Quetzalcoatl PDF
Quetzalcoatl PDF
Quetzalcoatl PDF
D. H. LAWRENCE
QyeTzaLcoaTL
EDITED, WITH AN INTRODUCTION,
BY LOUIS L. MARTZ
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Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ix
1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
II . .................................................................................. 13
IV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
V . . . . . . . . ................ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . �
� ............ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ................... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . �
IX . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .145
X . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
XI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .171
XII . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .191
xv . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241
� ............................................................................. 269
INTRODUCTION
even ro one long addition of fifteen lines ar the end of chapter XV Ill:
the symbolic passage on the snake.
Jr is true that Lawrence in his letters repeats, over and over, char
the work is nor finished. Writing from the ranch above Taos (New
Mexico), a year after he had left Chapala, he says this early version
represents a novel char is only "half finished" or "two-thirds done"
(Letters, v, 75, 128). Bur Lawrence does nor mean char he is planning
to add chis much as a continuation of rhe early version; he is planning
to expand rhe whole body of his complete sketch, recasting irs
emphasis- enlarging ir in oils, we might say- thus producing a work
almost twice irs original size.
Some sixteen months elapsed between the writing at Lake Chapa
la and the re-writing in Oaxaca, where, after finishing the novel in
February 1925, Lawrence suffered a grave illness and hemorrhage
from rhe lungs that brought him close to death. Much had
happened - and not only to his health - in the sixteen intervening
months, ro change Lawrence's attitude toward the world, and toward
his wife, Frieda.
They were happy ar Chapala, as photographs (see frontispiece)
and letters show. "Chapala paradise. Take evening train," Lawrence
had telegraphed Frieda on first arriving there (Letters, IV, 435 ) . But
Frieda longed for her children in England and for her mother in
Germany. She kept on urging Lawrence to go back with her for a visit.
Lawrence demurred, hesitated, agreed, hesitated again and again,
went up by train with her to New York, with the uncertain intent of
taking passage to England with her. Bur at the last moment he refused
to go, and Frieda went off alone. Leaving the manuscript of Quetzal
roatl with his prospective publisher, Thomas Seltzer, to be typed,
Lawrence made his way to Los Angeles, where he joined his friend,
the Danish artist Kai Gotzsche. Then the two of them went back to
Guadalajara and Chapala, over difficult mountain ways, from rhe
West, partly by muleback. But when Lawrence saw Chapala again, all
was changed, utterly changed. The landscape and the natives were the
same, but one essential element was missing: Frieda. "I went to
Chapala for rhe day yesterday- the lake so beautiful," Lawrence
writes. "And yet rhe lake I knew was gone - something gone, and it
was alien to me." "I was at Chapala yesterday- It felt strange to me,
not the same place" (Letten, IV, 519-20). But more than Frieda's
absence appears to be involved here. During the two months away
Introduction XI
* * *
The differences between the two versions of the novel become clear in
two chapters dealing with the hymns ofQuetzalcoatl: chapter IX of the
early version and chapter XV of the later. In both versions the preced
ing chapter has closed with the ugly incident in which Kate anempts
to rescue a helpless bird in the water from the mischievous anacks of
two linle "urchins" who arc stoning the limp creature. Her failure to
save the bird brings to a climax her feelings of revulsion against the
ugly, sordid aspects of native life, to the extent that in both versions
she declares that she will leave Mexico. In the final version, however,
her declaration is restrained and tentative: '"But the day will come
xir QUETZ.ALCOATI.
emphasize the way in which the name of the savior is always present
with these people, and they need a savior. Now they sing for Kate the
short song of "the coming of Quetzalcoatl," as Jesus, son of Fclipa,
takes the role of Quetzalcoatl. Dead silence follows the abrupt ending
of the song; everyone quietly leaves; and Kate ponders the meaning of
the scene in the long passage that ends the chapter:
Kate went down to her room, wondering. What did these people
believe, and what didn't they? So queer to talk ofJ esus and Mary as if they
were the two most important people in the village, living in the biggest
house, the church. Was it religion, or wasn't it?
For her "the world seemed to have become bigger, as if she saw
through the opening of a tent a vast, unknown night outside." And
the chapter closes with the words: "Life had taken on another gesture
altogether." From beginning to end of this chapter, Kate is the
receiver of the songs, the center of the conversation, her mind the
focus of the action.
In the corresponding chapter ofThe Plumed Serpent, the situation
is utterly different. The chapter heading tells it all: ''The Written
Hymns of Quetzalcoad." The hymns here no longer create the effect
of arising uncertainly and gradually from native life, accompanied by
native instruments. The hymns are now being circulated on printed
sheets throughout the land. Kate has already read one of them in the
earlier scene at the Plaza (chapter VII), where singers render it in the
circle of the men of Quetzalcoatl, after an old Indian sage has delivered
a long, lyrical sermon about the coming of Quetzalcoatl. Now the
little group at Kate's house is listening to the hymns as they are read by
Julio (formerly Francisco), an educated newcomer who reads first the
hymn that has been so slowly extracted from the group by Kate's
questioning. After a shortened version of the naive conversation
about Jesus and Mary (which omits the comic interruption by the
entry of "Jesus"), Julio reads the "second" hymn, which now covers
two-and-a-half pages. At the end of this the chapter closes with one
abrupt sentence: ''There was silence as the young man finished read
ing." Kate's long rumination over the meaning of religion among the
Indians is gone: her responses are no longer at the center of the book.
Ramon's presence, through the written hymns which he has com
posed, now dominates the scene: he speaks directly to us, without a
questioning intermediary.
In Quetzalcoatl the atmosphere of song, arising naturally in an
Introduction XJJii
oral civilization, has been carefully prepared by the scrring at the close
of the long chapter v, mainly devoted to description of the household
in Chapala and native life on the village plaza, where singing to the
guitar and violin is part of daily life:
The tall, handsome men, with sarape over one shoulder, proudly,
lmmged and strolled about, standing ro listen ro the singers, of whom
there were usually rwo or three groups. A couple of young men, with
different-sized guitars, stood facing each 01 her like rwo fighting cocks,
their guitars almost touching, and they strummed rapidly, intensely,
singing in restrained voices the eternal ballads, nor very musical, endless,
intense, not very audible, and really mournful, to a degree, keeping it up
for hours, till their throats were scraped! In among the food-booths
would be another trio, one with a fiddle, keeping on at a high pitch and
full speed, yet not very loud.
The singer of the Quetzalcoatl legend thus forms part of this tradition
of "the eternal ballads."
This passage, slightly altered, appears also in The Plumed Serpent
(113-14), as part of chapter VII, wholly devoted to ''The Plaza." But
here the account of village life, covering the first third of the chapter, is
suddenly invaded by "a new sound, the sound of a drum, or tom
tom," toward which the peons arc drifting:
There was a rippling and a pulse-like thudding of the drum, strange
ly arresting on the night air, then the long note of a nure playing a sort of
wild, unemotional melody, with the drum for a syncopated rhythm.
Kate, who had listened to the drums and the wild singing of the Red
Indians in Arizona and New Mexico, instantly felt that timeless, primeval
passion of the prehistoric races, with their intense and complicated
religious significance, spreading on the air. (PS, 117)
The rirual, then, is not native to Chapala: Ramon and Cipriano, we
later learn, have imported the drums from the North, as part of
Lawrence's transformation of the scene into the mythical village and
lake named Sayula in The Plumed Serpent (the acrual name of a much
smaller lake in the region). Here, as the drum gives forth its "blood
rhythm," Kate notices men "giving little leaflets to the onlookers"; she
receives one and finds on it "a sort of ballad, but without rhyme, in
Spanish," while "at the top of the leaflet was a rough print of an eagle
within the ring of a serpent that had its tail in its mouth" (PS, 118 ).
Lawrence then provides the poem, Quetzalcoatl's song of his coming
back to replace Jesus in Mexico. Next, as "the drum was beating a
XI' iii QUErZ.ALCOATI.
slow, regular thud, acting straight on the blood," the crowd assembles
in silence to hear the long lyrical sermon of the Indian sage, telling in
biblical language and cadences the full legend of the god's rerum.
Various voices then take up the song printed in the leaflet, and finally
the whole company moves into a rirual pattern, "dancing the savage
bird-tread" (PS, 128). Kate cannot resist the invitation of an unknown
man to join in the dance, and she does so, gradually losing her sense of
individuality:
She felt her sex and her womanhood caught up and identified in the
slowly revolving ocean of nascent life, the dark sky of the men lowering
and wheeling above. She was nor herself, she was gone, and her own
desires were gone in the ocean of the great desire. As the man whose
fingers touched hers was gone in the ocean that is male, stooping over the
face of the waters. (PS, 131)
Already, only a quarter of the way into The Plumed Serpent, it is clear
that Kate will not be able to resist the spell of the men ofQuetzalcoatl.
Equally important, the scene here shows that the religion of the
rerumed god is fully developed, with its cosrume, symbols, rirual,
sermons, and poetry. But in Quetzalcoatl Lawrence tells us in chapter
XI, more than half-way through the novel, that the religious move
ment "is only just in its infancy." We watch its growth as it arises
gradually from the native soil and enters into Kate's consciousness.
Ramon, in the early version, seems almost like an emanation from the
scene, a "dark-skinned" man of the native race (see end of chaptet
III) - whereas in The Plumed Serpent he is lighter in hue and to Kate
"he feels European" (PS, 237).
The basic difference between the two versions is evident in the
two different accounts of Kate's first visit to Ramon's hacienda, given
the symbolic name Las Yemas ("the buds") in the early version, but
changed to Jamiltepec in the final version, presumably for the more
indigenous effect of the name. In Quetzalwatl (chapter VI) Kate
climbs up to a balcony, and as she rums "to look out at the water," she
hears "the sound of a guitar, and a man singing in a full, rich voice, a
curious music." The single voice is succeeded by "the sound of guitars
and violins," while "four or five men started singing." Don Ramon,
playing on his guitar, is leading his men in what he calls "the music
lesson"- they are practicing a song, with laughter and high spirits.
Here again, under the influence of the lake, the music ofQuetzalcoatl
is beginning to arise from a domestic scene with native instruments.
Introduction xix
Carlota, it soon appears, hates the sound of the drum and all it
signifies; when Kate asks, "Is Don Ramon drumming?" Carlota cries
out, "No! Oh, no! He is not drumming, himself. He brought down
two Indians from the north to do that" (PS, 164) . And she proceeds to
denoWlce bitterly her husband's effort to revive the old gods. With the
focus thus shifted to Don Ramon's enterprise, the next three chapters
(XI -XIII) are dominated by the words and actions of Ramon and his
foUowers.
In chapter XI of the final version, "Lords of the Day and Night,"
Kate is removed from the action, as we watch Ramon praying alone in
his room, then visiting the workmen on his estate, as they forge in iron
the symbol ofQuetzalcoatl: "The bird within the SWl" (PS, 171 ) Kate .
and Ramon's wife briefly come upon the scene, but only to get the key
to the boat which will take them away for a row upon the lake. Ramon
now visits the artist who is carving his head in wood, and here, as
Ramon sits for the sculptor, we are given the fully developed features
of the religion of Quetzalcoatl: the prophetic leader, the ritual ges
tures, the transfer of power from master to disciple:
The artist gazed wid! wonder, and wid! an appreciation rouched
wid! fear. The orner man, large and intense, wid! big dark eyes staring
wid! intense pride, yet prayerful, beyond me narural horizons, sent a
rnrill of dread and of joy rnrough me artist. He bowed his head as he
looked.
Don Ramon rumed to him.
"Now you!" he said.
The artist was afraid. He seemed to quail. But he met Ramon's eyes.
And instandy, mat stillness of concentration came over him, like a trance.
And men suddenly, out of me trance, he shot his arm aloft, and his fat,
pale face took on an expression of peace, a noble, motionless transfigura
tion, me blue-grey eyes calm, proud, reaching into me beyond, wid!
prayer. (PS, 173)
Q UETZALCOATI.
Then Ramon visits the shed where his people are weaving a sarape
that presents a more elaborate symbol of the movement: "a snake with
his tail in his mouth, the black triangles on his back being the outside
of the circle: and in the middle, a blue eagle standing erect, with slim
wings touching the belly of the snake with their tips, and slim feet
upon the snake, within the hoop" (PS, 174). So the way is prepared
for Ramon to beat the drum, call his disciples together, and begin the
service of Quetzalcoad.
They sat in silence for a time, only the monotonous, hypnotic sound
of the drum pulsing, touching the inner air. Then the drummer began to
sing, in the curious, small, inner voice, that hardly emerges from the
circle, singing in the ancient falseno of the Indians:
"Who sleeps- shall wake! Who sleeps- shall wake! Who treads
down the path of the snake shall arrive at the place; in the path ofthe dust
shall arrive at the place and be dressed in the skin of the snake -n
One by one the voices of the men joined in, till they were all singing
in the strange, blind infallible rhythm of the ancient barbaric world. And
all in the small, inward voices, as if they were singing from the oldest,
darkest recess of the soul, not outwards, but inwards, the soul singing
back to herself. (PS, 175)
In the next chapter Kate, too, feels the powerful spell of Ramon,
standing and sitting there "naked to the waist," in a passage that
further diminishes her individual being:
"Ah 1" she said to herself. "Let me close my eyes to him, and open
only my soul. Let me close my prying, seeing eyes, and sit in dark stillness
along with these two men. They have got more than I, they have a
richness that I haven't got. They have got rid of that itching of the eye,
and the desire that works through the eye. The itching, prurient, knuw
ing, imagining eye, I am cursed with it, I am hampered up in it. It is my
curse of curses, the curse ofEve. The curse ofEve is upon me, my eyes are
like hooks, my knowledge is like a fish-hook through my gills, pulling me
in spasmodic desire. Oh, who will free me from the grappling of my eyes,
from the impurity of sharp sight' Daughter ofEve, ofgreedy vision, why
don't these men save me from the sharpness of my own eyes- !" (PS,
184)
This is Lawrence at his least attractive- bur none of this is in Quetzal
coati.
In The Plumed Serpent Ramon, as the mythic representative of
Quetzalcoad, seems to have power even over the clements of earth and
sky, for the rituals, the drununing, the songs, and the long sermon of
Introduction
Ramon that follows in chapter XIII ("The First Rain") seem to evoke
the thunder, lightning, and tropical downpour that ends this long
central sequence of three chapters.
Even as he spoke the wind rose, in sudden gusts, and a door could be
heard slamming in the house, with a shivering ofglass, and the trees gave
off a tearing sound.
"Come then, Bird of all the great sky!" Ramon called wildly.
"Come! Oh Bird, settle a moment on my wrist, over my head, and give
me power of the sky, and wisdom." (PS, 198)
Soon, after more of Ramon's sermon, the rain comes.
All this symbolizes the change that is coming over the land
through the religious power of Ramon, "Lord of the Two Ways,"
downward and upward, uniting earth and sky and men and women in
one irresistible unity, where the women are always subordinate to the
rediscovered manhood of the followers of-Quetzalcoatl, with their
ominous celebration of the Leader.
''You know the Navajo women, the Indian women, when they
weave blankets, weave their souls into them. So at the end they leave a
place, some threads coming down to the edge, some loose threads where
their souls can come out. And it seems to me your country has woven its
soul into its fabrics and its goods and its books, and never left a place for
the soul to come out. So all the soul is in the goods, in the books, and in
the roads and ways of life, and the people are fmished like finished
sarapes, that have no faults and nothing beyond. Your women have no
threads into the beyond.Their pattern is finished and they are complete."
Kate objects that she is Irish, not English, and Cipriano concedes that
she may be different.
"I did nor say that every English woman, or Irish woman, was
finished and finished off. But they wish to be. They do not like their
threads into the beyond. They quickly tie the threads and close the
pattern. In your women the pattern is usually complete and closed, at
twenty years."
"And in Mexico there is no pattern- it is all a tangle," said Kate.
"The pattern is very beautiful, while there are threads into the
unknown, and the pattern is never finished. The Indian patterns are
never quite complete. There is always a flaw at the end, where they break
into the beyond - nothing is more beautiful to me than a pattern which is
lovely and perfect, when it breaks at the end imperfecdy on to the
unknown-"
The mythical touch prepares the way for the brilliantly presented
scene that follows as the peons urge a cow and "a huge black-and-
Introduction
white bull" into the interior of the boat. The bull is magnificent in his
"unutterable calm and weighty poise," as the men urge him toward
the boat in ritual, ballet-like movements: "with the loose pauses and
the casual, soft-balanced rearrangements at every pause."
There he stood, huge, silvery and dappled like the sky, with snake
dapples down his haunches, looming massive way above the red hatches
of the roof of the canoe. How would such a great beast pass that low red
roof and drop into that hole? It seemed impossible.
And then in the end he leaps down to join the cow, and the boat moves
off "softly on the water, with her white sail in a whorl like the boat of
Dionysos, going across the lake. There seemed a cettain mystery in it.
When she thought of the great dappled bull upon the waters, it
seemed mystical to her."
The symbolism is clear: the men have captured, with ritual rever
ence, the very principle of potency. The wretched bull-fight, with its
"stupid" bulls, that formed the novel's opening chapter has been
redeemed by recognition of a divinity that looms within this noble
creature once worshipped by the ancients. The incident is retained in
the middle of the last chapter ofThe Plumed Serpent, along with details
of the earlier springtime scene, but it is placed in November and
surrounded by the presence of Ramon.Thus the mythological power
of the symbolic bull is associated with Ramon, along with the other
activities of nature.
In the springtime scene ofQuetzalcoatl, Kate sees everywhere the
signs of creative life: "A roan horse, speckled with white, was racing
prancing along the shore, and neighing frantically." "A mother-ass"
has just given bitth to a foal, and Kate watches the foal rise on its "four
loose legs."
Then it hobbled a few steps forward, ro smell at some growing green
maize. It smelled and smelled and smelled, as if all the aeons of green juice
of memory were striving to awake. Then it rumed round, looked straight
towards Kate with irs bushy-veker face, and put our a pink tongue at her.
She broke inro a laugh. It stood wondering, lost in wonder. Then it pur
our irs tongue at her again. And she laughed again, delighted. It gave an
awkward little new skip, and was so surprised and rickety, having done
so. It venrured forward a few steps, and unexpectedly exploded into
another little skip, itself most surprised of all by the event.
It seems almost the perfect image of Kate's own rebitth. She is leaving
Mexico, but the "green juice" of the memory of what she has witnes-
QUETZALCOATL
sed will stay with her. Her whole Mexican experience now seems like a
myth of Dionysos, the fiction of a possibility. It is almost as though
she had dreamed the whole experience, in answer to her need. That is
why the memories of her life in England have, in the preceding
chapter, come back so strongly to her. England, however "fmished," is
her reality, just as the enduring memory of her beloved husband
remains with her until the end, helping to draw her home.
* * *
One of the most significant differences between the two versions lies
in Lawrence's treatment of Kate's married life. In Quetzalcoatl she has
one husband (the father of her two children), bearing the simple
Scorch-Irish name Desmond Bums. In the fmal version she has two
husbands, the first of whom she remembers with respect but not with
love, and by this divorced husband she has had her two children. Then
she marries an Irish patriot bearing the name James Joachim Leslie, a
symbolic name that suggests James the apostle, as well as Joachim the
father of Mary and the medieval mystic and prophet, Joachim of
Flora, in whom Lawrence was deeply interested. So the second hus
band bears the aura of an evangelist and a prophet, whereas Desmond
Bums is a beloved man -no more than man.
One of the most moving scenes in Quetzalcoatl is found in the
third chapter when Kate, in the midst of a dinner-party, breaks
down weeping before all the company at the memory of her dead
husband. She never loses that link with her past: again, in the middle
of chapter XII, she weeps bitterly at the memory of her husband's
failure and death. The earlier incident ofher weeping is retained in The
Plumed Serpent, but here it occurs only in the presence of Cipriano and
thus serves to indicate the possibility of a closer relation between the
twO.
To prepare for Kate's acceptance of Cipriano, Lawrence has made
a drastic change in his treatment of the general. In the third chapter of
Quetzalcoatl we hear the story of how, when he was a small boy, he
saved the life of the mistress of his hacienda by sucking out the poison
of a snake that had bitten her, with the result that she sent him to
England to be educated. "Oh, by the way," says Owen in reporting the
story, "beware he doesn't bite you, because the natives have a supersti
tion that his bite is poisonous." This image of the snake reaches its
Introduction
become a priest. "So you sec," Cipriano explains ro Kate, "I have
always been half a priest and half a soldier" (PS, 70). With his venom
thus removed, the way is clear for Kate ro marry him. By this marriage,
and by her agreement to join the new movement as the representative
of the goddess Malintzi, Kate denies the essence of the individual
character that she has maintained throughout Quetzalcoatl, and
throughout the earlier portion of The Plumed Serpent. Kate thus
controls the action and the meaning of Quetzalcoatl, whereas in The
Plumed Serpent Ramon and Cipriano have their way. True, she keeps a
strong measure of inner resistance up to the very end of the final
version, but at the close it is clear that she has decided to stay. "She had
come to make a sort of submission: to say she didn't want to go away."
"'You don't want me ro go, do you?' she pleaded" with Cipriano.
Then in the final version's closing line she continues her pleading in
words that variously imply that she will and wants ro stay: '"You
won't let me go!' she said to him." That is to say: "Your strength is
overpowering me: I can't get free." Or, "You won't let me go; this
reassures me that I will stay." Or, "You won't ever let me go, will you?"
* .. ..
In all these ways, while making his final expansion, Lawrence has
transformed Quetzalcoatl from a psychologically plausible narrative,
focused on and through Kate, into a work that places much greater
stress upon the transcendent element, in accord with the rumination
in the middle of the crucial chapter VI of The Plumed Serpent, where
Kate is overwhelmed by "the great seething light of the lake":
So in her soul she cried aloud to the greater mystery, the higher
power that hovered in the interstices ofthe hot air, rich and potent. It was
as if she could lift her hands and clutch the silent, storm less potency that
roved everywhere, waiting. "Come then!" she said, drawing a long slow
breath, and addressing the silent life-breath which hung unrevealed in
the atmosphere, waiting. (PS, 106)
And she says to herself, "There is something rich and alive in these
people. They want to be able ro breathe the Great Breath" -a term
suggestive of current theosophical thought. Lawrence knows exactly
"' hat he is doing here: he stresses the shift in her tone:
She was surprised at herself, suddenly using this language. But her
weariness and her sense of devastation had been so complete, that the
Introduction xxix
Other Breath in the air, and the bluish dark power in the eanh had
become, almost suddenly, more real to her than so-caUed reality. Con
crete, jarring, exasperating reality had melted away, and a sofr world of
potency stood in its place, the velvety dark flux from the eanh, the
delicate yet supreme life-breath in the inner air. Behind the fierce sun the
dark eyes of a deeper sun were watching, and between the bluish ribs of
the mountains a powerful heart was secretly beating, the heart of the
eanh. (PS, 108-9)
So Chapala becomes Sayula, and most of the other actual names of
places around the lake (which are retained in Quetzalcoatl) are likewise
given fictitious names, where the myth of the gods' rerum can move
beyond "concrete, jarring, exasperating reality'' into the "velvety dark
flux" of the earth and the "supreme life-breath of the inner air."
While the amount of material dealing with landscape and native
life remains substantially the same in both versions, because of the
much greater size of The Plumed Serpent, the native maner has pro
portionately less impact. In Quetzalcoatl the local and the mythologi
cal are closely wrought together, evenly balanced in emphasis. But in
The Plumed Serpent the additional mythic and transcendent
elements -sermons, ruminations, expanded hymns, expanded
rirual -tend to dominate the landscape and local detail preserved
from the early version; in the new context these exist as a thin,
transient layer of temporal life, lying between two greater modes of
being. The Plumed Serpent, as in the passage just quoted, frequently
creates abrupt shifts from the local to the transcendental: a strategy
appropriate to a prophetical novel designed to shock the reader into
an awareness of the need for a religious awakening and renewal. But
Quetzalcoatl works in another way, with more stress on the concrete
details indicative of "spirit of place" -a way illustrated by the scene in
chapter X, where Cipriano escorts Kate to her home. They come to a
corner where there are "several reed huts of the natives":
Kate was quite used to seeing the donkeys looking over the low
dry-stone wall, the black sheep with the curved horns tied to a pole, the
boy naked save for his shirt, darting to the corner of the wall that served
as a W.C. That was the worst of these little clusters of huts, they always
made a smell of human excrement.
But there is something beyond all this: "Kate was used, too, to hearing
the music of guitars and fiddles from this corner not far from her
house. When she asked Fclipa what the music meant, Felipa said it was
QUETZALCOATI.
a dance." Now once again music is emerging from the huts, and "by
the light of the moon many figures could be seen, the white clothes of
the men."
"Loo k !" said Kate. ''They are having a baile- a dance!"
And she stood ro watch. But nobody was dancing. Someone was
singing - rwo men. Kate recognized the hymns.
''They are singing the hymns to Querzalcoatl," she said ro Viedma.
"\Vhat are those?" he replied laconically.
''The boys sing them to me at the house."
He did not answer.
Like Felipa, the general is reluctant to speak of the hymns.
The song ceased, and he would have moved on. But she stood
persistently. Then the song started again. And this rime it was different.
There was a sort of refrain sung by all the men in unison, a deep, brief
response of male voices, the response of the audience to the chant. It
seemed very wild, very barbaric in irs solemnity, and so deeply, resonant
ly musical that Kate felt wild tears in her heart. The strange sound ofmen
in unanimous deep, wild resolution. As if the hot-blooded soul were
speaking from many men at once.
''That is beautiful," she said, turning to him.
And he proceeds to mythologize the song: '"It is the song of the
moon,' he answered. 'The response of the men to the words of the
woman with white breasts, who is the moon-mother."'
In this way, throughoutQuetzalcoatl, the mythological element is
closely related to the native scene, with all its local detail. In The
Plumed Serpent the musical portion of the above scene is omitted: the
final version jumps from "a smell of human excrement" to "Kate and
Cipriano sat on the verandah of the House of the Cuentas" (PS, 233).
Then follows a conversation in which Cipriano attempts to persuade
Kate to accept the role of "a goddess in the Mexican pantheon." For
such a role the preservation of human individuality ceases to matter;
what is important is to be swept away into the realms of transcendent
being.
One can understand, then, why Katherine Anne Porter in her
early review said that The Plumed Serpent "seems only incidentally a
novel." While this judgment is extreme, it points the way toward a
valid distinction between the two versions, or rather, the two novels.
If not a traditional novel, what is it? In its combination of prose
and poetry, its mingling of narrative and description with songs and
Inuoduction
Louis L. Martz
XXXI I QUETZALCOATL
I in Mexico City. Four special bulls had been brought over from
T wAS the Sunday after Easter, and the last bull-fight of the season
Spain for the occasion, since Spanish bulls are more fiery than Mex
ican. Perhaps it is the altitude, perhaps just the spirit of the western
continent which is to blame for the lack of"pep," as Owen put it, in
the native animal.
Although Owen disapproved of bull-fights, yet, as he had never
seen one, "We shall have to go," he said.
"Oh yes, I think we must see it," chimed in Kate, while some
where at the back of her mind lingered the speculation as to why
"never having seen one" should entail "having to go." But Owen was
an American, and each nation has its own logic. And Kate was good at
chiming in.
Yet the reserve at the back ofher mind was substantial, and caused
a slight oppression on her heart.
As none of them were very rich, and as the day was somewhat
cloudy, they took tickets for the "sun." Nobody who is anything takes
a seat in the sun, in the bull-ring. Ofcourse the vast proportion of the
audience always sits there. That is why, if you want to be somebody,
you have to buy a much more expensive ticket and sit way up in the
"shade."
Kate felt uneasy, as if she were doing something against her own
nature, as she foUowed Owen, and Villiers foUowed her to the proper
entrance into the vast iron-and-concrete stadium. From the outside,
mostly iron framework. Along the causeways, vendors of fruits and
cakes and pulque and sweets. Rather lousy.
The man who took the tickets at the entrance suddenly pawed
Owen on the chest and down the front of the body, and Owen bricUed
like a shying horse. Then he turned with a half self-conscious, half
excited smile to Kate.
2 QUETZALCOATL
her bowels were uneasy because of the mob. Then at a certain moment
a signal was given and the masses above in the cheap seats poured
down to take the unoccupied reserved seats below them. It was like a
sudden rush of black water, humanity confusedly rushing round.
In a few moments all the lower seats were occupied, men were
calling to one another and scrambling to get together. Bur there was
no shoving and pushing, no wrangling. Two people did not dart for
the same seat. It was more like water rushing quickly to its place.
Kate now sat among the crowd. Her seat, however, was on one of
the pathways. People passed along in front ofher, back and forth. And
men began to take advantage of the ledge for the feet of those on the
row where Kate sat, to squat there. Owen soon had a fellow sitting
plumb between his knees.
"I hope they won't sit on my feet," said Kate anxiously.
"We won't let them," said Villiers, with fierce coldness. "Why
don't you shove him off, Owen? Shove him off."
Owen laughed and flushed. The Mexicans around looked at the
three.
And the next thing was a fat Mexican inserting himself insolently
on Villiers' foot-space. Bur young Villiers was too quick for him. He
quickly brought his feet together under the man's sinking posterior,
the fellow subsided uncomfortably on to a pair of boots, and at the
same time felt Villiers shoving him quietly on the shoulder.
"No!" said Villiers in good American. "This place is for my feet!
Get offi - You get off!'' And again he quietly bur very decidedly
pushed the Mexican's shoulder, to remove him.
The Mexican half raised himself and looked round as if he would
murder Villiers. But the young American's face was calm and cold,
unmoved, his eyes just coolly decided. And Kate, in the next seat, was
looking down with blazing Irish contempt in her grey eyes.
The Mexican diminished in importance. He muttered an explana
tion in Spanish that he was only sitting there a moment till he could go
to his friend in the lower tier, waving his hand in that direction.
Villiers did not understand a word, but he repeated:
"I don't care what it is. This place is for myfeet, and you don't sit
there."
The Mexican, however, turned a fat black city back and again
placed his posterior on Villiers' foot-rest. And again Villiers sharply
shoved him by the shoulder, saying:
Chapter I 5
waved rags to him and he swerved on. Till he came to where one of the
men stood on horseback. Kate now noticed that the horse was thickly
blindfolded with a black cloth. Yes, so was the horse ridden by the
other picador, thickly blindfolded with black cloth.
The bull trotted suspiciously up to the motionless horse bearing
the rider with the long pole. The picador turned the horse to face the
bull, slowly, and prodded the bull in the shoulder with his lance. The
bull, as if in surprise, suddenly lowered his head and lifted his horns
straight into the horse's abdomen. Without more ado the horse and
rider rolled over, the rider scrambling from beneath the horse and
running away with his lance.
The horse, a poor specimen, struggled to rise, as if dumbly
wondering why on earth! The bull, with a red sore on his shoulder,
stood looking around as if also wondering why on earth! He saw the
horse already half on its feet just near, smelling already of blood and
abdomen, rearing itself erect. So not knowing what else to do, the bull
once more lowered his head and drove his long, flourishing horns into
the horse's belly, working them up and down inside the horse's
abdomen with a certain vague satisfaction.
Kate, watching, had never been so suddenly taken by surprise in
her life. She had come with romantic notions of a gallant display.And
before she knew where she was, she was watching a bull, with a red
place on his shoulder, working his horns up and down in the belly of a
prostrate and feebly plunging old horse.
She looked aside, almost having lost control of herself. But the
greatest shock was surprise, amazement at the poor vulgarity of it.
Then she smelt blood and the nauseous smell of bursten bowels.
When she looked up, it was to see the horse feebly and vaguely
trotting out of the arena, led by an attendant, a great ball of its own
entrails hanging and swinging reddish against the animal's legs as it
automatically trotted.
And again, the shock of surprise almost made her lose her self
control. She heard the scattered Ahh! of amused satisfaction from the
crowd. She looked into Owen's face.
He too was somewhat pale, with a wrinkled nose and rounded
eyes behind his spectacles, half scared, somewhat disgusted, but also
excited and pleased, as if to say: Now we're seeing the real thing.
uBut the horse doesn't move! It doesn't do anything to save
itself!" cried Kate in her horrified amazement.
Chapter I 7
folded horse. The bull ignored it, and rroned away again, as if all the
rime looking for something, excitedly looking for something. He
stood still and excitedly pawed the ground, as ifhe wanted something.
A roreador advanced and swung a cloak. Up pranced the bull, his rail
in the air, and with a prancing bound charged - upon the rag, of
course. The toreador skipped round with a ladylike skip, then tripped
w another poinr. Very ladylike.
Bur the bull, in the course of his troning and prancing and
pawing, had once more come near the bold picador. The bold picador
shoved forward his ancient steed again, and prodded the bull with his
lance. The bull looked up irritated: what now! He saw the horse and
rider. The horse stood as calm as if it were waiting in the shafts while
irs master delivered milk. Ir must have been very much surprised when
the bull gave a little bound like a dog, ducked irs head, and catching
the horse in the abdomen at once rolled it over, as one might push over
a sewing-machine. Then the bull looked with some irritable wonder at
the curious medley of a collapsed horse with rider scrambling our, a
few yards from him. He was going w investigate when the roreadors
drew him off, and he wenr caracoling at more red rags.
Meanwhile an anendanr had got the horse on irs feet again, and
was leacling ir slowly and feebly inro the gangway and round w the
exit under the Authorities. The horse crawled slowly. The bull, run
ning from rag w rag, and never catching anything, was gening
excited, and a little impatient of the rag game. He jumped once more
inro the corridor and starred running, alas, in the clirection after the
wounded horse, which was still limping its way rowards the exir.
Kate knew what was coming. Before she could look away, the bull
had charged on the limping horse from behind, the anendanrs had
fled, the horse was heaved up absurdly from the rear, with one of the
buU's horns between his legs and deep in his body, then he wenr
collapsing down in from, with his rear still heaved up and the bull's
hom working vigorously, pushing up and down deep inside him,
while he lay on his neck, aU twisted. And a heap of bowels coming out.
And the nauseous stench!
This happened nor far from where Kate sat, on her side of the
ring. She rose w her feet. Most of the other people were on their feet,
craning, looking down at the sight just below, with exciremenr. Kate
knew ifshe saw any more she would go into hysterics. She was gening
beside herself.
Chapter I 9
" I asked him to call m y car, as the m an speaks English and you can
be sure of him. Will you borrow my cloak for a moment? It doesn't
rain so much any more, but enough to wet you."
"Oh thank you," she said flushing. "I don't think I need it."
"I am afraid you do," he said, holding it out for her.
So she perforce had to tum her shoulders and be enveloped in the
big cloak of fine, pale-blue cloth.
"You didn't like the bull-fight?" he said, smiling slightly.
"Not ar all. No. Ir was a shock more than anything."
"A shock! Yes! I could see. Naturally ir was a shock. You had
never been before."
"Or I shouldn't have come again."
"Naturally. - No, I dislike ir myself. Bur in Rome one does as
Rome does; until the moment comes to make a change in Rome."
She hardly heeded him. Bur she replied mechanically:
'<yes, I suppose things do change sometimes."
''When we make them," he replied.
There was the noisy sound of a car - then a big red automobile
appeared beyond the gate, the wer soldier dropped offthe foot-board,
and carne runn ing in to the stadium, carrying an umbrella, which he
handed with a salute to the General.
The General opened the umbrella, and stepped our with Kate.
''Thank you so very much," she said, handing him the cloak as she
turned ro enter the car.
''Won't you keep ir rill you are under cover, and send i r back by the
man?" he said.
''Thank you so much."
He closed the door, she sar expecting the car to move on. The
General waited, the chauffeur waited, and she waited.
"Charles," said the General, "take the lady where she wishes to go,
and come back here."
And he bowed and was retreating.
"Oh!" said Kare, starring and stammering in confusion. "Er
Er - Hotel Verona. - Oh thank you, thank you so much." And she
pur her hand waveringly our of the window. The General kissed her
finger-rips, smiled, and looked ar the chauffeur.
"Hotel Verona," said the chauffeur.
In rcn minutes' time Kare found herself back in her own room in
the second-class bur kindly Italian hotel, with more impressions than
12 QUETZALCOATI.
she knew what to do with. She was too much agitated to be still . The
rain had ceased, she went out again and took a taXi to Sanborn's, the
tea-house, where she could have tea and feel at home without being
alone.
13
II Tea-Party in Tacubaya
Kate sat trying ro sew, but her hand trembled. She could nor get
rhe bull-ring our of her vision. And she felt ourraged in her soul. And
she felt also a background of gratirude ro rhat general: Cipriano; she
remembered his first name, but nor rhe orher.
Ir was nearh· seven o'clock when Villiers carne in. He looked wan,
peaked, bur lik� a bird rhat has successfully pecked its enemy.
"'h it was GREAT! " he said, lounging on one hip. "Great! They
killed SEVE:-.1 BULLS -"
"But no calves, unforrunarely," said Kate, suddenly angry again.
He paused ro consider rhe point, rhen laughed.
"No," he said, "no calves. - And several more horses after you'd
gone -"
"I don't want ro hear," she said.
He laughed, feeling perhaps somewhat heroic: like one who can
look on blood wirhour going green. The young hero! Yet rhere were
black rings round his eyes.
"Oh, bur don't you want ro hear what I did after! I wem ro rhe
horel of rhe chief roreador, and saw him lying on his bed in his
bedroom, all dressed, and smoking a fat cigar. Rarher like a Venus
wirh a far cigar."
"Who rook you rhere?"
"Why, a Spanish fellow who talked English, just behind us. Bur
rhe roreador was great, lying on his bed in all his get-up except his
shoes, and quite a crowd of men going over it all again - wa-wa-wa!
\Va-wa-wa-wawa! !"
And rhe young man imitated rhe gabble of rhe Spanish and rhe
fierce posruring ofrhe men in rhe bedroom as rhey rehearsed rhe noble
events of rhe ring.
"Aren't you wet?" asked Kate.
"No, nor at all . I'm perfectly dry. You see I had my coat. Only my
head, of course. My poor hair was srreak.ed all down my face as ifrhe
dye had run." He wiped his rhin hair across his head wirh a rarher
posing humorousness. - "Hasn't Owen come in?" he added.
"Yes, he's changing."
"Well, I'll go up. I suppose it's nearly supper-time. Oh yes, it's
after!" At which discovery he brightened as if he'd received a gift. "Oh
by rhe way, how did you get on all alone? Rarher mean of us ro let you
go off like rhat, all by yourself," he added, as he poised in rhe half-open
doorway.
Chapter II 15
"Perfectly all right," she said. "I hope I can call a taxi, at my time of
life."
''Well, I don't know-w-" he said with an American drawl, as he
disappeared.
Kate felt rather angry with them both. But poor Owen was really
so remorseful, and rather bewildered by his confusion of emotions,
that she had to relent towards him. He was really awfully kind. But
also he was an American, and if he felt he was missing something, he
was at once swept with the despair of having lived in vain. And the
despair of having lived in vain made him pelt off to the first crowd he
saw in the street, abandoning all his higher philosophic self, all his
poetry, all his everything, and just craning his neck in one more frantic
effort to see. To see all there was to be seen! Not to miss it. And then,
after he'd seen something nasty, an old woman run over by a motor
car and bleeding on the floor, he'd rerum to Kate pale at the gills, sick,
bewildered, daunted, and yet, yes, glad he'd seen it if it was there to be
seen.
''Well," said Kate, "I always thank God I'm not Argus. I see quite
enough horrors as it is, without opening more eyes for them."
She could not sleep in the night for thinking of the bull-ring.
Neither could Owen. They were both genuinely upset.
"Oh, I never slept so well since I was in Mexico!" said Villiers,
with the triumphant look of a bird that has just pecked its enemy.
"Look at the frail aesthetic youth !" mocked Owen.
''Their frailty and their aestheticism are both bad signs to me,"
said Kate, ominously. And she meant it.
But Villiers only smiled a cold, pleased little smile.
She had not told them a word about the General. Probably she
would never meet the man again, so why talk about it. She knew
practically no-one in Mexico - and she wanted to know no-one.
However, the one person she did know rang up two days later.
"Is that you, Mrs. Bums? How do you do! Yes, I've been ill,
couldn't see anybody. - But look here, won't you come to tea today?
What? Yes, I wish you would. What? About half-past four? Oh good,
good, very good indeed! I shall be so awfully glad to see you.
Goodbye!"
It was Mrs. Norris, widow of an English ambassador of the
bygone days of Don Porfirio. Mrs. Norris lived on in a big, old
fortress of a house beyond Tacubaya, and was famous for her collec
tion of Aztec and Indian things.
16 QUETZALCOATL
enamel an d gold, roWld her neck. Her face had gone slightly black
ened, her nose was sharp, her voice weU-bred but hammered Wltil it
had gone hard. Her face reminded Kate always of one of the Aztec
masks carved in black-grey lava, with a sharp nose and slightly prom
inent eyes and a look of tomb-like mockery. She had lived so many
years in Mexico, and rooted among Aztec remains so long.
"But come in, do come in," she said, after keeping her two visitors
out on the terrace where rather dusty Aztec carvings and dusty native
baskets adorned the waU, like a museum.
Three men were in the sitting room that opened on to the
terrace - aU three in civilian dress, Kate saw at a glance. Major Harper,
the very correct but watchful young man who was American military
attache at the moment; General Cipriano Viedma, and Senor Ramon
Carrasco. Kate saw the American Major look quickly at her dress -
which had no relation to the fashions, being of a duU-blue silk, the top
made something like a Russian shirt, with briUiant red silk Persian
embroidery on the shoulders and down the front - to see whether she
was real "society" or not. When he'd looked he didn't know. But he
knew, in Owen, at once, his feUow-coWltryman, saw in him a high
brow, only a moderate income, crank of some sort, probably bolshev
ist. As a matter of fact, Owen was a bolshevist by conviction but a
capitalist by practice. He lived on his income but sympathised fiercely
with comrnWlism. He sent out waves of hatred, at sight, to the
military attache.
General Viedma shook hands in silence. Senor Carrasco, a big,
handsome, dark man, was also silent and quite impassive, though his
silence was perfectly courteous. When he sat down, Kate noticed the
beautiful poise of his head, and the handsomeness of his thighs:
something almost god-like, in an Indian, sensuous, statuesque way.
"WeU, and how are you getting on in Mexico? Do you still like it?"
asked Mrs. Norris.
'"¥es," said Kate. "Sometimes I'm a bit scared of it. But it has a
fascination. I like it much, much better than the United States."
"Why," said Mrs. Norris, with a deprecating declension in her
voice, for the sake of the attache who sat next to her; "of course this is
older, it has an older background, that we haven't altogether explored
yet, which makes it perhaps more interesting."
'"¥es," said Kate. "And ofcourse I have seen so little of the United
States, I reaUy ought not to talk."
18 QUETZ.ALCOATL
you look again, they aren't really there. Their eyes have no middle to
them."
Ram6n was watching her from his curious distance. His face
seemed to smile, yet he wasn't smiling. She felt there was something
withheld, mysterious, about him. For the first time in her life, she
seemed not to be able to sec, not to be able to grasp what was before
her. Suddenly her grip on the world seemed to be leaving her.
"They aren't really there !" repeated Ramon, in his quiet, yet rich
voice, as if it carne from magnificent depths in him. And again Kate
realised she heard these splendid, yet subtle voices fairly often among
the Indian men, porters and laborers. And that they startled her.
"What docs it mean, rwt really there?'' he said again, in his slow
English, turning to the General.
The two Mexicans talked for a moment or two in Spanish. Then
Ramon bowed to Kate.
"It is true as you say - rwt really there! No-onc has wished them to
be there."
"Senor Carrasco is a great philosopher," said Mrs. Norris, in a
high voice. "Far beyond my grasp. - But come to tea." - And she led
the way along the terraces, while Ramon Carrasco replied to her,
rather teasingly, in Spanish. And she answered again in Spanish, in a
high voice, marching ahead in her black shawl and grey, neat hair, like
one of the Conquistadores followed by a quiet, mocking Indian chief.
It was a round tea-table, with shiny silver tea-service, and silver
kettle with a little flame, and pink and white oleanders, and cakes, and
a parlour-maid in black and white: exactly like England. Mrs. Norris
cut the cakes with a heavy hand, and sent them round, pouring tea also
with a heavy motion.
"Nobody lives without hope," she said; "if ir's only the hope of
getting a real to buy a litre of pulque."
"Ah Senora," said Ramon, in his voice that was so beautiful, but
which yet made one uneasy; "if the pulque is the last blessing we
know!"
"Then a peso will buy all the hope in the world," she retorted.
He made a slightly exasperated gesrure, and Cipriano Vicdma
smiled. Kate looked across at him. There was something contained in
him, which suggested great energy. His eyes were very dark and full,
and not quite fathomable. He too seemed to see something in the
universe which she did not see. When he looked at her he made her
heart go hot inside her breast.
Chapter I I 21
The happy party trooped out, the Judge hobbling rather behind,
near Kate.
"Isn't that strange sruff," said Kate, picking up one of the Aztec
obsidian knives that lay on the terrace parapet. "Is it jade?"
"Jade!" snarled the Judge. "Jade is green, not black. That's obsi
dian."
"But I've got a lovely little tortoise of black jade, from China,"
persisted Kate.
"You can't have. Jade's green."
"And I'm sure there's white jade," she insisted.
The Judge ignored her as if she was a fool.
"What's that?" cried Owen, hearing the word "jade" and being a
Chinese enthusiast.
"Surely there's more jade than green jade!" appealed Kate.
"What!" cried Owen. "More! Why there's jade of every imagin
able tint. White jade, rose jade, lavender jade - beautifol! Why, you
should see the jade ornaments I coUected in China! Exquisite work,
and beautiful, beautiful colours. Only green jade! Ha-ha-ha! !"
They had come to the black, polished stairs. The Judge and
Ramon Carrasco were last.
"I'U catch hold of your arm down here," said the Judge. "This
stair-case is a death-trap."
Ramon silently gave his arm, and the white-haired little man
hobbled down. Mrs. Norris pretended not to hear.
Evening was falling. In the garden roses and carnations were in
bloom, and some beautiful scarlet hibiscus. But the tlowers were not
in the gorgeous profusion of South Italy.
The party broke into two parts. Mrs. Judge was being rather
fadedly effusive with Mrs. Norris. The Judge was hobbling mid-way.
Owen was hanging back with the General, and bridling, saying
awkwardly:
"Really, one is almost driven to apologise for one's fellow
countrymen."
"You can't be responsible for all the United States," replied
Cipriano.
Kate was last, with Ramon Carrasco, trying to keep several
tlower-beds between herself and the Judge.
"Ah!" she sighed. "It is lovely to be out of doors again."
"Yes," he laughed. "That the vegetable kingdom has no tongue."
26 QUETZ.ALCOATL
"I used ro think I liked rea-rime. I only know now how much I
dislike ir," she said.
"Ir is pan of the game of life," he replied.
"I'm a little tired ofthe game oflife. Ir's awful ro be forced ro rake
pan in a game all the rime."
"If the game is nor worth ro be played."
"And ir really isn't, is ir?" she said.
"This game - no - nor as I fmd ir. There might be other games."
"No," she said. "I am rather afraid of the game oflife any more. Ir
can be so meaningless: and so overbearing, so endlessly cruel in a small
way. I wish there were some other game."
"There may be," he said.
Owen and Cipriano Viedma were waiting by a flowering arch.
Dusk was really falling, under the big trees, and a firefly sparked now
and then.
"General Viedma was asking if we'd go ro dinner on Thursday,"
said Owen ro Kate. "I said for my pan I should like nothing better."
Kate looked ar the smallish, silent man opposite, and felt his black
eyes on her, half commancling her, half wanting something of her,
waiting for her. And she wavered. She truly was weary of any more
contacts.
"Thursday?" she said slowly. "Thursday?"
"Or another day if you wish," said the General, rather cunly.
"No, Thursday is as good as any other day," she replied, wearily.
"Thank you very much," said the General; while Owen once more
brightened up wonderfully, thinking he had a new experience ahead.
They drifted through the archways into the patio, and there
waited in silence for their hostess. The General had very little to say: he
was roo concise and direct for a conversationalist. While Ramon
seemed voluntarily to withdraw from speech.
Up came the hostess with the Judge family, Mrs. Judge saying:
"When will you come and have lunch with us? I don't mean come
our ro our house. - Anywhere you like, in town -"
And Mrs. Norris was putting her off.
The two Mexicans rook the opportunity to leave. And in another
minute Kate found herself outside the great doors with Mrs. Judge
asking her:
"How are you going back? There wasn't an automobile to be
found when we wanted to come, and we were late, so we rook a
Chapter II 27
Querzalcoatl. She carne away feeling depressed, and hoping that none
of those gloomy, gruesome Aztec things would ever come back. Life
seemed all snakes and writhing things and malevolent birds like
serpents, in that museum.
Nevertheless she said to Villiers:
"I should like to go to Chapala."
"\Vhere's Chapala?"
"A little resort on a big lake not far from Guadalajara."
"A lake! Oh let's go!" said Villiers. "Why not?"
There was no reason why not. Nothing kept them in Mexico City.
They were all three straying rather aimlessly round.
Kate had gone to the United States for a visit. She was the widow
of an Irish rebel, or patriot, have it as you will, who had been killed in
the late revolution in Ireland. She herself was of Irish blood, but her
family had gone to live in England. She had two children, a boy and a
girl, of fifteen and seventeen years old. They were at school in Eng
land. Their home was with her mother. Kate felt she couldn't live in
England any more.
From the United States she had drifted with her cousin Owen,
who lived in New Mexico, down to Old Mexico. Owen was a poet
when he was anything: that is, he wrote poems and criticised them.
Villiers was his friend, secretary, or disciple - any or all of these.
"Did I tell you how General Viedrna rescued me at the bull-
fight?" she said at luncheon, to Owen.
"Rescued you! Why no! What was that?"
She told him.
"\Vhy how very nice of him! So much nicer than we were -" and
Owen flushed with a little shame still. "\Vasn't that courteous and
nice! A bit of the real Mexican courtesy one hears of but so rarely
meets. - But why did you keep it so dark!" - And Owen laughed
uncomfortably.
"I don't know," said Kate.
"Perhaps so as not to make us feel ashamed. Ha-ha!" said Owen,
lapsing into a muse, rolling back his eyes to think it over.
wrhat makes it heaps more romantic," said Villiers.
"\Vhy yes!" said Owen. "And no doubt it was he who arranged the
tea-party at Mrs. Norris'. I'm sure she'd never have asked me again, for
the sake of seeing me. She asked you because the General wanted her
to. Hm-hm! Quite interesting!"
"'h I'm dying to meet him!" cried Villiers.
Chapter III 31
"Yes, he's quite interesting. I hear he's quite the power behind the
throne - or behind the Presidential Chair - in Mexico. They say he
has an extraordinary power over the men in the army, and that he's
scheming to be President, or to make Ramon Carrasco President, next
election. The radicals here don't like him at all - suspect another Diaz
in him. They think he wants to become Tyrant of Mexico, as Diaz was.
But apparently he never states his aims. - Anyhow it's awfully inter
esting that he engineered Mrs. Norris into that tea-party. - Ha-ha! -
The Knight of the Cloak. A second Walter Raleigh. - Better: Walter
Raleigh didn't have an automobile at hand for the lady - who was
it - yes, Queen Elizabeth. Ha-ha-ha!"
And Owen ended on his uncomfortable laugh.
Kate saw that he was rather jealous. Men are so unreasonable.
Owen was a confirmed bachelor, a bachelor by conviction and by
practice. If he had thought he had to marry his cousin Kate he would
have fled to the ends of the earth, not with her, but away from her. No,
what made it so nice was that she didn't want to marry him any more
than he wanted to marry her. She neither wanted to flirr nor be
emotional in any way. Only she was a very sympathetic presence, and a
perfect travelling companion. As for sex, she had got over it. Certainly
between her and Owen there was nothing but good-natured friend
ship, with a touch of kinship.
He enjoyed her company immensely. But if she had wanted any
closer contact he would have left her in a minute. Luckily she wanted
closer contact as little as he did: probably less. Even Owen's amiable
company was often a weariness to her. But she liked him.
What then could be more unreasonable than his spun of jealousy
against the General? Kate was not in love with Cipriano Viedma. She
was in love with nobody, and she wanted to be in love with nobody. In
the younger days she had loved her husband. Now he was dead. And
with him was dead for her all that in-love business. She was a woman
of thirry-eight. She wanted to be left in peace, not forced into close
contact with anything or anybody.
The inside of her soul had gone remote from contact. Even her
children were a weariness to her, when they were about. She felt,
somehow, that her life wasn't in accord with their lives. They be
longed to England, to their grandmother, to tennis and cricket match
es and swnmer at the seaside, and school. And she was glad. But it all
wearied her. Her destiny had been to marry Desmond Burns. And he
32 QUETZALCOATL
had taken all that away from her. In the end he had taken away even
the desire for love. He had made the world lose all its value for her, he
had made her almost as remote as himself. And she could not go back
on it. He was dead, but somehow he did not seem dead. She never felt
he was dead. His spirit lived so strongly in her. She never felt for a
moment she was a widow. It was as if he had placed their marriage
outside the world and outside of events. She was always married to
him, he was always married to her. Death, somehow, didn't make it
different. He left his influence upon her for ever.
So she didn't fret, or grieve. She wasn't unhappy at all. Only she
avoided the thing she had known as the world. On the whole, she
avoided it: England, her mother, her children, Ireland - she just kept
out of range, out of reach. She felt it had to be so. It was her nature,
now.
And in the same way she avoided any further close contacts. She
did not want them. Something was accomplished in her, she sought
for nothing further. As for her wandering, that was really negative.
She did not wander seeking. She wandered to avoid a home, a group, a
family, a circle of friends, an "interest." She wanted to avoid all that.
In a way, Owen was the same. His very rushing to every little
commotion was really an avoiding of the fixed world. He too was very
sensitive to contacts. But he was American, he unconsciously believed
that the man who lived out of contact with the world missed life
altogether. So, as a compromise, he rushed for all the little contacts.
In spite of all these facts, he was at once jealous of General
Viedma. It was as if he had had a slight smack in the face, himself. He
thought about it, swallowed a little wine, and thought again.
"The idea of your keeping the cloak incident dark from us -
absolutely cloaking the General from our sight. I suppose if we hadn't
met him again at Mrs. Norris' - that is, if he hadn't brought it about
we should never have heard of him from you at all. General Cipriano
Viedma! Or was it Viemda! I'm getting mixed."
"Oh I think Cipriano is such a gorgeous name!" cried Villiers.
"Cipriano! That's Cyprian in English, isn't it? Gorgeous ! I'm dying to
meet him."
"You shall meet him, you American child," said Owen.
"But when? Can't I go to dinn er with you on Thursday? I suppose
not, if he didn't ask me."
"We'll give him a dinner back again," said Owen soothingly.
And after luncheon he immediately set out to glean more in-
Chapter III 33
exceptional anyhow. She has friends in all camps; and doesn't always
succeed in keeping them apart - like last Sunday. Ha-ha! Wasn't it
amusing? - She doesn't like the Americans, really, although she tries
to keep up appearances. You see there's quite a large anti-bolshevist
party, the hacendados and business people, who want to get into
power and then join Mexico to the United States in a sort of federal
union: the first step to annexation by us. The people with property
look on annexation as the only hope - for their property, of course. I
don't suppose it will ever come to pass. I don't think the United States
altogether wants to take the Mexican serpent to its bosom. Ha-ha-ha!
Especially with the l.W.W. growing more troublesome at home, and
England in such a state.
"But isn't it fun! Isn't it fun down here! You feel just anything
might happen: bolshevism, or annexation by the U.S., or a new
Napoleon. Of course, in spite of all my communist sympathies, the
last is what I would like best. Nn�er again, the radicals declare, 'Never
again will Mexico fight for a man. That at last is finished. Mexico has
her eyes opened. In the future she will fight only for an itka, for a
principle.' Well, that's all right. Only a man is rather more fun.
"But I haven't told you the whole of the story. The god in the
Viedma machine is apparently Don Ramon. He, apparently, is of a
good family, and supposed to be one of the cleverest men in Mexico.
But he won't have anything at all to do with politics. They suspect him
of trying to found a new religion. This man among the washing, at
Chapala, is apparently being used by Don Ramon to influence the
people to a sort of new religious revival. I don't know how much truth
there is in the story. Some people look on Carrasco as a crank, a sort of
latent lunatic, and some think he is really a remarkable person. I say,
why not both? Anyhow he is fairly rich, and the government doesn't
get in his way. He and Cipriano, apparently, are inseparable: a David
and Jonathan couple without any love. The august Ramon apparently
considers himselfbeyond and above all love. But he has allied himself
very closely with General Cipriano, who seems to have a fiXed beliefin
him.
"And between them, apparently, they ignore all Mexican and
foreign 'society.' Since the last revolution, Don Ramon says there is
no Mexican society, there are only Mexican parasites. It seems to me
he's about right there. So he just blandly ignores all the people with
houses and motor-cars. Mrs. Norris is one of his TJtry few friends: or
Chapter III 35
the moment she makes a move to set off, she recoils, and retreats
fanher back from it than ever."
"That is rurious," smiled the General. "Yet you have children in
England, I am told."
"Yes. But really I belonged to Ireland, with my husband, if I
belonged anywhere. And my children are so happy at school and with
their grandmother in England, I only disrurb them. I know I only
disrurb them. And why should I!"
"You think they should not be disrurbed?" he smiled.
"No! No! Some people it is good for them to be disrurbed. It isn't
good for my children . They belong to their grandmother's world,
ruriously enough."
She said it, however, sadly, as if disappointed. As if something
were lost to her.
''It may easily be so," he said.
The General had full, dark Indian eyes, without the Indian vague
ness or sadness. His look was bright, almost imperious. And yet, as his
eyes rested on Kate's face, she knew he wanted something of her. The
bright, Indian imperiousness was rather fascinating, at a distance.
That he wanted something of her also - and she knew by instinct that
he did - wearied her. She did not wish to make any great effon any
more, as long as she lived. She wanted to be left in peace.
"So you wish to stay a long time in Mexico?" asked Don Ramon.
"No. I am half my time anxious to go away. I get moments of
terrible depression - oppression it seems like - here. The country
oppresses me sometimes - or something does - terribly."
"What it is that oppresses, or depresses you?" asked the General.
"I don't know. It may be inside myself. But it seems to me
something is trying to drag me down, down, down all the time."
"Down to where?"
"Down to eanh absolutely. Right down. And never get up
again."
"But why should one not come down to eanh?" smiled the
General.
"I know. I always wanted to. But not like a deer dragged down by
wolves. Or a tree chopped down. Not to be dragged down."
"Do you know what drags you down?"
"I don't know. The spirit ofthe place. Democracy. There seems to
be such a heavy, heavy democracy here - like a snake puUing one
38 QUETZALCOATL
once more, the dark eyes of the women, soft, appealing, and, it seemed
to Kate, unrrusrworthy. Something lurking in their eyes, where the
womanly centre should have been. Fear - and the companion offear,
misoust - and inevitable result of misoust, a lurking insolence.
It was the same, really, in the eyes of the men: the void in the
blackness, the fear, the misoust, and the lurking, waiting insolence.
But then the men were more reckless than the women. They would
risk themselves with a certain generosity. But they would perhaps
never oust. And in the end, maybe the insolence would be the last
thing left.
Kate was much too Irish to have any respect for blind belief
berween human beings. No, if belief was to have any value, it must be
slow, and wary. But it must be possible.
After the death ofher husband, she had been driven to believe that
she must oust nobody, nobody, nothing any more. But since she was
in America, where no one does oust anybody any more: where no man
or woman ever seems to have a frnal, resting trust in anything, man or
woman or god, but where everybody depends on the social code of
behaviour, which everybody supportS in order to make life possible at
all ; since she had been a year in America, she felt a craving for human
oust, for belief.
She felt life could not go on any further. There was no faith left.
What was she doing herself! Drifting there in Mexico, with her
cousin Owen, and with young Villiers. Why? Why? What had she
come for?
She looked at the rwo Mexicans, and her soul seemed empty.
What had she come for? Just to fool her time away. No more. She
wanted just to fool the rest ofher life away, for her life was over. Like
Owen. He too had no life. Perhaps his life had never even begun. So
wearily he played around. The Playboy of the Western Wodd.
Oh he had been in business. He had been successful too, and had
made money. The business men could take no rise out of him. But
business had been the weariest of all his games, the dreariest of all his
Main Street pastimes. He had even thrown it up, in contempt, and
been satisfied with a moderate income.
Bener play, simply and purely play at playing, than keep up the
heavy hand at whist, which was the business game. Bener fool about
in Mexico taking kodak pictures and exclaiming over peculiarities of
the natives. For after all , if one had a life to live, bener not make the
Chapter III 43
farce too heavy. The light hand, the light hand! And business was
played with an absurdly solemn, heavy hand.
Playboys of the Western World. Owen, snapping kodak picrures
and carefully putting together bits of poetry, or reviewing little dra
mas in the solemniry of his hotel bedroom! Owen, exploring the
Thieves' Market in Mexico for odds and ends, with all the eagerness of
another Humboldt. Owen darting to the Literary Club to get com
munistic and angry with some capitalist. Owen being thrilled by the
natives, and hoping that at last they had got a real representative
government!
And Owen not caring, inside him, one single straw about any of
these activities. Just forcing himself to be a playboy, by strength of
will. Almost a marryr to his own amusement. And inside, hopelessly,
helplessly indifferent to everything. A playboy with a hopeless void of
indifference and dreariness at the middle of him. A void growing
slowly wider and more gaping. The gap where his soul should be.
Young Villiers almost worse. He hadn't even the rags of liberal
ism and idealism to flutter. He didn't even care vasdy about amusing
himself. He hadn't done anything and he hadn't loved anybody. He
wanted to be a playboy of the western world also, but he was frightful
ly difficult to amuse. He was almost all gap, with a frne hard-stone self
around it. Like a finely-cut stone hammer with a hollow core, only
pleased when he was giving little destrUctive taps at something.
Villiers was absolutely cold about love: as cold as an obsidian
hammer. But he always dressed himself with meticulous care. Why,
Kate never knew. Unless the hollow at the middle of him was haunted
by the self-admiring ghost ofhimself. Poor Villiers, so young, yet with
absolutely nothing ahead except tapping against everything he carne
across, to knock a chip or two off it. He never wanted to break
anything. Just knock a chip or two off everything, and he was de
lighted with a bird-like delight.
At the centre ofhis eye, all the same, the strange, arching void that
sometimes seemed to dilate with horror, but which usually basked like
a snake asleep. There was in his eyes the curious basking apathy of a
snake asleep. But sometimes, again, the apathy uncoiled in a sort of
frenzy.
The gap. The awful gap at the middle of people. In Owen, it was a
slow, soft caving-in. With Villiers it was a hard, finely-wrought rim
around an everlasting void: like some sort of jewel with a blackish
44 QUITZALCOATI.
centre. With the Mexican natives it was an unutterably dark pit in the
midst of a strong, soft-flaming life.
The pit! The bottomless pit of hollowness where the soul should
be, in a man and in a woman. The white soul just caving in, like Owen.
Everything in the white world going with a slow, soft slide over the
edge of the bottomless pit that has opened like a fissure in the white
man's soul. Down which all the world will slide, since the white man's
soul has been the centre of the world for many years now. And now it
has caved in upon an inner emptiness.
And the dark man's soul not ready yet. She was, in some way,
afraid of these natives, afraid of their gleaming black eyes with no
centre to them. She felt they might explode like gunpowder in some
horrible passion, a passion with nothing to control it. A terrible black
potentiality, without any soul to assume responsibility. Without any
soul to hold control over the dark life-potentialities.
They fascinated her, these people. She felt they had never had a
soul, and lost it. They had never been cowed. Owen had been cowed.
Villiers looked as if he were always trying to bear up against some
hateful menace. Almost all white men she knew were cowed, their
souls were cowed inside them, though they had amazing courage of
self-sacrifice still. But the strange soft flame of life-courage had gone
out of them, leaving that hateful gap, which so often becomes me
chanical and demonish, like a reversed pivot. That reversed look! The
look which is in the very middle of the eyes of so many white people.
As if life were running in the reverse direction.
But in the eyes of the natives, the strange soft flame of life
courage. Only it was not knit to a centre, that centre which is the soul
in a man. The soft, full flame of life in dark eyes. But centreless, the
eyes centreless and helpless, sometimes demonish, diabolical.
The white men have not been able to fuse the soul ofthe dark men
into being. Instead, in his attempt to overwhelm and convett the dark
man to the white way of life, the white man has lost his own soul,
collapsed upon himself.
Kate thought of Mexico, the great, precipitous, dry, savage coun
try, with a handsome church in every landscape, rising as it were out of
nowhere. A revolution-broken landscape. But everlasting tall, hand
some churches. Magnificent patriarchal haciendas often in ruins. But
churches, great gorgeous churches standing still above everything,
above the straw and adobe huts of the natives, above trees and ruins
45
The religion and the authority are now both broken. The Indian
once more knows he is thrown on himself. The white man is mechani
cally exploiting him, now. For the heroism of the first manly con
querors, and the beauty of the first Christian padres has disappeared
into the automatism of capitalism and exploitation. What is there now
to honour in the white man's world !
So that, naturally, in one sense the Indian is the white man's
enemy. Naturally he wants, in his slow, silent persistence, to pull
down the white man and the white man's world. Good and bad alike,
perhaps, since he has not come to the point of fme discrimination.
"Yes," said Kate, in answer to Don Ramon's question. "I feel that
the peons do want to pull me down, too. But not so much personally,
out of a desire to destroy me, personally, as white people do. They
don't seem to me mean, as white people are.
"'nly, they do seem to me on a lower level than myself. And they
do want to bring me down from my level. Even they want to love me
at their own level - like the old woman-servant who is so awfully nice.
But they never want to come up to my level. They won't even kJok up
to it. They don't look up to it. They just solidly expect me to come
down to them. As if they were the magnetic earth which everything
must come down to."
"But maybe," said Owen, "you are mistaken in considering their
level as lower than your own. It may only be different."
"No," said Kate. "They are lower. Their sort of heaviness, and
their unfreeness, as if a stone lay on their souls. No, I think it would be
wrong of me to disown my own higher self."
"But maybe," persisted Owen, "the magnetic earth is the greatest
reality: much greater than any human loftiness."
"No," said Kate. "The human soul is more than the magnetic
earth. I knuw I mustn't let myself be pulled right down."
"It seems to me," said Owen, "that we can only get back to reality
by coming right back to earth."
"I used to think that," said Kate. "I used to want to live in a cave.
Now I know that a cave isn't any more real than a villa. The Indians in
their straw huts aren't any more real than I am in a flat in London.
Perhaps less. They are even less fulfilled. They seem so hopeless in
their straw huts."
"Do you think so?" cried Owen.
"They are less fulfilled, they feel less real than I do. They never feel
Chapter Ill 47
quite real to themselves. That's how they seem to me. And that is
where I am higher. Don't you think so?" she asked, turning to the
General.
He was watching her with Wleasy black eyes.
"I think it is as you say," he replied. "But is it necessary, pardon
me, for a woman to know so much ?"
"What else should I do!" she replied.
"Ah Senora!" he exclaimed, with a fair,r smile and a deprecating
wave of the hands, dropping his head as if it made him feel impatient
and a little hopeless.
"Nobody can live my life for me, can they?" she said.
"I think," he replied, "that some-one might think all these things
for you, so that you need not have the trouble of thinking them. I am
sure Don Ramon will think it all for you - and even for me, since he is
a better thinker than I, and I believe what he says."
His eyes, as he watched her, were mocking, and baffled with pity,
and at the same time pleading for something.
"Can Don Ramon think my thoughts for me?" she said.
"Such big, heavy, serious thoughts," he replied, smiling.
She looked across at Don Ramon. He looked so large and
portentous.
"I shall alwayr think my own thoughts," she said. "You cannot
prevent it, without beheading me."
"Bueno, Senora, bueno!Muy bueno!" deprecated the General. "But
we also think. We also have thoughts. Yes, we also! "
"Ah!" she said distrustfully. "Men can't think for women."
"No?" said the General, sceptical.
"With my husband, I always had to think for myself. He had his
ideas, and his ideals, and his enthusiasm. And it all broke down in the
end. And I was left with nothing but the things I had learnt for myself,
looking at things with my own eyes."
"Ah, Senora, your husband! A white man! They never come to
eanh, as you say. They are like the aeroplanes the world is so proud of,
always in the air. That, they say, is higher." And the General smiled
sardonically.
Kate flushed, and bethought herself.
"I know it," she said. "That is why I must think for myself."
"We are not all white men. There are other men in the world
except white men," said the General, perhaps sarcastically.
48 QUETZALCOATL
have roors in the carrh. Life is stiU a tree, it is nor a loose leafin the air,
or an aeroplane. Come back to carrh to have deep roors, deep in the
carrh." He made a gcsrurc downwards, and the look of his black eyes,
so determined on something to her unknown and unspeakable, made
her blood stand stiU. Then, with a rerum of the slowly unfolding
smile, that had such a dark gleam at the centre ofir, he said: "Bur from
the roors we grow up, up, as far as the sap will carry us. " And he made
the gesrurc with his dark, suave hands, whose palms were a little paler
and more naked-seeming than the backs. ''We grow up, up as far as the
sap will rake us. Like a tree: a very great tree." And he spread his
fingers in the air, then looked at her with that point of light in the
middle of his black eyes. "Now the Indians in America arc lying low.
They arc sending up no shoors of life. Nor yet. Bur their roors arc
deep, their roors arc very deep, and when they starr to grow upwards,
it will be like an earthquake ro the white man's world of facrcries and
machines. Life is stiU a tree, Senora, ir is nor a coUccrion of aeroplanes
or a swann of insccrs."
His words sounded like a threat, to her.
"I shall be very glad," she said, meeting his eyes, "when life is a tree
again, with roors. No one will be more glad."
"It will rise from the roors only. It will nor descend from above,
our of words or aeroplanes," said Don Ramon, "or thin air."
"Bur what exactly are the roors?" asked Owen, rather pcrulant.
"The roors arc the human blood. That which rises up out of the
blood, like a tree with irs roors in the dark water which is below the
carrh, that is manhood. The human blood sends up the tree oflifc. The
human mind is only a flowering on the tree, which passes and comes
again. - And only those that have power of blood will live, when the
blood begins to send up the new tree from the darkness under the
world."
Chapter III 49
Owen felt oppressed, but not convinced of anything. For him the
blood was a red fluid whose laws and properties are known. This
rather portentous prognosticating, as he felt it, annoyed him. Yet he
felt oppressed and annulled.
Kate also battled against Don Ramon. But she believed what he
said, in her heart of hearts. And it made her go dumb.
And so it ended in a silence of the two white people, against the
two dark-skinned men.
51
IV The Lake
elderly Mexican with an Irish, pug-dog face_ His assistant was a young
Mexican pitted with small-pox. There was no gainsaying them. They
were determined to make the beds at once. The passengers were
driven unprotesting from their seats, while the operation was per
formed. Kate aJmcst protested. But her Spanish wasn't good enough.
And the other passengers had submitted so dumbly. So when the old
Irish-face came up and muttered "Permite," she rose and cleared out to
the women's toilet room. They were a dumb, stricken crowd in the
grip of those two short-legged monkeys of attendants.
At half-past eight there was nothing to do but go to bed. The
Mexican passengers were silently and intensely discreet, immured
behind the green curtains, in their berths. Kate loathed a Pullman. She
loathed the horrible nearness of all the other people, like so many
larva: in so many sections, behind green serge curtains. She loathed
struggling to undress inside the oven of her berth. Her elbow would
hit the curtain and no doubt reveal a flash of white arm, for there was a
man's body outside, the attendant buttoning up the green curtain .
And her elbow, as she struggled with her hair, would butt him in the
stomach through that odious curtain.
But thank goodness, once she was in bed she could put up the
window-blind and open the window a little, her light being shut out.
She wouldn't have put up her window-blind for anything, till her light
was out. Her respect for the guns of bandits or low thieves was
considerable.
There was a rather cold wind, after the rain, up there on the high
plateau. The moon had risen. She saw rocks, and tall organ cactus.
Then more acres of maguey. Then the train had stopped at a dark little
station on a crest, where men swathed in sarapes held dusky, ruddy
lanterns. Why did the train stay so long?
At last it was going again, and she saw a pale downslope before
her, in the moonlight, and away below the lights of a little town. She
lay watching the land go by, rocks, cactus, maguey, rocks, as the train
wound its way down. And soon she dozed. To wake at a station
where, in the dim, dusky light, women in reboros were running along
the train with tortillas, and dishes of meat or chicken or tamales, and
fruit. It was only about nine o'clock. The women's faces came near the
dark wire-screen of Kate's window. She lowered her window, in a
kind of fear. The Pullman was all dark. But at the back of the train,
outside, Kate could see the light from the open coaches of the first
class, and the third class. She almost wished she was there, in the
54 QuETZALCoAn
tram-car.
"He means we go in the tram," said Villiers.
Kate went back to see all the masses of heavy luggage taken out of
Chapter IV 55
the van. It was all there. The porter was as eager for it as if it had been a
juicy beef-steak. Kate decided the only thing to do was to leave it
where it was.
"Mas tarde," said Kate, using that invaluable phrase. "Later on."
The porter broke into speech, showed her the brass plate of his
number, and she set off to the tram. Villiers had found out from the
guide book that you could take the tram to the town and then the
motorboat ofthe hotel would carry you across the comer of the lake.
At last the driver whipped up his mules, and they roUed slowly
down stony, cobbled roads, between walls, and between houses. A
desert. Occasional men in huge hats and scarlet sarapes passed like
concrete ghosts, morning-silent. An occasional man on horseback. A
boy on a high mule delivering milk from red jars slung on either side
the mule. And stiU another stone-uneven, sterile street. All seeming
absolutely dead, the whole place an inhabited deadness.
At length they came to an end, in a plaza with broken pavements
and rather broken-down arcade, with fountain-basins where low
water bubbled up, milky-dim, and brilliant trees blossomed in masses
of pure scarlet, one in lavender flowers.
"What next?"
They got down from the tram, and a boy appeared.
"Hotel Orilla!" said Kate.
"OriUa!" said the boy, looking rather vaguely ahead, up the street.
"Si! Un bote! Una barcaf'
The word barca did it. The boy pointed vigorously ahead. So off
they set, along the incredibly uneven, painful street, foUowing the boy
who was trotting the Indian trot, with the bags.
They came in a while to an old, dusty bridge, a broken wall, a
wide, pale brown stream down below, and a cluster of men. The men
were boatmen, and wanted her to take a boat. She announced she
wanted the motorboat from the Hotel OriUa. They said there was no
boat from the hotel. She didn't believe it. Then a dark-faced feUow
with his black hair down his forehead and a certain intensity in his
face, said, Yes, the hotel had a boat, but it was broken. In an hour and a
half he would row her there. "In how long?" asked Kate. "An hour and
a half!"
"And I am so hungry!" cried Kate.
"What does he say?" came the inevitable question from ViUiers.
"For how much?" asked Kate.
56 QUETZ.ALCOAn
looking for a wife in the watery coWluics, and he has come back with
her. I don't know if il's uuc abom the wife. Bm he has come. You can
believe it, I assure you." He was watching her all the rime closely, with
his staring black eyes. She had to uy nO£ lO sec his naked breast. Il was
so ncar.
"Ycs," said Kate, dimly Wldcrstanding and made more Wleasy by
the man's bold black eyes, that were full of fire, and by his voice, which
she seemed w Wldcrstand apart from words.
"Look !" - and the man held out his other hand, in which were
two little pms, encrusted from lying Wldcr the water. "These ace the
ollicitas of the wife ofQuctzalcoatl. They come from Wlder the water.
Take them, Seiiori£a."
Kate very hesitatingly took the two little vases. They were really
two tiny rough cooking polS, one a tripod and the other with two long
cars, made apparently of soft black stone, and crusted with lime from
the water. Each was about as big as a thimble.
"They ace pretty. They ace very pretty. Thank you so much," she
said nervously, determined, as far as possible, w humour the inuudcr.
"Ollicitas of the wife of Quetzalcoad," said the man. "I foWld
them in the shallow water." He was watching her searchingly, to see
the effect on her. His earnest, eager watching, that had at the same
rime something domineering, reminded her of the General.
"Thank you so much," she said, stiffening slightly.
"AdiOs Senmita! AdiOs Senor! AdiOs humbre! We ace those of the
God Quctzalcoatl. n
He annoWlccd his goodbye in a different, more insolent voice,
and at the same rime gave the boat a little push, which sent it down
stream, while he waded away as if he would ignore them now. Kate
turned to look again at the dark, glowing face, that seemed almost to
contain fire, and at the sc�rching black eyes. He was all the rime
watching, as if something were important w him. - But he had
retreated, was wading om of the water, the sWllight flashing on his
wet, strong back.
"Who is he?" asked Kate of the boatman, who was rowing again
as if for dear life. The boatman merely shook his head.
Then, when the boat had uavelled some distance, and he had seen
the naked man disappear into the green of the pcppcr-uees a way off,
he said in a rather cautious voice:
"They ace those of the God Quetzalcoat!, Senorita."
Chapter IV 59
said Kate, eyeing the slippery stones on to which she must clamber.
"Give them ro me," said the boaonan quickly. He rook them in his
hand, and looked ar them. Then he lifted his black eyes to Kare, and
said, with a touch of mockery:
"They don't ear much rice, the Gods." Then, ruming the linle pot
upside down, "Look !" he said.
Kate saw that it was the head of an animal, with wide ears and a
snout. Rather like a cat.
"A black cat!" she said.
"Yes, or a coyote."
"And the other one?"
He held up the other por. It too had a resemblance to some queer
head of an animal. Both pots were perforated through each projec
tion.
The man gave her back her ollicitas, when she stood on land,
smiling a queer, almost sententious smile at her as he did so.
"AdiOs! Vaya con Quetzalcoatl! Go with Quetzalcoatl," she said,
when she had paid him.
"Adws! Yes, Senorita, I am going," he replied, simply, with the
same sardonic touch.
One thing she noticed, how the name of the Indian God seemed
to give the man a secret satisfaction, as if he had something that she
had not; even a touch of watchful arrogance. She was interested - and
rather piqued.
She walked with Villiers up the path berween tanered banana
trees, most of which were bearing green fruit, to the hotel. No Owen.
Three men at a comer table of the glass-fronted dining-room;
obviously Germans. Then another man, obviously German: the man
ager. He was about forty, young-looking, erect, bur with his blue eyes
going opaque and stony behind his spectacles, though their centre was
keen. It was the look of a European who has been many years in
Mexico.
Owen was still in bed. He hadn't had their telegram. He was full
of protestations, in his red-blobbed dressing-gown. But Kate, after
washing her hands, went down again for breakfast, for she was
hungry. Before the long verandah ofthe hotel the green pepper-trees
drooped like green light, and small scarier birds with brown wings and
blazing impertinent heads flashed brightly among the pepper-buds. A
train of geese passed in automatic march down to the lake, in the
62 QUETZALCOATL
When she had taken a bath in the sperm-like water, Kate sat in the
shade of the boat-house, above a heap of collapsed masonry. Some
small white ducks bobbed about, raising clouds of dust in the thin
shallows of the water. A canoe came paddling in, a lean fellow with
sinewy brown legs. He answered Kate's salute with the promptness of
an Indian, made fast his canoe inside the boat-house, and was gone,
stepping silent and bare-foot over the green stones.
No sound in the morning save a faint touching of water, and the
occasional powerful, startling yelping of the turkey-cock. For the rest,
silence, a muted silence. Ringing to the white turkey-cock. And the
strange lymphatic expanse of water, trembling, trembling, with the
hills beyond in substantial nothingness. Near at hand, banana trees,
bare hills with cactus. A hacienda with peons' square mud boxes of
houses. Occasional farmers in tight trousers, on horseback, or men in
floppy white cotton, seated over the rump of asses. The big hats, the
sun, the silence!
And the morning passing all of a piece, without issue, empty of
issue. It was a land empty ofissue, around the long, pale, unreal lake. A
land so dry as to have a quality of invisibility, and ofwater that seemed
hardly water at all. The ghost of water. Or the milk of black fishes, as
Owen said. Between the ghosts of utterly dry, parched, pale-earth
mountains.
65
United States government, because it's the one government that exists
simply and solely to protect money. - And Mexico, of course, has
always been a place for men to fill their pockets without hindrance.
Everybody comes here for money - money, money, money! Cortes
came for gold, and it's gone on ever since. In one way, it's the dreariest
country I've ever been in. Everybody you meet is here for money. One
never meers a soul except just money-getters. Besides the peons, and
those one doesn't meet. Socially, it's the dreariest, vulgarest country in
the world. Because those who'vegot money go somewhere else to be
people of leisure. And there's nothing left but the great class of the
greedy ones. - If l were the Mexican poor, I'd hate the foreigners."
"But they don't," said Owen. "Not in most cases."
"No, that's because they're nice," said Kate.
In her soul she was rather weary of this political sort of talk. She
had suffered so much from it. She had imagined Mexico a pure
pastoral patriarchal land. For she wanted, oh so much, to get back to
the human simplicity of the non·political life. But no such luck. The
liberals said the peasants wanted land, the hacendados said the
peasants didn't. No doubt both were right. It is no fun, anyhow, being
the farmer of a few weary acres of land.
"By the way," she said, "have you met the God Quetzalcoatl yet?"
"The God Quetzalcoatl!" exclaimed Owen, a little puzzled. "Oh,
you mean the man who came out among the washing, that we read of
in the Excelsior. No, I've not dived into Quetzalcoatl's patio yet."
Then Kate told him of the incident that had happened as they
rowed along.
"Now isn't that extraordinary!" said Owen. "What do you imag
ine it means?"
"There must be more people who have seen Quetzalcoatl, besides
the man among the washing. But I must show you the two little
cooking pots of the Goddess."
''What can her name be, I wonder!" said Owen.
"Yes, I wonder!" said Kate.
"What!" exclaimed the manager of the hotel, eyeing the three
friends sharply when they came to ask him about the Indian God.
"Quetzalcoatl! The Children ofQuetzalcoatl ! It's another put-up job
of the bolshevists." And he watched the three most suspiciously.
"The bolshevisrs !" exclaimed Owen with a laugh. "Ha-ha! isn't
that funny, now! The God Quetzalcoatl and the bolshevists! What an
68 QUETZ.ALCOATL
odd assomncnt! However are the two things associated? What is the
connection? - Why I shall soon think, if a cow moos it is saying
something bolshevistic. I'm sure your rurkey is."
And he laughed heartily at the hotel manager, who, however,
brirtlely stood his ground.
"A put-up job of the bolshevists," he asserted again, dryly. "They
thought bolshevism needed a God, so they got him out of Lake
Chapala."
"How very interesting!" said Owen. "I feel far more interested in
Querz.a.lcoad than I ever did before_ What is the idea, though? I don't
quite get it."
1'he idea," said the German, "is to catch the peons_ The peon is
ignorant, so they want to catch him through his ignorance. They've
only to tell him the God Querz.a.lcoad has come back, and that he says
this thing and the other, and the peon will believe it. So they form
their new society of Sons of Querz.a.lcoad, bolshevists, nothing else_"
"And where? Where do they form the society of the Sons of
Querz.a.lcoad?" cried Owen.
"In Chapala. And all along the lake. They pretend to keep it a
secret_ But where you see a bunch ofmen talking together, that's what
they're talking about_ They've got songs about it too."
"Oh let's go to Chapala!" cried Owen.
"You've no need," said the manager quickly, "to go to Chapala.
There's just as much of it here in Ixdahuacan_ But they won't tell you
anything about it_ You're a gringo, you're all gringuitos, and this is for
pure Mexicans, for Indians."
"But I must know more about it," said Owen_
Then Kate told the manager of her experience, and showed him
the ollicitas_
"Oh there are plenty ofthese things about," said the man, holding
the two Little jars in the palm of his hand and eyeing them as if they
were dragon's eggs. "There's nothing in them. You can pick them up
in the mud at San Juan_ Just playthings, or charms, that the Indians
used to throw into the lake in times gone by, when they wanted more
fish, I suppose. - San Juan is the Midsummer Night village_ These
ollicitas have got nothing to do with this new Querz.a.lcoad business."
Kate, however, was quite ready to accept Owen's suggestion that
they should go on to Chapala, which was some thirty miles further
along the lake_ Not because she was so very much interested in the
Chapcer V 69
God Queczalcoatl, buc because she had been told chat ac Chapala she
would easily fmd a furnished house chac she could rent for a monch or
cwo. And she dearly wanted a house of her own.
Because she fete tired, weary in body and soul. She had been
wandering aboue and scaying in hocels so long. And she had been on
che very poinc of going back to England. Her mocher wanced her co
come. And Kace was still attached co her mocher. Buc since she was in
America che real yearning she had always felc for her children had
snapped, and wich ic, a greac deal more had broken in her. She had
always really hoped chac one day, when chey grew up, chey would
come to her. She had, racher bitterly, granted chem cheir con
ventionalism for che time being, believing chac in che furure chey
would come to her and be che children of her spirit. Bue her husband
had never mentioned chem, when he was dying. And ac lase, in
America and Mexico, che bond of her mocher-yeaming and mocher
hope had snapped. They were che children of her idea, chey had
noching co do wich her deepest blood, or her soul. And now chey were
nearly grown up, che bond of che mere physical connection was weak,
and chere was no ocher connection. They were noc, and never would
be che children of her deepesc desire. They were noc her descendancs of
che soul. They inherited none of her onward-striving spirit. They had
slipped back into che conventional, meaningless mass.
Her love for chem seemed co slacken as her hope in chem
weakened. The cwo chings were so closely associated in her. And now
she would have no more children. She did noc want any more. So chac
her greac womanly connection wich che furure was gone. This left her
feeling a greac loss, and a sort ofbarrenness inside her. Which was very
bitter. For she had always been filled wich such a strong sense of
fururiry and hope. And now, as a female woman, she fete cue off,
somewhat meaningless.
For chis reason, because of che sense of loss of connection, she
could noc go back co England. The vical connection seemed to have
broken. She fete she could noc go back. So she had drifted further wesc
in Mexico. For chere was someching in Mexico, someching in America
chac sustained her, made her feel her loss less disastrously. In chis
country ic did noc seem a disaster to be cue off as she was cue off. lc
seemed inevitable. Someching strengthened her, something unknown
and racher grim, here in che western continent.
Buc she fete really cired, and incapable of any further effort, eicher
70 QUETZALCOATL
straining in any way. This she wanted, nothing else. If she couldn't
have this, she almost wanted to die.
But she knew she could have this. And she felt sure she could have
it in Chapala. So she made Owen hire a motor-boat to go down the
lake with her. And when she saw the rwo white, ornate obelisk-towers
of Chapala church rising above green wiUow trees, and the dry, tall
mound of a hiU with dry bushes beyond, with corrugated mountains
back of that, she believed in Chapala. It looked peaceful, almost
Japanese. And when she came abreast with the little lake-side resort
with its small jetty and fishing nets hung up to dry, and little pro
menade behind feathery green trees, and a few villas with palm-trees
and trees blazing with scarlet blossom, gay with pink trees ofoleander,
scarlet spots of hibiscus, and magenta clumps of bougainvillea; also
the little green bathing house, and the white boats on a little sandy
beach, and the boatmen lying under the shade on the sand, and the few
women with parasols, she felt sure she would find a place for herself.
This was not too wild, not too savage. Even she didn't mind the
advertisement for motor-tyres, painted along the jetty in huge letters.
It seemed human.
Walking down the short street from the lake to the plaza, the first
thing she saw, on a green slate in smeary chalk letters: Se renta una casa
amueblada. She at once asked about it, and in ten minutes' time was
looking at the low one-storey house that formed a letter L, the other
rwo sides of the square being fiUed in by the next orchard of thick, tall
mango-trees. So she had her patio, except that rwo sides were dark
trees instead of house. And in the middle, flowers, big white olean
ders, dark red oleanders, hibiscus, an orange tree or rwo, all growing
from their rings of water in a green lawn. Then round the rwo sides, a
deep verandah, all shade, with large pots of geranium and other
flowers.
It was an old house with a tiled roof and a jutting-out dining
room in front of which the queer, smooth, snake-like trunks of
cropped mango-trees rose at flexible angles. Right at the far end of the
building was a tropical-tattered cluster of banana trees and a little hen
house, then two savage rooms where lived a Mexican Felipa and her
rwo girls. Felipa, with her untidy black hair and centreless black eyes,
was a woman offorty or more, rather short, with a dark, full face and a
limping way of walking. She looked as if she could be aggressive: but
honest. Too much of the old barbaric indifference towards things, to
72 QUETZ.ALCOATL
smash in a door. So, through the black night, she lay and listened.
She had had nervous nights before. But not until now did she
realise the thick terror of a Mexican night. At long internls she would
hear the police patrol riding by on horseback, giving the short shrill
whistle that is their night-cry. Then the abject silence, the rising wind
from the lake, the strange noise in trees, the shaking of many doors:
and above all, the sense of fear and of devilment thick in the air.
Her fears were not just nonsense. The whole village was in that
state of curious, reptile apprehension which comes over dark people.
Four robbers were captured and put in prison. But the scare contin
ued. Felipa's inky eyes became more blob-like and inky, and the old,
weary, monkey look of subjection to fear settled on her bronze face.
The look of the races subject to fear, unable to shake it off.
And still Kate would not discuss the terror with Felipa or with
Owen. She didn't believe in giving way. But the thing got worse. It
was usual for the natives all to throng in the plaza, sitting under the
ttees on the benches in the cool of the dark night, while some young
men thrummed and sang eternal monodies to guitars, and the booths
where men ate their evening meal kept the charcoal fires going till late,
and a man went round with ice-cream, saying NiCTJe.1 NiCTJe! - Snow!
Snow! - and the plaza was dense with people, men in big hats with
sarape over one shoulder, women in their long skirts and their dark
rebows, boys running barefoot, and groups with babies sitting on the
pavements. All the stalls lit by tin torches that flared in the wind.
But this night, by nine o'clock the plaza was empty, and Kate got
home and locked herself in, her heart beating thick. It is not easy to
withstand the atmosphere of fear that rises when dark people fall into
panic. Kate had heard various grim stories during her stay in Mexico.
She remembered the eyes ofsome of the low-class men: the queer, evil
light lurking in a blackness. It was strange. Even Humboldt, she
remembered, said that few people had such a gentle smile, and at the
same time, such fierce eyes, as these Indians. It was true their smile was
wonderfully gentle. And their eyes were not exactly fierce; but black,
with a strange dagger of light in them: as if they themselves were not
sure of their own unquenched blood, as if they never knew what their
own sudden dark blood might do with them. Any spark might kindle
it to deeds they had never thought of. And when men are like that, the
very fear of themselves makes them more dangerous, makes fear more
frightful. Because, she had decided, their essential nature was gentle.
74 QUETZALCOATL
But there was in them the black gulfof W1Certainty, and that liability to
utter, diabolic rage, which knows no outlet but the stroke of a knife.
Everything seemed fair enough in the daytime. But in the middle
of the night there was fear like curdled blood. It was a dark, heavy
souled people, with a fathomless resentment at the bottom of the soul.
The heavy, passionate resentment ofmen who have never been able to
free themselves from the chaos of the dark, W1create world. Men who
have never succeeded in coming to completeness, but are swayed to
hot ferocity by a too-strong SW1, or stunned by the heavy electricity of
the Mexican air, made sulphureous by the boiling volcanoes below
groW1d. Clogged and tangled in the elements, and never able to come
into their own self-possession. And hence subject to an ever
recurring, fathomless hatred of everything, a black demonish hatred
oflife, a desire for cruelty, a lust for murder. Better the heavy thud and
thrust of a stabbing knife than even the keenest thrust of sexual
gratification. Better the fmgers strangling a live throat, than the touch
of the most desirable woman. Man in his incompleteness, W1able to
come into complete being, turning into a dread thing. Liable to fall
W1der the hideous spell of money, mere money, and to murder and
murder again for the sake of a handful of silver. A brutal lust in the
murder, the lust started by the thought ofa handful ofsilver pesos, or a
little heap of gold.
In this night she felt again the heavy horror of Mexico, the same
that the Conquistadores felt when they smelt the stench of human
blood darkening the air roW1d the pyramids of Huitzilopochdi and
Quetzalcoad. A black-blooded, volcanic, W1certain people. As Bernal
Diaz says, the hearts of men are changeable but particularly the heartS
of the Indians. Men never able to balance themselves amid the ele
ments, to gain a responsible centre to themselves. Swayed from ex
treme love to diabolism, never knowing when the reaction will set in.
Kate lay and thought hard, at the same time listening intensely,
with her heart, beyond her control, getting into a knot inside her
throat. Her heart seemed wrenched out of place, and actually did hun
her. She was physically afraid, blood-afraid, as she had never been
before. And it made her feel her heart wrenched, her spirit humiliated.
In England, in Ireland, during the war and the rebellions, she had
known cold mcral fear: the worst thing she had ever known. Absolute
cold, cold torture of fear of the government, of society in its ghasdy
mob-cruelty, trying to kill the spirit. That was what her husband had
Chapter V 75
said during the war: "They are trying to kiU the spirit in the individual,
in all individual men and women. Because once they have killed the
spirit they can handle everybody." And during the war this pseudo
civilised lust to stamp out the individual spirit in human beings
reached a demoniacal pitch, a pitch of cold, demoniacal horror. The
more horrible because it was the cold, coUective lust of millions of
people, against each solitary outstanding individual.
In those days Kate had known the agony ofcold social fear, as if a
nation were a huge, huge cold centipede with poison in every foot,
that wanted to spread itself over the individual solitary man and
woman. That had been her worst agony offear. And she had survived.
Now for the first time she knew the real heart-wrench of blood
fear. Her heart seemed pulled out of place, in a stretched pain.
And just as she dozed, came flares of white light through all the
window cracks, and the crash of thunder as if great cannon-balls were
faUing on her heart. She had been near to hysterics in the buU-ring in
Mexico. She was even nearer now.
At last, morning came. But she felt a wreck.
"How have you passed the night?" asked Felipa, the conventional
phrase.
"Badly! " said Kate. "I can't sleep shut up in the dark. And the
thunder and all. I shall either have to go to the hotel, or I shall have to
leave my door open."
"No, no," said Felipa. "You can't leave your door open, Niiia.
There is danger, much danger. I too can't sleep for thinking of you
poor innocent lying there alone. And what ifl got up in the morning
to find you lying there murdered, and the house robbed. A lonely
innocent! No no, Nifia, you can't continue like this. Either you must
have Rafael to sleep outside your door with a pistol, and he wiU shoot
anybody who comes near - brnm! brnmm!!'' - Felipa levelled an im
aginary pistol at an imaginary robber - "or else you wiU have to go to
the hotel, Niiia."
Kate never ceased to be amused by the Mexican woman-servant's
way of calling her mistress "Nifia," "Child." If the mistress is eighty,
and the servant eighteen, the mistress still is "Child !" to the serving
lass.
But for the moment Rafael was the point. Felipa had two sons,
Jesus and Rafael. Jesus, the elder, ran the little motor which made the
electric light for the village. Rafael, the younger, a black-eyed lad of
76 QUETZALCOATL
eighteen, worked in the fields, but slept with J esus in the planta, as the
little hole was called where they made the electricity.
When Kate had seen Rafael, with his black, bright eyes that had
the dagger of light in them, and heard his resonant, breaking voice,
and after he had told her, with his gleaming eyes and handsome smile:
"The pistol has five shots. If you open the door in the night, you must
say a word to me first. Because ifl see anything move I shall fire five
shots, Pst! Pst! !"
And she saw by his black eyes that not only would he fire the five
shots, but he would fire them with eagerness, and with a complete
desire to hit. He was not in the least afraid, having that pistol.
So Rafael slept on a straw mat outside her door, with the pistol,
and she could leave the upper shutter open, for the good night air. The
first night she was once more kept awake by his fierce snoring. Never,
never had she heard such a resonance! What a chest the boy must have!
What magnificent organs of respiration! What a savage noise it was!
He must have got into a weird position. But even though it kept her
awake, there was something in the snoring that she liked: something
so unbrokenly strong and fearless, and even generous. She felt more
safe, thank heaven. But even then, in the thick of the next horrific
night, what soothed her most was her determination to believe that
what these people wanted most of all was good. They wanted the
wholeness and the good of life, at last. But they were helpless. Their
Christian religion could never save them from themselves. They
wanted even to be trustwonhy, but their natures erupted like volca
noes, beyond their control. Jesus could not save them, finally, Christ
could not hold them together. They needed a stronger, darker god, a
god who knew the dark sacred depths of man's sensual being. Other
wise it was no good. These dark people could never become spiritual.
They were heavy souled, with a deep, true sensuality for their weU of
life. They could never deny it. Always they were driven back to it.
They would never offer themselves up on the Christian cross. They
would never understand love, in the Christian sense, and self-sacrifice.
Their blood was their whole being. How could they sacrifice it? - But
their blood was not evil. It was deep and rich. But helpless. If only it
could come into its own!
Soon Kate was fond of her limping, untidy Felipa, and of the
fierce young Juana, who was foutteen, and of the queer, gentle Pedra,
who was only twelve. There was a basic, sardonic recklessness about
Chapter V 77
them all . They lived from day to day with a stubborn, dark, silent
carelessness, careless about the future, careless about anything. They
were pinned down on nothing, not even a desire for money. They had
no aim, no purpose, but lived absolutely a terre, down on the dark,
volcanic earth. They were not animals, because men can't be animals.
In their dark eyes was fear, and wonder, and a certain misery. The
misery of human beings who have never been able to come into their
own being, and wait, and wait, and wait, as it were forever outside
their own unaccomplished selves. To Kate, there was a great pathos in
this. Also a great untrustworthiness. And a slight repulsiveness.
Yet Felipa and her children were honest, with a native, barbaric
honesty. And always, since they liked their Nifia, ready to serve, as the
fertile earth is ready to serve. Careless, with a basic indifference to
everything, they yet were glad that Kate cared. They were glad that
Kate wanted the house nice and tidy. Their own rooms were just
caves. But they watched with wonder while Kate arranged her sur
roundings and made them pleasant. They watched her and wondered
over her, with insatiable curiosity. She was always a source ofwonder,
half-amused wonder to them. In a way they saw in her a wonder
being, a sort of god. But never a social superior. They never saw her as
a social superior. They never thought her blood and birth were better
than theirs. These things meant nothing to them. They didn't realise
that she was a social being on whom they must not intrude. No! She
was their Niiia, an amusing sort of god-being different from them
selves, who was there to make life for them and to be served. They
were willing to serve for ever. But she must not withdraw herself and
hold herself apart. She must not hold her soul apart from them, in the
white social manner, or they would jeer at her, and pull her down. Her
position as Niiia, she soon discovered, was no sinecure.
It was a queer family life. Felipa considered herself as belonging
entirely to Kate. She established herself in the kitchen, and kept her
daughters off as much as possible. Juana was left in possession of the
little, smoky, doorless hole which was Felipa's own kitchen, not
Kate's. And here, her head peering all the time through the square
aperture that served as window, Juana would stand for hours making
tortillas: the flat maize pancakes, or girdle cakes, cooked without fat.
For hours at a time Kate would hear the clap-clap-clap, as Juana
slapped each cake time after time from one palm to the other, that
being the correct way of making tortillas light. It was part ofthe sunny
78 QUETZALCOATL
morning, like the wind fluttering the rags of the banana trees, and the
stark sun on the flowers, the birds swiftly coming and going, the
\\'hire-clothed Indians passing in the dark mango trees, like ghosts.
At one o'clock, the girls would be eating the wann tortillas one by
one as Juana picked them off the carthem plate upon the slow wood
fire. The youngsters just lived on tortillas. In the afternoon they would
go to bathe in the lake. Sometimes, when they felt like it, they went to
school. Both girls could read a little. But neither Jesus, who was
twenty-two, nor the eighteen-year-old Rafael, could read or write.
Jesus, a very dark fellow, ate at the house of his master, for whom
he worked all day, running the planta at night. The Mexican law is that
every workman and every servant shall have one whole day free each
week. But Jesus worked seven days out of seven, till half-past-ten at
night, and earned twenty-two pesos a month. Which is eleven Amer
ican dollars. Of course he had his keep.
The boys were never at home. Rafael appeared with his proud
walk and his sarape over his shoulder, at about six o'clock in the
evening, marched to Juana's fire-hole, sat on the floor, and rapidly
folded and ate one tortilla after another. In five minutes he was gone
again. Sometimes he ate tamales or another Mexican, fiery dish with
pork in it, bought at a booth in the market. Many of the Mexican
women cooked nothing at all, except tortillas. The Mexican food at
the stalls was just as cheap as cooking at home, so the men had their
tasty dish bought ready-made, or they ate there in public in the plaza,
by the flare of the little floating oil- wicks. It always amused Kate, the
lordly way Rafael assumed command of his sisters, during the brief
five minutes when he was at home, sitting on the floor eating his food.
For a Catholic country, the woman was as little of a Madonna, a
mother with a son, as could be imagined. Felipa saw as little ofher two
sons as she did of any boys in the village. She didn't speak twenty
words a day to them. Juana washed them their shirt and cotton
trousers once a week. And Felipa was there if they wanted anything,
ready to get it them. But the family was almost like an animal family,
so careless and detached, without the strain oflove or hate. They had
no personal intimacy, and therefore no quarrels. Juana teased Pedra,
tormented her, and Pedra wept a few tears. It was always the same:
this endless, not very serious tom1enting. All the boys were the same:
they tormented one another. And the tormented one always cried. But
neither torment nor tears seemed to matter at all: until, as didn't often
Chapter V 79
her family from Kate's table. She just didn't have any desire to get
things. She took from the household supplies what she wanted for her
own needs, as naturally as if everything were her own, and as coolly,
and as frugally. And beyond that, she paid for her family with her own
money.
True, she had a reputation for honesty, which is a good thing to
live up to. But the main-spring was a resistance to everything, even to
the desire for possessions, or even for food. She refused to care. The
family feeling was clannish, a defence against the world. For the rest,
they refused to care for anything. Like Rafael, when he just lay down
on the garden path, to sleep. When he might have had a mattress. He
resisted even his own comfort. Almost he resisted eating.
Nevertheless, they had their grudge. Felipa and her sons had
known a fair amount of mean treatment at the hands of richer people.
As when Rafael worked for two months, when he was fifteen, just to
get a sarape. And at the end of the two months the sly, avaricious
master said he would pay later, always later. So the boy was never paid,
and didn't get his sarape. This gave another reason for locking the
backbone in resistance.
There was a pathos about the family. They, with their sardonic,
careless honour, how could they fail to be cheated and insulted at the
hands of people "on the make?" The sense of insult and of dishonour
able rerum was fairly deep in Felipa. - But Jesus' master at the planta,
though stingy, was not bad to him and her. - And Kate ofcourse was
a godsend. So the good and the bad fairly well balanced. Though
sometimes Kate felt they really preferred the bad. It satisfied their
passion for resistance. She knew the same thing very well, in the Irish.
They reminded her a good deal of the Irish.
Still she didn't very much resent having the family about. It was
like birds or animals coming and going. There was something natural,
if a trifle sordid about it. Very much like curious dark, quiet animals
slipping about. If they wouldn't get too fond ofher, and try to prey on
her life. This was what she always dreaded, about people of this sort.
They had not enough life of their own, they enjoyed preying on other
people's life. But meanwhile they went their own way. Clap-clap-clap
she could hear the tortillas going from the flat of one of]uana's hands
to tht" other, back and forth. And a queer crunching as Felipa crushed
the chili and tomato-pulp on the lava stone in the kitchen. And the
noise of the bucket in the well. Jesus had come to water the garden.
Chapter V 81
To all of them, the work was just a game. It was a sort of fun, no
matter how many times they did it. And if there was work that was not
fun, then they could hardly bring themselves to perform it. They just
couldn't work if it wasn't fun. Consequently everything was rather
careless as to detail, a natural confusion and untidiness. But it was a
living confusion, not a dead, dreary thing. What you call discipline,
method, strict order, they had none. They would do the same thing
differently every day. They couldn't do anything twice in precisely the
same way. That made Kate feel a bit muddled. But she just left it to
them, and everything was done in time, and done well enough. And it
was so nice for once to feel that no wheels were working, that things
were just casually evolving of themselves, and evolving satisfactorily.
It was nice, when you got used to it, to take your breakfast at one
corner of the verandah, to fmd yourself moved to the middle for
lunch, served in the dining-room for supper, and the next morning
posed under a tree on the grass. Just as it took Felipa's fancy.
Sometimes she liked them so much : the absence of fuss, the
absence of wheels, their real childishness. They really looked on life
either as a pastime, or as something to fear and to resist. They had no
morals, no standards: careless as the animals. And yet not animals.
Never animals. Something dark and cognisant in their souls all the
time. They worked in bits, in fits and starts. And they lazed in fits and
starts. They were quite merry by fits and starts. But underlying all was
a dark gloom of resistance. They resisted even their own merriment,
seemed to recoil on ro a sinister silence. They resisted whatever work
they undertook, - throwing down the tool suddenly. They loved with
a sinister abandon, for a time. Then they fell into as sinister, or more
sinister a resistance of the very love they felt. Always the same underly
ing resistance, even to life itself. And sometimes Kate was glad of it,
for she herself was driven to hate the shape oflife now. And often she
resented it terribly, felt their heavy weight on her intolerable.
The servants about the house were her clue to the rest of the
people. But she watched them all. She watched them passing down
the lane to the lake, she watched them in the plaza. Always the men
together, erect, handsome, balancing their great hats on the top of
their heads. And the women together separately, watchful, wrapped
in their dark reboros, and separate. The men and the women seemed
to be turning their backs on one another, as if they didn't want to see
one another. No flirting, no courting. Only occasionally a quick, dark
82 QUETZALCOATL
It was curious to contrast the peons with the city people who
came down to the lake in motor-cars, for the day. Elegant young men,
called Fifis, languidly hanging on to the arms of shrill, self-conscious
girls in organdie frocks; the girls often very prerty, but hopelessly
unattractive in their new, metallic emancipation; then young couples
dancing in the plaza on the pavement of the cafe, the fellow stalking
his legs berween the girl's thin frock, hunching up his shoulders over
her and sticking out his elbows, and looking like some huge, repulsive
insect in the act of copulation. Ugh, what a sight! And the tall, erect,
elderly peons in their big hats standing inscrutably watching. And
then the flow of youths of the peon class surging on across the
pavement which the bourgeois had tried to clear for their dancing, the
lower, Indian class almost deliberately swamping out the jazzers and
fox-trotters. So, the slow current of Indian life circulating, and the
dance put out.
Kate had heard the bitter complaint from the western cities, how
the life was ruined. Once the peons were not allowed in the walks of
the plaza, under trees. And then it was a sight to see all the elegant
women in silks and high heels and high combs, parading in the
fashionable evening hour, and fanning themselves and their perfume.
Alas, all over. The peons have got possession of the plazas, the
eleganza can parade no more. Now, the elegance is all shut up in
motor-cars and driven slowly, at walking pace, round a circle of a few
central streets, in a slow, funereal, mechanical procession, most
lugubrious to look on. This is the "quality'' taking the traditional
evening stroll. But a dismal sight, even in Mexico City.
The peons have taken possession of the Alamedas and the plazas.
Kate could not but be amused, watching it in Chapala. The Fifis,
young elegants, and the flappers in organdie, trying to dance on the
pavement of the cafe, to the music of the four musicians. And the
young peons in their huge hats and little white jackets, with a big
scarlet sarape over one shoulder, slowly, indifferently, irresistibly
passing through the dance, ignoring it utterly, and extinguishing it.
The mysterious faculty of the Indians, as they sit there so quiet and
dense, for killing off any pretentious life, bringing it down to earth
again, to nothingness. The poor organdie butterflies of flappers,
unable to live up against the silent ignoring and resistance of those
passive devils of peons.
After three or four days the bandit scare passed, evaporated
84 QUETZALCOATI.
dressed-up men the same. Any attempt at being smart, above the level,
at drawing attention to oneself, roused a curious smoke-like hatred in
the plaza full oflnd.ians. And this silent hatred was powerful. It darkly
and silently seemed to shove the offender out. Kate therefore aban
doned all idea of chic, left that to the bourgeois trippers from the city.
Sometimes a defmite circle would form in a dark comer of the
square: an Indian, in a white poncho, wearing it with his head
through the middle, was singing alone in a low voice to the sound ofa
mellow guitar. He was invariably surrounded by a thick circle ofmen,
so thickly pressed, so solid, and so silent, standing there, that it was
impossible to break through. Owen ofcourse was at once piqued. He
stood on the outside of the ring, pressed up against the solid backs of
the men, craning his neck to look over their shoulders. And there he
saw the Indian in the beautiful white sarape with brilliant coloured
borders and, most unusual, a brilliantly coloured fringe. Also the man
wore no shirt under the blanket, the dark arm that held the guitar was
naked, and lifted showed his dark side. But he wore the wide white
cotton pants ofthe peons, and the red sash. So much Owen could see.
He was a middle-aged man, with a sparse Indian beard at the end
of his chin, and that unseeing, almost sightless look of some of the
natives. He played rapidly, brilliantly, and sang in a high-pitched
voice, but not at all loud. There was something intense and inhuman
in the sound. Owen strained his ears, and made Kate come and strain
hers, but they could not catch a word. The ring of men stood solid,
and absolutely silent, as if spellbound. When the singer fmished, and
he did not sing long, many of the men followed him as he quickly,
silently went away. Owen noticed that he wore the trousers fastened
close round the ankles with red and blue cords, and that his sandals,
guaraches of woven leather, were dyed red and blue.
Altogether there was something a little mysterious and exciting
about it, which made Owen wildly curious. He questioned the people
of the hotel, but they could tell him nothing. He got guests, English
speaking Mexicans, to enquire. All they found out was that the man
was a singer, that he sang songs about the Indians before the white
men came, and not love songs at all, and that he used such a strong
local vernacular that they could hardly understand anything. But, they
suggested, he was part of the new Indian movement which took the
name of the god Quetzalcoatl for a sort of mystic inspiration.
"These, then," exclaimed Owen, "are the new Children ofQuet-
86 QUETZALCOATL
z.a.lcoatl. Oh, I wish I could fmd our more! If only I spoke fluent
Spanish! What a wonderful article one could write for The NatU!n!"
Kate was the one who did fmd our. When they were leaving
Mexico, Don Ramon had told her that he mmed a house on the lake, a
small hacienda that produced wheat and maize and tequila, which he
would probably be visiting in a short rime, and he hoped, if Kate really
stayed by the lake, he might meet her again there. She gathered, from
his exclusive mention of herself, that he did nor want very badly to see
Owen. When, therefore, an Indian brought her a note one morning,
she was nor surprised to see that it was from Don Ramon, asking if he
might call and bring his wife.
Dona Car lora was a thin, gentle, wide-eyed woman with a slightly
srarrled expression, and with soft, brmmish hair. She came from
Chihuahua, and was quite different from the usual stout Mexican
matron. Her thin, eager figure had something English about it, but
the strange, wide, brown eyes were nor English. She spoke only
Spanish, but in such a distinct, slightly plaintive sing-song, very
musical and a good deal like the Indian women, that Kate understood
her easily, much, much more easily than Don Ramon.
The two women were at once in S)mpathy, but a little nervous of
one another. Dona Carlota was delicate and sensitive like a Chihuahua
dog, with the same slightly prominent eyes. Kate thought she had
never seen a human being with such doglike fmesse of gentleness.
Don Ramon, large, swarthy, handsome, with his beautifully poised
head, seemed remote and in another world. Almost menacing. And as
if his words would never come across. It was evident that Dona
Carlota had never for an instant criticised him. He was one of her
absolutes, like God.
Kate gathered that Senora Carrasco was a pure Catholic. She had
two boys, one ten years old, one about fourteen, whom she loved
intensely. But also she had a work ofherown. She was the director ofa
Cuna, a foundlings home, in Mexico City. The waste, unwanted
babies were left at her door. The undesiring mother had only to knock
and hand in the living little bundle. Dona Carlota even found this
bundle a name. It was accepted our of nowhere. And as soon as
possible some decent Indian woman was paid a modest sum to take
the child to her home. Then every month she must come with the little
one, to the Home, to receive her wage. In former days, Dona Carlora
said, nearly all the well-born ladies of Mexico would adopt one of
Chapter V 87
these children, and bring it up in her family. There was this loose,
patriarchal generosity natural in the bosom of the Mexicans. But now,
not many children were adopted. Instead they were taught to be
carpenters or gardeners, if they were boys, or dress-makers or very
often school-teachers, if they were girls.
Kate listened with interest, really touched . Although in her own
heart the desire for charity, to take part in charitable works, no longer
existed, stiU she felt that if she had been Mexican, a native of this
half-wild disorderly country whose people still wrung her heart, she
might have been happy doing as Doiia Carlota did. And yet, even so,
Doiia Carlora had just a bit the look of a victim : a sensitive, gentle,
slightly-startled victim. And there was something remotely suggestive
of cruelty in Don Ramon's poise. An impassive cruelty, somewhat
god-like, and yet none the less resented, instinctively, by Kate Bums.
She had a few words with him, and he rold her thar General
Viedrna was for the rime being in Guadalajara, in military command
there: and thar he came frequently to the lake. He had heard that Kate
was in Chapala, and sent his respects.
''Will you do me the pleasure of coming to see me?" smiled Doiia
Carlota, rather wavering and tentative. She was a wee bir afraid of
Kare. "I have my rwo boys here - they do so love to be by the lake, so
they came with me for a short vacation."
Kare stammered her acceptance in bad Spanish.
89
VI Ram6n at Ho-me
T
HE HOUSE was only a league or so from Chapala, bur the road
was very bad. Kate went on foot, escorted by Felipa. They
passed large and handsome villas, built in Porfirio Diaz' day, now
most ofthem empty, some of them becoming rather dilapidated, with
broken walls and smashed windows. Only the flowers bloomed in
masses above the rubble. And they passed many houses of the natives,
flimsy straw huts carefully thatched with reed, dark-grey adobe huts
with a few tiles, all scattered haphazard, as if the wind had blown them
where they were. No careful selection, no little garden - just a hapha
zard little rubbish-place, where people lived like fowls. And in front of
these huts the women would sit, their magnificent hair flowing,
lousing one another, the children would run about naked or half
naked, the man would stride home proudly, his sarape over his
shoulder. In many places they were busily thatching, in readiness for
the rainy season, which was at hand. And the land was being clumsily
ploughed, by two oxen and a mere lump ofpointed wood. No plough
at all, bur the best thing for this stony land.
Kate and Felipa walked on through the dust, past the last of the
broken villas, on under the shade of the big trees with queer, curling
beans. On the left the pale, dove-coloured lake was lapping on the pale
fawn stones. At the water-hole of a stream, on the beach, a cluster of
women were washing clothes, and in the lake itself two women sat
bathing, their brown shoulders heavy and womanly and of a fine
orange-brown colour, their splendid hair hanging in wet masses.
From the lake came a fresh breeze, but the dust underfoot was hot. On
the right the hill rose precipitous, yellowish, giving back the sun from
its dryness like a vast high wall, and exhaling the subtle, dry smell of
Mexico. Endless strings of donkeys trotted laden through the dust,
their drivers stalking erect and rapid behind, watching with eyes like
black holes, but always answering Kate's salute with a kindly, respea-
90 QUETZ.ALCOATL
the hostess, making the queerest little sound ofdistress. "But we are in
the country, you must forgive everything, even my husband's sarape."
''The sarape is beautiful. And your husband in the sarape is very
beautiful."
''Yes, yes, it is true. Bur whether beautiful things are wise things, I
don't know. So much I don't know, Senora. Ah, so much! And you,
do you know what is wise?"
"I!" said Kate. "No. I used to think I did."
"Ah! - And do you think Ramon is wise, in his sarape?"
"Oh very ! It must be wise, to be so beautiful. And men in their
clothes usually look so ugly -" Kate had lapsed into English, and
Dona Carlota watched her with inteUigent, half-scared eyes, divining
what she said.
"Ah yes - ah yes - muy feo!" she murmured.
The house was not very large, and scantily, even miserably fur
nished, the rooms almost empty. But Kate knew it was usuaUy so on
haciendas liable to be attacked from time to time and piUaged by
revolutionaries or bandits. The two boys came in from the lake, the
elder big and nearly as dark as his father, the younger with his mother's
soft brown hair. They were handsome, healthy school-boys, in white
cotton shirts and white, short breeches.
''You don't wear sarapes, like your father?" said Kate.
"No, a shirt is more comfortable," said Francisco, the elder.
"No shirt is more comfortable stiU," laughed Don Ramon.
"No. No. That's not true," replied Francisco quickly. "Because
with no shirt we are ashamed to be seen, and that is not comfortable."
''You know the donkey who was ashamed to look at the wild ass
that had no saddle on," teased Don Ramon. "It looked so naked."
"Papa, a shirt is not the same as a saddle."
"And a boy is not the same as a tame donkey."
"No, Papa, because a boy is the arriero, he's the driver of the
donkey."
"And the man in the sarape is the donkey?"
"No, because he's only got two legs."
"Otherwise yes," laughed Don Ramon.
But the boy had run to his mother.
"If I went into the plaza in these calzones," said Don Ramon,
glancing at the peon's loose cotton trousers, crossed in front and held
in a blue sash, which he wore, "the authorities would arrest me: ifthey
dared."
Chapter VI 93
he reirerared. "Bur soon rhey will be: high and dry. Isn'r char rhe word?
The dry Flood!"
He smiled ar her quickly. He was very handsome, bur he made her
blood nm cold. Ar rhe back of his black eyes rhe devil was smiling
fiendishly.
"I'm afraid you will never gee rhe whire man our of America
again," said Kare.
"\Vho knows rhe furure?" said Don Ramon, wirh a sardonic
reserve.
"¥ou don'r chink you will ever gee America back, for rhe Mexicans
and rhe Indians, do you?" asked Kare.
"\Vhy nor?" he said.
"Because ir seems impossible."
"Seems impossible, yes," he replied.
Kare rhoughr ofrhe Indians ofrhe northern pueblos. They believe
wirh such devilish certainty char rhe wheel offare will bring rhe end of
rhe whire man's day, char rhe whire men will perish from rhe earrh, and
rhe Red Men will be: rhe world's lord.
Kare and Ramon were sitting alone on rhe rerrace. As soon as
Don Ramon scarred ro speak English in a certain cone, Dofia Carioca
excused herself and fle d. Yer she hovered from room ro room, never
very far away, like a conscience hovering ourside her husband's body.
"Tell me chen," said Kare, "why rhey don'r arrest rhe man who
was singing here wirh you, one of rhe four, and who sings in rhe
plaza."
"Because," laughed Don Ramon, "rhey don'r dare." And his eyes
seemed ro contract dangerously.
"\Vhy nor?"
"I will cell you," said Don Ramon. "I would nor, pardon me if i
say ir, cell rhe same ro your American cousin, or ro any ocher inquirer."
"Oh, I'm sorry," said K;;re. "I am always so rude, asking why."
She felr she had had a slap in rhe face.
"No no, no no! I wish ro cell you. In my philosophy mere are
exceptions ro all generalities. You will pardon me when I say char I
regard you as an exception."
"To whar," said Kare, slighrly offended.
"To rhe ordinary whire people, wirh whire blood and whire
minds."
Kare flushed a lirrle. She saw, in rhe faim satiric smile on Don
Ramon's face, how deep wem his hatred. Profound, unchanging
Chapter VI 95
hatred. Even of her. She felt again he hated her, generically, not
specifically. She had become again just an object to him, that he talked
at.
"But Mexicans are white peopld" she said.
"Many of them are powdered very white."
Kate laughed, and was W1Comfortable. She was not gening on
well with Don Ramon. Yet he had seemed so handsome, and with a
certain demonish geniality, when he was singing. �ow he seemed to
be wanting to hurt her all the time, wanting to be cruel, all roWld
cruel.
"Don't you think of yourselfas a white man?" she asked, timidly.
"�o, my skin allows me no place among the elect. And I do not
wish to pray, with the negro, 'Lord, Lord, sure the heart of this nigger
am more white than a white man's skin?' - My heart is no whiter than
my hair."
Kate laughed, and was silent for a rime.
"You don't like speaking English," she said. "I am sorry my
Spanish is so bad."
Instead of answering he rose from his chair suddenly, with a
violent motion.
"The afternoon is very hot," he said. "With your permission I will
remove my sarape."
"Certainly," she replied.
He lifted his sarape over his head and threw it over the balustrade
of the terrace. Then, naked to the waist, his black, splendid hair all
ruffled, he stood with his back to Kate, looking out to the lake. She
saw the soft, cream-brown skin of his back, of a smooth pure sensual
ity that made her shudder. And the broad, square, rather high shoul
ders, with the neck and head rising steep, proudly. It was h andsome,
but with a certain insentience, fiXed and, to her, stupid. She could not
help imagining a knife stuck between those pure, male shoulders.
The evening breeze was blowing very faintly. Two sailing boats
were advancing through the pearly atmosphere far off, the SW1 above
had a golden quality. The opposite shore, rwenty miles away, was
distinct, and yet there seemed an opalescent, sperm-like haze in the air,
the same quality as in the filmy water. Kate could see the white specks
of the far-off towers of Tizap:in.
Just below her, in the garden below the house, was a thick grove
of mango-trees, through which the path went down to a lirtle shingle
96 QUETZALCOATL
bay, with a small breakwater. There the boys were throwing a big, fine
round net to catch the little silvery fish, caUed charales, which flicked
our of the brownish water sometimes like splinters of glass. Among
the dark and reddish leaves ofthe mango-trees, scarlet little birds were
bickering, and pairs of birds, yeUow underneath as yellow butterflies,
went skimmi ng past. The yeUow birds were quite grey on top. In this
country the birds had their colour all below, their colourless sheath
above.
Don Ramon stiU stood looking out to the lake, rurning his naked
back on Kate. She knew now why the full cotton pants were forbidden
in the plaza. The living flesh seemed to emanate through them. He
was handsome, horribly handsome, with his black head poised splen
didly, rising above a brown, smooth neck of pure sensuality. Nothing
impure. But hostile. There, with the blue sash round his waist, the
cotton pants falling thin against his hips and thighs, so that the flesh
seemed to speak through, he seemed to emanate a fascination like a
narcotic, the male asserting his pure, fme sensuality against her. There
was a strange aura about him, that seemed to deny her existence, so
pure in its hostility. He seemed to wish to armul her existence, as a
white woman born of Christianity. And he emitted an effluence so
powerful, that it deprived her of movement, for the time being.
Dona Carlota appeared by instinct on the balcony, looked at her
husband, looked at Kate sitting there in the chair in silence, and
hovered uneasily. Then she carne near.
"ShaU we take tea? Yes?" she asked uncertainly.
''Yes," said Kate to her. "I would like that."
"Good! Good!" And the little woman was turning away, pleased
and relieved.
"Send a tray here, Carlota," said Don Ramon, in a gentler voice.
His wife stopped as if some hand had suddenly grasped her.
"Good! Good!" she repeated abstractedly. Then she hurried again
on her way.
"In this country birds have all their colour underneath, and are
colourless on top," said Kate, making this observation out of polite
determination.
Don Ramon turned and stood in front of her, above her, with his
naked breast, looking down on her with inscrutable black eyes.
''They say the word Mexico means Beluw this," he said, with that
faint Indian smile which she hated.
Chaprer VI 97
appear ro have swallowed the snake. You may have swallowed him,
bur you can never digest him. You will sink down to the grave with the
dead weight of him inside you."
Kate was silent. It seemed useless to answer. She believed that
Ramon hated her because Cipriano loved her. He was jealous of his
friend.
"I don't understand snakes and eagles and mysticism. I am my
self," she answered.
"Like Dona Carlora -" he continued - And at that moment
Dona Carlora appeared, with her wide, pathetic brown eyes, and her
nervous hands. Behind her came a mozo, a man-servant with a small
round table. She was carrying an embroidered tablecloth.
"Carlora," said Don Ramon to her, "I want you to go yourself and
gather me a few hibiscus flowers."
" Good ! she said, vaguely, as if distracted.
"
And Kate realised how jealous poor Dona Carlora was: how the
poor woman knew that her husband was dismissing her for a few
minutes longer: bur how it was her creed to obey. For a moment it
flitted through Kate's mind, whether she ought to rise and accompany
the wife to the garden. Don Ramon was stupidly male and cruel. He
was all snake and eagle himself: sometimes all physical and fascinating
like a serpent, sometimes mystical and high-flying like a menacing
eagle. Bur he was the enemy, she must hear him our.
"Dofia Carlora," resumed Don Ramon, "believes in peace. Bur I,
I know I have no peace. Ifl have no peace, why should I lie to myself,
that I have peace?"
"Bur you could have peace if you wanted it," persisted Kate.
"Is that so? What kind of peace could I have?"
"The peace of your own soul," she said.
"Is that so? Is that so?" he replied, leaning forward to her with his
black eyes smiling devilishly and his cream-brown flesh like opium.
He spread his hand on his naked, rather full breast. "Here," he said, "is
the Mexican eagle, staring ar the Mexican sun and unable ro escape
from the heavy serpent below. And here -" he pressed his fist in his
side, in his groin, "is the heavy Mexican serpent, pierced by the claws
of the eagle and biting up ar her. Where is the peace between them?"
"You are a man," she said. "You can control the rwo halves ofyour
nature."
"I am a man," he said venomously. - "I am a man, and therefore I
1 00 QUE'J"l.ALCOATI.
will not be like the whited sepulchres of the pale-faces_ Not even if a
pale-face squaw wishes it ofme. I will not be the tomb ofmy serpent. I
will not be a pale-face machine that adds up money. No. Nor shall they
rum my people into adding-up machines. Reckoning machines, that
are at a standstill when there is no more money to add, and call that
peace. That they call peace. - My people shall never know such
peace."
"I don't call it peace," she said.
"You! You have sufficient money, which someone else is always
adding up. And you are like Dofia Carlota. You take the money when
it is added up. And you talk about love and peace and possessing your
own soul. All the time that the adding-machines are talking louder
than thunder. You say let them talk, let them talk? So all the world,
even I, must fall to adding up, and reckoning money. True, there is no
more snake in the adding-machine."
She looked, with her gold-gleaming eyes, into the black rage of
his bottomless eyes. It was a war. She herselfhad her own anger, but it
was set hard and static at the depths of her. She wanted no break in
this. While she lived she would be gentle and kindly towards life. Her
will was fLXed for this. But the bedrock of her soul was anger, anger,
unappeased and unreleased, static like a rock. She would rather die
than have this anger broached, have the static rock broken, for the
boiling lava to flow forth. But there it was. And there she would keep
it, as a bedrock. Whilst she preserved a gentleness towards life.
With her eyes, she defied Ramon to break open the rock of her
anger.
"And what would you do?" she asked coldly.
He was leaning forward towards her, and she felt the massive
weight of his psyche, like heavy iron. And oh, how she hated this
Mexican heaviness. She wanted a certain carelessness. The bosses of
his naked, golden breast seemed to thrust forward, full of a strange,
half-divine power. But he was bullying her. So she put it to herself. In
the depths of his wonderful black eyes, he was watching her as an
enemy, and his naked breast was like a naked war against her. She
found it, also, much harder to withstand the naked smoothness of his
arms, in their quick gestures, than if they had been covered in coat
sleeves. He was taking a dreadful advantage of her, in his physical
nakedness.
"What would I do? I will bring back the Mexican gods with all
Chapter VI 1 01
their anger. The snake that the white men have killed I will set up
again. And he shall bite them. Oh, he shall bite their genitals, as he bit
the bull of Mithras. I will set up the snake again. I will bring back the
Mexican gods, and deliver the snake from the claws of the eagle. And
the snake shall bite the genitals of the white men, till they are bitten to
death. And then I will lift up my eagle and let him fly to the sun. And I
will take the serpent softly in my left hand, and let him glide away to
the bowels of the earth. And I shall be the man on earth, I shall be the
man of the world, I, the Mexican. When the white men who are all
sepulchres and adding-machines are dead, and the white women, who
are all sepulchres and charity institutions, are dead too. When all the
flowers are not set on tombs -"he concluded bitterly, as Dona Carlota
carne hurrieclly fotward and set a bowl of rose-scarlet hibiscus on the
finely worked cloth .
"Bonitas, bonitas, Cosita," he said with a smile, touching the
flowers with the tips of his brown fingers. "Qui bonitas!'
"And then, Ramon," she said, with a little air of righteous author
ity, handing him a white garment, "you will wear this, yes?"
"Good! Good!" he said, rising and thrusting his arms into the
shott, man's shirt or blouse, such as the peons wear, a white blouse
with a narrow yoke and three flat pleats down the back, and a small
open collar like a shirt. The naked man had gone again. But he was not
gone very far, inside that short peasants' blouse.
None the less, Kate felt more comfortable, seeing him covered.
Her face lost its bright, sharpened look, the look of a bright dagger
point, as she turned very amiably to Dona Carlota. Dona Carlota at
once recognized an ally.
"I hope I carne at the right time," said Kate. "I didn't know exactly
when you wanted me, so I carne about teatime."
"Good, very good!" sang Dona Carlota in her bird-like, attractive
voice. "Any time is good. I expected you all the day. And now you will
stay the night, yes? I think General Viedrna will come, but he and
Ramon are so busy with their schemes. They have told you? Yes ? That
they want other gods? Yes?"
Don Ramon laughed and went away.
"And you are very much interested in their schemes?" asked Dona
Carlota, smiling her gentle bright smile, and speaking in her gentle,
light voice like a bird chirruping. Underneath all her gentleness,
however, was an infinite passive resistance, a great fear, and an ob
stinacy even greater than fear.
1 02 QUETZALCOATI.
"Nor very much," said Kate, in broken Spanish. "I have known so
many."
"So many - ?" queried Doiia Carlota delicately.
"Schemes - pronunciamientos - revolutions. So much liberty.
So much work for the good ofthe people, and it never does any good.
Only does harm."
"Only does harm," repeated Doiia Carlora, with gende convic
tion. "Yes. Yes. It does only harm. The people were happiest when
they had their faith, when they lived in the belief in the Church, and
the Church took them to God. Ah yes -" said Doiia Carlota hurriedly,
"Don Ramon is a philosopher, but his philosophy cannot give me the
Purest Virgin, and prayer. And it cannot give the people peace. No, if
we love the people, we should give them the Church, and the Virgin,
and good, kind, strong masters. Yes. That is the only way."
"Yes," said Kate, though without conviction.
"I have tried, I have tried to foUow Don Ramon," said Doiia
Carlota, fluttering. "But I cannot give up the Most Pure Virgin, I
cannot. I can much more easily die."
There was a pause.
"So now," continued Doiia Carlota, looking at her teaspoon as if
gazing into HeU: "Now I am here in my husband's house, while he
intends to teach false gods to the people." There was strange
vindictiveness in her words.
"Surely," said Kate, "we don't want any mere Gods."
"More Gods, Seiiora," said Doiia Carlora, shocked. "How is it
possible! Don Ramon is in mortal sin: in mortal sin."
"And General Viedma?" asked Kate.
1'he same. The same. But it was Don Ramon who proposed this
mockery he calls Quetzalcoad. Quetzalcoad, Seiiora! What buffoon
ery, if it were not horrible sin! What buffoons, for two clever and
well-educated men. The sin of pride, Seiiora, men wise in their own
conceit."
"Men always are," said Kate.
She left shortly afterwards, wanting to be home by nightfall.
Doiia Carlota ordered a man to row the two visitors back to the
viUage. It was sunset, with a big level cloud like fur overhead, but the
sides of the horizon fairly clear. The sun was not visible. It had gone
down in a thick rose-red fume behind the wavy ridge of the distant
mountains. Now the hills stood up bluish, all the air was a salmon-red
Chapter VI 103
flush, the fawn water had pinkish ripples. Boys and men, bathing in
the shallow lakeside, were the colour of deep flame.
The boatman looked at the sky.
"A storm is coming?" asked Felipa, swathed in her black rebozo
like a swarthy madonna, and carrying a bunch of gaudy flowers.
"I believe so," said the boatman.
"Soon?" said Kate.
"Not very soon, Senora."
"No, no," exclaimed Felipa. "In the night."
But the man pulled hard. The air was thick and hot, there was a
slow, thick breeze.
"How nice it is," exclaimed Felipa, "to row in a boat. Also a
motor-boat is nice, you go quickly - ssh! - But Don Ramon hasn't
got a motor-launch?"
"No, he hasn't got one," replied the boatman. "He has two
sailing-canoes."
''Yet it would be a good thing for him to have one," said Felipa.
''What a nice soul is Dona Carlota! What a good woman! If she sees a
man on the road who is poor, she sends him a shirt and a peso. How
nice she is! And if anyone has children and they find themselves poor,
they go to Dona Carlota. So good! so good!"
"And Don Ramon?" asked Kate.
"Oh yes! Yes! Also! But he is different. Very learned, Don
Ramon. He knows many things that we don't know. - Look, how
pretty Chapala. How nice Chapala is!"
The green trees on the low shore were very green, in the pinkish
light. The hills rose behind abruptly, like steep mounds, dry and
pinkish. Down the shore, among green trees, shone the two graceful
white towers of Chapala Church, obelisk-shaped. And villas peeped
out from trees. The strand was in shadow, but still one could see the
white scattering of many people, and sailing ships with their masts
lying up on the beach, and the pleasure boats side by side on the
water's edge. The lights flickered on as Kate's boat drew near. It was
half-past-six. Boatmen were busily pulling their boats high and dry,
expecting a storm.
Kate decided she would speak to Owen before she went home, so
she crossed the beach and entered the big, careless dining-room of his
hotel: a rough, happy-go-lucky place. She wandered up the broken
stone steps to the great dilapidated square place upstairs, on to which
1 04 QUETZALCOATL
opened the bedroom doors. The panes of glass in Owen's door were
half of them smashed, so he kept the shutters closed. She tapped.
"Hello!" came his voice from within.
"Only me."
"Oh!" - and quickly he opened the door. ''You !" he exclaimed.
"Come in and have a cocktail. Or would you rather wait till I put a
shirt on."
Owen too was naked to the waist, in belted trousers and sandals.
"I go like this for coolness," he said, "and because of my shoul
ders. They are quite painful! Look!" - And he bowed his shining,
sun-scorched bald head before her like a Chinese bonze making an
obeisance. On the tops of his shoulders the sunburn was a scarlet
inflammation, and in two round spots the skin had gone, showing two
purple, angry places.
"Why," she said, "that is serious. You must be careful."
"I know I must. I had hardly a wink of sleep last night."
He had been lying out on the beach in his bathing drawers in
order to get brown. His arms, indeed, and his breast were already
almost as brown as Don Ramon's, but of a more smoky colour. His
head and shoulders were angry red.
"But you are absurd," said Kate, "to stay in the sun till you are in
that state."
"No," said he, "it's not the sun, it is letting the little boys stand on
my shoulders to dive into the water." He broke into a laugh. "It was
quite the game. They climb up my back and stand with their naked feet
on my shoulders, to jump into the water. But it has taken the skin
off." - He looked down ruefully.
"You've had to pay for your oh-so-friendliness this time," she
said.
''Yes, I have. But they're awfully nice kidd.ies. - Let me make you
a cocktail. - What have yon been doing all day?"
"I should love a cocktail," said Kate, sitting down by the window.
On the bed was a spread of letters written, envelopes addressed,
loose poems, and piles of the Chicago Tribune. Owen, stooping
forward his reddened shoulders, was putting letters in their appropri
ate envelopes and licking the flaps. Each letter had its long brown
stamp on. Each, as it was done, he dropped in a little squadron on the
counterpane. Dozens of letters as usual.
''You don't mind if I just fmish these," said Owen, "then they're
done."
Chapter VI 1 05
Kate looked at the American newspaper, but she could only half
understand its jargon, and somehow its tone made her feel sick. Owen
was rushing through his letters and hastening to clear them away.
Kate went over to his dressing-table. It was a litter of papers and
books, and things he had bought, little earthern plates, little curios, a
peon's sash.
"Oh, and look!" he said, holding out his foot. He had bought a
pair of handsome plaited sandals. "Three pesos and a half," he added.
"The man wanted four and a half, but he took three and a half."
Kate was sniffmg at the guavas in Owen's big bowl of fruit.
''Take them if you care for them," he said.
"I think I like the smeU better than the taste," said she.
"Yes," he laughed. "One does. But these have a rather strong,
coarse scent. - Oh, and look! " - He hastened to his cupboard and
switched out something white. In an instant he had dived into a pair of
the great white cotton pants, had crossed the flaps over the front and
tied the ends behind.
"There !" he said.
Kate laughed, he was so pleased, standing there in his big-rimmed
spectacles, with his red-burned round face and naked chest. Owen too
was tall and weU-built. But his physique was somehow meaningless,
and in the floppy white drawers he looked just absurd. But he was a
dear.
"I had a wonderful time getting these made," he said. "One of my
little boys took me to the dress-makers - three young ladies. Imagine
my attempt to explain what I wanted. But with a great deal of
gesticulating and the help of the boy - such a bright little feUow - I
managed it. Then she had to measure me to see how much material I
should want. Oh embarrassing moment! She most gingerly held the
tape about six inches away from me, and reached down to the floor,
measuring my aura rather than me. Then she said I wanted two metres
and a half. Oh it was great. They were all as solenm and elegant as if
they were in church. But I turned as I went out and saw, ro my relief,
that they were just going off into fits of laughter. It was great - Then
my little boy whisked me off to the dry-goods store."
Owen had now got into a weU-fitting blue shirt of fine crape, and
tied his tie and settled his neck.
"I suppose just a shirt doesn't hurt your shoulders ?" she said.
"No. Not just a shirt. But a coat is agony."
He was squeezing orange-juice into a glass.
1 06 QUETZ.ALCOATL
"Ah! Ah Nina, the water! the water!" cried Felipa. And once more
Kate went out to the terrace. The first great drops were flying darkly at
the flowers.
In another minute down came the rain with a crash, waters
breaking downwards. And all the time, from every part ofthe sky, very
blue lightning fell and lit up the garden in a blue, breathless moment,
while the thunder dropped and exploded. Kate watched the masses of
water. Already the garden and the walks were a pond with little waves.
She strayed round her rooms, looking if the scorpions were coming
out: and called to Felipa to come and kill a small one that was just
scuttling across her bedroom floor.
Then she sat in her sal a and rocked and rocked, smelling the good
werness, and breathing the good chiU air. She had already forgotten
what really chill air was like. She rose and fetched herself a little velvet
coat.
"Ah yes, yes ! You feel the cold!" cried Fclipa. "Sometimes, in the
time of water, it is so cold at night, that I lie and shake. But you have
plenty of sara pes, plenty of covers. Yes! Yes !"
She and the girls were wrapped tight in their rebozos, watching
the night. At half past nine the rain began to abate, and Felipa began
putting pails and kerosene-cans under a spout, to get water. There was
no water in the house. The water-man carried all the wash-water from
the lake, and for drinking and cooking brought two square kerosene
cans full ofthe warm water from the hot springs at the other end of the
village: a pole over his shoulder, and a heavy pail hanging from either
end. The aguador! He wouldn't earn so much tomorrow. He was paid
six centavos for each trip to the lake, and twelve for each trip to the hot
spring. Kate listened to the water pouring into the can.
At about ten o'clock Rafael came runn ing in from the planta.
Then they locked the house, and Feli pa carried out the mattress for the
boy, and laid it outside Kate's door. Rafael brought his sarape, and his
old, ivory-handJed pistol. The rain came on again, breaking down
wards. The house went to its uneasy sleep.
109
VII Conversion
D
ON RAMON'S HACIENDA by the lake was called Las Yemas. It
was not a large property, and yielded him not much return .
Indeed, by himself he was a poor man. The money was his wife's, and
it carne from silver.
He had been brought up at Las Yemas, by a father who was twice
banished from Mexico, once for being too liberal, once for not being
liberal enough. As a boy, Ramon had seen the uselessness of politics.
He had had, however, a passionate interest in philosophy and litera
ture. His father had sent him to school in Europe. There, for a time, he
overflowed with romantic enthusiasm. And then he went cold again.
He wanted to go back to America. He believed that the only hope lay
in America.
This was in the prosperous days of Don Porfirio. Ramon's father,
though a liberal at heart, was weary and disillusioned with Liberty,
and supported Diaz for many years, even holding office as governor of
Jalisco for a term. But later, he saw Mexico gradually passing into the
power of foreign exploitation, and he retired into solitude at Las
Yemas. Diaz however had been several times a visitor at Las Yemas,
had taken a fancy to Chapala, and decided to build himself a villa by
the lake. This was too much for Don Octavia. He departed with
Ramon to the United States.
Ramon was in his first twenties. He attended lectures in history
and philosophy at Harvard, and travelled the United States to study
the conditions. After two years, he was thoroughly depressed . The
great democracy of the north depressed him and made him feel
hopeless. He went back alone to Mexico City, leaving his father in San
Diego, California. In San Diego Don Octavia died. Ramon stayed in
Mexico through all the miserable times following the shameful flight
of Diaz, but he took no part in the disturbances, revolutions and
anti-revolutions and colossal swindlery. He had married a gentle wife
whose gentleness he found beautiful, a kind of sanctuary in the
1 10 QUETZALCOATL
the world was not ar>.d never could be gentle and loving, it was
something much more. He himself was not really gentle and loving :
he was something else. Life was not a safe thing. The formula of love
would never make it safe. He must struggle to liberate the thing he
actually was, rather than struggle to obey old commandments which
had really nothing to do with him. He must struggle to liberate the
thing he actually was, and in that way liberate his people. Oh, he was a
liberator. But he realised with chagrin that Li oerty was a very dreary
prison for him and for his people. Oh, to liberate himself and his
people from this mechanical Liberty which white men had invented,
and which imprisoned the Mexican soul in the narrow circle of its
conception. This Liberty which is a safe chrysalis-case inside which we
all die like larvae. To break out, like the great dark, dark-eyed moths of
the Mexican night!
Now Dona Carlota loved him with all her soul: but inside the
chrysalis-case. She loved him always, silently and pathetically, but
obstinately and devilishly, to keep him, as she said, true to himself. She
loved him desperately. But she loved love most. And parricularly she
loved her own love for him. That was her own form ofdeadly egotism.
She fairly soon succeeded in drawing the young life of her boys all
towards herself. Ramon was too proud to appeal for love, especially to
his own children. He smiled ironically and let her have them.
"Remember," he said to her, with the logic of-southern people, "I
don't like the benevolent tyranny of love any longer. I don't like your
love for your god. I don't like your love for me. I don't like your love
for your children. I dislike your way of love. I dislike intensely your
insistence on love, I dislike the monopoly of one feeling, I disapprove
of the whole trend of your life. You are weakening and vitiating the
boys. One day they will hate you for it. - Remember I have said this to
you."
Dona Carlota trembled in every fibre of her body, with shock at
this. But she went away to the chapel of the Annunciation Convent, to
pray for his soul, and praying she seemed to gain a victory over him.
She succeeded in purifying her spirit of all baser emotion, was able to
pray for him in singleness of heart, and came home in exquisite
triwnph, like a pale flower that has bloomed out of a cannon's mouth.
But Don Ramon now watched her in her beautiful, rather flutter
ing gentleness as he watched his closest enemy.
"You, Carlota," he said to her laughing, "arc the Mexican eagle of
112 QUETZALCOATI.
the sky, and I am the Mexican serpent oflower earth, and though you
have me in your beak, I have my tail tight round your neck, and the
question is whether I strangle you before you bite me in two."
"No, Ramon," she said, "you know none of that is true."
"You wish me always well, don't you ?" he laughed.
She gave him a strange look from her hazel-brown eyes, and went
away.
"Ha, how demonish her gentle bird-spirit is!" he said to himself.
"She is capable of biting me in two."
Perhaps her opposition only determined him the more in his own
direction. The single way of love was to him a falsehood and disaster.
The conunandment of self-sacrificing love was monstrous in itself.
Particularly for a dark, barbaric people like his own, who could never
understand except in terms of give and take. Th\! whole proposition
was just a perversion, for the Indians. He looked at the patriots, from
Hidalgo and Juarez to Madero. He looked at the tyrants, from Santa
Ana to Diaz and Huerta. The principle of love and self-obliteration
fighting the principle of tyrannical power. And the two things equally
fatal. The sickening oscillation of the half-savage country between the
two half-savage impulses. For self-sacrifice seemed to him as barbaric
as blood-sacrifice. The fi asco of both sides. The gradual sinking of the
country into mechanism and conunercialism, betrayed in its own
nature; the gradual sapping of real life. Soviets even more ugly and
more killing to the soul than a dead Catholicism and a spurious
autocracy. The ghastly theorism of conununism against the vile mech
anism of industrialism. The peons being gradually betrayed into
Labor Unions and the conununistic dreariness. The great material
anti-life mechanism triumphing everywhere. His half-barbaric people
betrayed into politics! To drag the peon into political consciousness
was to destroy him in his own self. And the peons were being
gradually dragged into political consciousness. And into industrial,
mechanical servitude.
What then? There was nothing else. All the energetic men Ramon
knew sent their vitality down one or the other channel of political
passion. Liberty, or money for the many; conservatism, or money for
the few. The rest were dully interested in conunerce. Only the really
unlightened peons remained for a brief time yet unbroken, blind but
dangerous instruments of political and conunercial scheming. One
party was in a frenzy, to exploit the peon. The other party was in a
Chapter VII 113
peons used as nothing more than spades ro dig the treasure our, for
four ccnrurics. Counted not even as animals, as mere shovels and
spades. And the impoverished "world" in a greater frenzy now to get
the peons once more firmly gripped by the neck, ro dig out more
treasure with them, quickly, in order ro stop the hole in a leaking
system.
And yet, Don Ramon knew, as soon as the Grudge fiXed itself in
the hearts of the Indians, they were dead men. For the grudge of the
have-nots, like the lust of possession in the haves, is a kind ofcancer of
the soul. In spite of all the centuries of misusage, the Mexican Indians
were only here and there consciously infected with the grudge. This
Ramon believed. But it is an infection that spreads with strange
rapidity, and then goodbye to life.
Was a man to sit by and see it grow? Supposing all the world
passed inro communism, what was the good, seeing that the
victorious communists became dead-alive men in the process? Auto
mata, with theories. Busy, hideous, automatic communists!
And yet the further spread of the capitalistic exploitation could
not be submitted to, not at any price.
A Scylla and a Charybdis, with a vengeance. Men all doomed to
lose their manhood, one way or the other. Two bottomless pits, down
which all real manhood pours. The swirling grudge that is called
Liberty, and the vortex of greed of possession. And the tiniest thread
of a way out, between the two.
Man is not man for nothing. He does not possess his manhood
without the means to preserve it. Nor is he doomed unless he chooses.
So, thought Ramon to himself, ifl myself keep myself out of the
cesspool of greed for money, and if I don't split my head hating the
people who are greedy for money - though I hate them sufficiendy;
and if, though I mean to escape both the rock and the whirlpool, I am
still out in the stream, and not tremulously picnicking on the muddy
banks, like the cowarclly self-preservers who all play at being happy: if
then I am none of these things, neither a haver nor a grudger nor a
picnicking self-preserver; and I reassure myself that I am not: what
then am I ?
As the years went by, Ramon felt himselfdriven into a further and
further loneliness. His wife was picnicking with a love-and-charity
basket. He had no inward friends, not one: not an approach to one.
lnwarclly he was quite alone. And he was not sure whether he didn't
prefer to be quite alone.
Chapter VII 115
But being alone, more and more deeply alone, he was driven to
ask himself if this was to be all his life, this standing aside from life and
trying simply to realise. Letting the great drift go by, and trying to
discern its direction.
And he knew something surging at the bottom of his soul like the
depths of a black volcano. Over and over again came up in him a desire
for revenge, for revenge on all humanity, this mass of automata inside
a corral which they call infmite. The idiotic sheepfold of the Infmite.
And the rank, self-satisfied sheep inside it.
A black wave would surge up in him, a desire for revenge,
revenge, unending revenge on this foul humanity which refuses life
and will not let life be. Invents more tricks of machines and
sentimentality, and calls these tricks Life, so as not to let any real life be.
Oh for revenge, for revenge! Oh his terrible hatred of men, his
hate of the heans of men. Oh to be able to strike out their heans and
hold them smoking to the sun, as his ancestors had done in the
blood-stinking temples ofHuichilobos. To take revenge on men for
the vast unmanliness of men. To have revenge, a colossal blood
revenge. Revenge is for the gods. But men are executors for the gods.
To serve the gods of revenge. Only that! Only that! To take an
unspeakable revenge on mankind, because of the utter unmanliness of
mankind.
Mankind! Mankind! Who is mankind? he asked himself. Are all
men mankind?
All men, except his own people. All men, except the dark-eyed
peons. The dark-eyed men of his own Mexico. He did not idealise
them. They were men a, yet unmade. They were false, they were
indifferent, callous, brutal, monstrous. Above all, undependable.
Rather undependable than treacherous or false. They did not set out
for treachery. Something changed inside them. Sometimes he hated
his own people as much as everybody else. They would be firm and
true to nothing on earth. They would never stand up for their own
manhood. You could never look atone of them and say, in Napoleon's
words, Voila un homme! No, you could only say: There is a brave
creature! There is a handsome creature! There is a devilish creature!
Always a creature. Never quite a man. None of them had achieved
their own manhood.
Had he himself achieved his own manhood? He asked himself the
question often, vaguely, with struggle and bitterness. And he re-
116 QUETZALCOATI.
white gods, Jesus, Mary, the unknown white gods, would bring them
fulfilment. But alas, it was not so, Jesus with all his beautiful and
liberating words could not quicken the Indian blood to the last bright
flame. Jesus could soothe this blood to a certain passivity, a relieffrom
the torture of the old frenzy. But he could never give the complete
sacrament, he could never put the final bread of Indian manhood
between Indian lips. After a certain period, Christianity only put off
the day of the Indian's fulfilment, postponed it indefinitely. And
meanwhile Christianity itself was collapsing, the great Anti-christ of
mechanism and materialism was ruling. And the natives of America,
who had never yielded their final hope of fulfilment, through all the
centuries, now saw the last letter of their doom looped in iron letters
across their country. Christ would never destroy them. But the Anti
christ of industrialism, commerce, mechanisation, and fathomless
greed, this would destroy them. The white Christ would never be
their death. But the white Anti-christ would certainly be death to
them.
Was it to be borne? Was it to take place? Would the Great God
who is Father of all gods, Father of all the gods and of all the
multifarious races of men, would He allow it? Would He allow this
one race of men, the dark-eyed men of America, to be eaten up
without their ever having come into their own?
He would, unless they saved themselves. Ramon knew this. Jesus,
after all, was a man. And if the Man Jesus had never gone forth in
ultimate heroism, the Old World would slowly have destroyed itself.
Men must save themselves. A race must produce its own heroes, its
own god-men. Men, some men, some man must take the heroic step
into his own godhead, in the sight of all his people: or there is no
godhead for this people. The Christian padres were pure and beautiful
heroes, in Mexico. But they only provided for the interval, not for the
great entry.
"I must act! I must act!" said Ramon to himself. "Soon it wiU be
too late. If only I could call one man to myself: only one man."
The answer came first in the person of Cipriano Viedrna. The two
had known each other for some years . They were almost of an age,
Viedma being a year or two younger than Carrasco. But they had
never been really intimate. They had kept aloof, as it were suspicious
of one another, although all the time they knew there was some secret
bond between them. A bond which must one day assert itself. So one
118 QUE;rz.ALCOATL
day Viedma suddenly said, looking at the other man with a flame in his
e\'eS
·
:
"Carrasco, I think I should like to be dictator of Mexico."
Ram6n smiled slowly.
"To what end?" he asked. ''To elope at last to Paris, carrying off
thirty million dollars in cash, like President Porfirio Diaz, his great
excellency?"
"No, not that. Couldn't I leave a better mark on Mexico?"
"Isn't Mexico badly enough marked?"
"No, but what I mean, isn't my will a better thing than any of the
other wills in the country, whether will of the people or any other
bunkum? I can see no clean thing in the country but my own will."
"And what is your will?"
"I don't know. To be really Mexican. To see if Mexico can't
become himself. - It is good that Mexico is 'he,' and not 'she,' don't
you think? It pleases me Mexico is masculine."
"So it does me," said Ramon. "But what are you going to do
about foreign property here? What are you going to do about oil?
What are you going to do about silver? How are you going to settle
the ownership ofland? What, above all, are you going to do with the
United States and the United States capital that is already in the
country and that is waiting for another favorable moment to come
into the country?"
"I would fmd a way," said Cipriano, his eyes clouding.
Ramon shook his head.
"There is no military road to a real Mexico," he said. ''While the
United States is solid and all-wealthy, there is no military road to
Mexican Mexico. There is no road to Mexican Mexico at all. The
pressure of foreign capital means our exploitation, and that means
Labour Unions and organised strikes, and goodbye Mexico. The only
thing is to equivocate and postpone the evil day, in the hope that the
great white industrial world may collapse before it absorbs us. - But
there is small hope of that."
Cipriano glowered with black, dangerous irritation.
"There's a devil in Mexico that makes a man thirst for personal
power - blind personal power," said Ramon. "And there's an even
stronger devil in the people that makes them destroy all power or any
power, even the power of God, after a certain time of enduring it."
"But what about the devil that is outside Mexico, and just wants
Chapter VII 119
to coin her dead body into silver, and squeeze it into oil? What about
the devil in the outsiders?"
"It usually takes possession of the ruling Mexican, in the end."
"It should never take possession of me."
"The people would rum against you and shoot you, after a time."
"Why can't the devils be faithful," cried Cipriano, "if I control
them for their own and their children's sake, not for my own?"
"How would you control them for their own sake? How would you
treat foreign capital? How would you answer the United States about
oil, and silver, and Lower California, and all the other things she is
waiting for an answer about?"
"One couldn't do more than let Hell loose, if things became
impossible."
"One couldn't do less."
Cipriano bit his moustache with black irritation.
"I could get the presidency, I could make myself Dictator," he
said, moodily.
"I know," said Ramon. "And what then?"
Cipriano was silent for a time, looking down sideways. Then he
flung himself into a chair.
"I know too," he muttered. "But I'd rather smash Mexico to bits,
and spill every drop of blood in the country, than let him become like
New Mexico or Arizona or worst of all, like California."
"And have the United States, England, and France intervene for
the peace of the country," said Ramon, "and Mexico finally planted
out like California, oh, in a very short time; most of the Mexicans
dead, and the remainder day-laboring for the Yankee money-makers,
and all hating your memory. You've seen the United States. The
United States is ideal, in Yankee eyes. They only waitto clean us up the
same. Mexico needs cleaning up. You would provide the excuse. They
only want to clean up Mexico: for our own good. They truly see it like
that. And from their point of view, it is truly the best that could
happen to us."
"At least," said Cipriano, "I'd be dead before they began."
"What would be the good even of being dead," said Ramon.
"What is the good of being alive, at this rate?"
They faced each other in the silence ofhelplessness, knowing they
were cornered by the great world of industrial mankind. And in the
silence that was almost despair, the moment of dark suspense, their
120 QUITZALCOATI.
hearts swung into final unison. They looked into each other's eyes.
Ramon's eyes were obscure, black and pondering: Cipriano's were
flashing with impatient anger.
"We must do something," said Ramon, with a faint smile.
"It is what I say," replied Cipriano quickly, waiting on the other
man.
Ramon turned away and flung himself into a chair, putting
together the tips of his fingers.
"But we've got to start far off."
"Vanws!' said Cipriano. "I'm your man."
"We don't have to think of today," said Ramon, "and we don't
have to think of tomorrow. We have to get away from events, and
from this Mexico. We have to sink away from the surface of events,
like a swimmer that shuts his eyes and sinks under the water and dies."
"How! How!" said Cipriano.
Then Ramon put it to Cipriano, that you can do nothing in real
achievement till you get down to the religious level. And though
Cipriano was sick of the cowardly sentimentalism that passes as
religion today, or the political scheming that makes use of this
sentimentalism, he still did not shy at the word.
"So long as it is a religion ofmen, not of monks and women," he
replied.
"Now listen, Cipriano. Our strength, our manhood, doesn't
come to us just from the dinner we eat, or the air we breathe, or the
fme thoughts we think. Nor from the books we read, nor the good
deeds we do. Nor from any work performed. - Where do you get
your manhood, do you consider?"
"It is in me. I don't get it."
"But think about it. Your manhood. It is not like money in a safe.
It is something that flows and ebbs, and sometimes it almost leaves
you, and sometimes it is very strong. Isn't it so with you? It is with
me."
Cipriano watched Ramon for some time. Then he burst into a
laugh.
"It is so with me," he said.
'We are not self-made," said Ramon. "Something controls the
flow of my manhood, something greater than I. Sometimes people
seem to bleed all my manhood away from me. Then I have to rum
away, and I have to try to get back to the place where my manhood
flows again. Do you know?"
Chapter VII 121
Cipriano's eyes had gone dark, his face stern and gloomy, and he
clenched his fists.
"Yes, I know," he said.
"And I have to be continually fighting for my manhood - against
everything and everybody. And that puts the devil into me. Because all
the rest seems like the devil to me, wanting to eat my manhood out of
me as a devil might eat my liver."
The General, who was in uniform, took a rum round the room,
clashing his spurs in a defiant manner.
"I feel my devil is stronger than theirs," he said, smiling in his
black beard.
"So is mine, once he's roused. But till they've roused my devil,
they bleed me of my manhood. And once they've roused my devil, I'm
nothing but devil for them all."
"Keep your devil roused," said Cipriano, smiling grimly.
"I do," smiled Ramon. "I pray to my devil, to keep his tail lively."
"Good , " said Cipriano, lowering his eyelids curiously.
"The point is, though," said Ramon, "shall I be nothing but
devil?"
"The devil is a gentleman," said Cipriano, "and there are few
enough in the world."
"It would be good to be a pure devil, Cipriano, and to shake
hands on it," said Ramon, lifting his black eyes and watching the other
man with a curious glisten, almost like a smile.
Cipriano stood still, his legs apart, his spurs glittering, gazing at a
perfectly blank place in the white wall. Then he rurned again with his
half-wicked laugh, and put out his hand.
"Ramon, friend," he said, "here is my hand."
"Wait a bit," said Ramon, "before I take it."
Again the fixed, mask-like look had come on his face, a look of
blank repose. And in this repose his black eyes seemed to have gone
abstract like the eyes of a passive serpent.
Cipriano stood very still, very definite in his military uniform. His
face had a hard, fme, military look, as ifcut in semi-transparent stone.
Then he rurned his hard black eyes down to Ramon, who sat with his
anns spread on a table, looking vacantly before him. Ramon wore a
little white jacket, from which his dark wrists thrust out. And his feet
were naked in slight sandals. - The two men looked each other in the
eyes for some moments in a kind of war.
122 QUETZALCOATL
"Now swear this. IfI judge that you fail to lead, I will kill you."
"I refuse to swear that," said Cipriano rising. "I have sworn to be
your man. I have sworn always to judge you. And I have sworn on my
manhood not to misjudge you. I will swear no more."
"Good!" said Ramon. "Now listen. I swear myself to the Un
known God and the gods. - Bear witness to my oath."
"I bear it witness," said Cipriano. "I judge that you will keep your
oath. I judge I shall know the Unknown God and the gods through
you. I am content. Is it good?"
"It is good," said Ramon. "Now there is much to do."
''Tell me."
"I am going to bring back our own gods."
''Which are our own gods?"
"Quetzalcoatl - he is my god. Huitzilopochtli - he is your god.
Then we will see."
Cipriano saluted with a slow military salute and a queer little
smile.
"I swear to be your man," he said. ''Though I don't understand."
"Yes, you understand. We need our own gods. Jesus is the white
man's god : he is not the god of our people. Neither Jesus, nor
Jehovah, nor Mary. We need our own gods, we need Quetzalcoatl and
Huitzilopochtli and Malintzi and Tlaloc."
"Are they any more than names?" asked Cipriano.
"If they are only names! Even so, which calls an answer in your
blood, the name of Jesus, or the name of Quetzalcoatl?"
Cipriano thought about it.
"My blood gives no response to the name of Jesus," he said
seriously. "But - yes - my heart stirs just a little to the word Quetzal
coati. Quetzalcoatl! Quetzalcoatl!" He repeated it several times to
himself, smiling. "Curious!" he said. "But yet, Ramon, need we revive
old gods? Isn't it an antiquarian thing to do? - Do you know what
Padre Ignacio once said to me, about you? 'Ramon Carrasco's future
is the past ofhumanity.' - That always stuck in my mind. Can you find
the future in the past?"
"It is only the spiral of evolution, if you care to see it that way. We
must make a great swerve, and gather up the past, before we can have
any future. As it is, we are futureless."
"I really believe you beforehand," said Cipriano. "It would never
have occurred to me that we need the old gods. But the moment you
say it, I believe it. That is curious."
126 QUETZALCOATL
everything for them, you will get the woman thrown in. You have said
it."
"I know it," said Cipriano. "I am nearly forty years of age. But I
am neither old nor young. The time has come, since I know there is the
woman, and I feel the gods rousing ro come back. No, I have that
timeless feeling which comes to me when my fate and I arc at one
again. Tell me, what shall we do?"
129
VIII
K
ATE WASl'IT VERY HAPPY in her house, after all. She felt the
same as in the United Stares, as if her life were refused, and
pressed back on her. Bur here it was a dark opposition, and complete,
there was none of the social nervous excitement ofthe United Stares to
keep her going. And here, roo, she had no relief as a woman. In the
United Stares she felt a curious triumph in being a modem woman, an
elation part suffragette and part Bacchic, like the Bacchae. She recog
nised it as a destructive excitement, bur still it was something.
Here in Mexico this destructive female elation even was denied
her, and her life was thrust back upon her. She felt that in America
altogether the spirit of place, the very trees and air seemed hostile to
man, hostile to his living. Every minute was a fight. Every breath was
something snatched from the enemy. Bur this fight stiffened one's
backbone and purified one's soul of the great nausea of European
sentimentality. If one was sentimental in America, it was without
self-delusion. She saw the people turning on their sentimentality as
they turned on the hot water in the bath, and turning it off again the
minute the bath was getting roo hot. This deliberate, self-controlled
sentimentality of America seemed to her like a game. Sentimentality
was just a cynical emotional game. Nobody, at least among the people
she mer, went overhead in the slush. Everybody played the game of
sentiment with at least one cynical eye open. And this, though it is
really an Irish trick roo, was so coldly done that it rejoiced her. It
seemed to her like a triumph over the great mush offalse emotionalism
which has swamped England.
Nevenheless, after a rime the game becomes sterile, the soul feels
barren and life seems nothing bur a matter of stupid, obstinate will
and struggle for self-preservation. The struggle for self-preservation is
very real. Even if one has a sufficient income to spare one's thinking of
the morrow, financially, still the struggle for self-preservation is there.
It is deeper than meat and drink. Deeper even than money.
130 QUETZ.ALCOATL
Each reruming day Kate felt she had to fight the morning, for her
life. As if the dawn didn't wish her to have her existence under another
day, and she must fight to carry on. And when the night carne, the
moon was like a devil in the sky, trying to shove her out of the night,
and she had to fight even in her sleep, to remain living and maintain
her place.
And what was true of the dements was true of the people also.
The people seemed to be silently annihilating one another all the time.
Openly, they were kind. They helped her in difficulties and would take
trouble for her. But silently, unconsciously, they seemed to be doing
her in all the time. Unless she was all the time on her guard, on the
rapid defensive, inwardly, she was prostrate and felt her life going.
Then the spirit of battle rose in her, and she swept, also silently, but
with a mocking smile and a brief hint of awareness and of contempt,
upon her deadly friends, and the atmosphere cleared for a time. TiU
one or the other went off guard again, and she felt a knife at her scalp
suddenly.
So it was, in America. You pretended the utmost democratic
amiability. But secretly, you were anned to the teeth, and you never,
never ceased to watch your friend, lest she should gently insinuate her
knife among your hair and suddenly rip at your scalp. You watched
your male friend the same, but he was clumsier.
At first Kate had been rather horrified, when she woke up to the
first attacks. She had been somewhat accustomed to the same game in
Ireland. But there it was much more sentimental, and you had certain
very definite group defences. Here in America, money or no money,
class or no class, every man, and particularly every woman seemed like
a naked savage with a knife hidden in his breech-doth, a suave smile in
one eye, and an anxious look darting behind him to see if anyone was
getting behind his defences, in the other eye.
That was life. They didn't try to steal your money. But your very
best friend was always trying to make a fool of you, and to get the
better of you, spirirually. That was just life, in America: a collecting of
spirirual scalps. Subtly taking the life of your best friend: who would
then continue your best friend in the hope of getting your life, more
vitally, later on.
Kate had to admit that there was something in the game that she
really liked. It kept one on the alert, it braced one's spirirual backbone,
it had a certain excitement in it. So long as you didn't really let them
Chapter VIII 131
get you under. Particularly so long as you never let them see that you
were got under.
But it was an endless game, like an endless staircase that went a
little faster than anybody could climb. When it threw you down on the
bottom step you died or went into a nursing home. The grimmest old
climbers kept on for eighty or ninety years, grim old hacked weapons
by that time.
And Kate decided it wasn't good enough. Her stomach had
absolutely turned from the t()Uj()Urs perdrix of Europe. But she wasn't
sure that she didn't fmd the American diet of perpetual tough cat
harder to digest. Anyhow, after about a year it left her feeling appalled
and rather sick. So she went to Mexico.
She went with her cousin Owen because he wasn't altogether a
tough cat. He had some of the soft niceness of the paruidge. Or rather
his round, startled eyes were somewhat the eyes of a hare which feels
the breath of a cat at the back of his neck, and will tum round and make
a fight for it. Owen, like an unyielding hare, had given fight to many a
cat, and had never been quite beaten. For he could lash out with a
hare's mad ferocity on occasion, and then he would bolt like the wind.
So she and he had got on very well. They were both Celts by
blood. The difference was that Owen had fought more and at one time
or another had lost more of his fur, whereas Kate had lived more, she
had had deeper and more vital, if sometimes more tragic human
relationships. And that was why, sometimes, Owen wearied her. He
had dodged, like a carmy, unbeaten old hare, out of so many tight
places on the face of the globe, he had stood up to so many grinning
cats, and driven them off. But he had never united with anything in all
his life. He was a tough lone rabbit in a Tarascon of cats.
Any lone animal, however, is limited by his own outlines. And
that was Owen. For him the world was outlined by Owen. In spite of
all his cleverness and Celtic femininity of perceptions, the outline of
Owen was never anything but Owen. And inside this a great hollow
unbelief in anything but Owen; and at the very centre, a hollow little
unbelief even in the reality of the Owen.
Kate realised this, and Owen at once paid her back. He was still
perfectly courteous and sufficiently attentive. But at Chapala the real
American came out in him. Without doing anything at all against her
directly, he made a fool of her.
In Chapala he had found a nice soft milieu. In the hotel was
132 QUETZ.ALCOAn
no-one but himself and ViUiers, and an American mother with two
young daughters. Immediately he rose to the opportunity. He became
absolutely American, showing off to the top of his bent, and duly
impressing the American mother and the two daughters. He said Yep
instead ofYes, he let it be seen how many famous people he knew, he
was most awfuUy nice to the mother and daughters, he played the
bagateUe game and squealed with laughter and told anecdotes rather
like a professor bosom to bosom with his class. FrightfuUy familiar, he
was. Yet always on a sort of rostrum upper-leveL Putting it over that
mother and those daughters in a thoroughly American fashion. Say
ing "Bless you!" when the mother gave him a pot of honey. "Bless
you !"
Oh, Owen was enjoying himself.
And then the bathing. He lay for hours on the sands cooking like a
beefsteak and surrounded by a swarm of little boys, the boot-black
boys and the regular urchins of the place, spanking their little post
eriors and being spanked back by them, letting them climb over him
and dive from his shoulder when he was in the water, letting one of
them sit on his naked chest as he lay on the sand. And aU the time, in
the most grotesque way, learning Spanish from them.
Kate went twice to bathe from the hotel: to find herself, when she
came out of the water, sharing the bath of half a dozengamins, and
when she sat on the beach, surrounded by louts and street arabs
poking insolent questions at her, and pulling at her sandals. since she
was one of Owen's suite, while Owen and Villiers, like real democrats,
pawed and were pawed by the swarming crew, and giggled and
crowed as if they were having the time of their lives. Owen with his
bald head!
Kate was very angry. She felt so insulted. Whenever she happened
to go down the pavement under the trees, there she saw Owen lying in
his bathing suit or his dressing gown, a heap oflittle boys around him,
and he like a Chinese bonze of a school-teacher with his pupils aU
swarming promiscuously over him. And seeing Kate, he would wave
to her Helw!, with a certain insolence, as if to let her see how much
more important and alive his little boys were than she, and would not
trouble to come across the sand.
No, he had found life, LIFE, in a gang ofMexicangamins, and was
learning Spanish from them so fast. Kate, who understood Spanish
much better than he, heard the Spanish they were teaching him, and
Chapter VIII 133
heard the insolence of some ofthe louts. Some ofthe boys were really
nice little fellows . But some of the louts were vermin.
Owen was really in a wild state of excitement about his boys and
youths. He photographed them in all imaginable poses, took nude
photographs of those that would let him, on the beach, told them
things about America, like a good school-teacher, and let them correct
him and jeer at him, like a hwnble pupil. "I'm out to learn," he said.
And he walked the streets of the little town with his chest out and
his eyes glistening behind his spectacles, boys running round him
asking him their impertinent questions in Spanish. Ifhe chanced to be
walking with Kate, it was "Hello! Hello Son!" every moment, and
then to Kate "Excuse me just a moment." - And there she stood in the
plaza waiting, while he, a little distance off, stood stooping over a
couple of boot-blacks in a delighted but usually vain attempt to make
out their Spanish. Then he would at last rejoin Kate, all flushed and his
eyes glistening, clearing his throat:
"Hm! Hm! I don't know what they say. Aren't they funny little
youngsters?" - Then he would laugh to himsel(
After this, Kate thought there was something in the English idea
of a man's keeping his dignity: if he'd got any to keep, which few
Englishmen had, whom she had known.
She would walk alone a little way by the lake. You couldn't walk
far - only just along the lake front as far as the houses went. It was not
safe to go outside the village, for her alone, not half a mile.
She liked the lake with its queer pale-brown water and the few
very green trees. She liked the women washing clothes in the lake's
edge, and the endless come and go of animals driven down to the
water: men on horseback, in Mexican saddles and huge hats, driving
slow cows: a man leading a huge bull: a woman enticing two hairy
pigs, one of them spotted black and grey like a hyaena, one of them a
hairy rust colour: a calf, three goats, a black, long-legged sheep with a
lamb, and a little biscuit-coloured dog, driven by three tattered little
girls in scarlet frocks and blue rebows: six asses with empty saddles,
braying and kicking one another. An endless come-and-go of animals
to the pale, unreal water, while the mountains stood across stiff and
pale and unreal too.
But the animals did not seem happy - there was no glisten or
glitter of animation in the scene: so unlike the Mediterranean in that.
Even on Sundays, when the sailing boats came over the lake in the
134 QUETZ.ALCOATL
The rains carne, and the trees that were in bud flamed with
tropical scarlet and with rose red and with lavender. But these flowers
were not real flowers to Kate. They seemed soulless, and even,
strangely enough, invisible. It was as if they were hardly noticeable:
they had no presence as flowers. Again, like the animals, they gave off
no life-radiance. They ended where they were, like paper. Nothing
carne across the air from them.
Kate thought of the thorn-trees in bloom, in Ireland, and of the
lovely glow of a group of tall fox-gloves, and tufts ofling and heather,
and the fugitive harebells. And sometimes she felt she must go back at
once, just for the beauty of the air and the leaves and the wind and the
ram.
For the wind, in Mexico, was only a hard draught, the rain was
only a sluice of water, to be avoided. There was no lovely fusion in the
air, between water and sun. Either the sky was black, full oflighming,
and sending down masses of heavy, breaking water. Or the sun was
shining persistently and stiffly over a dry, unreal land of unliving
mountains, that reminded her of the av.ful dry abstraction and ugli
ness ofMount Sinai, as you see it from a ship in the Red Sea. The sun
did not melt into the rain, the rain did not melt into the sun, and
between them they did not produce the nodding, lovely flowers and
fruits of Europe, cowslips and apples and raspberries. - She cared no
more for the fruits than for the flowers. Mangoes, custard-apples,
marneyes, guavas, pitahayas, bananas, limes, pineapples, zapotes,
papayas, and a dozen other tropical fruits, she never really cared for
them. They had a slight ghastliness, she always imagined a slight taste
of blood, as if their roots were watered by blood. The only things she
truly liked were the oranges.
And the smell of rain was not the smell of rain she had known, the
sweet good earth. Here the rain smelt cold, and a little uncanny . And
the beach, the roads were all so dirty, covered with refuse and the
droppings of animals and the ordure of man. She could hardly sit
under any tree, at her own end of the beach. In the lonelier places it
almost everywhere smelt of human excrement, worse after rain. And
particularly under the trees, where one might sit for shade, the natives
urinated or crouched down to evacuate. This, and the litter, the old
rags and old bones and many remains of old huge hats, spoiled
everywhere except j ust the beach in front of the hotel and the villas,
where a man cleaned up.
136 QUETZALCOATL
The depression and gloom of it came over Kate when she had
been in her house a month. She had been fond of Felipa and the two
wild girls. And it resulted, as usual, in insolence, the strange insolence
of the American Cominem, nm impeninence, but a son of under·
neath jeering. Felipa did her work, in her haphazard way, con
sciemiously enough: chiefly, perhaps, because Kate herself tidied
whatever was untidy, and cleaned whatever was unclean, and kept the
place in hand. And Felipa also was honest stiU, she wanted Kate to
have the things she liked. There was no flouncing or impudence. No.
But the strange jeering. Even in the very caress of the cry Nina,
Nina, there came a cenain mockery. Felipa would pile the dinner on
the little table on the verandah, then sit herselfdown at a little distance
to talk in her rapid Spanish, or dialect, while Kate took her meal. And
all the time Felipa talked, in her rapid mouthfuls of words with long,
musical endings, she watched her Nina, and in the black, unseeing
eyes with the spark of slow light on them would lie the peculiar slow,
malevolent insolence of the Indian, jeering her Nina out of existence.
Kate was not rich in money, but ofcourse Felipa considered her rich.
And in Mexico more than anywhere Kate felt that it was a crime to be
rich, to be superior. Or not so much a crime, as a freak. It was like
having two heads, or three eyes. The antagonism was not really envy.
It was the slow, powerful, corrosive mockery of the volcanic Indian
nature, for anything which strove to be above the bed rock of human
necessity.
"Is it uue, Nina, that your country is through there?" And Felipa
jabbed her finger downwards, pointing to the earth's center.
"No," said Kate, "nm quite. My country is that way -" and she
slanted her fmger at the earth's surface.
"Ah!" said Felipa. "That way! Ah!" - And she looked at Kate as if
to say only potatoes or camotes could come from that way.
"And is it uue that over there, there are people with only one eye,
here!" Felipa punched herself in the middle of the forehead.
"No," said Kate, "that isn't uue. That's a story."
"Ah!" said Felipa. "It isn't uue. Do you know it isn't uue? Have
you been in all the countries?"
"Yes," said Kate, a little amply.
"Ah, you've been there! And it isn't uue? There are none of
them?"
"No," said Kate. "There are none."
Chapter VIII 137
"Ah! There are none! - And in your country are they all gringos?"
"Yes," said Kate.
"Like you?"
"Yes."
"And they talk like you ?"
"Yes."
The rwo girls inevitably carne up during such a discourse. The
little one, Pedra, with her black wide eyes and thin arms pitted with
small-pox, she was the soft, adoring savage narure, while Juana, the
strapping girl of fourteen, with her masses of black hair, was the
savage termagant. Juana was always teasing Pedra, calling her names,
pinching her, jeering at her mercilessly, in real savage torment. And
Pedra was always lapsing into a few wild unmeaning tears. Felipa was
as absolutely indifferent as if they were rwo rabbits, and they very
rarely took any notice of their mother.
Yet Pedra was utterly, vacantly lost if]uana were not there. As for
Juana, she spent some of her hours slapping tortillas from one hand to
the other, and peering like a young demon out of the window-hole at
the far end of the house, near the banana-trees. If Kate carne near, she
called out to her some rough, half-intelligible question, gazing at her
Nifia as if the same Nifia were some slightly comical beast from a
menagerie.
Kate would go in to the cave of a kitchen-place and watch Juana
slapping the thin tortillas on to a thin earthem-ware baking-plate,
which rested on the burning faggots, slapping them over as they were
cooked, then slapping them aside on to the dirty bricks of the top of
the fireplace, or slapping them down her own throat. She did not have
to do more than slap and bake the tortillas, because the maize-dough
they bought in ready lwnps, from the plaza.
"Do you eat tortillas?" shouted the wild and towsled-haired
Juana.
"Sometimes," said Kate.
"Eh?" shouted the young savage.
"Sometimes."
"Here. Eat one now." And Juana thrust a dirty brown hand
holding a dingy-looking tortilla, at Kate.
Now Kate really disliked the indigestible things.
"Not now," she said.
"Don't you want it? Don't you eat it?" - And with a savage,
impudent laugh Juana flung the tortilla on to the little heap.
138 QUETZALCOATL
So that at dinner-time, when Felipa had piled all the food on the
table, soup, rice cooked with grease and tomato, bits of boiled meat
and vegetables, and the little fried fishes called charales, all in one mass
at the same time on the table in front of the Nina, together with bread,
thin butter, honey, and a heap of mangoes, pitahayas, bananas and so
forth; then had seated herself in one of the chairs and opened the
strange, blind flux of words; while the sun poured in the green square
of the garden, the palm spread its great fans green-lucent at the light,
the hibiscus dangled great double red flowers from its very green tree,
and the dark green oranges looked as if they were sweating; then,
hearing Felipa's voice upraised, from the far end of the house's sha
dow would emerge Pedra, barefoot, black-haired, in a limp, torn red
frock, and after her the wild and towsled Juana in a dirty white frock.
And Pedra, the loving one, would come and stand by Felipa and
stealthily touch Kate's white arm, stealthily touch her again, and, not
being rebuked, stealthily lay her arm on Kate's shoulder, with the
softest, lightest cling imaginable, and her strange, wide black eyes
would gleam with a ghostly black beatitude, very curious, her whole
face slightly imbecile with a black, arch, beatitudinous look. Then
Kate would quietly remove the thin, dark, pock-marked arm, and the
child would withdraw half a yard, the beatitudinous look foiled, but
her very wide black eyes still shining absorbedly, like some young
snake rapt in love. While Juana would break into some jeering remark
which Kate would not understand, extraordinarily brutal and savage,
and would have to go up to the glotzing Pedra, to poke her. Where
upon Pedra with her hand wiping a meaningless tear away, Juana
breaking into a loud, brutal, mocking laugh, like some violent bird,
and Felipa halting in the black and gluey flow ofher words to glance at
her elder daughter and throw some ineffectual remark at her. And all
the time, Felipa, Juana, and Pedra were absolutely indifferent to
everything. The children were even indifferent to the cake Kate gave
them. They only on the surface stirred their black souls into a show of
interest.
The two girls could both read a little, so Kate would sit in the sala
in a rocking-chair, in the hot mornings, and the girls would stand by
her, reading slowly from a school-reader or from a ballad-sheet. This
went very weU for a time. Pedra was the gentle and insidious serpent of
adoration, Juana was the violent serpent of mockery, but both were
rather defiantly proud of being able to read. The boys couldn't read at
all.
Chapter VIII 139
Then Kate found herself in for trouble. The two girls followed her
into her bedroom, Pedra subtly stroking the Nifia and insidiously
clinging to her body, Juana watching with a savage's alert eyes, and
shouting a rude question now and then. They filled the rooms with
their wild hair and their savage, slightly repulsive presence.
Kate closed the doors to keep them out. Then, when she went on
to the verandah, there they sat near her door, Pedra carefully picking
the lice out of Juana's black, abundant hair.
The girls were not dirty, because they bathed in the lake. But Kate
did not care for the proximity. She sent them away to their own end of
the house, and, barefoot, untidy, off they went, jeering and laughing.
And outside the kitchen door, or under the trees of the garden, they
would sit while their mother loused them, or they loused each other,
or one of them loused their mother. - Kate hardly noticed it, it was so
common. The village beauties sat in their doorways with their splen
did locks flowing, spending a chatty afternoon hunting in the forests
of one another's heads. - But even this was not so bad as Ceylon,
where the men louse each other in the public street.
The two young hussies went to school when they thought they
would. Kate tried to send them off.
"No," shouted Juana. ''We're late now, and when we're late she
pulls our ears -" she being the teacher. So they stayed at home. -A
fair number of girls went to school, but few boys. And the attendance
was as casual and as intermittent as any youngster chose to make it.
Some of Owen's little friends had never been to school at all: some had
attended two or three times, and found it a bad joke. Hardly any could
read.
Juana would set off with a handful of washing, to the lake. She
would return at nightfall, her masses of wet hair hanging, for a bathe
was the end of the washing, a handful of wet clothes in her hands,
having lost one of the stockings from her mother's only pair.
Then a very mild uproar - and a sort ofhalfhope that Kate would
give another pair of stockings.
Next day another lament - Juana hadgone to school, and lost the
fifty-cent piece with which she was to buy grease and maize-dough.
Volumes of words like bats out of a cave. And the hope that Kate
would make the money good. Kate didn't. So at evening Fclipa asked
for the advance of a peso on her wages.
"I have no memory, no memory!" said Fclipa.
140 QUETZALCOATL
"Yah, you'U forget the money you've had from the �iiia," jeered
Juana.
"Then I'U remember it," said Kate.
And the two girls went off into a laugh of derision.
They none of them really cared about anything. But this curious,
absolute uncaring carried with it an insolent, veiled attack on anything
that was to be cared for. Kate felt this - felt the steady, derisive attack
on her self, from all of them, from everybody, from the whole aonos
phere of the natives.
It ended one morning when the two gawky, unkempt, barefoot
girls carne puUing one another and shoving one another into Kate's
bedroom, giggling and talking their jargon. Kate was glum. At length,
after fidgerting about - for they knew at once how Kate was feeling
Juana barked a rude question.
"\Vhat did you say?" asked Kate. She never understood Juana.
Then the young mild Pedra lifted her face and murmured, ending
on a nigger simper:
"If you've got lice in your head?"
Kate felt they wanted to examine her hair.
"Out!" she said. "Out of my room. Ugly girls, ugly girls, go to
school. Go to school! Out! You ugly girls !"
And instandy, like something that melts or evaporates, they
disappeared, all the jeering and laughing ceased, only two tangled
black things scuttling. They might ha\·e been lice themselves, running,
thought Kate angrily at that moment.
She was angry for many days after this. Everything changed. The
girls seemed to have gone to live somewhere else. Heaven knows
where they were. Felipa was subdued. And the hopeless, helpless
Indian melancholy settled over the house, a dead weight of gloom.
That's how it was. They were sensitive at once to a feeling. They
knew at once when Kate was detesting them, wishing to be back in
Ireland, finding them all a bit repulsive. They knew at once. And a
gloom, with a slight touch of dangerous resenonent settled down on
them all. They knew Kate found them slighdy repulsive. And a heavy,
almost reptile depression carne over them, with a reptile resenonent.
It was no easy life. So empty - empty of flow_
In the morning, out of disgust with her household, Kate went and
sat under a fleecy wiUow-tree on the sand. The lake was stiU, some
women in the near distance were kneeling in their wet slips on the
Chapter VIII 141
edge of the lake, and Kate was reading a Pio Baroja novel that was
almost as out-of-temper as she was herself. On her left, where the
beach ended and the cultivated lands of the Indians stretched almost
to the water's edge, were three little hovels of reed and straw, in
conspicuous under the trees. Kate knew these people by sight.
She glanced up and saw a little urchin, son of one of the straw
houses, marching to the water's edge, and dangling from his tiny
outstretched arm a bird, held by the toe, head down and feebly
flapping its outspread wings. It was a black waterfowl with a white bar
across the inner side of the wing: one of the many mud-chicks that
were bobbing about on the lake.
The urchin she knew quite well. He was a tiny brat, seemed not
three years old, yet as independent as a young animal on the warpath.
He wore a tattered rag of a red shirt, and weird rags ofwhite trousers.
Kate knew his little round head, his stiff, sturdy Indian walk, his round
eyes, and his swift, scuttling run, like a bolting animal.
"Now what's the little demon doing?" she said, as she watched
him stiffly march to the water, dangling the mud-chick, which seemed
huge as an eagle suspended upside down from the tiny hand. Another
urchin carne pelting down. The two little figures paddled a yard into
the lapping water, and gravely stooping, set the mud-chick on the
lake. It seemed to paddle hardly at all . The lift of the ripples moved it.
Then the urchins dragged it in. They had got it by the leg on a string.
"Ah the little wretch!" thought Kate. "Yet he seemed such a nice
boy."
She pondered within herself, whether she should go and release
the bird. "But," she said to herself, "if a mite like that caught it, and if it
can't get away from him, really - !" - So rather unhappily she re
turned to her book, casting an uneasy eye at the water now and then.
She heard a splash of a stone, and looked up. The two diminutive
brats were throwing stones at the unhappy bird. It, apparently, was
fast by the leg, the string fastened to a stone. There it lay, a couple of
yards out on the water. And there were those two little fiends, with
their tiny, sober manliness and cold ferocity, stooping, picking up big
stones, and throwing them down on the bird, which fluttered feebly.
"You demon incarnate! " said Kate to herself, seeing the warrior
like attitude of the mite, as he stood with his arm upraised. "And he
seemed such a nice child ! " was her afterthought.
In another second she was darting down the beach.
1 42 QUETZALCOATL
"Ugly boys! Ugly children! Go! Go! Ugly children! Ugly boys!"
she cried in one breath.
The round-headed dot gave her one glance from his manly eyes,
then the rwo of them scunled like a rar that disappears. Kate marched
inro the water and lifted our the bird. Ir was all wer, and warm, and ir
feebly tried ro bire her hand. The bir of coarse hempen string hung
from irs limp, greenish, water-fowl's ankle.
She:: rapidly stepped our of the water and unfastened the srring,
holding the wer bird, thar was about as big as a pigeon, softly against
her. Ir nested in her hand, the hor, wer, soft thing, without stirring,
and her hearr gave a cry of distress again.
So she stooped and pulled off her shoes and her srockings. She
looked round. In the dark shadow of the trees, the reed hurs showed
no sign oflife. Bur she knew those brars were watching. She lifted her
skirts ro her knees and staggered our over the cruel stones, in the
shallow water. The srones hun her feer so thar she almost feU. The
warer was quire hot ar the edge of the lake, and blood-warm as she
waded further in. Staggering, she wenr on quire a long way in the
shallow, shallow lake-side, whose water never seemed ro ger any
deeper, riU she was up ro her knees. Then gently she launched the
greeny-black bird, and gave ir a linle push rowards the expanse of
water.
Ir lay there wer and draggled on the pale sperm of the water, like a
buoyant rag.
"Swim then ! Swim!" she said, rrying ro urge ir inro the lake.
Bur ir didn't. Perhaps ir couldn't. Who knows ?
Anyhow ir was weU beyond the reach of linle boys. Kare strug
gled back ro the shore, back ro her tree, ro the shade. The sun was
fierce. The world was sriU. FuU of slow anger, she reswned her book,
glancing up from rime ro rime ar the floating bird, and sideways ar the
reed huts in shadow.
Yes, the bird was dipping irs beak in the water and shaking ir - ir
seemed ro be coming ro life. Bur ir would not paddle. Ir ler itself be
lifred, lifted on the ripples, and the ripples would gradually drift ir
ashore.
"Fool of a thing!" said Kare exasperatedly.
Two more black dots with white specks of faces were coming out
of the pale glare of the lake. Two mud-chicks swam busily forward.
The first one went and poked its beak at the inert bird, as if ro say:
Chapter VIII 1 43
said to herself, "if looks will annihilate you I'll annihilate you." And
she glared as if all the devils were in her. The boy rurned his face like a
bit ofclockwork at her from rime to time, as he struned palpitating on
towards the gap in the reed fence where the youth had disappeared.
"Is it any good rescuing the miserable thing any more?" thought
Kate. "It isn't. It is beyond helping itself. It will die soon. It's no good.
Why didn't it have the spirit to escape, or the spirit to preserve its
freedom? Now let it suffer to the end, the miserable thing."
And she detested the flabby bird. Likewise she detested that brat
of a boy, with his dark moon·face looking at her in apprehension.
"I've had enough of this," she said rising. "I'm going back to
Europe."
She looked westward at the receding lake, the lousy shore, the
lumps of women at the water's edge: the dilapidated-looking villas
and the mockery of a white church with its two fingers to heaven: the
scarlet flame-tree, the dark mangoes. And she smelt the smell of
Mexico, excrement, human and animal, dried in the sun on a dry, dry
earth: and mango leaves: and clean air with refuse and a linle wood
smoke in it. And she said again:
"I loathe Mexico. I loathe it. I'm going back to England."
145
IX
AM
I in other days. Till there came a man with a white skin, and
QUETZALCOATL with the dark face, who lived in �texico
and towards the fire fell streaming wings and streaming, brilliant
feathers. So Quetzalcoatl flew across the space between the
mountain-top and the steps of heaven like a bird, and as he flew,
the night fell. So men in the world saw only a star travelling back
into the sky, and entering heaven.
Then men said in Mexico: Quetzalroatl hasgone. He is a star in
heaPen. Jesus is the God in MexiaJ, let us learn his speech.
And men in Mexico learned the speech of Jesus from the
white priests. And they became Christians.
Down at Felipa's end of the house two men were singing to one
guitar. A little oil wick gave a small light in the dark, and showed
figures of men with dark sarape over one shoulder, standing behind
the singers, and inside the little cave of Felipa's room the women,
faintly discernible. This was the second or third night that there had
been singing, and the same music, the same words.
Kate went slowly across the garden patio and sat on the pavement
of her house, behind the singers. The group were all talking now,
eagerly. Only Felipa, who was in the open little room, saw her Nina
and rose.
"WiU you also come, Nina?" she said in her musical voice.
"Yes. I want to hear," said Kate.
"Fetch a chair for the Nina, Juana. Quick!"
"No," said Kate, "let me sit here."
She was rather shy, with the dark faces of the men under their big
hats turned silently to her. But they were not hostile.
The singers were Rafael and Francisco. Francisco was Felipa's
cousin. Suddenly one morning Kate had noticed two new figures at
the far end of her house: a girl with a full, oval, MadolU1a face, a clean
dress, and a necklace, and a tall, straight young man with a dark face
and a slightly pressed-in nose, and black, proudly arched eyes. He had
a curious face.
"Who are the two others?" Kate asked.
"They are my cousins," said Felipa. "They are bride and bride
groom."
"Bride and bridegroom?" said Kate.
"Yes. Carmen is fourteen-and-a-half years old. She was married
six days ago to Francisco, in Tizapan."
"And how old is he?"
"As old as my Jesus. Twenty-two."
Chapter IX 1 47
"What then?"
Felipa laughed her odd, childlike linle laugh.
"They are the Mexican hymns," she said, rather unwillingly.
"What Mexican hpnns? About fighting?"
"No-o. No-o. About the two gods."
And she didn't want to say any more.
The second evening of the singing Kate was still too shy to join
the group at the far end of the house. She felt they didn't want her. But
the third evening she went.
"Tell me what the words are," she said, when the song was over.
This was received in silence.
"Tell the Nina what the words are," commanded Felipa from the
dark hole of a room, which seemed like a cave full of obscure animals.
And suddenly Rafael's half-broken voice came defiantly:
"It says," he announced - But he could get no fanher.
"It says -" he started again. And Juana broke into a whoop of a
laugh.
"You, quiet your mouth," said Felipa ineffectually, into the dark.
Francisco gently rattled the strings of the guitar. Then again came
the trumpet-like voice of Rafael:
"I am Quetza.lcoatl with the dark face, who lived in Mexico . . . "
He kept breaking down, and one or another from the invisible audi
ence would prompt him. Even Felipa went on with the phrase about
Mary.
"Ah!" said Kate. "Felipa knows it too!"
"No-o, Nifia! I've got no memory. I've got no memory. I only
remember: My 11Wther is here. She has shed many tears for me."
Juana yelled out the phrase about flying across the space to the
steps of heaven, and then ducked down behind her mother in savage
embarrassment.
"And is that all?" asked Kate, when she had understood to the
end.
"Yes Senora. Of this hymn, this is all."
"Senora!" yelled Juana. "Is it true that heaven is up there, and you
come down steps to the edge of the sky, like the steps from the mole
into the lake? Is it true that El Senor comes to the steps and looks
down like we look down into the lake to see the charales?"
Juana shoved her fierce swanhy face into the feeble light, and
glared at Kate, waiting for an answer.
Chapter IX 1 49
knives for the ends of the wings of love, give me longer, sharper
feathers, tempered like knives." - "Longer, sharper feathers, tem
pered like knives for the wings oflove" - "To cut through the black air
of the night." - So the two voices ended in unison.
"I can't do it! I can't do it!" spoke the voice of the unknown man.
"Oh Father, Father, make the souls of the Mexicans light."
"I can't do it."
"Oh Father, Father, make the way to heaven less steep."
"I can't do it."
"Oh Father, Father, let the night not fall while Mexican souls are
flying."
"They must fly for a night and a day."
"Oh Father, Father, command the fallen, angry souls to be peace
ful in Mexico's land."
"I canno t command them. I gave them to you to command."
"Father, they will not listen. They are many, they rob my churches
and steal my strength, my churches are beginning to break. We are
gringos in the land, and the bandits are attacking us. Father, help!"
"Come home to the G/Qria, my Son. Come with your Mother
Mary."
"I cannot leave the men of Mexico without a master." - "I cannot
leave the women of Mexico without a patrona, " wailed the two voices
to the guitar.
"' will send Quetzalcoatl. Then come home."
The song died, and there was silence.
"Ah ! Ah ! It is true!" said Felipa, in a hushed voice. "They rob my
churches and steal my strength. Isn't it true, Senora, that the soldiers
robbed the cathedral of Guadalajara, and put their horses in the choir,
and dug up the bodies of the buried saints, the bishops, and took all
the jewels? And they stood the mummies of the bishops against the
walls, and pushed a cigar i.,, the mouth of the dead saints. Ah! Ah!
Ah! - And the Lord has not done anything to them. He didn't kill
them. They went to Mexico and became presidents and excellencies.
Ah ! The Lord couldn't do anything to them. That is to say the Lord
isn't strong, and they are the angry souls, bandits and thieves. They
can come and kill us all in the night, and the Lord can't help us. Ay!
Ay! What a horror!"
"You be quiet, Mother, and don't let anybody hear you," com
manded Rafael.
Chapter IX 1 53
"It is time."
"Give us a little while yet, Quetzalcoatl, to say farewell. Leave
us a little while, in the land we love. Do not drive us out like
orphans, like refugees."
"In a little while you must go."
"Ay! Ay! A little while. Already the land is no longer ours.
Leave us a little time to shed our tears of farewell."
"Do not shed too many tears over Mexico."
"Ay! Ay! We shed our tears."
The song ended abruptly, in a dead silence. Then the strangers
who were present muttered among themselves and turned to go,
silently, saying only AdiOs, and lifting their hats to Kate. Nobody said
any more.
Kate also rose from the pavement.
"I like the songs of Quetzalcoatl very much," she said.
"¥es!" they answered. And then dumbly, they began to move to
go to bed.
Kate went down to her room, wondering. What did these people
believe, and what didn't they? So queer to talk ofJesus and Mary as if
they were the two most important people in the village, living in the
biggest house, the church. Was it religion, or wasn't it? There was
none of the exaltation and yearning, or ecstasy, that she was used to
associate with religion. There was no defmite pull in any particular
direction. And yet the world seemed to have become bigger, as if she
saw through the opening of a tent a vast, unknown night outside. She
didn't know whether to look on her servants at the end of the house
with an affectionate pity, as if they were dark male children and female
children with powerful passions; or whether to pause and ask herself if
their lives were not really deeper than her own. So she went to sleep
dissatisfied with herself, and irritated. A sense of the superficiality of
her life, even of her love and her tragedy, exasperated her. Why did she
feel that love and tragedy and happiness were really only superficial
things? So long as you remained on the surface, they seemed all
important. They seemed to embrace the whole of life.
But the surface on which they were built could break, and under
neath was a vast obscure world where the ruins oflove and tragedy and
happiness remained only as curiosities. Life had taken on another
gesture altogether.
155
had spines of solid iron. The iron spine of the unbroken Indian.
Baskets of guavas, baskets of green, sweet lemons, baskets of
orange-red and greenish mangoes, baskets of pineapples. Oranges,
carrots, cactus-fruit in great abundance, a few potatoes, huge pink
radishes, flat, pure-white onions, little calabacitas, and middle-sized
speckled calabashes, camotes cooked and raw: she liked to see what
was coming to market.
Then, rather late as a rule, big red pots, bulging red water jars,
eanhernware cooking pots, red eanhernware mugs with cream and
black scratches of majolica pattern: big plates with weird dogs and a
maze of scratches: bowls, jars with handles: a great deal ofcrockery, all
red eanhernware. On the west beach, men running up the shore
wearing twelve great hats at once, huge heavy towers of hats, trotting
quickly to the plaza. Men carry ing a few pairs of beautifuUy woven
sandals, guaraches, and some ordinary strip-sandals. A man with a
bunch of new dark sara pes with gaudy patterns.
By the time the church-beUs clanged for sundown ¢e market had
already begun. On all the pavements round the plaza squatted the
Indians v.ith their wares, arrays of red eanhernware, globes ofmelons,
hats in piles, guaraches in pairs side by side, much fruit, little stands of
sweets. And people stiU coming in from the country with laden asses.
Yet never a shout, hardly a voice to be heard. :-:ever the animation
and excitement of market. :-:ever any thriU. When dark feU, all the
vendors lighted their tin torch-lamps, and the flames wavered and
streamed, and the dark-faced men in their white clothes and big hats
squatted silent on the ground, waiting. They never asked you to buy.
They never showed you their wares. They didn't even look at you. It
was as if they didn't want to seU their things: didn't care.
The food-stalls were briUiantly lit up, men sat at the plank board
in rows, drinking soup and eating hot food with their fmgers. The
milkman rode in on horseback, his two big cans of milk slung before
him, and advanced slowly to the food-stalls. There he delivered milk,
and, sitting on his l:orse unmoved, are his bowl of soup, his plate of
tamales or minced, fiery meat and mush, while the peons slowly
drifted round, and music was playing, and sometimes a big motor-car
would shove its way through, choked with girls and people, ex
cursionists from Guadalajara. And the foreign-looking soldiers with
their knives and pistols and looped hats, and their curious northern
speech, would stand in couples, more alien even than Kate herself.
All this life and flare of torches low dov.n upon the ground. All
Chapter X 157
"So you do not feel happy in Mexico, you want to go away?" said
Viedma.
"I'm not a bit happy," said Kate.
"Why not?"
"I can't do anything here. Felipa won't let me do anything in the
house. And it's mostly too hot to walk, and anyhow it isn't safe to walk
outside the village. So here I sit and rock in a rocking-chair, and that's
all the life I have. Felipa won't let me cook - she just doesn't intend me
to. And I can't do anything with her and all the rest of them. I can't
come near to them, they are such savages. And they don't understand
unless I do come near to them, and insist and force myself into their
consciousness. I can't do that. So I just sit in a rocking-chair and rock
myself through the days."
"¥ou read?" he said, looking at the books and magazines lying
around.
"Oh, and it all seems to me so stupid, so stupid, so stupid. I never
knew the world was so stupid!" she cried. "The books and papers are
beyond words stupid."
"Perhaps they aren't. - Perhaps that is only Mexico too," he
laughed, "makes them seem so."
"Oh, and I long for England, with a house and a lawn and a
garden, and the sea not far, and a bit of peace in my life."
"When do you think you will leave?" he asked.
"In three weeks, when I have arranged the money and every
thing."
He was silent. And he made her uncomfortable. He too seemed to
take away her freedom, to have the paralysing effect of Mexico upon
her, as if her soul were paralysed.
"I had hoped you would choose to live in Mexico," he said, in the
quiet, secretive-seeming voice of the Indians.
"Not for the world!" she declared, panic-stricken and defiant.
"But when you get to England," he said, "perhaps you may wish
to be in Mexico again."
"Well," she said. "One never knows what madness may come over
one, and so I suppose even that is possible."
He was silent, and the Indian gloom came out of him, like a black
mist.
"When I was in England," he said slowly, "I stayed all the time to
find out what was the secret of it. But all the time my spirit was in
162 Q UETZ..\LCO.\TL
.'.kcico, and only my mind was in England. learning things . .'.iy spirit
was in .'.ie.xico. It seemed to me only .'.ie:cico was life. The rest was
Welcs.s . .,
�.\nd did you find our the secret of England?"
"�o," he said. "l found our the chief secret, that there was not
much life, only many habits and conventions and ways of life, and
ideas. All, all the incricare ways of life, so many, like the pavements of a
city. Even your country, very beautiful, your woods and fields and
hills., bur like a beautiful pa.rk around a city. :\1.1 made. All made and
finished \nd your women so made and finished. as if they roo were
. •
the exceUem goods of your country. Your country makes such ex·
ceUem goods, fabrics \nd the people are like exceUenr fabrics, some
. •
more e."<pensive, some less. But all made and finished off- finished
off. - You know the �avajo women, the Indian women, when they
weave blankets. weave their souls into them. So ar the end the:-· leave a
place, some threads coming down to the edge, some loose threads
where their souls can come out. .\nd ir seems to me your country has
woven its soul into its fabrics and its goods and its books, and nc:..-er
kfr a place for the soul to come out. So all the soul is in the goods, in
the books, and in the roads and ways of life, and the people are
finished like finished sarapes, mar have no faults and nothing beyond.
Your women have no threads into the bC)·ond. Their parrc:m is
finished and me:-· are complete."
"But I am Irish," said Kate.
�early all English people," he said smiling, "are Irish or Scorch
or Welsh or Cornish. or me:-· had a French grandmother. Qui .r'txcu.u
.r'=t."
�o, I don't e."<cuse myself," she said. "l only stare a fact."
He made a slight mocking gesture \\irh his hand.
".\nd you don't like English women,"' she said. ".\nd I don't
like - I don't like .'.iexico. You don't like England because it seems
finished, and I don't like .'.k"<ico because ir teels like a blaclc bog \\-here
one has no foothold."
He was silent for some moments before he replied:
"l did nor say mar C\·ery English woman, or Irish woman., was
finished and finished off. Bur rhC\·
.
wish to be. ThC\·
. do not like their
threads into the bC)·ond. The:-· quickly tie the thre-ads and dose the
parrc:m. In your women the parrem is usually complete and closed, ar
rwenty years."
Chapter X 163
"Let me tell you," he said, "you will die. The peace you want will
poison you. Such peace is worse than bad suffering. Cancer is berter
than such peace."
"But you don't know, since it isn't your peace. Besides, death does
not seem to me such a disaster," smiled Kate. She saw that he wanted
her to be poisoned by such peace.
"Arobardado!'' he said, smiling angrily. "Arobardado!''
Kate blenched at the word. Her husband had always said: The
most hateful thing on earth is a life-coward. She would never admit
herself cowed, encowarded : particularly by life.
"It may seem to you, arobardado," she retorted. "That is because it
is my life, and not yours. You are not European, and I am."
"Arobardado!" he repeated.
Then he lapsed into a hostile silence. After which he rose, and
putting a smile on his face, bowed, saluted her, and left her.
She, absolutely exhausted, asked Felipa to lock up, and went to
bed. She was asleep almost as soon as her head touched the pillow.
In the night she woke up startled, not knowing where she was.
She could not recognise her bedroom, she did not know which was
the door, where was the way out. "Is it my bedroom in New York?"
she asked herself, and she looked for the signs.
It took her some time to frnd the door, open on to the verandah,
and the chair in the doorway, and a faint light of moonlight outside,
and the sound of Rafael muttering in his sleep, on the mattress outside
the door. But at last, in a panic, she had deciphered it all .
And there came to her, in a shock that woke her completely :
General Viedma wants to marry me. He wants to force me to marry
him.
The fear ofthe Mexican night was as great as it had ever been. She
wanted to run, to run away. Oh, she wanted to go. She felt as if some
huge beast had almost caught her, some horrible beast. She thought of
Viedma almost with horror. The thought of his dominating her
through fear came on her like a madness. She must get out, get out at
once. She thought of the train, of the journey to Mexico and Vera
Cruz. Or of the journey to Irapuato and El Paso. Or of the flight west,
not so far, to Colima and Manzanillo. Whatever else she did, she must
escape out ofthis country. For she felt they would try to detain her, try
not to let her get out.
As she lay in her bed looking at the chair-blocked open door she
166 QUETZ.ALCOATL
figured our all the best ways of escape. And for some reason she
thought she would flee west. It was not far from Guadalajara to
Colima, and then M anzan illo and the sea were near. A steamer would
take her up to Los Angeles.
Then she thought of her heavy trunks: having them carried by the
cargador to the station: boo king them to Guadalajara : then again to
Manzanillo. And what the steamers would cost. And if she had
enough money to get to Los Angeles. And what she should say to
Owen? - She would not have to speak of her flight to Owen. Not to
anybody. She would leave, without any luggage, and get Owen to
bring her things to the United Stares. He would hare all the bother,
but he would do it.
The thought of the United Stares was like heaven to her. A great
escape. Owen seemed almost like an angel: he left her so free. And
Villiers was the perfection of niceness, so attentive and unobtrusive.
And the white men's countries were the only places where she could
breathe.
This was in the middle ofthe night, with a pallor ofmoon outside,
beyond the balcony, the occasional antiphony of night-hoarse cocks,
and the occasional little apparition of greenish light in the air of her
room, like someone striking a match, from the intermittent firefly.
And she herself prostrate in her bed, quire acobardJulo.
Curiously enough, she woke in the morning with a new feeling of
strength. It was only six o'clock, yet she felt the life rising up in her.
Rafael had gone, had rolled up his mattress. The hibiscus trees were
hung with big scarlet blossoms, there was a faint scent ofroses, the sun
was a soft flood of light. The big, dense mango-trees always seemed
most sumptuous in the early morning, when their hard green fruits
dropped like testes from the bronze new leaves, absolutely still, yet
strangely potent. Outside her window along the road slow cows were
marching down to the lake, with a little calf, big-eyed and
adventurous, trotting to peep through her gate at the grass and
flowers. The peon lifted his two arms to send it on, without making a
sound. Only the noise of the feet of the cows. - Then two boys trying
vainly to urge a young bull-calf down towards the lake. It suddenly
jerked up its rump and gave dry little kicks, or butted them with its
blunt young head. They were terrified, and rook to the inevitable
recourse of the Indians, of throwing stones at the creature.
"No," shouted Kate from her window, in English. ''You're not to
throw stones at it. Treat it sensibly."
Chapter X 1 67
She walked along the shore in the dark with Villiers, watching the
sailing boars depart. The wind was from the west, so several of the
boars sailing east had gone. The boars for Jocotepec could not leave.
There was a big one that had carried many people, and the people were
now going on board again. They clustered in a group at the edge ofthe
flapping water. The big, wide, flat-borromed canoe with her wooden
a\\ning and her one srraight mast lay black, a few yards out, in the
night. A lamp was burning under the wooden hatches, you could look
in. Then a shorr man came ro carry the passengers on board. The men
stood ,,;th their backs ro him, their legs apart. He ducked his head
berween their legs, straightened himself, and there they were riding
on his shoulde�, his head berween the fork of their legs. So he waded
out ro the black boat, and hea\'ed them on to the side, like hea\ing a
pig. For a woman, he crouched dO\\TI and she seated he�lf on one
shoulder. Then he rose, clasping her legs while she held his head ro
balance her. And so he waded through the water. The srrength of
these men's spines seemed almost unn arural.
Soon the boat was almost full of people. There they sat, on the
floor along the sides, baskers hanging from the hatch roof, swa)ing as
the boat swayed ro the water. Another lirrle woman came running
across the sand. She had forgorren something. The men inside the
boat spread their sarapes and lay down ro sleep. They would lea,·e
when the wind changed, after midnight.
And almost for the firsr time, Kate v.ished ro be with them. :\or
actually ,,;th them, sleeping on the floor of that canoe like so many
canle. But in some way participating in their lives. She wanted in some
way to participate.
Owen was lea,ing at the end of June, going back ro the United
States. And she must make up her mind whether to go or nor. She was
determined ro go. Yet when the very moment came to give up her
house, she equivocated. "Perhaps," she said to her landlord, "I shall go
at the end of this month."
She had nC\·er in her life been so indefinite. Usually, when she
wanted ro do a thing, she just did it. :\ow she wanted to go away, ro
go back ro Europe. And instead ofdoing it, she hung neurral. It was as
if she couldn't gather he�lf into decision or into energy. That was
Mexico. It acted like morphine on her, and didn't let her do anything,
not C\·en go away.
Scarlet birds like drops of blood, in very green wi.l..low-rrees. So
Chapter X 169
she often saw them in the mornings by the lake. And she felt she was
hypnotised. A film was over her, a film over all her will and her feeling.
She would never be free till she was back again in Europe, or in the
United States.
An aguador trotting towards her house with a pole over one
shoulder and two heavy square cans ofwater hanging, one from each
end of the pole. Barefoot, bare-legged, his dark, handsome face bent
in shadow under the big hat, the young man trotted softly, softly, with
a rhythm that was pure hypnotism.
Dark heads on the water in little groups, like black water-fowl
folded up and bobbing. Were they birds? Were they heads? Was this
human life, or something intermediate?
1 71
XI
"Ir is much better, of course, rhar she should realise and choose for
herself."
"If she doesn'r, I will choose for her."
"And prevenr her leaving?"
"Yes."
"Derain her here?"
"Yes."
"\\!here?"
Cipriano spread his hands.
"If you feel ir musr be so, ir musr," said Ramon. "Bur ir would be
much better if she realised and chose for herself."
"I know it perfectly. Bur if she won't realise, if she can't choose! If
the habir of an old life is roo strong - !"
"Then have your way, if you feel ir necessary."
"You agree ?"
"If you have an inward necessiry, I agree, even if it comes to
shutting rhe woman up as a prisoner. One must obey one's gods first,
come what will."
"Then you are with me?"
"Yes."
"Good."
The two men suddenly embraced, breast to breast, Mexican
fashion.
"'f it were not for you, Ramon, rhe gods in me would tum into
devils."
"Keep your eye on m<:, Cipriano. It's my danger too," said
Ramon.
The two men looked at one anorher and laughed shonly. Then a
new calm came over their hearts. They were silenr for a time.
"The priest is coming this morning," said Ramon.
"Yes ?"
"Shall I see him alone? "
Cipriano looked into rhe black eyes o f Ramon. Ramon w as grave
and remore, with again some of rhat immobile, statuesque, god-like
look which was so impressive. Ir was now Cipriano's tum to hesitate a
momenr.
"No," he said. "I will be rhere."
They were sitting in the library of General Vicdrna's quarters in
Guadalajara. As milirary commander of rhe Srare, and as a general
wirh extraordinary hold over rhe mass of the soldiers, Cipriano was
Chapter XI 1 73
perhaps the strongest man in the country. Yet he had always kept very
quiet, he had avoided as much as possible the military and political
leaders of Mexico. It was his instinct to be a man by himself. Only he
was attached to Ramon. So far, however, he had never publicly
identified himself with Ramon's effort to change the religion of the
country. The movement was only just in its infancy. No one could
foresee the furure. Cipriano felt it would be unbecoming in him to
compromise the government by appearing as a new sort of agitator.
Also it would do the new cause no good, to have a general in the
fore-front. It would be like another political trick.
Now, however, the priests in the parish churches had begun, by
order of the bishop, to preach against these Hymns of Quetzalcoatl.
For the Hymns were spreading rapidly from one end of the Republic
to the other. But the State of ]alisco was the place where they had
started, and where they already had great vogue. Hardly a village or a
hacienda in the west where the men had not learned the first and
second of the hymns, at least, and where the people were not arguing,
in their blind way, about Jesus and Mary being gringos, and about
their departure again into heaven, and about the mystic virtues of
Quetzalcoatl. It seemed as if some passionate, positive mystic chord
had been touched in the Indian's soul, something active and almost
violent. It put their passive worship of Jesus to flight almost in a
breath. Their narures kindled like straw. They were ready, more than
ready for their own gods. Somewhere, their slumbering volcanic souls
were aching for a passionate release, for passionate, active gods to
serve.
The government in Mexico City, of course, was anti-Catholic,
leaning towards conununism, hating the priests. It was not at all
hostile, then, to this rise of a new, national religious impulse, seeing in
it a wonderful instrument against the Catholic Church. "You can only
dislodge an old superstition with a new superstition," said the
President, who was a general, and an unselfish man with a real desire
to serve the people of his country, but who was almost powerless to
act, surrounded as he was by bullying generals at home, and by the
various Mammons of the foreign powers, all of them waiting to seize
the bone of Mexico. He was a politician and a general, so he had not
much belief in religion, new or old. Its chief usc, he saw, was as a
political instrument in handling the masses of the people. But as a
sincere liberal he disliked intensely the underhand methods of religion
in politics. Still, he kept his eye on Ramon Carrasco and General
1 74 QUfTZ.ALCOATL
Viedma, when the stress of answering all the requests from the great
financial powers left him a momem ro tum his eyes aside.
The Church, too, had of course watched the growth of the new
legend closely. The Bishop of Guadalajara was a Mexican who had
lived many early years in Rome, but who had preserved a good deal of
his native freshness. He was by nature easy and good-tempered. If he
had ro choose berween Rome and his native coumry, he would
probably choose the latter. Ir was nearer home ro him than his creed.
Bur he had no imemion of choosing. Why choose berween blessings?
Why not keep both?
So he ignored Ramon Carrasco and the Hymns as long as possi
ble: tiU his orders from the Archbishop, who was a fierce Churchman,
made him take steps. The first step was an interview with Carrasco.
They met at the house of a conunon friend, outside the city.
"It is you, Senor, is it not," asked the Bishop frankly, ''who have
started these so-called Hymns of Querzalcoatl among the peons?"
"Nor exactly," said Ramon. ''The very first account of the man
who came out of the lake saying he had seen Querzalcoad, I read in the
newspaper."
"Ah Senor," said the Bishop, spreading his hands. "Bur this man
is not right in his mind."
"Perhaps a divine madness, Bishop," smiled Ramon.
"If it were madness, Don Ramon! But when it is only silliness -"
The Bishop smiled an amiable, amused smile. Then, rather un-
wiUingly, he straightened his face and looked grave.
''TeU me though, if you will be so kind," he said. "What is your
idea, in these hymns? What is it you wish to effect?"
"Ir is fairly obvious," said Don Ramon. "I want ro release the
natural religious passion which is in us Mexicans, particularly if we are
Indians, the religious energy native to our own blood."
"But isn't that already released? Do you think you can improve on
the Church, dear Don Ramon?"
"No, I really don't. I have the profoundest admiration for the
Church, as a hisrorical institution. But it is no growth of our soil. It
isn't ours."
"My dear Don Ramon ! Surely the Church is universal. Surely the
Church is as universal as your world-socialism?"
"I haven't any world-socialism, dear Bishop. Only I think we poor
devils of Mexicans have always been swamped in universals invemed
Chapter XI 1 75
the same plumb, indifferent sympathy with one another. Since neither
of them was greedy for money. The moment the Bishop had showed
signs of money-greed, Ramon would have plotted his destruction.
And vice-versa. But neither man cared about possessions, one way or
another.
Yet when the Bishop received orders to counteract the new and
foolish heresy started by Don Ramon among the Indians, he obeyed
at once, without taking any notice of Carrasco. He sent the order to
every priest in his diocese, to preach against the so-called hymns, to
forbid the singing of the so-called hymns, and to refuse to confess any
man or woman who persisted in singing or in any way communicating
to others these so-called hymns.
This order was given after the famous Fourth Hymn had begun to
spread over the country.
Then over the land of Mexico a weariness came. For men had
shed blood through many years, to bring the Kingdom of Christ
to their land. And whenever Mexican blood was shed, men from
all countries came, appeared out of nowhere, eager to fmd some
thing. And the greedy ones found silver, much silver, and carried
it away. And the greedy ones found the oil of the earth, much oil,
very much oil, and blackened the land to get this oil into ships.
And the greedy ones said: Let us get sugar out of the earth, from
the tall tubes of the cane. And among the cane-fields smoke of
factories rose, and in the fields the peons of Mexico sweated, to
bring the sugar from the living earth into the trains and ships of
the greedy ones, who carried it away.
So more blood was shed, and the Mexicans said: Let us shed
our blood, to have brotherhood and the ways of the Lord in
Mexico. For Jesus says: GiTJe all thou hast to the poor. Let us shed
our blood, and let all be given to the poor.
So more blood was shed, and many houses were broken. And
many, many greedy ones ran away out of Mexico, taking with
them all they could take.
Then the Mexicans, being weary, said: Let us shed no more
blood. We are poor. Let each poor man work in his garden, for
maize and milk. For all is given to the poor.
But the greedy ones from afar, seeing that quiet had returned
into the bodies of the Mexicans, came stealing back, stealing back.
In trains they came, in many automobiles, and in ships. All over
1 78 QUETZALCOATL
This hymn spread quicker than the others. Even in the cities, in
Mexico itself, the workmen learnt it. It gave them a strange satisfac
tion.
So it happened that in several churches in the city the images of
Jesus disappeared, and in their places were found grotesque Judas
figures, such as are seen everywhere at Easter time. Easter in Mexico
being really the great week of] udas. In the city all the time men hawk
numbers of grotesque figures made of papier mache and briUiandy
painted, like great dolls. And they are all grotesque men-dolls, some
very big, more than halflife-size, some not very large. These men-dolls
are distorted in all ways. But mosdy they represent a fat Mexican with
a sticking-out stomach and tight trousers and turned-up moustaches :
the old-fashioned sort of property-owner, the patron. Many represent
white men, like Punch. But they never represent the dark-faced peon.
Judas always has a rosy complexion, and a stiff, ridiculously haughty
expression.
Men, well-dressed men, buy these enormous figures in the street,
180 Qm:rz.ALCOATI.
walk home with them in their arms, like great children with great
dolls, laughing. On Saturday, Easter Saturday, Judas is hung from the
balcony and burned. Often he has a loud cracker in the middle of him,
and ends with a bang. AU the town is popping with Judases.
Great, then, was the scandal whm three ofthese Mexican Judases
were found occupying the place of the Statue of the Saviour, in three
city churches. A thrill ofhorror and excitement went over the country.
Secretly, the govenunent was pleased. But the Catholics were beside
themselves. If they could but have put forward a leader, they might at
this moment have captured the country. The Knights of Columbus,
with their ferocious oaths behind them, ought to have accomplished
something. But they didn't.
"Bah!" said Cipriano. "If a soldier was violating their wife on the
bed, they'd be under the bed hiding, not drawing a breath. No such
cowards in the world."
Ramon was afraid everything would take a wrong tum now. He
regretted the Judas incident sincerely. That was not what he wanted.
He had to move at once. For this reason he had asked for another
interview with the Bishop.
The Bishop arrived, in a simple blackcassock with purple buttons.
Cipriano was in uniform, Ramon in black city clothes. The three men
saluted one another courteously, and the Bishop sat slowly and amply
in a chair by the window. It was evident he was annoyed. A ray of sun
feU on his creamy-brown hand with the huge amethyst. He moved his
hand irritably.
"I have come at your order, Senores," he said irritably.
"We would have waited on you in any place you chose, Bishop,"
said Ramon. "You know that."
"I suppose I chose a lesser evil, coming here. - What is it you
want, Senores?"
The Bishop's plump, smooth, creamy-brown face looked petu
lant, as if he might cry. At the same time, angry, very angry.
"You understand I regret the incident of the Judas figures in the
City, Bishop," said Ramon, faintly ironic.
"It pleases you to regret it?" said the Bishop sarcastically.
"Why surely."
"For my part," said Cipriano, "I d1ink. it a stroke of Mexican
genius."
The Bishop bowed in his direction, sarcastically, adding:
Chapter XI 181
�Man, you are mad. All the demons in your body. You will see
what fate will overtake you - yes, and all Mexico -"
�I am nor afraid. But I wished co prepare you. Ifyou are wise, you
will be with US -"
�with whom?"
"Myself. General Viedrna. And Mexico."
"You, Don Ramon, are a madman. General Viedrna is one more
Mexican general. I need add nothing co that. Mexico has had generals
enough. And as for Mexico, which I notice you place last, Mexico is
not yet yours for the taking, Senores."
"Nevertheless, Bishop, ifyou are a wise man you will wait and see
the issue, before you take sides too actively. I would like co make the
Church in Mexico the Church of Mexico, instead of the Church of
Rome. And the mediators between us and the Most High shall be
none but our own gods, Quetzalcoatl and the re-born gods of our
race. The altar is the altar of the Most High God . The Church is the
Church of the invisible God. But the chapels are the chapels of
Quetzalcoatl and Tlaloc and Coatlicue; the manifestations ofthe High
God are Indian manifestations. It shall be so."
Again the Bishop seemed confused, as if numbed.
"It is all impossible," he answered.
"Nevertheless it will be so. General Viedrna and I are ofone mind.
With me are the people of the place. General Viedrna has the soldiers.
Wait and see how the change goes, Bishop."
"It can lead co nothing but more disaster," said the Bishop, in
chagrin.
"Wait and see."
And so the second interview was over.
Cipriano smiled when the B ishop had gone.
"He fears the loss of his office, no more," he said.
"If he will be our friend at the right moment," said Ramon, "that
will be of great assistance."
"Ah, as for such friends - !"
1bey are symbols in the eyes of the people."
"Ramon," said Cipriano, "this removing of the figures from the
church means a very great deal to you, doesn't it?"
"It is the great crisis of my life, of my soul."
Cipriano shook his head.
"It is curious," he said. "You almost tremble when you think of
it."
Chapter XI 183
the post office, she saw the men in their cotton uniforms lying about
the wide doorway of the barracks. There must have been fifty or more.
Yet they were very rarely seen in the streets. They seemed to be kept in
reserve. After dark there were patrols of horse-soldiers through the
village. The inhabitants were requested to be indoors by ten o'clock.
Altogether there was an air of excitement and mystery, as if
another revolution were brewing. The church, she knew, was closed.
The old priest had preached against the hymns and worked himself
into a great rage. Now his life was threatened. Continually men were
sending word by the old woman who served the priest in the house by
the church, that the next time his reverence opened his mouth, church
or not church, they would shoot him. So he closed the church, and
there was no mass on Sunday. This put the village into a great state,
chiefly of rage. Practically all the people who came over the lake on
1 84 QUETZ.ALCOATL
aisle, tiny little girls in white dresses and little crowns of flowers no
longer came with a handful of flowers, at evening. The month of
Maria was ended, the day ofCorpus Christi was gone. There had been
the high mass of this great day, and the church full to the doors with
kneeling peons, from dawn till midday. There had been the feeble
little procession of children within the church, because the govern
ment no longer allowed religious processions out of doors. For the
Church was nothing if not political in its activities. And then, the
doors had been closed.
:-;or to open again, even on Sunday. The consternation was great.
As it happened, it was a big market. Much fruit and stuff had come
over the lake, from the south, from even as far as Colima. There were
piles of fruit, and men with lacas, wooden bowls, and women with
glazed pottery. And at the same time, there were men crouching in
guard over rwenty centavos' worth of chilis and tropical plums, piled
in tiny pyramids, rwo centavos' worth, and five centavos' worth, on
the roadway. The much and the little.
It was a big market, with the much and the little of the Indians.
And everybody in a state of consternation. The church doors were
shut and locked. The people could neither hear mass nor go to confess.
It was as if they could not change their dirty clothes ofthe week for the
snow-white which they put on on Sundays. It was as if they could not
escape the dirt of the week of work behind. They must go on with the
old dirt upon them. ;-.;o mass, and no confession.
Everyone was talking, but in low tones. Every man was glancing
nervously over his shoulders. The vendors squatting on the causeway
crouched tight, as if making themselves low and small, squatting on
their haunches with their knees up to their shoulders, like the old
Aztec figures. Soldiers in rwos and threes were standing everywhere.
At about eleven o'clock a group of men appeared in the plaza
wearing white sarapes, poncho-fashion, their heads through the hole
in the middle. White sarapes with brilliantly coloured borders and
fringe, and little flame-like flowers on the shoulders. They moved in a
little throng across the plaza and down the short road to the space
before the church, their white blankets with the gaudy fringe swing
ing to their soft tread, their white cotton trousers bound at the ankle
above coloured [guaraches]. And at the centre of the group, tall,
stately, in a big hat and a sarape of white with blue and black at the
neck, was Don Ramon. On either side of the group went six soldiers.
186 QUETZALCOATL
Instantly, and in silence, the whole plaza was on its feet, the
people in a great silent body were flooding down towards the lake,
towards the church. The men in white sarapes passed through the
broken iron gates into the open space ofthe church-front, the soldiers
mounted guard at the two gateways. There was only a low wall around
the church precincts. Outside this stood the mass of people, under the
trees, by the tall palm-trunks, crowding round the standing motor
cars that had brought people from the city for Sunday, crowding
round the cantina where drinks were sold, crowding the open-air food
place, a mass of big hats and black reboros in the spangled shadow.
Behind them, the pallor of the lake through the fronds of pepper
trees.
Within the enclosure, in front of the big church-door, the men in
white sarapes opened and formed a half moon. They had all taken off
their hats. At the centre, Don Ramon. And in front of him, in a
straight black cassock, the young assistant priest: the one black blotch
in the fair, strange figures of the men. The crescent of black heads and
dark faces remained unmoved.
A guitar began to strum quietly. The young priest, with his dark,
wooden, stupid-looking face, took a step forward, and in the high,
unnatural voice the people knew so well from church, he began to
intone:
Despedida! Despedida!
Farewell! Farewell ! The last of my days in Mexico has come.
Farewell! Farewell! my people. It is the God Almighty calls
me home.
Back to my Father's house, back to my home in heaven, as fire
goes up to its home in the sky, I go.
I am Jesus, going home. And my mother, the most pure
Mary, with me goes too.
And my saints, the saints ofheaven, will follow me, follow me
home. Saint Francis and Saint Anthony, Saint Joaquin and Saint
Anna, all my faithful ones. With me, Jesus of the Heart, Jesus of
Nazareth, Jesus of Succour, and the Purfsima, they go home.
We go home to my Father, Almighty God, who is lonely,
waiting for us.
Because he has sent his Son, the God Quetzalcoatl, to be God
in Mexico.
And the wife and the cousins ofQuetzalcoatl have started out
on the long
Chapter XI 187
tered the church, followed by the priest and the men wearing white,
brilliant-fringed sarapes.
There was a deathly silence. Then an approach of candles in the
dark.
The priest emerged bearing aloft a crucifiX, with a blood-stained
image of Christ. Followed Don Ramon, naked to the waist, his sarape
over one shoulder, carrying one end of the famous bier whereon lies
the dead Christ of Holy Week. The other end ofthe bier was carried by
a tall, dark man, naked to the waisr. The crowd murmured as if in fear
and doubt, crossed themselves, and some flung their arms apart, and
so remained, arms extended.
After the bier of the Dead Christ, a slow procession of men naked
to the waist carrying liner after liner. On the first, the wooden image
of the Saviour of the Heart with outstretched hands, the well-known
figure from the side altar. Then the second image ofthe Saviour, Jesus
of Nazareth with crown ofthorns. Then the Virgin in her blue mantle
and golden crown. Then the brown Saim Anthony with a child in his
arms. Then Saim Francis looking strangely ar a cross in his hand. Then
Saint Anna. And lastly Saint Joaquin.
The brown-skinned men emerged in the sunlight. The bell was
slowly tolling. Soldiers had made a way through the crowd. The
images glinered in the sun, the glass case of the bier ofthe dead Christ,
a life-size, life-like figure, flashed ahead from the shoulders of the two
powerful men. The strange procession made irs silem way through the
kneeling, moaning crowd. Some women cried aloud, crying: "Purisi
ma, Purisima, don't leave us!", and the men murmured and mur
and raised the crucifix again. The Crucified Jesus, all caked with gore,
turned towards the land. Two men pushed off the boat, and the
crucifiX was slowly rowing away on the pale, smooth, sun-blenched
lake.
Don Ramon came down to the water's edge, with the great bier of
the dead Christ. He and his fellow-bearer waded slowly out to a black
canoe, a big, native boat. Men in the black canoe took the ends of the
bier. The glass case was glittering rather tawdrily within the boat.
With long poles the boatmen pushed off from the shore. Don Ramon
slipped on his sarape and put on his hat, sitting in the bow. The black
canoe was rowing swiftly across the blenched water.
One after another, swiftly, the images were placed in boats, the
boats pushed off, and the slow, irregular procession continued in file
across the surface of the lake, yet rowing swiftly. They were steering
towards the Island of Scorpions, a little islet with a few trees and
bushes plainly visible not far away in the lake, at a distance ofan hour's
row. The tall crucifiX led the way on the smooth water, heaving like a
mast to the pull of the oars. Followed the black canoe with the glass
case. Then the boats with the other images, the well-known, beloved
images of the village, standing erect and small as the boats diminished
on the surface of the water.
The great mass of the people had flooded down the shore to the
water's edge. There they stood, the soldiers on guard preventing any
from wading out to the boats anchored at a little distance from the
shore. Soldiers embarked in two motor-boats, and making a wide
detour, took up guard away on the right and on the left of the slow
convoy of the procession, as they steered for the Isle of the Alacrans.
While on the shore stood the men of the lake, watching with a
fLXed, Indian look as the boats got smaller and smaller, sometimes
shaking their heads and speaking in low tones together, then again
fLXing their eyes on the dots of the boats. The boats grew rapidly
smaller. The people, with a dumb kind of patience, sat down on the
sands, waiting. The bell tolled slowly all the time. Soldiers guarded the
closed door of the church. And people again began to buy ice slush
from the ice-cream man, and water-melons from the great pile of
huge, dark-green globes. In silence a woman bought a melon, re·
turned to her place, smashed the melon open on a stone, and broke it
into pieces for her children. In silence the men sprinkled salt on the
thick slices of cucumber sold by the woman under the tree. They were
all watching, and murmuring among themselves.
1 90 QUETZALCOATL
The bolts were no longer visible, they must have landed. The
crowd on the shore watched intently. There was an exclamation as a
thin thread of smoke mounted in the air. The bells of the church
suddenly clashed. And from the low end of the island our in the lake
rose a ragged, orange-reddish flame, with a fringe ofbluish invisibility
and of smoke. The people were all on their feet again, the men crying
in blind, strange voices Senor!Senor! the women throwing their hands
to heaven and murmuring, moaning Santisima! Santisima! Santisima!
It was noon, and a hor day. The flame and the smoke melted as if
by miracle in the hot air. The opposite side of the lake, through the
filmy air, looked brown and changeless. A cloud was rising from the
south-west, from behind the dry mountains beyond the lake, like a
vast white rail, like the great white fleecy rail of some squirrel that had
just dived behind the mowuains. This tail was fleecing up towards the
sun in the zenith, straight towards the sun. And before the fire had yet
burned out, a delicate film of shadow was over the earth-white lake.
Low on the stony end of the Isle of Scorpions fire still made a reddish
mark on the air, and smoke filmed up. But it was getting less and less,
less and less.
Jesus, and his mother, and the saints were gone, and Chapala was
empty of God. Lost, and deprived of speech, the people drifted away
to their mid-day meal.
1 91
XII
T Kate rook an old Ford car and wem our to Las Yemas. She
HE AFfER_l,IOONS WHEN RAIN DID NOT COME were very hot.
wanted to see Don Ramon and tell him she was in sympathy.
Arrived at the house, which looked shut up, she asked for Dona
Carlota. Two men, mows, were there in the silem courtyard. The
patrona was away: she had returned w Mexico with the boys. Don
Ramon, however, was at home. Kate thought he roo must be prepar
ing w leave, as everything seemed so shut and so silent, lower win
dows all shuttered, doors closed. Only two upper windows open.
The mow looked at her strangely, as if wondering why she had
come. The chauffeur ofher car, who had been speaking with the other
mow in the courtyard ofthe hacienda, came edging towards her at the
same momem as Don Ramon opened the door and appeared on the
threshold. He wore peon's dress, bur of fine white linen, and a heavy
cartridge belt.
"Ah, Mrs. Burns! This is a very great pleasure!"
Kate thought, however, he wasn't very cordial. He seemed ab
stracted.
"Patron! Patronr' said the low voice of the chauffeur, as he edged
nearer.
"What do you wam?" asked Don Ramon, turning w him quickly.
"Am I w stay?" asked the man, in a low voice.
,,
"Yes.
"Patron, I am not armed. Patron!"
"Good! Go w the village and get your arms, then come back."
"I will go, Patr6n."
The man saluted and turned away. In another minute the sound
of a Ford's engine rattled the air. In contrast the hacienda seemed very
still. The wind-mill that was spinning in the wind, drawing up water,
made no sound. The peons had nor yet come in from the fields, where
1 92 QUETZ.ALCOATL
they were planting maize, three grains in each linle hole. The two
mows, who both, she noticed, wore canridge belts, were at the
gateway peering down the road after the depaning automobile.
'Why does he want arms?" asked Kate.
"Oh, they're afraid of bandits again. It is an epidemic."
"Bur are there bandits?"
"They say so. - It is just rogues and scoundrels who get inro
gangs and rake any opponuniry ro way-lay a man if they think he has
money, or capture him if they think a ransom will be paid."
"Bur where do they live? In the hills?"
"In the hills? No! What would they ear and drink in the hills? They
live in the villages, Ajijic, San Pedro, like other people."
"It seems horrid."
She went as usual through ro the inner patio, where was a basin
with a few blue water-lilies. She noticed the big doors ro the lake were
shut. That was strange. They had always been open before, giving a
lovely glimpse through a wide tunnel-archway of the mango-grove
and the lake. Now the patio was shut in. Don Ramon closed the great
door to the entrance courtyard, by which they had entered, and the
two climbed the wide brick steps ro the terrace. There Don Ramon
offered her a chair, and clapped his hands for a maid. Kate sat down,
and saw between the thick mango-trees the ruffled, pale-brown lake,
the dark monntains of the opposite shore, above which lay a heavy bur
distant black cloud, in which lighming flapped suddenly and nneasily.
The wind was strong and cool. No servant appeared.
"I am sorry Dofia Carlota isn't here," said Kate. 'When did she
leave?"
"A week - ten days ago."
"And are you leaving roo?"
"Not immediately."
"Excuse my coming uninvited. I did so want ro tell you how
wonderful I thought it was, Sunday. That seemed ro me real
heroism." - She seemed almost apologetic ro him.
"Heroism?" he smiled - "I don't think there was much danger."
"No, nor that kind of heroism. No -" she said earnestly. "I don't
mean the heroism that faces death. I mean the heroism of- of men -"
When she thought of the scene at the church, she was very much
moved, moved with an emotion that she fonnd almost irksome. She
felt reverence for Don Ramon, and the men in white sarapes.
Don Ramon glanced at her keenly.
Chapter XII 1 93
Kate now heard rhe shor of a pisrol from rhe entrance courtyard,
and a man shrieking in hysterics: "Patni11! Patr611! Patni11!" Then [\\'O
more shors and a bubble of silence. Ramon had gone ro rhe end ofrhe
terrace and wirh long, car-like leaps was springing up rhe narrow stairs
rhar led ro rhe roof. Kate, from rhe doorway where she stood, heard an
explosion and a loud hiss. She saw somerhing swish up past rhe dark
mango trees. A rocker burst in rhe afternoon, cloudy sky, exploding in
rhe air wirh noise of shors, and wirh birs of flame and puffs of smoke
after each deronation in rhe heavens.
"Holli! Friends!" She heard rhe angry, ironic voice ofDon Ramon
from rhe roof above. Such anger rhar it was almost laughing.
A subdued menace of \'Oices carne from rhe invisible courtyard,
and shors.
Kate did nor know what ro do. Again, rhe casual sound ofshors in
rhe afternoon, bur rhis time from abo\·e; and again a muffled shout
from rhe outer courtyard. Kate wanted ro run far, far away. Bur she
could nor. She could not enter rhe dark room he had indicated. So,
trembling, she hurriedly climbed rhe narrow steps up ro rhe roof, rhe
azorea. All seemed quiet rhere.
The roof was flat, bur irregular. It had a low wall round it, and at
each comer a small rower. Trembling, hesitating, she went forward.
She had just come inro sight of rhe open gates of rhe entrance
courtyard, and rhe black hurs on rhe slope just ourside, where all
seemed quiet, rhe country all quiet, when somerhing gave a slight
smack and birs of plaster flew into her face and hair. Speechless wirh
terror she ran back ro rhe rop of rhe steps, where rhere was a linle
rower place, and a srone sear, and a high iron gate rhar stood open. She
sank trembling on ro rhe sear. Looking down rhe narrow brick stair
way, where only one person could come at a time, everything seemed
quiet. She rhoughr she would wait till rhe trouble passed.
The roof was peaceful in sunlight. Trembling in her retreat like a
rabbit in her hole, she could look across rhe roof and see rhe figure [of]
Don Ramon in one of rhe rowers, aiming carefully through a loop
hole. She could nor see his face, bur his figure stood perfectly motion
less , one arm bent, apparently pointing rhe revolver at rhe slit of rhe
loop-hole. He had rhrown off his white blouse, so rhat rhe white
should nor show rhrough rhe embrasure, and stood rhere in rhe
shadow of rhe rurrer, dusky in his brown skin, his cartridge belt heavy
abo\'e his white, loose panrs, his dark head looking intently down
wards.
Chaprer XII 1 95
The sun was shining yellow, the clouds had shifted. Kare saw the
mounrains peaceful in the afrem<XJn lighr, the fleece of young green
fainr and beautiful, now thar the rains had srarred. Don Ramon, she
knew, had a good posirion. He commanded the grear d<XJr of the
house, and also the wide d<XJrs which led through from the enrrance
courtyard ro the garden in fronr of the house, rowards the lake. Kare
knew these d<XJrs were shur: they had been all closed when she arrived.
And she knew the big d<XJrs leading ro the lake were fasr. She only
wondered whar had become of the rwo mozos, and if the one whose
shriek she had heard was dead. She wanred ro know. Thar was why she
had been advancing rowards the paraper.
Occasionally there was a spatter of lead and the mild sound of
shors. Occasionally Don Ramon fired from his vanrage place. He
srood perfecrly srill. Kare could nor see his face, only parr of his back:
the splendid brown shoulders with brown, sofr, fine skin, the beauri
ful black head with thick hair, the slanr of the carrridge belr above his
loins, and the wide, floppy cotton trousers. He had nor seen her.
Evidenrly he did nor know she was there. Thar made her feel lonely,
bur she was also glad. She didn'r wanr him ro be aware of her.
She felr ir wasn'r a very serious business. The afrem<XJn was so
srill . The house was well barricaded. And soldiers would come from
the village. She need only wair a little while. Bur she srarred as Don
Ramon frred again. Every time he fired she srarred, ir seemed so near.
Suddenly she gave a piercing shriek and in one leap was our ofher
rerrear. She had seen a black head ar the bottom of the srairs. Before
she knew where she was she was our on the r<XJf, and Don Ramon was
jumping pasr her like a grear car. Ar the same momenr the man sprang
from the srairs on ro the r<XJf, crash inro Don Ramon. A revolver wenr
off, rwo men were on the fl<XJr. Bur even falling Don Ramon had
dropped his revolver and seized the clothing of the other fellow,
bringing him down with a crash. His hands seemed ro run up the
other fellow's body, ro the wrisr thar srill held a revolver. This revolver
also wenr off, bur Don Ramon had gor the wrisr. A redness of blood
appeared on the whire cotton clothing as the rwo men sprawled on the
fl<XJr, writhing and struggling.
Don Ramon shoured something in Spanish. Kare, in perfea
horror, was oblivious, warching. Ramon had the other, smaller man
by the wrisr and by the hair. The bandir had his reeth in Ramon's
naked arm, and was struggling, flourishing his l<XJse arrn, ro draw his
1 96 QUETZ.ALCOATI.
knife. His ghasrly eyes, with his reeth fiXed in the other man's arm,
were roo horrible. Kare was afraid the loose arm might ger the
revolver on the floor. In horror she ran and picked up the weapon. AI;
she did so her heart stood still, for the bandit had succeeded, with
devilish cunning, in wrenching Ramon's own knife our of irs sheath.
The man seemed like a devil ro her. He could nor ger any play with his
left arm, bur he gave a feeble blow with the knife, sideways, imo
Ramon's naked back.
Kare ran for.vard ro prevem ir. AI; she did so she saw another head
emerge in the srair.vay. The hand thar held the revolver was tense. She
fired srraighr in fronr of her, rwice. A black, hairy head came pitching
ar her. She recoiled in horror. There was red among the hair. The man
fell, and rwirched horribly, face down, his buttocks humped up. Kare
looked ar Don Ramon and saw him, with an absolutely blank face,
striking the other man in the throat with the dagger, once, rwice,
thrice, while blood spurted and there was a noise something like a
soda syphon. Then Ramon, who srill held his enemy by the hair,
watched him, warched the livid, disrorted face with the ghastly eyes in
which the ferocity seemed ro freeze.
Then, withour letting go of the man's hair, he cautiously looked
up. To see the second man, his black hair matted with blood, and
blood running imo his dazed eyes, slowly rising ro his knees. Ir was the
srrangesr face in the world: the high sloping head with the thick hair
all bloody, blood trickling down the narrow, corrugated dark brow
and runn ing along the eye-brows above the dazed, black, numbed
eyes, in which ferocity seemed ro have merged imo a black, numb
wonder, which in rum was merging imo cunning again, on the way
back ro ferocity. Ir was a long, thin, handsome face, with a sparse black
moustache under which showed longish reeth, and the absolute living
nighr of those numbed, wide eyes scaring.
And ins randy Ramon had ler go the hair ofhis victim, whose head
dropped sideways with a ghasrly, gaping red throat, and had risen ro a
crouching posicion. The second man had already drawn his knife. So
the rwo crouched for a momem, the one on his knees, Ramon
squarring. The wounded man reared up a little. And insranrly,
Ramon's knife flashed in the air as he threw ir. lr wem deep in the
man's abdomen. The wounded young bandit srood kneeling a mo
ment as if in prayer. Then slowly he doubled up and wenr on his face
again. Ramon, his face still perfecrly absrracr, his black eyes glittering
Chapter XII 1 97
"He is coming to open the door!" cried Kate, in a high voice. She
hated having to shout. The officer cupped his ear with his hand, and
she had to shout louder. And as she shouted Don Ramon stepped out
ofthe big doorway. The men saluted him, the Captain shook his hand.
But Don Ramon was creamy pale, and when he turned his back, there
was blood from his shoulder to his heels, his cotton pants red and
stuck to his loins. The soldiers in their rather shoddy-looking cotton
uniforms were dismounting from their horses, and wiping their
brows and thick hair with coloured cotton handkerchiefs. They
looked mosdy quite young men, short in stature, with sun-blackened
faces and devil-may-care bearing, real sons of Satan, though not
ill-humoured. Some of them, with a sergeant, had turned over the
body of the dead peon that lay by the wall, and Kate saw the legs of the
dead man suddenly rwitch. Perhaps he was not dead. She looked
round with horror at the dead bodies close behind her. Supposing
they were not dead! - But in the yeUowing light they lay sprawled in
heaps, in the blackening blood. One, her man, wore a workman's grey
blouse and blue cotton trousers. He was surely dead: such a heap. He
had been handsome, when he was alive, taU and fuU of native vigour.
Now he was a heap, his black eyes glassily staring, and the thin line of
black beard that framed his handsome face looking artificial. He was
no longer a man, no longer handsome: just dead, and a heap. Carrion!
Human carrion!
"While some become flesh that they may die and fertilise the
earth."
This sentence from she knew not where carne to her mind and
made her heart sink almost to extinction. Had he been born and
grown and become handsome, so that he might die and serve as a
fertiliser? A fertiliser for other life ? The handsomeness of these dark
natives became repugnant to her. Even handsomeness like Don
Ramon's. A heavy repugnance filled her sunken heart. And for a pure
moment she wished for men who were not handsome, women who
were not beautiful. People who were neither ugly nor beautiful, but
reaUy themselves. People who were not carrion when they were dead.
Her husband had not been carrion. No. He looked like a man who had
made a fatal mistake, and who was returning home sadder and wiser.
So he looked when he was dead. Taking home with him into death a
sad, heavy secret of failure, but a treasure all the same.
She sat in the comer of one of the towers and again wept bitterly.
200 QUETZ.ALCOATL
There was no help for it, only bitter tears. Neither the gold of evening
nor the red of darkening blood mattered to her any more. At this
moment neither Mexico nor Ireland existed. Only bitter tears which
blotted out the world and the reality of men.
She was aroused by the appearance of the Captain, followed by a
woman servant and four soldiers. She hid her tears hastily, and tried to
look bright. The Captain saluted. The woman-servant, hardly notic
ing the dead bodies, came to her and stroked her hand.
"Do you feel ill, Senora? Don Ramon says won't you come
down?"
Kate rose to follow the woman. She didn't want her hand stroked.
She did not want to be touched.
Don Ramon sat in a leather garden-chair in the courtyard, still in
his blood and half-nakedness. He lifted his eyes as Kate came down,
black eyes in which the soul had retreated very remote. And he rose
from his seat, stretching out his hand that was streaked with dried
blood.
"Thank you for saving my life," he said, "and forgive me for
lening you stay - for not sending you back at once in your car."
It was evident he made the speech with effort, because he had it on
his mind, prepared.
"But you didn't know," she said, "that this would happen."
"Yes, we knew. I was ready. The servants had run out to hide. But
we had expected this attack before, and I despise false alarms. And
perhaps I wanted your help. So now I must thank you very much."
His face was creamy brown, his eyes black and remote, he seemed
to make the words from his lips as he stood before her.
"Wouldn't it have been better if you had soldiers to defend you?"
she asked.
"I wished to try without soldiers. With your help."
"Won't you go to bed .md have a doctor?" she said.
''Yes. But it is nothing. It is when the soul feels stabbed -" And he
looked at her with a strange dumb pathos.
She knew that feeling too: as if her soul were stabbed. The tears
that darkened the world rose to her eyes again, and she was aware of
nothing for a moment.
The soldiers were carrying out the dead bodies of the men from
the roof. They laid them beside the dead peon. Kate now realised that
most of the horse-soldiers had ridden away. Only half a dozen re-
Chapter XII 201
XIII
noticed that lately there seemed a conspiracy to get money out of her.
Felipa, whom she had thought at first so honest, now came almost
every day, saying: "Nifia, how dear everything is here! Oranges are ten
centavos each. The woman wanted twelve centavos, but I said etc.
etc." Now Kate didn't care about the few centavos. But she did resent
having even one centavo bullied out of her.
She realised she had made a sad mistake. In buying new boots for
Felipa, and having a doctor to attend to her sore feet: in making new
frocks for the girls, and giving a dress of her own to Felipa: in
providing them all with money for feast days, she had spoilt them.
They now only thought ofwhat they were going to get next. Appetite
was awakened, and they were quiet, heavy leeches. That was how she
felt them: quiet, heavy leeches on her.
Then the lack of honour. She knew that Felipa entered into a
conspiracy with her acquaintances in the village, to get a higher price
than the just price out of the Nifia. The ordinary townspeople, boot
makers and carters and shop-keepers, were all conveniently bolshevis
tic, or communistic in creed. And being bolshevistic or communistic
means that you hinge your whole life on acquiring, by force, the
possessions of your richer neighbour. The naked, hideous, hyaena
like struggle and russle over possessions.
Now Kate had thought out this possessions problem long ago.
She was born into the possessing class, though she was never rich. She
had married an idealist whose one idea was liberty and happiness for
the poor of his native land. "Give all thou hast to the poor ."
She had realised that this command was specific: it was a com
mand given to just one man. Probably he needed to give all he had to
the poor. But she herself, who was too honestly struggling with her
soul, to make life more living, was she to give her little income to these
204 QUETZALCOATI.
and a little more. Kate realised that the people didn't respect her,
because she clidn't fight for every centavo. They jll5t did not respect
her.
But she refused to fight for every centavo. If life was no more than
a fight for centavos, better be: dead. "Became flesh so that they should
clie and fertilise the earth ." This seemed to her the last truth about
these people. When Juana belched in her face, she smelt the human
animal destined to become manure. These people should die, and
fertilise the earth for a higher race, with greater souls.
So she felt, in the terrible reaction after the fight at Don Ramon's
house. She felt she had been stabbed in her soul. The so-called bandits
that had attacked the house were only a gang of ne'er-do-wells from
Chapala and the neighbouring villages, egged on by the priests. Don
Ramon had been warned. His peons had got wind of the intending
attack. Yet nobody moved to protect him or help him. :-:one of his
servants. :s"obody. He could have had solcliers for the asking. He
preferred to try alone.
The emptiness of the people. They had no souls. There was no
answer in them.
Again her heart fell dead in her breast, her soul felt as if it were
bleeding inside her. And a great, grievoll5 bitterness and a slow,
burning desire for revenge was at the bottom of her soul.
"'Felipa," she said, "have you brought my sandals from the shoe-
maker?"
�o, :s"ifia. I Y.i.l..l go and ask him how much they are."
"'Better take the money and pay for them."
Felipa took two pesos, and set off. It was a sunny morning after
rain, the birds were lively. Kate was beginn ing to feel restored. She
wanted the life of the morning, the green of the tropical leaves, the
white of the perfumed oleander in the garden, the red ba!ls of the
double hibiscus hanging from the bush, the scarlet-headed birds
dashing at the rub of rain-water, to drink, and the big grey humming
bird hanging before the flowers.
But no. Back came Felipa creeping, followed by a fellow holding
the sandals.
"':s"ifia! :s"ifia !" How Kate had come to hate the sneaking call . -
"'Ah ! Here is the man with the sandals! Look how well he has done
them."
The morning went black for Kate.
206 QUETZALCOATL
never to have let them come near. I should have kept them back.,
down, in their own place. I have betrayed myself."
As she sat thus musing, she saw General Viedma, in uniform, pass
the window. She sprang up to escape, for she was in a common, cotton
house-dress, bare-footed, wearing Indian sandals. There was, how
ever, no escape, because he had glanced through the big open window
as she sprang up startled, and, slightly startled himself, saluted her in
passing. She twitched at her dress and felt her hair. She knew she
looked her worst, because her eyes hurt her: the sun or the hot wind
had got them. But there was no escape. He was there in the open
doorway on the verandah. She recovered herself and went forward to
him.
"This is the first moment I could come to see you," he said. "I
went to Ramon last night."
"How is he?" she replied. "Do sit down."
He bowed, and sat in the other big looped rocking-chair, op
posite her. He sat quite still, and she tried to prevent herself falling
again into the uneasy rhythm of her rocker. Cipriano's face was
motionless, expressionless. His mouth was closed firm under the
clipped black beard, his thick hair brushed sideways over his forehead.
He slowly turned his military cap on his knee.
"Ramon is weU," he replied, "or almost weU. He was hurt very
little. We have to thank you for saving his life. " The General was grave.
"I don't know," she said. "My part of it did itself by accident."
She had again started to rock in the unhappy rhythm ofthe chair.
The sun had caught her face, it looked scorched, her eyelids looked
burnt. She felt she was awful. Cipriano looked at her with his full,
strange black eyes, less human than Don Ramon's. The eyes of a
soldier who sees beyond human lives, counts human lives as nothing,
having some further, dangerous purpose.
"You saved Ramon's life," he repeated gravely, his great, black.,
sombre eyes still on Kate's face, so that she felt the powerful, inhuman
qualiry of his will. "And saving that, you saved more than my life for
me."
"Why?" she asked bluntly. She wished he would cease looking at
her in that inhuman way, overpowering her.
"Why? Because Ramon means more than my life to me. He
creates hope for me. He gives me something at last to do. But for
Ramon there would be no light in my sky, and my heart would be
dead."
208
Kate quailed before the srres.s of dill utterance. .�d she felr a riny
twinge oi jcak>usy.
"1 "·am you to understand this." he added. hea'i�·.
'"Why do you wam me to understand ir?� she replied. rocking
qwckcr in her chair and feeling rather like a ,;com.
"Because you belong to us now.�
'"Don't I ha,·e any choice?" she laughed. She was frightened ofhis
h�vy face and his black. fixed. heavy eyes. She wanted him to laugh
[00.
Bur his soul was heavy, he didn't laugh . •�d the attempt died on
her face.
"As I see it. you ha,·e no choice.," he replied.
"But don't be so solemn about it," she laughed, her soul recoiling
from his hea,·y black srres.s, "o r I shall run."
Bur !l()[ a muscle ilickered in his s.et iace, his black eyes changed
nor the slightest in their black intensity.
"1 don"r wish to laugh." he said, ,,;th a certain dignity; looking
away to the ,·erandah where Fehpa had just appeared.
"�iiia!" cried Fehpa. -�iiia ! Don .�tonio says he is coming to
see you."
""When?" said Kate.
"�ow. He says he is coming at once."
"Go and tell him I will see him dill afternoon ar fi,·e o'clock."
"Ah! You won't see him now? He will be on the wa\·. Look ! He is
here!"
Kate sa,,. the srour figure of her landlord on the walk outside the
''indow, riling off his har and bo''ing low to her. She looked at him
as if he were nor there. Then she turned to Felipa.
'"Tell him.� she said coldly . .�d she sat rigid in her chair.
"Ah!" exclaimed Felipa. gasping. .�d she scuttled round to the
pathway b�· the gate., where her low volubility could be heard, rather
plainci,·e., to Don .�ronio. To dill fat lmdlord she was all humble. He
was much more impon:ant to h er r:hm her :-\iiia .
Don .�tonio raised his cap - he wore a cloth cap. of all things, in
dill land oi huge hats - and again bowed low from the pathway
beyond the \\indow. Kate nodded coldly. Then Felipa scuttled into
the doorway again.
"He says he ''ill come at fi,·e. - Shall I bring anything?"
"'\\-ill you drink anything, General \Tiedma?" asked Kate.
Chapter XIII 209
"Nothing," he said.
"Nothing," repeated Kate to Felipa. "And don't trouble me
again."
"Very good!" retorted Felipa, drawing her black rebozo about
her.
This time Viedma smiled a little, meeting Kate's angry eyes.
"Who is Don Antonio?" he asked.
She told him, adding in the same breath:
"He wants to see me because I have sent a note to tell him that I
am leaving this house at the end of the month."
"You have decided to leave?"
''Yes, I want to go."
"\Vhere wiU you go?"
"To New York - then to England."
"At the end of the month?"
"Before then. In three weeks' rime. I must go in three weeks."
"Why must?"
"Oh, I have had enough. I have had enough. It is like being in a
black bog, and sinking in, all the time sinking in. I must go in three
weeks."
"What is like a black bog? Mexico?"
''Yes. These people. The servants. Everybody. AU the people that
Don Ramon is trying to do something for. Like a black bog. They are
like the bottomless pit. Everything just sinks into nothingness in
them. It seems to me they could swallow the universe and leave
nothing to show. Ah no, I want to go, I want to go. They have nearly
swallowed me already."
She now had lifted her scorched face like a mask, the laughter
gone away from her. She was rocking fatally, automatically in her
chair.
"That is just what we must prevent," he said.
"You can't prevent it," she cried. "I knew it when I first saw
Mexico from the train - all the ruins of the things the Spaniards had
put up. It is a bog, and everything sinks and at last collapses. If the
United States took over Mexico, Mexico would swallow up the
United States in her bottomless pit. These people are a bog, a bottom·
less bog, that slowly swallows everything up. - Oh, I feel there is
nothing on this continent but negation, negation, negation, and evil
negative gods, that swallow life back. There is nothing else. And I
can't bear it."
210 QUETZALCOATL
may die in the bog of themselves, or in the prison, whichever way you
like to put it. But since I know Ramon I know that there is a solid
pathway out of the bog, and a hole in the wall of the prison. Since I
know Ramon I know this, and I will never again change from know
ing it."
"It may be," she said, rocking violently. "But I don't see it myself."
"I see," he said, "that Ramon is not a bog, in the first place. He is a
man that will never collapse, and can never collapse."
"What if the bandits had killed him?" blurted Kate.
"They did rwt kill him - You were there," replied Cipriano.
"They nearly did."
"They could never kill him."
"But if they did?"
"Then let me die too, and let the bottomless pit swallow Mexico
and all the Mexicans. - But those are words. No one could kill him, he
is beyond it."
"A bullet will kill him as easily as it will kill me," said Kate. "Think
if! had not happened to be there on that roofl Think of that horrible
peon who ran up those stairs. Ah, how can I forget it! There seems to
be evil at the back of one all the time, evil at the back of one. All the
mass ofevil there is at the back ofDon Ramon: and him with his naked
back that any mean knife or bullet can cut into. No, it's horrible."
''We will always guard him from behind," said Cipriano.
"How can we!" Her face changed suddenly. "How did those two
men get upstairs?" she asked, with sudden interest.
He smiled a slight, sardonic smile.
''There are mango trees growing near the east end of the house,
are there not, towards the lake?"
"'Yes," said Kate. "I remember."
"And the balcony-room at the end of the upstairs terrace has a
lattice window which opens towards these mango trees."
"That I have not noticed."
"'Yes, it has. So! Ifthe lattice-window is open, a man who can give
a long leap can leap from a bough of the mango tree on to that
window-sill. But it is dangerous, because if he falls he falls on to those
rocks that are made into rough steps, sloping down towards the lake."
"Why was the lattice-window open?"
"Because one ofthe mozos opened it, some days before the attack,
and no-one noticed. The same mozo told one man. Whoever killed
212 QUETZALCOATL
Don Ramon was ro get a large reward. The mow was to share this
reward. - So, the man from Ajijic, who was the mow's brother-in
law, jumped first. Then the boatman, who had been running round ro
look for a way into the house, jumped too. After which the mow
himself jumped, but missed, and fell on to the rocks, breaking his leg
very badly and injuring himself inside. Then apparently the soldiers
came. One of the soldiers found the mow, who thought himself
dying. When the motor-car returned with the doctor and the priest,
the mow insisted on confessing there and then - and Don Ramon
and the doctor both heard the confession."
"A traitor as usual," said Kate bitterly. "Have they cut the bough
down?"
"They have cut the bough down."
"And did he die?"
"�o, he is getting better."
"Then I hope he will be hanged."
"Yes, we shall hang him."
"How I wathe a traitor! Bur somebody would always be a traitor in
this country."
"We will try to exterminate the creatures," said Cipriano.
"I don't like Don Ramon, that he has a Judas," said Kate, rocking
angrily. "I wathe Judases, and I loathe men who are betrayed by
them."
"This one will betray no more," said Cipriano.
He glanced round at the clock.
"I must go," he said. "I am going to the end of the lake, in a
motor-boat. I don't know if it would please you to come too - your
woman could go with you."
Kate was not in much mood for outings. Yet rather than sit and
rock and do nothing, she consented. Felipa ofcourse was in a seventh
heaven, dumb with bliss.
It was a fairly large boat, with a boatman and two armed soldiers.
Cipriano had his revolvers at his side. Felipa sat in the front seat. The
wind was fresh, the boat rose to meet the little wa\·es with a smack. On
the right, the high, dry, mountains, just coming green, rose pre
cipitous from the low strip of shore, that was sometimes green and
fleecy with willows, then again bare. Sometimes a white church tower
among trees. Sometimes natives on donkeys. Sometimes bits of
ploughed fields with stone walls.
Chapter XIII 213
side, between the long harp-strings of the warp, and pressing down
each thread of this woof with the wooden bar, then treadling to
change the long, fine threads of the warp.
They were weaving the sarapes for Don Ramon. In the shadow of
the mud, the white wool looked like something mystical, especially
rayed with scarlet and blue. And the work went on without ceasing,
the carding, the spinning, the weaving, while the soldiers stood in the
dark doorway, and the one-eyed man was showing Cipriano two
finished sarapes, one all white with a fine centre of blue and black
diamonds, the other white with red and blue bars. They reminded
Kate of beautiful striped synagogue robes. And they were finely,
beautifully woven, of delicate wool, for the one-eyed man was a
master.
''White and blue and black are the colours of Quetzalcoatl," said
Cipriano to Kate. ''This with the colour at the middle is for the day of
petition."
"And what is the one with red and blue bars for?" she asked,
wondering.
"For the messengers of Huitzilopochtli," he replied.
She ate in a little fonda, while Cipriano attended to business in the
barracks. The eternal hot soup, and rice cooked in grease, scraps of
dead boiled meat, and a mess of little squash vegetables: always the
same. And the hostess, a nice woman, running every minute with one
or two more tonillas, hot from the fire. Ah it was so hot! And nothing
but bottled beer to drink, because the water smelled slightly.
It was one of those bad periods when the rains seem strangled,
and the air is thick with thunder, silent, ponderous thunder in the air
from day to day, mixed with thick, strong sunshine. Kate often felt
that between the volcanic violence under the earth, and the electric
violence of the air above, it was no wonder that men were dark and
incalculable. One walked a narrow level between two spheres of
violent force, an upper and a nether mill-stone. The west wind seemed
fresh, but it was a running mass of electricity that burned her face and
her eyes and hutt the roots of her hair. She simply felt she could not
live. And she looked at the dark natives with resentment. Like sala
manders they seemed, full of sulphur and dormant, diabolic electric
ity. They did not suffer from these days. Only they seemed wicked,
demonish.
Chapter XIII 215
It was some distance from the plaza ro the shore, down the black,
shattered, sun-ruined street trailing blindly. But Cipriano had got a
donkey for her, with a sort of chair side-saddle, and a horse for himself,
and a donkey for Fclipa. As he sat there on the light, beautiful arab
horse, moving with it like one flesh, and looking down at her with
dark eyes, she suddenly saw how different his blood was from hers,
darker, foreign as the blood of an animal or a lizard. She could almost
feel the powerful yet stealthy surge of his blood, a sort of dark river
softly lapping, and full of sulphur and electricity, corrosive. She
shrank away from this blood-presence, which seemed almost likely to
envelop her.
For the first time she felt definitely the terrible difference between
his blood and her own. And he wanted their rwo blood-streams to
meet and mingle. That was what he was after. She knew it. Pursuing
her as ifshe were some prey that was cool and thirst-quenching to him,
as cats with their sulphurcous blood arc fascinated by cool, watery
fish. She remembered the story that he had serpent's poison in his
blood, and that his bite was venomous. She felt it might easily be so.
He looked down at her as he rode, with centuries ofdark waiting in his
eyes, and centuries ofslow pertinacity. And her breast seemed to wilt.
She felt that never, never could she give her blood to contact with him.
As if, were she to do so, a stream of dark, corrosive effluence would
enter her from him, and hurt her so much she would be destroyed. -
No, the thing she had to do was to preserve her own integrity and
purity. She understood why half-breeds were usually all half souled
and half unnatural.
They reached the silent shore of the lake end, where the delicate
fishing-nets were hung in long lines and blowing in the wind, loop
after loop after loop striding above the stones and blowing delicately
in the wind. The flat land was cultivated, with half-grown maize
waving its flags, and some scattered willow trees soft and fleecy green
coming down to the wide flat shingle where the lake gave out. A
group of white-clad fishermen were holding a conclave in a dug-out
hollow by a tree. They saluted and lifted their hats. And as their black
eyes looked up, she saw how they were one blood with Cipriano, but
how they were the death of her.
The lake stretched pale and unreal, far, far away into the invisible,
with dimmed mountains on either side rising bare and abstract. Away
on the shallows ncar at hand rode [the) white motor-boat, and three
216 QUE17.ALCOATI.
horse again joyfully pawed rhe warm water. It was splashing all the
handsome leather harness, bur the man would make His Excellency
responsible for that.
The lake end, the deserr of shingle, the blowing, gauzy nets
beyond, and beyond them, the black land with green maize standing,
and furrher fleecy green trees, the broken lane leading inro the trees.
There was a ranch, too, a long, low black building and a cluster of
black huts with red tiles, empty gardens with reed fences, clumps of
banana and willow trees. All in the changeless heavy light of the
afternoon, the long lake reaching inro invisibility, between its moun
tains.
"I think the lake is beautiful here," said Kate. "One could almost
live here."
"Do you know what is Ramon's idea?" he replied, looking at her
with curious subtle eyes. "Later on we shall make all the land for some
distance, five miles, ten miles round this little town, belong to the
commune. And some the commune will divide out among the fami
lies. And some the commune will keep, and will work with hired
labour of young men. And we shall establish a system something like
the old Indian village system, with a war chief, and a cacique, and a
peace chief. But also a chieftainess, and a woman cacique who will
suffer with the women. Then the women will weave again in their
houses, and spin for themselves. And the woman of peace will be
chieftainess of them all. And the peace chief of the men will divide the
land and be chief judge and the living Quetzalcoatl."
"You can't have a living Quetzalcoatl," she said.
"Why not? In China there is the living Buddha, when they
celebrate their great man. The living Quetzalcoatl in every pueblo will
be the peace chief, in whom the God lives most. Ramon is the living
Quetzalcoatl of Mexico."
"And what are you?"
"I am the living Huitzilopochtli."
He looked into her eyes as he spoke, and the strange dark fluid
power seemed to flow from his eyes. He neither smiled nor deprecated
his words. It was evident that he felt in himself the presence of a
god-power.
"Ramon is the living Quetzalcoatl," he repeated. "He is only a
man, and he knows it. He has all the weaknesses of a man, and he
knows that too. But the deepest root of his soul goes down to God,
and he rises from God, and he is the living Quetzalcoatl."
Chapter XIII 219
understand rhar word love. I have known desire. And the white
woman who adopted me for a rime was a wonder-woman ro me, yes,
like a sort of goddess. Bur I knew no god in myself then. I never knew
the god in myself rill Ramon raughr me. And now I am no longer a
man desiring a woman. I am a god-man asking for the god-woman
who belongs ro his destiny."
"Bur for all that," said Kate, "there is a good deal ofordinary male
desire in ir, apart from high words."
His eyes looked angry, fLXed on hers.
"That is rrue," he replied. "I am an ordinary male. Bur ifir were no
more than the ordinary male in me desiring you, I would forger you. I
have my moments of desire for women, when the girl has dark eyes
with far, yielding distances in them. - Bur I pur these desires away,
and forger the girl utterly."
"Perhaps you shouldn't," said Kate.
"What?"
"Forger the girl so utterly, if she attracts you."
His face rurned away from her, and became remote again.
"I roo used ro think that. Bur Ramon raughr me the god in me,
and the god in me has irs own deep, unchanging desires. So I have
decided ro give up the little changing desires of the man in me, ro be
true ro the long, enduring desire of the god in me. I am learning how
nor ro forger the god in me, and how ro forget the man in me. I am the
living Huitzilopochtli, and I am Cipriano Viedma. But the most of me
is the living Huitzilopochtli."
"It's a hard name to remember, anyhow," said Kate.
He laughed quickly.
"Cipriano Viedma is much easier?" he asked. "I don't see why. It
is just as long. You think it would be better for some brown-skinned
girl ro be Senora Viedma, than for you ro be the w i fe of
Huitzilopochtli? - No!" he shook his head. "I am the living Huitzilo
pochtli. Ramon is the living Quetzalcoatl. My destiny lies that way."
The motor-boar, with the waves behind, was running quickly
along the pale water, that looked like brownish milk of fishes, as Owen
said. Felipa, in the front scat, had the glazed, srupefied mask-face of
the people when they arc sleepy. She would soon give up, and curl on
the seat. The rwo soldiers behind were already asleep in the bottom of
the boat, rwo little heaps lying in contact. Human men! But so near
the animal. She could understand Cipriano's insistence on his own
Chapter XIII 221
godliness. The boatman, a tall handsome fellow, sat erect in the stern
by the pulsing motor, gazing ahead under the shadow of his great hat,
whose chin-ribbon fell black against his cheek. He was almost as still as
an image. There was something god-like about him too, but the
strange empty godliness of a pre-human being, rather than the godli
ness of the super-human.
Cipriano, in a white uniform and high black riding-boots, sat on
the seat facing her, spreading his arms along the back of the seat, and
relaxing to the motion of the boat. For an Indian, he was rather thin,
his cartridge-belt sagged on his hips. His cap lay on the seat beside
him, and the wind blew his thick black hair across his forehead. He
was screwing up his eyes a little, because of the light that came back
from the lake, and gazing at the shore without seeing anything. The
white awning flapped overhead, and he lifted his hand unconsciously,
holding down one of the side-flaps.
Seated thus, quite still and given to the motion of the boat, he
looked good-humoured and debonair, like any other man, except for
his black beard, which was unusual among his people. Yet even in
repose his face had some of that demon-like resolution which fright
ened Kate. And she had learned to see, in the amiable Indian contours,
the stealthy flow ofa powerful, masterful dark blood, that was waiting
darkly for the moment when it could re-gain mastery. The repose, the
self-restraint, and the waiting, stealthy, devilish masterfulness.
It seemed to her that though he could communicate with her in
words, in language, in ideas, this currency of all mankind, there was
absolutely no communication between his blood and hers. She mis
trusted and feared that dark, stealthy, tyrannous blood in him, in spite
of all his words. Ir seemed to her he wanted to obliterate her.
And yet - if she should accept her own god-being� If she should
accept herself as a goddess, in so far as her nature was rooted in God
and flowering from God! If she could accept the god-woman in
herself, accept herselfas god-woman, and live as a god-woman, be as a
god-woman ! If she could dare to undertake the life of the living
Malinchi, as he put it, wouldn't she dare to meet him then?.Wouldn't
she dare risk the terrible ordeal of blood-contact, meet the man in him
with the woman in her, blood to blood)
But her soul shrank away from the thought. Oh, she wanted to be
left alone, to remain alone, apart, just true to her solitary self, for the
rest of her days. She had been through the great experience ofwoman-
222 QUETZALCOATI.
hood, wife-hood, mother-hood. Now, at her age, she could be still for
the rest of her days. Her soul could not rouse and answer any more
calls. Especially the great soul-effort she would have to make, to
answer this man in his overbearing demand for the god-woman in her.
No no, she wanted peace.
But she could see now, at last, the possibilities. Himself, the living
Huitzilopochtli. Herself, the living Malinchi. A union ofthe god-man
in him with the god-woman in her. Whether the union took place or
not, he would go forward as the god-man, the living Huitzilopochtli.
He had such an immense belief in Ramon Carrasco. The living
Quetzalcoatl. In spite of herself, she could not think of Ramon as the
living Quetzalcoatl without being impressed. Cipriano, sitting there
with his arms spread out and his white uniform crumpling up on his
chest, he was a little bit absurd as the living Huitzilopochtli. Just a bit
ridiculous. Until you met his eyes, as she just happened to, with the
dark, unchanging resolute power in them. And then you felt another
atmosphere deepen around you, in which the silent, resolute Huitzilo
pochtli was more real than General Viedma in his uniform.
"And does the living Quetzalcoatl find no goddess for himself?"
she asked, half mocking, half earnest.
"\Vho knows!" he answered.
"Because Dona Carlota will never be guilty of such impiety."
He smiled slowly and shook his head, tightening his eyes.
"Who knows!" he said again. "It would be good if Ramon too
found a real woman. I think it would. But we can do nothing till she
appears."
"No. - I prefer your gods for that, anyhow, that they are not
intended to be womanless," she said.
"No, they are not intended to be womanless," he replied smiling.
"But perhaps the living Quetzalcoatl will be womanless now. Perhaps
he has passed into a certain loneliness. The woman belonged to the
man. Perhaps the returned Quetzalcoatl has no woman. Who
knows?"
The breeze had been gradually dying. Suddenly the motor stop
ped dead, the waves lurched the boat. Everybody looked up, Felipa
awoke.
"What is it?" asked Cipriano.
"I think we want more gasoline, Excellency," said the wide-eyed
boatman, who was standing over the engine, abandoning the tiller.
Chaprer XIII 223
The boar swung and drifted, veering round. They were rowards rhe
shore, nor far from where rhe whire rower of San Amonio rose from
rhe rrees in rhe near disrance. And rhe waves drifted rhem and spun rhe
boar slowly round.
"Is rhe warer coming?" asked Cipriano.
"I believe ir is, Excellency."
"The rain?" said Kare, who never quire gor used ro rhe word water
as meaning rain.
"I rhink so," said Cipriano.
"Yes ! Yes!" said Felipa. ''The warer is coming. Look!"
She poimed ro a place where rhe black clouds were rushing up like
smoke from behind rhe mounrains, and anorher place farrher off
where grear banks were rising wirh srrange suddenness. The air
seemed ro be knitting rogerher overhead. Lighrning flashed in several
places, and rhunder muttered. Srill rhe boar drifted, as rhe man
pottered wirh rhe machinery. Then ar lasr he gor rhe moror going
again, only ro srop ir after a minure. He rolled up his rrousers and ro
Kare's amazemenr srepped over rhe side of rhe boar. Though rhey
were quire far, compararively, from rhe shore, rhe warer was nor up ro
his knees. So shallow was rhe lake. And rhe warer always filmy, you
could never look imo ir. He walked slowly in rhe warer, pushing rhe
boar before him, rowards rhe deeper places.
"How deep is rhe lake furrher in?" asked Kare.
"There, Senora, where you see rhe birds wirh rhe whire breasrs
swimming, ir is eighr and a half merres," said rhe man, poiming as he
walked.
''We musr make hasre," said Cipriano, "if rhe warer is coming."
"Yes, Excellency!" - And rhe man srepped on board, wirh a srride
of his long, brown, handsome legs. The moror was sputtering again,
rhe boar was rravelling before rhe waves. A new, more chilly wind was
springing up. Bur away ahead rhey could see rhe sprinkled whire
buildings of Chapala among rhe rrees of rhe fore-shore, and rhe rwo
whire rowers of rhe church like candles, and rhe small whire boars laid
up ar rhe warer's edge like a long row of whire pigs sleeping. On rhe
left, jusr inside a flar promonrory, was Las Yemas rising from irs dark
mango-rrees, rhe pale, primrose-yellow of rhe upper srorey looking
like sulphur above rhe black-green rrees. The gares ofrhc house ar rhe
end of rhe mango-avenue were open, you could gcr a glimpse of
flowers and rhe rwo palrn-rrees rising up, and whire door-arches.
224 QUETl.ALCOATL
Then only the black huts of the peons above the mango-trees and the
bananas: peon women washing in the lake, kneeling on the stones in
front of the bright green willow trees, where a small stream ran in.
"Didn't you want to land at Las Yemas?" asked Kate.
"! must go to Chapala first."
It was a race between the boat and the rain. A cool wind was
spinning round in the heavens. Black clouds were piling up. But the
first villas of the pueblo were already abreast.
The rain had just begun when Felipa and Kate ran through the
gateway under the cuenta tree. It was about four in the afternoon. The
wind hissed in the leaves, and suddenly the rain was streaming down
in a white smoke of power. The water-spout from the verandah
poured a great jet. Pedra, like a little demon in a pink rag of a frock,
was scooting out and putting a pail under the jet. Up it splashed into
her face. Juana was crouching on the ground holding a big red
water-jar under a thin stream, and Carmen, the bride, was skipping
excitedly back and forth along the edge of the downpour, holding her
skirts back from her bare brown legs, dabbling her bare feet, and
skipping away again, self-conscious still from her bridal self
consciousness. What a queer, stiffway they all had, ungraceful, yet not
ugly! Their backbones too hard, too insentient, Kate thought.
In a minute Felipa had got out of her black skirt and her boors,
and was splashing in the rain in her under-skirt, collecting water. Kate
had to do the same. She slipped on a plain cotton frock and ran out
with an umbrella, barefoot, bare-legged, into the solid white smoke of
the downpour. It almost smashed her umbrella in above her head. She
had to run back. Water, cool water was dancing up madly from the
earth, and rushing with a smoke of speed down from heaven.
225
XIV
road with a ploughed field on one hand and the high wall of an orange
and banana orchard on the other. The window was the west window,
the one that admitted the fresh west wind. But it had to be shut at
night, much to her chagrin. The nights still had their terrors, and it
needed all Rafael's pistol outside her door to reassure her.
Usually, at dawn she got up and opened the big window to look
out. Already silent women were going down to the lake with red,
pumpkin-smooth water jars, silent little girls in their raggy reboros
were going barefoot, with smaller jars, the aguador was trotting
barefoot, his two cans hanging from a pole, a man on horseback was
walking behind four silent cows, and two ragged boys were distantly
following a brown goat, two towsled black sheep, a hairy frizzy brown
pig with three little ones. And down the damp road they all trailed
silent and inconsequent, with the unspeakable dumbness of the night
and the country upon them. Ifshe did not open her window she heard
no sound, save perhaps the shuffle and rustle of sheep's footsteps, or
the subdued little grunt ofa pig, or perhaps the low voices oftwo little
girls resting their water-jars on her window-sill, which came down
low almost to the road.
For, Kate had realised, it was the fashion in Mexico to have
windows opening straight on to the pavement and reaching almost to
the ground; which windows, especially on holidays when you have
put flowers on the table and arranged everything like a display, you
leave wide open so that the lucky passers-by can stay and feast their
eyes. To stand staring in at a big open window is not rude, but almost
an essential act of politeness.
Kate, however, continually thwarted Felipa's longings for a dis
play by keeping the sala window closed and shuttered. Her bedroom
window she could not keep shut.
226 QUETZ.ALCOATI.
She opened it at dawn, and looked down to the lake. The sun had
come, and queer blo�· shadows were on the mountains across the
lake. \\'ay down at the water's edge a woman was pouring water from
a calabash bowl over a statuesque pig, dipping rapidly and assiduous
ly: the little group seen in silhouette against the pale dun lake.
But she could not stand at her window. As if by magic appeared
an old woman with a wooden dish of green chopped-up nopales, the
tender leaves of the big cactus chopped up small for a vegetable,
thrusting the dish at Kate, who stood there in her nightdress. And
Kate bought three centavos worth, on a plate from the sala. Instantly a
little girl appeared, unfolding three eggs from the corner ofher ragged
rebozo, and thrust them imploringly towards Kate. At fi,·e centa,·os!
Kate bought them. She saw an old man hobbling for all he was worth,
just as the sunshine flooded into the road, and she turned to flee,
knowing he had a sad story for her.
At the same instant she realised the sun was on all the orange trees
beyond the wall opposite, deep gold, and her heart started to a sound
which is strange, frightening, and at the same time familiar from past
ages in the blood of all men: the rapid, savage beating of drums the ,
vibration of rom-toms. She knew the sound rising in the tropical dusk
at nightfall from the temples in Ceylon. She knew it pulsing from the
roofs of the big houses of the pueblo Indians in Arizona, in the desert.
�ow, most frightening of all , she heard the rapid, summoning noise
in the Mexican sunrise. A violent throbbing of two drums pulsing
unevenly against one another, then slowing down, then falling into
one slow, continual, monotonous note, thrum! - thrum! - thrum! -
thrum! - thrum! - thrum! - like great drops of sound distilling dark
and fallin g plumb out of the dawn on to the inner consciousness. She
always felt that rom-toms resounded straight upon her solar plexus.
The sound came from the church. Beyond the orange garden
directly facing her window rose three tall, handsome, shaggy palm
trees, side by side. And from the very top of each outer palm-tree, like
a crest, she had looked at it ofren, rose the two Larin crosses that
finished the church-rowers. The towers themselves were not visible.
The trees were exactly in front of them. And exactly from the sununirs
of the green, huge palms, rose the two crosses. And now she saw that
these crosses were enclosed in a golden ring. The original shapely iron
crosses of openwork metal, dark within a glittering gold ring, in the
heavy morning light.
The two drums suddenly were bearing against one another once
Chapter XIV 227
more, making the whole air of the morning throb with a swnmons
that sounded almost sinister. Kate felt her hands flutter on her wrists,
with fear.
"�iila! �ina!" cried Felipa's voice outside on the verandah. "Lis
ten! Listen to what they are doing in the church, �iila."
She was frightened. Rafael, who lay later on his mattress outside
Kate's door, on Sundays, was speaking in his deep, half-broken voice,
hitching his loose pants around him. Kate went to the door and
looked into Felipa's black eyes. Usually she forgot that Felipa was
dark. For days she would not realise that the woman was different
from herself. Till she met the black, void-black eyes with the glint of
light on them. And then Kate was always startled. She realised the
great blood-difference between the two of them.
Sometimes, when she caught Felipa's black, reptilian eyes un
expectedly, Kate asked herself whether it was hate she saw. Did Felipa
hate her? Or was it only the difference, the unspeakable difference in
blood? The fonn.less, extraordinary blackness of Felipa's slow eyes
might mean anything. Certainly there was fear, primeval fear in the
black orbs that seemed not to have sight in them, yet which saw so
quickly. Fear, and a certain cringing, and a certain slow, savage
nonchalance, defiance. And all the time, the hopelessness that was yet
not quite daunted. �ot quite daunted. That was the last word.
"Eyes like the sun," said Pedra, of Kate's quick-changing, grey
gold eyes. But to Kate, Felipa's eyes were darker and more primeval
than any night, black and yet living as the eyes ofan unyielding reptile.
"Listen, �iila! The drums! They don't ring the bells any more for
mass! Listen then!" - The drums were shuddering rapidly again. In
Felipa's eyes was fear, excitement, and a lurking triumph also.
"Come and look!" said Kate, going across the room.
"Look! Look!" murmured Felipa in a hushed voice, standing in
front of the window and seeming rather small, as if her soul were
sinking earthwards. ''The crosses inside the sun! Look! There are no
more pure crosses!"
Queer her voice was! She seemed like a heap of darkness rather
low at Kate's side. And the strange, reptilian quality seemed to come
out of her stronger than ever.
Suddenly she turned with a brusque movement, gauche, and
pattered out of the room, calling: "Look! Look Pedra! Look Juana!"
Kate went to close the window. As she did so a man in an
228 QUITZALCOATL
eanh-dark sarapc with blue and white stripes mrust a note at her
suddenly, silently. She starred back, then took me note. She was in her
night-dress. The man stood plumb before me low, big window-space,
static. She realised he was waiting for her to read me note.
"Will you come to the church at seven o'clock, when you hear me
big drum begin to beat? R. C."
That was all. She looked at me man in me street. His black eyes
were fixed on her, under me shade of his huge hat.
"Say that I will come," she answered.
He lift:ed his hat in silent response, and moved a few paces aside.
Kate closed me street window, and began to get dressed. The tom
tom was beating a slow drop of sound in me air, unnoticeable unless
you noticed it, and men, once you had heard it, occurring in your very
blood. Felipa and me family were in me street, speaking a few brief,
wurusrful words to some man, who answered in monosyllables.
Evidently mis man in me striped sarape was waiting. That brief,
laconic question and answer across a distance was characteristic ofme
people, when speaking wim a stranger.
Kate put on a white dress and a yellow hat, and a long string of
yellow topaz. She heard me swish ofFelipa's sweeping me verandah.
Then she went our into me patio. The eanh was all damp wim rain,
me leaves were fresh and tropical mick. Felipa saw her mistress
dressed.
"Ah! You are going our! Aren't you taking coffee! Wait, wait!"
There was a running of me children wim cup and plate. They had
got clean frocks on. Kate was just sipping her coffee when Rafael
stalked into me patio wim his head erect and eyes glittering. A hubbub
of voices at me fanher end of me house. And men a soft:, slack mud in
me air, seeming to leave a gap behind it, a dark gap. Thud! Thud!
Thud! It was me big drum.
Kate rose at once from me coffee.
"Felipa!" she cr:ed, "I am going to me church!"
"Ah! You are gcing! One moment, I am coming."
She trotted back and reappeared in a moment, wrapping her black
rebow round her, and running wim shon, quick steps.
Two men in eanh-coloured sarapes wim blue and white stripes
were waiting by me gate. They followed silently behind Kate and
Felipa.
"Look !" said Felipa in a hushed voice. ''lbey are accompanying
Chapter XIV 229
us. They are nor from here. They are those of Querzalcoarl. Look at
the sarapes!"
Kate looked, though she had seen before. The men had dark
sarapes with blue and white stripes across the end, and a blue and
white square at the neck. They were the colours ofQuerzalcoarl. The
men of the district wore either black sarapes with pink and white and
blue flowers, very gay: or else the big scarlet blankets with black
borders.
It was Sunday morning, the sailing boars lined the water's edge.
Bur the beach was empty: absolutely empty. All the people were in
front of the church. The big drum was slowly thudding, the lirrle
drums shuddering rapidly and excitingly. Kate had her heart in her
mouth as she approached the church.
There was a great throng of natives in white, with their red and
their dark, flowered sarapes, and their dark heads: very few wore their
hats: also many women in dark rebozos: and all silent, no hustling or
shouting, waiting silent in a mass before the church. The church-yard
space was almost empty. Inside, the low wall was lined wirli a row of
men in the earth-dark sarapes with the blue and white decorations,
each man of this guard holding a gun with a fixed bayonet. Two
groups of the dark guard of Querzalcoarl stood outside the gate
entrance, and three lanes of guard held open way through the crowd,
one lane towards the lake, one straight forward from the gateway, one
towards the plaza.
"Pass!" said the soldiers of the guard at the end of the lane
through the crowd, as Kate approached.
''You, no!" they said, barring the way to Felipa.
Kate walked slow and self-conscious between the dark-eyed men
in their big hats and dark sarapes. She was aware of their eyes, and the
gleam of the bayonets as she passed. She looked down at her feet, and
stumbled. It seemed an eternal distance to the church-gate, and she
felt she was going to execution.
Inside the church-gate a brilliant striped figure came to meet her.
It was Cipriano, in a big hat stitched with gold, and a fine-woven
sarape of stripes of white, black, scarlet, green, white, yellow, black:
stripes running lengthwise. The curious stiff Indian poise and the
balance of the great hat saved him from any suggestion of ridicule. A
small group of men in black sarapes, with red and white and yellow
stripes at the ends, stood in the centre of the church-front, with
bayonets, as a sort of guard for Cipriano.
230 QUETZALCOATL
The slow, slack hoUowness of the great drum shattered in the air,
oncr, twice, thrice. The kneeling people lifted wonder-struck faces.
And then the men in white sarapes answered the chant:
Chapter XIV 231
And again the deep slack explosion of the great drum. After which the
soldiers of the guard repeated the same words:
God is One God.
No man can sec Him.
No man can speak to Him.
No man knows His Name.
He remains beyond.
He turned and went again into the dim church. The men in white
sarapes followed him. The rom-roms dropped into the one slow bear.
Then carne the sudden voice of Cipriano, facing the throng.
"Hear me, people. You may enter the church. The women may
kneel in the benches. The men shall stand. The new God will have no
men kneel."
Cipriano went with Kate ro the church-door, while the soldiers of
the guard of Quetzalcoarl formed a lane from the gate-way to the
church-door. Kate, fascinated, looked in to the church. It was all
different. The roofwas dark blue with gold stars, all the vaulting and
arching was blue, coming down to the white walls. Then, breast-high
from the floor, the lower wall was all painted in perpendicular stripes
of red and black and green and yellow. The pillars were dark green,
rising to the blue roof. Two lirrle blocks of naked wooden benches
occupied the floor of the church, with a narrow lane between. Bur on
either side, between the suiped wall and the benches was a wide space
of floor, for the men ro stand in.
Cipriano led Kate down the church ro the \'ery front, on the left,
and gave her a chair to kneel to, whilst he stood behind her. The white
high altar of the church still occupied the usual place, bur it had been
lifted higher, and a low wooden chair, or throne, stood at the very foot
of the altar itself. The rails had been taken away, and the raised space in
front of the chair was clear. One tiny light hung suspended above the
altar.
Bur in front ofthe niche on the right, where the Sa\'iour had stood
in his white silk robe, a low stone pillar had been erected, and on this
pillar stood a great statue of dark, raw wood: a flat, archaic statue of a
Chapter XIV 233
man with legs together and ann raised just above his brow, while from
the upraised wrist, a spread eagle, much simplified, was reaching
darkly into the air; and in the left hand, which was down ncar his
thigh, the god held a serpent whose length was coiled round his leg.
This great dark statue loomed stiff like a pillar, obtruding into the
space of the apse, where stood the uplifted altar.
The priest in the black cassock mounted the pulpit. The musicians
in the gallery over the entrance door began to play slow, monotonous
music, and suddenly the people were admitted. The church was
dimmer than before the change. The throng involuntarily hesitated on
the threshold, in wonder, and a strange murmur came from them.
"Men to the right and to the left. Women to the benches. Leave
the centre way open," commanded the priest from the pulpit.
The men in their white clothes, with folded sarape slung over one
shoulder, hesitatingly drifted to right and to left, then, scattered, went
down on their knees, crossing themselves.
"Men, stand up! Men, stand up! So!" and the priest, standing
erect in the pulpit, faced the image ofQuetzalcoatl and lifted his right
arm high, the pahn of the hand flat towards heaven. It was something
the attitude of the god-image, save that from the wrist ofQuetzalcoatl
rose the archaic eagle.
But the men in the congregation were too dense or stupefied to
understand. So the men in white sarapes went among them, pulling
them from their knees and pushing up the right ann. So that gradually
the bulk of the men were erect, more erect still because of the strong
upthrust of the hand. And for example they had on either side of the
altar-space three splendid men in white sarapes, facing the Quetzal
coati image with naked arm uplifted, revealing the naked side and the
dark-blue sash round the living waist. They stood still as statues, erect
and splendid in a noble gesture, faces slightly uplifted.
Kate looked at the tall forests of men with white-sleeved arms
upstretched and dark hands like leaves, tall forests beside the low dark
shrubs of the kneeling women, whose heads were veiled in the black
[ rebozos ]. And her heart quivered, seeing how the new religion was to
arise from the splendid animal virility of the people, instead of from
humility.
The church was full of silent people. The monotonous music
continued. The strange branches ofthe uplifted arms of the thicket of
men rose against the pearly whiteness of the wall. High up, the
234 QUETZALCOATI.
iron-barred windows were all open, letting light into the blue vaulting
of the roof. And down below, berween the green pillars, crouched the
black women, like low shrubs. A solid churchful of people.
The priest in the pulpit lifted his hand. The music stopped. The
men in white sarapes dropped their anns suddenly. And the anns of
the men in the congregation wavered.
"Lower your anns!" said the priest.
And the white sleeves of the men rustled down, the forest of
dark-headed men seemed shorter. The church was still and all dim
down below, the light remaining overhead, over the nave. Above the
high white altar hung one spot of ruddy light.
"This is the house of God," began the priest. "That little light is
the light of the presence of the Everlasting God. He is the God of all
people, in all the world. All people in all the world shall cover their
eyes and be silent, before the light of the Everlasting God."
A little drum was struck rwice. The men in the white sarapes
swung full facing the altar, lifted their faces to the Holy Light, and
covered their eyes with both hands.
"Cover your faces and be silent, before the Everlasting God," said
the priest, turning towards the altar and shading his eyes as he spoke.
The soldiers in earth-dark sarapes, among the congregation of
men, were heard muttering commands. And gradually all the men had
lifted their dark heads and covered their eyes with their hands. The
kneeling women did the same. There was dead silence, only the
rustling sound of the breathing of many people. Then the drum again
sounded rwice.
"Look up!" said the priest in the pulpit.
The people looked, and saw six tall green candles burning with a
greenish light before the lofty, impressive dark image of the god
Quetzalcoatl. The music ofthe gallery began softly to play, and in slow
procession entered Don Ra..-n6 n, naked except for a white breech
cloth, followed by six men in white sarapes with blue and brown-black
bars. Ramon slowly went up the altar steps to the foot of the altar,
turned, and faced the people, his ann uplifted in the salute of Quetzal
coati. His six guards, three on either side of the altar, stood erect and
flashed up their anns. The men in white below the altar steps, and the
priest in black in the pulpit, with Cipriano and all the soldiers present
in the congregation simultaneously flashed with the same movement,
the salute ofQuetzalcoatl. And the dazed men in the congregation, as
Chapter XIV 235
if hypnotically, did the same. Ramon, naked save for the white breech
clout, stood there before the altar, facing the people in the grand
salute, motionless, remote, the living Quetzalcoatl.
The silence of wonder was broken by a low moan, rising into a
high, hysterical cry. A woman in a black dress, letting her black scarf
fall back from her head, came creeping on her knees down the narrow
central aisle between the women, moaning, her hands clasped in
supplication before her face, working forward on her knees and
moaning and crying aloud:
"Lord! Lord Jesus! Forgive him! Lord! Lord Jesus ' Lord Jesus!
He knows not what he is doing! Forgive Lord! Forgive! Lord! Lord
Jesus of the Heart!"
It was Dona Carlota, in a religious ecstasy. There on her knees,
with supplicating hands and thin white face uplifted, she worked her
way, a crawling woman in black, along the brick pavement towards
the altar steps. The church seemed suddenly to become dark and tense
with a conflict of agony. Kate, kneeling at her chair near the altar steps,
half rose to her feet. But Cipriano's hand pressed her down. The
kneeling, creeping black figure emerged from the aisle and reached the
foot of the altar steps. There it threw the clasped white hands aloft:
"Jesus! Saviour! Christ Jesus !" came the strange ecstatic cry of
Dona Carlota. "Jesus! Jesus! Jesus! Jesus! Jesus! Jesus ! Jesus! Jesus!"
Her thin black body convulsed, the cry came in a strange, con
vulsive, strangled sound, different each time, freezing Kate's bowds
with horror. And all the time, naked before the altar, with naked arm
uplifted in salute, stood Don Ramon, the living Quetzalcoatl, looking
down without change or motion, his black eyes wide and inalterable,
watching the woman.
Terrible convulsions took possession of the body of Dona Carlo
ta. Then came her voice in the mysterious rhapsody ofprayer, seeming
to sound inside the soul of her listeners:
"Lord! Lord! This blasphemy! Forgive!
"Jesus! Jesus! God of Love! Look down! Forgive him, he knows
not what he does. Forgive him! Forgive him! He knows not.
"Lord! Lord Jesus! End it now! Take him, Saviour, take him now,
before he sins further, before sin takes root. Have mercy on him, and
take him to Paradise, Father, Almighry God.
"Almighry God, take his life from him, and save his soul."
Her voice had gathered strength, till at the end it rang out like
bronze, on the great invocation that was almost a summons:
236 QUE17.ALCOATL
" A lmight God, rake his life from him and save his soul."
y
She remained with her white clasped hands upraised, and her
white arms and her white face showing mystical, like white onyx, from
her thin black dress. She was absolutely tense in an ecstasy of prayer.
Don Ramon, naked, with upraised ann , further back, looked down at
her all the time abstractedly, his black eyes changelessly watching.
A strong convulsion seized her body. She became tense again.
Then another com1..1 lsion seized her. StiU she recovered, and thrust up
her clenched hands more intensely. A third com1..1 lsion seized her as if
from below, and she feU with a moan in a little heap on the altar steps.
Without knowing, Kate had risen and run to her. Ramon drop
ped his ann and stood with both hands stiffly by his thighs, his
impassive face watching. There was a darkness between his brows, his
head dropped a little, his mouth was set in an old pain. Only his wide,
dark, proud eyes watched without any change, as if from some
changeless distance.
There was a little froth on Dona Carlota's discoloured mouth.
Kate wiped it gently and lifted the black-garbed figure in her arms. It
was all heavy and inen, the hazel eyes were staring glassily.
"We must take her out," said Kate, looking round to Cipriano.
He nodded, stepped forward and looked dmm at the uncon
scious woman. Then he slipped off his sarape, and purring it over the
dreadful, pitiful figure, lifted Dona Carlota, wrapping round her the
brilli ant sarape, as if to hold her together. With this strange bundle in
his arms, he went down the narrow aisle of the church between the
kneeling women, foUowed by Kate. The wicket door was opened, a
shaft of sunlight fell on the colours of the wasp-striped wrap, that was
yeUow and black and white and red and green, in equal stripes of
colours that seemed almost like sounding strings.
"I am the living Quetzalcoatl!" came the low, distinct voice of
Ramon.
Kate glanced round. A drum had begun rapidly, shudderingly to
beat. She saw Ramon with one foot stepping forward, his right ann
again uplifted. And she felt that Dona Carlota had died from fear of
him.
"I am the living Quetzalcoatl !"
This, and the shudder of the drum, was the last sound she heard
from the church as she stepped into the great and unreal light of the
morning. It was only afterwards she heard of the rest of the rirual.
Chapter XIV 237
The roots are mine, down the dark, moist paths of the snake.
And the branches are mine, in the paths of the sky and the bird.
But the heart invisible belongs to my Father, the Everlasting God.
And I am the eagle of the sky, filling your faces with daylight
And fanning your breasts with my breath
And building my nest of peace in your bosom.
Querzalcoarl.
the dark-green earth. So he sat in the chair of the altar, the clothed
god.
Every year, at the coming of the rains, they would celebrate the
return of Quet:zalcoatl.
The priests of the earth and sky then celebrated the first brief mass
of Quet:zalcoatl, before the altar, and before the dark statue with its
green candles of life, and before the living Quetzalcoatl.
Then they sang the song ofthe Welcome ofQuet:zalcoatl, dancing
in a slow, measured step in front of the altar, teaching the people the
dance-step of Quet:zalcoatl. And Ramon also danced.
We are nor godless, we are not alone:
Quctzalcoatl has come!
We are not weeping, our complaint is finished:
Quctzalcoatl has come!
Deep from the earth glides out the black and golden
Quetzalcoarl snake.
Coiling round our ankles strong for dancing,
Spitting earth-fire from volcanoes in our loins,
Putting sleep as black as beauty in the secret of our bellies.
XV
T.( ATE WAS USEDTOGO every morning to the shore, to sit by the
...r lake in the early light. Berween the rains, the mornings came
wonderfully clear, she could see every wrinkle in the great hills op
posite, which were already covered with a green sheen. And the pass
where the river came through to Tizap:in was so plain, she felt she had
walked through it. The frogs too were whirring in the morning, and
the red birds looked as if they had been newly dipped in colour.
But now there was a difference. Continually, from the church
towers, came the rolling of drums or tom-toms, a sound which never
failed to darken the air and startle her heart. She would never have
believed it possible to miss the harsh jangle of the bells, but she did
miss it. Berween the rapid thudding of the drums the air had a softer,
more velvety silence, unshattered by metal.
They took Dofia Carlota to Guadalajara to be buried, and on that
day the drums were silent. Don Ramon, in conventional black, and his
boys attended the funeral, and Cipriano was there in uniform.
''This is my last concession to the world," he said to Cipriano
when the ceremony was over, and he sat in the General's quarters in
the Palace.
He sent for the boys, who had accompanied him to Cipriano's
place. They looked odd little shoots in their black suits. They were
both round-faced, and creamy brown in complexion, and both had a
touch offairness. The elder, a lad offourteen with bare knees under his
short black breeches, resembled his father more than his mother. But
his hair was softer, finer, more fluffy than his father's, with a hint of
brown, and his dark eyes had not the inky Indian blackness. He was
now sulky and awkward, and kept his head ducked.
The younger boy had the fluffy, upstanding brown hair of his
mother, and her innocent hazel eyes. He was evidently prepared to
accept somebody's guidance all his life: probably that of Francisco, his
elder brother.
242 QUE17..ALCOATL
''Yes Papa," reasoned the little boy hastily. "They say she came up
the church on her knees, and you looked at her till she died. Because
you have given yourself to Satan, and you can kill us with looking at
us, if you want to. - Isn't it true, Francisco?" he added, backing round
his brother nervously.
"It isn't true, my child," said Don Ramon gravely. "Do you think
so much evil of your father?"
''Yes Papa, because Mama said you were in mortal sin, and now
she has gone to Paradise because you killed her," retorted the child,
sheltering behind his brother.
"No, it's not true. None of that is true," said Ramon gently.
''Yes! Yes! At Las Yemas thou usedst to go about with no shirt
and a sarape. Yes! Thou usedst to sing with those men, and teach them
Satan songs. Yes! And Mama used to cry. And so you have killed her.
Yes! It is so."
"You are only little. You can't know these things, child," said Don
Ramon.
"He is little, but he is right," said Francisco, with the black,
atavistic hate of a boy. ''You have killed our mother, and I hate you.
You have killed our mother, and one day I shall kill you."
It was out now, the thing he had on his soul. He became dead
silent.
"Say no such thing," replied Don Ramon, with quiet sternness.
"Say no such thing." The boy looked up at him with proud, malevo
lent defiance. "Because," said the father, meeting his son's eyes, "if
ever thou shouldst try to kill me, I shall kill thee first."
The two stared into each other's eyes for a moment, then the boy
dropped his gaze. He was cowed. Don Ramon looked at him steadily.
"Forget all this foolish talk," he said. "Thou shouldst be too much
of a man to listen to the things that servant-women and priests will tell
thee against me. Where is thy loyalty to thy father?"
"I am loyal to my mother, who is in Paradise," replied the boy,
with another flash of hatred and defiance.
"Surely, surely, be true to thy mother in Paradise. But dost thou
think thy mother would wish thee to say the things thou hast said, her
soul in Paradise?"
"Yes! I think she would!" said the boy, with finality.
"Good. Then think it ifthou must. But thou wrongest the soul of
thy mother. - And remember this. Whoever tries to kill me, I kill him
first."
244 Q UE17..ALCOATI..
"Yes, he would kill thee," said Pedro na·ively, taking his brother's
hand and looking up at his face.
"Come here," said Ramon to the linle boy.
The child shrank behind his elder brother.
"Come," said Ramon, holding out his hand.
"No, you would kill me," said Pedro.
"Linle coward!" smiled Don Ramon. Then he sat erect.
"Good!" he said, in a changed voice. "So it is! You will go back to
Mexico with your Aunt Margarita. It will be best if you use your
mother's name, and be both of you Gutierrez de Lara. You are neither
of you Carrasco any more. If ever you want to see me again, you must
send me word: Papa, I wasfoolish, forgive me. Otherwise, remain with
your mother's people, and think no more of me."
"And the money?" blurted Francisco defiantly.
''That will be paid to your guardians, linle bourgeois. Now go!"
The two boys panered to the door, the little one holding by the
jacket of the elder. Don Ramon watched them go. Pedro peeped
round the door as he was disappearing, to look at the bogey of his
father. The father laughed to himself at the odd little sight. He loved
his little boy. He loved both the boys. But what was the good oflove,
if they were hostile in faith? - He sat by the window and watched
them go out into the Plaza of the city, anended by a man-servant.
What a pathetic sight the poor, self-conscious Francisco looked in his
boy's new suit of black, that left bare knees, a new and expensively
tailored suit, and the absurd little black felt hat. Yet it was correct, and
so the lad felt haughty and superior. As they walked across the Plaza,
conceitedly, followed by the man-servant, Ramon felt they were
walking ridiculously out of his life.
"How ridiculous they look! How ridiculous they look! Poor
Carlota, why was she such an obstinate narrow fool! To think they are
my children! That pair of little jackanapes! The little fools! The little
fools!"
And he thought to himself, passionately:
"If ever they as much as lift a finger against me, I will shoot them.
There shall be no traitors in my life."
Cipriano carne back, and the two men sat talking. The Quetzal
coati movement was spreading like electricity through the country.
But there seemed, perhaps, to be more zest in burning the old images
and slighting the old faith, than in accepting the new. Quetzalcoatl
Chapter XV 245
was a name, and a magic name in the mouth of the people, but it was a
name they took all too lightly. And this was the danger. They had
learned, during the last twenty years, to treat every name lightly. To
respect nothing but the man with a revolver, and to reverence nothing
at all. The danger was, that the new movement would lead to more
chaos.
"It is no use, Cipriano," said Ramon. "You will have to come in as
Huitz.ilopochtli, and put fear into the people, or they will break the
speU and become just insurrectionists again."
Cipriano thought about it. He was a general in the government
service, and he did not wish to betray the government. By the sheer
magic of his will, he had an inunense influence over his soldiers. But
could he trust his officers? Also the Knights of Columbus, one of the
extravagant half-secret societies of America, which included the bulk
of the frightened Mexican property-owners and which swore death
and destruction to anything anti-Catholic, were working hard in
politics to bring the downfall ofViedrna, when they would at once use
fire and brimstone to destroy every trace of the Quetz.alcoatl move
ment. There was a fairly large party of priests within the Church,
however, who, strangely enough, looked on the Quetzalcoatl move
ment as not strictly anti-Catholic, and who secretly aspired to a
Mexican Church with a Mexican God-symbol and a Mexican ritual.
Ramon and Cipriano spent many hours thinking and discussing,
they had endless interviews, endless, with the clergy, with heads of
business houses, with the leaders of Worker's Federations, with the
governor of the State, with military men. Ramon had a fair success
with the clergy. It was curious, but most of the priests seemed ready to
abandon Christianity as such, if only the Church would continue.
"The Church shall and must continue," said Ramon. "The people
shall and must have a religion. What is more, they shall have a true
faith. And that needs a new symbol. God is always God. But men need
a new approach. Especially in America the old Christian approach is
ineffectual, rationalised to death."
"I am no enemy ofthe One Church," he said to the priests. "I am
no enemy of the Church of the One Everlasting God. But men are
human and diverse, and they must have different ways of coming to
God. Different Saviours, according to their different needs. God is
One Great God forever. But Mexico needs a different Saviour. Other
wise the Church will collapse altogether, as a church, here in America.
246 QU ETZALCOATL
all this communisr sruff. He sees, quire righdy, that: you can only drive
out a bad passion by arousing a good passion. He considers, as I do
myself, that this morbid polirical frenzy for raking everything away
from the people who arc considered rich, and for pulling down
everything which looks like authority, is in itself a bad passion, the
worst passion that could possibly get hold of mankind. It is the most
ghastly of all vices. And you see yourselves how it is spreading. And
you know yourselves, that even if you do succeed in working the
Church interest, and in getting together a Fascist reaction, you are
only staving off the evil day. Fascism won't hold against the lust for
anarchy which is at the bottom of the Fascisti themselves. The Fascisti
only live because they think they can bully society. It is a great bully
movement, just as communism is a bully movement. But communism
is a more vital feeling, because of the big grudge that burns in a
communist's belly. And in the end, that grudge will burn holes
through all Fascism, and down you'll come again, and the Church
with you, in a big smash.
"Now Don Ramon doesn't want this. He wants a people really
stable. And the only thing to keep them stable, you know yourselves,
is a religious faith. But all these agitators have destroyed the bulk of
the old faith. The bulk of the people no longer believe in the Church.
You know it yourselves. So, without smashing the churches or hurt
ing anybody except a name and a wooden image or two, Don Ramon
wants to introduce a new faith, to draw away the attention of the
people from all this political agitation, into another channel, a peace
ful, fruitful, religious channel.
"If you are wise men, you will sit tight and let Don Ramon go
ahead. You will encourage your peons to sing the hymns of Quetzal
coati. While they are singing those they won't be listening to these
bolshevist agitators. And once they get the taste for these hymns,
they'll have no more use for politics.
"'You should encourage thefll to sing the hymns of Quetzalcoatl.
You should sing them along with your people. After all God is One
God, and as like as not your priest will have nothing to say against it."
"But doesn't Don Ramon want to end up with communism?"
"Communism? No. He has no idea of dividing up the big estates.
He doesn't believe in your millions of little farmers idea. He knows
that little farmers simply won't stand the life for two seasons.
"No, he wants to go back more to the old-fashioned hacienda
Chapter XV 249
"For I feel the God Huitzilopochtli inside me, like the volcano of
Colima, me Mexican God of War come back w me.
"Are you my children? Arc you me children ofHuitzilopochtli?"
When Cipriano was really worked up, and his black eyes blazed,
and he opened his mouth and his white teeth flashed, something
seemed w be starting om of him, as if some strange, invisible, dark
feathered demon were leaping with wings out of his breast and
shoulders. His black aura seemed w bristle with wings, and his men,
in a kind of second-sight, actually saw a bristling savage god. And
involuntarily they gave short, barking cries of acclamation:
"Hie! Hie! Cipriano! Cipriano! Hie! Hie!"
The whole strength of the movemem was in me response of the
peons and me soldiers. Cipriano had not very much belief in his
officers, me higher officers a[ leas[. It was me younger men who stood
for him, and the common soldiers themselves. They called themselves
Ciprianisws, and addressed one another as such. "How are you,
Ciprianisw? Well, son of Cipriano! - Pass me that knife, Ciprianisw!
Ola! Ciprianisw, don't you touch me again." And their catch-word all
me time was Cipriano!
When their general announced w them that me God Huitzilo
pochtli was inside him, they wok it with great good-humour. The
word amused them. They would say w one another, a propos of
nothing: Huitzilupochtli!, with explosive vigour. And this was for
some reason a rich joke. From this gradually they invemed themselves
a new nick-name: Pochtlotes. But about this name they were touchy,
not allowing any outsider w use it. In common use, they were
Ciprianisws. Only in private, on odd occasions, did they come out
with Pochtlote, as if this name had a significance they were not
altogether easy about.
The curse of the Mexican army, Cipriano said, was that most of
their time me men were lying about like pigs, with nothing w do.
They were not rigorously drilled, not by any means. They were by no
means spick and span. A shirt, an old conon runic and breeches,
conon leggings, and bare feet never washed since their beginning,
thrust imo flat sandals held on by leather strings. There was a soldier:
plus cartridges, revolver, knife and gun. He slept in his clothes on me
floor, anywhere: pushed tortillas down his throat at meal-times : and
for the rest lay about like a dog, or strolled in gangs on a kind ofpatrol.
Cipriano was detennincd w put more discipline imo his men, and
252 QUETZALCOATL
he did it. But the God Huitzilopochtli himself would not have got
much order into the devils. The General did not intend to try. He
knew his men were best left fairly loose and reckless. We are men! was
their great assertion. Or else: Don't you believe that we are valorous! To
tell the truth they were more like savages than men, and often like
untamed dogs. But cowed they were not. And valorous, in their own
way, they were. Valorous as demons the moment they were roused.
And he wished to keep them so.
Taking a leaf from Ramon's book, he bought them guitars and
encouraged them to sing. He had little gatherings of the musicians
among the soldiers, and they learned the songs of the country. Then
he introduced the tom-toms. He got Indians from the north to join
with their savage drums and their unintelligible wild songs, he got
them to dance their savage dances round the drum. He himself
sometimes joined in these savage dances, naked to the waist, dancing
for hours, sweating and singing the chant in the unintelligible Indian
dialect. He found it exhilarated him and strengthened him. These
dances round the drum seemed to generate a new sort ofenergy inside
him, that lasted over the following days, and seemed to smile ex
ultantly inside him. Because it was not the mere old dance of the
northern Indians. It was the dance of his determination to make a
change in life for all the people of his blood; a great change, not back
to the old gods, but, in an ascending spiral, overtaking the old gods in
a movement to the new. A new epoch for Mexico. Eventually, a new
American epoch.
He knew what he was doing. Ramon had made it very plain.
''What is the good of waiting for inspiration pure and simple,"
said Ramon to him. ''We are men, Cipriano. We've got to act as men,
not as would-be angels. Belief in us is a matter of hard determination
and shrewd intelligence. And at the bottom, pure belief in the life
sources. Pure belief that we are opening new valves to the life-flow, to
manhood. We know what we're doing, Cipriano. We are men, and
we've got to put this thing through, without any of the arguing and
snivelling of white people."
They were not going back to savagedom. They were opening the
old well-springs of life in their souls, that Christianity had bricked
over.
"I don't want human sacrifices and hearts pulled out," said
Ramon. "But neither do I want penitences whipping themselves, or
Chapter XV 253
wamed her for his life, as he had said to her before. And she was used
to being loved, nor merely wanted for a man's life.
To be sure, to be wanted by a man for his life was better than
being loved. She knew ir. Bur oh, a woman can't change so easily! She
had been a woman who was loved, and she had loved her husband
again. All her body and soul was built that way. How could she change
and become the wife of a man who wamed her for his life, nor for
herself? She had always wished to be wanted for herself. That and that
only. And that she had had.
How could she go back on it by giving in to a man who just
wanted her for his life? It meant going back on all she had ever been.
What he said about wanting her for his immortality she inter
preted as wanting her for his real, inner life. The life that he could
easily live alone was his social life. This roo she knew. Bur even that a
man should just want her for the fulfilling of his inward life seemed a
little bit arrogant to her.
''You see you don't consider my life," she said.
''Your immortality," he replied with a smile, his eyes watching her
closely to see how she softened, and how she hardened again.
"Ah, my immortality will look after itself," she said casually. "Bur
my life is my own. You don't consider that. You don't consider my life,
do you?"
''Your life," he said, "will be made good by my life."
''You rake it easily for granted," she laughed. "Don't I have any
say?"
"Ah you!" he replied. ''You say your says our of perverseness. Ifl
want you for my life, it is because your own life is nothing apart from
mine. The gods make ir so. Apart from my life, you have no life. You
have only your own ego. You may keep your ego. Bur that is nor life, ir
wiU never be life."
"How do you know?"
"I know."
"And your life? WiU that be a life apart from mine?"
"Nor a complete life. I have told you that. Bur a life nevertheless. I
am still the living Huirzilopochtli."
"And you have Don Ramon."
"I have Don Ramon. He is very much my life to me."
"So anything else is only a trifle to you."
"Ah no, don't believe that." His voice was suddenly so simple and
Chapter :XV 259
earnest, she was terrified for her defences. "There is something miss
ing forever from my life and my immortality, unless you will come
into it. - But you must come of your own free will." - He added the
last words mournfully, as if regretting sincerely that the admission
must be made.
"I should think so," she laughed. "If you think about your life, I
must think about mine, you know."
"Think about your immortality, Malintzi, and you will see it
unites you to me," he said, half mocking.
"Oh, as for my immortality! A woman prefers to be very mortal
on these occasions."
"On which occasions, Senora mia?"
"Oh! Why, marriage and so forth."
"Then be very mortal, and accept this marriage and so forth."
"No! No!" she cried. "I'm not ready. Don't try to force me. You
always try to overpower me. I feel it all the time. And that will never
make me give in. I have lived too long and fought too hard to beforced
to yield."
''Qui Amazona!" he replied satirically.
"Yes, an Amazon," she retorted, flushing, ''when anyone tries to
overpower me."
They had the Huitzilopochtli ceremony at night, in the wide
yard-space in front of the church, with two lines of men in striped
sarapes, like wasps or tigers, red, black, yellow, the stripes lengthwise,
holding blazing torches ofocore wood, stretching from door to gate, a
bonfire built between them, half way, but unk.ind.led, the hard drums
and rattles going like Pandemonium. Cipriano, naked with a black
loin-cloth, came running out of the church between his guards,
holding a torch. He kindled the central bonfire, waited till it blazed,
then seizing a blazing faggot from the rush of flame, tossed it over the
heads ofthe guard to a naked man. He tossed four brands to four men,
in the four directions. They ran in the four directions, and kindled four
more bonfires of ocote wood, built like little hollow rowers, while
Cipriano flung brand after brand at the heavens, and the guard
dodged as they fell, singing all the time in a monotone, and dancing
the war-step. The only word intelligible in the chant was the con
tinually recurring: Huitzilopochtli. Two naked attendants threw over
Cipriano's head first a yellow silk cloak, as he danced the war-dance,
and a tall yellow flame rose from the fire. Then they threw a red silk
260 QUETZALCOAU
I am Huitzilopochtli.
I am the red of the blood of men.
I am the yellow in the fire of the blood of men.
I am the whiteness of living bone, within the red of the flesh of men.
The fires had all died down, me torches only were burning. At me
back, in front of me solid white church-wall, a plarform had been
built. A man went hanging six oil torches against me wall above mis
plarform. The guard all wimdrew to me low outer walls of me yard,
meir backs to me crowd. The drums were gradually going quiet: only
a single, slow beat, at last.
Cipriano had folded his black sarape inwards till it hung in front
Chapter XV 261
and behind in one long bar. The folded red sarapc was red outside
that. The yellow flowed loose. He looked like a dark stroke rising from
the earth, from which fluttered red and yellow, like flame. In his hand
he held a bunch of black strips of palm-leaf.
He went and pushed open the doors of the church, then rumed,
and slowly mounted the platform. Behind him came a procession of
rwo and rwo: a guard of Huirzilopochtli, in black and red and yellow
stripes, leading a peon in floppy white work-clothes, the peon blind
folded with a black cloth. They mounted to the scaffold, six blind
folded peons, six guards, and stood facing the great dim crowd
outside, under the torches.
Last carne a seventh peon, limping, with a black cross painted on
the breast and the back ofhis white cotton jacket. Cipriano went to the
front of the platform, and called in a loud voice:
"Men! Listen! These are six of the bandits who tried to murder
Don Ramon, who is the living Querzalcoatl.
"The one with the black cross is the peon who betrayed the way
from the mango tree into the house.
"He is a traitor.
"Every traitor dies.
"The bandits are cowards. They only attack unarmed people or
people much fewer than they are.
"In my law, traitorous cowards die too.
"But because the grass is green, and it likes to grow, and because
sometimes men are deceived into playing the coward: we will put one
green blade among the five black blades.
"But five must die, out of these six."
He held up the bunch of black blades. Then he gave it to one of
the guards. The prisoners in their white work-clothes had the black
bandages removed from their eyes. The guard went and offered the
bunch of black blades to the first.
"Draw one," he said.
"They are all black," said the man.
"One is green at the lower end," said the guard.
The prisoner drew a long leaf. It was all black. He looked again.
"Black," said the guard.
The man threw away the strip with fatal indifference.
"Kill me," he said.
The second man drew a leaf.
262 QUrTZ.ALCOATL
Scarlet Huitzilopochtli
Keeps the day and the night apart.
Golden Huitzilopochtli
Stands on guard between death and life.
Scarlet Huitzilopochtli
Is the purifier.
Golden Huitzilopochtli
Is the liberator.
Black Huitzilopochtli
Closes the everlasting end.
White Huitzilopochtli
Is the clean forgerring.
Green Huitzilopochtli
Is a leaf of grass.
XVI
nothing about it: there was only a quiet civil marriage, and no festivity
at all: until she had a note from Ramon saying: I have married a wife,
may I bring her to see you?
She was a shy, gentle crearure, about twenty-five years old, called
Teresa. She had known Don Ramon since she was a child, he and her
father having been friends since boyhood. All her life she had lived on
the tequila hacienda of Opatlan, behind the mountains from Las
Yemas, with her father and two ne'er-do-well brothers. Last year her
father had died, after having made a will appointing her as administra
tor of the estate. But the brothers had installed themselves in the
hacienda and ran the place by sheer brute force. Don Ramon was one
ofTeresa's guardians. He found the brothers obdurate: they intended
to administer the estate. And a law-suit would have been a miserable
business. So he arranged a modest dowry for his ward, and married
her, and brought her to Las Yemas.
She was rather small, and pale, with a lot of loose black hair and
wide, gentle black eyes. Yet in her quiet bearing and well-closed
mouth you could see that she was used to authority. She had been her
father's right hand on the hacienda, and she was profounclly indignant
with her brothers for having usurped her place as administrador of the
hacienda, by sheer brute force. Against brute force she could do
nothing. She had shed many tears, which were still evident in a certain
wanness round her eyes. But they had been tears of anger and helpless
indignation. That was evident from the closed pressure of her mouth.
She was very shy and distant with Kate. Evidently she was not
used to her new position, and she did not quite know where she was.
Don Ramon's Quetzalcoatl activities were completely bewildering to
her. All she could do was to make her mind a blank in that direction.
Which she did easily, after all. Because the image of the man himself
270 QUETZALCOATL
people was different from her own. And they seemed to be all blood,
without sinew or nerve. Silky, soft blood-flesh. Her hand where she
had touched him was startled and a little shocked. That was the man of
flesh he was! And a slight revulsion came over her again.
Teresa was watching with a black, seeing look. She watched
Kate's starting away, her quick flush under the fair skin, the startled
golden light in her eyes. She saw Ramon's subtle swerving aside, and
his hasty apology. She saw the moment of race-hostility between the
two people of different blood, different nerve. And she rose and came
at once to Don Ramon's side, looking in the rumblers, bending over
them and asking, in that curious conscious childishness of dark
women,
"What do you put in them?"
"Look!" said Ramon. And with the same conscious, male child
ishness of dark men he was explaining to her gin, and vermouth, and
letting her smeU the bottles, and putting a little gin in a spoon for her
to taste.
"It is an impure tequila," she said naiVely.
"Eight pesos a bottle," he said, laughing.
"ReaUy!"
She looked up at him with a long, exposed dark look, and he
looked down at her, his dark face seeming warmer. So she got back her
blood-intimacy with him, and he was captured into that foolish
seeming softness of dark men, as if something were melting in him.
WJ"hey are aU fuU of harem-tricks, these women," said Kate to
herself.
She was a little impatient, really, seeing the big and portentous
Ramon in the toils of this little woman. He who had taken such a
grand attitude to marriage, when Dona Carlota was alive. And now he
was as soft as warm dough in the hands of this little prostitute
dress-maker. Kate resented being made so conscious of his physical
presence, his fuU dark body inside the thin cotton clothes, his straight,
strong, yet soft shoulders, and his full, splendid thighs. And the little
woman drawing him hither and thither with her black eyes.
What a wiU the little creature had! What a powerful female wiU in
her little dark body! She wanted to make him big and splendid. And
by making him big and splendid, to hold him in her speU. The bigger
and more splendid he was, the more she held him. Just his physical
bigness, and the richness of his soft, dark flesh. While she herself
272 QUITZALCOATL
white woman. It was true, the flappers and young women of the
so-called upper classes in Mexico had started to imitate American
women in ways offreedom and boldness. A distressing spectacle they
were, too. Shrill, noisy, shrieking, aggressive and impudent, without
any ofthe reckless man-to-man daring which gives a certain charm and
pathos to the white flapper. Her dare-devil courage and "sporting"
recklessness makes the white flapper still a bit of a heroine, even if of a
misguided sort. But when the Mexican miss takes to flapping she adds
even a touch of cowardliness, most often, to her aggression. She has
not inherited that white ideal of being "sporting." She has inherited
the dark ideal of being hidden and secret in her womanhood. And this
underlies all her flaunting.
So that although the Mexico with money is becoming rapidly
Americanised in every way, even in the way of its women, there is still
the bulk of the population which understands only the old approach
between men and women, male and female. There are still a good
many women who know only the ancient mystery of female power,
through glorifying the blood-male. And there are still a good many
men to whom the free and easy, "equality'' approach of the white
woman is repugnant, something unwomanly and hostile to life.
Now Kate had all her life despised what she called the "slave"
approach in a woman. Teresa, to her mind, made a slave of herself
before Don Ramon. She grovelled before him, like a slave or an
odalisk. She wanted nothing but the sex in him. Like a sort of
prostitute.
Stay though! Was this true? Was Teresa just prostituting herself
to her man? Or was she fighting all the time to keep him blood-faithful
to her?
Not mind-faithful or nerve-faithful. Not merely faithful in sym
pathy or companionship. But blood-faithful. She was fighting to keep
the man faithful to her from his blood: as, truly, he wanted to be kept.
Kate suddenly realised that this is the great fight which woman
has to keep up through all the eternity of woman. This is the root and
base of all human life, the blood-relation between a man and his
woman. An honorable woman fights all her life to keep one man's
blood faithful to her, and her triumph is her greatest honour. The man
has no say in the matter. He will be kept if the woman can keep him.
Now in her previous life, Kate had kept her husband. But it had
been the faithfulness of mind and nerve and sympathy, not the heavy
274 QUETZ.ALCOATL
This was whar he was, underneath all his striving: a dark savage
\\ith the impossible fluid flesh of savages, and thar way of dissolving
into an awful black mass of desire. With the male conceit of savages
swelling his blood and making him seem endless. While his eyes
glistened in their blackness, as if the man were dissohing inro a black,
thick liquid.
�o, she could never have physical conracr \\ith such people. Her
pride of race came up strong.
And yet - this came back to her like a funeral bell clanging: if she
had made Desmond a man of the blood, like this man, he would never
have died. He would never have died. For ir seemed ro her woman's
Chapter XVI 275
fancy that men of the powerful blood-freedom could not die. Ramon
could not die. Especially with this little woman.
And Desmond would not have died.
Her heart stood still as she piled the books around her, kneeling
on her knees. Desmond - ! But it wouldn't have been Desmond!
Desmond! the eager, clever, fierce, sensitive Irishman, who could look
into her soul, and laugh into her soul, and who had died under her
eyes. Desmond, the father of her rwo children.
If ever he could have been the dark, mindless blood-presence that
Don Ramon was now, he would not have died, and the children
would have been different.
But he couldn't have been. That was the end of it. She wouldn't
have wanted him to be. It meant stepping over into another race. Best
stick to one's own race. Best live and die true to one's own race.
Teresa came stepping timidly into the bedroom.
"May I come?" she said, looking round excitedly at everything.
"Do," said Kate, rising from her knees and leaving little piles of
books all round the trunk. There was not a book-shelf in the house.
The bedroom was fairly large, with doors opening on to the patio
and showing the wet garden, the smooth mango-trunks rising like
elephants' trunks out of the earth, the wet grass, the chickens beyond
the sprawl of banana leaves. It had rained heavily in the night, the sky
was still low with clouds. A scarlet bird dashed and sprang about a
bath of water, opening and shutting brown wings from a body of
pure, lovely scarlet.
But Teresa was looking with interest round the room, at the
algerian curtain hung behind the bed, at the coloured bed-cover, the
navajo rugs on the red tile floor, the dresses hung against the wall, the
litter of books , jewellery and cigarettes.
"How nice!" she said, fmgering the bed-cover.
"A friend made it me in England," said Kate.
Don Ramon's wife was fascinated by the unusual fabrics and the
unusual patterns. She wanted to touch everything, especially the
tangle of inexpensive jewellery that Kate left carelessly on her
dressing-table. But she was careful not to admire anything aloud, lest
Kate should feel constrained to give it her.
And Kate, looking at her brown neck bending down absorbed in
examining the Italian toilet-cover, at the loosely-folded masses of
black hair held by tortoise-shell pins, at the thin shoulders with their
276 QUETZALCOATL
soft brown skin, thought to herself: this is the woman that holds Don
Ramon in a spell! This little, humble, insignificant dark thing! Who
would have believed it?
But Kate could not deceive herself. Teresa was not really humble
or insignificant. And underneath the soft brown skin, that stooping
female spine was hard and powerful, with an old, powerful female will
which could call up the blood in a man and glorify it, and by glorifying
hold it to herself. A new mystery.
On the sewing-table was a piece of fine India muslin, pine-apple
colour, which Kate had bought in India, and which she had been
cogitating over. It really was too young for her. She didn't quite know
what to do with it. Teresa touched it, looking at the thread of gold
along the edge.
"It isn't organdie?" she asked.
"No, it is muslin - the hand-made India muslin they used to wear
so much. Won't you take it? It doesn't quite suit me, and I'm sure it
will be perfect for you. Look!"
She held the muslin against Teresa's dark neck, and pointed to the
mirror. Teresa saw her own eyes, then the warm-yellow, fine fabric.
She said nothing, but her face glowed.
"Do take it," said Kate.
"Oh, thank you, no!"
«Yes. It doesn't suit me. I shall be glad to give it away to someone
whom it becomes."
Kate was imperious too, upon occasion. Teresa took the muslin
and went soft-foot, like a child, to Don Ramon in the next room.
"Look!" she said shyly; ''what the senora has given me."
"Doesn't it suit her!" cried Kate, entering the sala from her
bedroom. "It was made in India for someone as dark as she is. Doesn't
it suit her!"
''Yes," said Don Ramon. ''Very pretty."
And Teresa was covered with confusion and pleasure.
Don Ramon asked Kate to come and spend a few days with his
wife at Las Yemas.
''Would you like me to?" asked Kate of Teresa.
"Mucho!Mucho!'' came the answer, and the black eyes in the sober
little face shone again with anticipation.
"She needs women-friends," said Ramon. "She has nobody."
"No," she said, turning to him. "I don't need anybody. But if the
Senora Catarina will come, that will be much pleasure, much pleasure."
Chapter XVI 277
Kate went, and before the two women knew where they were,
they were busy dress-making, cuning up the muslin for Teresa. Poor
Teresa, for a bride her stock of clothing was scanty. She had never
learned to make dresses for herself, and there had never been much
ready money at her father's hacienda. She had a few poor things made
by a village dress-maker, and a few old-fashioned jewels and some lace,
from her mother. No-one had ever thought of dressing her up.
So Kate pinned the muslin over the brown shoulders, wondering
again at the strange, uncanny softness of the dark skin, and the
stiffuess of the straight dark back. She draped the muslin over Teresa's
slim arms. Teresa insisted on long sleeves.
"No! No!" said Kate. "It's so much prenier with short sleeves."
"Bur my arms are so thin !" murmured Teresa, hiding her slender
brown arms with shame. They were not at all thin, only naturally
slender, to suit her build. "Ah, if they were beautiful arms like yours."
Kate, as was becoming to a woman offorty, well-built and strong,
was well-rounded, with full white limbs. She was afraid of gening
faner - wished she could get thinner.
"No," she said. "Your arms aren't thin. They are so preny! Just
right."
"Ah no!" said Teresa with regret. "They are thin. Ifthey were only
like yours. The men don't like linle thin women, here." She spoke
quite sadly.
"But Don Ramon likes your' cried Kate. "I don't know what you
want."
"Ah yes! Yes!" replied the other, with quiet pride. - "Bur I would
like to be faner. The men like it."
She was quite definite and quite determined about it.
Kate had promised to stay a few days at Las Yemas. There was a
good library of books , there was a horse to ride, a boat to row, and all
the fascinating life of the hacienda. Teresa was the one most interested
in the hacienda. She and Kate rode out across the fields, to inspect the
cactus for the tequila, or to look at the growing maize. Teresa ex
amined the long rows of bee-hives under the trees, because the bees
were not thriving. She visited the peons in their huts, encouraging the
women to spin and weave. Don Ramon had introduced light looms
for conon-weaving for the women. Then tequila was being made, the
whole place was full of the sweetish scent of the distilling liquor,
stronger still when the sort of bark waste was spread along the road for
a sort of road-mending.
278 QUETZALCOATI.
Don Ramon saw his administrador every morning, but did not
devote much of his time to the hacienda. He was a great deal alone,
pondering the next moves, srudying, thinking. Then he had to teach
the hymns, the doctrine, the rirual to the minstrels and wandering
priests. For this he was a great deal in Chapala. Then he had continual
private interviews. As soon as the dawn came he was busy, and he
continued all day. Yet in the day he never seemed tired. He seemed to
put no effort into his activities. But by night-fall he was silent and
ready for sleep. He always retired about nine o'clock.
Kate too usually retired early. But on the second evening of her
stay, she remained up reading after Don Ramon and Teresa had gone
to bed. She was agitated. She could not quite adjust herself to this
marriage. It seemed to her so earthly. It seemed to make everything
Ramon and Cipriano did seem a little bit cheap.
It was a very dark night, with lightning beating about on the
horiwns, but as yet no thunder. The rain would come in the middle of
the night.
Kate went slowly and silently along the upper terrace towards the
look-out. Everything dark, save the intermittent pallor of the light
ning. When she came out on to the end terrace she was a little startled
to see, in a gleam oflightning, Teresa crouching with her back to the
wall and Ramon lying on the floor with his head against her knee,
while she was slowly ruffling his thick black hair. The pair were as
silent as the night.
Kate wished so much she had never come down the terrace.
"Oh!" she stammered. "I am so sorry to disrurb you."
She was withdrawing in confusion. But Ramon rose slowly from
the floor, and pulled forward a leather garden-chair.
"Stay for a little while," he said quickly.
Then he put a chair for Teresa, who sat down demurely. He
remained standing.
"How dark it is!" said Kate. "But for the lightning I should never
have seen you."
"Do you regret having seen us?" he laughed.
"Of course I didn't want to disrurb you. And it is a surprise," she
said in English. "I never thought of you except as the living Quetzal
coati, so narurally -"
There was a moment's pause, in the black night. He stood in front
ofthe two women - hardly discernibly white. Then the distant, bluish
lightning hovered ghostly again.
Chapter XVI 279
"I think I am myself, and perhaps a good deal more myself, and
more of a woman, when I am alone, rhan when I am submitting ro
some man," she said.
"No, no, my dear!" crooned rhe soft voice ofTeresa. "It isn't rhat
you submit. I don't submit to Ramon. I don't understand it. It is rhat I
like him very, very much, wirh my soul. I don't understand about
submitting."
"But you rhink your life would be norhing wirhout him."
''Yes, I rhink it. But I should live ifl didn't have him. Listen. Ifrhe
bandits had killed him on rhis roof, when you saved him - for which I
like you very, very much, always. Ifrhey had killed him, I should never
have married him. And I should have been at Opatlan, looking after
rhe hacienda. Or I should have married some orher man. And rhen I
should have talked like you: am i any less myselfbecause[ am alone? But
yes! yes ! It is not rhat I love Ramon. I love him, yes. But perhaps I
could have loved anorher man: you know, love!' - she spoke rhe word
rarher deprecatingly. "It really isn't rhat I love Ramon," she repeated,
in her distinct, lucid, childish way. "It is rhat he takes charge of my
soul."
''Wouldn't you rarher take charge of your own?" said Kate.
"No, my dear. I can't. When I have ro take charge of my own soul,
I am norhing. Only when a man comes who can take my soul from me,
I am somerhing."
"And what about his soul?"
"I take it."
''Where?"
"Here!" she placed her hand on her side. "If he gives me children,
rhe children leave me again. But I keep his soul here, always" - and she
pressed her side again. "And it is rhis rhat makes me somerhing. A
woman can't be somerhing by herself. It is like rhe seed in a man. It is
norhing till he gives it ro a woman. And a woman's soul is norhing till
she gives it to a man."
"And he betrays her," said Kate.
"No no, my dear, no no!" said Teresa, shaking her fmger in front
of Kate's face in rhe dark. "He won't betray me. I have his soul in my
womb, and if he betrays me I will kill his soul. He knows it. He won't
betray me. And I look him in rhe eyes. Ifhe begins ro betray me, I see it
in his eyes, and I say to him 'Look! Thou dost not betray me!' Of
course I say it. But Ramon does not betray."
Chapter XVI 281
with clever men, men ofthe world. A woman with all the education of
the white people. Whereas she, Teresa, was small and brown and
ignorant and poor . But after all, Ramon had never wanted to marry
Kate: that was obvious. And he had truly married herself, Teresa. Why
didn't he want Kate? And why did he want Teresa?
Teresa had answered these questions in her own way, and taken
her stand. And she had fathomed her secret dislike of the white
woman, the same dislike she felt for all foreign white women. They
were so assured, and they kept their souls so fast for themselves. They
never gave their souls to their husbands.
Before she married, Teresa had thought they were right, the white
women, to keep their souls for themselves. She had thought they were
right, in being assured and in full possession of themselves.
Now, since she had given her soul to Ramon, and taken his soul,
she suddenly felt contempt for these assured, foreign white women
who talked to men like men. They roused in her a certain disgust: the
disgust that foreign white men had always inspired in her. They
seemed to her unnatural and ugly in soul: ugh, so ugly! As white
foreign men were almost invariably ugly, physically unclean, in spite
of all their washing. Unclean under their skin.
But Kate had saved Ramon's life. And Kate was undeniably
beautiful. And somewhere Kate had a true tenderness, like Teresa's own
tenderness, which was also cautious and reasoning as well as deep.
And Ramon wanted Kate to marry Cipriano, because Cipriano
wanted it.
So, for all these reasons, Teresa did the last thing expected, and
told all her private, passionate woman's thinkings, told them all out
before Kate and Ramon. Ramon loved her no less. She had known he
would not love her less. He loved her more, because of her fiery,
passionate courage. She knew he would love her more. The passionate
courage he held sacred.
But would Kate now leave offtreating her as an inferior? That was
the point. For, undeniably, Kate, in a very subde and indefrnable way
had treated Teresa as an inferior. Had ft/t her an inferior: slighdy.
Teresa had known this always from white foreigners. She saw that
white foreigners, all of them, in their heart of hearts looked on all
Mexicans as inferiors. At the worst, they showed contempt. At the
best, they were cautious, showing a certain false deference. She had
seen plenty of white people show this false deference to Ramon. To
284 QUETZALCOATL
her, however, to the insignificant Teresa they had only too often let
the contempt come forth into sight. And all her life she had more or
less allowed ir. Not that she felt inferior. On the contrary, she felt as a
rule that the white foreigners were actually, in their being, the in
feriors. Bur they seemed to have the money of the world in their
hands, the sway of the world's dominion. Therefore one had to let
them asswne this superiority. One had to allow them to imply to one a
certain inferiority. It was almost a habit.
Since she had married Ramon, however, Teresa was determined
not to accept this implication of inferiority. She had been to school
with American girls, and her brothers had always brought foreigners
to Opatlan. Now, since she had married Ramon she had determined
to know no more foreigners. So the first woman Ramon had pre
sented her to, was, ofcourse, the foreign Kate. And Kate, quite subtly,
but quite unmistakably showed that she looked on Teresa as an
inferior. Nay more, Kate didn't want to look on Teresa as an inferior.
She did it against her wanting.
And Teresa was determined not to have it. So she carne down to
breakfast next morning with a new insouciance and a sort of silent
blitheness.
"How did you sleep?" she said to Kate courteously, as she would
have said it to a Mexican.
As a matter offact Kate had slept very badly. The night had been
black, black dark, a blackness thick enough to contain anything. This
sense ofblack, active darkness was, in Kate's mind, peculiar to Mexico.
In all other countries darkness seemed immobile. But here it seemed
alive and rather horrifYing. And then, just as she had dozed off, bang
carne the thunder and down carne the rain, smashing down with a
weight and a ferocity unnatural to water. This in thick darkness, with
occasional watery gleams of lightning. And a drumming crash of
falling water kept up for hours. Add to this Kate's thoughts : her
conning over and over again Teresa's declaration and challenge. For of
course it was a challenge to Kate's womanhood, flung right in her face.
Teresa's gentle, subtle, serpentine condescension, with its poisonous
tang of contempt. Teresa's delicately unveiled contempt for Kate's
womanhood, for Kate's way of wifehood.
"Does she expect me, then, to behave to Cipriano Viedma as she
behaves to Ramon?" Kate asked herself indignantly. And of course
had to answer herself, that they all did expect it, Cipriano no less than
the others.
Chapter XVI 285
entertain you, but I told him I hadn't much hope. But we can bathe, or
ride, or row in the boat. I'm afraid the sun won't come out just yet."
They were taking coffee on the upper terrace. The sky was low
with cloud, the frogs were singing frantically. Across the lake the
mountains were deep blue-black, and little pieces of white fluffy
vapour wandered low and horirontal. The tops ofthe mountains were
in cloud. The cloud made a level sky-line of whitish softness the whole
length of the black mountains. Across the dove-brown water one sail
was blowing.
"It is like Europe - like the lakes in Germany and Austria, in the
Tyrol where it rains so much," said Kate.
"Do you like Europe very much?" asked Teresa.
"Yes, I love it."
"Do you feel you must go back to it?"
"Soon. If only to look at it."
"Do they want you very much in Europe?"
''Yes," said Kate. "My mother, and my children." - Then she
considered a while, and a sense of truth made her add: "But not very
much, really. They don't want me very badly. I don't fit in with their
lives."
"Ah they don't want you very much!"
,
want money. You don't want money from Mexico. You don't want
anything. You want only to live here."
"I must go to Europe first."
"But why?"
"I must."
Teresa looked at her with big, contemplative black eyes.
"You are a woman of will," she said.
"And you?" laughed Kate.
"Yes. But different."
289
XVII
I to look at the world. The morning was sunny, with many silky
THAD RAINED VERY HEAVILY in the night. Kate went to the roof,
white clouds in the sky, piling and rolling along the tops of the low
hill-mowuains opposite, and casting dapples of shadow on the green,
distant slopes, and the grey scores of rock. Near at hand, the shore was
all fleecy and pale green with the round, drooping willows that Kate
liked so much. The mango-trees stood solid, dropping their hard
green fruit like the testes ofbulls. The red-roofed, mud-black cabins of
the peons stood among the greenness of trees on either side of the
road, a wagon with solid wheels was being hauled by eight bullocks,
while another wagon with four long-eared mules was going down to
the shore for sand. She saw the mules jumping and floundering in the
sand as if they were swimming, pulling out the heavy wagon on its
high wheels, while the tall peon in white flourished the lasso-reins.
Scattered on the slopes and in the flat fields by the lake were white
peons, dotted in twos and threes like white sea-gulls. Among the
spikey tequila plants a long line of peons were busy upon the steep
slope rising to the mountains. The mountains beyond rose bare and
empty, the empty abstraction of Mexico.
Cattle were wandering round the hacienda and straying on the
shingle beach, cropping the new-coming grass among the acacia
thorns and stones. There were many donkeys, and mother-donkeys
with little foals all legs and long, long ears pricking up in delightful
anticipation of existence, flicking themselves suddenly into a staccato
gallop and going to the she-ass for a drink. There were calves careering
with uplifted tails, frisky, and two bull-calves having an earnest fight.
A black ram was persistently tormenting the young sows, sniffing at
their rear and butting them, while they ran squealing away. Till one
sow turned with a grab and a fierce rush, and the black ram with flat
horns went offhelter-skelter, his thick tail flopping between his legs.
All the animals seemed to be entire. There was not the rage for
290 QUETZ.ALCOATL
son fallacy. The father in his manhood is one column of blood. The
son in his manhood is another, absolutely different. Manhood is not a
family affair.
It was no wonder Ramon succeeded. It was no wonder the mass
of men were with him. They were with him narurally, even without
excitement or enthusiasm. There was more enthusiasm for Cipriano
than for Ramon. But then Cipriano was a man of action and personal
leadership, Ramon's was the leadership of the manhood of under
standing.
"If Don Ramon is Quetzalcoad and a god," Kate said to Teresa,
"don't you want to be the same? Don't you want to be a goddess, as
much as he is a god?"
"No," said Teresa. "I don't want it. The same Ramon doesn't
want it. But he thinks it is his duty as a man."
"Do you mean Don Ramon doesn't want to be the living Quetzal
coati?"
"No. No. He doesn't want it. He is it, you understand. I believe it.
Ramon is a god as well as a man. It is easy to see. No other man is like
him. But he doesn't like to be there before all the people. As a man, he
is not like that. He is shy, and very private. He suffers, yes, he suffers at
having to show himself. But he says the man in him must suffer at
times for the sake of the god in him, and the god in the people. And
I - yes! Yes, if it was necessary I would go before the people to
represent the goddess, because I am Ramon's wife, and I am so much
of a goddess. But I don't want to. I would do it for Ramon's sake. And
he says no, not unless I do it for my own sake. No, I can't do it for my
own sake. I don't understand enough. And Ramon has got all my soul.
If they want a woman who gave her soul to her husband, and carried
his soul always inside her, so that she never cared about anything else,
they can put a wooden image of me sitting with my hands in my lap.
But not me myself. Because I am Ramon's all the time, I don't belong
to all the other people. I belong to only one man, not to all the men of
the world. I say to Ramon they can put an image of a woman with her
head bent down and her hair hiding her face, sitting still with her
hands in her lap, always like that, ifthey want the wife ofQuetzalcoatl.
But she would never look up. - However, that is only for me. You are
different. You arc different."
"How am I different?" said Kate, rather jealous.
"Yes, you are different. You are woman for all the people in the
world, as Ramon is Quetzalcoad for all the men in the world. I, no."
294 QUF:TZ.ALCOATL
"You don't think I'm the perfect wife?" said Kate, chagrined.
"You, no! You, no! You are more. You ought co be a wife, yes.
Bur you are a woman of all the people in the world. So you are."
"You think I ought co be a goddess?" said Kate ironically.
"Yes! Yes! Also Ramon thinks so. He says that you are the
universal woman."
"No more than you are the universal wife."
"Ir is different. A wife is only a wife. But a woman is woman to all
the men and all the people in the world. So you are."
"You don't think I could ever be the perfect wife?" Kate repeated
the question.
"No! No!" replied Teresa, with a melancholy sing-song.
"Then I'd better not try being a wife any more."
"Yes! Yes! There are men who don't want a wife like me. Ramon
wants it so. Bur there are men who don't want it so. There are men
who want a universal woman for their wife. Men who don't under
stand everything, everything, like Ramon, they want a wife who
knows a great deal, knows the world and all the things that matter. I,
no. I don't know. I don't know. But Ramon knows."
"And you think Cipriano Viedma doesn't know so much?"
"He knows already very much. But not as Ramon knows. lr is
different. It is different. He is very good, very good, Don Cipriano.
Ramon loves him very much, he loves him very much."
"And he thinks I ought co marry him?"
"Yes. He says it would be good for Don Cipriano ifyou married
him. Because Don Cipriano wants it very much, very much he wants
it."
"And what do you say?"
"I say yes. I say yes. You would be a very good wife for Don
Cipriano, he likes you very much. But you don't like him?"
"Yes, I like him."
"But not much? Not enough co marry him?"
"Perhaps. Bur I'm not sure. I don't believe that people should
marry when their race is so different as mine is different from General
Viedma's."
"But I have got Spanish blood and native blood," said Teresa. "I
am the daughter of different races. And who knows if Don Cipriano is
not the same."
Chapter XVII 295
XVIII
darkness of his intense, heavy will, which always made Kate withdraw
on her defences.
They talked the affairs ofQuetzalcoatl, and there was a good deal
to say. The Archbishop of Mexico had excommunicated Ramon and
Cipriano, and had preached death to all their followers. Having
succeeded in rousing considerable blind enthusiasm, he had marched
out of the cathedral and headed a procession to the church of San Juan
Batisto, the church of the Black Saviour, which had become the
metropolitan church of the Sons of Querzalcoatl. The government,
who knew that they would have to fight the Archbishop sooner or
later, had sent soldiers, arrested the Archbishop for conducting a
procession through the streets, which was an illegal proceeding, and
after some bloodshed scattered the procession. San Juan, the church
ofQuetzalcoatl in the capital, was defended by a host of the guards of
Querzalcoatl, and the mob were threatening to attack. The Knights of
Columbus had brought out their secret stores of arms, and were
arming the people in the name of the Church. Some priests had gone
over to Querzalcoatl, some were haranguing the people in the church
es, preaching death and extermination to Quetzalcoatl. The govern
ment had ordered the cathedral and all churches to be closed. The
streets of the capital were full of people, some streets all white with a
sudden out-flow of white sarapes with the blue and earth-brown
decorations, other streets full of men armed by the Knights of Colum
bus. At any moment General Narciso Beltran might declare a rebellion
in the name of the Church and the army. In which case Cipriano
would call up his men in the west. And the government would either
have to take a stand between the two, or declare for Quetzalcoatl. For
the government could not possibly unite with the Church. In all
probability it would depend on General Gallardo and the socialist
interest.
298 QUETZALCOATL
Ramon had not been anxious to have the government declare for
Quctzalcoatl. He wanted as long as possible to avoid the political
taint. But it is never possible for long, particularly in a country like
Mexico.
The government refused to liberate the Archbishop, because the
Archbishop refused to pledge himself to compel peace as far as possi
ble, and to obey the conditions of the law which established freedom
ofworship in Mexico. The Archbishop flatly refused to pledge himself
to abstain from any form of arrack, in church or elsewhere, upon any
other form of religion. He declared that Querzalcoatl was not a
religion, but a blasphemy. So he was kept in prison. While the Knights
of Columbus raged, and more priests were arrested, and General
Narcissus was expected to pronounce at any moment, from the city of
Puebla. But Puebla is not yet Mexico.
"The Archbishop will bring us once more into civil war," said
Cipriano. "It is the usual act of Christian charity."
"It still may be possible to prevent a break with the Church," said
Ramon. "If the Church will accept Querzalcoatl, the people may still
confess and obey the priests, the priests may still celebrate the mass, at
certain seasons."
"Isn't that a curious compromise?" said Kate.
"The Christian Religion is the religion of the soul's redemption -
mine is the religion of the redeemed Adam, in whom dwells the Holy
Spirit, the Holy Ghost. I will kneel to the old mass of Redemption, if
they will lift up their hands with me, as the Risen Adam, Redeemed
with Blood. I will still kneel at Easter."
"I don't understand," said Kate.
"Don't you know the mysteries? In all religions the dead body of
Adam, or the unredeemed Adam, was buried at the foot of the cross,
and the blood of the Redeemer showered down on him. So he rose
again, as before the Fall. Mine is the religion of the Redeemed Adam,
guided from within by the Holy Ghost. But I will still kneel, at Easter,
to the great mass of the Sacrifice. I will take from the priest the
sacrament of the Crucified Redeemer. I will do it at Easter, in re
membrance. But my ritual will be the ritual of the Redeemed Adam,
and the cross is again enclosed in the circle of the Unity. And the foot
of tht: cross is in the House of Life, not in the grave. It is the Lower
Root from which everything proceeds, and has proceeded, in genesis.
The risen Adam. And at the head of the cross is the Ram with the
Chapter XVIII 299
He smiled teasingly.
''What do you want me to do?" she asked, in her nervousness
holding the bowl of her glass - it was a large glass on a stem, that the
Mexicans call a Copa, a Cup - and swaying the wine mesmerically.
The glass was half full. Don Ramon watched the dark red wine
rocking and slowly forming into a vortex.
"Drink just a little more, now," he said gently.
And perhaps for the first time in her life she obeyed as a child
obeys, implicitly, and drank a little wine at once. And almost im
mediately she doubted herself, and looked back at him with eyes like a
roused snake.
It wasn't her nature to obey. All her life, if asked to do anything,
she instinctively paused, waited, and in that moment's pause, refused.
But then, in the next instant, reconsidered, and if her reconsideration
decided her to accede, she complied. This moment's negation, mo
ment's consideration, and moment of compliance usually took only a
second or two. But it made all the difference in the world between
implicit acceptance, implicit response, and a considered response, a
considered acquiescence. Long as she had known her husband, well as
she trusted him, she had never, not once in all her life implicitly obeyed
him. By taking a round-about method, he could trick her into
spontaneous compliance. But if he said to her simply: Hand me my
pencil! she instantly, instinctively hesitated before complying. And
usually she would remind him: Please!
Her instinct, in fact, was not to comply.
If he said: ''Will you please pass me my pencil," she passed it at
once, almost eagerly. But she insisted on this bridge of politeness. She
was like the Lady of Shalott, always in a castle surrounded by a moat,
spinning the web of her own particular life. She would let down the
drawbridge instantly, upon request. But after the petitioner had
passed, she drew it instantly up again.
And all the Launcelots in the world might have crossed her
mirror, he would have had to doff his hat and give at least a pleading
look before she would go to the window. She always waited for that
look ofcapitulation, or that word of capitulation from the other party,
before she left her fortress.
Now she realised that Don Ramon had caught her for one second
disarmed of her will. She had obeyed him like a child. And instantly
her soul was up in arms again, she was looking at him with roused
yellow eyes.
308 QUETZALCOATL
"Why did you want me to drink more?" she asked, adding at the
back of her mind: to bully me?
He saw her aggression and smiled quietly.
"Because you had created the vortex," he said.
Instantly she was all puzzled.
"\Vhar \"Ortex?" she asked, in doubt and wonder.
He pointed to the wine, which was still slightly rocking.
"In your wine. Don't you know that in the mysteries you must
drink from the vortex?"
She pondered that. She had spun the wine and created a vortex.
And she had drunk from that. - In spire of herself the words and the
act had magic for her: the magic ofthe ancient blood, before men had
learned to think in words, and thought in images and in acts.
The vortex ! She had created a vortex, and drunk from it. What
mysteries lay behind! What mysteries did Don Ramon know? What
was she entering upon? She was full of doubt, and at the same rime
deeply drawn. Something in her narure responded to this symbolic
language. It was a great rest from the endless strain of reason. It was
like the blood flowing released, instead of knotted back in thought.
"What vortex did I drink of?" she asked.
"Oh insatiable Eve!" laughed Ramon.
"What vortex?"
''The vortex of the Dragon in the Cup."
''What cup?"
''Which you like. The Grail! The Cup of Dionysus. The cup of
Liber."
"And what Dragon?"
''The Serpent in the Wilderness."
"You just pur me off with words."
"You know Moses' Serpent in the Wilderness."
She was silent, puzzled, ,·exed, yet in a way fascinated and domin
ated.
Suddenly Cipriano gave a loud laugh, and reached his hand to her
glass, looking across into her eyes.
"Do you know what it all means, Senora?" he said in a curious
mocking-sounding voice. And he lifted her glass, which was still half
full af wine. ''This is your blood." - He filled his own glass half full,
and lifted it. ''This is my blood. In this glass is the dragon. Do you
want to know what the dragon is? It is desire. Always desire is the
Chapter XVIII 309
dragon. Good desire is the Serpent in the Wilderness, all gold. You
have only to look at it and you are strong. That is the serpent in this
glass: the serpent of my desire in the cup of my blood. Then the Lord
Almighty looses the flood. See!" And swiftly he poured the wine from
Kate's glass into his own. "And that creates the vortex. Look!" He
rocked the wine subtly with both his cupped, brown hands. "Look!
And the vortex is the mingling and the wheeling ofcreation in the cup,
with the Lord Almighty in the middle of the Red Sea, dividing the
waters of the Red Sea, look, in the hollow of the cup, so that the soul
can pass from the Egypt, which is the unblest flesh of me on the other
side of the Red Sea of this cup, to Canaan, which is my blest soul after
its consummation in this cup. Look! The vortex of my blood with
your blood, and the Lord Almighty dividing the flood for the con
summated soul to pass on to a Canaan of tomorrow. Look! Look!
That is why I must make a vortex. That is why I must drink of the
vortex. Look!" and he caught the spinning wine with his lips, and
drank slowly, deeply, leaving only a linle wine at the bonom of the
glass. This he spun round vigorously. "There!" he said. "Take it, and
drink. It's my blood. Drink it! You have my explanation. It is exact.
Ramon's covers the whole cosmos. What is that to me! The two
explanations are one and the same, but his is the macrocosm, and I am
the microcosm. I am the linle cosmos. There's my blood in the glass,
with the serpent of fire. And the Lord Almighty poured down the
flood of your blood into mine, and created the vortex of the Red Sea,
in the middle of which He stands making a way for your soul and
mine, his linle Israel, to pass into the promised land, out of the
bondage of that old Egypt ofunconsummated flesh. There you have it
all. Drink, drink while the vortex lasts. Drink! What is Eleusis to me!
This is Mexico, and I am Huitzilopochtli, and I know the mysteries. I
am the man with the sword. You are the woman bound. There, take
the cup and drink. Take it!"
Kate rook the glass. This was becoming more than she could bear.
"I will drink it," she said gravely, the tears not far away. She felt
the men like two demons pressing on her. If her tears came, and they
would come soon, she would be helpless before them for ever. So she
must go away at once. "I will drink it," she said, "but then you must let
me go away at once to my room, because I am tired."
"Drink!" said he, still holding the glass our to her between his two
cupped hands and rocking it swiftly, subtly, while all the rime he kept
310 QUETZALCOATL
his black, bright, str;uJge eyes on her face, in a strange smile rhat
seemed to hypnotise her, like a serpent gradually insinuating its folds
round her.
"If I drink," she faltered, "you must let me go at once."
"Yes," said Ramon quietly. "You shall go."
She looked to him, because of her great fear ofCipriano. And rhe
look of Ramon's silent, impassive face steadied her. She rurned again
and looked at rhe glass, not at Cipriano, and at rhe two black, sun
blackened hands rhat wrearhed it. She held out her hand.
Cipriano put rhe glass into her hand carefully, but still she did not
look at him. She looked only at rhe dark, spinning wine. Then she
lifted it to her lips and drank as in an ordeal. And at rhe same moment
came his voice:
"Is it not my blood? Is it not my warm blood wirh rhe dragon of
fire in it? Is it not rhe sacred vortex?"
She shuddered, purring down rhe glass and wiping her mourh
wirh her hand. For rhe wine was heavy, and hot-warm like blood, and
seemed to smell of blood: his dark blood. And rhere was a fire in it like
a dragon. And it seemed to coil round her rhroat and her heart, and in
anorher moment she would cease to care, she would cease to care, and
she would never, never care again any more, not rhrough all eternity.
She knew it.
She rose wirh a sudden jerk, as if somerhing in her rhighs had
twitched her to her feet. Her chair fell over, but she stood motionless.
The two men had risen too. Don Ramon opened rhe door, and she
went out swiftly and stiffiy, feeling her rhighs hard and insentient like
iron. Though she did not look round, she felt Cipriano's black eyes
watching her go, black, gleaming, and taunting, gazing at her shoul
ders.
Once in her room, wirh rhe door locked, she stood motionless.
She had brought in wirh her rhe night-light rhat had been burning
outside her door. She blew it out. The night was black dark, so dark
rhat rhe clouds of rhe sky were not visible in rhe one blackness. The
lake seemed suddenly to start to sound. Frogs were rartling and an owl
was hooting softly, flying so rhat rhe hoot came now loud, now low.
"I can't!" said Kate, standing rigid before rhe window. "I can't! I
can't! I can't!"
She felt somerhing had rurned to iron inside her, and it would
never soften again. This iron resistance inside her would prevent her
Chapter XVIII 311
living. When she had drunk the blood something had fixed into iron
inside her, and she could nor release ir. :\ow she would go in misery.
The incantation, or the initiation, whatever they liked ro call ir, had
failed, and she was fastened on ro this hard rock inside her, a miserable
prisoner with all the appearance of freedom. :\ow she would know
nothing bur a hard, fast misery. Her emotions could nor flow any
more. Her emotions were fastened with iron ro a hard rock ar the
middle of her. Lucky those men, who could sir mixing mysteries in
their wine. For her there was no mystery. She was ser into a hard rock,
like the rock before Moses smote ir and released the flow.
Bur ir was night, and she slept rill morning. When she awoke ir
was already day. She gor up ro push wide the window doors of her
little terrace looking ro the lake.
Ir was day, bur the sun was nor yer on the lake. The morning, for
once, in the middle of the rainy season, had come blue and cloudless.
The mountains opposite had the sun, and were magically clear, as if
some magic light were focussed directly on them. She saw all the green
furrows of the moun rain sides as if ir were her own hand. Two white
gulls were flying down the lake. They roo caught the sun, and glit
tered. She thought of the sea. Ir was nor very far away, the Pacific, yer
the sea seemed almost ro have retreated entirely our of her conscious
ness.
Cipriano was going ro bathe. She saw him throw his wrap on the
jetty and go wading through the shallow, pale-dun water, naked save
for a scrap of black ar his loins. How dark he was! How dark he looked
against the pale water. :\early black like a negro. Ir was curious thar his
body was as dark as his face. And nervous and active-looking. He
waded along slowly in the shallow lake, which still was only up ro his
knees, a dark brown figure in the pale water. Then he dropped in, and
swam as best he could in the ever-shallow lake-side.
When he rose again the water was shallower than ever, though he
was far our. Bur he rose in the sun, and he was red as fire. The sun was
nor red, ir was roo high. The light was golden with morning. Bur as ir
flooded along the surface of the lake ir caught the small figure of
Cipriano and he was as red as fire, or as red as a painted red buoy
floating in the sunlight our on rhe lake. She had noticed before, how
the natives shone pure red when the morning or evening sun caught
them. And now she saw Cipriano. A red Indian.
Clothed with the sun. Clothed with fire. He really looked like ir.
The sons of the morning.
312 QuETZ.ALCoAn
�o, it was nor really that she was afraid. She was afraid of nothing
that would be true ro her own being. Bur would it be true for her ro
marry that red man our there in the water? She could nor feel it. She
admired him. She liked him too. Bur she must remain true ro her own
innermost self. And her own innermost self had no conununion with
him. How then could she force herself ro be his wife? It would only
make a false marriage. There was a gulf between him and her, the gulf
of race, of colour, of different a:ons of time. He wanted ro force a way
across the gulf. But that would only mean a mutual destruction. 1:\o
no! She knew it was bra\'er nor ro accede ro any union, until her soul
should agree ro ir. It was no good forcing herself. And no good his
trying to force her. Unless she could give herself from her soul, it
would be cowardice ro gi\'e herself at all. It would be cheating him as
much as herself.
She felt she was on the brink of her own being. But she did not
want to be pushed O\'er a precipice. If she went O\'er a precipice with
him she would only be helping to break him, not to make him. Berrer
die alone than help to break the new thing in the men.
She knew what she wanted. She wanted to go home, before
deciding anything. And from the distance look across, and choose.
She wanted to see her children and her mother. Perhaps after all she
could win her children O\'er ro a heroic way oflife. She had lo\'ed them
when they were Iirrle, so much. How could she go back on it? And her
mother! She was fond ofher mother. And she was an old woman now,
tolerant and so sensible in her old age. She understood her daughter
Kate, too, for she herself was of a wilful, downright nature. But Lady
Fitzpatrick had always lo\'ed the framework of society, as a serring.
She loved it still. It was always a kind of game to her, to be Lady
Fitzpatrick and ha\'e generals and lords for her friends. She always
kept staunch men-friends, did Lady Fitzpatrick, bur no-one had e\'er
thought scandal. Sir Anthony, her husband, Kate's father, had been
rather scandalous. But the Baronet was dead these ten years, and the
title went to Kate's boy, Frederick.
Kate thought of her home in De,·on, the old stone house, and the
wild park, the sea invisible but only four miles away. Kate had lo\'ed
Uthway, as the house was called. She thought of it now: her mother
with her lo\'ely white hair, like thistle-down, sirring erect and hand
some, rather stout, in her black silk or her black net or her white
dresses, with a bit of fme lace carelessly put on, and probably a spot or
Chapter XVIII 313
two somewhere on the dress. For Lady Fitzpatrick was really a rough
handed woman. Kate had hated her mother's heavy hand, as a child,
and her mother's rough, caustic, humorous nature. She had loved the
subtle, untrustworthy Sir Anthony.
"Ah Anthony! Anthony!" her mother would say of him. "He is
the saint to pray to, if you want to find a lost reputation."
So the rough-handed, rather selfish mother maintained all her life
the most delightful romantic friendships with paladins of the old
school, General Mornington, Lord Eppingway, and Lord Neagh.
General Mornington painted her portrait: he was an amateur. Lord
Eppingway sent her interesting things and long letters from Egypt
and Abyssinia: he too was an amateur. And Neagh had once proposed
to Sir Anthony: "I think it would be a good thing if Lady Fitzpatrick
went away with me. I haven't spoken to her yet, as I thought you and I
had better arrange the difficult matters." Sir Anthony had im
mediately darted into his study for a pair of pistols, and Neagh had
said: "Ah, if you rake ir like that, why, of course, consider it unsaid."
So Sir Anthony had considered it unsaid, and had departed to Ireland
to shoot and make a few more debts. Which Lady Fitzpatrick haggled
over, and paid when she had haggled to the lowest figure.
But Anthony was dead, and Neagh was dead, and Eppingway was
dead. But still Mornington was faithful. He was still painting, though
a martyr to his kidneys. And he still called every day. And Lady
Fitzpatrick still received him in the little drawing-room. And she
would still bridle like a girl who was receiving her beau. And he would
peer at her through his pince-nez, and say to her:
"Is the lace of your collar torn?"
"Torn? - Where?" And she would crane her neck. "I don't think
so."
"Look here!" - He would lift up the torn place.
"Ah that! That is nothing!" she would reply, patting it down with
her heavy white hand. ''That is nothing. You always were a gover
ness."
"I can hardly walk today," he would say, putting his hand to his
back.
"Oh dear! Oh dear! Does it hurt you again?" she would cry, as if in
fear. She still called him General, and he still called her Lady Fitzpat
rick, after forty years.
And a maid-servant outside would be pursuing the young master,
314 QUITZALCOATI.
ism and Labour, because they were unattractive. They spoilt all the
charm ofthings. Desmond was a charming man. Why waste his life in
these unpleasant democratic pursuits? She herself, she said, was per
fectly democratic. Which was true. She talked just as simply, was just
as much herself with a casual farmer as with Mornington. \Vhen she
was sixty, she had sat chatting on a bench at Porthcothan, with an
elderly, good-looking fisherman. He was a widower, she was a
widow.
"I've got no ties in the world, and seemingly you haven't," he had
said to her in the end. "Why don't you and me make a match of it?"
"Nay! Nay!" she laughed. "I shall never marry again."
"Come! You're young yet. Think it over. Why you and me are just
built for one another. I never liked the cut of a woman better."
She had really been rather pleased. She told the story to Morning
ton the moment she saw him. And he had answered, in his correct
way:
''Well, I suppose it is a tribute to you."
''Why it's the best feather I shall ever put in my cap," she replied.
The atmosphere of home came over Kate, and she knew she
would have to go. For the relief. As a relief to herself. Her soul was
strained, straining away so far.
The drums were sounding outside. In the open clearing of the
mango-trees, men were dancing in a ring, and in two long lines, a stiff,
stately, rapid-treading dance, threading curiously in and out. They
were naked to the waist, and carried gourd rattles. They danced in a
rhythm of five, shaking the rattles at every fifth, while the drums kept
up a subtle, rippling rhythm, which she could not quite unravel.
But her eyes were full of Uthway, the little breakfast-table on the
lawn, her mother's bedroom-window, next the little drawing-room,
wide open, and the children standing outside on the path shouting to
their grandmother, who was taking her breakfast in bed.
"Grandmother! You're having kidneys for breakfast! You know
the doctor says they are bad for your hean."
"Now all the world has its eyes on my forkful ofdevilled kidney!"
came the exasperated voice of the grandmother, from her bed.
Kate would not go to look. - She could sec plainly enough, in her
mind's eye, her handsome mother with fine white hair hastily but
attractively caught up, sitting in bed wearing a little cotton jacket
scalloped all round with blue, which she had scalloped and made for
316 Q lJEl"ZALCO.-\TL
"Home to what?"
"Home to my children. And home to my mother, who is gening
old now. She is over seventy."
"And you must go now, just now?"
''Yes, I must go now," she replied, sighing. "It is all such a strain
on me here. I can't bear it any longer. I must go home. I said I would
go at the end of the month, and I must stick to it. I can't bear to stay
any longer."
She knew there was a great resistance and a great rebellion in him.
But she could not think about him any more. Her soul ignored him.
Fleetingly, she remembered him, the red man glowing like a bit of red,
heated iron, in the light on the lake. Clothed in the sun. Then her soul
turned aside its face. She could not think ofhim, she could not even be
aware of him.
The sky had clouded over and rain was falling on the mountains
opposite, brushed down like grey hair. It would be raining at Uthway.
It would be raining, and she would be going out in a waterproof, and a
sailor's waterproof hat, to walk in the garden in the summer rain, and
smell the roses. The big, wide damask roses. And the velvety dark-red
ones. And the Glory up the side ofthe stable. And pinks would be out,
beds of white pink, and then those big old pinks with a dark red spot,
the sort that so often broke their calyx. She would give her whole soul
to smell pinks and roses in the rain, and the lime tree in flower by the
little s ummer-house. To sit in the linle rustic summer-house, and see
the honeysuckle, almost day-scentless, drip with rain round the door,
and the garden with roses and a privet screen, and the plain stone
houses beyond. Or to ride in the rain down to the sea, and sit in the
rocks watching the big waves break, grey, with a great mass offem, in
the rain.
"Will you bring your children here?" he was asking her.
The thought almost made her smile.
"Perhaps," she said.
"Ifyou wish to have a house like this, to bring yourchildren here,"
he was saying.
A house like this! With Mexican servants around her all the time.
And the alien, intolerable pressure. Bring her children here! How they
would hate her for it, after the first two months. Ugh, how they would
hate it! More even than she hated it. And yet she said:
"Perhaps! Perhaps! I shall have to see, when I get to England."
318 QUETZALCOATL
It was raining heavily again, the drums were silent, they rwo seemed
shut in in the veils of tropical rain.
"Perhaps I would rather you should hate me," he said, "than that
you should be gone from me altogether."
This made her heart stand with fear, for a moment.
"Surely you have Don Ramon, and your Huirzilopochtli, and
your army, and your country. Surely having me and hating me would
only spoil it all for you."
''Who knows," he said darkly.
"I know," she replied.
But she didn't. She was afraid of him. Perhaps the devil in him
would like having her and hating her, once he was thwarted. So for a
moment, fearing him, she did hate him. And she longed, longed to be
gone out of Mexico.
"I must go," he said, rising.
''Won't you take your ring?" And she held our the plate to him, on
which it lay.
He looked at her once more.
''Will you not keep it in remembrance of me?" he said.
She met his eyes, and glanced away.
"I should like to, if you won't look on it as a pledge."
He smiled at her darkly.
"I shall look on it as nothing," he said.
She rook up the ring. Bur when he had gone, she put it down on
the table again. And she went to the azotea to see him ride away. In
uniform, the dark-grey uniform, on a red, silky, delicate horse. He
belonged to his horse more than to any woman, she thought, watch
ing him in secret. Like a subtler sort of centaur, he rode.
The rider on the red horse.
She went down and walked a few moments by the shore, beyond
the low break-water wall. Suddenly before her she saw a long dark soft
rope, lying over a pale boulder. And instantly, the dark soul in her was
alert. It was a snake, with a subtle pattern along its soft dark back, lying
there over a big round stone, its head sunk to earth. It felt her
presence, too, for suddenly, with incredible soft quickness, it con
tracted down the stone and she saw it entering a little gap in the stone
wall. The hole was not very big, and as it entered it looked quickly
back, with its small, dark, wicked-pointed head, and flickered a dark
tongue. Then it eased its dark length into the hole. The hole could not
320 QUETZALCOATL
have been very large, because when ir had all gone in, Kare could see
me las[ fold srill, and me flar little head resting on mis fold, like me
devil wim his chin on his arms looking our of a loop-hole in hell. There
was me little head looking OU[ a[ her from mar hole in me wall, wirh
me wicked spark of an eye. Making irself invisible. Warching OU[ of irs
own invisibility. Coiled wickedly on irs own disappoinrmem. lr was
d.isappoimed ar irs failure w rise higher in crearion, and irs disappoim
mem was poisonous. Kare wem away, nnable w forger ir.
321
XIX
l:( ATE WENT HOME THAT DAY. She didn't want to stay longer at
..r Las Yemas. She felt a certain tenderness for Cipriano, but she
almost hated Ramon. Teresa too. But particularly Ramon. Those
mystical, life-destroying men, with their hateful abstraction and imag
ery. Posing so large, too. And looking at her so calmly and dis
passionately. He need not pretend so much calm and dispassion, for
she believed he hated her, at the depths of him. His excessive maleness
hated her because she was a woman, and not humble. He wanted her
to be humble, like Teresa. He wanted to humble her, before his
uninspired maleness. He would not succeed. And of course he was
jealous of Cipriano's feeling for her.
So she was rowed back to Chapala. She was forced to admit the
lake had a real beauty, now the rains had moistened the hills and
soothed the air. The wind carne fresh and healing, sunlight lay in
bright gleams on the mountains of the shore, and shadow deep and
velvety. The folds and the slopes were all green, save where the
ploughed eanh was reddish. But the ridges of rock were grey still,
through a sprinkleofbushes. Red and bright green and pale green and
dark green and whitish and grey lay the splashes of sun, the villages
were white specks here and there. Dark, dark green, paling to blue
green and deepening to indigo spread the subtly-varying shadows.
The lake had come alive with the rains, the air had come to life, the sky
was silver and white and grey, with distant blue. There was something
soothing and, curiously enough, paradisal about it, even the pale,
dove-brown water. She could not remember any longer the dry rigid
pallor of the heat, like memory gone dry and sterile, hellish. A boat
was coming over with its sail hollowing out like a shell, pearly white,
and its sharp black canoe-beak slipping past the water. It looked like
the boat of Dionysos crossing the seas and bringing the sprouting of
the vine.
When she had landed and was going home, she saw such an
322 QUETZ.ALCOATL
loose planks, and very slowly, pushed from behind, moved to the end,
above the low cavern of the boat.
There he stood, huge, silvery and dappled like the sky, with
snake-dapples down his haunches, looming massive way above the red
hatches of the roof of the canoe. How would such a great beast pass
that low red roof and drop into that hole? It seemed impossible.
He lowered his head and looked into the cavern. It seemed not to
trouble him at all. The men behind shoved in his living flanks. He
seemed to take no heed. Then he lowered his head and looked again.
The men behind pushed once more. Slowly, carefully, he crouched,
making himself small, and with a quick, massive little movement
dropped down into the cavern of the boat with his fore-feet, leaving
his huge hind-quarters heaping up behind. There was a shuffle and a
little stagger down below, then the soft thud as his hind feet leaped
down. He had gone. The massive, sky-like animal had gone down into
the bowels ofthe boat. There was another loose pause. Then the peons
moved again to a different arrangement.
The planks were taken away. A peon had run out to unfasten the
rope from the stones on the shore. There was a slight thudding of
strange feet in the dark belly of the boat. Men were pushing at her
stem, to push her off. They were pulling away stones from under her,
to make her float a linle. Slowly, casually, they flung the stones aside,
into the shallow water. And the flat-bottomed boat moved, edged our
to the water, slowly, she was afloat. Slowly the peons poled her away
from the shore, running silently, barefoot along her deck, pressing on
their poles, till they reached the stem. And with her hidden cargo of
silver-spangled mighty life she slid slowly out, till it was far enough,
and they could hoist the sail. The wide white sail thrusting up her one
hom and curving to a whorl in the wind like a shell. She was already
getting small on the surface of the water.
Kate turned away home. It all happened so quietly, no noise save
the thud of hoofs at one moment; so softly and unviolently, with the
loose pauses and the casual, soft-balanced rearrangements at every
pause. And now the boat was softly on the water, with her white sail in
a whorl like the boat ofDionysos, going across the lake. There seemed
a certain mystery in it. When she thought of the great dappled bull
upon the waters, it seemed mystical to her.
A man was stripping palm-stalks, squatting in silence in his white
cotton pants under a tree, his black head bent forward. Then he went
324 QUETZALCOATL
to wer his long scrips in rhe lake, rerurning wirh rhem dangling. Then
silemly, deftly, wirh rhe dark childish absorprion ofrhc people, he was
rhrcading his strips of palm and mending a chair-scar. - A roan horse,
speckled wirh whire, was racing prancing along rhc shore, and neigh
ing framically. His mane !lowed in rhc wind, his fccr srruck rhc
pebbles as he ran, opening his nose and neighing anxiously. Away up
rhc shore he ran. Whar had he lose? - A peon had driven a high
wheeled wagon drawn by four mules, imo rhc lake. Ir was deep in rhc
lake above rhc axle, up ro rhc bed of rhc cart, so char ir looked like a
dark square boar drawn by four soft, dark sea-horses, wirh long cars,
while rhc whirc peon wirh his big har srood crccr. The mules buried in
rhc warcr srcppcd gently, curving cowards rhc shore.
Ir was spring on rhc lake. New whirc-and-ycllow calves, whirc and
silky, were skipping, butting up rhcir rear ends, lifting rhcir rails, and
trotting side by side ro rhc warcr ro drink. A morhcr-ass was rcrhcrcd
to a rrcc, and in rhc shadow lay her foal, a little rhing as black as ink,
curled up, wirh tluflY head crccr and grcar black cars reaching up, for
all rhc world like some jcr-black hare ofwirchcraft pricking irs abnor
mal cars. A little black spor wirh a big head and high, srartling leaves of
black cars. Karc was dclighrcd. She waircd and waircd, bur ir did nor
gcr up.
"How many days?" she called ro rhc peon who was passing to one
of rhc straw hues.
"Lase nighr!" he called in answer.
"Oh! So new! He won'r gcr up. Can'r he gcr up?"
The peon wcm back, pur his arm round rhc foal, and lifted ir ro irs
fccr. There ir straddled in amaze on irs high, bene hair-pins of black
legs.
"Oh! Oh! How nice!" cried Karc in dclighr, and rhc peon laughed
back ar her, passing on ro his srraw hur in silence.
The ass-foal, black as ink, didn'r undcrsrand in rhc lease whar
sranding up mcanr. Ir rocked on irs four loose legs, and helplessly
wondered. Then ir hobbled a few seeps forward, ro smell ar some
growing green maize. Ir smelled and smelled and smelled, as if all rhe
a!ons ofgreen juice of memory were srriving ro awake. Then ir rumed
round, looked straighr towards Kare wirh irs bushy-velver face, and
pur our a pink tongue ar her. She broke inro a laugh. Ir srood
wondering, lose in wonder. Then ir pur our irs rongue ar her again.
And she laughed again, delighred. Ir gave an awkward little new skip,
Chapter XIX 325
and was so surprised and rickety, having done so. It venrured forward
a few steps, and unexpectedly exploded into another little skip, itself
most surprised of all by the event.
"Already!" said Kate. "Already it skips, and only came last night
into the world." After bethinking itself for some time, it walked
uncertainly forward, to its mother, and straight to her udder. It was
drinking. The mother, a well-liking grey-and-brown ass with not a
hint of black, stood with a rather smug self-satisfaction, Kate rather
envious of her, deciding it was time to go home. As she went in, she
noticed what long green shoots the roses had put forth, with new
leaves, and how many opening buds there were. The dark green
oranges also were growing big.
But she had come home to pack. As she changed into her house
dress, one of the scarlet little birds, more scarlet than a flower, came
flying with its brilliant breast and head to her open window, from the
wall of the orange-garden opposite. Then it settled on her window
sill, closing its brown wings like a little brown cape over so much pure
scarlet-rosy red. Only its head still flamed. It stayed a while, looking
round. "Paying me a visit," said Kate. Then it was gone again. She
looked up and saw the golden circles round the dark Greek crosses of
the church-towers, above the new green of the big palms.
"I am going back to Europe," she said.
And suddenly Europe seemed very pale to her, pale, almost
ghosrly. The life seemed thin and unreal, as if you could see through
the people, as you see through ghosts. Nevertheless, she went to the
box-room, and began packing the household trunk, that held the linen
and towels and table-cloths she had brought.
"Ah Nifia!" cried Felipa. ''You are packing the trunks! Are you
going?"
''Yes, I must go to my children and my mother."
"Ah no! No! Don't you go! - If you take me, I will work. You
needn't give me any money, only my food and clothes, and I will work
for you. I like to work. Me, I work like a donkey. I will work for you
over there."
Kate had one glimpse of Felipa in an English country house.
"It is so far, Felipa. So very far."
"Very far, yes," echoed Felipa. "But I want to see the world. - Is it
true that you go like that - ?" and she curved her hand round swiftly,
to describe the motion of sailing round the globe.
326 QUE.TZ.ALCOATL
TEXTUAL COMMENTARY
On Saturday afternoons rhe big black canoes wirh rhei r large square
sails came slowly approaching out of rhe rhin haze across rhe lake, from
rhe west fromJ ocorepec wirh hats and pots, from Ocodan andJ amay and
La Palma wirh mats and timber and charcoal and oranges, from Tux·
cueco and Tizapan and San Luis wirh boat· loads of dark-green globes of
watermelons, and tomatoes, boat-loads ofbricks and tiles, and rhen more
charcoal, more wood, from rhe wild dry hills across rhe lake.
In The Plumed Serpent (229) all but one of these names are fictional·
ized to read: Tlapaltepec, Ixdahuacan, Jaramay, Las Yemas, Cux
cueco, Tuliap:in. San Luis is here changed to San Cristobal, an actual
name. Further problems arise when on two occasions Kate looks
across the lake from Chapala to Tizap:in, an actual place (changed to
Tuliap:in in PS); or when in chapter XIII Kate makes her trip down the
lake with Cipriano to Jocotepec, an actual place (changed to Jaramay
in PS) ; then, on the return, Kate sees the place "where the white tower
of San Antonio rose from the trees in the near distance" (changed to
San Pablo in PS); and a little later in the trip back "they could see the
sprinkled white buildings of Chapala among the trees of the fore·
shore, and the two white towers of the church like candles, and the
small white boats laid up at the water's edge like a long cow of white
pigs sleeping." The name Sayula thus forms an anomaly in the geo
graphical context, and for this reason alone an editor might consider
keeping the name Chapala as it appears throughout Lawrence's origi
nal draft. But there is a much weightier reason for keeping to the name
Chapala.
The change to Sayula does not accord with the original impulse of
the draft written in Chapala, which remains close to the local scene
and shows the religion of Quetzalcoad arising gradually from the
actual landscape and native life, accompanied by the native music of
guitars and violins (as several passages cited in the Introduction
demonstrate). The early version is thus a novel based upon Lawrence's
conception of"the spirit of place," as set forth in the first version ofhis
essay by that tide in 1918. This essay, drastically revised, forms the
opening chapter in the American edition of his Studies in Classic
American Literature ( 1 923), for which he was correcting proofs dur
ing his stay in Chapala. This conception of"place" was therefore very
close to the center of his mind as he was composingQuetzalcoatl. This
early version breathes the very spirit of place: the people and the
landscape express the emergence of the new consciousness that Law·
Textual Commentary 331
renee longed to feel arising in the l':ew World. "For every great
locality has its own pure daimon," says Lawrence in this essay, "and is
conveyed at last into perfected life."
Every great locality expresses itself perfectly, in its own flowers, its
own birds and beasts, lastly its own men, with their perfected works.
Mountains convey themselves in unutterable expressed perfection in the
blue gentian flower and in the edelweiss flower, so soft, yet shaped like
snow-crystals. The very strata of the eanh come to a point of perfect,
unutterable concentration in the inherent sapphires and emeralds. It is so
with all worlds and all places of the world. We may take it as a law.
"So now," he concludes, "we wait for the fulfillment of the law in the
west, the inception of a new era ofliving . . . . We wait for the miracle,
for the new soft wind, . . . we can expect our iron ships to put forth
vine and tendril and bunches ofgrapes, like the ship ofDionysos in full
sail upon the ocean." 1
This is also the ship that emerges in the final chapter ofQuetzal
roatl, inseparable from the landscape. Since the spirit of an actual
place, Chapala, inspires the novel, the authentic names of the locale
have been retained. 2 The creation ofthe mythic realm of Sayula in The
Plumed Serpent had to await realization for the full development of
Lawrence's prophetic vision. 3
NOTES
1 . Lawrence, The Symbolic Meaning: The Unrollected Vmwns ofStudies
in Classic American Literature, ed. Armin Arnold (�ew York: The
Viking Press, 1 964), 30.
2. F or consistency we have omitted the heading for chapter v and have
changed to "Chapala" two occurrences of "Sayula" that appear in pas
sages added by Lawrence in his partial revision. Lawrence provided
titles only for the first seven chapters.
3. For a more detailed account of the textual problems and further
comparisons between the early and final versions, see the essay in
D. H. Lawrence Rt"Piew, 22, ( 1 990), 286-98.
332 QUE17..ALCOATI.
GLOSSARY
aa�bardtuW: cowed, lacking courage
aguador: water-carrier
alameda: public walk, avenue
amueblada: furnished
arriero: mule-driver
azotea: flat roof
barca: small boat
bonita: pretty thing
bue1UJ: good, excellent
calabacita: little squash or gourd
calzones.· trousers
camilm (properly camum): bus, in Mexican usage ( Lawrence anglicises
the word)
camote: sweet potato
campesi1W: peasant
ca1U!e (properly ca1U!a, as in PS): a large wooden sailing boat (Law-
rence uses English spelling in Q)
cargador: porter, load-carrier
charales: tiny fish abundant in Lake Chapala
chica: small; affectionate term addressed to women: "dear little girl"
chiquita: diminutive of chico, chua: small
rosita: little thing (affectionate term)
cuna: foundling hospital
despedida: farewell
feo: ugly
folrecita: little flower
fmda: inn
gringuito, gringuita: diminutive ofgringo; a friendly term (Lawrence
writes gringito, gringita)
guaraches: Mexican spelling cf huaraches; leather sandals
hacienda: farm, ranch, large estate
hacendado: owner of a hacienda (usually referring to owner of a large
estate)
lacas: lacquered wooden bowls (Lawrence writes lacques)
maguey: large cactus
mameyes: fruit of the mamey tree (Lawrence writes mameas)
mQZQ: male servant
muy: very, greatly
Glossary 333