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User talk:Gil samaco jr

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Gil samaco jr (talk | contribs) at 11:46, 22 January 2009. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

"He was The only writer in Cagayan de Misamis; was a young boy who wrote poetries using our dialect. 

Oh, how will I forget the way he reminded me when the American forces battled the forces of General Nicolas Capistrano, but many thought he vanished with the gunpowder that blasted the cannonballs of both forces, and many thought he vanished for good. Whe in fact, he fled the scene of an almost impossible escape when the hand of angels pushed him into to steep mountainside that made him unconscious for one hundred and nine days, and he was the only surviving witness of the war and his papers, along with the poetries, burned by the Americans who wanted to distinguish the unprepared revolutionary Masons. It was painful of course, but the jesuits must smoothen the way. Of course, they must.There were thorns that had stung the Moro, they ruled these lands before, but they cannot accept the legitimate change that time shed. They wanted to resurrect their kingdom because they too, and their culture, were ruins now of history, but no kingdom ever stood without falling. This too, is God's design."

You said he fell in a mountainside... last part...the contemplations were in the home of Capistrano where the image of horse , balay ng bato

died during the Battle of Agusan hill, when he actually fled in a sanctuary that later became a place visited by people and visions.