“Which one is me? The medical student? The son of Sisa? The friend of Simoun? The man who saw Maria Clara die in spirit?” (He reaches out to touch a reflection. It shatters. Glass cuts his hand.)
“Obey, and you shall enter heaven! Disobey, and your carabao dies!” (Children cheer. Simoun watches, face like stone.) El Filibusterismo Script Kabanata 17
“Accidents happen at fairs. That is the lesson. One small spark, and the whole carnival forgets to laugh.” (Basilio stares at the smoke rising.) “Which one is me
“Look. They sell tickets for two pesos. The winner gets ten thousand. But there are ten thousand tickets. The house always wins.” MAKARAIG: “And yet we buy. Like we buy the dream that Madrid will hear us. That the friars will repent.” A FRIAR (passing by, sneers): “Indios playing at mathematics. You should be praying, not calculating.” DEEP TEXT COMMENTARY: The lottery is the colonial education system: high entry cost, infinitesimal chance of reward, absolute certainty of profit for the operator. Rizal indicts not gambling but the institutionalization of false hope. Scene 4: The Mirror Maze – Identity Fractured (Basilio enters a hall of mirrors. His reflection multiplies, distorts.) The friend of Simoun
“They laugh because the puppet is wood. But the real show—the real one—has no strings. Only blood.” DEEP TEXT COMMENTARY: The puppet show is the colony’s tolerated “criticism”—so exaggerated it becomes harmless. Simoun rejects this. His revolution will not be a puppet show. It will be a fire. Scene 6: The Ending – A Firecracker in the Dark (Night deepens. A final firecracker explodes—not in celebration, but near the governor’s booth. Shouting. Panic.)
The Quiapo Fair, Manila. Night. Lanterns sway, cheap mirrors reflect distorted faces. The air smells of gunpowder from firecrackers and spoiled sweets. Scene 1: The Carnival of Masks (Symbolic Opening) (The stage is crowded. Government officials, students, friars, vendors. Noise. Laughter that never reaches the eyes.)
The fair is a metaphor for colonial “opportunity.” The games are designed to be unwinnable for the native. Simoun will later exploit this same principle—rigged systems breed revolutionary fury. Scene 2: Simoun’s Lens – The Jeweler’s Trap (SIMOUND stands apart, not playing. He watches BASILIO.)