Sagot :
Answer:
Creole Democracy is a clear representation of one fundamental defect of the democratic form of government. Democracy is based on the concept of the rule of the people, and for the people. So the story ends in tragedy and death, with the participants not really knowing what it is all about.
Answer:
BLANCO-FOMBONA was born at Caracas, in Venezuela, in 1874. He comes of an old and aristocratic family of Spanish descent. His extraordinary activities, not only as a writer, but as politician, revolutionary soldier, and government employee, together with his picturesque personal exploits, have all contributed to make him one of the most interesting figures in Spanish-America. He has travelled in many parts of the world. His writings include criticism, poetry, political essays, novels, and short stories, the first collection of which appeared in 1900. Of Creole Democracy, perhaps his finest short story, Dr. Goldberg has said that "not many tales that have come out of South America can match it." The present version, revised from an earlier version, is here printed by permission of the translator, Isaac Goldberg.
The hamlet of Camoruco stands at one of the gateways to the Plains. The wagon-road cuts the little settlement squarely and neatly in two, like the parting of a dandy's hair. Stretched out upon the savanna, the village consists of two rows of houses which stand in a file along the edge of the road, and seem to peer furtively upon the passer-by. They look like a double row of sparrows upon two parallel telegraph wires. Close by flows the Guarico, an abundant stream that irrigates the pampas; in its sands slumbers the skate-fish and on its banks, with half -open jaws, the laey alligators take their noonday rest.