Page:Vol 3 History of Mexico by H H Bancroft.djvu/793

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SPORT AND DRAMA.
773

over, the multitude turned with haste to the profane entertainments, notably the bull-fight, for which one of the city squares was usually reserved;[1] or to the boisterous amusements of the fair-ground with its gambling, cock-fighting, and other sports, combined of course with drinking and other excesses glaringly in contrast to the solemnity of the day.

Cock-fighting was a favorite sport among all classes, and under its alluring excitement rich and poor, noble and beggar, freely mingled their shouts and bets.[2] While hardly any restrictions were imposed on brutal pastimes of this nature, gambling with dice, cards, and other implements was subject to a number of prohibitions, which embraced certain games of hazard, limited the stakes of a person to ten pesos de oro a day, and excluded from any contact with the vice judges, agents of merchants, and some other classes.[3] Safeguards were no doubt required among a people with whom the passion for gambling, so prevalent already among the Spaniards, was greatly intensified by a frivolous and impulsive nature; yet the government fostered it in another direction by extending royal patronage over lotteries. An official institution of this kind was established in 1770, with fourteen drawings a year, and prizes ranging as high as twelve thousand pesos. Within fifteen years the government made a profit of over a million pesos.[4]

For a people so addicted to the drama as the Spanish, and boasting such names as Lope de Vega and

    Mexico, devolved on a regidor, and was declined by many owing to the outlay required.

  1. In addition to the necessary stands for the occasion the windows of the houses around were controlled by the committee in charge. Beleña, Recop., i. 161; Villaroel, Enferm. Pol., 86.
  2. At the instance of the archbishop the sport was forbidden in 1688, and the revenue therefrom ordered to be drawn from other sources, with the usual result. Robles, Diario, ii. 474, etc. Later the stakes were limited to a small amount. Recop. de Ind., ii. 218. But this served only the better to protect the dishonorable. Museo Mex., i. 284-6. In the time of Revlla Gigedo, Instruc., 324-5, it yielded a revenue to the crown of $50,000.
  3. Recop. de Ind., ii. 352-3; Beleña, Recop., i. pt. iii. 217; Estalla, xxvi. 377; Concilios Prov., MS., pt. iii. 120-1; pt. iv. 36, 49.
  4. As more fully explained in the chapter on finance.