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Jewels of the Pauper by Horacio de la Costa, S.J.

There is a thought that comes to me sometimes as I sit by my window in the evening,


listening to the young men’s guitars, and watching the shadows deepen on the long
hills, the hills of my native land.

You know, we are a remarkably poor people; poor not only in material goods, but
even in the riches of the spirit. I doubt we can claim to possess a truly national
literature. No Shakespeare, no Cervantes has yet been born among us to touch with
immortality that which is in our landscape, in our customs, in our story, that which is
most original, most ourselves. If we must give currency to our thoughts, we are
focused to mint them in the coinage of a foreign tongue; for we do not even have a
common language.

But poor as we are, we yet have something. This pauper among the nations of the
earth hides two jewels in her rages. One of them is our music. We are sundered one
from another by eighty-seven dialects; we are one people when we sing. The
kundimans of Bulacan awaken an answering chord of lutes of Leyte. Somewhere in
the rugged north, a peasant woman croons her child to sleep; and the Visayan listening
remembers the crane fields of his childhood, and his mother singing the self-made
song.

We are again one people when we pray. This is our other treasure; our Faith. It gives
somehow, to our little uneventful days, a kind of splendor; as though they had been
touched by a king. And did you ever notice how they are always mingling, our
religion and our music? All the basic rite of human life – the harvest and the seedtime,
the wedding, birth and death – are among us drenched with the fragrance and the
coolness of music.

These are the bonds that bind us together; these are the souls that make us one. And as
long as there remains in these islands one mother to sing Nena’s lullaby, one boat to
put out to sea with the immemorial rowing song, one priest to stand at the altar and
offer God to God, the nation may be conquered, trampled upon, enslaved, but it
cannot perish. Like the sun that dies every evening it will rise again from the dead.

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