There were at least nine women linked with
Rizal; namely Segunda Katigbak, Leonor Valenzuela, Leonor Rivera, Consuelo
Ortiga, O-Sei San, Gertrude Beckette, Nelly Boustead, Suzanne Jacoby and
Josephine Bracken. These women might have been beguiled by his intelligence,
charm and wit.
Segunda Katigbak and Leonor Valenzuela
Segunda Katigbak was her puppy love. Unfortunately,
his first love was engaged to be married to a town mate- Manuel Luz. After his
admiration for a short girl in the person of Segunda, then came Leonor
Valenzuela, a tall girl from Pagsanjan. Rizal send her love notes written in
invisible ink, that could only be deciphered over the warmth of the lamp or
candle. He visited her on the eve of his departure to Spain and bade her a last goodbye.
Leonor Rivera
Leonor Rivera, his sweetheart for 11 years played the greatest influence in
keeping him from falling in love with other women during his travel.
Unfortunately, Leonor’s mother disapproved of her daughter’s relationship with
Rizal, who was then a known filibustero. She hid from Leonor all letters sent
to her sweetheart. Leonor believing that Rizal had already forgotten her, sadly
consented her to marry the Englishman Henry Kipping, her mother’s choice.
Consuelo Ortiga
Consuelo Ortiga y Rey, the prettier of Don Pablo Ortiga’s daughters, fell in
love with him. He dedicated to her A la Senorita C.O. y R., which became one of
his best poems. The Ortiga's residence in Madrid was frequented by Rizal and his
compatriots. He probably fell in love with her and Consuelo apparently asked
him for romantic verses. He suddenly backed out before the relationship turned
into a serious romance, because he wanted to remain loyal to Leonor Rivera and
he did not want to destroy hid friendship with Eduardo de Lete who was madly in
love with Consuelo.
O Sei San
O Sei San, a Japanese samurai’s daughter taught Rizal the Japanese art of
painting known as su-mie. She also helped Rizal improve his knowledge of
Japanese language. If Rizal was a man without a patriotic mission, he would
have married this lovely and intelligent woman and lived a stable and happy
life with her in Japan
because Spanish legation there offered him a lucrative job.
Gertrude Beckett
While Rizal was in London annotating the Sucesos
de las Islas Filipinas, he boarded in the house of the Beckett family, within
walking distance of the British
Museum. Gertrude, a
blue-eyed and buxom girl was the oldest of the three Beckett daughters. She
fell in love with Rizal. Tottie helped him in his painting and sculpture. But
Rizal suddenly left London for Paris to avoid Gertrude, who was seriously in
love with him. Before leaving London,
he was able to finish the group carving of the Beckett sisters. He gave the
group carving to Gertrude as a sign of their brief relationship.
Nellie Boustead
Rizal having lost Leonor Rivera, entertained the
thought of courting other ladies. While a guest of the Boustead family at their
residence in the resort city of Biarritz,
he had befriended the two pretty daughters of his host, Eduardo Boustead. Rizal
used to fence with the sisters at the studio of Juan Luna. Antonio Luna, Juan’s
brother and also a frequent visitor of the Bousteads, courted Nellie but she
was deeply infatuated with Rizal. In a party held by Filipinos in Madrid, a drunken
Antonio Luna uttered unsavory remarks against Nellie Boustead. This prompted
Rizal to challenge Luna into a duel. Fortunately, Luna apologized to Rizal,
thus averting tragedy for the compatriots.
Their love affair unfortunately did not end in marriage. It
failed because Rizal refused to be converted to the Protestant faith, as Nellie
demanded and Nellie’s mother did not like a physician without enough paying
clientele to be a son-in-law. The lovers, however, parted as good friends when
Rizal left Europe.
Suzanne Jacoby
In 1890, Rizal moved to Brussels because of the
high cost of living in Paris.
In Brussels, he
lived in the boarding house of the two Jacoby sisters. In time, they fell
deeply in love with each other. Suzanne cried when Rizal left Brussels
and wrote him when he was in Madrid.
Josephine Bracken
In the last days of February 1895, while still in Dapitan, Rizal met an 18-year
old petite Irish girl, with bold blue eyes, brown hair and a happy disposition.
She was Josephine Bracken, the adopted daughter of George Taufer from Hong Kong, who came to Dapitan to seek Rizal for eye
treatment. Rizal was physically attracted to her. His loneliness and boredom
must have taken the measure of him and what could be a better diversion that to
fall in love again. But the Rizal sisters suspected Josephine as an agent of
the friars and they considered her as a threat to Rizal’s security.
Rizal asked Josephine to marry him, but she was not yet
ready to make a decision due to her responsibility to the blind Taufer. Since
Taufer’s blindness was untreatable, he left for Hon Kong on March 1895.
Josephine stayed with Rizal’s family in Manila.
Upon her return to Dapitan, Rizal tried to arrange with Father Antonio Obach
for their marriage. However, the priest wanted a retraction as a precondition
before marrying them. Rizal upon the advice of his family and friends and with
Josephine’s consent took her as his wife even without the Church blessings.
Josephine later give birth prematurely to a stillborn baby, a result of some
incidence, which might have shocked or frightened her.
12 (mga) komento:
Very Romantic Rizal
Lost Child? So ibig sabihin may anak si Rizal?
Chickboy.
Romantic maybe hindi chickboy hehehehe :)
Very Romantiko!
Segunda Katigbak <3
Josephine Bracken too :D
ito talaga si Rizal. Ang unang LOVER BOY ng Pilipinas
nasaan yung anak niya?
chickboy
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