Lineage, Life and Labors of José Rizal, Philippine Patriot
José Rizal Philippine Patriot
Dulce Et Decorum Est Pro Patria Morir Page i
In the Philippine Islands the American Government has tried, and is trying, to carry out exactly what the greatest genius and most revered patriot ever known in the Philippines, José Rizal, steadfastly advocated,
—Theodore Roosevelt, then President of the United States, in a public address at Fargo, N. D., April 7, 1903.
Philippine Money and Postage Stamps, with the Rizal Portrait
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The Portrait of Rizal in 1883 Painted in Oil by Felix Resurreccion Hidalgo.
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Austin Craig
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Lineage Life and Labors
of
José Rizal
Philippine Patriot
A Study of the Growth of Free Ideas in the Trans-Pacific American Territory
Dedication
Introduction
Contents
List of Illustrations
Chapter I
America’s Forerunner
Chapter II
Rizal’s Chinese Ancestry
Chapter III
Liberalizing Hereditary Influences
Chapter IV
Rizal’s Early Childhood
Chapter V
Jagor’s Prophecy
To the Philippine Youth
Chapter VI
The Period of Preparation
“You Ask Me for Verses”
To the Flowers of Heidelberg
Chapter VII
The Period of Propaganda
Specimens of Tagal Folklore
Proverbial Sayings
Puzzles
To my Muse
Chapter VIII
Despujol’s Duplicity
Pobres Frailes!
Chapter IX
The Deportation to Dapitan
Chapter X
“Consummatum Est”
Countrymen:
Chapter XI
The After-Life in Memory
The Tagalog Story of the Monkey and the Tortoise Illustrated by José Rizal
The Novels of José Rizal Translated from Spanish into English