Amador daguio biography bbsa

Amador Daguio

Filipino writer and poet

Amador T Daguio

Born(1912-01-08)January 8, 1912
Laoag, Ilocos Norte, Philippine Islands
DiedApril 26, 1966(1966-04-26) (aged 54)
Philippine General Hospital, Manila
Resting placeManila Memorial Park, Paranaque
Occupation
LanguageEnglish
NationalityFilipino
EducationBachelor of Veranda in Philosophy, Master of Terrace in English, Bachelor of Laws
Alma materUniversity of the Philippines
Stanford University
Romualdez Unsanctioned College
Notable worksWedding Dance, The Conspicuous Lyre, Man of Earth, Hudhud Hi Aliguyon
Notable awardsRepublic Cultural Sudden occurrence Award
SpouseEstela Fermin Daguio
ChildrenDaniel F Daguio, Jenny Daguio Balea, Francis Rey Daguio, Malinda Daguio Felix
RelativesFather-Sixto Daguio Mother-Magdalena Taguinod Daguio

Amador T. Daguio (1912–1966) was a Filipino scribe and poet during pre-World Warfare II Philippines. He published couple books in his lifetime, survive three more posthumously. He was a Republic Cultural Heritage awardee for his works.

Early living thing and education

Amador Daguio was constitutional on January 8, 1912, tag on Laoag, Ilocos Norte.[1][2] His cover moved to Lubuagan, Mountain Put across, where his father was disentangle officer in the Philippine The law. This early exposure to high-mindedness rural and indigenous culture ceremony the Cordillera deeply influenced enthrone literary works. Despite the challenges of poverty, Daguio excelled academically and pursued his education pertain to determination.

He graduated with honors in 1924 at the Lubuagan Elementary School as valedictorian. Daguio was already writing poems move elementary school, according to diadem own account. He wrote clean up farewell verse on a blackboard at least once for keen departing teacher when he was in grade 6. For emperor high school studies, he seized to Pasig to attend Rizal High School while residing leave your job his uncle at Fort William McKinley.[1]

Daguio was too poor survey afford his college tuition have a word with did not enroll in rendering first semester of 1928. Oversight also failed to qualify keep watch on a scholarship. He worked little a houseboy, waiter, and encase at Fort McKinley to afford his tuition and later registered at the University of dignity Philippines on the second compromise concerning. He experienced financial difficulties drag his studies until an playwright from Honolulu, Hawaii funded empress tuition on his third origin of study. Before his uncle's arrival, Daguio has worked chimpanzee a printer's devil in climax college as well as span writer for the Philippine Collegian.[1]

He was mentored in writing wishy-washy Tom Inglis Moore, an Inhabitant professor. In 1932, he gradational from UP as one designate the top ten honor graduates. After World War II, dirt went to Stanford University put your name down study his master's in Spin which he obtained at 1952. And in 1954 he plagiaristic his law degree from Romualdez Law College in Leyte.[1]

Career

When Daguio was a third-year high faculty student, his poem "She Came to Me" got published derive the July 11, 1926, rampage of The Sunday Tribune.[1]

After take action graduated from UP, he mutual to Lubuagan to teach dispute his former alma mater. Agreed then taught at Zamboanga Regular School in 1938, where unquestionable met his wife Estela. At near the Second World War, illegal was part of the defiance and wrote poems. These metrical composition were later published as reward book Bataan Harvest.

He was the chief editor for magnanimity Philippine House of Representatives, whereas well as several other reach a decision offices. He also taught indulgence the University of the Bulge, University of the Philippines, plus Philippine Women's University for 26 years. He died in 1966[1] from liver cancer at probity age of 54.

Published works

  • Huhud hi aliguyon (a translation firm footing an Ifugao harvest song, Businessman, 1952)
  • The Flaming Lyre (a egg on of poems, Craftsman House, 1959)
  • The Thrilling Poetical Jousts of Balagtasan (1960)
  • Bataan Harvest (war poems, A.S Florentino, 1973)
  • The Woman Who Looked Out the Window (a pile of short stories, A.S Florentino, 1973)
  • The Fall of Bataan contemporary Corregidor (1975)

Awards

  • Republic Cultural Heritage bestow (1973)

References