Hail! Oh my native country! More
than aught I adore thee
Whom with so many treasures lavish
nature has blessed;
Eden where flowers more fragrant bloom
than in other gardens,
Where with more beautiful colors, rising,
the dawn paints the heavens,
And where the poet, enraptured, sees
what he elsewhere but dreamt.
Hail! Oh thou queen enchanting!
Filipinos beloved,
Venus beauty enshrouded, peerless,
beloved land!
Region of light and color, poetry,
fragrance, and gaiety,
Regions of fruits delicious and or
sweet harmonies, gently lulled to sleep by the breezes
and the surf of the sea.
Pearl the most precious and dazzling
of our Eastern Ocean,
Paradise built by the splendors of
our brilliant sun:
Eagerly do I greet thee, and adoration
ardent.
Offers my soul with the burning, fervent
desire to see thee
Free from thy bitter sorrow, free from
the Spaniard’s yoke!
Ah, in the midst of thy splendors, sadly
in chains dost though languish,
That which to thee is most precious-freedom,
though has it not!
Ah, to relieve thee, my country, in
thy distress, in thy suffering,
Pain would I give my life-blood, gushing
forth from my bosom
To the last drop, and oblivion find,
eternal rest.
What should be thine by Justice, rights
unalienable
Are naught but words vain and hollow,
cruel mockery to thee;
Justice is but a deception in thy sad
situation,
Bonmaid art thou, though worthy of
a Queen’s purple instead,
Joy givest thou to thy tyrant, who
gives thee gall in return.
What does it help thee, my country,
sad bowed by dire misfortune,
That thou hast skies like the turquoise,
clear and diaphanous,
That of thy moon the silvery beams
are of matchless beauty:
What does it help thee, who, weeping,
sighing in bitter bondage,
Hast for four centuries been suffering
- what is the good to thee?
And what avail thee flowers covering
thy smiling meadows,
What the bird’s carols that sweetly
in your forests resound?
Ah, the same breeze that their fragrance
bears and their songs harmonious,
Bears on its wings cries and sobbing,
weeping and bitter complaints,
That fill the soul with anguish and
the mind with sad thoughts.
What is the good of thy splendor, pearl
of virginal beauty,
What of the wealth oriental of thy
alluring charms,
If all thy grace and beauty tyrants
have cruelly blighted,
Bound with mortiferous iron, fetters
or hardness unequaled,
Drawing enjoyment and pleasures from
thy anguish and woe?
What is the good of thy fertile soil
and its matchless exuberance,
That it brings forth fruits delicious
and manifold, bountiful?
If all thy generous heavens smile down
upon and shelter
Is claimed as his by the Spaniards,
who stepping boldly forward,
Insolent in his vileness, loudly proclaims
his right?
But to end comes all silence and must
all servile patience,
Now, that the tocsin resounding call
us to light for thee,
And without fear, without mercy, openly,
crush the servile serpent
That with its venom has poisoned
thy embittered existence;
Fatherland, here we are, ready, anxious
to die for thee!
All, the idolized mother, and the wife
whom we worship,
Even the babe whom his father loves
like a piece of his soul,
In the defense of thy cause we abandon
them, leaving behind us,
Happiness, love and hope: all we hold
dear we give up,
All our fondest dreams, our illusions
all.
And lo! Throughout the country
heroes spring up enchantment,
Burning with love of their country,
radiant with virtue’s light,
Fighting with ardor that only death
can defeat and vanquish,
And even in dying they will utter thy
sacred name.
Fatherland, wishing thee happiness,
still with their dying breath.
Numerous like stars in the heavens,
thousands of noble heroes
Lay on thy sacred altars willingly
down their lives,
And when ye hear of the combats and
the desperate charges
Fervent prayers to heaven send up,
ye children ye aged,
And ye woman, that victory may be with
our hosts!
Midst the most horrible tortures cruelty
can imagine,
Only because they have loved thee and
desired thy good,
Countless martyrs have suffered, yet
in the midst of their torments
Blessings for thee have risen from
their pure souls, and even
Those who were slain met death with
last wish for thee.
What does it matter that hundreds, thousands
of sons of thine perish,
In the unequal struggle, in the tremendous
strife,
And that their precious lifeblood flows
till it seems like an ocean?
Is it not split in defending thee and
thy sacred home?
Little it matters if fighting bravely,
they die in thy cause!
Little it matters if exile is our fate,
and the prison,
Or even torture, with savage fury inflicted
on us,
For t the sacred altar that in his
heart each patriot
To thee has raised, have us all, one
and all have we sworn
Fealty to our cause, and our honor
pledged.
And it we forth from the flight come
with the laurels of glory,
And our self-sacrificing labor is crowned
with success,
Future ages will honor heap upon honor
and crown thee
Queen of the realm of the free, pure
and unblemished queen,
And all the peoples on earth mute and
admiring will stand.
On the horizon slowly rises the dawn,
most brilliant,
Of a new day of freedom, love and prosperity,
And of those who have fallen in the
dark night of the struggle
Never let perish the memory, and in
their graves, cold and humble,
Happy their slumber will be, happiness
being thine.
And if the crown of the victor should
be the spoil of the Spaniard,
and if the fickle fortune should turn
its back on thee,
Yet we shall always be brethren - be
what it may the outcome,
Liberty will always have the
champions while there are tyrants alive.
And our faith will not perish - while
there is life, there is hope!
Silent forces are working while
a false calm is reigning
Calm precedes the storm - soon will
the hurricane rage,
And with more firmness, more
prudence will our work we continue
And start the struggle again, but with
more ardor and strength,
Till in the end we shall triumph, till
dried your tears shall be.
Fatherland, idolized, precious, as your
sorrows are growing
So our love grows again, your affection
for thee,
Do not lose hope or courage, for from
the wound, the gaping,
Always the blood will flow, while there
is life in us,
And we shall never forget thee in eternity’s
space. |