60 CHAQUE PAYS, CHAQUE MODE. 



hibition, and at such monsters as the instigators and 

 encouragers of it? Yet such scenes do constantly 

 take place, and, what is more, tlie owner of the Avin- 

 ner is often cheered and lauded as if he had really 

 performed some meritorious and heroic action ! 



I have personally been accused by ladies of showing 

 a disposition to cruelty, and even barbarity, because 

 I have occasionally gone to see a prize-fight. This 

 they naturally consider as a most horrid exhibition : 

 long may my fair countrywomen continue to think 

 so ! It is tlie natural result of the tenderness of 

 woman's nature. The dark-eyed daughters of An- 

 dalusia tell you, Quen no ha visto Sevilla no ha visto 

 maravilla : so they say also of a bull fight. Now 

 though few men wlio have seen such eyes have 

 escaped their influence, however fascinating their 

 truly lovely owners may be, their bare endurance, 

 without their praises of a bull fight, would be a 

 damper to the feelings of an Englishman in selecting 

 them as wives. I therefore glory in the indignant 

 glances called forth from Englishwomen at the bare 

 mention of a fight. That two gluttons after an hour's 

 fighting are by no means pleasing objects to look 

 upon is quite clear ; but I fully maintain that 

 cruelty has nothing on earth to do here, nor can I 

 consider it follows that men who witness it have any 

 cruelty in their disposition. If an unfortunate 

 wretch was condemned to be beaten to death, or 

 nearly so, as a punishment by an executioner, I grant 

 the man must be worse than brutish who could 

 derive any gratification in witnessing so revolting a 

 spectacle : but if two men prefer fighting as a mode 

 of making money to any other, wdio has a right to 

 interfere in their selection of occupation ? Chacun a 



