<h3 class="label">IV</h3>
<p class="line" ><span>“God save thee, ancient Mariner!
</span></p>
<p class="line" ><span>From the fiends, that plague thee thus!
</span></p>
<p class="line" ><span>Why look’st thou so?”—“With my cross-bow
</span></p>
<p class="line" ><span>I shot the Albatross!”
</span></p>
<p>COLERIDGE.</p>
<p>It was one of those magic December mornings of the tropics—the very nuptials of earth and sky, when great Nature seems to
fling herself incontinently into creation, wrapping the world in a brooding calm of light and color, that Spain chose for
committing political suicide in the Philippines. Bagumbayan Field was crowded with troops, both regulars and militia, for
every man capable of being trusted with arms was drawn up there, excepting only the necessary guards in other parts of the
city. Extra patrols were in the streets, double guards were placed over the archiepiscopal and gubernatorial palaces. The
calmest man in all Manila that day was he who must stand before the firing-squad.</p>
<p>Two special and unusual features are to be noted about this execution. All the principal actors were Filipinos: the commander
of the troops and the officer directly in charge of the execution were native-born, while the firing-squad itself was drawn
from a local native regiment, though it is true that on this occasion a squad of Peninsular <i>cazadores</i>, armed with loaded Mausers, stood directly behind them to see that they failed not in their duty. Again, there was but one
victim; for it seems to have ever been the custom of the Spanish rulers to associate in these gruesome affairs some real criminals
with the political offenders, no doubt with the intentional purpose of confusing the issue in the general mind. Rizal standing
alone, the occasion of so much hurried preparation and fearful precaution, is a pathetic testimonial to the degree of incapacity
into which the ruling powers had fallen, even in chicanery.</p>
<p>After bidding good-by to his sister and making final disposition <SPAN id="d0e730"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[<SPAN href="#d0e730">xlix</SPAN>]</span>regarding some personal property, the doomed man, under close guard, walked calmly, even cheerfully, from Fort Santiago along
the Malecon to the Luneta, accompanied by his Jesuit confessors. Arrived there, he thanked those about him for their kindness
and requested the officer in charge to allow him to face the firing-squad, since he had never been a traitor to Spain. This
the officer declined to permit, for the order was to shoot him in the back. Rizal assented with a slight protest, pointed
out to the soldiers the spot in his back at which they should aim, and with a firm step took his place in front of them.</p>
<p>Then occurred an act almost too hideous to record. There he stood, expecting a volley of Remington bullets in his back—Time
was, and Life’s stream ebbed to Eternity’s flood—when the military surgeon stepped forward and asked if he might feel his
pulse! Rizal extended his left hand, and the officer remarked that he could not understand how a man’s pulse could beat normally
at such a terrific moment! The victim shrugged his shoulders and let the hand fall again to his side—Latin refinement could
be no further refined!</p>
<p>A moment later there he lay, on his right side, his life-blood spurting over the Luneta curb, eyes wide open, fixedly staring
at that Heaven where the priests had taught all those centuries agone that Justice abides. The troops filed past the body,
for the most part silently, while desultory cries of “<i lang="es">Viva España!</i>” from among the “patriotic” Filipino volunteers were summarily hushed by a Spanish artillery-officer’s stern rebuke: “Silence,
you rabble!” To drown out the fitful cheers and the audible murmurs, the bands struck up Spanish national airs. Stranger death-dirge
no man and system ever had. Carnival revelers now dance about the scene and Filipino schoolboys play baseball over that same
spot.</p>
<p>A few days later another execution was held on that spot, of members of the <i>Liga</i>, some of them characters that would have richly deserved shooting at any place or time, according to existing standards,
but notable among them there knelt, torture-crazed, as to his orisons, Francisco Roxas, millionaire capitalist, who may be
regarded as the social and economic head of the Filipino people, as Rizal was fitted to be their intellectual leader. Shades
of Anda and Vargas! Out there <SPAN id="d0e744"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">[<SPAN href="#d0e744">l</SPAN>]</span>at Balintawak—rather fitly, “the home of the snake-demon,”—not three hours’ march from this same spot, on the very edge of
the city, Andres Bonifacio and his literally sansculottic gangs of cutthroats were, almost with impunity, soiling the fair
name of Freedom with murder and mutilation, rape and rapine, awakening the worst passions of an excitable, impulsive people,
destroying that essential respect for law and order, which to restore would take a holocaust of fire and blood, with a generation
of severe training. Unquestionably did Rizal demonstrate himself to be a seer and prophet when he applied to such a system
the story of Babylon and the fateful handwriting on the wall!</p>
<p>But forces had been loosed that would not be so suppressed, the time had gone by when such wild methods of repression would
serve. The destruction of the native leaders, culminating in the executions of Rizal and Roxas, produced a counter-effect
by rousing the Tagalogs, good and bad alike, to desperate fury, and the aftermath was frightful. The better classes were driven
to take part in the rebellion, and Cavite especially became a veritable slaughter-pen, as the contest settled down into a
hideous struggle for mutual extermination. Dark Andres went his wild way to perish by the violence he had himself invoked,
a prey to the rising ambition of a young leader of considerable culture and ability, a schoolmaster named Emilio Aguinaldo.
His Katipunan hovered fitfully around Manila, for a time even drawing to itself in their desperation some of the better elements
of the population, only to find itself sold out and deserted by its leaders, dying away for a time; but later, under changed
conditions, it reappeared in strange metamorphosis as the rallying-center for the largest number of Filipinos who have ever
gathered together for a common purpose, and then finally went down before those thin grim lines in khaki with sharp and sharpest
shot clearing away the wreck of the old, blazing the way for the new: the broadening sweep of “Democracy announcing, in rifle-volleys
death-winged, under her Star Banner, to the tune of Yankee-doodle-do, that she is born, and, whirlwind-like, will envelop
the whole world!”</p>
<p>MANILA, December 1, 1909</p>
<hr class="fnsep">
<br/>
<p class="line" ><span>What? Does no Caesar, does no Achilles, appear on your stage now?
</span></p>
<p class="line" style="text-indent: 2em; "><span>Not an Andromache e’en, not an Orestes, my friend?
</span></p>
<p class="line" ><span>No! there is nought to be seen there but parsons, and syndics of commerce,
</span></p>
<p class="line" style="text-indent: 2em; "><span>Secretaries perchance, ensigns and majors of horse.
</span></p>
<p class="line" ><span>But, my good friend, pray tell, what can such people e’er meet with
</span></p>
<p class="line" style="text-indent: 2em; "><span>That can be truly call’d great?—what that is great can they do?</span></p>
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