Philippine Folklore Stories 
 
Project Gutenberg's Philippine Folklore Stories, by John Maurice 
Miller This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and 
with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away 
or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included 
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Title: Philippine Folklore Stories 
Author: John Maurice Miller 
Release Date: January 21, 2004 [EBook #10771] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 
PHILIPPINE FOLKLORE STORIES *** 
 
Produced by Jeroen Hellingman 
 
PHILIPPINE FOLKLORE STORIES 
 
By John Maurice Miller, Boston, U.S.A. 
 
1904 
 
Preface 
As these stories are only legends that have been handed down from 
remote times, the teacher must impress upon the minds of the children
that they are myths and are not to be given credence; otherwise the 
imaginative minds of the native children would accept them as truth, 
and trouble would be caused that might be hard to remedy. Explain 
then the fiction and show the children the folly of belief in such 
fanciful tales. 
 
Contents 
The Tobacco of Harisaboqued The Pericos Quicoy and the Ongloc The 
Passing of Loku The Light of the Fly Mangita and Larina How the 
World Was Made The Silver Shower The Faithlessness of Sinogo 
Catalina of Dumaguete The Fall of Polobolac The Escape of Juanita 
The Anting-Anting of Manuelito When the Lilies Return 
 
The Tobacco of Harisaboqued 
A legend of the volcano of Canlaon on the island of Negros. It is told 
generally in Western Negros and Eastern Cebu. The volcano is still 
active, and smoke and steam rise from its crater. 
Long before the strange men came over the water from Spain, there 
lived in Negros, on the mountain of Canlaon, an old man who had great 
power over all the things in the earth. He was called Harisaboqued, 
King of the Mountain. 
When he wished anything done he had but to tap the ground three times 
and instantly a number of little men would spring from the earth to 
answer his call. They would obey his slightest wish, but as he was a 
kind old man and never told his dwarfs to do anything wrong, the 
people who lived near were not afraid. They planted tobacco on the 
mountain side and were happy and prosperous, 
The fields stretched almost to the top of the mountain and the plants 
grew well, for every night Harisaboqued would order his dwarfs to 
attend to them, and though the tobacco was high up it grew faster and 
better than that planted in the valley below. 
The people were very grateful to the old man and were willing to do 
anything for him; but he only asked them not to plant above a line he 
had ordered his little men to draw around the mountain near the top. He 
wished that place for himself and his dwarfs. 
All obeyed his wish and no one planted over the line. It was a pretty
sight to see the long rows of tobacco plants extending from the towns 
below far up to the line on the mountain side. 
One day Harisaboqued called the people together and told them that he 
was going away for a long time. He asked them again not to plant over 
the line, and told them that if they disregarded this wish he would carry 
all the tobacco away and permit no more to grow on the mountain side 
until he had smoked what he had taken. The people promised faithfully 
to obey him. Then he tapped on the ground, the earth opened, and he 
disappeared into the mountain. 
Many years passed and Harisaboqued did not come back. All wondered 
why he did not return and at last decided that he would never do so. 
The whole mountain side was covered with tobacco and many of the 
people looked with greedy eyes at the bare ground above the line, but 
as yet they were afraid to break their promise. 
At last one man planted in the forbidden ground, and, as nothing 
happened, others did the same, until soon the mountain was entirely 
covered with the waving plants. The people were very happy and soon 
forgot about Harisaboqued and their promise to him. 
But one day, while they were laughing and singing, the earth suddenly 
opened and Harisaboqued sprang out before them. They were very 
much frightened and fled in terror down the mountain side. When they 
reached the foot and looked back they saw a terrible sight. All the 
tobacco had disappeared and, instead of the thousands of plants that 
they had tended so carefully, nothing but the bare mountain could be 
seen. 
Then suddenly there was a fearful noise and the whole mountain top 
flew high    
    
		
	
	
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