline the factions or parties somewhat as follows: on
+the one hand, the unitary, the military, the clerical, the
+conservative, and the moderate; on the other,the federalist, the
+civilian, the lay, the liberal, and the radical. Interspersed
+among them were the advocates of a presidential or congressional
+system like that of the United States, the upholders of a
+parliamentary regime like that of European nations, and the
+supporters of methods of government of a more experimental kind.
+Broadly speaking, the line of cleavage was made by opinions,
+concerning the form of government and by convictions regarding
+the relations of Church and State. These opinions were mainly a
+product of revolutionary experience; these convictions, on the
+other hand, were a bequest from colonial times.
+
+The Unitaries wished to have a system of government modeled upon
+that of France. They wanted the various provinces made into
+administrative districts over which the national authority should
+exercise full sway. Their direct opponents, the Federalists,
+resembled to some extent the Antifederalists rather than the
+party bearing the former title in the earlier history of the
+United States; but even here an exact analogy fails. They did not
+seek to have the provinces enjoy local self-government or to have
+perpetuated the traditions of a sort of municipal home rule
+handed down from the colonial cabildos, so much as to secure the
+recognition of a number of isolated villages or small towns as
+sovereign states--which meant turning them over as fiefs to their
+local chieftains. Federalism, therefore, was the Spanish American
+expression for a feudalism upheld by military lordlets and their
+retainers.
+
+Among the measures of reform introduced by one republic or
+another during the revolutionary period, abolition of the
+Inquisition had been one of the foremost; otherwise comparatively
+little was done to curb the influence of the Church. Indeed the
+earlier constitutions regularly contained articles declaring
+Roman Catholicism the sole legal faith as well as the religion of
+the state, and safeguarding in other respects its prestige in the
+community. Here was an institution, wealthy, proud, and
+influential, which declined to yield its ancient prerogatives and
+privileges and to that end relied upon the support of clericals
+and conservatives who disliked innovations of a democratic sort
+and viewed askance the entry of immigrants professing an alien
+faith. Opposed to the Church stood governments verging on
+bankruptcy, desirous of exercising supreme control, and dominated
+by individuals eager to put theories of democracy into practice
+and to throw open the doors of the republic freely to newcomers
+from other lands. In the opinion of these radicals the Church
+ought to be deprived both of its property and of its monopoly of
+education. The one should be turned over to the nation, to which
+it properly belonged, and should be converted into public
+utilities; the other should be made absolutely secular, in order
+to destroy clerical influence over the youthful mind. In this
+program radicals and liberals concurred with varying degrees of
+intensity, while the moderates strove to hold the balance between
+them and their opponents.
+
+Out of this complex situation civil commotions were bound to
+arise. Occasionally these were real wars, but as a rule only
+skirmishes or sporadic insurrections occurred. They were called
+"revolutions," not because some great principle was actually at
+stake but because the term had been popular ever since the
+struggle with Spain. As a designation for movements aimed at
+securing rotation in office, and hence control of the treasury,
+it was appropriate enough! At all events, whether serious or
+farcical, the commotions often involved an expenditure in life
+and money far beyond the value of the interests affected.
+Further, both the prevalent disorder and the centralization of
+authority impelled the educated and wellto-do classes to take up
+their residence at the seat of government. Not a few of the
+uprisings were, in fact, protests on the part of the neglected
+folk in the interior of the country against concentration of
+population, wealth, intellect, and power in the Spanish American
+capitals.
+
+Among the towns of this sort was Buenos Aires. Here, in 1829,
+Rosas inaugurated a career of rulership over the Argentine
+Confederation, culminating in a despotism that made him the most
+extraordinary figure of his time. Originally a stockfarmer and
+skilled in all the exercises of the cowboy, he developed an
+unusual talent for administration. His keen intelligence, supple
+statecraft, inflexibility of purpose, and vigor of action, united
+to a shrewd understanding of human follies and passions, gave to
+his personality a dominance that awed and to his word of command
+a power that humbled. Over his fellow chieftains who held the
+provinces in terrorized subjection, he won an ascendancy that
+insured compliance with his will. The instincts of the multitude
+he flattered by his generous simplicity, while he enlisted the
+support of the responsible class by maintaining order in the
+countryside. The desire, also, of Buenos Aires to be paramount
+over the other provinces had no small share in strengthening his
+power.
+
+Relatively honest in money matters, and a stickler for precision
+and uniformity, Rosas sought to govern a nation in the
+rough-and-ready fashion of the stock farm. A creature of his
+environment, no better and no worse than his associates, but only
+more capable than they, and absolutely convinced that pitiless
+autocracy was the sole means of creating a nation out of chaotic
+fragments, this "Robespierre of South America" carried on his
+despotic sway, regardless of the fury of opponents and the menace
+of foreign intervention.
+
+During the first three years of his control, however, except for
+the rigorous suppression of unitary movements and the muzzling of
+the press, few signs appeared of the "black night of Argentine
+history "which was soon to close down on the land. Realizing that
+the auspicious moment had not yet arrived for him to exercise the
+limitless power that he thought needful, he declined an offer of
+reelection from the provincial legislature, in the hope that,
+through a policy of conciliation, his successor might fall a prey
+to the designs of the Unitaries. When this happened, he secretly
+stirred up the provinces into a renewal of the earlier
+disturbances, until the evidence became overwhelming that Rosas
+alone could bring peace and progress out of turmoil and
+backwardness. Reluctantly the legislature yielded him the power
+it knew he wanted. This he would not accept until a "popular"
+vote of some 9000 to 4 confirmed the choice. In 1835,
+accordingly, he became dictator for the first of four successive
+terms of five years.
+
+Then ensued, notably in Buenos Aires itself, a state of affairs
+at once grotesque and frightful. Not content with hunting down
+and inflicting every possible, outrage upon those suspected of
+sympathy with the Unitaries, Rosas forbade them to display the
+light blue and white colors of their party device and directed
+that red, the sign of Federalism, should be displayed on all
+occasions. Pink he would not tolerate as being too attenuated a
+shade and altogether too suggestive of political trimming! A band
+of his followers, made up of ruffians, and called the Mazorca, or
+"Ear of Corn," because of the resemblance of their close
+fellowship to its adhering grains, broke into private houses,
+destroyed everything light blue within reach, and maltreated the
+unfortunate occupants at will. No man was safe also who did not
+give his face a leonine aspect by wearing a mustache and
+sidewhiskers--emblems, the one of "federalism," and the other of
+"independence." To possess a visage bare of these hirsute
+adornments or a countenance too efflorescent in that respect was,
+under a regime of tonsorial politics, to invite personal
+disaster! Nothing apparently was too cringing or servile to show
+how submissive the people were to the mastery of Rosas. Private
+vengeance and defamation of the innocent did their sinister work
+unchecked. Even when his arbitrary treatment of foreigners had
+compelled France for a while to institute a blockade of Buenos
+Aires, the wily dictator utilized the incident to turn patriotic
+resentment to his own advantage.
+
+Meanwhile matters in Uruguay had come to such a pass that Rosas
+saw an opportunity to extend his control in that direction also.
+Placed between Brazil and the Argentine Confederation and so
+often a bone of contention, the little country was hardly free
+from the rule of the former state when it came near falling under
+the domination of the latter. Only a few years of relative
+tranquillity had elapsed when two parties sprang up in Uruguay:
+the "Reds" (Colorados) and the "Whites" (Blancos). Of these, the
+one was supposed to represent the liberal and the other the
+conservative element. In fact, they were the followings of
+partisan chieftains, whose struggles for the presidency during
+many years to come retarded the advancement of a country to which
+nature had been generous.
+
+When Fructuoso Rivera, the President up to 1835, thought of
+choosing some one to be elected in constitutional fashion as his
+successor, he unwisely singled out Manuel Oribe, one of the
+famous "Thirty-three" who had raised the cry of independence a
+decade before. But instead of a henchman he found a rival. Both
+of them straightway adopted the colors and bid for the support of
+one of the local factions; and both appealed to the factions of
+the Argentine Confederation for aid, Rivera to the Unitaries and
+Oribe to the Federalists. In 1843, Oribe, at the head of an army
+of Blancos and Federalists and with the moral support of Rosas,
+laid siege to Montevideo. Defended by Colorados, Unitaries, and
+numerous foreigners, including Giuseppe Garibaldi, the town held
+out valiantly for eight years--a feat that earned for it the
+title of the "New Troy." Anxious to stop the slaughter and
+destruction that were injuring their nationals, France, Great
+Britain, and Brazil offered their mediation; but Rosas would have
+none of it. What the antagonists did he cared little, so long as
+they enfeebled the country and increased his chances of
+dominating it. At length, in 1845, the two European powers
+established a blockade of Argentine ports, which was not lifted
+until the dictator grudgingly agreed to withdraw his troops from
+the neighboring republic.
+
+More than any other single factor, this intervention of France
+and Great Britain administered a blow to Rosas from which he
+could not recover. The operations of their fleets and the
+resistance of Montevideo had lowered the prestige of the dictator
+and had raised the hopes of the Unitaries that a last desperate
+effort might shake off his hated control. In May, 1851, Justo
+Jose de Urquiza, one of his most trusted lieutenants, declared
+the independence of his own province and called upon the others
+to rise against the tyrant. Enlisting the support of Brazil,
+Uruguay, and Paraguay, he assembled a "great army of liberation,"
+composed of about twenty-five thousand men, at whose head he
+marched to meet the redoubtable Rosas. On February 3,1852, at a
+spot near Buenos Aires, the man of might who, like his
+contemporary Francia in Paraguay, had held the Argentine
+Confederation in thralldom for so many years, went down to final
+defeat. Embarking on a British warship he sailed for England,
+there to become a quiet country gentleman in a land where gauchos
+and dictators were unhonored.
+
+In the meantime Paraguay, spared from such convulsion as racked
+its neighbor on the east, dragged on its secluded existence of
+backwardness and stagnation. Indians and half-castes vegetated in
+ignorance and docility, and the handful of whites quaked in
+terror, while the inexorable Francia tightened the reins of
+commercial and industrial restriction and erected forts along the
+frontiers to keep out the pernicious foreigner. At his death, in
+1840, men and women wept at his funeral in fear perchance, as one
+historian remarks, lest he come back to life; and the priest who
+officiated at the service likened the departed dictator to Caesar
+and Augustus!
+
+Paraguay was destined, however, to fall under a despot far worse
+than Francia when in 1862 Francisco Solano Lopez became
+President. The new ruler was a man of considerable intelligence
+and education. While a traveler in Europe he had seen much of its
+military organizations, and he had also gained no slight
+acquaintance with the vices of its capital cities. This acquired
+knowledge he joined to evil propensities until he became a
+veritable monster of wickedness. Vain, arrogant, reckless,
+absolutely devoid of scruple, swaggering in victory, dogged in
+defeat, ferociously cruel at all times, he murdered his brothers
+and his best friends; he executed, imprisoned, or banished any
+one whom he thought too influential; he tortured his mother and
+sisters; and, like the French Terrorists, he impaled his officers
+upon the unpleasant dilemma of winning victories or losing their
+lives. Even members of the American legation suffered torment at
+his hands, and the minister himself barely escaped death.
+
+Over his people, Lopez wielded a marvelous power, compounded of
+persuasive eloquence and brute force. If the Paraguayans had
+obeyed their earlier masters blindly, they were dumb before this
+new despot and deaf to other than his word of command. To them he
+was the "Great Father," who talked to them in their own tongue of
+Guarani, who was the personification of the nation, the greatest
+ruler in the world, the invincible champion who inspired them
+with a loathing and contempt for their enemies. Such were the
+traits of a man and such the traits of a people who waged for six
+years a warfare among the most extraordinary in human annals.
+
+What prompted Lopez to embark on his career of international
+madness and prosecute it with the rage of a demon is not entirely
+clear. A vision of himself as the Napoleon of southern South
+America, who might cause Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay to cringe
+before his footstool, while he disposed at will of their
+territory and fortunes, doubtless stirred his imagination. So,
+too, the thought of his country, wedged in between two huge
+neighbors and threatened with suffocation between their
+overlapping folds, may well have suggested the wisdom of
+conquering overland a highway to the sea. At all events, he
+assembled an army of upwards of ninety thousand men, the greatest
+military array that Hispanic America had ever seen. Though
+admirably drilled and disciplined, they were poorly armed, mostly
+with flintlock muskets, and they were also deficient in artillery
+except that of antiquated pattern. With this mighty force at his
+back, yet knowing that the neighboring countries could eventually
+call into the field armies much larger in size equipped with
+repeating rifles and supplied with modern artillery, the "Jupiter
+of Paraguay" nevertheless made ready to launch his thunderbolt.
+
+The primary object at which he aimed was Uruguay. In this little
+state the Colorados, upheld openly or secretly by Brazil and
+Argentina, were conducting a "crusade of liberty" against the
+Blanco government at Montevideo, which was favored by Paraguay.
+Neither of the two great powers wished to see an alliance formed
+between Uruguay and Paraguay, lest when united in this manner the
+smaller nations might become too strong to tolerate further
+intervention in their affairs. For her part, Brazil had motives
+for resentment arising out of boundary disputes with Paraguay and
+Uruguay, as well as out of the inevitable injury to its nationals
+inflicted by the commotions in the latter country; whereas
+Argentina cherished grievances against Lopez for the audacity
+with which his troops roamed through her provinces and the
+impudence with which his vessels, plying on the lower Parana,
+ignored the customs regulations. Thus it happened that obscure
+civil discords in one little republic exploded into a terrific
+international struggle which shook South America to its
+foundations.
+
+In 1864, scorning the arts of diplomacy which he did not
+apparently understand, Lopez sent down an order for the two big
+states to leave the matter of Uruguayan politics to his impartial
+adjustment. At both Rio de Janeiro and Buenos Aires a roar of
+laughter went up from the press at this notion of an obscure
+chieftain of a band of Indians in the tropical backwoods daring
+to poise the equilibrium of much more than half a continent on
+his insolent hand. But the merriment soon subsided, as Brazilians
+and Argentinos came to realize what their peril might be from a
+huge army of skilled and valiant soldiers, a veritable horde of
+fighting fanatics, drawn up in a compact little land, centrally
+located and affording in other respects every kind of strategic
+advantage.
+
+When Brazil invaded Uruguay and restored the Colorados to power,
+Lopez demanded permission from Argentina to cross its frontier,
+for the purpose of assailing his enemy from another quarter. When
+the permission was denied, Lopez declared war on Argentina also.
+It was in every respect a daring step, but Lopez knew that
+Argentina was not so well prepared as his own state for a war of
+endurance. Uruguay then entered into an alliance in 1865 with its
+two big "protectors." In accordance with its terms, the allies
+agreed not to conclude peace until Lopez had been overthrown,
+heavy indemnities had been exacted of Paraguay, its
+fortifications demolished, its army disbanded, and the country
+forced to accept any boundaries that the victors might see fit to
+impose.
+
+Into the details of the campaigns in the frightful conflict that
+ensued it is not necessary to enter. Although, in 1866, the
+allies had assembled an army of some fifty thousand men, Lopez
+continued taking the offensive until, as the number and
+determination of his adversaries increased, he was compelled to
+retreat into his own country. Here he and his Indian legions
+levied terrific toll upon the lives of their enemies who pressed
+onward, up or down the rivers and through tropical swamps and
+forests. Inch by inch he contested their entry upon Paraguayan
+soil. When the able-bodied men gave out, old men, boys, women,
+and girls fought on with stubborn fury, and died before they
+would surrender. The wounded escaped if they could, or, cursing
+their captors, tore off their bandages and bled to death. Disease
+wrought awful havoc in all the armies engaged; yet the struggle
+continued until flesh and blood could endure no more. Flying
+before his pursuers into the wilds of the north and frantically
+dragging along with him masses of fugitive men, women, and
+children, whom he remorselessly shot, or starved to death, or
+left to perish of exhaustion, Lopez turned finally at bay, and,
+on March 1, 1870, was felled by the lance of a cavalryman. He had
+sworn to die for his country and he did, though his country might
+perish with him.
+
+No land in modern times has ever reached a point so near
+annihilation as Paraguay. Added to the utter ruin of its
+industries and the devastation of its fields, dwellings, and
+towns, hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children had
+perished. Indeed, the horrors that had befallen it might well
+have led the allies to ask themselves whether it was worth while
+to destroy a country in order to change its rulers. Five years
+before Lopez came into power the population of Paraguay had been
+reckoned at something between 800,000 and 1,400,000--so
+unreliable were census returns in those days. In 1878 it was
+estimated at about 230,000, of whom women over fifteen years of
+age outnumbered the men nearly four to one. Loose polygamy was
+the inevitable consequence, and women became the breadwinners.
+Even today in this country the excess of females over males is
+very great. All in all, it is not strange that Paraguay should be
+called the "Niobe among nations."
+
+Unlike many nations of Spanish America in which a more or less
+anticlerical regime was in the ascendant, Ecuador fell under a
+sort of theocracy. Here appeared one of the strangest characters
+in a story already full of extraordinary personages--Gabriel
+Garcia Moreno, who became President of that republic in 1861. In
+some respects the counterpart of Francia of Paraguay, in others
+both a medieval mystic and an enlightened ruler of modern type,
+he was a man of remarkable intellect, constructive ability,
+earnest patriotism, and disinterested zeal for orderliness and
+progress. On his presidential sash were inscribed the words: "My
+Power in the Constitution"; but is real power lay in himself and
+in the system which he implanted.
+
+Garcia Moreno had a varied career. He had been a student of
+chemistry and other natural sciences. He had spent his youth in
+exile in Europe, where he prepared himself for his subsequent
+career as a journalist and a university professor. Through it all
+he had been an active participant in public affairs. Grim of
+countenance, austere in bearing, violent of temper, relentless in
+severity, he was a devoted believer in the Roman Catholic faith
+and in this Church as the sole effective basis upon which a state
+could be founded or social and political regeneration could be
+assured. In order to render effective his concept of what a
+nation ought to be, Garcia Moreno introduced and upheld in all
+rigidity an administration the like of which had been known
+hardly anywhere since the Middle Ages. He recalled the Jesuits,
+established schools of the "Brothers of the Christian Doctrine,"
+and made education a matter wholly under ecclesiastical control.
+He forbade heretical worship, called the country the "Republic of
+the Sacred Heart," and entered into a concordat with the Pope
+under which the Church in Ecuador became more subject to the will
+of the supreme pontiff than western Europe had been in the days
+of Innocent III.
+
+Liberals in and outside of Ecuador tried feebly to shake off this
+masterful theocracy, for the friendship which Garcia Moreno
+displayed toward the diplomatic representatives of the Catholic
+powers of Europe, notably those of Spain and France, excited the
+neighboring republics. Colombia, indeed, sent an army to liberate
+the "brother democrats of Ecuador from the rule of Professor
+Garcia Moreno," but the mass of the people stood loyally by their
+President. For this astounding obedience to an administration
+apparently so unrelated to modern ideas, the ecclesiastical
+domination was not solely or even chiefly responsible. In more
+ways than one Garcia Moreno, the professor President, was a
+statesman of vision and deed. He put down brigandage and
+lawlessness; reformed the finances; erected hospitals; promoted
+education; and encouraged the study of natural science. Even his
+salary he gave over to public improvements. His successors in the
+presidential office found it impossible to govern the country
+without Garcia Moreno. Elected for a third term to carry on his
+curious policy of conservatism and reaction blended with modern
+advancement, he fell by the hand of an assassin in 1875. But the
+system which he had done so much to establish in Ecuador survived
+him for many years.
+
+Although Brazil did not escape the evils of insurrection which
+retarded the growth of nearly all of its neighbors, none of its
+numerous commotions shook the stability of the nation to a
+perilous degree. By 1850 all danger of revolution had vanished.
+The country began to enter upon a career of peace and progress
+under a regime which combined broadly the federal organization of
+the United States with the form of a constitutional monarchy.
+Brazil enjoyed one of the few enlightened despotisms in South
+America. Adopting at the outset the parliamentary system, the
+Emperor Pedro II chose his ministers from among the liberals or
+conservatives, as one party or the other might possess a majority
+in the lower house of the Congress. Though the legislative power
+of the nation was enjoyed almost entirely by the planters and
+their associates who formed the dominant social class, individual
+liberty was fully guaranteed, and even freedom of conscience and
+of the press was allowed. Negro slavery, though tolerated, was
+not expressly recognized.
+
+Thanks to the political discretion and unusual personal qualities
+of "Dom Pedro," his popularity became more and more marked as the
+years went on. A patron of science and literature, a scholar
+rather than a ruler, a placid and somewhat eccentric philosopher,
+careless of the trappings of state, he devoted himself without
+stint to the public welfare. Shrewdly divining that the
+monarchical system might not survive much longer, he kept his
+realm pacified by a policy of conciliation. Pedro II even went so
+far as to call himself the best republican in the Empire. He
+might have said, with justice perhaps, that he was the best
+republican in the whole of Hispanic America. What he really
+accomplished was the successful exercise of a paternal autocracy
+of kindness and liberality over his subjects.
+
+If more or less permanent dictators and occasional liberators
+were the order of the day in most of the Spanish American
+republics, intermittent dictators and liberators dashed across
+the stage in Mexico from 1829 well beyond the middle of the
+century. The other countries could show numerous instances in
+which the occupant of the chief magistracy held office to the
+close of his constitutional term; but Mexico could not show a
+single one! What Mexico furnished, instead, was a kaleidoscopic
+spectacle of successive presidents or dictators, an unstable
+array of self-styled "generals" without a presidential
+succession. There were no fewer than fifty such transient rulers
+in thirty-two years, with anywhere from one to six a year, with
+even the same incumbent twice in one year, or, in the case of the
+repetitious Santa Anna, nine times in twenty years--in spite of
+the fact that the constitutional term of office was four years.
+This was a record that made the most turbulent South American
+states seem, by comparison, lands of methodical regularity in the
+choice of their national executive. And as if this instability in
+the chief magistracy were not enough, the form of government in
+Mexico shifted violently from federal to centralized, and back
+again to federal. Mad struggles raged between partisan chieftains
+and their bands of Escoceses and Yorkinos, crying out upon the
+"President" in power because of his undue influence upon the
+choice of a successor, backing their respective candidates if
+they lost, and waiting for a chance to oust them if they won.
+
+This tumultuous epoch had scarcely begun when Spain in 1829 made
+a final attempt to recover her lost dominion in Mexico. Local
+quarrels were straightway dropped for two months until the
+invaders had surrendered. Thereupon the great landholders, who
+disliked the prevailing Yorkino regime for its democratic
+policies and for favoring the abolition of slavery, rallied to
+the aid of a "general" who issued a manifesto demanding an
+observance of the constitution and the laws! After Santa Anna,
+who was playing the role of a Mexican Warwick, had disposed of
+this aspirant, he switched blithely over to the Escoceses,
+reduced the federal system almost to a nullity, and in 1836
+marched away to conquer the revolting Texans. But, instead, they
+conquered him and gained their independence, so that his reward
+was exile.
+
+Now the Escoceses were free to promulgate a new constitution, to
+abolish the federal arrangement altogether, and to replace it by
+a strongly centralized government under which the individual
+States became mere administrative districts. Hardly had this
+radical change been effected when in 1838 war broke out with
+France on account of the injuries which its nationals, among whom
+were certain pastry cooks, had suffered during the interminable
+commotions. Mexico was forced to pay a heavy indemnity; and Santa
+Anna, who had returned to fight the invader, was unfortunate
+enough to lose a leg in the struggle. This physical deprivation,
+however, did not interfere with that doughty hero's zest for
+tilting with other unquiet spirits who yearned to assure national
+regeneration by continuing to elevate and depose "presidents."
+
+Another swing of the political pendulum had restored the federal
+system when again everything was overturned by the disastrous war
+with the United States. Once more Santa Anna returned, this time,
+however, to joust in vain with the "Yankee despoilers" who were
+destined to dismember Mexico and to annex two-thirds of its
+territory. Again Santa Anna was banished--to dream of a more
+favorable opportunity when he might become the savior of a
+country which had fallen into bankruptcy and impotence.
+
+His opportunity came in 1853, when conservatives and clericals
+indulged the fatuous hope that he would both sustain their
+privileges and lift Mexico out of its sore distress. Either their
+memories were short or else distance had cast a halo about his
+figure. At all events, he returned from exile and assumed, for
+the ninth and last time, a presidency which he intended to be
+something more than a mere dictatorship. Scorning the formality
+of a Congress, he had himself entitled "Most Serene Highness," as
+indicative of his ambition to become a monarch in name as well as
+in fact.
+
+Royal or imperial designs had long since brought one military
+upstart to grief. They were now to cut Santa Anna's residence in
+Mexico similarly short. Eruptions of discontent broke out all
+over the country. Unable to make them subside, Santa Anna fell
+back upon an expedient which recalls practices elsewhere in
+Spanish America. He opened registries in which all citizens might
+record "freely" their approval or disapproval of his continuance
+in power. Though he obtained the huge majority of affirmative
+votes to be expected in such cases, he found that these
+pen-and-ink signatures were no more serviceable than his
+soldiers. Accordingly the dictator of many a day, fallen from his
+former estate of highness, decided to abandon his serenity also,
+and in 1854 fled the country--for its good and his own.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI. PERIL FROM ABROAD
+
+Apart from the spoliation of Mexico by the United States, the
+independence of the Hispanic nations had not been menaced for
+more than thirty years. Now comes a period in which the plight of
+their big northern neighbor, rent in twain by civil war and
+powerless to enforce the spirit of the Monroe Doctrine, caused
+two of the countries to become subject a while to European
+control. One of these was the Dominican Republic.
+
+In 1844 the Spanish-speaking population of the eastern part of
+the island of Santo Domingo, writhing under the despotic yoke of
+Haiti, had seized a favorable occasion to regain their freedom.
+But the magic word "independence" could not give stability to the
+new state any more than it had done in the case of its western
+foes. The Haitians had lapsed long since into a condition
+resembling that of their African forefathers. They reveled in the
+barbarities of Voodoo, a sort of snake worship, and they groveled
+before "presidents" and "emperors" who rose and fell on the tide
+of decaying civilization. The Dominicans unhappily were not much
+more progressive. Revolutions alternated with invasions and
+counterinvasions and effectually prevented enduring progress.
+
+On several occasions the Dominicans had sought reannexation to
+Spain or had craved the protection of France as a defense against
+continual menace from their negro enemies and as a relief from
+domestic turmoil. But every move in this direction failed because
+of a natural reluctance on the part of Spain and France, which
+was heightened by a refusal of the United States to permit what
+it regarded as a violation of the Monroe Doctrine. In 1861,
+however, the outbreak of civil war in the United States appeared
+to present a favorable opportunity to obtain protection from
+abroad. If the Dominican Republic could not remain independent
+anyway, reunion with the old mother country seemed altogether
+preferable to reconquest by Haiti. The President, therefore,
+entered into negotiations with the Spanish Governor and Captain
+General of Cuba, and then issued a proclamation signed by himself
+and four of his ministers announcing that by the "free and
+spontaneous will" of its citizens, who had conferred upon him the
+power to do so, the nation recognized Queen Isabella II as its
+lawful sovereign! Practically no protest was made by the
+Dominicans against this loss of their independence.
+
+Difficulties which should have been foreseen by Spain were quick
+to reveal themselves. It fell to the exPresident, now a colonial
+governor and captain general, to appoint a host of officials and,
+not unnaturally, he named his own henchmen. By so doing he not
+only aroused the animosity of the disappointed but stimlated that
+of the otherwise disaffected as well, until both the aggrieved
+factions began to plot rebellion. Spain, too, sent over a crowd
+of officials who could not adjust themselves to local conditions.
+The failure of the mother country to allow the Dominicans
+representation in the Spanish Cortes and its readiness to levy
+taxes stirred up resentment that soon ended in revolution. Unable
+to check this new trouble, and awed by the threatening attitude
+of the United States, Spain decided to withdraw in 1865. The
+Dominicans thus were left with their independence and a
+chance--which they promptly seized--to renew their commotions. So
+serious did these disturbances become that in 1869 the President
+of the reconstituted republic sought annexation to the United
+States but without success. American efforts, on the other hand,
+were equally futile to restore peace and order in the troubled
+country until many years later.
+
+The intervention of Spain in Santo Domingo and its subsequent
+withdrawal could not fail to have disastrous consequences in its
+colony of Cuba, the "Pearl of the Antilles" as it was proudly
+called. Here abundant crops of sugar and tobacco had brought
+wealth and luxury, but not many immigrants because of the havoc
+made by epidemics of yellow fever. Nearly a third of the insular
+population was still composed of negro slaves, who could hardly
+relish the thought that, while the mother country had tolerated
+the suppression of the hateful institution in Santo Domingo, she
+still maintained it in Cuba. A bureaucracy, also, prone to
+corruption owing to the temptations of loose accounting at the
+custom house, governed in routinary, if not in arbitrary,
+fashion. Under these circumstances dislike for the suspicious and
+repressive administration of Spain grew apace, and secret
+societies renewed their agitation for its overthrow. The symptoms
+of unrest were aggravated by the forced retirement of Spain from
+Santo Domingo. If the Dominicans had succeeded so well, it ought
+not to be difficult for a prolonged rebellion to wear Spain out
+and compel it to abandon Cuba also. At this critical moment news
+was brought of a Spanish revolution across the seas.
+
+Just as the plight of Spain in 1808, and again in 1820, had
+afforded a favorable opportunity for its colonies on the
+continents of America to win their independence, so now in 1868
+the tidings that Queen Isabella had been dethroned by a liberal
+uprising aroused the Cubans to action under their devoted leader,
+Carlos Manuel de Cespedes. The insurrection had not gained much
+headway, however, when the provisional government of the mother
+country instructed a new Governor and Captain General--whose
+name, Dulce (Sweet), had an auspicious sound--to open
+negotiations with the insurgents and to hold out the hope of
+reforms. But the royalists, now as formerly,would listen to no
+compromise. Organizing themselves into bodies of volunteers, they
+drove Dulce out. He was succeeded by one Caballero de Rodas
+(Knight of Rhodes) who lived up to his name by trying to ride
+roughshod over the rebellious Cubans. Thus began the Ten Years'
+War--a war of skirmishes and brief encounters, rarely involving a
+decisive action, which drenched the soil of Cuba with blood and
+laid waste its fields in a fury of destruction.
+
+Among the radicals and liberals who tried to retain a fleeting
+control over Mexico after the final departure of Santa Anna was
+the first genuine statesman it had ever known in its history as a
+republic--Benito Pablo Juarez, an Indian. At twelve years of age
+he could not read or write or even speak Spanish. His employer,
+however, noted his intelligence and had him educated. Becoming a
+lawyer, Juarez entered the political arena and rose to prominence
+by dint of natural talent for leadership, an indomitable
+perseverance, and a sturdy patriotism. A radical by conviction,
+he felt that the salvation of Mexico could never be attained
+until clericalism and militarism had been banished from its soil
+forever.
+
+Under his influence a provisional government had already begun a
+policy of lessening the privileges of the Church, when the
+conservative elements, with a cry that religion was being
+attacked, rose up in arms again. This movement repressed, a
+Congress proceeded in 1857 to issue a liberal constitution which
+was destined to last for sixty years. It established the federal
+system in a definite fashion, abolished special privileges, both
+ecclesiastical and military, and organized the country on sound
+bases worthy of a modern nation. Mexico seemed about to enter
+upon a rational development. But the newly elected President,
+yielding to the importunities of the clergy, abolished the
+constitution, dissolved the legislature, and set up a
+dictatorship, in spite of the energetic protests of Juarez, who
+had been chosen Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, and who, in
+accordance with the terms of the temporarily discarded
+instrument, was authorized to assume the presidency should that
+office fall vacant. The rule of the usurper was short-lived,
+however. Various improvised "generals" of conservative stripe put
+themselves at the head of a movement to "save country, religion,
+and the rights of the army," drove the would-be dictator out, and
+restored the old regime.
+
+Juarez now proclaimed himself acting President, as he was legally
+entitled to do, and set up his government at Vera Cruz while one
+"provisional president" followed another. Throughout this trying
+time Juarez defended his position vigorously and rejected every
+offer of compromise. In 1859 he promulgated his famous Reform
+Laws which nationalized ecclesiastical property, secularized
+cemeteries, suppressed religious communities, granted freedom of
+worship, and made marriage a civil contract. For Mexico, however,
+as for other Spanish American countries, measures of the sort
+were far too much in advance of their time to insure a ready
+acceptance. Although Juarez obtained a great moral victory when
+his government was recognized by the United States, he had to
+struggle two years more before he could gain possession of the
+capital. Triumphant in 1861, he carried his anticlerical program
+to the point of actually expelling the Papal Nuncio and other
+ecclesiastics who refused to obey his decrees. By so doing he
+leveled the way for the clericals, conservatives, and the
+militarists to invite foreign intervention on behalf of their
+desperate cause. But, even if they had not been guilty of
+behavior so unpatriotic, the anger of the Pope over the treatment
+of his Church, the wrath of Spain over the conduct of Juarez, who
+had expelled the Spanish minister for siding with the
+ecclesiastics, the desire of Great Britain to collect debts due
+to her subjects, and above all the imperialistic ambitions of
+Napoleon III, who dreamt of converting the intellectual influence
+of France in Hispanic America into a political ascendancy, would
+probably have led to European occupation in any event, so long at
+least as the United States was slit asunder and incapable of
+action.
+
+Some years before, the Mexican Government under the clerical and
+militarist regime had made a contract with a Swiss banker who for
+a payment of $500,000 had received bonds worth more than fifteen
+times the value of the loan. When, therefore, the Mexican
+Congress undertook to defer payments on a foreign debt that
+included the proceeds of this outrageous contract, the
+Governments of France, Great Britain, and Spain decided to
+intervene. According to their agreement the three powers were
+simply to hold the seaports of Mexico and collect the customs
+duties until their pecuniary demands had been satisfied.
+Learning, however, that Napoleon III had ulterior designs, Great
+Britain and Spain withdrew their forces and left him to proceed
+with his scheme of conquest. After capturing Puebla in May, 1863,
+a French army numbering some thirty thousand men entered the
+capital and installed an assemblage of notables belonging to the
+clerical and conservative groups. This body thereupon proclaimed
+the establishment of a constitutional monarchy under an emperor.
+The title was to be offered to Maximilian, Archduke of Austria.
+In case he should not accept, the matter was to be referred to
+the "benevolence of his majesty, the Emperor of the French," who
+might then select some other Catholic prince.
+
+On his arrival, a year later, the amiable and well-meaning
+Maximilian soon discovered that, instead of being an "Emperor,"
+he was actually little more than a precarious chief of a faction
+sustained by the bayonets of a foreign army. In the northern part
+of Mexico, Juarez, Porfirio Diaz,--later to become the most
+renowned of presidential autocrats,--and other patriot leaders,
+though hunted from place to place, held firmly to their resolve
+never to bow to the yoke of the pretender. Nor could Maximilian
+be sure of the loyalty of even his supposed adherents. Little by
+little the unpleasant conviction intruded itself upon him that he
+must either abdicate or crush all resistance in the hope that
+eventually time and good will might win over the Mexicans. But do
+what they would, his foreign legions could not catch the wary and
+stubborn Juarez and his guerrilla lieutenants, who persistently
+wore down the forces of their enemies. Then the financial
+situation became grave. Still more menacing was the attitude of
+the United States now that its civil war was at an end. On May
+31, 1866, Maximilian received word that Napoleon III had decided
+to withdraw the French troops. He then determined to abdicate,
+but he was restrained by the unhappy Empress Carlotta, who
+hastened to Europe to plead his cause with Napoleon. Meantime, as
+the French troops were withdrawn, Juarez occupied the territory.
+
+Feebly the "Emperor" strove to enlist the favor of his
+adversaries by a number of liberal decrees; but their sole result
+was his abandonment by many a lukewarm conservative. Inexorably
+the patriot armies closed around him until in May, 1867, he was
+captured at Queretaro, where he had sought refuge. Denied the
+privilege of leaving the country on a promise never to return, he
+asked Escobedo, his captor, to treat him as a prisoner of war.
+"That's my business," was the grim reply. On the pretext that
+Maximilian had refused to recognize the competence of the
+military court chosen to try him, Juarez gave the order to shoot
+him. On the 19th of June the Austrian archduke paid for a
+fleeting glory with his life. Thus failed the second attempt at
+erecting an empire in Mexico. For thirty-four years diplomatic
+relations between that country and Austria-Hungary were severed.
+The clericalmilitary combination had been overthrown, and the
+Mexican people had rearmed their independence. As Juarez
+declared: "Peace means respect for the rights of others."
+
+Even if foreign dreams of empire in Mexico had vanished so
+abruptly, it could hardly be expected that a land torn for many
+years by convulsions could become suddenly tranquil. With Diaz
+and other aspirants to presidential power, or with chieftains who
+aimed at setting up little republics of their own in the several
+states, Juarez had to contend for some time before he could
+establish a fair amount of order. Under his successor, who also
+was a civilian, an era of effective reform began. In 1873
+amendments to the constitution declared Church and State
+absolutely separate and provided for the abolition of peonage--a
+provision which was more honored in, the breach than in the
+observance.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII. GREATER STATES AND LESSER
+
+During the half century that had elapsed since 1826, the nations
+of Hispanic America had passed through dark ages. Their evolution
+had always been accompanied by growing pains and had at times
+been arrested altogether or unduly hastened by harsh injections
+of radicalism. It was not an orderly development through gradual
+modifications in the social and economic structure, but rather a
+fitful progress now assisted and now retarded by the arbitrary
+deeds of men of action, good and bad, who had seized power.
+Dictators, however, steadily decreased in number and gave place
+often to presidential autocrats who were continued in office by
+constant reelection and who were imbued with modern ideas. In
+1876 these Hispanic nations stood on the threshold of a new era.
+Some were destined to advance rapidly beyond it; others, to move
+slowly onward; and a few to make little or no progress.
+
+The most remarkable feature in the new era was the rise of four
+states--Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, and Chile--to a position of
+eminence among their fellows. Extent of territory, development of
+natural resources, the character of the inhabitants and the
+increase of their numbers, and the amount of popular intelligence
+and prosperity, all contributed to this end. Each of the four
+nations belonged to a fairly well-defined historical and
+geographical group in southern North America, and in eastern and
+western South America, respectively. In the first group were
+Mexico, the republics of Central America, and the island
+countries of the Caribbean; in the second, Brazil, Argentina,
+Uruguay, and Paraguay; and in the third, Chile, Peru, and
+Bolivia. In a fourth group were Ecuador, Colombia, and Venezuela.
+
+When the President of Mexico proceeded, in 1876, to violate the
+constitution by securing his reelection, the people were prepared
+by their earlier experiences and by the rule of Juarez to defend
+their constitutional rights. A widespread rebellion headed by
+Diaz broke out. In the so-called "Plan of Tuxtepec" the
+revolutionists declared themselves in favor of the principle of
+absolutely no reelection. Meantime the Chief Justice of the
+Supreme Court handed down a decision that the action of the
+Congress in sustaining the President was illegal, since in
+reality no elections had been held because of the abstention of
+voters and the seizure of the polls by revolutionists or
+government forces. "Above the constitution, nothing; above the
+constitution, no one," he declared. But as this assumption of a
+power of judgment on matters of purely political concern was
+equally a violation of the constitution and concealed, besides,
+an attempt to make the Chief Justice President, Diaz and his
+followers drove both of the pretenders out. Then in 1876 he
+managed to bring about his own election instead.
+
+Porfirio Diaz was a soldier who had seen active service in nearly
+every important campaign since the war with the United States.
+Often himself in revolt against presidents, legal and illegal,
+Diaz was vastly more than an ordinary partisan chieftain.
+Schooled by a long experience, he had come to appreciate the fact
+that what Mexico required for its national development was
+freedom from internal disorders and a fair chance for
+recuperation. Justice, order, and prosperity, he felt, could be
+assured only by imposing upon the country the heavy weight of an
+iron hand. Foreign capital must be invested in Mexico and then
+protected; immigration must be encouraged, and other material,
+moral, and intellectual aid of all sorts must be drawn from
+abroad for the upbuilding of the nation.
+
+To effect such a transformation in a land so tormented and
+impoverished as Mexico--a country which, within the span of
+fifty-five years had lived under two "emperors," and some
+thirty-six presidents, nine "provisional presidents," ten
+dictators, twelve "regents," and five "supreme
+councilors"--required indeed a masterful intelligence and a
+masterful authority. Porfirio Diaz possessed and exercised both.
+He was, in fact, just the man for the times. An able
+administrator, stern and severe but just, rather reserved in
+manner and guarded in utterance, shrewd in the selection of
+associates, and singularly successful in his dealings with
+foreigners, he entered upon a "presidential reign" of thirty-five
+years broken by but one intermission of four--which brought
+Mexico out upon the highway to new national life.
+
+Under the stable and efficient rulership of Diaz, "plans,"
+"pronunciamentos," "revolutions," and similar devices of
+professional trouble makers, had short shrift. Whenever an
+uprising started, it was promptly quelled, either by a
+well-disciplined army or by the rurales, a mounted police made up
+to some extent of former bandits to whom the President gave the
+choice of police service or of sharp punishment for their crimes.
+Order, in fact, was not always maintained, nor was justice always
+meted out, by recourse to judges and courts. Instead, a novel
+kind of lynch law was invoked. The name it bore was the ley fuga,
+or "flight law," in accordance with which malefactors or
+political suspects taken by government agents from one locality
+to another, on the excuse of securing readier justice, were given
+by their captors a pretended chance to escape and were then shot
+while they ran! The only difference between this method and
+others of the sort employed by Spanish American autocrats to
+enforce obedience lay in its purpose. Of Diaz one might say what
+Bacon said of King Henry VII: "He drew blood as physicians do, to
+save life rather than to spill it." If need be, here and there,
+disorder and revolt were stamped out by terrorism; but the
+Mexican people did not yield to authority from terror but rather
+from a thorough loyalty to the new regime.
+
+Among the numerous measures of material improvement which Diaz
+undertook during his first term, the construction of railways was
+the most important. The size of the country, its want of
+navigable rivers, and its relatively small and widely scattered
+population, made imperative the establishment of these means of
+communication. Despite the misgivings of many intelligent
+Mexicans that the presence of foreign capital would impair local
+independence in some way, Diaz laid the foundations of future
+national prosperity by granting concessions to the Mexican
+Central and National Mexican companies, which soon began
+construction. Under his successor a national bank was created;
+and when Diaz was again elected he readjusted the existing
+foreign debt and boldly contracted new debts abroad.
+
+At the close of his first term, in 1880, a surplus in the
+treasury was not so great a novelty as the circumstance
+altogether unique in the political annals of Mexico-that Diaz
+turned over the presidency in peaceful fashion to his properly
+elected successor! He did so reluctantly, to be sure, but he
+could not afford just yet to ignore his own avowed principle,
+which had been made a part of the constitution shortly after his
+accession. Although the confidence he reposed in that successor
+was not entirely justified, the immense personal popularity of
+Diaz saved the prestige of the new chief magistrate. Under his
+administration the constitution was amended in such a way as to
+deprive the Chief Justice of the privilege of replacing the
+President in case of a vacancy, thus eliminating that official
+from politics. After his resumption of office, Diaz had the
+fundamental law modified anew, so as to permit the reelection of
+a President for one term only! For this change, inconsistent
+though it may seem, Diaz was not alone responsible. Circumstances
+had changed, and the constitution had to change with them.
+
+Had the "United Provinces of Central America," as they came forth
+from under the rule of Spain, seen fit to abstain from following
+in the unsteady footsteps of Mexico up to the time of the
+accession of Diaz to power, had they done nothing more than
+develop their natural wealth and utilize their admirable
+geographical situation, they might have become prosperous and
+kept their corporate name. As it was, their history for upwards
+of forty years had little to record other than a momentary
+cohesion and a subsequent lapse into five quarrelsome little
+republics--the "Balkan States" of America. Among them Costa Rica
+had suffered least from arbitrary management or internal
+commotion and showed the greatest signs of advancement.
+
+In Guatemala, however, there had arisen another Diaz, though a
+man quite inferior in many respects to his northern counterpart.
+When Justo Rufino Barrios became President of that republic in
+1873 he was believed to have conservative leanings. Ere long,
+however, he astounded his compatriots by showing them that he was
+a thoroughgoing radical with methods of action to correspond to
+his convictions. Not only did he keep the Jesuits out of the
+country but he abolished monastic orders altogether and converted
+their buildings to public use. He made marriage a civil contract
+and he secularized the burying grounds. Education he encouraged
+by engaging the services of foreign instructors, and he brought
+about a better observance of the law by the promulgation of new
+codes. He also introduced railways and telegraph lines. Since the
+manufacture of aniline dyes abroad had diminished the demand for
+cochineal, Barrios decided to replace this export by cultivating
+coffee. To this end, he distributed seeds among the planters and
+furnished financial aid besides, with a promise to inspect the
+fields in due season and see what had been accomplished. Finding
+that in many cases the seeds had been thrown away and the money
+wasted in drink and gambling, he ordered the guilty planters to
+be given fifty lashes, with the assurance that on a second
+offense he would shoot them on sight. Coffee planting in
+Guatemala was pursued thereafter with much alacrity!
+
+Posts in the government service Barrios distributed quite
+impartially among Conservatives and Democrats, deserving or
+otherwise, for he had them both well under control. At his behest
+a permanent constitution was promulgated in 1880. While he
+affected to dislike continual reelection, he saw to it
+nevertheless that he himself should be the sole candidate who was
+likely to win.
+
+Barrios doubtless could have remained President of Guatemala for
+the term of his natural life if he had not raised up the ghost of
+federation. All the republics of Central America accepted his
+invitation in 1876 to send delegates to his capital to discuss
+the project. But nothing was accomplished because Barrios and the
+President of Salvador were soon at loggerheads. Nine years later,
+feeling himself stronger, Barrios again proposed federation. But
+the other republics had by this time learned too much of the
+methods of the autocrat of Guatemala, even while they admired his
+progressive policy, to relish the thought of a federation
+dominated by Guatemala and its masterful President. Though he
+"persuaded" Honduras to accept the plan, the three other
+republics preferred to unite in self-defense, and in the ensuing
+struggle the quixotic Barrios was killed. A few years later the
+project was revived and the constitution of a "Republic of
+Central America" was agreed upon, when war between Guatemala and
+Salvador again frustrated its execution.
+
+In Brazil two great movements were by this time under way: the
+total abolition of slavery and the establishment of a republic.
+Despite the tenacious opposition of many of the planters, from
+about the year 1883 the movement for emancipation made great
+headway. There was a growing determination on the part of the
+majority of the inhabitants to remove the blot that made the
+country an object of reproach among the civilized states of the
+world. Provinces and towns, one after another, freed the slaves
+within their borders. The imperial Government, on its part,
+hastened the process by liberating its own slaves and by imposing
+upon those still in bondage taxes higher than their market value;
+it fixed a price for other slaves; it decreed that the older
+slaves should be set free; and it increased the funds already
+appropriated to compensate owners of slaves who should be
+emancipated. In 1887 the number of slaves had fallen to about
+720,000, worth legally about $650 each. A year later came the
+final blow, when the Princess Regent assented to a measure which
+abolished slavery outright and repealed all former acts relating
+to slavery. So radical a proceeding wrought havoc in the
+coffee-growing southern provinces in particular, from which the
+negroes now freed migrated by tens of thousands to the northern
+provinces. Their places, however, were taken by Italians and
+other Europeans who came to work the plantations on a cooperative
+basis. All through the eighties, in fact, immigrants from Italy
+poured into the temperate regions of southern Brazil, to the
+number of nearly two hundred thousand, supplementing the many
+thousands of Germans who had settled, chiefly in the province of
+Rio Grande do Sul, thirty years before.
+
+Apart from the industrial problem thus created by the abolition
+of slavery, there seemed to be no serious political or economic
+questions before the country. Ever since 1881, when a law
+providing for direct elections was passed, the Liberals had been
+in full control. The old Dom Pedro, who had endeared himself to
+his people, was as much liked and respected as ever. But as he
+had grown feeble and almost blind, the heiress to the throne, who
+had marked absolutist and clerical tendencies, was disposed to
+take advantage of his infirmities.
+
+For many years, on the other hand, doctrines opposed to the
+principle of monarchy had been spread in zealous fashion by
+members of the military class, notable among whom was Deodoro da
+Fonseca. And now some of the planters longed to wreak vengeance
+on a ruler who had dared to thwart their will by emancipating the
+slaves. Besides this persistent discontent, radical republican
+newspapers continually stirred up fresh agitation. Whatever the
+personal service rendered by the Emperor to the welfare of the
+country, to them he represented a political system which deprived
+the provinces of much of their local autonomy and the Brazilian
+people at large of self-government.
+
+But the chief reason for the momentous change which was about to
+take place was the fact that the constitutional monarchy had
+really completed its work as a transitional government. Under
+that regime Brazil had reached a condition of stability and had
+attained a level of progress which might well enable it to govern
+itself. During all this time the influence of the Spanish
+American nations had been growing apace. Even if they had fallen
+into many a political calamity, they were nevertheless
+"republics," and to the South American this word had a magic
+sound. Above all, there was the potent suggestion of the success
+of the United States of North America, whose extension of its
+federal system over a vast territory suggested what Brazil with
+its provinces might accomplish in the southern continent. Hence
+the vast majority of intelligent Brazilians felt that they had
+become self-reliant enough to establish a republic without fear
+of lapsing into the unfortunate experiences of the other Hispanic
+countries.
+
+In 1889, when provision was made for a speedy abdication of the
+Emperor in favor of his daughter, the republican newspapers
+declared that a scheme was being concocted to exile the chief
+military agitators and to interfere with any effort on the part
+of the army to prevent the accession of the new ruler. Thereupon,
+on the 15th of November, the radicals at Rio de Janeiro, aided by
+the garrison, broke out in open revolt. Proclaiming the
+establishment of a federal republic under the name of the "United
+States of Brazil," they deposed the imperial ministry, set up a
+provisional government with Deodoro da Fonseca at its head,
+arranged for the election of a constitutional convention, and
+bade Dom Pedro and his family leave the country within
+twenty-four hours.
+
+On the 17th of November, before daybreak, the summons was obeyed.
+Not a soul appeared to bid the old Emperor farewell as he and his
+family boarded the steamer that was to bear them to exile in
+Europe. Though seemingly an act of heartlessness and ingratitude,
+the precaution was a wise one in that it averted, possible
+conflict and bloodshed. For the second time in its history, a
+fundamental change had been wrought in the political system of
+the nation without a resort to war! The United States of Brazil
+accordingly took its place peacefully among its fellow republics
+of the New World.
+
+Meanwhile Argentina, the great neighbor of Brazil to the
+southwest, had been gaining territory and new resources. Since
+the definite adoption of a federal constitution in 1853, this
+state had attained to a considerable degree of national
+consciousness under the leadership of able presidents such as
+Bartolome Mitre, the soldier and historian, and Domingo Faustino
+Sarmiento, the publicist and promoter of popular education. One
+evidence of this new nationalism was a widespread belief in the
+necessity of territorial expansion. Knowing that Chile
+entertained designs upon Patagonia, the Argentine Government
+forestalled any action by conducting a war of practical
+extermination against the Indian tribes of that region and by
+adding it to the national domain. The so-called "conquest of the
+desert" in the far south of the continent opened to civilization
+a vast habitable area of untold economic possibilities.
+
+In the electoral campaign of 1880 the presidential candidates
+were Julio Argentino Roca and the Governor of the province of
+Buenos Aires. The former, an able officer skilled in both arms
+and politics, had on his side the advantage of a reputation won
+in the struggle with the Patagonian Indians, the approval of the
+national Government, and the support of most of the provinces.
+Feeling certain of defeat at the polls, the partisans of the
+latter candidate resorted to the timeworn expedient of a revolt.
+Though the uprising lasted but twenty days, the diplomatic corps
+at the capital proffered its mediation between the contestants,
+in order to avoid any further bloodshed. The result was that the
+fractious Governor withdrew his candidacy and a radical change
+was effected in the relations of Buenos Aires, city and province,
+to the country at large. The city, together with its environs,
+was converted into a federal district and became solely and
+distinctively the national capital. Its public buildings,
+railways, and telegraph service, as well as the provincial debt,
+were taken over by the general Government. The seat of provincial
+authority was transferred to the village of Ensenada, which
+thereupon was rechristened La Plata.
+
+A veritable tide of wealth and general prosperity was now rolling
+over Argentina. By 1885 its population had risen to upwards of
+3,000,000. Immigration increased to a point far beyond the
+wildest expectations. In 1889 alone about 300,000 newcomers
+arrived and lent their aid in the promotion of industry and
+commerce. Fields hitherto uncultivated or given over to grazing
+now bore vast crops of wheat, maize, linseed, and sugar. Large
+quantities of capital, chiefly from Great Britain, also poured
+into the country. As a result, the price of land rose high, and
+feverish speculation became the order of the day. Banks and other
+institutions of credit were set up, colonizing schemes were
+devised, and railways were laid out. To meet the demands of all
+these enterprises, the Government borrowed immense sums from
+foreign capitalists and issued vast quantities of paper money,
+with little regard for its ultimate redemption. Argentina spent
+huge sums in prodigal fashion on all sorts of public improvements
+in an effort to attract still more capital and immigration, and
+thus entered upon a dangerous era of inflation.
+
+Of the near neighbors of Argentina, Uruguay continued along the
+tortuous path of alternate disturbance and progress, losing many
+of its inhabitants to the greater states beyond, where they
+sought relative peace and security; while Paraguay, on the other
+hand, enjoyed freedom from civil strife, though weighed down with
+a war debt and untold millions in indemnities exacted by
+Argentina and Brazil, which it could never hope to pay. In
+consequence, this indebtedness was a useful club to brandish over
+powerless Paraguay whenever that little country might venture to
+question the right of either of its big neighbors to break the
+promise they had made of keeping its territory intact. Argentina,
+however, consented in 1878 to refer certain claims to the
+decision of the President of the United States. When Paraguay won
+the arbitration, it showed its gratitude by naming one of its
+localities Villa Hayes. As time went on, however, its population
+increased and hid many of the scars of war.
+
+On the western side of South America there broke out the struggle
+known as the "War of the Pacific" between Chile, on the one side,
+and Peru and Bolivia as allies on the other. In Peru unstable and
+corrupt governments had contracted foreign loans under conditions
+that made their repayment almost impossible and had spent the
+proceeds in so reckless and extravagant a fashion as to bring the
+country to the verge of bankruptcy. Bolivia, similarly governed,
+was still the scene of the orgies and carnivals which had for
+some time characterized its unfortunate history. One of its
+buffoon "presidents," moreover, had entered into boundary
+agreements with both Chile and Brazil, under which the nation
+lost several important areas and some of its territory on the
+Pacific. The boundaries of Bolivia, indeed, were run almost
+everywhere on purely arbitrary lines drawn with scant regard for
+the physical features of the country and with many a frontier
+question left wholly unsettled. For some years Chilean companies
+and speculators, aided by foreign capital mainly British in
+origin, had been working deposits of nitrate of soda in the
+province of Antofagasta, or "the desert of Atacama," a region
+along the coast to the northward belonging to Bolivia, and also
+in the provinces of Tacna, Arica, and Tarapaca, still farther to
+the northward, belonging to Peru. Because boundary lines were not
+altogether clear and because the three countries were all eager
+to exploit these deposits, controversies over this debatable
+ground were sure to rise. For the privilege of developing
+portions of this region, individuals and companies had obtained
+concessions from the various governments concerned; elsewhere,
+industrial free lances dug away without reference to such
+formalities.
+
+It is quite likely that Chile, whose motto was "By Right or by
+Might," was prepared to sustain the claims of its citizens by
+either alternative. At all events, scenting a prospective
+conflict, Chile had devoted much attention to the development of
+its naval and military establishment--a state of affairs which
+did not escape the observation of its suspicious neighbors.
+
+The policy of Peru was determined partly by personal motives and
+partly by reasons of state. In 1873 the President, lacking
+sufficient financial and political support to keep himself in
+office, resolved upon the risky expedient of arousing popular
+passion against Chile, in the hope that he might thereby
+replenish the national treasury. Accordingly he proceeded to pick
+a quarrel by ordering the deposits in Tarapaca to be expropriated
+with scant respect for the concessions made to the Chilean
+miners. Realizing, however, the possible consequences of such an
+action, he entered into an alliance with Bolivia. This country
+thereupon proceeded to levy an increased duty on the exportation
+of nitrates from the Atacama region. Chile, already aware of the
+hostile combination which had been formed, protested so
+vigorously that a year later Bolivia agreed to withdraw the new
+regulations and to submit the dispute to arbitration.
+
+Such were the relations of these three states in 1878, when
+Bolivia, taking advantage of differences of opinion between Chile
+and Argentina regarding the Patagonian region, reimposed its
+export duty, canceled the Chilean concessions, and confiscated
+the nitrate deposits. Chile then declared war in February, 1879,
+and within two months occupied the entire coast of Bolivia up to
+the frontiers of Peru. On his part the President of Bolivia was
+too much engrossed in the festivities connected with a masquerade
+to bother about notifying the people that their land had been
+invaded until several days after the event had occurred!
+
+Misfortunes far worse than anything which had fallen to the lot
+of its ally now awaited Peru, which first attempted an officious
+mediation and then declared war on the 4th of April. Since Peru
+and Bolivia together had a population double that of Chile, and
+since Peru possessed a much larger army and navy than Chile, the
+allies counted confidently on victory. But Peru's army of eight
+thousand--having within four hundred as many officers as men,
+directed by no fewer than twenty-six generals, and presided over
+by a civil government altogether inept--was no match for an army
+less than a third of its size to be sure, but well drilled and
+commanded, and with a stable, progressive, and efficient
+government at its back. The Peruvian forces, lacking any
+substantial support from Bolivia, crumpled under the terrific
+attacks of their adversaries. Efforts on the part of the United
+States to mediate in the struggle were blocked by the dogged
+refusal of Chile to abate its demands for annexation. Early in
+1881 its army entered Lima in triumph, and the war was over.
+
+For a while the victors treated the Peruvians and their capital
+city shamefully. The Chilean soldiers stripped the national
+library of its contents, tore up the lamp-posts in the streets,
+carried away the benches in the parks, and even shipped off the
+local menagerie to Santiago! What they did not remove or destroy
+was disposed of by the rabble of Lima itself. But in two years so
+utterly chaotic did the conditions in the hapless country become
+that Chile at length had to set up a government in order to
+conclude a peace. It was not until October 20, 1883, that the
+treaty was signed at Lima and ratified later at Ancon. Peru was
+forced to cede Tarapaca outright and to agree that Tacna and
+Arica should be held by Chile for ten years. At the expiration of
+this period the inhabitants of the two provinces were to be
+allowed to choose by vote the country to which they would prefer
+to belong, and the nation that won the election was to pay the
+loser 10,000,000 pesos. In April, 1884, Bolivia, also, entered
+into an arrangement with Chile, according to which a portion of
+its seacoast should be ceded absolutely and the remainder should
+be occupied by Chile until a more definite understanding on the
+matter could be reached.
+
+Chile emerged from the war not only triumphant over its northern
+rivals but dominant on the west coast of South America. Important
+developments in Chilean national policy followed. To maintain its
+vantage and to guard against reprisals, the victorious state had
+to keep in military readiness on land and sea. It therefore
+looked to Prussia for a pattern for its army and to Great Britain
+for a model for its navy.
+
+Peru had suffered cruelly from the war. Its territorial losses
+deprived it of an opportunity to satisfy its foreign creditors
+through a grant of concessions. The public treasury, too, was
+empty, and many a private fortune had melted away. Not until a
+military hand stronger than its competitors managed to secure a
+firm grip on affairs did Peru begin once more its toilsome
+journey toward material betterment.
+
+Bolivia, on its part, had emerged from the struggle practically a
+landlocked country. Though bereft of access to the sea except by
+permission of its neighbors, it had, however, not endured
+anything like the calamities of its ally. In 1880 it had adopted
+a permanent constitution and it now entered upon a course of slow
+and relatively peaceful progress.
+
+In the republics to the northward struggles between clericals and
+radicals caused sharp, abrupt alternations in government. In
+Ecuador the hostility between clericals and radicals was all the
+more bitter because of the rivalry of the two chief towns,
+Guayaquil the seaport and Quito the capital, each of which
+sheltered a faction. No sooner therefore had Garcia Moreno fallen
+than the radicals of Guayaquil rose up against the clericals at
+Quito. Once in power, they hunted their enemies down until order
+under a dictator could be restored. The military President who
+assumed power in 1876 was too radical to suit the clericals and
+too clerical to suit the radicals. Accordingly his opponents
+decided to make the contest three-cornered by fighting the
+dictator and one another. When the President had been forced out,
+a conservative took charge until parties of bushwhackers and
+mutinous soldiers were able to install a military leader, whose
+retention of power was brief. In 1888 another conservative, who
+had been absent from the country when elected and who was an
+adept in law and diplomacy, managed to win sufficient support
+from all three factions to retain office for the constitutional
+period.
+
+In Colombia a financial crisis had been approaching ever since
+the price of coffee, cocoa, and other Colombian products had
+fallen in the European markets. This decrease had caused a
+serious diminution in the export trade and had forced gold and
+silver practically out of circulation. At the same time the
+various "states" were increasing their powers at the expense of
+the federal Government, and the country was rent by factions. In
+order to give the republic a thoroughly centralized
+administration which would restore financial confidence and bring
+back the influence of the Church as a social and political
+factor, a genuine revolution, which was started in 1876,
+eventually put an end to both radicalism and states' rights. At
+the outset Rafael Nunez, the unitary and clerical candidate and a
+lawyer by profession, was beaten on the field, but at a
+subsequent election he obtained the requisite number of votes
+and, in 1880, assumed the presidency. That the loser in war
+should become the victor in peace showed the futility of
+bloodshed in such revolutions.
+
+Not until Nunez came into office again did he feel himself strong
+enough to uproot altogether the radicalism and disunion which had
+flourished since 1860. Ignoring the national Legislature, he
+called a Congress of his own, which in 1886 framed a constitution
+that converted the "sovereign states" into "departments," or mere
+administrative districts, to be ruled as the national Government
+saw fit. Further, the presidential term was lengthened from two
+years to six, and the name of the country was changed, finally,
+to "Republic of Colombia." Two years later the power of the
+Church was strengthened by a concordat with the Pope.
+
+Venezuela on its part had undergone changes no less marked. A
+liberal constitution promulgated in 1864 had provided for the
+reorganization of the country on a federal basis. The name chosen
+for the republic was "United States of Venezuela." More than
+that, it had anticipated Mexico and Guatemala in being the first
+of the Hispanic nations to witness the establishment of a
+presidential autocracy of the continuous and enlightened type.
+
+Antonio Guzman Blanco was the man who imposed upon Venezuela for
+about nineteen years a regime of obedience to law, and, to some
+extent, of modern ideas of administration such as the country had
+never known before. A person of much versatility, he had studied
+medicine and law before he became a soldier and a politician.
+Later he displayed another kind of versatility by letting
+henchmen hold the presidential office while he remained the power
+behind the throne. Endowed with a masterful will and a pronounced
+taste for minute supervision, he had exactly the ability
+necessary to rule Venezuela wisely and well.
+
+Amid considerable opposition he began, in 1870, the first of his
+three periods of administration--the Septennium, as it was
+termed. The "sovereign" states he governed through "sovereign"
+officials of his own selection. He stopped the plundering of
+farms and the dragging of laborers off to military service. He
+established in Venezuela an excellent monetary system. Great sums
+were expended in the erection of public and private buildings and
+in the embellishment of Caracas. European capital and immigration
+were encouraged to venture into a country hitherto so torn by
+chronic disorder as to deprive both labor and property of all
+guarantees. Roads, railways, and telegraph lines were
+constructed. The ministers of the Church were rendered submissive
+to the civil power. Primary education became alike free and
+compulsory. As the phrase went, Guzman Blanco "taught Venezuela
+to read." At the end of his term of office he went into voluntary
+retirement.
+
+In 1879 Guzman Blanco put himself at the head of a movement which
+he called a "revolution of replevin"--which meant, presumably,
+that he was opposed to presidential "continuism," and in favor of
+republican institutions! Although a constitution promulgated in
+1881 fixed the chief magistrate's term of office at two years,
+the success which Guzman Blanco had attained enabled him to
+control affairs for five years--the Quinquennium, as it was
+called. Thereupon he procured his appointment to a diplomatic
+post in Europe; but the popular demand for his presence was too
+strong for him to remain away. In 1886 he was elected by
+acclamation. He held office two years more and then, finding that
+his influence had waned, he left Venezuela for good. Whatever his
+faults in other respects, Guzman Blanco--be it said to his credit
+--tried to destroy the pest of periodical revolutions in his
+country. Thanks to his vigorous suppression of these uprisings,
+some years of at least comparative security were made possible.
+More than any other President the nation had ever had, he was
+entitled to the distinction of having been a benefactor, if not
+altogether a regenerator, of his native land.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII. "ON THE MARGIN OF INTERNATIONAL LIFE"
+
+During the period from 1889 to 1907 two incidents revealed the
+standing that the republics of Hispanic America had now acquired
+in the world at large. In 1889 at Washington, and later in their
+own capital cities, they met with the United States in council.
+In 1899, and again in 1907, they joined their great northern
+neighbor and the nations of Europe and Asia at The Hague for
+deliberation on mutual concerns, and they were admitted to an
+international fellowship and cooperation far beyond a mere
+recognition of their independence and a formal interchange of
+diplomats and consuls.
+
+Since attempts of the Hispanic countries themselves to realize
+the aims of Bolivar in calling the Congress at Panama had failed,
+the United States now undertook to call into existence a sort of
+inter-American Congress. Instead of being merely a supporter, the
+great republic of the north had resolved to become the director
+of the movement for greater solidarity in thought and action. By
+linking up the concerns of the Hispanic nations with its own
+destinies it would assert not so much its position as guardian of
+the Monroe Doctrine as its headship, if not its actual dominance,
+in the New World, and would so widen the bounds of its political
+and commercial influence - a tendency known as "imperialism."
+Such was the way, at least, in which the Hispanic republics came
+to view the action of the "Colossus of the North" in inviting
+them to participate in an assemblage meeting more or less
+periodically and termed officially the "International Conference
+of American States," and popularly the "Pan-American Conference."
+
+Whether the mistrust the smaller countries felt at the outset was
+lessened in any degree by the attendance of their delegates at
+the sessions of this conference remains open to question.
+Although these representatives, in common with their colleagues
+from the United States, assented to a variety of conventions and
+passed a much larger number of resolutions, their acquiescence
+seemed due to a desire to gratify their powerful associate,
+rather than to a belief in the possible utility of such measures.
+The experience of the earlier gatherings had demonstrated that
+political issues would have to be excluded from consideration.
+Propositions, for example, such as that to extend the basic idea
+of the Monroe Doctrine into a sort of self-denying ordinance,
+under which all the nations of America should agree to abstain
+thereafter from acquiring any part of one another's territory by
+conquest, and to adopt, also, the principle of compulsory
+arbitration, proved impossible of acceptance. Accordingly, from
+that time onward the matters treated by the Conference dealt for
+the most part with innocuous, though often praiseworthy, projects
+for bringing the United States and its sister republics into
+closer commercial, industrial, and intellectual relations.
+
+The gathering itself, on the other hand, became to a large extent
+a fiesta, a festive occasion for the display of social amenities.
+Much as the Hispanic Americans missed their favorite topic of
+politics, they found consolation in entertaining the
+distinguished foreign visitors with the genial courtesy and
+generous hospitality for which they are famous. As one of their
+periodicals later expressed it, since a discussion of politics
+was tabooed, it were better to devote the sessions of the
+Conference to talking about music and lyric poetry! At all
+events, as far as the outcome was concerned, their national
+legislatures ratified comparatively few of the conventions.
+
+Among the Hispanic nations of America only Mexico took part in
+the First Conference at The Hague. Practically all of them were
+represented at the second. The appearance of their delegates at
+these august assemblages of the powers of earth was viewed for a
+while with mixed feelings. The attitude of the Great Powers
+towards them resembled that of parents of the old regime:
+children at the international table should be "seen and not
+heard." As a matter of fact, the Hispanic Americans were both
+seen and heard--especially the latter! They were able to show the
+Europeans that, even if they did happen to come from relatively
+weak states, they possessed a skillful intelligence, a breadth of
+knowledge, a capacity for expression, and a consciousness of
+national character, which would not allow them simply to play
+"Man Friday" to an international Crusoe. The president of the
+second conference, indeed, confessed that they had been a
+"revelation" to him.
+
+Hence, as time went on, the progress and possibilities of the
+republics of Hispanic America came to be appreciated more and
+more by the world at large. Gradually people began to realize
+that the countries south of the United States were not merely an
+indistinguishable block on the map, to be referred to vaguely as
+"Central and South America" or as "Latin America." The reading
+public at least knew that these countries were quite different
+from one another, both in achievements and in prospects.
+
+Yet the fact remains that, despite their active part in these
+American and European conferences, the Hispanic countries of the
+New World did not receive the recognition which they felt was
+their due. Their national associates in the European gatherings
+were disinclined to admit that the possession of independence and
+sovereignty entitled them to equal representation on
+international council boards. To a greater or less degree,
+therefore, they continued to stay in the borderland where no one
+either affirmed or denied their individuality. To quote the
+phrase of an Hispanic American, they stood "on the margin of
+international life." How far they might pass beyond it into the
+full privileges of recognition and association on equal terms,
+would depend upon the readiness with which they could atone for
+the errors or recover from the misfortunes of the past, and upon
+their power to attain stability, prosperity, strength, and
+responsibility.
+
+Certain of the Hispanic republics, however, were not allowed to
+remain alone on their side of "the margin of international life."
+Though nothing so extreme as the earlier French intervention took
+place, foreign nations were not at all averse to crossing over
+the marginal line and teaching them what a failure to comply with
+international obligations meant. The period from 1889 to 1907,
+therefore, is characterized also by interference on the part of
+European powers, and by interposition on the part of the United
+States, in the affairs of countries in and around the Caribbean
+Sea. Because of the action taken by the United States two more
+republics--Cuba and Panama--came into being, thus increasing the
+number of political offshoots from Spain in America to eighteen.
+Another result of this interposition was the creation of what
+were substantially American protectorates. Here the United States
+did not deprive the countries concerned of their independence an
+d sovereignty, but subjected them to a kind of guardianship or
+tutelage, so far as it thought needful to insure stability,
+solvency, health, and welfare in general. Foremost in the
+northern group of Hispanic nations, Mexico, under the guidance of
+Diaz, marched steadily onward. Peace, order, and law; an
+increasing population; internal wealth and well-being; a
+flourishing industry and commerce; suitable care for things
+mental as well as material; the respect and confidence of
+foreigners--these were blessings which the country had hitherto
+never beheld. The Mexicans, once in anarchy and enmity created by
+militarists and clericals, came to know one another in
+friendship, and arrived at something like a national
+consciousness.
+
+In 1889 there was held the first conference on educational
+problems which the republic had ever had. Three years later a
+mining code was drawn up which made ownership inviolable on
+payment of lawful dues, removed uncertainties of operation, and
+stimulated the industry in a remarkable fashion. Far less
+beneficial in the long run was a law enacted in 1894. Instead of
+granting a legal title to lands held by prescriptive rights
+through an occupation of many years, it made such property part
+of the public domain, which might be acquired, like a mining
+claim, by any one who could secure a grant of it from the
+Government. Though hailed at the time as a piece of constructive
+legislation, its unfortunate effect was to enable large
+landowners who wished to increase their possessions to oust poor
+cultivators of the soil from their humble holdings. On the other
+hand, under the statesmanlike management of Jose Yves Limantour,
+the Minister of Finance, the monetary situation at home and
+abroad was strengthened beyond measure, and banking interests
+were promoted accordingly. Further, an act abolishing the
+alcabala, a vexatious internal revenue tax, gave a great stimulus
+to freedom of commerce throughout the country. In order to insure
+a continuance of the new regime, the constitution was altered in
+three important respects. The amendment of 1890 restored the
+original clause of 1857, which permitted indefinite reelection to
+the presidency; that of 1896 established a presidential
+succession in case of a vacancy, beginning with the Minister of
+Foreign Affairs; and that of 1904 lengthened the term of the
+chief magistrate from four years to six and created the office of
+Vice President.
+
+In Central America two republics, Guatemala and Costa Rica, set
+an excellent example both because they were free from internal
+commotions and because they refrained from interference in the
+affairs of their neighbors. The contrast between these two quiet
+little nations, under their lawyer Presidents, and the bellicose
+but equally small Nicaragua, Honduras, and Salvador, under their
+chieftains, military and juristic, was quite remarkable.
+Nevertheless another attempt at confederation was made. In 1895
+the ruler of Honduras, declaring that reunion was a "primordial
+necessity," invited his fellow potentates of Nicaragua and
+Salvador to unite in creating the "Greater Republic of Central
+America" and asked Guatemala and Costa Rica to join. Delegates
+actually appeared from all five republics, attended fiestas, gave
+expression to pious wishes, and went home! Later still, in 1902,
+the respective Presidents signed a "convention of peace and
+obligatory arbitration" as a means of adjusting perpetual
+disagreements about politics and boundaries; but nothing was done
+to carry these ideas into effect.
+
+The personage mainly responsible for these failures was Jose
+Santos Zelaya, one of the most arrant military lordlets and
+meddlers that Central America had produced in a long time. Since
+1893 he had been dictator of Nicaragua, a country not only
+entangled in continuous wrangles among its towns and factions,
+but bowed under an enormous burden of debt created by excessive
+emissions of paper money and by the contraction of more or less
+scandalous foreign loans. Quite undisturbed by the financial
+situation, Zelaya promptly silenced local bickerings and devoted
+his energies to altering the constitution for his presidential
+benefit and to making trouble for his neighbors. Nor did he
+refrain from displays of arbitrary conduct that were sure to
+provoke foreign intervention. Great Britain, for example, on two
+occasions exacted reparation at the cannon's mouth for ill
+treatment of its citizens.
+
+Zelaya waxed wroth at the spectacle of Guatemala, once so active
+in revolutionary arts but now quietly minding its own business.
+In 1906, therefore, along with parties of Hondurans,
+Salvadoreans, and disaffected Guatemalans, he began an invasion
+of that country and continued operations with decreasing success
+until, the United States and Mexico offering their mediation,
+peace was signed aboard an American cruiser. Then, when Costa
+Rica invited the other republics to discuss confederation within
+its calm frontiers, Zelaya preferred his own particular
+occupation to any such procedure. Accordingly, displeased with a
+recent boundary decision, he started along with Salvador to fight
+Honduras. Once more the United States and Mexico tendered their
+good offices, and again a Central American conflict was closed
+aboard an American warship. About the only real achievement of
+Zelaya was the signing of a treaty by which Great Britain
+recognized the complete sovereignty of Nicaragua over the
+Mosquito Indians, whose buzzing for a larger amount of freedom
+and more tribute had been disturbing unduly the "repose" of that
+small nation!
+
+To the eastward the new republic of Cuba was about to be born.
+Here a promise of adequate representation in the Spanish Cortes
+and of a local legislature had failed to satisfy the aspirations
+of many of its inhabitants. The discontent was aggravated by lax
+and corrupt methods of administration as well as by financial
+difficulties. Swarms of Spanish officials enjoyed large salaries
+without performing duties of equivalent value. Not a few of them
+had come over to enrich themselves at public expense and under
+conditions altogether scandalous. On Cuba, furthermore, was
+saddled the debt incurred by the Ten Years' War, while the island
+continued to be a lucrative market for Spanish goods without
+obtaining from Spain a corresponding advantage for its own
+products.
+
+As the insistence upon a removal of these abuses and upon a grant
+of genuine self-government became steadily more clamorous, three
+political groups appeared. The Constitutional Unionists, or
+"Austrianizers," as they were dubbed because of their avowed
+loyalty to the royal house of Bourbon-Hapsburg, were made up of
+the Spanish and conservative elements and represented the large
+economic interests and the Church. The Liberals, or
+"Autonomists," desired such reforms in the administration as
+would assure the exercise of self-government and yet preserve the
+bond with the mother country. On the other hand, the Radicals, or
+"Nationalists"--the party of "Cuba Free"--would be satisfied with
+nothing short of absolute independence. All these differences of
+opinion were sharpened by the activities of a sensational press.
+
+>From about 1890 onward the movement toward independence gathered
+tremendous strength, especially when the Cubans found popular
+sentiment in the United States so favorable to it. Excitement
+rose still higher when the Spanish Government proposed to bestow
+a larger measure of autonomy. When, however, the Cortes decided
+upon less liberal arrangements, the Autonomists declared that
+they had been deceived, and the Nationalists denounced the utter
+unreliability of Spanish promises. Even if the concessions had
+been generous, the result probably would have been the same, for
+by this time the plot to set Cuba free had become so widespread,
+both in the island itself and among the refugees in the United
+States, that the inevitable struggle could not have been
+deferred.
+
+In 1895 the revolution broke out. The whites, headed by Maximo
+Gomez, and the negroes and mulattoes by their chieftain, Antonio
+Maceo, both of whom had done valiant service in the earlier war,
+started upon a campaign of deliberate terrorism. This time they
+were resolved to win at any cost. Spurning every offer of
+conciliation, they burned, ravaged, and laid waste, spread
+desolation along their pathway, and reduced thousands to abject
+poverty and want.
+
+Then the Spanish Government came to the conclusion that nothing
+but the most rigorous sort of reprisals would check the excesses
+of the rebels. In 1896 it commissioned Valeriano Weyler, an
+officer who personified ferocity, to put down the rebellion. If
+the insurgents had fancied that the conciliatory spirit hitherto
+displayed by the Spaniards was due to irresolution or weakness,
+they found that these were not the qualities of their new
+opponent. Weyler, instead of trying to suppress the rebellion by
+hurrying detachments of troops first to one spot and then to
+another in pursuit of enemies accustomed to guerrilla tactics,
+determined to stamp it out province by province. To this end he
+planted his army firmly in one particular area, prohibited the
+planting or harvesting of crops there, and ordered the
+inhabitants to assemble in camps which they were not permitted to
+leave on any pretext whatever. This was his policy of
+"reconcentration." Deficient food supply, lack of sanitary
+precautions, and absence of moral safeguards made conditions of
+life in these camps appalling. Death was a welcome relief.
+Reconcentration, combined with executions and deportations, could
+have but one result--the "pacification" of Cuba by converting it
+into a desert.
+
+Not in the United States alone but in Spain itself the story of
+these drastic measures kindled popular indignation to such an
+extent that, in 1897, the Government was forced to recall the
+ferocious Weyler and to send over a new Governor and Captain
+General, with instructions to abandon the worst features of his
+predecessor's policy and to establish a complete system of
+autonomy in both Cuba and Porto Rico. Feeling assured, however,
+that an ally was at hand who would soon make their independence
+certain, the Cuban patriots flatly rejected these overtures. In
+their expectations they were not mistaken. By its armed
+intervention, in the following year the United States acquired
+Porto Rico for itself and compelled Spain to withdraw from Cuba.*
+
+* See "The Path of Empire", by Carl Russell Fish (in "The
+Chronicles of America").
+
+The island then became a republic, subject only to such
+limitations on its freedom of action as its big guardian might
+see fit to impose. Not only was Cuba placed under American rule
+from 1899 to 1902, but it had to insert in the Constitution of
+1901 certain clauses that could not fail to be galling to Cuban
+pride. Among them two were of special significance. One imposed
+limitations on the financial powers of the Government of the new
+nation, and the other authorized the United States, at its
+discretion, to intervene in Cuban affairs for the purpose of
+maintaining public order. The Cubans, it would seem, had
+exchanged a dependence on Spain for a restricted independence
+measured by the will of a country infinitely stronger.
+
+Cuba began its life as a republic in 1902, under a government for
+which a form both unitary and federal had been provided. Tomas
+Estrada Palma, the first President and long the head of the Cuban
+junta in the United States, showed himself disposed from the
+outset to continue the beneficial reforms in administration which
+had been introduced under American rule. Prudent and conciliatory
+in temperament, he tried to dispel as best he could the bitter
+recollections of the war and to repair its ravages. In this
+policy he was upheld by the conservative class, or Moderates.
+Their opponents, the Liberals, dominated by men of radical
+tendencies, were eager to assert the right, to which they thought
+Cuba entitled as an independent sovereign nation, to make
+possible mistakes and correct them without having the United
+States forever holding the ferule of the schoolmaster over it.
+They were well aware, however, that they were not at liberty to
+have their country pass through the tempestuous experience which
+had been the lot of so many Hispanic republics. They could vent a
+natural anger and disappointment, nevertheless, on the President
+and his supporters. Rather than continue to be governed by Cubans
+not to their liking, they were willing to bring about a renewal
+of American rule. In this respect the wishes of the Radicals were
+soon gratified. Hardly had Estrada Palma, in 1906, assumed office
+for a second time, when parties of malcontents, declaring that he
+had secured his reelection by fraudulent means, rose up in arms
+and demanded that he annul the vote and hold a fair election. The
+President accepted the challenge and waged a futile conflict, and
+again the United States intervened. Upon the resignation of
+Estrada Palma, an American Governor was again installed, and Cuba
+was told in unmistakable fashion that the next intervention might
+be permanent.
+
+Less drastic but quite as effectual a method of assuring order
+and regularity in administration was the action taken by the
+United States in another Caribbean island. A little country like
+the Dominican Republic, in which few Presidents managed to retain
+their offices for terms fixed by changeable constitutions, could
+not resist the temptation to rid itself of a ruler who had held
+power for nearly a quarter of a century. After he had been
+disposed of by assassination in 1899, the government of his
+successor undertook to repudiate a depreciated paper currency by
+ordering the customs duties to be paid in specie; and it also
+tried to prevent the consul of an aggrieved foreign nation from
+attaching certain revenues as security for the payment of the
+arrears of an indemnity. Thereupon, in 1905, the President of the
+United States entered into an arrangement with the Dominican
+Government whereby, in return for a pledge from the former
+country to guarantee the territorial integrity of the republic
+and an agreement to adjust all of its external obligations of a
+pecuniary sort, American officials were to take charge of the
+custom house send apportion the receipts from that source in such
+a manner as to satisfy domestic needs and pay foreign creditors.*
+
+* See "The Path of Empire", by Carl Russell Fish (in "The
+Chronicles of America").
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX. THE REPUBLICS OF SOUTH AMERICA
+
+Even so huge and conservative a country as Brazil could not start
+out upon the pathway of republican freedom without some unrest;
+but the political experience gained under a regime of limited
+monarchy had a steadying effect. Besides, the Revolution of 1889
+had been effected by a combination of army officers and civilian
+enthusiasts who knew that the provinces were ready for a radical
+change in the form of government, but who were wise enough to
+make haste slowly. If a motto could mean anything, the adoption
+of the positivist device, "Order and Progress," displayed on the
+national flag seemed a happy augury.
+
+The constitution promulgated in 1891 set up a federal union
+broadly similar to that of the United States, except that the
+powers of the general Government were somewhat more restricted.
+Qualifications for the suffrage were directly fixed in the
+fundamental law itself, but the educational tests imposed
+excluded the great bulk of the population from the right to vote.
+In the constitution, also, Church and State were declared
+absolutely separate, and civil marriage was prescribed.
+
+Well adapted as the constitution was to the particular needs of
+Brazil, the Government erected under it had to contend awhile
+with political disturbances. Though conflicts occurred between
+the president and the Congress, between the federal authority and
+the States, and between the civil administration and naval and
+military officials, none were so constant, so prolonged, or so
+disastrous as in the Spanish American republics. Even when
+elected by the connivance of government officials, the chief
+magistrate governed in accordance with republican forms.
+Presidential power, in fact, was restrained both by the huge size
+of the country and by the spirit of local autonomy upheld by the
+States.
+
+Ever since the war with Paraguay the financial credit of Brazil
+had been impaired. The chronic deficit in the treasury had been
+further increased by a serious lowering in the rate of exchange,
+which was due to an excessive issue of paper money. In order to
+save the nation from bankruptcy Manoel Ferraz de Campos Salles, a
+distinguished jurist, was commissioned to effect an adjustment
+with the British creditors. As a result of his negotiations a
+"funding loan" was obtained, in return for which an equivalent
+amount in paper money was to be turned over for cancellation at a
+fixed rate of exchange. Under this arrangement depreciation
+ceased for awhile and the financial outlook became brighter.
+
+The election of Campos Salles to the presidency in 1898, as a
+reward for his success, was accompanied by the rise of definite
+political parties. Among them the Radicals or Progressists
+favored a policy of centralization under military auspices and
+exhibited certain antiforeign tendencies. The Moderates or
+Republicans, on the contrary, with Campos Salles as their
+candidate, declared for the existing constitution and advocated a
+gradual adoption of such reforms as reason and time might
+suggest. When the latter party won the election, confidence in
+the stability of Brazil returned.
+
+As if Uruguay had not already suffered enough from internal
+discords, two more serious conflicts demonstrated once again that
+this little country, in which political power had been held
+substantially by one party alone since 1865, could not hope for
+permanent peace until either the excluded and apparently
+irreconcilable party had been finally and utterly crushed, or,
+far better still, until the two factions could manage to agree
+upon some satisfactory arrangement for rotation in office. The
+struggle of 1897 ended in the assassination of the president and
+in a division of the republic into two practically separate
+areas, one ruled by the Colorados at Montevideo, the other by the
+Blancos. A renewal of civil war in 1904 seemed altogether
+preferable to an indefinite continuance of this dualism in
+government, even at the risk of friction with Argentina, which
+was charged with not having observed strict neutrality. This
+second struggle came to a close with the death of the insurgent
+leader; but it cost the lives of thousands and did irreparable
+damage to the commerce and industry of the country.
+
+Uruguay then enjoyed a respite from party upheavals until 1910,
+when Jose Batlle, the able, resolute, and radical-minded head of
+the Colorados, announced that he would be a candidate for the
+presidency. As he had held the office before and had never ceased
+to wield a strong personal influence over the administration of
+his successor, the Blancos decided that now was the time to
+attempt once more to oust their opponents from the control which
+they had monopolized for half a century. Accusing the Government
+of an unconstitutional centralization of power in the executive,
+of preventing free elections, and of crippling the pastoral
+industries of the country, they started a revolt, which ran a
+brief course. Batlle proved himself equal to the situation and
+quickly suppressed the insurrection. Though he did make a wide
+use of his authority, the President refrained from indulging in
+political persecution and allowed the press all the liberty it
+desired in so far as was consistent with the law. It was under
+his direction that Uruguay entered upon a remarkable series of
+experiments in the nationalization of business enterprises.
+Further, more or less at the suggestion of Battle, a new
+constitution was ratified by popular vote in 1917. It provided
+for a division of the executive power between the President and a
+National Council of Administration, forbade the election of
+administrative and military officials to the Congress, granted to
+that body a considerable increase of power, and enlarged the
+facilities for local self-government. In addition, it established
+the principle of minority representation and of secrecy of the
+ballot, permitted the Congress to extend the right of suffrage to
+women, and dissolved the union between Church and State. If the
+terms of the new instrument are faithfully observed, the old
+struggle between Blancos and Colorados will have been brought
+definitely to a close.
+
+Paraguay lapsed after 1898 into the earlier sins of Spanish
+America. Upon a comparatively placid presidential regime followed
+a series of barrack uprisings or attacks by Congress on the
+executive. The constitution became a farce. No longer, to be
+sure, an abode of Arcadian seclusion as in colonial times, or a
+sort of territorial cobweb from the center of which a spiderlike
+Francia hung motionless or darted upon his hapless prey, or even
+a battle ground on which fanatical warriors might fight and die
+at the behest of a savage Lopez, Paraguay now took on the aspect
+of an arena in which petty political gamecocks might try out
+their spurs. Happily, the opposing parties spent their energies
+in high words and vehement gestures rather than in blows and
+bloodshed. The credit of the country sank lower and lower until
+its paper money stood at a discount of several hundred per cent
+compared with gold.
+
+European bankers had begun to view the financial future of
+Argentina also with great alarm. In 1890 the mad careering of
+private speculation and public expenditure along the roseate
+pathway of limitless credit reached a veritable "crisis of
+progress." A frightful panic ensued. Paper money fell to less
+than a quarter of its former value in gold. Many a firm became
+bankrupt, and many a fortune shriveled. As is usual in such
+cases, the Government had to shoulder the blame. A four-day
+revolution broke out in Buenos Aires, and the President became
+the scapegoat; but the panic went on, nevertheless, until gold
+stood at nearly five to one. Most of the banks suspended payment;
+the national debt underwent a huge increase; and immigration
+practically ceased.
+
+By 1895, however, the country had more or less resumed its normal
+condition. A new census showed that the population had risen to
+four million, about a sixth of whom resided in the capital. The
+importance which agriculture had attained was attested by the
+establishment of a separate ministry in the presidential cabinet.
+Industry, too, made such rapid strides at this time that
+organized labor began to take a hand in politics. The short-lived
+"revolution" of 1905, for example, was not primarily the work of
+politicians but of strikers organized into a workingmen's
+federation. For three months civil guarantees were suspended, and
+by a so-called "law of residence," enacted some years before and
+now put into effect, the Government was authorized to expel
+summarily any foreigner guilty of fomenting strikes or of
+disturbing public order in any other fashion.
+
+Political agitation soon assumed a new form. Since the
+Autonomist-National party had been in control for thirty years or
+more, it seemed to the Civic-Nationalists, now known as
+Republicans, to the Autonomists proper, and to various other
+factions, that they ought to do something to break the hold of
+that powerful organization. Accordingly in 1906 the President,
+supported by a coalition of these factions, started what was
+termed an "upward-downward revolution"--in other words, a series
+of interventions by which local governors and members of
+legislatures suspected of Autonomist-National leanings were to be
+replaced by individuals who enjoyed the confidence of the
+Administration. Pretexts for such action were not hard to find
+under the terms of the constitution; but their political
+interests suffered so much in the effort that the promoters had
+to abandon it.
+
+Owing to persistent obstruction on the part of Congress, which
+took the form of a refusal either to sanction his appointments or
+to approve the budget, the President suspended the sessions of
+that body in 1908 and decreed a continuance of the estimates for
+the preceding year. The antagonism between the chief executive
+and the legislature became so violent that, if his opponents had
+not been split up into factions, civil war might have ensued in
+Argentina.
+
+To remedy a situation made worse by the absence-- usual in most
+of the Hispanic republics--of a secret ballot and by the refusal
+of political malcontents to take part in elections, voting was
+made both obligatory and secret in 1911, and the principle of
+minority representation was introduced. Legislation of this sort
+was designed to check bribery and intimidation and to enable the
+radical-minded to do their duty at the polls. Its effect was
+shown five years later, when the secret ballot was used
+substantially for the first time. The radicals won both the
+presidency and a majority in the Congress.
+
+One of the secrets of the prosperity of Argentina, as of Brazil,
+in recent years has been its abstention from warlike ventures
+beyond its borders and its endeavor to adjust boundary conflicts
+by arbitration. Even when its attitude toward its huge neighbor
+had become embittered in consequence of a boundary decision
+rendered by the President of the United States in 1895, it abated
+none of its enthusiasm for the principle of a peaceful settlement
+of international disputes. Four years later, in a treaty with
+Uruguay, the so-called "Argentine Formula" appeared. To quote its
+language: "The contracting parties agree to submit to arbitration
+all questions of any nature which may arise between them,
+provided they do not affect provisions of the constitution of
+either state, and cannot be adjusted by direct negotiation." This
+Formula was soon put to the test in a serious dispute with Chile.
+
+In the Treaty of 1881, in partitioning Patagonia, the crest of
+the Andes had been assumed to be the true continental watershed
+between the Atlantic and the Pacific and hence was made the
+boundary line between Argentina and Chile. The entire Atlantic
+coast was to belong to Argentina, the Pacific coast to Chile; the
+island of Tierra del Fuego was to be divided between them. At the
+same time the Strait of Magellan was declared a neutral waterway,
+open to the ships of all nations. Ere long, however, it was
+ascertained that the crest of the Andes did not actually coincide
+with the continental divide. Thereupon Argentina insisted that
+the boundary line should be made to run along the crest, while
+Chile demanded that it be traced along the watershed. Since the
+mountainous area concerned was of little value, the question at
+bottom was simply one of power and prestige between rival states.
+
+As the dispute waxed warmer, a noisy press and populace clamored
+for war. The Governments of the two nations spent large sums in
+increasing their armaments; and Argentina, in imitation of its
+western neighbor, made military service compulsory. But, as the
+conviction gradually spread that a struggle would leave the
+victor as prostrate as the vanquished, wiser counsels prevailed.
+In 1899, accordingly, the matter was referred to the King of
+Great Britain for decision. Though the award was a compromise,
+Chile was the actual gainer in territory.
+
+By their treaties of 1902 both republics declared their intention
+to uphold the principle of arbitration and to refrain from
+interfering in each other's affairs along their respective
+coasts. They also agreed upon a limitation of armaments--the sole
+example on record of a realization of the purpose of the First
+Hague Conference. To commemorate still further their
+international accord, in 1904 they erected on the summit of the
+Uspallata Pass, over which San Martin had crossed with his army
+of liberation in 1817, a bronze statue of Christ the Redeemer.
+There, amid the snow-capped peaks of the giant Andes, one may
+read inscribed upon the pedestal: "Sooner shall these mountains
+crumble to dust than Argentinos and Chileans break the peace
+which at the feet of Christ the Redeemer they have sworn to
+maintain!" Nor has the peace been broken.
+
+Though hostilities with Argentina had thus been averted, Chile
+had experienced within its own frontiers the most serious
+revolution it had known in sixty years. The struggle was not one
+of partisan chieftains or political groups but a genuine contest
+to determine which of two theories of government should
+prevail--the presidential or the parliamentary, a presidential
+autocracy with the spread of real democracy or a congressional
+oligarchy based on the existing order. The sincerity and public
+spirit of both contestants helped to lend dignity to the
+conflict.
+
+Jose Manuel Balmaceda, a man of marked ability, who became
+President in 1886, had devoted much of his political life to
+urging an enlargement of the executive power, a greater freedom
+to municipalities in the management of their local affairs, and a
+broadening of the suffrage. He had even advocated a separation of
+Church and State. Most of these proposals so conservative a land
+as Chile was not prepared to accept. Though civil marriage was
+authorized and ecclesiastical influence was lessened in other
+respects, the Church stood firm. During his administration
+Balmaceda introduced many reforms, both material and educational.
+He gave a great impetus to the construction of public works,
+enhanced the national credit by a favorable conversion of the
+public debt, fostered immigration, and devoted especial attention
+to the establishment of secondary schools. Excellent as the
+administration of Balmaceda had been in other respects, he
+nevertheless failed to combine the liberal factions into a party
+willing to support the plans of reform which he had steadily
+favored. The parliamentary system made Cabinets altogether
+unstable, as political groups in the lower house of the Congress
+alternately cohered and fell apart. This defect, Balmaceda
+thought, should be corrected by making the members of his
+official family independent of the legislative branch. The
+Council of State, a somewhat anomalous body placed between the
+President and Cabinet on the one side and the Congress on the
+other, was an additional obstruction to a smooth-running
+administration. For it he would substitute a tribunal charged
+with the duty of resolving conflicts between the two chief
+branches of government. Balmaceda believed, also, that greater
+liberty should be given to the press and that existing taxes
+should be altered as rarely as possible. On its side, the
+Congress felt that the President was trying to establish a
+dictatorship and to replace the unitary system by a federal
+union, the probable weakness of which would enable him to retain
+his power more securely.
+
+Toward the close of his term in January, 1891, when the Liberals
+declined to support his candidate for the presidency, Balmaceda,
+furious at the opposition which he had encountered, took matters
+into his own hands. Since the Congress refused to pass the
+appropriation bills, he declared that body dissolved and
+proceeded to levy the taxes by decree. To this arbitrary and
+altogether unconstitutional performance the Congress retorted by
+declaring the President deposed. Civil war broke out forthwith,
+and a strange spectacle presented itself. The two chief cities,
+Santiago and Valparaiso, and most of the army backed Balmaceda,
+whereas the country districts, especially in the north, and
+practically all the navy upheld the Congress.
+
+These were, indeed, dark days for Chile. During a struggle of
+about eight months the nation suffered more than it had done in
+years of warfare with Peru and Bolivia. Though the bulk of the
+army stood by Balmaceda, the Congress was able to raise and
+organize a much stronger fighting force under a Prussian
+drillmaster. The tide of battle turned; Santiago and Valparaiso
+capitulated; and the presidential cause was lost. Balmaceda, who
+had taken refuge in the Argentina legation, committed suicide.
+But the Balmacedists, who were included in a general amnesty,
+still maintained themselves as a party to advocate in a peaceful
+fashion the principles of their fallen leader.
+
+Chile had its reputation for stability well tested in 1910 when
+the executive changed four times without the slightest political
+disturbance. According to the constitution, the officer who takes
+the place of the President in case of the latter's death or
+disability, though vested with full authority, has the title of
+Vice President only. It so happened that after the death of the
+President two members of the Cabinet in succession held the vice
+presidency, and they were followed by the chief magistrate, who
+was duly elected and installed at the close of the year. In 1915,
+for the first time since their leader had committed suicide, one
+of the followers of Balmaceda was chosen President--by a strange
+coalition of Liberal-Democrats, or Balmacedists, Conservatives,
+and Nationalists, over the candidate of the Radicals, Liberals,
+and Democrats. The maintenance of the parliamentary system,
+however, continued to produce frequent alterations in the
+personnel of the Cabinet.
+
+In its foreign relations, apart from the adjustment reached with
+Argentina, Chile managed to settle the difficulties with Bolivia
+arising out of the War of the Pacific. By the terms of treaties
+concluded in 1895 and 1905, the region tentatively transferred by
+the armistice of 1884 was ceded outright to Chile in return for a
+seaport and a narrow right of way to it through the former
+Peruvian province of Tarapaca. With Peru, Chile was not so
+fortunate. Though the tension over the ultimate disposal of the
+Tacna and Arica question was somewhat reduced, it was far from
+being removed. Chile absolutely refused to submit the matter to
+arbitration, on the ground that such a procedure could not
+properly be applied to a question arising out of a war that had
+taken place so many years before. Chile did not wish to give the
+region up, lest by so doing it might expose Tarapaca to a
+possible attack from Peru. The investment of large amounts of
+foreign capital in the exploitation of the deposits of nitrate of
+soda had made that province economically very valuable, and the
+export tax levied on the product was the chief source of the
+national revenue. These were all potent reasons why Chile wanted
+to keep its hold on Tacna and Arica. Besides, possession was nine
+points in the law!
+
+On the other hand, the original plan of having the question
+decided by a vote of the inhabitants of the provinces concerned
+was not carried into effect, partly because both claimants
+cherished a conviction that whichever lost the election would
+deny its validity, and partly because they could not agree upon
+the precise method of holding it. Chile suggested that the
+international commission which was selected to take charge of the
+plebiscite, and which was composed of a Chilean, a Peruvian, and
+a neutral, should be presided over by the Chilean member as
+representative of the country actually in possession, whereas
+Peru insisted that the neutral should act as chairman. Chile
+proposed also that Chileans, Peruvians, and foreigners resident
+in the area six months before the date of the elections should
+vote, provided that they had the right to do so under the terms
+of the constitutions of both states. Peru, on its part, objected
+to the length of residence, and wished to limit carefully the
+number of Chilean voters, to exclude foreigners altogether from
+the election, and to disregard qualifications for the suffrage
+which required an ability to read and write. Both countries,
+moreover, appeared to have a lurking suspicion that in any event
+the other would try to secure a majority at the polls by
+supplying a requisite number of voters drawn from their
+respective citizenry who were not ordinarily resident in Tacna
+and Arica! Unable to overcome the deadlock, Chile and Peru agreed
+in 1913 to postpone the settlement for twenty years longer. At
+the expiration of this period, when Chile would have held the
+provinces for half a century, the question should be finally
+adjusted on bases mutually satisfactory. Officially amicable
+relations were then restored.
+
+While the political situation in Bolivia remained stable, so much
+could not be said of that in Peru and Ecuador. If the troubles in
+the former were more or less military, a persistence of the
+conflict between clericals and radicals characterized the
+commotions in the latter, because of certain liberal provisions
+in the Constitution of 1907. Peru, on the other hand, in 1915
+guaranteed its people the enjoyment of religious liberty.
+
+Next to the Tacna and Arica question, the dubious boundaries of
+Ecuador constituted the most serious international problem in
+South America. The so-called Oriente region, lying east of the
+Andes and claimed by Peru, Brazil, and Colombia, appeared
+differently on different maps, according as one claimant nation
+or another set forth its own case. Had all three been satisfied,
+nothing would have been left of Ecuador but the strip between the
+Andes and the Pacific coast, including the cities of Quito and
+Guayaquil. The Ecuadorians, therefore, were bitterly sensitive on
+the subject.
+
+Protracted negotiations over the boundaries became alike tedious
+and listless. But the moment that the respective diplomats had
+agreed upon some knotty point, the Congress of one litigant or
+another was almost sure to reject the decision and start the
+controversy all over again. Even reference of the matter to the
+arbitral judgment of European monarchs produced, so far as
+Ecuador and Peru were concerned, riotous attacks upon the
+Peruvian legation and consulates, charges and countercharges of
+invasion of each other's territory, and the suspension of
+diplomatic relations. Though the United States, Argentina, and
+Brazil had interposed to ward off an armed conflict between the
+two republics and, in 1911, had urged that the dispute be
+submitted to the Hague Tribunal, nothing would induce Ecuador to
+comply.
+
+Colombia was even more unfortunate than its southern neighbor,
+for in addition to political convulsions it suffered financial
+disaster and an actual deprivation of territory. Struggles among
+factions, official influence at the elections, dictatorships, and
+fighting between the departments and the national Government
+plunged the country, in 1899, into the worst civil war it had
+known for many a day. Paper money, issued in unlimited amounts
+and given a forced circulation, made the distress still more
+acute. Then came the hardest blow of all. Since 1830 Panama, as
+province or state, had tried many times to secede from Colombia.
+In 1903 the opportunity it sought became altogether favorable.
+The parent nation, just beginning to recover from the disasters
+of civil strife, would probably be unable to prevent a new
+attempt at withdrawal. The people of Panama, of course, knew how
+eager the United States was to acquire the region of the proposed
+Canal Zone, since it had failed to win it by negotiation with
+Colombia. Accordingly, if they were to start a "revolution," they
+had reason to believe that it would not lack support--or at
+least, connivance--from that quarter.
+
+On the 3d of November the projected "revolution" occurred, on
+schedule time, and the United States recognized the independence
+of the "Republic of Panama" three days later! In return for a
+guarantee of independence, however, the United States stipulated,
+in the convention concluded on the 18th of November, that,
+besides authority to enforce sanitary regulations in the Canal
+Zone, it should also have the right of intervention to maintain
+order in the republic itself. More than once, indeed, after
+Panama adopted its constitution in 1904, elections threatened to
+become tumultuous; whereupon the United States saw to it that
+they passed off quietly.
+
+Having no wish to flout their huge neighbor to the northward, the
+Hispanic nations at large hastened to acknowledge the
+independence of the new republic, despite the indignation that
+prevailed in press and public over what was regarded as an act of
+despoilment. In view of the resentful attitude of Colombia and
+mindful also of the opinion of many Americans that a gross
+injustice had been committed, the United States eventually
+offered terms of settlement. It agreed to express regret for the
+ill feeling between the two countries which had arisen out of the
+Panama incident, provided that such expression were made mutual;
+and, as a species of indemnity, it agreed to pay for canal rights
+to be acquired in Colombian territory and for the lease of
+certain islands as naval stations. But neither the terms nor the
+amount of the compensation proved acceptable. Instead, Colombia
+urged that the whole matter be referred to the judgment of the
+tribunal at The Hague.
+
+Alluding to the use made of the liberties won in the struggle for
+emancipation from Spain by the native land of Miranda, Bolivar,
+and Sucre, on the part of the country which had been in the
+vanguard of the fight for freedom from a foreign yoke, a writer
+of Venezuela once declared that it had not elected legally a
+single President; had not put democratic ideas or institutions
+into practice; had lived wholly under dictatorships; had
+neglected public instruction; and had set up a large number of
+oppressive commercial monopolies, including the navigation of
+rivers, the coastwise trade, the pearl fisheries, and the sale of
+tobacco, salt, sugar, liquor, matches, explosives, butter,
+grease, cement, shoes, meat, and flour. Exaggerated as the
+indictment is and applicable also, though in less degree, to some
+of the other backward countries of Hispanic America, it contains
+unfortunately a large measure of truth. Indeed, so far as
+Venezuela itself is concerned, this critic might have added that
+every time a "restorer," "regenerator," or "liberator" succumbed
+there, the old craze for federalism again broke out and menaced
+the nation with piecemeal destruction. Obedient, furthermore, to
+the whims of a presidential despot, Venezuela perpetrated more
+outrages on foreigners and created more international friction
+after 1899 than any other land in Spanish America had ever done.
+
+While the formidable Guzman Blanco was still alive, the various
+Presidents acted cautiously. No sooner had he passed away than
+disorder broke out afresh. Since a new dictator thought he needed
+a longer term of office and divers other administrative
+advantages, a constitution incorporating them was framed and
+published in the due and customary manner. This had hardly gone
+into operation when, in 1895, a contest arose with Great Britain
+about the boundaries between Venezuela and British Guiana. Under
+pressure from the United States, however, the matter was referred
+to arbitration, and Venezuela came out substantially the loser.
+
+In 1899 there appeared on the scene a personage compared with
+whom Zelaya was the merest novice in the art of making trouble.
+This was Cipriano Castro, the greatest international nuisance of
+the early twentieth century. A rude, arrogant, fearless,
+energetic, capricious mountaineer and cattleman, he regarded
+foreigners no less than his own countryfolk, it would seem, as
+objects for his particular scorn, displeasure, exploitation, or
+amusement, as the case might be. He was greatly angered by the
+way in which foreigners in dispute with local officials avoided a
+resort to Venezuelan courts and--still worse--rejected their
+decisions and appealed instead to their diplomatic
+representatives for protection. He declared such a procedure to
+be an affront to the national dignity. Yet foreigners were
+usually correct in arming that judges appointed by an arbitrary
+President were little more than figureheads, incapable of
+dispensing justice, even were they so inclined.
+
+Jealous not only of his personal prestige but of what he
+imagined, or pretended to imagine, were the rights of a small
+nation, Castro tried throughout to portray the situation in such
+a light as to induce the other Hispanic republics also to view
+foreign interference as a dire peril to their own independence
+and sovereignty; and he further endeavored to involve the United
+States in a struggle with European powers as a means possibly of
+testing the efficacy of the Monroe Doctrine or of laying bare
+before the world the evil nature of American imperialistic
+designs.
+
+By the year 1901, in which Venezuela adopted another
+constitution, the revolutionary disturbances had materially
+diminished the revenues from the customs. Furthermore Castro's
+regulations exacting military service of all males between
+fourteen and sixty years of age had filled the prisons to
+overflowing. Many foreigners who had suffered in consequence
+resorted to measures of self-defense--among them representatives
+of certain American and British asphalt companies which were
+working concessions granted by Castro's predecessors. Though
+familiar with what commonly happens to those who handle pitch,
+they had not scrupled to aid some of Castro's enemies. Castro
+forthwith imposed on them enormous fines which amounted
+practically to a confiscation of their rights.
+
+While the United States and Great Britain were expostulating over
+this behavior of the despot, France broke off diplomatic
+relations with Venezuela because of Castro's refusal either to
+pay or to submit to arbitration certain claims which had
+originated in previous revolutions. Germany, aggrieved in similar
+fashion, contemplated a seizure of the customs until its demands
+for redress were satisfied. And then came Italy with like causes
+of complaint. As if these complications were not sufficient,
+Venezuela came to blows with Colombia.
+
+As the foreign pressure on Castro steadily increased, Luis Maria
+Drago, the Argentine Minister of Foreign Affairs, formulated in
+1902 the doctrine with which his name has been associated. It
+stated in substance that force should never be employed between
+nations for the collection of contractual debts. Encouraged by
+this apparent token of support from a sister republic, Castro
+defied his array of foreign adversaries more vigorously than
+ever, declaring that he might find it needful to invade the
+United States, by way of New Orleans, to teach it the lesson it
+deserved! But when he attempted, in the following year, to close
+the ports of Venezuela as a means of bringing his native
+antagonists to terms, Great Britain, Germany, and Italy seized
+his warships, blockaded the coast, and bombarded some of his
+forts. Thereupon the United States interposed with a suggestion
+that the dispute be laid before the Hague Tribunal. Although
+Castro yielded, he did not fail to have a clause inserted in a
+new "constitution" requiring foreigners who might wish to enter
+the republic to show certificates of good character from the
+Governments of their respective countries.
+
+These incidents gave much food for thought to Castro as well as
+to his soberer compatriots. The European powers had displayed an
+apparent willingness to have the United States, if it chose to do
+so, assume the role of a New World policeman and financial
+guarantor. Were it to assume these duties, backward republics in
+the Caribbean and its vicinity were likely to have their affairs,
+internal as well as external, supervised by the big nation in
+order to ward off European intervention. At this moment, indeed,
+the United States was intervening in Panama. The prospect aroused
+in many Hispanic countries the fear of a "Yankee peril" greater
+even than that emanating from Europe. Instead of being a kindly
+and disinterested protector of small neighbors, the "Colossus of
+the North" appeared rather to resemble a political and commercial
+ogre bent upon swallowing them to satisfy "manifest destiny."
+
+Having succeeded in putting around his head an aureole of local
+popularity, Castro in 1905 picked a new set of partially
+justified quarrels with the United States, Great Britain, France,
+Italy, Colombia, and even with the Netherlands, arising out of
+the depredations of revolutionists; but an armed menace from the
+United States induced him to desist from his plans. He contented
+himself accordingly with issuing a decree of amnesty for all
+political offenders except the leaders. When "reelected," he
+carried his magnanimity so far as to resign awhile in favor of
+the Vice President, stating that, if his retirement were to bring
+peace and concord, he would make it permanent. But as he saw to
+it that his temporary withdrawal should not have this happy
+result, he came back again to his firmer position a few months
+later.
+
+Venting his wrath upon the Netherlands because its minister had
+reported to his Government an outbreak of cholera at La Guaira,
+the chief seaport of Venezuela, the dictator laid an embargo on
+Dutch commerce, seized its ships, and denounced the Dutch for
+their alleged failure to check filibustering from their islands
+off the coast. When the minister protested, Castro expelled him.
+Thereupon the Netherlands instituted a blockade of the Venezuelan
+ports. What might have happened if Castro had remained much
+longer in charge, may be guessed. Toward the close of 1908,
+however, he departed for Europe to undergo a course of medical
+treatment. Hardly had he left Venezuelan shores when Juan Vicente
+Gomez, the able, astute, and vigorous Vice President, managed to
+secure his own election to the presidency and an immediate
+recognition from foreign states. Under his direction all of the
+international tangles of Venezuela were straightened out.
+
+In 1914 the country adopted its eleventh constitution and thereby
+lengthened the presidential term to seven years, shortened that
+of members of the lower house of the Congress to four, determined
+definitely the number of States in the union, altered the
+apportionment of their congressional representation, and enlarged
+the powers of the federal Government--or, rather, those of its
+executive branch! In 1914 Gomez resigned office in favor of the
+Vice President, and secured an appointment instead as commander
+in chief of the army. This procedure was promptly denounced as a
+trick to evade the constitutional prohibition of two consecutive
+terms. A year later he was unanimously elected President, though
+he never formally took the oath of office.
+
+Whatever may be thought of the political ways and means of this
+new Guzmin Blanco to maintain himself as a power behind or on the
+presidential throne, Gomez gave Venezuela an administration of a
+sort very different from that of his immediate predecessor. He
+suppressed various government monopolies, removed other obstacles
+to the material advancement of the country, and reduced the
+national debt. He did much also to improve the sanitary
+conditions at La Guaira, and he promoted education, especially
+the teaching of foreign languages.
+
+Gomez nevertheless had to keep a watchful eye on the partisans of
+Castro, who broke out in revolt whenever they had an opportunity.
+The United States, Great Britain, France, the Netherlands,
+Denmark, Cuba, and Colombia eyed the movements of the ex-dictator
+nervously, as European powers long ago were wont to do in the
+case of a certain Man of Destiny, and barred him out of both
+their possessions and Venezuela itself. International patience,
+never Job-like, had been too sorely vexed to permit his return.
+Nevertheless, after the manner of the ancient persecutor of the
+Biblical martyr, Castro did not refrain from going to and fro in
+the earth. In fact he still "walketh about" seeking to recover
+his hold upon Venezuela!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X. MEXICO IN REVOLUTION
+
+When, in 1910, like several of its sister republics, Mexico
+celebrated the centennial anniversary of its independence, the
+era of peace and progress inaugurated by Porfirio Diaz seemed
+likely to last indefinitely, for he was entering upon his eighth
+term as President. Brilliant as his career had been, however, and
+greatly as Mexico had prospered under his rigid rule, a sullen
+discontent had been brewing. The country that had had but one
+continuous President in twenty-six years was destined to have
+some fourteen chief magistrates in less than a quarter of that
+time, and to surpass all its previous records for rapidity in
+presidential succession, by having one executive who is said to
+have held office for precisely fifty-six minutes!
+
+It has often been asserted that the reason for the downfall of
+Diaz and the lapse of Mexico into the unhappy conditions of a
+half century earlier was that he had grown too old to keep a firm
+grip on the situation. It has also been declared that his
+insistence upon reelection and upon the elevation of his own
+personal candidate to the vice presidency, as a successor in case
+of his retirement, occasioned his overthrow. The truth of the
+matter is that these circumstances were only incidental to his
+downfall; the real causes of revolution lay deeprooted in the
+history of these twenty-six years. The most significant feature
+of the revolt was its civilian character. A widespread public
+opinion had been created; a national consciousness had been
+awakened which was intolerant of abuses and determined upon their
+removal at any cost; and this public opinion and national
+consciousness were products of general education, which had
+brought to the fore a number of intelligent men eager to
+participate in public affairs and yet barred out because of their
+unwillingness to support the existing regime.
+
+Some one has remarked, and rightly, that Diaz in his zeal for the
+material advancement of Mexico, mistook the tangible wealth of
+the country for its welfare. Desirable and even necessary as that
+material progress was, it produced only a one-sided prosperity.
+Diaz was singularly deaf to the just complaints of the people of
+the laboring classes, who, as manufacturing and other industrial
+enterprises developed, were resolved to better their conditions.
+In the country at large the discontent was still stronger.
+Throughout many of the rural districts general advancement had
+been retarded because of the holding of huge areas of fertile
+land by a comparatively few rich families, who did little to
+improve it and were content with small returns from the labor of
+throngs of unskilled native cultivators. Wretchedly paid and
+housed, and toiling long hours, the workers lived like the serfs
+of medieval days or as their own ancestors did in colonial times.
+Ignorant, poverty-stricken, liable at any moment to be
+dispossessed of the tiny patch of ground on which they raised a
+few hills of corn or beans, most of them were naturally a simple,
+peaceful folk who, in spite of their misfortunes, might have gone
+on indefinitely with their drudgery in a hopeless apathetic
+fashion, unless their latent savage instincts happened to be
+aroused by drink and the prospect of plunder. On the other hand,
+the intelligent among them, knowing that in some of the northern
+States of the republic wages were higher and treatment fairer,
+felt a sense of wrong which, like that of the laboring class in
+the towns, was all the more dangerous because it was not allowed
+to find expression.
+
+Diaz thought that what Mexico required above everything else was
+the development of industrial efficiency and financial strength,
+assured by a maintenance of absolute order. Though disposed to do
+justice in individual cases, he would tolerate no class movements
+of any kind. Labor unions, strikes, and other efforts at
+lightening the burden of the workers he regarded as seditious and
+deserving of severe punishment. In order to attract capital from
+abroad as the best means of exploiting the vast resources of the
+country, he was willing to go to any length, it would seem, in
+guaranteeing protection. Small wonder, therefore, that the people
+who shared in none of the immediate advantages from that source
+should have muttered that Mexico was the "mother of foreigners
+and the stepmother of Mexicans." And, since so much of the
+capital came from the United States, the antiforeign sentiment
+singled Americans out for its particular dislike.
+
+If Diaz appeared unable to appreciate the significance of the
+educational and industrial awakening, he was no less oblivious of
+the political outcome. He knew, of course, that the Mexican
+constitution made impossible demands upon the political capacity
+of the people. He was himself mainly of Indian blood and he
+believed that he understood the temperament and limitations of
+most Mexicans. Knowing how tenaciously they clung to political
+notions, he believed that it was safer and wiser to forego, at
+least for a time, real popular government and to concentrate
+power in the hands of a strong man who could maintain order.
+
+Accordingly, backed by his political adherents, known as
+cientificos (doctrinaires), some of whom had acquired a sinister
+ascendancy over him, and also by the Church, the landed
+proprietors, and the foreign capitalists, Diaz centered the
+entire administration more and more in himself. Elections became
+mere farces. Not only the federal officials themselves but the
+state governors, the members of the state legislatures, and all
+others in authority during the later years of his rule owed their
+selection primarily to him and held their positions only if
+personally loyal to him. Confident of his support and certain
+that protests against misgovernment would be regarded by the
+President as seditious, many of them abused their power at will.
+Notable among them were the local officials, called jefes
+politicos, whose control of the police force enabled them to
+indulge in practices of intimidation and extortion which
+ultimately became unendurable.
+
+Though symptoms of popular wrath against the Diaz regime, or
+diazpotism as the Mexicans termed it, were apparent as early as
+1908, it was not until January, 1911, that the actual revolution
+came. It was headed by Francisco I. Madero, a member of a wealthy
+and distinguished family of landed proprietors in one of the
+northern States. What the revolutionists demanded in substance
+was the retirement of the President, Vice President, and Cabinet;
+a return to the principle of no reelection to the chief
+magistracy; a guarantee of fair elections at all times; the
+choice of capable, honest, and impartial judges, jefes politicos,
+and other officials; and, in particular, a series of agrarian and
+industrial reforms which would break up the great estates, create
+peasant proprietorships, and better the conditions of the working
+classes. Disposed at first to treat the insurrection lightly,
+Diaz soon found that he had underestimated its strength. Grants
+of some of the demands and promises of reform were met with a
+dogged insistence upon his own resignation. Then, as the
+rebellion spread to the southward, the masterful old man realized
+that his thirty-one years of rule were at an end. On the 25th of
+May, therefore, he gave up his power and sailed for Europe.
+
+Madero was chosen President five months later, but the revolution
+soon passed beyond his control. He was a sincere idealist, if not
+something of a visionary, actuated by humane and kindly
+sentiments, but he lacked resoluteness and the art of managing
+men. He was too prolific, also, of promises which he must have
+known he could not keep. Yielding to family influence, he let his
+followers get out of hand. Ambitious chieftains and groups of
+Radicals blocked and thwarted him at every turn. When he could
+find no means of carrying out his program without wholesale
+confiscation and the disruption of business interests, he was
+accused of abandoning his duty. One officer after another
+deserted him and turned rebel. Brigandage and insurrection swept
+over the country and threatened to involve it in ugly
+complications with the United States and European powers. At
+length, in February, 1913, came the blow that put an end to all
+of Madero's efforts and aspirations. A military uprising in the
+city of Mexico made him prisoner, forced him to resign, and set
+up a provisional government under the dictatorship of Victoriano
+Huerta, one of his chief lieutenants. Two weeks later both Madero
+and the Vice President were assassinated while on their way
+supposedly to a place of safety.
+
+Huerta was a rough soldier of Indian origin, possessed of unusual
+force of character and strength of will, ruthless, cunning, and
+in bearing alternately dignified and vulgar. A cientifico in
+political faith, he was disposed to restore the Diaz regime, so
+far as an application of shrewdness and force could make it
+possible. But from the outset he found an obstacle confronting
+him that he could not surmount. Though acknowledged by European
+countries and by many of the Hispanic republics, he could not win
+recognition from the United States, either as provisional
+President or as a candidate for regular election to the office.
+Whether personally responsible for the murder of Madero or not,
+he was not regarded by the American Government as entitled to
+recognition, on the ground that he was not the choice of the
+Mexican people. In its refusal to recognize an administration set
+up merely by brute force, the United States was upheld by
+Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and Cuba. The elimination of Huerta
+became the chief feature for a while of its Mexican policy.
+
+Meanwhile the followers of Madero and the pronounced Radicals had
+found a new northern leader in the person of Venustiano Carranza.
+They called themselves Constitutionalists, as indicative of their
+purpose to reestablish the constitution and to choose a successor
+to Madero in a constitutional manner. What they really desired
+was those radical changes along social, industrial, and political
+lines, which Madero had championed in theory. They sought to
+introduce a species of socialistic regime that would provide the
+Mexicans with an opportunity for self-regeneration. While Diaz
+had believed in economic progress supported by the great landed
+proprietors, the moral influence of the Church, and the
+application of foreign capital, the Constitutionalists,
+personified in Carranza, were convinced that these agencies, if
+left free and undisturbed to work their will, would ruin Mexico.
+Though not exactly antiforeign in their attitude, they wished to
+curb the power of the foreigner; they would accept his aid
+whenever desirable for the economic development of the country,
+but they would not submit to his virtual control of public
+affairs. In any case they would tolerate no interference by the
+United States. Compromise with the Huerta regime, therefore, was
+impossible. Huerta, the "strong man" of the Diaz type, must go.
+On this point, at least, the Constitutionalists were in thorough
+agreement with the United States.
+
+A variety of international complications ensued. Both Huertistas
+and Carranzistas perpetrated outrages on foreigners, which evoked
+sharp protests and threats from the United States and European
+powers. While careful not to recognize his opponents officially,
+the American Government resorted to all kinds of means to oust
+the dictator. An embargo was laid on the export of arms and
+munitions; all efforts to procure financial help from abroad were
+balked. The power of Huerta was waning perceptibly and that of
+the Constitutionalists was increasing when an incident that
+occurred in April, 1914, at Tampico brought matters to a climax.
+A number of American sailors who had gone ashore to obtain
+supplies were arrested and temporarily detained. The United
+States demanded that the American flag be saluted as reparation
+for the insult. Upon the refusal of Huerta to comply, the United
+States sent a naval expedition to occupy Vera Cruz.
+
+Both Carranza and Huerta regarded this move as equivalent to an
+act of war. Argentina, Brazil, and Chile then offered their
+mediation. But the conference arranged for this purpose at
+Niagara Falls, Canada, had before it a task altogether impossible
+of accomplishment. Though Carranza was willing to have the
+Constitutionalists represented, if the discussion related solely
+to the immediate issue between the United States and Huerta, he
+declined to extend the scope of the conference so as to admit the
+right of the United States to interfere in the internal affairs
+of Mexico. The conference accomplished nothing so far as the
+immediate issue was concerned. The dictator did not make
+reparation for the "affronts and indignities" he had committed;
+but his day was over. The advance of the Constitutionalists
+southward compelled him in July to abandon the capital and leave
+the country. Four months later the American forces were withdrawn
+from Vera Cruz. The "A B C" Conference, however barren it was of
+direct results, helped to allay suspicions of the United States
+in Hispanic America and brought appreciably nearer a "concert of
+the western world."
+
+While far from exercising full control throughout Mexico, the
+"first chief" of the Constitutionalists was easily the dominant
+figure in the situation. At home a ranchman, in public affairs a
+statesman of considerable ability, knowing how to insist and yet
+how to temporize, Carranza carried on a struggle, both in arms
+and in diplomacy, which singled him out as a remarkable
+character. Shrewdly aware of the advantageous circumstances
+afforded him by the war in Europe, he turned them to account with
+a degree of skill that blocked every attempt at defeat or
+compromise. No matter how serious the opposition to him in Mexico
+itself, how menacing the attitude of the United States, or how
+persuasive the conciliatory disposition of Hispanic American
+nations, he clung stubbornly and tenaciously to his program.
+
+Even after Huerta had been eliminated, Carranza's position was
+not assured, for Francisco, or "Pancho," Villa, a chieftain whose
+personal qualities resembled those of the fallen dictator, was
+equally determined to eliminate him. For a brief moment, indeed,
+peace reigned. Under an alleged agreement between them, a
+convention of Constitutionalist officers was to choose a
+provisional President, who should be ineligible as a candidate
+for the permanent presidency at the regular elections. When
+Carranza assumed both of these positions, Villa declared his act
+a violation of their understanding and insisted upon his
+retirement. Inasmuch as the convention was dominated by Villa,
+the "first chief" decided to ignore its election of a provisional
+President.
+
+The struggle between the Conventionalists headed by Villa and the
+Constitutionalists under Carranza plunged Mexico into worse
+discord and misery than ever. Indeed it became a sort of
+three-cornered contest. The third party was Emiliano Zapata, an
+Indian bandit, nominally a supporter of Villa but actually
+favorable to neither of the rivals. Operating near the capital,
+he plundered Conventionalists and Constitutionalists with equal
+impartiality, and as a diversion occasionally occupied the city
+itself. These circumstances gave force to the saying that Mexico
+was a "land where peace breaks out once in a while!"
+
+Early in 1915 Carranza proceeded to issue a number of radical
+decrees that exasperated foreigners almost beyond endurance.
+Rather than resort to extreme measures again, however, the United
+States invoked the cooperation of the Hispanic republics and
+proposed a conference to devise some solution of the Mexican
+problem. To give the proposed conference a wider representation,
+it invited not only the "A B C" powers, but Bolivia, Uruguay, and
+Guatemala to participate. Meeting at Washington in August, the
+mediators encountered the same difficulty which had confronted
+their predecessors at Niagara Falls. Though the other chieftains
+assented, Carranza, now certain of success, declined to heed any
+proposal of conciliation. Characterizing efforts of the kind as
+an unwarranted interference in the internal affairs of a sister
+nation, he warned the Hispanic republics against setting up so
+dangerous a precedent. In reply Argentina stated that the
+conference obeyed a "lofty inspiration of Pan-American
+solidarity, and, instead of finding any cause for alarm, the
+Mexican people should see in it a proof of their friendly
+consideration that her fate evokes in us, and calls forth our
+good wishes for her pacification and development." However, as
+the only apparent escape from more watchful waiting or from armed
+intervention on the part of the United States, in October the
+seven Governments decided to accept the facts as they stood, and
+accordingly recognized Carranza as the de facto ruler of Mexico.
+
+Enraged at this favor shown to his rival, Villa determined
+deliberately to provoke American intervention by a murderous raid
+on a town in New Mexico in March, 1916. When the United States
+dispatched an expedition to avenge the outrage, Carranza
+protested energetically against its violation of Mexican
+territory and demanded its withdrawal. Several clashes, in fact,
+occurred between American soldiers and Carranzistas. Neither the
+expedition itself, however, nor diplomatic efforts to find some
+method of cooperation which would prevent constant trouble along
+the frontier served any useful purpose, since Villa apparently
+could not be captured and Carranza refused to yield to diplomatic
+persuasion. Carranza then proposed that a joint commission be
+appointed to settle these vexed questions. Even this device
+proved wholly unsatisfactory. The Mexicans would not concede the
+right of the United States to send an armed expedition into their
+country at any time, and the Americans refused to accept
+limitations on the kind of troops that they might employ or on
+the zone of their operations. In January, 1917, the joint
+commission was dissolved and the American soldiers were
+withdrawn. Again the "first chief" had won!
+
+On the 5th of February a convention assembled at Queretaro
+promulgated a constitution embodying substantially all of the
+radical program that Carranza had anticipated in his decrees.
+Besides providing for an elaborate improvement in the condition
+of the laboring classes and for such a division of great estates
+as might satisfy their particular needs, the new constitution
+imposed drastic restrictions upon foreigners and religious
+bodies. Under its terms, foreigners could not acquire industrial
+concessions unless they waived their treaty rights and consented
+to regard themselves for the purpose as Mexican citizens. In all
+such cases preference was to be shown Mexicans over foreigners.
+Ecclesiastical corporations were forbidden to own real property.
+No primary school and no charitable institution could be
+conducted by any religious mission or denomination, and religious
+publications must refrain from commenting on public affairs. The
+presidential term was reduced from six years to four; reelection
+was prohibited; and the office of Vice President was abolished.
+
+When, on the 1st of May, Venustiano Carranza was chosen
+President, Mexico had its first constitutional executive in four
+years. After a cruel and obstinately intolerant struggle that had
+occasioned indescribable suffering from disease and starvation,
+as well as the usual slaughter and destruction incident to war,
+the country began to enjoy once more a measure of peace.
+Financial exhaustion, however, had to be overcome before
+recuperation was possible. Industrial progress had become almost
+paralyzed; vast quantities of depreciated paper money had to be
+withdrawn from circulation; and an enormous array of claims for
+the loss of foreign life and property had rolled up.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI. THE REPUBLICS OF THE CARIBBEAN
+
+The course of events in certain of the republics in and around
+the Caribbean Sea warned the Hispanic nations that independence
+was a relative condition and that it might vary in direct ratio
+with nearness to the United States. After 1906 this powerful
+northern neighbor showed an unmistakable tendency to extend its
+influence in various ways. Here fiscal and police control was
+established; there official recognition was withheld from a
+President who had secured office by unconstitutional methods.
+Nonrecognition promised to be an effective way of maintaining a
+regime of law and order, as the United States understood those
+terms. Assurances from the United States of the full political
+equality of all republics, big or little, in the western
+hemisphere did not always carry conviction to Spanish American
+ears. The smaller countries in and around the Caribbean Sea, at
+least, seemed likely to become virtually American protectorates.
+
+Like their Hispanic neighbor on the north, the little republics
+of Central America were also scenes of political disturbance.
+None of them except Panama escaped revolutionary uprisings,
+though the loss of life and property was insignificant. On the
+other hand, in these early years of the century the five
+countries north of Panama made substantial progress toward
+federation. As a South American writer has expressed it, their
+previous efforts in that direction "amid sumptuous festivals,
+banquets and other solemn public acts" at which they "intoned in
+lyric accents daily hymns for the imperishable reunion of the
+isthmian republics," had been as illusory as they were frequent.
+Despite the mediation of the United States and Mexico in 1906,
+while the latter was still ruled by Diaz, the struggle in which
+Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, and Salvador had been engaged was
+soon renewed between the first two belligerents. Since diplomatic
+interposition no longer availed, American marines were landed in
+Nicaragua, and the bumptious Zelaya was induced to have his
+country meet its neighbors in a conference at Washington. Under
+the auspices of the United States and Mexico, in December, 1907,
+representatives of the five republics signed a series of
+conventions providing for peace and cooperation. An arbitral
+court of justice, to be erected in Costa Rica and composed of one
+judge from each nation, was to decide all matters of dispute
+which could not be adjusted through ordinary diplomatic means.
+Here, also, an institute for the training of Central American
+teachers was to be established. Annual conferences were to
+discuss, and an office in Guatemala was to record, measures
+designed to secure uniformity in financial, commercial,
+industrial, sanitary, and educational regulations. Honduras, the
+storm center of weakness, was to be neutralized. None of the
+States was thereafter to recognize in any of them a government
+which had been set up in an illegal fashion. A "Constitutional
+Act of Central American Fraternity," moreover, was adopted on
+behalf of peace, harmony, and progress. Toward a realization of
+the several objects of the conference, the Presidents of the five
+republics were to invite their colleagues of the United States
+and Mexico, whenever needful, to appoint representatives, to
+"lend their good offices in a purely friendly way."
+
+Though most of these agencies were promptly put into operation,
+the results were not altogether satisfactory. Some discords, to
+be sure, were removed by treaties settling boundary questions and
+providing for reciprocal trade advantages; but it is doubtful
+whether the arrangements devised at Washington would have worked
+at all if the United States had not kept the little countries
+under a certain amount of observation. What the Central Americans
+apparently preferred was to be left alone, some of them to mind
+their own business, others to mind their neighbor's affairs.
+
+Of all the Central American countries Honduras was, perhaps, the
+one most afflicted with pecuniary misfortunes. In 1909 its
+foreign debt, along with arrears of interest unpaid for
+thirty-seven years, was estimated at upwards of $110,000,000. Of
+this amount a large part consisted of loans obtained from foreign
+capitalists, at more or less extortionate rates, for the
+construction of a short railway, of which less than half had been
+built. That revolutions should be rather chronic in a land where
+so much money could be squandered and where the temperaments of
+Presidents and ex-Presidents were so bellicose, was natural
+enough. When the United States could not induce the warring
+rivals to abide by fair elections, it sent a force of marines to
+overawe them and gave warning that further disturbances would not
+be allowed.
+
+In Nicaragua the conditions were similar. Here Zelaya, restive
+under the limitations set by the conference at Washington,
+yearned to become the "strong man" of Central America, who would
+teach the Yankees to stop their meddling. But his downfall was
+imminent. In 1909, as the result of his execution of two American
+soldiers of fortune who had taken part in a recent insurrection,
+the United States resolved to tolerate Zelaya no longer. Openly
+recognizing the insurgents, it forced the dictator out of the
+country. Three years later, when a President-elect started to
+assume office before the legally appointed time, a force of
+American marines at the capital convinced him that such a
+procedure was undesirable. The "corrupt and barbarous" conditions
+prevailing in Zelaya's time, he was informed, could not be
+tolerated. The United States, in fact, notified all parties in
+Nicaragua that, under the terms of the Washington conventions, it
+had a "moral mandate to exert its influence for the preservation
+of the general peace of Central America." Since those agreements
+had vested no one with authority to enforce them, such an
+interpretation of their language, aimed apparently at all
+disturbances, foreign as well as domestic, was rather elastic! At
+all events, after 1912, when a new constitution was adopted, the
+country became relatively quiet and somewhat progressive.
+Whenever a political flurry did take place, American marines were
+employed to preserve the peace. Many citizens, therefore,
+declined to vote, on the ground that the moral and material
+support thus furnished by the great nation to the northward
+rendered it futile for them to assume political responsibilities.
+
+Meanwhile negotiations began which were ultimately to make
+Nicaragua a fiscal protectorate of the United States. American
+officials were chosen to act as financial advisers and collectors
+of customs, and favorable arrangements were concluded with
+American bankers regarding the monetary situation; but it was not
+until 1916 that a treaty covering this situation was ratified.
+According to its provisions, in return for a stipulated sum to be
+expended under American direction, Nicaragua was to grant to the
+United States the exclusive privilege of constructing a canal
+through the territory of the republic and to lease to it the Corn
+Islands and a part of Fonseca Bay, on the Pacific coast, for use
+as naval stations. The prospect of American intervention alarmed
+the neighboring republics. Asserting that the treaty infringed
+upon their respective boundaries, Costa Rica, and Salvador
+brought suit against Nicaragua before the Central American Court.
+With the exception of the Nicaraguan representative, the judges
+upheld the contention of the plaintiffs that the defendant had no
+right to make any such concessions without previous consultation
+with Costa Rica, Salvador, and Honduras, since all three alike
+were affected by them. The Court observed, however, that it could
+not declare the treaty void because the United States, one of the
+parties concerned, was not subject to its jurisdiction. Nicaragua
+declined to accept the decision; and the United States, the
+country responsible for the existence of the Court and presumably
+interested in helping to enforce its judgment, allowed it to go
+out of existence in 1918 on the expiration of its ten-year term.
+
+The economic situation of Costa Rica brought about a state of
+affairs wholly unusual in Central American politics. The
+President, Alfredo Gonzalez, wished to reform the system of
+taxation so that a fairer share of the public burdens should fall
+on the great landholders who, like most of their brethren in the
+Hispanic countries, were practically exempt. This project,
+coupled with the fact that certain American citizens seeking an
+oil concession had undermined the power of the President by
+wholesale bribery, induced the Minister of War, in 1917, to start
+a revolt against him. Rather than shed the blood of his fellow
+citizens for mere personal advantages, Gonzalez sustained the
+good reputation of Costa Rica for freedom from civil commotions
+by quietly leaving the country and going to the United States to
+present his case. In consequence, the American Government
+declined to recognize the de facto ruler.
+
+Police and fiscal supervision by the United States has
+characterized the recent history of Panama. Not only has a
+proposed increase in the customs duties been disallowed, but more
+than once the unrest attending presidential elections has
+required the calming presence of American officials. As a means
+of forestalling outbreaks, particularly in view of the
+cosmopolitan population resident on the Isthmus, the republic
+enacted a law in 1914 which forbade foreigners to mix in local
+politics and authorized the expulsion of naturalized citizens who
+attacked the Government through the press or otherwise. With the
+approval of the United States, Panama entered into an agreement
+with American financiers providing for the creation of a national
+bank, one-fourth of the directors of which should be named by the
+Government of the republic.
+
+The second period of American rule in Cuba lasted till 1909.
+Control of the Government was then formally transferred to Jose
+Miguel Gomez, the President who had been chosen by the Liberals
+at the elections held in the previous year; but the United States
+did not cease to watch over its chief Caribbean ward. A bitter
+controversy soon developed in the Cuban Congress over measures to
+forbid the further purchase of land by aliens, and to insure that
+a certain percentage of the public offices should be held by
+colored citizens. Though both projects were defeated, they
+revealed a strong antiforeign sentiment and much dissatisfaction
+on the part of the negro population. It was clear also that
+Gomez, intended to oust all conservatives from office, for an
+obedient Congress passed a bill suspending the civil service
+rules.
+
+The partisanship of Gomez, and his supporters, together with the
+constant interference of military veterans in political affairs,
+provoked numerous outbreaks, which led the United States, in
+1912, to warn Cuba that it might again be compelled to intervene.
+Eventually, when a negro insurrection in the eastern part of the
+island menaced the safety of foreigners, American marines were
+landed. Another instance of intervention was the objection by the
+United States to an employers' liability law that would have
+given a monopoly of the insurance business to a Cuban company to
+the detriment of American firms.
+
+After the election of Mario Menocal, the Conservative candidate,
+to the presidency in 1912, another occasion for intervention
+presented itself. An amnesty bill, originally drafted for the
+purpose of freeing the colored insurgents and other offenders,
+was amended so as to empower the retiring President to grant
+pardon before trial to persons whom his successor wished to
+prosecute for wholesale corruption in financial transactions.
+Before the bill passed, however, notice was sent from Washington
+that, since the American Government had the authority to
+supervise the finances of the republic, Gomez would better veto
+the bill, and this he accordingly did.
+
+A sharp struggle arose when it became known that Menocal would be
+a candidate for reelection. The Liberal majority in the Congress
+passed a bill requiring that a President who sought to succeed
+himself should resign two months before the elections. When
+Menocal vetoed this measure, his opponents demanded that the
+United States supervise the elections. As the result of the
+elections was doubtful, Gomez and his followers resorted in 1917
+to the usual insurrection; whereupon the American Government
+warned the rebels that it would not recognize their claims if
+they won by force. Active aid from that quarter, as well as the
+capture of the insurgent leader, caused the movement to collapse
+after the electoral college had decided in favor of Menocal.
+
+In the Dominican Republic disturbances were frequent,
+notwithstanding the fact that American officials were in charge
+of the customhouses and by their presence were expected to exert
+a quieting influence. Even the adoption, in 1908, of a new
+constitution which provided for the prolongation of the
+presidential term to six years and for the abolition of the
+office of Vice President--two stabilizing devices quite common in
+Hispanic countries where personal ambition is prone to be a
+source of political trouble--did not help much to restore order.
+The assassination of the President and the persistence of
+age-long quarrels with Haiti over boundaries made matters worse.
+Thereupon, in 1913, the United States served formal notice on the
+rebellious parties that it would not only refuse to recognize any
+Government set up by force but would withhold any share in the
+receipts from the customs. As this procedure did not prevent a
+revolutionary leader from demanding half a million dollars as a
+financial sedative for his political nerves and from creating
+more trouble when the President failed to dispense it, the heavy
+hand of an American naval force administered another kind of
+specific, until commissioners from Porto Rico could arrive to
+superintend the selection of a new chief magistrate.
+Notwithstanding the protest of the Dominican Government, the
+"fairest and freest" elections ever known in the country were
+held under the direction of those officials--as a "body of
+friendly observers"!
+
+However amicable this arrangement seemed, it did not smother the
+flames of discord. In 1916, when an American naval commander
+suggested that a rebellious Minister of War leave the capital, he
+agreed to do so if the "fairest and freest" of chosen Presidents
+would resign. Even after both of them had complied with the
+suggestions, the individuals who assumed their respective offices
+were soon at loggerheads. Accordingly the United States placed
+the republic under military rule, until a President could be
+elected who might be able to retain his post without too much
+"friendly observation" from Washington, and a Minister of War
+could be appointed who would refrain from making war on the
+President! Then the organization of a new party to combat the
+previous inordinate display of personalities in politics created
+some hope that the republic would accomplish its own redemption.
+
+Only because of its relation to the wars of emancipation and to
+the Dominican Republic, need the negro state of Haiti, occupying
+the western part of the Caribbean island, be mentioned in
+connection with the story of the Hispanic nations. Suffice it to
+say that the fact that their color was different and that they
+spoke a variant of French instead of Spanish did not prevent the
+inhabitants of this state from offering a far worse spectacle of
+political and financial demoralization than did their neighbors
+to the eastward. Perpetual commotions and repeated interventions
+by American and European naval forces on behalf of the foreign
+residents, eventually made it imperative for the United States to
+take direct charge of the republic. In 1916, by a convention
+which placed the finances under American control, created a
+native constabulary under American officers, and imposed a number
+of other restraints, the United States converted Haiti into what
+is practically a protectorate.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII. PAN-AMERICANISM AND THE GREAT WAR
+
+While the Hispanic republics were entering upon the second
+century of their independent life, the idea of a certain
+community of interests between themselves and the United States
+began to assume a fairly definite form. Though emphasized by
+American statesmen and publicists in particular, the new point of
+view was not generally understood or appreciated by the people of
+either this country or its fellow nations to the southward. It
+seemed, nevertheless, to promise an effective cooperation in
+spirit and action between them and came therefore to be called
+"Pan-Americanism."
+
+This sentiment of inter-American solidarity sprang from several
+sources. The periodical conferences of the United States and its
+sister republics gave occasion for an interchange of official
+courtesies and expressions of good feeling. Doubtless, also, the
+presence of delegates from the Hispanic countries at the
+international gatherings at The Hague served to acquaint the
+world at large with the stability, strength, wealth, and culture
+of their respective lands. Individual Americans took an active
+interest in their fellows of Hispanic stock and found their
+interest reciprocated. Motives of business or pleasure and a
+desire to obtain personal knowledge about one another led to
+visits and countervisits that became steadily more frequent.
+Societies were created to encourage the friendship and
+acquaintance thus formed. Scientific congresses were held and
+institutes were founded in which both the United States and
+Hispanic America were represented. Books, articles, and newspaper
+accounts about one another's countries were published in
+increasing volume. Educational institutions devoted a constantly
+growing attention to inter-American affairs. Individuals and
+commissions were dispatched by the Hispanic nations and the
+United States to study one another's conditions and to confer
+about matters of mutual concern. Secretaries of State, Ministers
+of Foreign Affairs, and other distinguished personages
+interchanged visits. Above all, the common dangers and
+responsibilities falling upon the Americas at large as a
+consequence of the European war seemed likely to bring the
+several nations into a harmony of feeling and relationship to
+which they had never before attained.
+
+Pan-Americanism, however, was destined to remain largely a
+generous ideal. The action of the United States in extending its
+direct influence over the small republics in and around the
+Caribbean aroused the suspicion and alarm of Hispanic Americans,
+who still feared imperialistic designs on the part of that
+country now more than ever the Colossus of the North. "The art of
+oratory among the Yankees," declared a South American critic, "is
+lavish with a fraternal idealism; but strong wills enforce their
+imperialistic ambitions." Impassioned speakers and writers
+adjured the ghost of Hispanic confederation to rise and confront
+the new northern peril. They even advocated an appeal to Great
+Britain, Germany, or Japan, and they urged closer economic,
+social, and intellectual relations with the countries of Europe.
+
+It was while the United States was thus widening the sphere of
+its influence in the Caribbean that the "A B C"
+powers--Argentina, Brazil, and Chile--reached an understanding
+which was in a sense a measure of self-defense. For some years
+cordial relations had existed among these three nations which had
+grown so remarkably in strength and prestige. It was felt that by
+united action they might set up in the New World the European
+principle of a balance of power, assume the leadership in
+Hispanic America, and serve in some degree as a counterpoise to
+the United States. Nevertheless they were disposed to cooperate
+with their northern neighbor in the peaceable adjustment of
+conflicts in which other Hispanic countries were concerned,
+provided that the mediation carried on by such a "concert of the
+western world" did not include actual intervention in the
+internal affairs of the countries involved.
+
+With this attitude of the public mind, it is not strange that the
+Hispanic republics at large should have been inclined to look
+with scant favor upon proposals made by the United States, in
+1916, to render the spirit of Pan-Americanism more precise in its
+operation. The proposals in substance were these: that all the
+nations of America "mutually agree to guarantee the territorial
+integrity" of one another; to "maintain a republican form of
+government"; to prohibit the "exportation of arms to any but the
+legally constituted governments"; and to adopt laws of neutrality
+which would make it "impossible to filibustering expeditions to
+threaten or carry on revolutions in neighboring republics." These
+proposals appear to have received no formal approval beyond what
+is signified by the diplomatic expression "in principle."
+Considering the disparity in strength, wealth, and prestige
+between the northern country and its southern fellows,
+suggestions of the sort could be made practicable only by letting
+the United States do whatever it might think needful to
+accomplish the objects which it sought. Obviously the Hispanic
+nations, singly or collectively, would hardly venture to take any
+such action within the borders of the United States itself, if,
+for example, it failed to maintain what, in their opinion, was "a
+republican form of government." A full acceptance of the plan
+accordingly would have amounted to a recognition of American
+overlordship, and this they were naturally not disposed to admit.
+
+The common perils and duties confronting the Americas as a result
+of the Great War, however, made close cooperation between the
+Hispanic republics and the United States up to a certain point
+indispensable. Toward that transatlantic struggle the attitude of
+all the nations of the New World at the outset was substantially
+the same. Though strongly sympathetic on the whole with the
+"Allies" and notably with France, the southern countries
+nevertheless declared their neutrality. More than that, they
+tried to convert neutrality into a Pan-American policy, instead
+of regarding it as an official attitude to be adopted by the
+republics separately. Thus when the conflict overseas began to
+injure the rights of neutrals, Argentina and other nations urged
+that the countries of the New World jointly agree to declare that
+direct maritime commerce between American lands should be
+considered as "inter-American coastwise trade," and that the
+merchant ships engaged in it, whatever the flag under which they
+sailed, should be looked upon as neutral. Though the South
+American countries failed to enlist the support of their northern
+neighbor in this bold departure from international precedent,
+they found some compensation for their disappointment in the
+closer commercial and financial relations which they established
+with the United States.
+
+Because of the dependence of the Hispanic nations, and especially
+those of the southern group, on the intimacy of their economic
+ties with the belligerents overseas, they suffered from the
+ravages of the struggle more perhaps than other lands outside of
+Europe. Negotiations for prospective loans were dropped.
+Industries were suspended, work on public improvements was
+checked, and commerce brought almost to a standstill. As the
+revenues fell off and ready money became scarce, drastic measures
+had to be devised to meet the financial strain. For the
+protection of credit, bank holidays were declared, stock
+exchanges were closed, moratoria were set up in nearly all the
+countries, taxes and duties were increased, radical reductions in
+expenditure were undertaken, and in a few cases large quantities
+of paper money were issued.
+
+With the European market thus wholly or partially cut off, the
+Hispanic republics were forced to supply the consequent shortage
+with manufactured articles and other goods from the United States
+and to send thither their raw materials in exchange. To their
+northern neighbor they had to turn also for pecuniary aid. A
+Pan-American financial conference was held at Washington in 1915,
+and an international high commission was appointed to carry its
+recommendations into effect. Gradually most of the Hispanic
+countries came to show a favorable trade balance. Then, as the
+war drew into its fourth year, several of them even began to
+enjoy great prosperity. That Pan-Americanism had not meant much
+more than cooperation for economic ends seemed evident when, on
+April 6, 1917, the United States declared war on Germany. Instead
+of following spontaneously in the wake of their great northern
+neighbor, the Hispanic republics were divided by conflicting
+currents of opinion and hesitated as to their proper course of
+procedure. While a majority of them expressed approval of what
+the United States had done, and while Uruguay for its part
+asserted that "no American country, which in defense of its own
+rights should find itself in a state of war with nations of other
+continents, would be treated as a belligerent," Mexico veered
+almost to the other extreme by proposing that the republics of
+America agree to lay an embargo on the shipment of munitions to
+the warring powers.
+
+As a matter of fact, only seven out of the nineteen Hispanic
+nations saw fit to imitate the example set by their northern
+neighbor and to declare war on Germany. These were Cuba--in view
+of its "duty toward the United States," Panama, Guatemala,
+Brazil, Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica. Since the Dominican
+Republic at the time was under American military control, it was
+not in a position to choose its course. Four countries Ecuador,
+Peru, Bolivia, and Uruguay--broke off diplomatic relations with
+Germany. The other seven republics--Mexico, Salvador, Colombia,
+Venezuela, Chile, Argentina, and Paraguay--continued their formal
+neutrality. In spite of a disclosure made by the United States of
+insulting and threatening utterances on the part of the German
+charge d'affaires in Argentina, which led to popular outbreaks at
+the capital and induced the national Congress to declare in favor
+of a severance of diplomatic relations with that functionary's
+Government, the President of the republic stood firm in his
+resolution to maintain neutrality. If Pan-Americanism had ever
+involved the idea of political cooperation among the nations of
+the New World, it broke down just when it might have served the
+greatest of purposes. Even the "A B C" combination itself had
+apparently been shattered.
+
+A century and more had now passed since the Spanish and
+Portuguese peoples of the New World had achieved their
+independence. Eighteen political children of various sizes and
+stages of advancement, or backwardness, were born of Spain in
+America, and one acknowledged the maternity of Portugal. Big
+Brazil has always maintained the happiest relations with the
+little mother in Europe, who still watches with pride the growth
+of her strapping youngster. Between Spain and her descendants,
+however, animosity endured for many years after they had thrown
+off the parental yoke. Yet of late, much has been done on both
+sides to render the relationship cordial. The graceful act of
+Spain in sending the much-beloved Infanta Isabel to represent her
+in Argentina and Chile at the celebration of the centennial
+anniversary of their cry for independence, and to wish them
+Godspeed on their onward journey, was typical of the yearning of
+the mother country for her children overseas, despite the lapse
+of years and political ties. So, too, her ablest men of intellect
+have striven nobly and with marked success to revive among them a
+sense of filial affection and gratitude for all that Spain
+contributed to mold the mind and heart of her kindred in distant
+lands. On their part, the Hispanic Americans have come to a
+clearer consciousness of the fact that on the continents of the
+New World there are two distinct types of civilization, with all
+that each connotes of differences in race, psychology, tradition,
+language, and custom--their own, and that represented by the
+United States. Appreciative though the southern countries are of
+their northern neighbor, they cling nevertheless to their
+heritage from Spain and Portugal in whatever seems conducive to
+the maintenance of their own ideals of life and thought.
+BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
+
+For anything like a detailed study of the history of the Hispanic
+nations of America, obviously one must consult works written in
+Spanish and Portuguese. There are many important books, also, in
+French and German; but, with few exceptions, the recommendations
+for the general reader will be limited to accounts in English.
+
+A very useful outline and guide to recent literature on the
+subject is W. W. Pierson, Jr., "A Syllabus of Latin-American
+History" (Chapel Hill, North Carolina, 1917). A brief
+introduction to the history and present aspects of Hispanic
+American civilization is W. R. Shepherd, "Latin America" (New
+York, 1914). The best general accounts of the Spanish and
+Portuguese colonial systems will be found in Charles de Lannoy
+and Herman van der Linden, "Histoire de L'Expansion Coloniale des
+Peuples Europeens: Portugal et Espagne" (Brussels and Paris,
+1907), and Kurt Simon, "Spanien and Portugal als See and
+Kolonialmdchte" (Hamburg, 1913). For the Spanish colonial regime
+alone, E. G. Bourne, "Spain in America" (New York, 1904) is
+excellent. The situation in southern South America toward the
+close of Spanish rule is well described in Bernard Moses, "South
+America on the Eve of Emancipation" (New York, 1908). Among
+contemporary accounts of that period, Alexander von Humboldt and
+Aime Bonpland, "Personal Narrative of Travels to the Equinoctial
+Regions of America", 3 vols. (London, 1881); Alexander von
+Humboldt, "Political Essay on the Kingdom of New Spain", 4 vols.
+(London,1811-1822); and F. R. J. de Pons, "Travels in South
+America", 2 vols. (London, 1807), are authoritative, even if not
+always easy to read.
+
+On the wars of independence, see the scholarly treatise by W. S.
+Robertson, "Rise of the Spanish-American Republics as Told in the
+Lives of their Liberators" (New York, 1918); Bartolome Mitre,
+"The Emancipation of South America" (London, 1893)--a condensed
+translation of the author's "Historia de San Martin", and wholly
+favorable to that patriot; and F. L. Petre, "Simon Bolivar"
+(London, 1910)--impartial at the expense of the imagination.
+Among the numerous contemporary accounts, the following will be
+found serviceable: W. D. Robinson, "Memoirs of the Mexican
+Revolution" (Philadelphia, 1890); J. R. Poinsett, "Notes on
+Mexico" (London, 1825); H. M. Brackenridge, "Voyage to South
+America, 2 vols. (London, 1820); W. B. Stevenson, "Historical and
+Descriptive Narrative of Twenty Years' Residence in South
+America", 3 vols. (London, 1895); J. Miller, "Memoirs of General
+Miller in the Service of the Republic of Peru", 2 vols. (London,
+1828); H. L. V. Ducoudray Holstein, "Memoirs of Simon Bolivar", 2
+vols. (London, 1830), and John Armitage, "History of Brazil", 2
+vols. (London, 1836).
+
+The best books on the history of the republics as a whole since
+the attainment of independence, and written from an Hispanic
+American viewpoint, are F. Garcia Calderon, "Latin America, its
+Rise and Progress" (New York, 1913), and M. de Oliveira Lima,
+"The Evolution of Brazil Compared with that of Spanish and
+Anglo-Saxon America" (Stanford University, California, 1914). The
+countries of Central America are dealt with by W. H. Koebel,
+"Central America" (New York, 1917), and of South America by T. C.
+Dawson, "The South American Republics", 2 vols. (New York,
+1903-1904), and C. E. Akers, "History of South America" (London,
+1912), though in a manner that often confuses rather than
+enlightens.
+
+Among the histories and descriptions of individual countries,
+arranged in alphabetical order, the following are probably the
+most useful to the general reader: W. A. Hirst, "Argentina" (New
+York, 1910); Paul Walle, "Bolivia" (New York, 1914); Pierre
+Denis, "Brazil" (New York, 1911); G. F. S. Elliot, "Chile" (New
+York, 1907); P. J. Eder, "Colombia" (New York, 1913); J. B.
+Calvo, "The Republic of Costa Rica" (Chicago, 1890); A. G.
+Robinson, "Cuba, Old and New" (New York, 1915); Otto Schoenrich,
+"Santo Domingo" (New York, 1918); C. R. Enock, "Ecuador" (New
+York, 1914); C. R. Enock, "Mexico" (New York, 1909); W. H.
+Koebel, "Paraguay" (New York, 1917); C. R. Enock, "Peru" (New
+York, 1910); W. H. Koebel, "Uruguay" (New York, 1911), and L. V.
+Dalton, "Venezuela" (New York, 1912). Of these, the books by
+Robinson and Eder, on Cuba and Colombia, respectively, are the
+most readable and reliable.
+
+For additional bibliographical references see "South America" and
+the articles on individual countries in "The Encyclopaedia
+Britannica", 11th edition, and in Marrion Wilcox and G. E. Rines,
+"Encyclopedia of Latin America" (New York, 1917).
+
+Of contemporary or later works descriptive of the life and times
+of eminent characters in the history of the Hispanic American
+republics since 1830, a few may be taken as representative.
+Rosas: J. A. King, "Twenty-four Years in the Argentine Republic"
+(London, 1846), and Woodbine Parish, "Buenos Ayres and the
+Provinces of the Rio de la Plata" (London, 1850). Francia: J. R.
+Rengger, "Reign of Dr. Joseph Gaspard Roderick [!] de Francia in
+Paraguay" (London, 1827); J. P. and W. P. Robertson, "Letters on
+South America", 3 vols. (London, 1843), and E. L. White, "El
+Supremo", a novel (New York, 1916). Santa Anna: Waddy Thompson,
+"Recollections of Mexico" (New York, 1846), and F. E. Ingles,
+Calderon de la Barca, "Life in Mexico" (London, 1859.). Juarez:
+U. R. Burke, "Life of Benito Juarez" (London, 1894). Solano
+Lopez: T. J. Hutchinson, "Parana; with Incidents of the
+Paraguayan War and South American Recollections" (London, 1868);
+George Thompson, "The War in Paraguay" (London, 1869); R. F.
+Burton, "Letters from the Battle-fields of Paraguay" (London,
+1870), and C. A. Washburn, "The History of Paraguay", 2 vols.
+(Boston, 1871). Pedro II: J. C. Fletcher and D. P. Kidder,
+"Brazil and the Brazilians" (Boston, 1879), and Frank Bennett,
+"Forty Years in Brazil "(London, 1914). Garcia Moreno: Frederick
+Hassaurek, "Four Years among Spanish Americans "(New York, 1867).
+Guzman Blanco: C. D. Dance, "Recollections of Four Years in
+Venezuela" (London, 1876). Diaz: James Creelman, "Diaz, Master of
+Mexico" (New York, 1911). Balmaceda: M. H. Hervey, "Dark Days in
+Chile" (London, 1891-1890. Carranza: L. Gutierrez de Lara and
+Edgcumb Pinchon, "The Mexican People: their Struggle for Freedom"
+(New York, 1914).
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg etext of The Hispanic Nations of the
+New World.
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Hispanic Nations of the New World
+by William R. Shepherd
+