Mabini the statesman: A bridge to his people
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1964-07-19Author
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Abstract
ON a worn-oat rattan chair sits a paralytic. The late afternoon sun falls on his face, revealing an unusually high forehead, rounded cheekbones, and eyes with a distinctively plaintive expression.
His collar-button is closed. His hands do not grip the arms of his chair; they fall on his knees in repose. His shoulders- perhaps the most striking feature about him - are slightly hunched.
There is nothing dynamic about the picture. It is that of a man whose life is being wasted away. Yet long alter this man is dead, historians will refer to him as one of the country s greatest statesmen. Poets will call him the Sublime Paralytic.
His name: Apolinario Mabini.
Description
Journal article.
Article compiled at Apolinario Mabini volume.
Suggested Citation
Calderon, A. B. (1964). Mabini the statesman: A bridge to his people. Sunday Times Magazine, 18.