Alejandro G. Abadilla
Alejandro G. Abadilla, commonly known as AGA, was a Filipino poet, essayist, and fiction writer. Critic Pedro Ricarte referred to Abadilla as the father of modern Philippine poetry, and was known for challenging established forms and literature's "excessive romanticism and emphasis on rhyme and meter". Abadilla helped found the Kapisanang Panitikan in 1935 and edited a magazine called Panitikan. His Ako ang Daigdig collection of poems is one of his better-known works.
Early life
Abadilla was born to an average Filipino family on March 10, 1906, in Rosario, Cavite. He finished elementary school at Sapa Barrio School, then continued for high school education in Cavite City. After graduation, he went abroad and worked for a small printing shop in Seattle, Washington. He edited several sections of the Philippine Digest, Philippines-American Review and established Kapisanang Balagtas. In 1934, he returned to the Philippines where he finished AB Philosophy at the University of Santo Tomas. Until 1934, he became a municipal councilor of Salinas before shifting to an insurance selling job.Major works
Aside from writing Ako ang Daigdig, Abadilla wrote several poems and a compilation of his works:- Mga Kuwentong Ginto – he co-edited with Clodualdo del Mundo.
- Mga Piling Katha: Ang Maikling Kathang Tagalog – he co-edited with F.B. Sebastian and A.D.G. Mariano.
- Maiikling Katha – together with Commission on the Filipino Language head Ponciano B.P. Pineda.
- Mga Piling Sanaysay.
- Parnasong Tagalog: Katipunan ng Mga Piling Tula Mula Kina Huseng Sisiw at Balagtas Hanggang sa Kasalukuyang Panahon ng Pamumulaklak at Pagkaunlad.
- Ako ang Daigdig at Iba Pang Mga Tula.
- Tanagabadilla, Una at Ikalawang Aklat - a compilation of Abadilla's tanagas. In Filipino poetry, a tanaga is a short poem of one stanza with 7-7-7-7 syllabic verse, with an AAAA rhyme scheme. Usually, a tanaga is embedded with symbols. Tanagabadilla is a coined term consisting of tanaga and Abadilla.
- Pagkamulat
- "Awit 101866"
"Ako ang Daigdig"