grind it just as their great-great-great-grandfathers
did. They plow with a board slightly shod with
iron; their trifling little harrows are drawn by men
and women; small windmills grind the corn, ten bushels
a day, and there is one assistant superintendent to
feed the mill and a general superintendent to stand
by and keep him from going to sleep. When the
wind changes they hitch on some donkeys and actually
turn the whole upper half of the mill around until
the sails are in proper position, instead of fixing
the concern so that the sails could be moved instead
of the mill. Oxen tread the wheat from the ear,
after the fashion prevalent in the time of Methuselah.
There is not a wheelbarrow in the land—they
carry everything on their heads, or on donkeys, or
in a wicker-bodied cart, whose wheels are solid blocks
of wood and whose axles turn with the wheel.
There is not a modern plow in the islands or a threshing
machine. All attempts to introduce them have
failed. The good Catholic Portuguese crossed
himself and prayed God to shield him from all blasphemous
desire to know more than his father did before him.
The climate is mild; they never have snow or ice,
and I saw no chimneys in the town. The donkeys
and the men, women, and children of a family all eat
and sleep in the same room, and are unclean, are ravaged
by vermin, and are truly happy. The people lie,
and cheat the stranger, and are desperately ignorant,
and have hardly any reverence for their dead.
The latter trait shows how little better they are
than the donkeys they eat and sleep with. The
only well-dressed Portuguese in the camp are the half
a dozen well-to-do families, the Jesuit priests, and
the soldiers of the little garrison. The wages
of a laborer are twenty to twenty-four cents a day,
and those of a good mechanic about twice as much.
They count it in reis at a thousand to the dollar,
and this makes them rich and contented. Fine
grapes used to grow in the islands, and an excellent
wine was made and exported. But a disease killed
all the vines fifteen years ago, and since that time
no wine has been made. The islands being wholly
of volcanic origin, the soil is necessarily very rich.
Nearly every foot of ground is under cultivation,
and two or three crops a year of each article are
produced, but nothing is exported save a few oranges—chiefly
to England. Nobody comes here, and nobody goes
away. News is a thing unknown in Fayal.
A thirst for it is a passion equally unknown.
A Portuguese of average intelligence inquired if our
civil war was over. Because, he said, somebody
had told him it was—or at least it ran
in his mind that somebody had told him something like
that! And when a passenger gave an officer of
the garrison copies of the Tribune, the Herald, and
Times, he was surprised to find later news in them
from Lisbon than he had just received by the little
monthly steamer. He was told that it came by
cable. He said he knew they had tried to lay
a cable ten years ago, but it had been in his mind
somehow that they hadn’t succeeded!