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Read Ebook: Der tolle Mensch by Nietzsche Friedrich Wilhelm
Font size: Background color: Text color: Add to tbrJar First Page Next PageEbook has 102 lines and 4338 words, and 3 pagesI ON THE BORDER 1 II BANDITS! 4 V DOWN THE WEST COAST 47 VI THOSE DARK-EYED SE?ORITAS! 70 X THE LAND OF THE INDIAN VAMPS 149 FACING PAGE In Those Days Trains Did Not Venture to Run at Night Across the Sonora Desert 8 An Escort of Soldiers Occupied a Freight Car Ahead as a Precaution Against Bandits 8 A Burro Train Laden with Bullion from the Mines 16 La Colorada, Once the Home of Gold Mines, Now Served Only as a Depot for Trucks That Crossed the Desert 30 Indian Women, Pounding Clothes upon the Rocks Beside a Shallow Brook, Ceased Their Work to Stare 30 The Christ Was Represented by a Cheap Rag Doll Cradled in a Wicker Basket 42 For Three Days the Indians Neither Ate Nor Slept, Refreshing Themselves Only with Mescal 42 The Mexican Se?orita Has Always Been Portrayed in Our Fiction as a Wild Vampire 80 In the Days of Carranza One Frequently Saw a Bandit Hanging Around the Railway 60 Pedro Zamorra Had Removed a Few Ties Where the Train Came Around a Bend 100 So Worthless Were the Federal Troops That Many Americans Professed a Preference for Bandits 100 The Orange Trees in Guadalajara's Plaza Were Golden Throughout the Year 114 Mexico City, One of the Most Ornate Capitals in the Western Hemisphere, Somewhat Resembled Paris 114 The Mexican Pyramids Probably Antedate Those of Egypt by a Thousand Years or More 130 In the Gardens of Xochimilco, Relics of an Aztec Paradise, Only the Cabbages Were in Bloom 130 Mexican Policemen in White Spats 142 No Latin-American Village Is So Tiny But That It Has a Square Devoted to Bartering 172 The Mexican Peon So Loves the Excitement of the Market That He Refuses to Sell His Goods Elsewhere 172 The Tehuana Maidens Regarded a Man as a Luxury Rather Than a Necessity 156 The Abundant Central-American Volcanoes Fertilize the Coffee Fincas with Lava Dust 222 Guatemala's Population Includes a Million Pure-blooded Aborigines 190 Occasionally the Resultant Earthquakes Knock Down a City or Destroy the Guatemalan Cathedral 222 When Orellana Started a Revolution, President Herrera Made No Strenuous Objection 206 The Only Casualties Were a Few Policemen Who Mistook the Revolution for a Disorderly Demonstration 206 A Banana-Boat Loading on the East Coast 286 In These Pleasant Tropical Countries No Peon Girl Escapes Maternity 236 From His Palace the President Could Watch the Treasury to See That No One Stole the National Debt 254 Soldiers Stopped a Pedestrian at Every Corner to Search for Weapons 266 The American Intervention Had Brought Peace, but Managua's Dusty Streets Suggested no Prosperity 306 If the American Marines Were Withdrawn from Nicaragua a Revolution Would Transpire Over-Night 306 For Three Days the Boatmen Poled the Launch Through Shallows Framed in Rank Green Jungle 330 Greytown Was a Typical East Coast Port--Low, Swampy and Unattractive--With Black Complexions Prevailing 330 San Jos? Contains the Most Delightful Plazas and the Most Beautiful Women in the World 354 A Machine-Gun Tower Built by the Tyrant Tinoco 344 In Its Interior Decoration the Costa Rican National Theater Equals Any Theater in the United States 354 A GRINGO IN MA?ANA-LAND A GRINGO IN MA?ANA-LAND ON THE BORDER It was my original plan to ride from Arizona to Panama by automobile. In fact, I even went so far as to purchase the automobile. It had been newly painted, and the second-hand dealer assured me that no car in all the border country had a greater reputation. This proved to be the truth. The first stranger I met grinned at my new prize with an air of pleased recognition. So did the second stranger, and the third. I had acquired not only an automobile, but a definite standing in the community. People who had hitherto passed me without a glance now smiled at me. There was even some discussion of organizing a club, of which I was to be the president, my term of office to continue until I could sell the car to some one else. When I announced that I meant to drive to Panama--down through Mexico, Guatemala, Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and any other republics which I might discover along the way--every one who heard of the idea offered encouragement: Add to tbrJar First Page Next Page |
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