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This chapter details how John Early was encouraged by his friend Dr. J. Paul Goode to write his memoir. Early began his story in 1906 as an aspiring journalist for the Southern Idaho Review. In the first chapter, he is critical of both the US government's failure to provide the promised irrigation water to the hundreds of homestead families in Eastern Idaho, and the Western arrogance he witnessed in Shanghai while making his way to the Philippines. The exercise of recalling his experiences among the Igorots so energized him that three days after sending the first chapter to Goode, he sent the next two, and five days later he sent six more. The chapter then looks at Early's final public address in 1931, in which he highlighted three things. First, humans are, without choice, tied to the past; second, he remembered the life and work of two lieutenant governors, Jeff Gallman and Norman Conner, who effectively brought peace to Ifugao and Apayao, respectively. Third, Early addressed the growing cynicism and demythologizing of historical figures. Following his talk, Early's fragile health gave way, and he collapsed. Early tried to continue his memoirs through the fall but found it impossible to concentrate. He then exhaled his last breath on January 2, 1932.
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