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The Social Cancer, by José Rizal - Home

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CHAPTER XIV 72<br />

Tasio burst out into a loud laugh. "You are worthy of your patroness," he remarked dryly in Spanish as he<br />

turned his back and went toward the church.<br />

Inside, the sacristans were preparing a catafalque, bordered with candles placed in wooden sockets. Two large<br />

tables had been placed one above the other and covered with black cloth across which ran white stripes, with<br />

here and there a skull painted on it.<br />

"Is that for the souls or for the candles?" inquired the old man, but noticing two boys, one about ten and the<br />

other seven, he turned to them without awaiting an answer from the sacristans.<br />

"Won't you come with me, boys?" he asked them. "Your mother has prepared a supper for you fit for a<br />

curate."<br />

"<strong>The</strong> senior sacristan will not let us leave until eight o'clock, sir," answered the larger of the two boys. "I<br />

expect to get my pay to give it to our mother."<br />

"Ah! And where are you going now?"<br />

"To the belfry, sir, to ring the knell for the souls."<br />

"Going to the belfry! <strong>The</strong>n take care! Don't go near the bells during the storm!"<br />

Tasio then left the church, not without first bestowing a look of pity on the two boys, who were climbing the<br />

stairway into the organ-loft. He passed his hand over his eyes, looked at the sky again, and murmured, "Now I<br />

should be sorry if thunderbolts should fall." With his head bowed in thought he started toward the outskirts of<br />

the town.<br />

"Won't you come in?" invited a voice in Spanish from a window.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Sage raised his head and saw a man of thirty or thirty-five years of age smiling at him.<br />

"What are you reading there?" asked Tasio, pointing to a book the man held in his hand.<br />

"A work just published: '<strong>The</strong> Torments Suffered <strong>by</strong> the Blessed Souls in Purgatory,'" the other answered with<br />

a smile.<br />

"Man, man, man!" exclaimed the Sage in an altered tone as he entered the house. "<strong>The</strong> author must be a very<br />

clever person."<br />

Upon reaching the top of the stairway, he was cordially received <strong>by</strong> the master of the house, Don Filipo Lino,<br />

and his young wife, Doña Teodora Viña. Don Filipo was the teniente-mayor of the town and leader of one of<br />

the parties--the liberal faction, if it be possible to speak so, and if there exist parties in the towns of the<br />

Philippines.<br />

"Did you meet in the cemetery the son of the deceased Don Rafael, who has just returned from Europe?"<br />

"Yes, I saw him as he alighted from his carriage."<br />

"<strong>The</strong>y say that he went to look for his father's grave. It must have been a terrible blow."<br />

<strong>The</strong> Sage shrugged his shoulders.

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