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Ravidas, Patricia May R. Grade 12-Lopez Abrio, Joana Rose L. 08/8/24 Creative Non-Fiction

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
90 views8 pages

Ravidas, Patricia May R. Grade 12-Lopez Abrio, Joana Rose L. 08/8/24 Creative Non-Fiction

Please be good to me
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Ravidas, Patricia May R.

Grade 12-Lopez
Abrio, Joana Rose L. 08/8/24
Creative Non-Fiction

MY FATHER GOES TO COURT


By: Carlos Bulosan

When I was four, I lived with my mother and brothers and sisters in a small
town on the island of Luzon. Father’s farm had been destroyed in 1918 by
one of our sudden Philippine floods, so several years afterwards we all lived
in the town though he preferred living in the country. We had as a next door
neighbour a very rich man, whose sons and daughters seldom came out of
the house. While we boys and girls played and sang in the sun, his children
stayed inside and kept the windows closed. His house was so tall that his
children could look in the window of our house and watched us played, or
slept, or ate, when there was any food in the house to eat.

Now, this rich man’s servants were always frying and cooking something
good, and the aroma of the food was wafted down to us form the windows of
the big house. We hung about and took all the wonderful smells of the food
into our beings.

Sometimes, in the morning, our whole family stood outside the windows of
the rich man’s house and listened to the musical sizzling of thick strips of
bacon or ham. I can remember one afternoon when our neighbour’s servants
roasted three chickens. The chickens were young and tender and the fat that
dripped into the burning coals gave off an enchanting odour. We watched the
servants turn the beautiful birds and inhaled the heavenly spirit that drifted
out to us.

Some days the rich man appeared at a window and glowered down at us.
He looked at us one by one, as though he were condemning us. We were all
healthy because we went out in the sun and bathed in the cool water of the
river that flowed from the mountains into the sea. Sometimes we wrestled
with one another in the house before we went to play. We were always in the
best of spirits and our laughter was contagious. Other neighbours who
passed by our house often stopped in our yard and joined us in laughter.

As time went on, the rich man’s children became thin and anaemic, while we
grew even more robust and full of life. Our faces were bright and rosy, but
theirs were pale and sad. The rich man started to cough at night; then he
coughed day and night. His wife began coughing too. Then the children
started to cough, one after the other. At night their coughing sounded like the
barking of a herd of seals. We hung outside their windows and listened to
them. We wondered what happened. We knew that they were not sick from
the lack of nourishment because they were still always frying something
delicious to eat

One day the rich man appeared at a window and stood there a long time. He
looked at my sisters, who had grown fat in laughing, then at my brothers,
whose arms and legs were like the molave, whichh is the sturdiest tree in the
Philippines. He banged down the window and ran through his house, shutting
all the windows.
From that day on, the windows of our neighbour’s house were always closed.
The children did not come out anymore. We could still hear the servants
cooking in the kitchen, and no matter how tight the windows were shut, the
aroma of the food came to us in the wind and drifted gratuitously into our
house.

One morning a policeman from the presidencia came to our house with a
sealed paper. The rich man had filed a complaint against us. Father took me
with him when he went to the town clerk and asked him what it was about.
He told Father the man claimed that for years we had been stealing the spirit
of his wealth and food.

When the day came for us to appear in court, father brushed his old Army
uniform and borrowed a pair of shoes from one of my brothers. We were the
first to arrive. Father sat on a chair in the centre of the courtroom. Mother
occupied a chair by the door. We children sat on a long bench by the wall.
Father kept jumping up from his chair and stabbing the air with his arms, as
though we were defending himself before an imaginary jury.

The rich man arrived. He had grown old and feeble; his face was scarred
with deep lines. With him was his young lawyer. Spectators came in and
almost filled the chairs. The judge entered the room and sat on a high chair.
We stood in a hurry and then sat down again.

After the courtroom preliminaries, the judge looked at the Father. “Do you
have a lawyer?” he asked.

“I don’t need any lawyer, Judge,” he said.

“Proceed,” said the judge.


The rich man’s lawyer jumped up and pointed his finger at Father. “Do you
or you do not agree that you have been stealing the spirit of the complaint’s
wealth and food?”

“I do not!” Father said.

“Do you or do you not agree that while the complaint’s servants cooked and
fried fat legs of lamb or young chicken breast you and your family hung
outside his windows and inhaled the heavenly spirit of the food?”

“I agree.” Father said.

“Do you or do you not agree that while the complaint and his children grew
sickly and tubercular you and your family became strong of limb and fair in
complexion?”

“I agree.” Father said.

“How do you account for that?”

Father got up and paced around, scratching his head thoughtfully. Then he
said, “I would like to see the children of complaint, Judge.”

“Bring in the children of the complaint.”

They came in shyly. The spectators covered their mouths with their hands,
they were so amazed to see the children so thin and pale. The children
walked silently to a bench and sat down without looking up. They stared at
the floor and moved their hands uneasily.

Father could not say anything at first. He just stood by his chair and looked
at them. Finally he said, “I should like to cross – examine the complaint.”

“Proceed.”
“Do you claim that we stole the spirit of your wealth and became a laughing
family while yours became morose and sad?” Father said.

“Yes.”

“Do you claim that we stole the spirit of your food by hanging outside your
windows when your servants cooked it?” Father said.

“Yes.”

“Then we are going to pay you right now,” Father said. He walked over to
where we children were sitting on the bench and took my straw hat off my
lap and began filling it up with centavo pieces that he took out of his pockets.
He went to Mother, who added a fistful of silver coins. My brothers threw in
their small change.

“May I walk to the room across the hall and stay there for a few minutes,
Judge?” Father said.

“As you wish.”

“Thank you,” father said. He strode into the other room with the hat in his
hands. It was almost full of coins. The doors of both rooms were wide open.

“Are you ready?” Father called.

“Proceed.” The judge said.

The sweet tinkle of the coins carried beautifully in the courtroom. The
spectators turned their faces toward the sound with wonder. Father came
back and stood before the complaint.

“Did you hear it?” he asked.

“Hear what?” the man asked.


“The spirit of the money when I shook this hat?” he asked.

“Yes.”

“Then you are paid,” Father said.

The rich man opened his mouth to speak and fell to the floor without a sound.
The lawyer rushed to his aid. The judge pounded his gravel.

“Case dismissed.” He said.

Father strutted around the courtroom the judge even came down from his
high chair to shake hands with him. “By the way,” he whispered, “I had an
uncle who died laughing.”

“You like to hear my family laugh, Judge?” Father asked?

“Why not?”

“Did you hear that children?” father said.

My sisters started it. The rest of us followed them soon the spectators were
laughing with us, holding their bellies and bending over the chairs. And the
laughter of the judge was the loudest of all.

Aguila, Augusto Antonio A., Joyce L. Arriola and John Jack Wigley. Philippine
Literatures: Texts, Themes, Approaches. Espana, Manila: Univesity of Santo
Tomas Publishing House. Print.

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