The Filipino perspective of the revolution had been logocentralized while that of the Spanish voice was peripheralized. Seen from this view, this dissertation offered a leveled-listening field to accommodate the decentralized story of the Spanish. This research had attempted to identify mainly the reality-frame of the Spanish, their attitudes, behavior, views and interpretation. These were culled from the different sectors and ranks of the Spanish society - the Religious Orders, the press, bureaucrats and the "faceless" soldiers. The presentation was structured as initial reactions from Madrid, then as comparative interpretations of the causes of revolution according to the clergy and the laymen, then their views on the ex-centric revolutionists, a detailed paralleled reportage on the Filipino revolutionary classes and ultimately, the marginalized "ex-centric" Spanish voices, and as insights to the doomed fin-de-siecle Zetgeist that included the living realities of economic pressure groups, the growing internationalization of the times, and the hidalguia of the crumbling Spanish empire.