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Unfinished book by José Rizal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Makamisa (English: After Mass) is an unfinished novel by Filipino patriot and writer José Rizal. The original manuscript was found by historian Ambeth Ocampo in 1987 while going through a 245-page collection of papers. This draft is written in pure, vernacular Lagueño Tagalog and has no written direct signature or date of inscription.
Author | José Rizal |
---|---|
Language | Tagalog Spanish |
Genre | Novel |
Publication date | Unpublished |
Publication place | Philippines |
Preceded by | El filibusterismo |
The novel has only one chapter. It runs only ten pages and is hand-written in the old orthographic ancillary glyphs.[1] Although written in a different language, its style, characterization, and setting mirror those of Rizal's two previous works, Noli Me Tángere and El filibusterismo, which he wrote in Spanish. The chapter ends with a short, unfinished sentence:
Sapagkát nabalitang nasampál si Aleng Anday ay wala mandin siláng
which in English is equivalent to:
Although it was rumored that Aleng Anday received slaps on her face, they still do not [have]
which satisfies the theory of it being unfinished. The novel explores the mysterious ill-temperament of the town curate, Padre Agaton. Rizal later restarted work on Makamisa, using Spanish.[2][3] However, the novel remained unfinished. The draft in Spanish was later translated to Filipino (under the name Etikang Tagalog: Ang Ikatlong Nobela ni Rizal) by Nilo S. Ocampo[3] of the University of the Philippines Diliman College of Arts and Letters.[4]
Seven characters are mentioned in this 10-page unfinished novel:
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