Page:Mexico in 1827 Vol 1.djvu/269

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
MEXICO IN 1827.
241

of Rănchērŏs;[1] a name, which always conveys to any one acquainted with the country the idea of great activity, strength, and excellent horsemanship, combined with all the peculiarities of dress which I have just been describing.

Nava conducted Mina to a large Rancho, in possession of the Insurgents, which he was allowed to reach, without any opposition, by a body of Royalists, seven hundred strong, under the command of Colonel Orrantia, who had been deputed by the Viceroy for the express purpose of preventing this junction, but was discouraged from attempting it by the recollection of the battle of Peotillos. After refreshing his men there, who were almost exhausted with a four-days' fast, the division proceeded to Sŏmbrērŏ, (one of the three strong-holds still in the possession of the Insurgents,) which it reached on the 24th of June, having, in thirty days, traversed a tract of country two hundred and twenty leagues in extent, and been three times engaged with an enemy of infinitely superior strength.

Mina only allowed his men four days of repose at Sombrero, after which he undertook an expedition, in conjunction with his new allies, Don Pedro Moreno, (the Commandant of the fort,) and the famous Insurgent partizan, Encărnācĭōn Ortīz, against San

  1. The Mexican Rănchērŏ is equivalent to the Gaucho of the Pampas, (with whose character, and mode of life. Captain Head's delightful work has rendered every one so familiar,) but rather in a higher stage of civilization.