Israel Zangwill - A Short Story Collection
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About this ebook
Israel Zangwill was born in London on 21st January 1864, to a family of Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire.
Zangwill was initially educated in Plymouth and Bristol. At age 9 he was enrolled in the Jews' Free School in Spitalfields in east London. Zangwill excelled here. He began to teach part-time at the school and eventually full time. Whilst teaching he also studied with the University of London and by 1884 had earned his BA with triple honours in philosophy, history, and the sciences.
His writing earned him the sobriquet "the Dickens of the Ghetto" primarily based on his much lauded novel ‘Children of the Ghetto: A Study of a Peculiar People’ in 1892 and its glimpse of the poverty-stricken life in London's Jewish quarter.
As a writer he was keen to reflect on his political and social outlooks. His simulation of Yiddish sentence structure in English aroused great interest. His mystery work, ‘The Big Bow Mystery’ (1892) was the first locked room mystery novel.
Zangwill was also involved with narrowly focused Jewish issues as an assimilationist, an early Zionist, and later a territorialist. In the early 1890s he had joined the Lovers of Zion movement in England. In 1897 he joined Theodor Herzl (considered the father of modern political Zionism) in founding the World Zionist Organization.
Zangwill quit the established philosophy of Zionism when his plan for a homeland in Uganda was rejected and founded his own organisation; the Jewish Territorialist Organization. Its stated goal was to create a Jewish homeland in whatever territory in the world could be found for them.
Amongst the challenges in his life he found time to write poetry. He had translated a medieval Jewish poet in 1903 and his volume ‘Blind Children’ in 1908 shows his promise in this new endeavour.
‘The Melting Pot’ in 1909 made Zangwill’s name as an admired playwright. When the play opened in Washington D.C., former President Theodore Roosevelt leaned over the edge of his box and shouted, "That's a great play, Mr. Zangwill, that's a great play."
Israel Zangwill died on 1st August 1926 in Midhurst, West Sussex.
Index of Contents
A Rose of the Ghetto,
Cheating The Gallows,
The Converts,
The Red Mark,
The Silent Sisters,
The Tug of Love
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Israel Zangwill - A Short Story Collection - Israel Zangwill
Israel Zangwill - A Short Story Collection
An Introduction
Israel Zangwill was born in London on 21st January 1864, to a family of Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire.
Zangwill was initially educated in Plymouth and Bristol. At age 9 he was enrolled in the Jews' Free School in Spitalfields in east London. Zangwill excelled here. He began to teach part-time at the school and eventually full time. Whilst teaching he also studied with the University of London and by 1884 had earned his BA with triple honours in philosophy, history, and the sciences.
His writing earned him the sobriquet the Dickens of the Ghetto
primarily based on his much lauded novel ‘Children of the Ghetto: A Study of a Peculiar People’ in 1892 and its glimpse of the poverty-stricken life in London's Jewish quarter.
As a writer he was keen to reflect on his political and social outlooks. His simulation of Yiddish sentence structure in English aroused great interest. His mystery work, ‘The Big Bow Mystery’ (1892) was the first locked room mystery novel.
Zangwill was also involved with narrowly focused Jewish issues as an assimilationist, an early Zionist, and later a territorialist. In the early 1890s he had joined the Lovers of Zion movement in England. In 1897 he joined Theodor Herzl (considered the father of modern political Zionism) in founding the World Zionist Organization.
Zangwill quit the established philosophy of Zionism when his plan for a homeland in Uganda was rejected and founded his own organisation; the Jewish Territorialist Organization. Its stated goal was to create a Jewish homeland in whatever territory in the world could be found for them.
Amongst the challenges in his life he found time to write poetry. He had translated a medieval Jewish poet in 1903 and his volume ‘Blind Children’ in 1908 shows his promise in this new endeavour.
‘The Melting Pot’ in 1909 made Zangwill’s name as an admired playwright. When the play opened in Washington D.C., former President Theodore Roosevelt leaned over the edge of his box and shouted, That's a great play, Mr. Zangwill, that's a great play.
Israel Zangwill died on 1st August 1926 in Midhurst, West Sussex.
Index of Contents
A Rose of the Ghetto
Cheating The Gallows
The Converts
The Red Mark
The Silent Sisters
The Tug of Love
A Rose of the Ghetto
One day it occurred to Leibel that he ought to get married. He went to Sugarman the Shadchan forthwith.
I have the very thing for you,
said the great marriage broker.
Is she pretty?
asked Leibel.
Her father has a boot and shoe warehouse,
replied Sugarman, enthusiastically.
Then there ought to be a dowry with her,
said Leibel, eagerly.
Certainly a dowry! A fine man like you!
How much do you think it would be?
Of course it is not a large warehouse; but then you could get your boots at trade price, and your wife’s, perhaps, for the cost of the leather.
When could I see her?
I will arrange for you to call next Sabbath afternoon.
You won’t charge me more than a sovereign?
Not a groschen more! Such a pious maiden! I’m sure you will be happy. She has so much way-of-the-country. And of course five per cent on the dowry?
H’m! Well, I don’t mind!
Perhaps they won’t give a dowry,
he thought with a consolatory sense of outwitting the Shadchan.
On the Saturday Leibel went to see the damsel, and on the Sunday he went to see Sugarman the Shadchan.
But your maiden squints!
he cried, resentfully.
An excellent thing!
said Sugarman. A wife who squints can never look her husband straight in the face and overwhelm him. Who would quail before a woman with a squint?
I could endure the squint,
went on Leibel, dubiously, but she also stammers.
Well, what is better, in the event of a quarrel? The difficulty she has in talking will keep her far more silent than most wives. You had best secure her while you have the chance.
But she halts on the left leg,
cried Leibel, exasperated.
Gott in Himmel! Do you mean to say you do not see what an advantage it is to have a wife unable to accompany you in all your goings?
Leibel lost patience.
Why, the girl is a hunchback!
he protested, furiously.
My dear Leibel,
said the marriage broker, deprecatingly shrugging his shoulders and spreading out his palms, you can’t expect perfection!
Nevertheless Leibel persisted in his unreasonable attitude. He accused Sugarman of wasting his time, of making a fool of him.
A fool of you!
echoed the Shadchan, indignantly, when I give you a chance of a boot and shoe manufacturer’s daughter? You will make a fool of yourself if you refuse. I dare say her dowry would be enough to set you up as a master tailor. At present you are compelled to slave away as a cutter for thirty shillings a week. It is most unjust. If you only had a few machines you would be able to employ your own cutters. And they can be got so cheap nowadays.
This gave Leibel pause, and he departed without having definitely broken the negotiations. His whole week was befogged by doubt, his work became uncertain, his chalk marks lacked their usual decision, and he did not always cut his coat according to his cloth. His aberrations became so marked that pretty Rose Green, the sweater’s eldest daughter, who managed a machine in the same room, divined, with all a woman’s intuition, that he was in love.
What is the matter?
she said, in rallying Yiddish, when they were taking their lunch of bread and cheese and ginger-beer amid the clatter of machines, whose serfs had not yet knocked off work.
They are proposing me a match,
he answered, sullenly.
A match!
ejaculated Rose. Thou!
She had worked by his side for years, and familiarity bred the second person singular. Leibel nodded his head, and put a mouthful of Dutch cheese into it.
With whom?
asked Rose. Somehow he felt ashamed. He gurgled the answer into the stone ginger-beer bottle, which he put to his thirsty lips.
With Leah Volcovitch!
Leah Volcovitch!
gasped Rose. Leah, the boot and shoe manufacturer’s daughter?
Leibel hung his head—he scarce knew why. He did not dare meet her gaze. His droop said Yes.
There was a long pause.
And why dost thou not have her?
said Rose. It was more than an inquiry; there was contempt in it, and perhaps even pique.
Leibel did