The Legend of Maria Makiling
The many legends of Mariang Makiling tell of a young woman who lived on
the beautiful mountain that separates the provinces of Laguna and Tayabas. Her
dwelling place was never definitely known, because those who had the good luck
to deal with her would wander about for a long time lost in the woods, unable
to return; neither did they remember the way, nor were they agreed as to the
place and its description.
While some say her home was a beautiful palace, bright as a golden
reliquary, surrounded by gardens and fine parks, others assert that they saw
only wretched hut with a patched roof and bamboo sides. Such a contradiction
may give rise to the belief that both parties were romancing, it is true; but
it may also be due to the fact that Mariang Makiling, like may persons in
comfortable circumstances, might have had two dwelling places.
According to eyewitness, she was a young woman, tall and graceful with
big black eyes and long a nd abundant hair. Her color was a clear pure brown,
the kayumangging kaligatan, as the Tagalog say. Her hands and feet were small
and delicate and the expression of her countenance always grave and serious.
She was a fantastic creature, half nymph, halves
sylph, born under the moonbeams of Filipinas, in the mystery of its ancient
woods, to the murmur of the waves on the neighboring shore. According to
general belief, and contrary to the reputation imputed to the nymphs and
goddesses, Mariang Makiling always remained pure, simple, and mysterious as the
genius of the mountain. An old maid servant we had, an Amazon who defended her
house against the outlaws and once killed once of them with a lance thrust,
assured me that she had in her childhood seen her passing in the distance over
the reed grass so lightly and airily that she did not even make the flexible
blades bend.
They said that on the night of Good Friday, when the hunters build
bonfires to attract the deer by the scent of the ashes of which these animals
are so fond, they have discerned her motionless on the brink of the most
fearful abysses, letting her long hair float in the wind, all flooded with the
moonlight. Then she would salute them ceremoniously, pass on, and disappear
amid the shadows of the neighboring trees.
Generally every one love and respected her and no one ever dared to
question her, to follow, or to watch her. She has also been seen seated for
long periods upon a cliff beside a river, as though watching the gentle
currents of the stream. There was an old hunter who claimed to have seen her
bathing in a secluded fountain at midnight, when the cicadas themselves were
asleep, when the moon reigned in the midst of silence, and nothing disturbed
the charm of solitude. In those same hours and under the same circumstances was
the time when the mysterious and melancholy notes of her harp might be heard.
Persons who heard them stopped, for they drew away and became hushed when any
attempt was made to follow them up.
Her favorable time for appearing, it is said, was
after a storm. Then she would be seen scurrying over the fields, and whenever
she passed, life, order, and calm were renewed; the trees again straightened up
their overthrown trunks, and all traces of the unchained elements were wiped
away.
When the poor country folk on the slopes of Makiling needed clothing or
jewels for the solemn occasions of life, she would lend them and besides, give
her a pullet white as milk, one that had never laid an egg, a dumalaga, as they
say. Mariang Makiling was very charitable and had a good heart. Now often has
she not, in the guise of a simple country maid, aided poor old women who went
to the woods for firewood or to pick wild fruits, by slipping among the latter
nuggets of gold, coins, and jewels.
A hunter who was one day chasing a wild boar through the tall grass and
thorny bushes of the thickets came suddenly upon a hut in which the animal hid.
Soon a beautiful young woman issued from the hut and
said to him gently: “The wild boar belongs to me and you have done wrong to
chase it. But I see that you are very tired; your arms and legs are covered
with blood. So come in and eat, and then you may go on your way.”
Confused and startled, and besides charmed by the beauty of the young
woman, the man went in and ate mechanically everything she offered him, without
being able to speak a single word. Before he left, the young woman gave him
some pieces of ginger, charging him to give them to his wife for her cooking.
The hunter put them inside the crown of his broad hat and after thanking her,
withdrew in content. On the was home, he felt his hat becoming heavy so he took
out many of the pieces and threw them away. But what was his surprise and
regret when the next day he discovered that what he had taken to be ginger was
solid gold, bright as a ray of sunshine. Although he tried to look for them
later, he could never find even one.
But for many years now, Mariang Makiling’s presence has not been
manifested on Makiling. Her vapory figure no longer wanders through the deep
valleys or hovers over the waterfalls on the serene moonlight nights. The
melancholy tone of her mysterious harp is no longer heard, and now lovers get
married without receiving from her jewels and other presents, many fear that
she has disappeared forever, or at least, she avoids any contact with mankind.
Yet on the side of the mountain, there is a clear, quite pool, and the
legend persists that her vapory figure may still be seen reflected in this pool
in the mists of early dawn, and from time to time people to the countryside go
to watch for her there.
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