SPAIN AND THE SPANISH conquerors still are, too often, the scapegoats of too many would-be historians. The Spaniards, according to them, were the grasping, greedy, bloody and cruel destroyers of the wonderful Indian civilizations. They murdered or enslaved the mild, long-suffering Indians, practically decimating them in all the countries of Latin America. This, of course, will not stop the same authors from telling us a little later, in their well-informed books, that Peru, Bolivia, Venezuela, Guatemala, Mexico, etc., suffer from indianismo and are predominantly peopled by Indians. The “Black Legend,” while tottering under the blows of writers like Bandelier, Lummis, Bolton, Simpson and others—who, knowing Spanish, were able to consult primary sources—still fascinates the textbook writers of the time. They seldom can find a good word for anything Spanish—agriculture, industry, commerce, culture, religion—while every flaw in the Spanish system is played up for the scandal of the weak and the joy of the wicked.