Authors: James Michener
When I left the plaza I entered the old part of Badajoz, and was
delighted with the narrow streets and the memories of Spain as
it used to be. This was a pleasing part of town and here I was not
in Rome or Texas. This was authentic Spain, but when I moved
to the west and to the area of big new buildings, sprawling schools
and hospitals, I might once more have been in any modern
European city. Taken building by building, Badajoz was a
respectable-looking city, clean, well organized and modern.
Homes, stores, theaters, the lesser churches and the public offices
were about what one would expect in a city of similar size in Italy
or France. Beauty there was not, but solidity there was. There was
also evidence that the citizens had money, for whenever in my
tour I reached a high point of ground, I saw numerous television
aerials; sets in the city could bring in both Portuguese and Spanish
programs.
What kind of people lived in Badajoz? I returned to the main
plaza and found an outdoor table, where I sat for some hours
simply looking at the passers-by, and as the cooler temperatures
of evening arrived a good many people appeared for their nightly
stroll. As to the girls, they looked exactly like girls of similar age
in New York or London. They wore the same amount of make-up,
the same length of dress, the same hairdos. They giggled in the
same way at private jokes, and when they walked with young men
they held hands and sometimes kissed in public. If the young
women gave no signs of being Spanish, certain of the older women
did, but only because they wore much more black than I would
have found in England or America.
Young men looked exactly like their cousins around the western
world. In dress they were wholly indistinguishable from boys their
age in Chicago or Mexico City, except that not many wore their
hair long. They did, however, carry transistor radios, which they
used as abusively as young people elsewhere. Spaniards are
conservative in dress and this became especially noticeable when
I studied the older men, for of all groups they alone did betray
the fact that they were Spanish, but only because they wore
extremely somber clothes. I saw not a single sport shirt, nor a
blazer, nor even a light-colored suit of any kind.
In facial appearance I could not detect among the young any
characteristics that would brand them as Spanish, but as both the
girls and boys grew older a certain Spanish look did seem to
appear; I mentioned this to an Englishman whom I met later, and
he said, ‘You’re wrong. If you put a hundred of the older people
in various European cities, you’d not be able to identify them.
France, Italy, Greece, Turkey would absorb them without your
knowing. Sweden and Finland? No. The Spaniards are a little
darker than the European average and against the blonds of those
two countries they’d be conspicuous.’
One point I must make clear. You could sit in the plaza at
Badajoz for three months and see no women trailing by in
mantillas. You’d see no castanets, no high ivory combs, no colorful
shawls tied about the waist. Nor would you see any men dressed
like Don Quixote or conquistadors. No bands of guitarists gather
at midnight, wrapped in cloaks, to serenade women behind iron
grilles, and the Spanish types one sees in
Yet certain trivial customs create a Spanish atmosphere. There
being little public assistance as we know it in America, it is
traditional for blind people to roam the streets selling lottery
tickets; cripples park cars or peddle things, and consequently one
sees more deformity in Spain than he would elsewhere. There is,
however, no begging. Shoeshine boys are also more numerous,
but usually they are grown men who move endlessly from one
café table to the next, calling ‘?Limpia?’ (Shall I clean?), so that
in the course of two hours one could have his shoes shined by ten
or fifteen different men.
One of the sure signs that this is Spain is the number of young
married women who have allowed themselves to get fat. On my
first night in Badajoz, I estimated that Spanish women of thirty
years and older weighed about twenty pounds more than
American or French women of comparable age and social
background. I commented on this to a Spaniard, and he said
approvingly, ‘It’s one of the most beautiful sights in Spain. To sit
in the plaza at dusk and watch the fat married women roll by with
their husbands and children. It’s beautiful because in Spain, once
a woman is married, she never again has to fight the dinner table.
She has her man and nothing on earth can take him away from
her, so she doesn’t give a damn how fat she gets. In Spain there’s
no divorce and her children cannot be taken away nor her home
either. She’s safe. Of course, her husband will probably take a
mistress. Three-fourths of the fine Spanish gentlemen you’ve been
meeting and enjoying so much have mistresses. But they’d have
them whether their wives were slim or fat. So our women eat and
love their children and go to the movies and gossip and put their
faith in the Church, and to hell with dieting, and you won’t find
a more contented group of women in the world.’
The newspapers for sale in the plaza were a strange lot.
Generalísimo Franco, the country’s dictator, was an old man and
his successor had not been determined, and this was a matter
which might decide the fate of Spain, but public discussion of
this vital problem was forbidden, and to read the papers in
Badajoz one would have felt that the general was going to live
forever. I am speaking here of 1961, shortly after the inauguration
of President Kennedy, when American newspapers were already
speculating on what might happen in the 1964 election, and
especially the 1968, but of Spain’s greater problem there was no
discussion. In place of political news the papers offered reams of
fine writing on sports, many columns on the Church, emphasizing
the activities of the Pope, and because the men who owned the
newspapers were monarchists, a constant stream of stories about
how European countries that lived under kings were better off
than those that didn’t.
The marriage of Prince Carlos of Bourbon to Princess Ana,
daughter of the Count of Paris, was characterized by its simplicity.
Will Princess Benedicta of Denmark never find a husband? There
is still hope, but available men are few and for the present she
loves only horses.
One got the feeling that the Spaniards would have enjoyed arguing
politics in their papers, but it was forbidden, so they satisfied
themselves with sports and religion and the doings of distant
royalty.
And so it went. Badajoz was Spain, and no place else. It was
sharply different from Portugal, which lay only four miles away,
but it was not an exaggerated Spain, not a musical-comedy land
at all.
In the morning I set out to visit random stores to see for myself
what it would cost a Spaniard to live in Badajoz as compared with
what I paid at home. I started by listing the dinner I’d had at the
Colón:
First-class dinner
$ 1.20
$ 4.50