Friday 13 September 2013

Introduction


      INTRODUCTION: "Philippine Literature"





The history of a nation can be learned in its constitution, its laws and its political statements. But to know the history of a nation’s spirit, you must read its literature. For in literature you can discover how the people of a nation have reacted to the events around them. In the stories, essays and poems contained in this volume, you will read the dreams, anxieties, joys and problems of the Filipino in the past seventy-five years. By reading this development of Philippine Literature you will review what has happened to the Filipino since 1900.

But literature offers much more than a mere personalized history. For an important quality of art is to share with others the intense realization of a human experience. Through this sharing, you may recognize your own experiences. You may learn what you are or how you have become what you are. You may even learn what you might be in the future. Philippine literature shows you how the Filipino differs from others. Yet in a sense the Filipino writer is linked with all the other writers of the world. For in explaining or questioning human experience, writers are never alone. Philippine Literature in English is really a part of the literatures of the world.

A further quality of literature is that the expressions used should be memorable. The language should be clear and forceful so that the ideas strike the reader with almost the same force with which they struck the writer. The early Filipino writers had difficulty in expressing themselves since English was a language new to them. The marvel is that they learned this language so quickly and with such facility.
Philippine literature in English reveals the spirit of the Filipino. Gradually this literature has learned to express the deepest of human experiences in words that create memorable images. You may divide Philippine Literature in English into many types and numerous periods
Philippine Literature is a diverse and rich group of works that has evolved side-by-side with the country’s history. Literature had started with fables and legends made by the ancient Filipinos long before the arrival of Spanish influence. The main themes of Philippine literature focus on the country’s pre-colonial cultural traditions and the socio-political histories of its colonial and contemporary traditions. 

Thursday 12 September 2013

Students Outputs





 2. Diana De Mayo 

 3. Ma. Johnmil Cejo 

 4. Joylyn Abing 



 7. Jessica Pasion 



 10. Vince Warren J. Barbosa 

 11. Richard Opiaza 

13. Diana Jane L. Aniversario 

14. Mark Anthony M. Dameg 

Wednesday 11 September 2013

Haiku Peom





Poetic Form: Haiku

A traditional Japanese haiku is a three-line poem with seventeen syllables, written in a 5/7/5 syllable count. Often focusing on images from nature, haiku emphasizes simplicity, intensity, and directness of expression.
Haiku began in thirteenth-century Japan as the opening phrase of renga, an oral poem, generally 100 stanzas long, which was also composed syllabically. 



1.Hear my heart beating
I'll stay with you forever
Keeping a promise.

2.Stare from here bright eyes
Keeps the heart  beats  faster 
Amazing feeling

3.Keeping in my heart
A promise until the end
Stay here forever

4.Cuddling on the bench
Enjoying the scenery
Ah! Priceless moment!

5.Holding her soft hands 
Walking at the lovely shore
Moments I treasured.

6.Fireworks light the sky
Great moments to express love
Forever  you'll stay

7.Lovebirds in the cage
The couple loves each other
Romantic indeed!

8.Finding my soul mate
Searching for the right person
Once in a lifetime.

9.Picking a red rose
Pretty lady is waiting
Bringing her a gift

10.Caressing her soul
A smile on her lovely face
The feeling is great

11.Love means happiness
Will sacrifice everything
Full of emotions.

12.Singing with guitar
Serenading a woman
The night is perfect.

13.Running in the shore
Chasing a lovely lady
Love is on the air

14.Watching the sunset
Hold my hands, never let go
Stay here forever

15.Enjoying the view
Your head is on my shoulder
The feeling is great

16.Singing our theme song
Seeing your face with a smile
Bond us together.

   17.Blue and gray feathers 
Lightweight body on thin legs
Wings wrap around core 

18.Poised and alert heron
Swivels eye toward human
Listens to click, click

19.Little bird in blue
From rooftop loudly proclaims
A jay bird is here

20.Petals in velvet
Emerge from a dark green bud
Unfolding full white

 21.Fungi leave darkness
As sun's light beams down on them
White caps shine brightly

22.The lizard queen
She scurries across the rail
Looking for the king

23.Hope you're surrounded
By people and things you love 
On your special day.

24.May your cake survive
the burden of wax candles 
and flames that ensue.

25.Happiest Birthday!
I would offer to sing, but 
Nobody wants that.

26.Pause and reflect as 
The sweetest of leaves
can become rather bitter 

27.When steeped for too long.
We take time to celebrate 
The day of your birth.

 28.Shoelaces untied
become a tripping hazard. 
Hope she falls for me.

29.Flowers withering 
beneath the weight of the sun. 
Yet the weeds stand proud.

 30.Sleeping baby rest 
In the mighty hands of God 
Safest place to be

31.Lightning and thunder, 
Earth and sky tremble and shake... 
God’s awakening.

32.ground squirrel

balancing its tomato
on the garden fence

33.As the wind does blow
Across the trees, I see the
Buds blooming in May

34.I walk across sand
And find myself blistering
In the hot, hot heat

35.Falling to the ground,
I watch a leaf settle down
In a bed of brown.

36.It’s cold—and I wait
For someone to shelter me
And take me from here.

37.I hear crackling
Crunch, of today’s new found day
And know it won’t last

38.Falling to the ground,
I watch a leaf settle down
In a bed of brown.

39.A cricket disturbed
the sleeping child; on the porch
a man smoked and smiled.

40.I'm turning over
look out and give me room there
you cricket, you.  

41.As the wind does blow
        Across the trees, I see the

                Buds blooming in May       
42.The beaches waves hit

Sounding of flooding water
Soothes aches all over

43.Silence around us
Our watchful eyes hear the world
Hands do the talking

44.Lightning flash—
what I thought were faces
are plumes of pampas grass.

45. A summer river being crossed
how pleasing
with sandals in my hands!

46.In the moonlight,
The color and scent of the wisteria
Seems far away.

47.Light of the moon
Moves west, flowers' shadows
Creep eastward.

48.Everything I touch
with tenderness, alas,
pricks like a bramble.

49.The crow has flown away:
swaying in the evening sun,
a leafless tree.  

50.In the coolness
of the empty sixth-month sky...
 the cuckoo's cry.