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As originally published in The Atlantic
Monthly
February 1860
Mexico
"The mere thought of the changes that have occurred there bewilders
the mind; and the inhabitants of orderly countries, whether that order be the
consequence of despotism or of constitutionalism, wonder that society should
continue to exist in a country where government appears to be unknown."
by Charles Creighton Hazewell
A certain immortal fool, who had, like most admitted fools, great wisdom, once
said, that the number of truces between the Christians and Saracens in
Palestine made an old man of him; for he had known three of them, so that he
must be at least one hundred and fifty years old. The saying occurs in a
romance, to be sure, but one which is not half so romantic as the
best-accredited decade of Titus Livius, and is quite as authentic as most of
what Sir Archibald Alison says, when he writes on the United States.
What Palestine and the Crusades were to the witty son of Witless, Mexico and
her politics are to moderns, not even excepting the predestined devourers of
the Aztec land, who ought to know something of the country they purpose
bringing within the full light of civilization through the aid of slaughter and
slavery. There are some myriads of "Americans of the North" yet living, and who
entertain not the remotest idea of dying, who remember Mexico as a Spanish
dependency quite as submissive to Viceroy Iturrigaray as Cuba is now to Captain
-General Serrano; and who have seen her both an Empire and a Republic, and the
theatre of more revolutions than England has known since the days of the
Octarchy. The mere thought of the changes that have occurred there bewilders
the mind; and the inhabitants of orderly countries, whether that order be the
consequence of despotism or of constitutionalism, wonder that society should
continue to exist in a country where government appears to be unknown.
Less than fifty years cover the time between the appearance of Hidalgo and that
of Miramon; and between the dates of the leaderships of the two men, Mexico has
had an army of generals, of whom little is now known beyond their names.
Hidalgo, Morelos, Mina, Bravo, Iturbide, Guerrero, Bustamente, Victoria,
Pedraza, Gomez Farias, Paredes, and Herrera, -- such are the names that were once
familiar to our countrymen in connection with Mexican affairs. We have now a
new race of Mexican chiefs, -- Alvarez, Vidaurri, Haro y Tamariz, Degollado, and
Miramon. Some of these last-named chiefs might, perhaps, be classed with those
first named, from years and services; but whatever of political importance they
have belongs to the present time; and the most important man of them all,
Miramon, is said to be very young, and was not born until many years after the
last vestiges of the vice-regal rule had been removed. Santa Ana, but for his
shifting round so often, -- now an absolute ruler, and then an absolute runaway,
yet ever contriving to get the better of his antagonists, whether they happen
to be clever Mexicans or dull Americans, -- might be called the isthmus that
connects the first generation of leaders with that which now misleads his
country. Santa Ana's public life synchronizes with the independence of Mexico
of foreign rule, and his career can hardly be pronounced at an end. It would be
of the nature of a newspaper coincidence, were he to know his "last of earth"
at the very time when, by all indications, Mexico stands in greater danger of
losing her national life than she has known since the day when Barradas was
sent to play the part of Cortes, but proved himself not quite equal to that of
Narvaez. Santa Ana owed much of his power to his victory over the Spaniards in
1830, though pestilence did half the work to his hand; and perhaps no better
evidence of the hatred of the Mexicans for Spanish rule can be adduced, than
the hold which he has maintained over their minds, in consequence of the part
he took in overthrowing that rule, and in rendering its return impossible.
Provoked by the anarchy which has so long existed in Mexico, American writers,
and writers of other countries, have sometimes contrasted the condition of that
nation with the order that prevailed there during the Spanish ascendancy, and
it is not uncommon to hear Americans say that the worst thing that ever
happened to the Mexicans was the overthrow of that ascendancy. They forget that
the causes of Mexican anarchy were of Spanish creation, and that it must have
exhibited itself, all the same, if Mexico had not achieved her independence.
The shock caused by the seizure of the Spanish throne by Napoleon I. led to
that war against the Spaniards in Mexico which prematurely broke out in 1810,
and which was of the nature of a Jacquerie, but which would have been
completely successful, had Hidalgo been equal to his position. It had been
intended that the blow should be struck against the Gachupines, -- European
Spaniards, or persons of pure Spanish blood, -- who were partisans of Spain,
whether Spain were ruled by Bourbons or Bonapartes; and it was to have been
delivered by the Creoles, who remained faithful to the House of Bourbon.
Circumstances caused the Indian races to commence the war, and this was fatal
to the original project, as it led to the union of both Spaniards and Creoles
against the followers of Hidalgo. The army with which Calleja overthrew the
forces of Hidalgo was an army of Creoles. It was composed of the very men who
would have been foremost in putting down the Spaniards, if the Indians had
remained quiet. From that time dates the disorder of Mexico, which has ever
since continued, though at intervals the country has known short periods of
comparative repose.
In 1811 Morelos was the most conspicuous of the insurgent chiefs, and the next
year he was successful in several engagements; and it was not until the end of
1815 that he fell into the hands of his enemies, by whom he was shot, sharing
the fate of Hidalgo. During the four years that he led the people, efforts were
made to settle the controversy on an equitable basis that would have left the
King of Spain master of Mexico; but the pride of the Spaniards would not allow
them to listen to justice. They acted in Mexico as their ancestors had acted in
the Netherlands. It is the chief characteristic of the Spaniard, that, in
dealing with foreigners, he always assumes a Roman-like superiority, without
possessing the Roman's sense and shrewdness. The treatment of the Capuans by
the Romans, as told by Livy in his narrative of the Hannibalian War, might be
read as a history of the manner in which the Spaniards ever treat "rebels"; and
never did they behave more cruelly than they behaved toward the Mexicans in the
last days of the viceroys. This fact is to be borne in mind, when we think of
the sanguinary character of Mexican contests; for that character originated in
the action of the Spaniards during their struggles with the Patriots. The
latter were not faultless, but they often exhibited a generosity and a
self-denial that promised much for the future of their country, which promise
would have been realized but for the ferocious tone of the warfare of the old
governing race. The Spaniards were ultimately beaten, but they left behind them
an evil that marred the victory of the Patriots, and which has done much to
prevent it from proving useful to those who obtained it at great cost to
themselves and their country.
The defeat and death of Morelos proved fatal, for the time, to regular
opposition on the part of the Patriots, and it was not until the arrival of
Mina in Mexico that they renewed the war in force. This was in April, 1817; and
Mina was defeated and put to death in seven months after he landed. At the
beginning of 1818, the viceroy Apodaca announced to the home government, "that
he would be answerable for the safety of Mexico without a single additional
soldier being sent out to reinforce the armies that were in the field." Had he
been a wise man, the event might have justified this boast; but as he was
neither wise nor honest, and as he sought to restore the old state of things in
all its impurity, his confidence was fatal to the Spanish cause. The Spanish
Constitution of 1812 had been proclaimed in Mexico in the autumn of that year,
and its existence kept the Liberal cause alive. So long as the Patriots had any
power in the field, Apodaca, though an enemy of the Constitution, dared not
seek its destruction; but after the overthrow of Mina, when he believed the
Patriot party was "crushed out," he plotted against the Constitution, and
resolved to restore the system that had existed down to 1812. Not a vestige of
Liberalism was to remain. He selected for his chief tool the once famous
Agustin de Iturbide, who turned out an edged tool, so sharp, indeed, that he
not only cut the viceroy's fingers, but severed forever the connection between
Mexico and Spain. Iturbide had eminently distinguished himself in the royal
army, and to him it was owing that Morelos had been defeated. He was brave,
ambitious, and able, and he possessed a handsome person and elegant manners. He
was appointed to head an army in Western Mexico, on condition that he should
"pronounce" in favor of the restoration of absolute royal authority. He
accepted the command; but on the 24th of February, 1821, he astonished his
employer by proclaiming, not the plan upon which they had agreed, but what is
known as the Plan of Iguala, from the town where the proclamation was made.
This plan provided that Mexico should be independent of Spain, and for the
erection of the country into a constitutional monarchy, the throne of which
should be filled by Ferdinand VII., or by one of his brothers, -- or by some
person chosen from among reigning families, should the Spanish Bourbons decline
the invitation. The monarch was to be called Emperor, a title made fashionable
and cheap by Bonaparte's example. Perfect equality was established, and all
distinction of castes was abolished.
Saving that the Catholic religion was declared the national religion, the
twenty-four articles of this Plan were of a liberal character, and leave an
impression on the mind highly favorable to their author. Viewing it in the
light of thirty-nine years, and seeing that republicanism has not succeeded in
Mexico, even a democrat may regret that the Plan of Iguala did not become the
constitution of that country.
The simple abolition of Spanish rule would have satisfied the mass of the
inhabitants, who cared little for political institutions, but who knew the
evils they suffered from the tyranny of a class that did not number above
one-eightieth part of the population. For the time, the Plan was successful:
the clergy, the military, the people, and the old partisans of independence all
supported it; and O'Donoju, who had arrived as successor to Apodaca, recognized
Mexican independence. The victors entered the capital September 27, 1821, and
established a provisional Junta, which created a regency, with Iturbide for
President. On the 24th of February, 1822, a Congress assembled, which contained
three parties, the representatives of those which existed in the country: -- 1.
The Bourbonists, who desired that the Plan of Iguala should be adhered to in
all its details; 2. The Iturbideans, who wished for a monarchy, with their
chief as Emperor; and, 3. The Republicans, who were hostile to monarchical
institutions as well as to Spanish rule. It is possible that the first party
might have triumphed, had Spain been under the dominion of sagacious men: for
the clergy must have preferred it, not only because it was that polity under
which they were sure to have most consideration, but because the whole power of
Rome might have been brought to bear in its behalf, and that the clergy never
would have seriously thought of resisting: -- and the influence of the clergy was
great over the mass of the people. But the Spanish government would not ratify
the treaty made by O'Donoju, or abandon its claim on Mexico. This left but two
factions in the Congress, and their quarrel had a sudden termination, for the
moment, in the elevation of Iturbide to the imperial throne, May 18th, 1822.
This was the work of a handful of the lowest rabble of the capital, the select
few of a vagabondage compared with whom the inhabitants of the Five Points may
be counted grave constitutional politicians. The legislature went through the
farce of approval, and the people acquiesced, -- as they would have done, had he
been proclaimed Cham. Had Iturbide understood his trade, he might have reigned
long, perhaps have established a dynasty; but he did what nearly every Mexican
chief since his time has done, and what, to be just, nearly every revolutionary
government has sought to do: he endeavored to establish a tyranny. He dissolved
the Congress, substituting a Junta for it, composed of his own adherents. The
consequence was revolt in various parts of the empire. Santa Ana, then Governor
of Vera Cruz, "pronounced" against the Emperor; and Echavari, who was sent to
punish him, played the same part toward Iturbide that Iturbide had played
toward Apodaca: he joined the enemies of the imperial government. As Iturbide
had triumphed over the vieceroy by the aid of men of all parties but that of
the old Spaniards, so was he overthrown by a coalition of an equally various
character. He gave up the crown, after having worn it not quite ten months, and
was allowed to depart, with the promise of an annual pension of twenty-five
thousand dollars. Seeking to recover the crown in 1824, he was seized and
shot, -- a fate of which he could not complain, as he was a man of bloody hand,
and, as a royalist leader, had caused prisoners to be butchered by the
hundred.
The Republicans were not triumphant, but their conduct showed that they were
not much better qualified to rule than were the Imperialists. They made a
Federal Constitution, -- that which is commonly known as the Constitution of
1824, -- which was principally modelled on that of the United States. This
imitation would have been ridiculous, if it had not been mischievous. Between
the circumstances of America and those of Mexico there was no resemblance
whatever, and hence the polity which is good for the one could be good for
nothing to the other. One fact alone ought to have convinced the Mexican
Constitutionalists of the absurdity of their doings. Their Constitution
recognized the Catholic religion as the religion of the state, and absolutely
forbade the profession of any other form of faith! In what part of our
Constitution they found authority for such a provision as this, no man can say.
It has been mentioned, reproachfully, that our Constitution does not even
recognize God; yet on a Constitution modelled upon ours Mexican statesmen could
graft an Established Church, with a monopoly of religion! Just where imitation
would have been more creditable to them than originality, they became original.
It has been said, in their defense, that the Church was so powerful that they
could not choose but admit its claim. This would be a good defense, had they
sought to make a Constitution in accordance with views admitting the validity
of an Ecclesiastical Establishment. The charge against them is not, that they
sanctioned an Establishment, but that they sought to couple with it a liberal
republican Constitution, and thus to reconcile contradictions, -- an end not to
be attained anywhere, and least of all in a country like Mexico.
The factions that arose in Mexico after the establishment of the Republic were
the Federalists and the Centralists, being substantially the same as those
which yet exist there. The Federalists have been the true liberals throughout
the disturbances and troubles of a generation, and, though not faultless, are
better entitled to the name of patriots than are the men by whom they have been
opposed. They have been the foes of the priesthood, and have often sought to
lessen its power and destroy its influence. If they could have had their will
any time during the last thirty-five years, the priests would have been reduced
to a condition of apostolic simplicity, and the Church's vast property been put
to uses such as the Apostles would have approved. Guadalupe Victoria would
probably have been as little averse to the confiscation of ecclesiastical
property as was Thomas Cromwell himself. The fear that a firm and stable
federal government would interfere with the privileges of the Church, and would
not cease such interference until the change had been made perfect, which
implied the Church's political destruction, is one of the chief reasons why no
such government has ever had an existence in Mexico. The Church has favored
every party and faction that has been opposed to order and liberty. Royalism,
centralism, despotism, and even foreign conquest has it preferred to any state
of things in which there should be found that due union of liberty and law
without which no country can expect to have constitutional freedom. Had it ever
been possible to establish a strong central government in Mexico, it is very
probable the Church would have been one of its firmest pillars. The character
and organization of that institution, its desire to maintain possession of its
property, and its aversion to liberty of every kind, would all have united make
such a government worthy of the Church's support, provided it had supported the
Church in its turn. The ecclesiastical influence is everywhere observable in
the history of Mexico, from the beginning of the struggle for independence. The
clergy were supporters of independence, not because they wished for liberty to
the country, but that they might monopolize the vast power of their order. They
hated the Spaniards as bitterly as they were hated by any other portion of the
inhabitants of Mexico. But they never meant that republicanism should obtain
the ascendancy in the country. A powerful monarchy, an empire, was what they
aimed at; and the government which Iturbide established was one that would have
received their aid, could it have brought any power to the political firm the
clergy desired to see in existence. It may be assumed that the clergy would
have preferred a Spanish prince as emperor, for they were too sagacious not to
know that the best part of royalty is that which is under ground. Kings must be
born to their trade to succeed in it; and a brand-new emperor, like Iturbide,
unless highly favored by circumstances, or singularly endowed with intellectual
qualifications, could be of little service to the clerical party. He fell, as
we have seen; but the clerical party remained, and, having continued to
flourish, is at this time, it is probable, stronger than it was in 1822. It is
owing to this party that the idea has never been altogether abandoned that
Mexico should resume monarchical institutions; and every attempt that has been
made to favor what in this country is known as consolidation has either been
initiated by it or has received its assistance. That we do not misrepresent the
so-called clerical party, in attributing to it a desire to see a king in
Mexico, is clear from the candid admission of one of its members, who has
written at length, and with much ability, in defense of its opinions and
actions. "Had it been given to that party which is taxed with being
absolutist," he says, "to see such a government in Mexico as the government of
Brazil, (not to take examples out of the American continent,) their earnest
desires would have been accomplished. It is therefore wrongfully that that
party is the object of the curses lavished upon it." This is plain speaking,
indeed, -- the Brazilian government being one of the strongest monarchies in the
world, and deriving its strength from the fact that it seeks the good of its
subjects. The blindest republican who ever dreamed it was in the power of
institutions to "cause or cure" the ills of humanity must admit, that, if
Bourbon rule in Mexico could have produced results similar to those which have
proceeded from Braganza rule in Brazil, it would have been the best fortune
that the former country could have known, had Don Carlos or Don Francisco de
Paula been allowed to wear the imperial crown which was set up in 1822. With
less ability than Iturbide, either of those princes would have made a better
monarch than that adventurer. It is not so much intellect as influence that
makes a sovereign useful, the man being of far less consequence than the
institution. Even the case of Napolean I. affords no exception to this rule;
for his dynasty and his empire fell with him, because they lacked the stability
which comes from prescription alone. Had Marlborough and Eugene penetrated to
Paris, as did Wellington and Blucher a century later, they never would have
thought of subverting the Bourbon line; but the Bonaparte line was cut off as
of course when its chief was defeated. The first king may have been a fortunate
soldier only, but it requires several descents to give to a man the flavor of
genuine nobility. If it be objected to this, that it is an admission of the
power which is claimed for flunkeyism, we can only meet the charge by saying
that there is much of the flunkey in man, and that whoso shall endeavor to
construct a government without recognizing a truth which is universal, though
not great, will find that his structure can better be compared to the Syrian
flower than to the Syrian cedar. The age of Model Republics has passed away
even from dreams.
We have called the party in Mexico which represents a certain fixed principle
the clerical party; but we have done so more for the sake of convenience, and
from deference to ordinary usage, than because the words accurately describe
the Mexican reactionists. Conservative party would, perhaps, be the better
name; and the word conservative would not be any more out of place in such a
connection, or more perverted from its just meaning, than it is in England and
the United States. The clergy form, as it were, the core of this party, and
give to it a shape and consistency it could not have without their alliance.
Yet, if we can believe the Mexican already quoted, and who is apparently well
acquainted with the subject on which he has sought to enlighten the English
mind, the party that is opposed to the liberals is quite as much in favor of
freedom as are the latter, and is utterly hostile to either religious or
political despotism. After objecting to the course of those Mexicans who found
a political pattern in the United States, and showing the evils that have
followed from their awkward imitation, he says, -- "No wonder, then, that some
men, actuated by the love of their country, convinced of the danger to Mexican
nationality from such a state of things, seeing clearly through all these
American intrigues, and determined to oppose them by all the means in their
power, should have formed long ago, and as soon as the first symptoms of
anarchy and the cause of them became apparent, the centre of a party, which,
having necessarily to combat the so-called 'Liberal party,' or, in other words,
the American army, is accused of being a retrograde, absolutist, clerical
party, bent on nothing but the re-establishment of the Inquisition and the
'worst of the worst times.' Nothing, however, is less true. That party contains
in its bosom the most enlightened and the most respectable part of the
community, men who have not as yet to learn the advantages and benefits of
civil and religious liberty, and who would be happy indeed to see liberty
established in their country; but liberty under the law, rational and wise
liberty, liberty compatible with order and tranquillity, liberty, in a word,
for good purposes, -- not that savage, licentious, and tyrannical liberty, the
object of which is anarchy, so well answering the private ends of its
partisans, and, above all, the iniquitous views of an ambitious
neighbor......For the present, no doubt, their object is limited to obtain the
triumph over their enemies, who are the enemies of Mexico, and to put down
anarchy, as the first and most pressing want of the country, no matter under
what form of government or by what means. In pursuance of such an object, the
clergy naturally side with them; and hence, for those who are ignorant of the
bottom of things in Mexican affairs, the denomination given to this party of
'Clerical party' supported by military despotism; whereas the 'Anarchical
party' is favored with the name of 'Liberal Constitutional party.' It is,
however, easy to see that those two parties would be more exactly designated,
the one as the Mexican party, the other as the American Party."
If this delineation of the Conservative party be a fair one, -- as probably it
is, after making allowance for partisan coloring, -- it is easy to see, that,
while the clergy are with it, they are not of it; and also, that it would be
involved in a quarrel with the priesthood in a week after it should have
succeeded in its contest with the Liberals. Where, then, would be the
restoration of order, of which this Mexican writer has so much to say? The
clergy of Mexico are too powerful to become the tools of any political
organization. They use politicians and parties, -- are not used by them. The
Conservative party, therefore, is not the coming party, either for the clergy
or for Mexico. It answers the clergy's purpose of making it a shield against
the Liberals, whose palms itch to be at the property of the Church; but it
never could become their sword; and it is a sword, and a sharp and pointed one,
firmly held, that the clergy desire, and must have, if their end is to be
achieved. The defensive is not and cannot be their policy. They must rule or
perish. Hence the victory of the Conservatives would be the signal for the
opening of anew warfare, and the clergy would seek to found their power solidly
on the bodies of the men whom they had used to destroy the Liberals. They have
pursued one course for thirty-eight years, and will not be moved from it by any
appeals that shall be made to them in the name of order and of law, appeals to
which they have been utterly insensible when made by Liberals. Indeed, they
will not be able to see any difference between the two parties, but will hate
the Conservatives with most bitterness, because standing more immediately in
their way. A combat would be inevitable, with the chance that the American
Eagle would descend upon the combatants and swoop them away.
If anarchy were a reason for the formation of a league in Mexico, composed of
all the conservative men of the country, it ought to have been formed long ago.
Anarchy was organized there with the Republic, and was made much more permanent
than Carnot made victory. Unequivocal evidences of its existence became visible
before the Constitution was in a condition to be violated; and when that
instrument was accepted, it appeared to have been set up in order that
politicians and parties might have something definite to disregard. The first
President was Guadalupe Victoria, an honest Republican, whose name has become
somewhat dimmed by time. With him was associated Nicolas Bravo, as
Vice-President. It was while Victoria was President that the masonic parties
appeared, known as the Scotch masons and the York masons, or Escoceses and
Yorkinos, which were nothing but clubs of the Centralists and the Federalists.
The President was of the Yorkinos or Federalists, and the Vice-President was of
the other lodge. Bravo and his party were for such changes as should substitute
a constitutional monarchy, with a Spanish prince at its head, for the
Constitution of 1824. Bravo "pronounced" openly against Victoria, -- a proceeding
of which the reader can form some idea by supposing Mr. Breckinridge heading a
rabble force to expel Mr. Buchanan from Washington, for the purpose of calling
in some member of the English royal family to sit on an American throne.
Through the aid of Guerrero, a man of ability and integrity, and very popular,
the Liberals triumphed in the field: but Congress elected his competitor,
Pedraza, President, though the people were mostly for Guerrero. This was a most
unfortunate circumstance, and to its occurrence much of the evil that Mexico
has known for thirty years may be directly traced. Instead of submitting to the
strictly legal choice of President, made by the members of Congress, the
Federalists set the open example of revolting against the action of men who had
performed their duties according to the requirements of the Constitution.
Guerrero was violently made President. That the other party contemplated the
destruction of the Constitution is very probable; but the worst that they, its
enemies, could have done against it would have been a trifle in comparison with
the demoralizing consequences of the violation of that instrument by its
friends. Yet the Presidency of Guerrero will ever have honorable mention in
history, for one most excellent reason: Slavery was abolished by him on the
anniversary of Mexican independence, 1829, he deeming it proper to signalize
that anniversary "by an act of national justice and beneficence." Will the time
ever come when the Fourth of July shall have the same double claim to the
reverence of mankind?
Guerrero perished by the sword, as he had risen by it. The Vice-President,
Bustamente, revolted, and was aided by Santa Ana. His popularity was too great
to allow him to be spared, and when he was captured, Guerrero was shot, in
1831. Of the many infamous acts of which Santa Ana has been guilty, the murder
of Guerrero is the worst. Possibly it would have ruined him, but for his
services against the Spaniards, at about the same time. He was now the chief
man in Mexico, and became President in 1833. The next year he dissolved
Congress, and established a military government. The Constitution of 1824 was
formally abolished in 1835, and a Central Constitution was proclaimed the next
year, by which the States were converted into Departments. Santa Ana kept as
much aloof from these proceedings as he could, and sought to add to his
popularity by attacking Texas, where he reaped a plentiful crop of cypress.
The triumph of the Centralists was the turning-point in the fortunes of Mexico,
as it furnished a plausible pretext for American interference in her affairs,
the end of which is rapidly approaching. The Texan revolt had no other
justification than that which it derived from the overthrow of the Federal
Constitution; but that was ample, and, had it not been for the introduction of
slavery into Texas, the judgment of the civilized world would have been
entirely in favor of the Texans. In 1844, when our Presidential election was
made to turn upon the question of the annexation of Texas to the United States,
the grand argument of the annexationists was drawn from the circumstance that
the Mexicans had abrogated the Federal Constitution, thereby releasing the
Texans from their obligations to Mexico. This was an argument to which
Americans, and especially democrats, those sworn foes of consolidation, were
prone to lend a favorable ear; and it is certain that it had much weight in
promoting the election of Mr. Polk. Had the Texan revolt been one of ambition
merely, and not justifiable on political grounds apart form the Slavery
question, the decision might have been different, if, indeed, the question had
ever been introduced into the politics of this country. The sagacious men who
managed the affairs of the Democratic party knew their business too well to
attempt the extension of slaveholding territory in the gross and palpable form
that is common in these shameless days. But Texas, as an injured party that had
valiantly sustained its constitutional rights, was a very different thing from
a province that had revolted against Mexico because forbidden by Mexican
authority to allow the existence of slavery within its borders. There was much
deception in the business, but there was sufficient truth and justice in the
argument used to deceive honest men who do not trouble themselves to look
beyond the surface of things. For more than twenty years our political
controversies have all been colored by the triumph of the Mexican Centralists
in 1835-6; and but for that triumph, it is altogether likely that our territory
would not have been increased, and that the Slavery question, instead of
absorbing the American mind, would have held but a subordinate place in our
party debates. It may, perhaps, be deemed worthy of especial mention, that the
action of the Centralists of Mexico, destined to affect us so sensibly, was
initiated at the same time that the modern phase of the Slavery question was
opened in the United States. The same year that saw the Federal Constitution of
Mexico abolished saw our government laboring to destroy freedom of the press
and the sanctity of the mails, by throwing its influence in favor of the bill
to prevent the circulation of "incendiary publications," that is, publications
drawn from the writings of Washington and Jefferson; and the same year that
witnessed the final effort of Santa Ana to "subdue" Texas to Centralization
beheld General Cushing declaring that slavery should not be introduced into the
North, thus "agitating" the country, and winning for himself that Abolition
support without which his political career must have been cut short in the
morning of its existence. Such are the coincidences of history!
From the time of the victory of the Centralists until the commencement of the
war with the United States, Mexico was the scene of perpetual disturbances.
Mexia, a rash, but honest man, made an attempt to free his country in 1838, but
failed, being defeated and executed by Santa Ana, who came from the retirement
to which his Texan failure had consigned him, as champion of the government.
After some years of apparent anarchy, Santa Ana became Dictator, and in 1843 a
new Constitution, more centralizing in its nature than its immediate
predecessor, was framed under his direction. At the beginning of 1845 he fell,
and became an exile. His successor was General Herrera, who was desirous to
avoid war with the United States, on which account he was violently opposed by
Paredes, with success, the latter usurping the Presidency. Aided by our
government, Santa Ana returned to Mexico, and infused new vigor into his
countrymen. On his return, he avowed himself a Federalist, and recommended a
recurrence to the constitution of 1824, which was proclaimed. Paredes had
fallen before a "revolution," and was allowed to proceed to Europe. He was a
monarchist, and at that time the friends of monarchy in Mexico had some hopes
of success. It is believed that the governments of England and France were
desirous of establishing a Mexican monarchy, and their intervention in the
affairs of Mexico was feared by our government. Two things, however, prevented
their action, if ever they seriously contemplated armed intervention. The first
was the rapid success of our armies, coupled as it was with the exhibition of a
military spirit and capacity for which European nations had not been prepared
by anything in our previous history: and the second was the potato-rot, which
brought Great Britain to the verge of famine, and broke up the Tory party. The
ill feeling, too, that was created between the English and French governments
by the Montpensier marriage, and the discontent of the French people, which led
to the Revolution of 1848, were not without their effect on affairs. Had our
government resolved to seize all Mexico, it could have done so without
encountering European resistance in 1848, when there was not a stable
Continental government of the first class west of the Niemen, and when England
was too much occupied with home matters, and with the revolutions that were
happening all around her, to pay any regard to the course of events in the
Occident. But the Polk administration was not equal to the work that was before
it; and though members of the Democratic party did think of acting, and men of
property in Mexico were anxious for annexation, nothing was done. The American
forces left Mexico, and the old routine of weakness and disorder was there
resumed. Perhaps it would be better to say it was continued; for the war had
witnessed no intermission of the senseless proceedings of the Mexican
politicians. Their contests were waged as bitterly as they had been while the
country enjoyed external peace.
Several persons held the Presidential chair after the resignation of Herrera.
Organic changes were made. The clergy exhibited the same selfishness that had
characterized their action for five-and-twenty years. An Extraordinary
Constituent congress confirmed the readoption of the Constitution of 1824,
making such slight changes as were deemed necessary. Santa Ana again became
President. Some of the States formed associations for defense, acting
independently of the general government. After the loss of the capital, Santa
Ana resigned the Presidency, and Pena y Pena succeeded him, followed by Anaya;
but the first soon returned to office. Peace was made, and Santa Ana again went
into exile. Herrera was chosen President, and for more than two years devoted
himself to the work of reformation, with considerable success, though outbreaks
and rebellions occurred in many quarters. President Arista also showed himself
to be a firm and patriotic chief. But in 1852 a reaction took place, under
favor of which Santa Ana returned home and became President for the fifth time,
and Arista was banished. The government of Santa Ana was absolute in its
character, and much resembled that which Napoleon III. has established in
France, -- with this difference, that it wanted that strength which is the chief
merit of the French imperial system. It encountered opposition of the usual
form, from time to time, until it was broken down, in August, 1855, when the
President left both office and the country, and has since resided abroad. The
new revolution favored Federalism. Alvarez was chosen President, but he was too
liberal for the Church party, being so unreasonable as to require that the
property of the Church should be taxed. Plots and conspiracies were formed
against him, and it being discovered that the climate of the capital did not
agree with him, he resigned, and was succeeded by General Comonfort. Half a
dozen leaders "pronounced" against Comonfort, one of them announcing his
purpose to establish an Empire. Government made head against these attacks, and
seized property belonging to the Church. Some eminent Church officers were
banished, for the part they had taken in exciting insurrections. At the close
of 1857, Comonfort made himself Dictator; but the very men who urged him to the
step became his enemies, and he was deprived of power. Zuloaga, who was one of
his advisers and subsequent enemies, succeeded him, being chosen President by a
Council of Notables. Comonfort's measures for the confiscation of Church
property were repealed. The Constitution of 1857 placed the Presidential power
in the hands of the Chief Justice, on the resignation of the President, whence
the prominence of Juarez lately, he being Chief Justice when Comonfort
resigned. Assembling troops, he encountered Zuloaga, but was defeated. The
Juarez "government" then left the country, but shortly after returned.
Insurrections broke out in different places, and confusion reigned on all
sides. General Robles deposed Zuloaga, and made an honest effort to unite the
Liberals and Conservatives; but the Junta which he assembled elected Miramon
president, a new man, who had distinguished himself as a leader of the
Conservative forces. Miramon reinstated Zuloaga, but accepted the Presidency on
the latter's abdication, and has since been the principal personage in Mexico,
and, though he has experienced occasional reverses, has far more power than
Juarez. At the close of the year 1859, the greater part of Mexico was either
disposed to submit to the Miramon government, or cared little for either
Miramon or Juarez.
It is impossible to believe that the Juarez government is possessed of much
strength; and the gentleman who lately represented the United States in Mexico
(Mr. Forsyth) is of opinion that it is powerless. Nevertheless, our government
acknowledges that of Juarez, and has made itself a party to the contests in
Mexico. In his last Annual Message, president Buchanan devotes much space to
Mexican affairs, drawing a deplorable picture thereof, and recommending armed
intervention by the United states in behalf of the Liberal party. "I recommend
to Congress," says the President, "to pass a law authorizing the President,
under such conditions as they may deem expedient, to employ a sufficient
military force to enter Mexico for the purpose of obtaining indemnity for the
past and security for the future." This force, should Congress respond
favorably to the Presidential recommendation, is to act in concert with the
Juarez government, and to "restore" it to power. In return for such aid, that
government is to indemnify the Americans, and to provide that no more Americans
shall be wronged by Mexican governments. Does the President believe this theory
of Mexican settlement will be accepted by the world? If yes, then is he a man
of marvellous faith, considering the uncommonly excellent opportunities he has
had to learn what the political settlements of Mexico really mean. If no, then
he has a meaning beneath his words, and that meaning is the conquest of Mexico.
We do not charge duplicity upon President Buchanan, but it is vexatious and
humiliating to be compelled to choose between such charge and the belief of a
degree of simplicity in him that would be astonishing in a yearling politician,
and which is astounding in a man who has held high office for well-nigh forty
years. Let us suppose that Congress should kindly listen to President
Buchanan's recommendation, -- that a strong fleet and a great army should be sent
to the aid of the Juarez government, and should establish it in the capital of
Mexico, and then leave the country and the coasts of "our sister
Republic," -- what would follow? Why, exactly what we have seen follow the Peace
of 1848. The Juarez government could not be stronger or more honest than was
that of Herrera, or more anxious to effect the rehabilitation of Mexico; yet
Herrera's government had to encounter rebellions, and outrages were common
during its existence, and afterward, when men of similar views held sway, or
what passes for sway in "our sister Republic." So would it be again, should we
effect a "restoration" of the Liberals. In a week after our last regiment
should have returned home, there would be rebellions for our allies to
suppress. If they should succeed in maintaining their power, it would be as the
consequence of a violation of their agreement with us; and where, then, would
be the "indemnity" for which we are to fight? If they should be overthrown, as
probably would be their fate, where would be the "security" for which we are to
pay so highly in blood and gold? It is useless to quote the treaty which the
Juarez government has just made with our government, as evidence of its
liberality and good faith. That treaty is of no more value than would be one
between the United States and the ex-king of Delhi. Nothing is more notorious
than the liberality of parties that are not in power. There is no stipulation
to which they will not assent, and violate, if their interest should be
supposed to lie in the direction of perjury. Have we, in the hour of our
success, been invariably true to the promises made in the hour of our
necessities? A study of the treaty we made with France in 1778, by the light of
after years, would be useful to men who think that a treaty made is an
accomplished fact. The people of the United States have to choose between the
conquest of Mexico and non-intervention in Mexican affairs. There may be
something to be said in favor of conquest, though the President's arguments in
that direction -- for such they are, disguised though they be -- remind us strongly
of those which were put forth in justification of the partition of Poland; but
the policy of intervention does not bear criticism for one moment. Either it is
conquest veiled, or it is a blunder, the chance to commit which is to be
purchased at an enormous price; and blunders are to be had for nothing, and
without the expenditure of life and money.
We had purposed speaking of the condition of Mexico, the character of her
population, and the probable effect of her absorption by the United States; but
the length to which our article has been drawn in the statement of preliminary
facts -- a statement made necessary by the general disregard of Mexican matters
by most Americans -- warns us to forbear. We may return to the subject should the
action of Congress on the President's recommendation lead to the placing of the
Mexican question on the list of those questions that must be decided by the
event of the national election of the current year.
Copyright © 1997 by The Atlantic Monthly. All rights
reserved. The Atlantic Monthly; February 1860; Mexico.
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