Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

Poems I?D Read over on Any Rainy Day

Good Essays
1092 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Poems I?D Read over on Any Rainy Day
COMMENTARY: Poems I?d read over on any rainy day by Nikki Rivera Gomez / MindaNews
Monday, 02 July 2007 23:01
It was the 1950s—the decade when a pompous West, emerging victorious from a world war that killed over 57 million people, was beginning to prance and preen like a peacock. Almost overnight, the US economy boomed with those big-finned Chryslers, Fords, and Buicks. Holiday Inn began its worldwide chain, as did the now ubiquitous McDonalds.
I was barely a year old when Elvis, James Dean, and Marilyn Monroe had begun to electrify the silver screen. Back home? Old pictures retain a homegrown charm about them: a tiny me sprawled on the grass, my mom seated beside, a gleaming black Buick parked nearby.
Everything seemed picture-perfect—with the world, despite America’s revulsion of black people and her manic campaign to exterminate North Koreans; and with the country, despite its ecstatic absorption of all things “stateside.”
The decade was also the time my parents were hacking their way through Compostela’s jungles in a bid to stake whatever modest claim they could. Back in Paco, Manila, my maternal grandfather, Godofredo Rivera, was putting together his “Little Things,” a potpourri of vignettes about life, living, and loving halfway through the Twentieth Century.
Love is sipping wine drop by drop
Each libation a delicate ritual
Of deep affection
Elevated by the subtle touch
Of eternal desire He probably didn’t intend his prose to be treated like poetry, but many of the entries in his book were quite lyrical they tugged at the heart. And they weren’t just about some pax de deux in Old Manila:
We win freedom by courage but lose it by default
We go to Church but insult God
We recite the Constitution but spit on the Flag
We fight foreign domination but surrender to native degradation
We feed the dead but starve the living
We build monuments to the hero but let the weeds grow under his feet
As we are in 1950, we perhaps misrepresent the philosophy of 1900.
Or we did not get it right Prescient, he only could have been. For not only did we not get it right in the 1950s; we were still groping in the dark 30-odd years later.
For the 1980s was tumultuous. Cheers and ticker tape may have greeted the onset of personal computers, the fall of the Berlin Wall, and white-lace-and-promises weddings such as that of Charles and Diana.
But throbbing silently in our hearts was an insecurity, a fear of the proverbial Unknown.
John Lennon was killed. The AIDS virus exploded into a global epidemic. Reagan illegally funded the Contras to quell dissent in Nicaragua. And Corporate America’s mammoth mergers and acquisitions betrayed only too well its preoccupation with commercial and political dominion.
And nowhere was this quest for hegemony more played out than in the Philippines.
Marcos, his family, his cronies, Subic and Clark, the hundreds of transnational companies and the thousands of human rights victims—all came together in a surrealism of exuberance, avarice, and perpetual dependence.
The “dark night of our souls” could only produce the deepest, most paradoxically beautiful poetry.
Mila Aguilar, one time underground activist in Mindanao, had been a prolific writer and multi-awarded poet during the 1980s.
Incarcerated, she wrote of the day she gave her son “a pair of pigeons/born and bred in my harsh prison./They had taped wings/and the instructions were specifically to keep them on for weeks/until they’d gotten used to their new cages./He never liked the thought of me in prison, his own mother/and would never stay for long/and rarely even came to visit./So perhaps I thought of souvenirs./But the tape from his pigeons he removed one day, and set them free/You’d think that would have angered me, or made me sad at least/But I guess we’re of one mind./Why cage pigeons who prefer free flight/in the vaster, bluer skies?”

Alfrredo Navarro Salanga, who’d also spent time in Mindanao as a feisty newspaper editor, wrote “Hour Poems for Alice.” His were words that not only stroked the hearts of his readers, but also refreshed their minds of the lingering insecurities amidst them. The second part of his poem reads: It is ten and dark and quiet The quiet stabbed, every now and then by the bladed horns of cars that flash by Like bullets I think of bullets and I think of you and I think of a night in Zamboanga Stabbed by bullets from a war I had gone to see you but you were cold like the muzzle Of a gun.
Among the most powerful verses I’ve ever come across were composed by songwriter Joey Ayala. Virtually poems in themselves, his songs come across as daggers that pierce the tender soul of his generation. Of humanity’s wisdom in an age of environmental neglect, Ayala had written, “Talino/Naging ararong nagpaamo sa parang/Naging kumpit na sumagupa sa karagatan/naging apoy na nagpalaya sa karimlan.”
His immortal “Walang Ibang Sadya” might as well be the ultimate celebration of the wonders of living. In part, it reads: “Aanhin ang labi/kundi madampian ng ulan/O di kaya’y mahagkan ng ilog… Pagmasdan, pakinggan/Lasapin ang mundo/Walang ibang sadya/Ang ayos nito.”
But perhaps the most prophetic of all poems was written in the early 1980s by a playwright named Al Santos.
“Sa Bundok ng Apo” was Mindanao’s first-ever rock opera. Its first run in 1981 was written and directed by Santos, with Joey Ayala composing the music. “Sa Bundok…” told of the Bagobo legend of harmony and unity, and of popular resistance against an oppressor. The tribe succeeds in the end, to the haunting rendition of Santos’s “Pahimakas sa Huling Tagpo.” May panatang natupad sa naganap
May pangakong nabuksan sa digmaan
Ito ang larawan ng bawa’t panahon
Katotohanan pa rin ng ngayon Buti at sama ay nagtunggali
Nang ligaya’y lukuban ng pighati
Palibhasay’s may bukas na minimithi
Buong lakas ay ibuhos nitong lipi Nasaksihan nyo’y tagpo ng kahapon
Siyang bolang kristal ng ngayon
Di natutulong ang sa kasamaa’y kampon
May halimaw ang bawa’t panahon
(Nikki Gomez authored “Coffee and Dreams on a Late Afternoon,” a collection of his essays on Mindanao development, published in 2005 by the University of the Philippines Press. He lives and works in Davao City.)

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    For the first time, more Americans lived in cities than in farms. The nation’s total wealth doubled, and the great economic growth generated a consumer society. However, the 1920’s didn’t began as prosperous as it it thought. Instead it started with a serious economic recession. After WWI productivity felt, unemployment increased, and consumption decreased.…

    • 739 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Confident Years, 1953-1964 Lecture/Reading Notes 1 (p. 324-330) I. A Decade of Affluence A. What’s Good for General Motors 1. New Republicanism Satisfied with postwar America, Eisenhower accepted much of the New Deal but saw _________________________________. Eisenhower’s first secretary of defense, “Engine Charlie” Wilson, had headed General Motors. At his Senate confirmation hearing, he proclaimed, “For years, I thought what ___________________________ was good for General Motors and vice versa.” 2. The impact of a booming economy Automobile production, on which _______________________________, neared 8 million vehicles per year in the mid-1950s; less than _________ of new car sales were imports. Average wages rose faster than consumer prices in __________________ ____________ between 1953 and 1964. Industrial cities offered members of _____________________ factory jobs at wages that could _______________________. However, there were never enough family-wage jobs for all of the African-American and Latino workers who continued to move to ____________ and _______________ cities. To cut costs and accelerate Native American assimilation, Congress pushed the _____________________________ between 1954 and 1962. Termination cut thousands of Indians adrift from the ________________ _________________. B. Reshaping Urban America 1. Urban Renewal…

    • 901 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    After the end of the World War II, the United States of America experienced a lot of boom in its economy. It is estimated that the period of the 1950s is when the US economy grew in more than double its original gross domestic value of $200 billion to over $500 billion. The economy general developed by 37% amid the 1950s. Toward the end of the decade, the Middle American family had 30% more acquiring power than during the starting. The expansion, which had wreaked devastation on the economy instantly after World War II, was insignificant, to some extent on account of Eisenhower's diligent endeavors to adjust the government spending plan ("The 1950S - Facts & Summary - HISTORY.Com" N.p).…

    • 357 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Fads in the 1940s

    • 290 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Now with all these luxuries appliances on sale for a cheap price they were found every where in the states. Now there were refrigerators, electric toasters were only some of the appliances. The product that probally was the greatest effect on american life was the television set. In 1946 only about 17,000 television sets existed in the entrie country. In the 50s, almost 7 million set were sold each…

    • 290 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    America was in a post-war boom in the 1960’s. World War II was a memory and the country was changing. Following the war the country’s citizens were more affluent. This was demonstrated by the massive increase in purchasing homes. Much of this is said to be John F. Kennedy’s doing. Following the war he expressed to the country “affluent society”, and thus allowing Americans to believe that society could be perfected. This was far from true. Actually, consumerism and capitalism was not a solution. It took America quite a while to catch on to this fact.…

    • 596 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The years following the second Great War are know as a period of culture consensus. The 1950s were characterized as a time of prosperity, due to the number of Americans who moved to the newly developed suburbs while under the comfort of a growing economy. As well, America's national identity began to change from an isolationist outlook on the world to a hard-line Cold War advict. This change made many writers and intellects switch to a writing style that focused on defending the United States and the freedoms it stood for. At the same time, a growing number of critics found the widespread conformity to be an evil to America’s health as a nation. From the expansion of the consumer economy, uniform communities, and corporate bureaucrats,…

    • 1231 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The 1950’s was a decade of progress. Cars were improving in efficiency. Everyone also had a pretty good idea of “the perfect all American family”. This family consists of a working dad who brings home the money; a stay at home mom who cooked, cleaned, took care of the children, and took care of the bills; and 2-3 children. This also created a stereotype for American families. The 1950’s was a pretty happy-go-lucky decade, and inventions such as the Mr. potato head, and the Hula-hoop showed it. 1950’s theater, film and television programs were greatly affected by the carefree activities that were happening during the 50’s.…

    • 440 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    1950's Misconceptions

    • 1066 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The national income doubled in the 1950's and would soon double again ten years later. It consisted of a popular culture…

    • 1066 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Many good consumer goods started getting produced during the 50s which was a very positive thing because Americans didn’t have to worry about losing their money again. Car registrations soared along with birth rate: from 26 million in 1945 to 40 million in 1950 to 60 million by the end of the decade. Americans can finally enjoy the…

    • 791 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Celebrities in the 50s

    • 720 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Movies were a popular activity in the 1950s. James Dean, Marilyn Monroe, Frankie Avalon, and John Wayne were royalty among Americans. Movies such as “Rebel without a Cause”, and “Some Like It Hot” were running ramped over society. James Dean was an American icon starring in movies such as “Rebel Without a Cause” and “East of…

    • 720 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The booming business of factories saw a shift from farm life to the city life. American workers who were used to a laid back lifestyle. They had their own businesses and homes. A lot of workers now had to depend on companies…

    • 286 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    1950s Consumerism

    • 1943 Words
    • 8 Pages

    The 1950’s are considered a decade of simplicity for most Americans. While the country was experiencing economic and social growth most American felt at home with them selves. Family stability was monumental, and the formation of the suburbs created an urban working class associated with a rural family atmosphere.…

    • 1943 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The most important thing on a company’s mind is: what does the consumer want? The New Deal era is the era where this new urban consumer lifestyle is introduced. (HIST 222 lecture, 19 OCT 10) Everything was made to have the effect to “be easier on people”. This was the era when Henry Ford introduced the automobile, which is one of the most important things an American can own today. This is also the time when Hollywood movies came out, so every American was watching, hearing, and learning the same things. (HIST 222 lecture, 19 OCT 10) This, in my opinion, is the definition of American living today. During this time, overproduction started to creep up. The Americans that lived during this time do not really know what it is like to have a scarcity of many materials. There Americans always lived in an age of a thriving…

    • 728 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Poetry assignment

    • 1551 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Your marks for the Poetry unit of work will be derived from an assignment and from a short test.…

    • 1551 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    My Favourite Poem

    • 445 Words
    • 2 Pages

    This is my favourite poem as it describes hope by using a powerful array of metaphors to enhance its effect. While it is true that many people all over the world live in extremely challenging and life threatening situations, leading hard lives in appalling conditions. What keeps people going in such circumstances is the glimmer of hope that things can change. This is one thought that came to mind when first reading the poem and this is what attracted me to it and as it relates to any hopeless situations it really does apply to all aspects of life.…

    • 445 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays

Related Topics