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Chapter
02: Crisostomo
Ibarra
It was not
two beautiful and well-gowned young women that attracted the attention of
all, even including Fray Sibyla, nor was it his Excellency the
Captain-General with his staff, that the lieutenant should start from his
abstraction and take a couple of steps forward, or that Fray Damaso should
look as if turned to stone; it was simply the original of the oil-painting
leading by the hand a young man dressed in deep mourning.
"Good
evening, gentlemen! Good evening, Padre!" were the greetings of Capitan
Tiago as he kissed the hands of the priests, who forgot to bestow upon him
their benediction. The Dominican had taken off his glasses to stare at the
newly arrived youth, while Fray Damaso was pale and unnaturally wide-eyed.
"I
have the honor of presenting to you Don Crisostomo Ibarra, the son of my
deceased friend," went on Capitan Tiago. "The young gentleman has
just arrived from Europe and I went to meet him."
At the
mention of the name exclamations were heard. The lieutenant forgot to pay
his respects to his host and approached the young man, looking him over from
head to foot. The young man himself at that moment was exchanging the
conventional greetings with all in the group, nor did there seem to be any
thing extraordinary about him except his mourning garments in the center of
that brilliantly lighted room. Yet in spite of them his remarkable stature,
his features, and his movements breathed forth an air of healthy
youthfulness in which both body and mind had equally developed. There might
have been noticed in his frank, pleasant face some faint traces of Spanish
blood showing through a beautiful brown color, slightly flushed at the
cheeks as a result perhaps of his residence in cold countries.
"What!"
he exclaimed with joyful surprise, "the curate of my native town! Padre
Damaso, my father's intimate friend!"
Every look
in the room was directed toward the Franciscan, who made no movement.
"Pardon
me, perhaps I'm mistaken," added Ibarra, embarrassed.
"You
are not mistaken," the friar was at last able to articulate in a
changed voice, "but your father was never an intimate friend of
mine."
Ibarra
slowly withdrew his extended hand, looking greatly surprised, and turned to
encounter the gloomy gaze of the lieutenant fixed on him.
"Young
man, are you the son of Don Rafael Ibarra?" he asked.
The youth
bowed. Fray Damaso partly rose in his chair and stared fixedly at the
lieutenant.
"Welcome
back to your country! And may you be happier in it than your father
was!" exclaimed the officer in a trembling voice. "I knew him well
and can say that he was one of the worthiest and most honorable men in the
Philippines."
"Sir,"
replied Ibarra, deeply moved, "the praise you bestow upon my father
removes my doubts about the manner of his death, of which I, his son, am yet
ignorant."
The eyes of
the old soldier filled with tears and turning away hastily he withdrew. The
young man thus found himself alone in the center of the room. His host
having disappeared, he saw no one who might introduce him to the young
ladies, many of whom were watching him with interest. After a few moments of
hesitation he started toward them in a simple and natural manner.
"Allow
me," he said, "to overstep the rules of strict etiquette. It has
been seven years since I have been in my own country and upon returning to
it I cannot suppress my admiration and refrain from paying my respects to
its most precious ornaments, the ladies."
But as none
of them ventured a reply, he found himself obliged to retire. He then turned
toward a group of men who, upon seeing him approach, arranged themselves in
a semicircle.
"Gentlemen,"
he addressed them, "it is a custom in Germany, when a stranger finds
himself at a function and there is no one to introduce him to those present,
that he give his name and so introduce himself. Allow me to adopt this usage
here, not to introduce foreign customs when our own are so beautiful, but
because I find myself driven to it by necessity. I have already paid my
respects to the skies and to the ladies of my native land; now I wish to
greet its citizens, my fellow-countrymen. Gentlemen, my name is Juan
Crisostomo Ibarra y Magsalin."
The others
gave their names, more or less obscure, and unimportant here.
"My
name is A----," said one youth dryly, as he made a slight bow.
"Then
I have the honor of addressing the poet whose works have done so much to
keep up my enthusiasm for my native land. It is said that you do not write
any more, but I could not learn the reason."
"The
reason? Because one does not seek inspiration in order to debase himself and
lie. One writer has been imprisoned for having put a very obvious truth into
verse. They may have called me a poet but they sha'n't call me a fool."
"And
may I enquire what that truth was?"
"He
said that the lion's son is also a lion. He came very near to being exiled
for it," replied the strange youth, moving away from the group.
A man with
a smiling face, dressed in the fashion of the natives of the country, with
diamond studs in his shirt-bosom, came up at that moment almost running. He
went directly to Ibarra and grasped his hand, saying, "Señor Ibarra,
I've been eager to make your acquaintance. Capitan Tiago is a friend of mine
and I knew your respected father. I am known as Capitan Tinong and live in
Tondo, where you will always be welcome. I hope that you will honor me with
a visit. Come and dine with us tomorrow." He smiled and rubbed his
hands.
"Thank
you," replied Ibarra, warmly, charmed with such amiability, "but
tomorrow morning I must leave for San Diego."
"How
unfortunate! Then it will be on your return." "Dinner is served!" announced a waiter from the café La Campana, and the guests began to file out toward the table, the women, especially the Filipinas, with great hesitation. |
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