The Philippines: Past and Present (Volume 1 of 2) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 594 pages of information about The Philippines.

The Philippines: Past and Present (Volume 1 of 2) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 594 pages of information about The Philippines.
of the saber until the blood ran in streams and formed pools upon the pavement.  The priest, more dead than alive, shuddered from head to foot, and appeared to be struggling in a tremendous fight between life and death; he had hardly enough strength to get his tongue to ask for God’s mercy.  At this most critical juncture, and when it seemed as if death were inevitable, the martyr received absolution from Father Diez, who witnessed the blood-curdling picture with his heart pierced with grief at the sight of the sufferings of his innocent brother, feeling as must the condemned man preparing for death who sees the hours fly by with vertiginous rapidity.  The blood flowing from the wounds on the priest’s head appeared to infuriate and blind the heart of Delfin who, rising from his victim’s body, sped away to the armory in the court house, seized a rifle, and came back furious to brain him with the butt and finish killing the priest; but God willed to free his servant from death at the hands of those cannibals, so that generous Lieutenant Navarro interfered, took the rifle away from him and caught Delfin by the arm, threatening him with some words spoken in Tagalog.  Then Navarro, to appease Delfin’s anger, turned the priest over with his face to the ground and gave him a few strokes with the bamboo, and feigning anger and indignation, ordered him away.

“Those who witnessed the horrible tragedy, the brutality of the tyrant and the prostration of the friar were persuaded that the latter would never survive his martyrdom.  The religious man himself holds it as a veritable portent that he outlived such a terrible trial; but even this did not satisfy them as subsequently the Secretary again called Father Ceferino to subject him to a further scrutiny, as ridiculous as it was malicious, though it did not go beyond words or insults.”

Senor Perez, the governor of Isabela, and Father Diez were compelled to go to Ilagan.  After they had arrived there on October 2d, Villa proceeded to torture them.  At the outset ten soldiers, undoubtedly instructed beforehand, beat the governor down to the earth, with the butts of their guns.  Villa himself struck him three times in the chest with the butt of a gun and Father Diez gave him absolution, thinking he was dying.  Father Diez was then knocked down repeatedly with the butts of guns, being made to stand up promptly each time in order that he might be knocked down again.  Not satisfied with this, Villa compelled the suffering priest to kneel before him and kicked him in the nose, repeating the operation until he left him stretched on the floor half-senseless with his nose broken.  He next had both victims put in stocks with their weight supported by their feet alone.  While in this position soldiers beat them and jumped onto them and one set the governor’s beard on fire with matches.  Father Diez was kept in the stocks four days.  He was then sent to Tuguegarao in order that personal enemies there might take vengeance on him, Villa bidding him good-by with the following words:  “Go now to Tuguegarao and see if they will finish killing you there.”  Senor Perez was kept in the stocks eight days and it is a wonder that he did not die.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Philippines: Past and Present (Volume 1 of 2) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.