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MEXICO IN 1827.

that whenever applied by the inhabitant of any one place to the temperature of any other, it implied an increase, and not a diminution, of heat. Thus, Jălāpă would certainly be called Tierra templada, by a native of Mexico, although Mexico might not perhaps be so termed by a native of Jalapa; while both would be designated in the same way by an inhabitant of Tierra fria, to whose district nature has assigned a degree of warmth much inferior to that of either of the other two.

Notwithstanding the arbitrary manner in which these terms are used, I shall frequently employ them in the course of this work; for, until a barometrical survey of the whole country has been executed, and the relative height of the principal points fixed, it would require a tedious explanation to give the ideas which the words Tierra caliente, and Tierra templada, are sure to convey. In order to illustrate still farther the peculiar character of the country, of which I fear that no words can furnish an adequate idea, I subjoin a sketch of Mexico, which, supposing it a bird's-eye-view, without any pretensions to geographical accuracy, may serve to show the relative position of the Tierra caliente and the Table-land, and to explain the variety of climate in the intermediate space.

The former division of New Spain into what was denominated the "Kingdom of Mexico," and the Eastern and Western Internal provinces, was never very distinct, and is now of little importance;