LETTER V 
CITY OF PITEBLA. 
I SHALL say nothing more of our journey from Perote to Puebla, or of 
the several uninteresting villages through which we passed. The road 
led among deep gullies, and was exceedingly dusty on the plains. The 
towns were usually built of the common adobes, or sun-dried bricks of 
the country, and neither in their architectural appearance, nor in the 
character of their inhabitants, offered any attractions for the attention of 
a traveller. It was, indeed, a tedious and uninteresting drive over the 
solitary moors, and I have seldom been more gratified at the termination of 
a day's fatigue than I was when we entered the gateway of our spacious 
and comfortable inn at Puebla. In addition to the usual discomforts of 
the road, we had suffered greatly from the heat during the two or three 
last hours of our ride, and were annoyed by a fine dust, which, heated 
by a. blazing sun, rolled into our coach from every side, and fell like 
a parching powder on our skins. A bath was, therefore, indispensable 
before the dinner, which we found excellent after our fare of the 
previous night at Perote. In the afternoon I paid a visit to the governor, 
who promised an escort of dragoons for the rest of the journey to the 
Capital ; and I then sallied forth, to see as much as possible of this really 
beautiful city. 
My recollections of Puebla (comparing it now with Mexico) are 
far more agreeable than those of the Capital. There is an air of neat- 
ness and tidiness observable everywhere. The streets are broad, well 
paved with flat stones, and have a washed and cleanly look. The 
crowd of people is far less than in the Capital, and they are not so ragged 
and miserable. House rents are one-half or one-third those of Mexico, 
and the dwellings are usually inhabited by one family ; but, churches 
and convents seem rather more plentiful in proportion to the inhabitants. 
The friars are less numerous, and the secular clergy greater. 
A small stream skirts the eastern side of Puebla, affording a large 
water-power for manufacturing purposes. On its banks a public walk 
has been planted with rows of trees, among which the paths meander, 
while a neat fountain throws up its waters in the midst of them. The 
views from this retreat, in the evening, are charmingly picturesque over 
the eastern plain. 
On the western side of Puebla lie the extensive piles of buildings 
belonging to the Convent of St. Francis, situated opposite the entrance of 
