Six Filipino poets / Amador T. Daguio...[and five others] ; with an introduction by Leonard Casper and notes by N.V. M Gonzales and Jean Edwardson.
Material type: TextManila : Benipayo Press, Pub., [1955]Description: 75 pages 17 cmContent type:- text
- volume
- PL 5531.1 .Si97 1955
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Isagani R. Cruz Collection | Aklatang Emilio Aguinaldo-Information Resource Center | PL 5531.1 .Si97 1955 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not for loan | 3IRC0000001373 |
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PL 5531.1 .D628 1994 Directory of Philippine American women writers and artists 1994. | PL 5531.1 .M486 1974 Directory of Filipino writers : past and present / | PL 5531.1 .Si97 1955 Six Filipino poets / | PL 5531.1 .Si97 1955 Six Filipino poets / | PL 5531.2 .Ab13 1978 A formal approach to lyric poetry / | PL 5531.2 .Eu44 1987 Awit and corrido : Philippine metrical romances. | PL 5531.2 .L97 1986 Tagalog poetry 1570-1898 : tradition and influences in its development / |
Amador T. Daguio, Dominador I. Ilio, Oscar de Zuniga, Carlos A. Angeles, Edith L. Tiempo, Ricaredo Demetillo "It is not often that society listens to its poets. In a country like ours where barbers can be more respectable than writers of verse, poets have to come disguised in as many ways as the imagination can make masks for them. The incredible thing is that they continue as poets, though it has never been easy to breathe through the masks." "In this book are newspapermen, teachers, and public servants--in short, practical people--who have functioned as poets, not off and on, but rather consistently. The masks have become no longer livable." "Mr. Dominador I Ilio, tearing the thing off his face one morning, showed us a collection of his poems. Thus an idea was born. Dr Leonard Casper thought six poets would be more interesting than one and agreed to undertake a selection. Why six, not nine? Why not fifteen or seventeen? But truly, six would make a nice little book. So that was that. " N.V.M. Gonzalez January 16, 1955
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