"May Day Eve"
Written after World War II, it became one of Joaquin's “signiture stories” that became a classic in Philippine literature in English. It was published in 1947, it is a story originally intended for adult readers, but has later become a required and important reading material for Filipino students.
May Day Eve utilized the theme of "magic realism" long before the genre was made a trend in Latin American novels.
Character Description
The major characters in May Day Eve are
Badoy, Agueda, Anastasia,Agueda's daughter, and Voltaire (Badoy's grandson). Agueda and Badoy have different personalities. Agueda
was described to be a bold, liberated, and a non-conformist young woman who
was “ahead of her time”. While Badoy was characterized in the beginning as
a promiscuous young man who
wanted to prove his machismo, he realized that he was “deliriously in love” with Agueda.
Plot
summary
As Don Badoy Montoya visited his old home at Intramuros, Manila,
memories of his youth came back. He recalled how he fell in love with Agueda, a
young woman who resisted his advances. Agueda learned that she would be able to
know her future husband by reciting an incantation in front of a mirror. As she
recited the words: “Mirror, mirror, show to me him whose woman I will be,”
Agueda saw Badoy. Badoy and Agueda got married.
However, Don Badoy learned from his grandson that he was described by Doña
Agueda (through their daughter) as a "devil".
In return, Don Badoy told his grandson that every time he looks at the mirror,
he only sees a "witch"
(Agueda). Don Badoy ponders on love that had dissipated. The truth was revealed, Badoy and Agueda
had a “bitter marriage”, which began in the past, during one evening in the
month of May in 1847. The tragedy of the story is Badoy’s heart forgot how he
loved Agueda in the past. They were not able to mend their broken marriage
because their love was a “raging passion and nothing more”
STORY:
May Day Eve
By Nick
Joaquin
The old
people had ordered that the dancing should stop at ten o’clock but it was almost
midnight before the carriages came filing up the departing guests, while the girls who
were staying were promptly herded upstairs to the bedrooms, the young men gathering around
to wish them a good night and lamenting their ascent with mock signs and moaning,
proclaiming themselves disconsolate but straightway going off to finish the punch and the
brandy though they were quite drunk already and simply bursting with wild spirits,
merriment, arrogance and audacity, for they were young bucks newly arrived from Europe;
the ball had been in their honor; and they had waltzed and polka-ed and bragged and
swaggered and flirted all night and where in no mood to sleep yet--no, caramba, not on
this moist tropic eve! not on this mystic May eve! --with the night still young and so
seductive that it was madness not to go out, not to go forth---and serenade the neighbors!
cried one; and swim in the Pasid! cried another; and gather fireflies! cried a
third—whereupon there arose a great clamor for coats and capes, for hats and canes,
and they were a couple of street-lamps flickered and a last carriage rattled away upon the
cobbles while the blind black houses muttered hush-hush, their tile roofs looming like
sinister chessboards against a wile sky murky with clouds, save where an evil young moon
prowled about in a corner or where a murderous wind whirled, whistling and whining,
smelling now of the sea and now of the summer orchards and wafting unbearable childhood
fragrances or ripe guavas to the young men trooping so uproariously down the street that
the girls who were desiring upstairs in the bedrooms catered screaming to the windows,
crowded giggling at the windows, but were soon sighing amorously over those young men
bawling below; over those wicked young men and their handsome apparel, their proud
flashing eyes, and their elegant mustaches so black and vivid in the moonlight that the
girls were quite ravished with love, and began crying to one another how carefree were men
but how awful to be a girl and what a horrid, horrid world it was, till old Anastasia
plucked them off by the ear or the pigtail and chases them off to bed---while from up the
street came the clackety-clack of the watchman’s boots on the cobble and the
clang-clang of his lantern against his knee, and the mighty roll of his great voice
booming through the night, "Guardia serno-o-o! A las doce han dado-o-o.
And it was
May again, said the old Anastasia. It was the first day of May and witches were abroad in
the night, she said--for it was a night of divination, and night of lovers, and those who
cared might peer into a mirror and would there behold the face of whoever it was they were
fated to marry, said the old Anastasia as she hobble about picking up the piled crinolines
and folding up shawls and raking slippers in corner while the girls climbing into four
great poster-beds that overwhelmed the room began shrieking with terror, scrambling over
each other and imploring the old woman not to frighten them.
"Enough,
enough, Anastasia! We want to sleep!"
"Go
scare the boys instead, you old witch!"
"She is
not a witch, she is a maga. She is a maga. She was born of Christmas Eve!"
"St.
Anastasia, virgin and martyr."
"Huh?
Impossible! She has conquered seven husbands! Are you a virgin, Anastasia?"
"No,
but I am seven times a martyr because of you girls!"
"Let
her prophesy, let her prophesy! Whom will I marry, old gypsy? Come, tell me."
"You
may learn in a mirror if you are not afraid."
"I am
not afraid, I will go," cried the young cousin Agueda, jumping up in bed.
"Girls,
girls---we are making too much noise! My mother will hear and will come and pinch us all.
Agueda, lie down! And you Anastasia, I command you to shut your mouth and go
away!""Your mother told me to stay here all night, my grand lady!"
"And I
will not lie down!" cried the rebellious Agueda, leaping to the floor. "Stay,
old woman. Tell me what I have to do."
"Tell
her! Tell her!" chimed the other girls.
The old
woman dropped the clothes she had gathered and approached and fixed her eyes on the girl.
"You must take a candle," she instructed, "and go into a room that is dark
and that has a mirror in it and you must be alone in the room. Go up to the mirror and
close your eyes and shy:
Mirror,
mirror, show to me him whose woman I will be. If all goes right, just above your left
shoulder will appear the face of the man you will marry." A silence. Then: "And
hat if all does not go right?" asked Agueda. "Ah, then the Lord have mercy on
you!" "Why." "Because you may see--the Devil!"
The girls
screamed and clutched one another, shivering. "But what nonsense!" cried Agueda.
"This is the year 1847. There are no devil anymore!" Nevertheless she had turned
pale. "But where could I go, hugh? Yes, I know! Down to the sala. It has that big
mirror and no one is there now." "No, Agueda, no! It is a mortal sin! You will
see the devil!" "I do not care! I am not afraid! I will go!" "Oh, you
wicked girl! Oh, you mad girl!" "If you do not come to bed, Agueda, I will call
my mother." "And if you do I will tell her who came to visit you at the convent
last March. Come, old woman---give me that candle. I go." "Oh girls---give me
that candle, I go."
But Agueda
had already slipped outside; was already tiptoeing across the hall; her feet bare and her
dark hair falling down her shoulders and streaming in the wind as she fled down the
stairs, the lighted candle sputtering in one hand while with the other she pulled up her
white gown from her ankles. She paused breathless in the doorway to the sala and her heart
failed her. She tried to imagine the room filled again with lights, laughter, whirling
couples, and the jolly jerky music of the fiddlers. But, oh, it was a dark den, a weird
cavern for the windows had been closed and the furniture stacked up against the walls. She
crossed herself and stepped inside.
The mirror
hung on the wall before her; a big antique mirror with a gold frame carved into leaves and
flowers and mysterious curlicues. She saw herself approaching fearfully in it: a small
while ghost that the darkness bodied forth---but not willingly, not completely, for her
eyes and hair were so dark that the face approaching in the mirror seemed only a mask that
floated forward; a bright mask with two holes gaping in it, blown forward by the white
cloud of her gown. But when she stood before the mirror she lifted the candle level with
her chin and the dead mask bloomed into her living face.
She closed
her eyes and whispered the incantation. When she had finished such a terror took hold of
her that she felt unable to move, unable to open her eyes and thought she would stand
there forever, enchanted. But she heard a step behind her, and a smothered giggle, and
instantly opened her eyes.
"And
what did you see, Mama? Oh, what was it?" But Dona Agueda had forgotten the little
girl on her lap: she was staring pass the curly head nestling at her breast and seeing
herself in the big mirror hanging in the room. It was the same room and the same mirror
out the face she now saw in it was an old face---a hard, bitter, vengeful face, framed in
graying hair, and so sadly altered, so sadly different from that other face like a white
mask, that fresh young face like a pure mask than she had brought before this mirror one
wild May Day midnight years and years ago.... "But what was it Mama? Oh please go on!
What did you see?" Dona Agueda looked down at her daughter but her face did not
soften though her eyes filled with tears. "I saw the devil." she said bitterly.
The child blanched. "The devil, Mama? Oh... Oh..." "Yes, my love. I opened
my eyes and there in the mirror, smiling at me over my left shoulder, was the face of the
devil." "Oh, my poor little Mama! And were you very frightened?" "You
can imagine. And that is why good little girls do not look into mirrors except when their
mothers tell them. You must stop this naughty habit, darling, of admiring yourself in
every mirror you pass- or you may see something frightful some day." "But the
devil, Mama---what did he look like?" "Well, let me see... he has curly hair and
a scar on his cheek---" "Like the scar of Papa?" "Well, yes. But this
of the devil was a scar of sin, while that of your Papa is a scar of honor. Or so he
says." "Go on about the devil." "Well, he had mustaches."
"Like those of Papa?" "Oh, no. Those of your Papa are dirty and graying and
smell horribly of tobacco, while these of the devil were very black and elegant--oh, how
elegant!" "And did he speak to you, Mama?" "Yes… Yes, he spoke to
me," said Dona Agueda. And bowing her graying head; she wept.
"Charms
like yours have no need for a candle, fair one," he had said, smiling at her in the
mirror and stepping back to give her a low mocking bow. She had whirled around and glared
at him and he had burst into laughter. "But I remember you!" he cried. "You
are Agueda, whom I left a mere infant and came home to find a tremendous beauty, and I
danced a waltz with you but you would not give me the polka." "Let me
pass," she muttered fiercely, for he was barring the way. "But I want to dance
the polka with you, fair one," he said. So they stood before the mirror; their
panting breath the only sound in the dark room; the candle shining between them and
flinging their shadows to the wall. And young Badoy Montiya (who had crept home very drunk
to pass out quietly in bed) suddenly found himself cold sober and very much awake and
ready for anything. His eyes sparkled and the scar on his face gleamed scarlet. "Let
me pass!" she cried again, in a voice of fury, but he grasped her by the wrist.
"No," he smiled. "Not until we have danced." "Go to the
devil!" "What a temper has my serrana!" "I am not your serrana!"
"Whose, then? Someone I know? Someone I have offended grievously? Because you treat
me, you treat all my friends like your mortal enemies." "And why not?" she
demanded, jerking her wrist away and flashing her teeth in his face. "Oh, how I
detest you, you pompous young men! You go to Europe and you come back elegant lords and we
poor girls are too tame to please you. We have no grace like the Parisiennes, we have no
fire like the Sevillians, and we have no salt, no salt, no salt! Aie, how you weary me,
how you bore me, you fastidious men!" "Come, come---how do you know about
us?"
"I was
not admiring myself, sir!" "You were admiring the moon perhaps?"
"Oh!" she gasped, and burst into tears. The candle dropped from her hand and she
covered her face and sobbed piteously. The candle had gone out and they stood in darkness,
and young Badoy was conscience-stricken. "Oh, do not cry, little one!" Oh,
please forgive me! Please do not cry! But what a brute I am! I was drunk, little one, I
was drunk and knew not what I said." He groped and found her hand and touched it to
his lips. She shuddered in her white gown. "Let me go," she moaned, and tugged
feebly. "No. Say you forgive me first. Say you forgive me, Agueda." But instead
she pulled his hand to her mouth and bit it - bit so sharply in the knuckles that he cried
with pain and lashed cut with his other hand--lashed out and hit the air, for she was
gone, she had fled, and he heard the rustling of her skirts up the stairs as he furiously
sucked his bleeding fingers. Cruel thoughts raced through his head: he would go and tell
his mother and make her turn the savage girl out of the house--or he would go himself to
the girl’s room and drag her out of bed and slap, slap, slap her silly face! But at
the same time he was thinking that they were all going to Antipolo in the morning and was
already planning how he would maneuver himself into the same boat with her. Oh, he would
have his revenge, he would make her pay, that little harlot! She should suffer for this,
he thought greedily, licking his bleeding knuckles. But---Judas! He remembered her bare
shoulders: gold in her candlelight and delicately furred. He saw the mobile insolence of
her neck, and her taut breasts steady in the fluid gown. Son of a Turk, but she was quite
enchanting! How could she think she had no fire or grace? And no salt? An arroba she had
of it!
"... No
lack of salt in the chrism At the moment of thy baptism!" He sang aloud in the dark
room and suddenly realized that he had fallen madly in love with her. He ached intensely
to see her again---at once! ---to touch her hands and her hair; to hear her harsh voice.
He ran to the window and flung open the casements and the beauty of the night struck him
back like a blow. It was May, it was summer, and he was young---young! ---and deliriously
in love. Such a happiness welled up within him that the tears spurted from his eyes. But
he did not forgive her--no! He would still make her pay, he would still have his revenge,
he thought viciously, and kissed his wounded fingers. But what a night it had been!
"I will never forge this night! he thought aloud in an awed voice, standing by the
window in the dark room, the tears in his eyes and the wind in his hair and his bleeding
knuckles pressed to his mouth.
But, alas,
the heart forgets; the heart is distracted; and May time passes; summer lends; the storms
break over the rot-tipe orchards and the heart grows old; while the hours, the days, the
months, and the years pile up and pile up, till the mind becomes too crowded, too
confused: dust gathers in it; cobwebs multiply; the walls darken and fall into ruin and
decay; the memory perished...and there came a time when Don Badoy Montiya walked home
through a May Day midnight without remembering, without even caring to remember; being
merely concerned in feeling his way across the street with his cane; his eyes having grown
quite dim and his legs uncertain--for he was old; he was over sixty; he was a very stopped
and shivered old man with white hair and mustaches coming home from a secret meeting of
conspirators; his mind still resounding with the speeches and his patriot heart still
exultant as he picked his way up the steps to the front door and inside into the
slumbering darkness of the house; wholly unconscious of the May night, till on his way
down the hall, chancing to glance into the sala, he shuddered, he stopped, his blood ran
cold-- for he had seen a face in the mirror there---a ghostly candlelight face with the
eyes closed and the lips moving, a face that he suddenly felt he had been there before
though it was a full minutes before the lost memory came flowing, came tiding back, so
overflooding the actual moment and so swiftly washing away the piled hours and days and
months and years that he was left suddenly young again; he was a gay young buck again,
lately came from Europe; he had been dancing all night; he was very drunk; he s stepped in
the doorway; he saw a face in the dark; he called out...and the lad standing before the
mirror (for it was a lad in a night go jumped with fright and almost dropped his candle,
but looking around and seeing the old man, laughed out with relief and came running.
"Oh
Grandpa, how you frightened me. Don Badoy had turned very pale. "So it was you, you
young bandit! And what is all this, hey? What are you doing down here at this hour?"
"Nothing, Grandpa. I was only... I am only ..." "Yes, you are the great
Señor only and how delighted I am to make your acquaintance, Señor Only! But if I break
this cane on your head you maga wish you were someone else, Sir!" "It was just
foolishness, Grandpa. They told me I would see my wife."
"Wife?
What wife?" "Mine. The boys at school said I would see her if I looked in a
mirror tonight and said: Mirror, mirror show to me her whose lover I will be.
Don Badoy
cackled ruefully. He took the boy by the hair, pulled him along into the room, sat down on
a chair, and drew the boy between his knees. "Now, put your cane down the floor, son,
and let us talk this over. So you want your wife already, hey? You want to see her in
advance, hey? But so you know that these are wicked games and that wicked boys who play
them are in danger of seeing horrors?"
"Well,
the boys did warn me I might see a witch instead."
"Exactly!
A witch so horrible you may die of fright. And she will be witch you, she will torture
you, she will eat
your heart
and drink your blood!"
"Oh,
come now Grandpa. This is 1890. There are no witches anymore."
"Oh-ho,
my young Voltaire! And what if I tell you that I myself have seen a witch.
"You?
Where?
"Right
in this room land right in that mirror," said the old man, and his playful voice had
turned savage.
"When,
Grandpa?"
"Not so
long ago. When I was a bit older than you. Oh, I was a vain fellow and though I was
feeling very sick that night and merely wanted to lie down somewhere and die I could not
pass that doorway of course without stopping to see in the mirror what I looked like when
dying. But when I poked my head in what should I see in the mirror but...but..."
"The
witch?"
"Exactly!"
"And
then she bewitch you, Grandpa!"
"She
bewitched me and she tortured me. l She ate my heart and drank my blood." said the
old man bitterly.
"Oh, my
poor little Grandpa! Why have you never told me! And she very horrible?
"Horrible?
God, no--- she was the most beautiful creature I have ever seen! Her eyes were somewhat
like yours but her hair was like black waters and her golden shoulders were bare. My God,
she was enchanting! But I should have known---I should have known even then---the dark and
fatal creature she was!"
A silence.
Then: "What a horrid mirror this is, Grandpa," whispered the boy.
"What
makes you slay that, hey?"
"Well,
you saw this witch in it. And Mama once told me that Grandma once told her that Grandma
once saw the devil in this mirror. Was it of the scare that Grandma died?"
Don Badoy
started. For a moment he had forgotten that she was dead, that she had perished---the poor
Agueda; that they were at peace at last, the two of them, her tired body at rest; her
broken body set free at last from the brutal pranks of the earth---from the trap of a May
night; from the snare of summer; from the terrible silver nets of the moon. She had been a
mere heap of white hair and bones in the end: a whimpering withered consumptive, lashing
out with her cruel tongue; her eye like live coals; her face like ashes... Now, nothing---
nothing save a name on a stone; save a stone in a graveyard---nothing! was left of the
young girl who had flamed so vividly in a mirror one wild May Day midnight, long, long
ago.
And
remembering how she had sobbed so piteously; remembering how she had bitten his hand and
fled and how he had sung aloud in the dark room and surprised his heart in the instant of
falling in love: such a grief tore up his throat and eyes that he felt ashamed before the
boy; pushed the boy away; stood up and looked out----looked out upon the medieval shadows
of the foul street where a couple of street-lamps flickered and a last carriage was
rattling away upon the cobbles, while the blind black houses muttered hush-hush, their
tiled roofs looming like sinister chessboards against a wild sky murky with clouds, save
where an evil old moon prowled about in a corner or where a murderous wind whirled,
whistling and whining, smelling now of the sea and now of the summer orchards and wafting
unbearable the window; the bowed old man sobbing so bitterly at the window; the tears
streaming down his cheeks and the wind in his hair and one hand pressed to his
mouth---while from up the street came the clackety-clack of the watchman’s boots on
the cobbles, and the clang-clang of his lantern against his knee, and the mighty roll of
his voice booming through the night:
"Guardia
sereno-o-o! A las doce han dado-o-o!"
soucrce: http://www.seasite.niu.edu/Tagalog/Literature/Short%20Stories/May%20Day%20Eve.htm
No comments:
Post a Comment