Authors: James Michener
The plaza is linked, in the minds of those who read Spanish
history, with Spain’s most unfortunate king, Carlos II
(1661-1700), known as El Hechizado (The Bewitched) because
of his twisted and incompetent body and mind to match. He was
the last of the Spanish Habsburgs and the inheritor of all their
weaknesses; a substantial case could be made that he was insane,
but he reigned from the age of three, and it was his childless death
that brought the Borbón rulers to the Spanish throne and the war
of the Spanish succession to Europe.
When Carlos was eighteen he caused much excitement at court
by finally expressing an interest in something. Overhearing that
the Inquisition’s jails in outlying districts were crowded with
heretics whom the judges had found guilty but had not yet burned,
he announced that it was his pleasure to hold in the Plaza Mayor
a sumptuous auto-da-fé at which a hundred and twenty
condemned would be brought forth for sentencing. With real
excitement the slack-jawed monarch organized a spectacle of
which the English historian John Langdon-Davies has said, ‘There
can be no denying that the show staged on June 30th, 1680, in
the Plaza Mayor of Madrid, must have been one of the most
dramatic, the most moving, conceived by the mind of man since
the days when Christians and wild beasts fought one another for
the amusement of decadent Rome.’ Carlos spent a month
formulating the complex ritual for the exhibition and running
through a series of dress rehearsals. On the day itself fourteen
uninterrupted hours were spent preaching at the heretics and
reading their sentences, after which one hundred and one were
dismissed with lesser sentences, like flogging or a term in the
galleys, while the remaining nineteen were prepared for the stake.
It is not my intention to recite the details of this grisly day;
anyone wishing to know what was entailed in an auto-da-fé—for
some curious reason this particularly Spanish institution has
always been known in English in its Portuguese spelling, instead
of the Spanish auto de fé (act of faith)—should consult
Langdon-Davies’
Spain had had two crazy queens. The second we have already
met, lying in state in the mausoleum in Granada, Juana la Loca
(1479-1555). The first was her grandmother, Isabel of Portugal
(c. 1430-1496), whom we shall meet more fully in the next
chapter. It was through these two unfortunate women that the
madness of the Spanish Habsburgs was transmitted; had their
offspring married outside the family it is highly probable that the
faulty strain would have been submerged. Instead, look at what
happened to produce a near-idiot like Carlos II:
A man’s ancestors in the third, fourth and fifth generations
comprise eight, sixteen and thirty-two relationships respectively.
Thus Carlos’ parents, like everyone else, each had fifty-six such
relationships in their family trees, or one hundred and twelve
between them.
These one hundred and twelve relationships in their case were
shared between only thirty-eight individuals. Carlos’ mother’s
fifty-six ancestors, forty-eight were also ancestors of his father. Of
the thirty-two women in the fifth generation, that is the sixteen
of one parent and sixteen of the other, twelve were descendants
of mad Isabel of Portugal.
In the two family trees the name of Juana la Loca occurs eight
times, the names of her two sons nineteen times. Seven out of the
eight great-grandparents of Carlos II descended from Juana la
Loca. No wonder he was bewitched.
Today the Plaza Mayor is a vast empty area in which little
happens. The many balconies still lend the place an architectural
charm, but even when I first knew it the predominant echoes
were tragic, for history has passed it by and it is only in the lesser
streets surrounding it that the life of Madrid moves with its old
vigor. I first became aware of this one Sunday morning when I
saw large numbers of people leaving the Puerta del Sol and
heading for what I supposed was the Plaza Mayor, but I was
wrong, for they passed right by this empty square and sought
another set of streets leading to a narrow plaza watched over by
a heroic statue of Eloy Gonzalo, a bearded soldier who had
conducted himself with glory in the Spanish-American war in
Cuba. What stretched out at the foot of the statue was something
that was difficult to believe. Thousands upon thousands of people
had convened, as they did each Sunday, to see what bargains they
could pick up in the junk stalls of the Rastro (Slaughterhouse),
and I was later to discover that no traveler can feel like a real
Madrileño unless he can announce at dinner or when entertaining
friends, ‘You must see the wonderful purchase I made in the
Rastro last Sunday.’ Some of my friends have furnished their
whole apartments from handsome odds and ends acquired in this
way; one man bought in June six bronze candlesticks, each seven
feet high, for three hundred dollars and sold them in August to
a New York antique dealer for three thousand. Renaissance
pictures, empty Coca-Cola bottles, antique needlepoint, Chevrolet
carburetors, Roman coins, damaged Goya etchings and positively
anything a human being could want or which in normal
circumstances he would throw away can be found in this amazing
market. It operates in diminished size the rest of the week, of
course, but the Sunday outpouring is something to see.
And so in my early visits to Madrid I stayed at the Puerta del
Sol, wandered in the Plaza Mayor, absorbing history, and refreshed
myself with the mobs in the Rastro. When I had saved a few
pesetas I followed the advice of a gentleman I had met at the Hotel
París and took my meals in either of those two fine restaurants
that lie just off the Plaza Mayor, Botín’s dating back to 1725 and
The Caves of Luis Candelas, a rambling affair named in honor of
Spain’s Robin Hood, who was a great favorite in Madrid. When
I first encountered them these restaurants were well known; now
they are world-famous and worthy of the reputation.
In 1966, as I approached Madrid once again as a tourist,
intending a long stay during which I hoped to clarify my ideas
about Spanish politics, I began to reflect upon the changes whose
development I had observed during the last fifteen years, and I
think the city will be more meaningful if I describe it in terms of
those changes, which any tourist could have noticed.
In a sense no visitor can ever be adequately prepared to judge
a foreign city, let alone an entire nation; the best he can do is to
observe with sympathy. But certain recent experiences had
qualified me to look upon Spanish life with better than average
understanding. Spain was a theocracy, and I had lived in Israel
and Pakistan, which were also theocracies, and the problems of
such governments tend to be the same, whether the theocracy is
Jewish, Muslim or Catholic. Spain was also a dictatorship, and I
had recently come from the Soviet Union and could compare
what happened in Spain’s relatively relaxed tyranny with what
happened in a hard dictatorship like Russia’s. ‘We no longer have
a dictadura, a dictatorship,’ a Spaniard told me, ‘but rather a
dictablanda, a bland dictatorship.’ And what was most instructive,
I had known Japan, and it, like Spain, was feudal, ritualistic,
devoted to honor and committed to maintaining a closed society.
In fact, I found Spain to be the Japan of Europe, and at many
points I was able to fathom the incomprehensibility of Spain only
because I had first met the similar incomprehensibility of Japan.
In 1950 Madrid was one of the most delightful world capitals
to visit, for then I could debark at the airport, ride quietly along
beautiful streets to the center of town and choose at will from
some twenty good hotels, where I would be welcomed;