Download Worksheet Long for Grammar and more Exercises English in PDF only on Docsity!
NAME:
The Stranger by I. ¥. Mallari
My classmates and I did not like the new boy, David. It was not because we knew he was a bad boy, or because
he had done anyone of us any harm. We only knew we did not like him.
He was a stranger in our barrio, and we did not like strangers. Ours was a little barrio where everybody knew
everybody else. I knew all my classmates and their fathers and their mothers and their brothers and their sisters,
and I was sure all my classmates knew me, and my father, and my brother, and my sisters.
But we knew nothing about David, or his father or his mother, We only knew that they had come at the
beginning of the school year, and that they were renting the big house at the bend of the road. My father said
that they had come from Pampanga, and that David’s father was in charge of repairing the old bridge across the
Malabon River.
So we all eyed David with suspicion. Whenever he tried to to smile at us, we looked at one another and then
lowered our eyes. We did not ¢ him any better when we found out that he could answer the teacher's
questions more readily than we could. He was, we decided, showing off. He wanted to be the teacher's pet.
We never asked David to play with us. He had to sit under the big, acacia tree in the schoolyard and watch us
play. We gave one another guavas and other fruits at recess, but we never offered David any.
One day, however, David brought a great big package to school. We were all curious about what the package
contained, but we tried hard not to show our curiosity.
At recess David approached us, shouting. “Hey, fellows, want any?” Then he opened the package. It was full of
puto seco, the most tempting I had scen in all my life.
“Where did you get it?” [ asked.
“My grandmother sent it to me,” David replied. “She made it herself. Here, take some. It's very good."And he
thrust a handful into my hands.
1 put a piece of puto seco into my mouth, It was very good. I took another bite, and another, and another.
“Hey, fellows,” I said, looking around, “Good, isn’t it?"
My classmates could only nod their heads in approval. Their mouths were too full. 1 looked at David. He was
smiling and his eyes were shining,
“Like it?” he asked_
“Yes, very much,” I answered. “Did you say your grandmother made it herself?”
“Surely.” David replied. “She can make other things, too-doughnuts, and sweets, and other things.”
“Umm!” [ said. “She must be good.”
It was wonderful what a handful of pute seco could do. David suddenly became very interesting to us. He was
no longer so strange although his accent was still rather funny to our cars.
We soon found out, too, that David was very entertaining. He told us about his home town, San Fernando, “It
was very much like Malabon,” he said. He told us about the games that he and his friends used to play.
Then it turned out that David had been to many places. Because of his father’s job, the family had to move
about. David had lived in Bacolod, Zambeanga, Aparri, and many other places that we had only read about in
our geography books. Goodness! We had thought that those names only stood for little marks on the map. Now
we learned from David that they were actual towns with houses, and people, and trees, and schools, and
churches.
One day David took us to his house.He was the only child of the family, and he had lots of toys. He had a pop
gun, and a small bicycle, and small-trucks, and toy trains. There was a huge case full of them.
His mother was very kind - very much like our own mothers. We had thought Pampange mothers must be
different. But she was not. She was very fond of David. She said she was glad he had found new playmates. She
wanted David te be happy. She thanked us for being nice to him. And we felt rather guilty of the way we had
treated David at the beginning of the school year
Then she gave us good foed-hot chocolate, and suman, and some preserves that she said had come from
Pampanga. My, but Pampangos could make good preserves. They melted in the mouth. Even my mother could
not make any better. And [ could see that the other boys enjoyed the merienda as much as I did.
Afterwards, David showed us pictures of the places where and his family had lived. There was a ture of him
on horseback, with his mother standing beside the horse. There was another picture of him in swimming trunks.
“De you swim?” I asked.
“[like swimming a lot,” David said, “My father taught me how to swim when I was a tot, and I’ve gone
swimming with my friends. In Bacolod, we also went banca riding. It was great fun.” “We go swimming here,
too,” I said. “Suppose we go next Saturday. The tide will be high, Um sure. And we can borrow my uncle’s
banca. We'll take some food with us, and we'll cat on a salarmbao.”
So the following Saturday, we started rather early. There were six of us. We took my uncle’s boat and paddled
out te Dagatdagatan. There we tied the boat to a salambao, put our supply of food in a neat little pile, took off
our clothes, and dived into the water.
David was a good swimmer. He could swim faster than any of us. His strokes were good. He said he had
learned them in a summer camp in Laguna. He had a geod teacher, he said. Imagine having formal lessons in
swimming! No wonder David was good.
Early neon we were rather tired and hungry. We decided to rest and eat. But where was Pendong?
“Pendong!” We called. “Pendong, where are you?”
No one answered. We became afraid. What had happened to Pendong? He was the smallest of us, and he was
not a good swimmer. ,
“There he is!* cried David. “Oh my goodness, he seems to be sinking.”
Pendong had swum out too far. He was in great danger. But no one dared to go out for him. We were all tired
out and no one could swim out that far_
“IL go." said David. And he plunged" to the water.
We held our breath as we watched him. What if he did not reach Pendong in time? The poor fellow seemed ta
be having a hard time keeping himself afloat. But David was swimming as I had not seen him swim before. His
fect churned the water like the propeller of a steamboat. His strokes were beautiful to see.