Transcriber’s Note: The map is clickable for a larger version, if the device you’re reading this on supports that.MapTHE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
Transcriber’s Note: The map is clickable for a larger version, if the device you’re reading this on supports that.
THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
FOOTNOTES[1]England is 50,823 square miles in extent, and Luzon is 40,885.[2]Fivepence. The amount of bread this sum will buy in the Philippines is equal to half the English 2d. loaf.[3]Another method is to tie a rope round thecarabao’shorns, and it is so tight that it cuts into the flesh, so that thecarabaosfrequently go mad with pain and “run amok.”[4]The actual numbers of the Commission have been changed several times, but the proportion of American to Filipino remains practically unaltered, as does the method of their election.[5]In the Spanish days, no Filipino was allowed to carry a walking-stick, except thePresidenteof a town, which distinction was jealously preserved.[6]The Government owns 60,000,000 acres; but no non-Filipino can obtain more than 40 acres, and no corporation may hold more than 2500 acres. Five years after the passing of this law, that is in 1907, all corporate lands owned in excess of this amount and under cultivation must be disposed of or forfeited.[7]A corruption oftubig, Visayan for water.[8]The fightingbolo, the more deadly and elaborate weapon is always kept concealed in the hut.[9]This breach of Oriental decorum is one of the most fatal and irreparable mistakes the Americans have made in the Philippines. It is a subject on which the Filipino orMestizois not slow to speak his mind. Alas for misunderstandings![10]The Tagalos are a much more industrious race than the Visayans, and are always in demand as clerks, workmen, or servants, in preference to the Southerners.[11]I have before me a cutting fromThe Manila Times, containing an account of the arrival in Manila, by the TransportDixfrom San Francisco, of “eleven strong-limbed, square-jawed bloodhounds” ... “for the work of trailing theLadronesof Cavite and thePulajanesof Samar.”
[1]England is 50,823 square miles in extent, and Luzon is 40,885.
[1]England is 50,823 square miles in extent, and Luzon is 40,885.
[2]Fivepence. The amount of bread this sum will buy in the Philippines is equal to half the English 2d. loaf.
[2]Fivepence. The amount of bread this sum will buy in the Philippines is equal to half the English 2d. loaf.
[3]Another method is to tie a rope round thecarabao’shorns, and it is so tight that it cuts into the flesh, so that thecarabaosfrequently go mad with pain and “run amok.”
[3]Another method is to tie a rope round thecarabao’shorns, and it is so tight that it cuts into the flesh, so that thecarabaosfrequently go mad with pain and “run amok.”
[4]The actual numbers of the Commission have been changed several times, but the proportion of American to Filipino remains practically unaltered, as does the method of their election.
[4]The actual numbers of the Commission have been changed several times, but the proportion of American to Filipino remains practically unaltered, as does the method of their election.
[5]In the Spanish days, no Filipino was allowed to carry a walking-stick, except thePresidenteof a town, which distinction was jealously preserved.
[5]In the Spanish days, no Filipino was allowed to carry a walking-stick, except thePresidenteof a town, which distinction was jealously preserved.
[6]The Government owns 60,000,000 acres; but no non-Filipino can obtain more than 40 acres, and no corporation may hold more than 2500 acres. Five years after the passing of this law, that is in 1907, all corporate lands owned in excess of this amount and under cultivation must be disposed of or forfeited.
[6]The Government owns 60,000,000 acres; but no non-Filipino can obtain more than 40 acres, and no corporation may hold more than 2500 acres. Five years after the passing of this law, that is in 1907, all corporate lands owned in excess of this amount and under cultivation must be disposed of or forfeited.
[7]A corruption oftubig, Visayan for water.
[7]A corruption oftubig, Visayan for water.
[8]The fightingbolo, the more deadly and elaborate weapon is always kept concealed in the hut.
[8]The fightingbolo, the more deadly and elaborate weapon is always kept concealed in the hut.
[9]This breach of Oriental decorum is one of the most fatal and irreparable mistakes the Americans have made in the Philippines. It is a subject on which the Filipino orMestizois not slow to speak his mind. Alas for misunderstandings!
[9]This breach of Oriental decorum is one of the most fatal and irreparable mistakes the Americans have made in the Philippines. It is a subject on which the Filipino orMestizois not slow to speak his mind. Alas for misunderstandings!
[10]The Tagalos are a much more industrious race than the Visayans, and are always in demand as clerks, workmen, or servants, in preference to the Southerners.
[10]The Tagalos are a much more industrious race than the Visayans, and are always in demand as clerks, workmen, or servants, in preference to the Southerners.
[11]I have before me a cutting fromThe Manila Times, containing an account of the arrival in Manila, by the TransportDixfrom San Francisco, of “eleven strong-limbed, square-jawed bloodhounds” ... “for the work of trailing theLadronesof Cavite and thePulajanesof Samar.”
[11]I have before me a cutting fromThe Manila Times, containing an account of the arrival in Manila, by the TransportDixfrom San Francisco, of “eleven strong-limbed, square-jawed bloodhounds” ... “for the work of trailing theLadronesof Cavite and thePulajanesof Samar.”
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