Ghetto Comedies
Ghetto Comedies THE MODEL OF SORROWSANGLICIZATIONTHE JEWISH TRINITYTHE SABBATH QUESTION IN SUDMINSTERTHE SABBATH QUESTION IN SUDMINSTER IITHE RED MARKTHE BEARER OF BURDENSTHE LUFTMENSCHTHE TUG OF LOVETHE YIDDISH 'HAMLET'THE CONVERTSHOLY WEDLOCKELIJAH'S GOBLETTHE HIRELINGSSAMOOBORONACopyright
Ghetto Comedies
Israel Zangwill
THE MODEL OF SORROWS
CHAPTER IHOW I FOUND THE MODELI cannot pretend that my ambition to paint the Man of Sorrows
had any religious inspiration, though I fear my dear old dad at the
Parsonage at first took it as a sign of awakening grace. And yet,
as an artist, I have always been loath to draw a line between the
spiritual and the beautiful; for I have ever held that the
beautiful has in it the same infinite element as forms the essence
of religion. But I cannot explain very intelligibly what I mean,
for my brush is the only instrument through which I can speak. And
if I am here paradoxically proposing to use my pen to explain what
my brush failed to make clear, it is because the criticism with
which my picture of the Man of Sorrows has been assailed drives me
to this attempt at verbal elucidation. My picture, let us suppose,
is half-articulate; perhaps my pen can manage to say the other
half, especially as this other half mainly consists of things told
me and things seen.And in the first place, let me explain that the conception of
the picture which now hangs in its gilded frame is far from the
conception with which I started—was, in fact, the ultimate stage of
an evolution—for I began with nothing deeper in my mind than to
image a realistic Christ, the Christ who sat in the synagogue of
Jerusalem, or walked about the shores of Galilee. As a painter in
love with the modern, it seemed to me that, despite the innumerable
representations of Him by the masters of all nations, few, if any,
had sought their inspiration in reality. Each nation had
unconsciously given Him its own national type, and though there was
a subtle truth in this, for what each nation worshipped was truly
the God made over again in its own highest image, this was not the
truth after which I was seeking.I started by rejecting the blonde, beardless type which Da
Vinci and others have imposed upon the world, for Christ, to begin
with, must be a Jew. And even when, in the course of my researches
for a Jewish model, I became aware that there were blonde types,
too, these seemed to me essentially Teutonic. A characteristic of
the Oriental face, as I figured it, was a sombre majesty, as of the
rabbis of Rembrandt, the very antithesis of the ruddy gods of
Walhalla. The characteristic Jewish face must suggest more of the
Arab than of the Goth.I do not know if the lay reader understands how momentous to
the artist is his model, how dependent he is on the accident of
finding his creation already anticipated, or at least shadowed
forth, in Nature. To me, as a realist, it was particularly
necessary to find in Nature the original, without which no artist
can ever produce those subtlenuanceswhich give the full sense of life. After which, if I say,
that my aim is not to copy, but to interpret and transfigure, I
suppose I shall again seem to be self-contradictory. But that,
again, must be put down to my fumbling pen-strokes.Perhaps I ought to have gone to Palestine in search of the
ideal model, but then my father's failing health kept me within a
brief railway run of the Parsonage. Besides, I understood that the
dispersion of the Jews everywhere made it possible to find Jewish
types anywhere, and especially in London, to which flowed all the
streams of the Exile. But long days of hunting in the Jewish
quarter left me despairing. I could find types of all the Apostles,
but never of the Master.Running down one week-end to Brighton to recuperate, I joined
the Church Parade on the lawns. It was a sunny morning in early
November, and I admired the three great even stretches of grass,
sea, and sky, making up a picture that was unspoiled even by the
stuccoed boarding-houses. The parasols fluttered amid the vast
crowd of promenaders like a swarm of brilliant butterflies. I noted
with amusement that the Church Parade was guarded by beadles from
the intrusion of the ill-dressed, and the spectacle of over-dressed
Jews paradoxically partaking in it reminded me of the object of my
search. In vain my eye roved among these; their figures were
strangely lacking in the dignity and beauty which I had found among
the poorest. Suddenly I came upon a sight that made my heart leap.
There, squatting oddly enough on the pavement-curb of a street
opposite the lawns, sat a frowsy, gaberdined Jew. Vividly set
between the tiny green cockle-shell hat on his head and the long
uncombed black beard was the face of my desire. The head was bowed
towards the earth; it did not even turn towards the gay crowd, as
if the mere spectacle was beadle-barred. I was about to accost this
strange creature who sat there so immovably, when a venerable Royal
Academician who resides at Hove came towards me with hearty hand
outstretched, and bore me along in the stream of his conversation
and geniality. I looked back yearningly; it was as if the Academy
was dragging me away from true Art.'I think, if you don't mind, I'll get that old chap's
address,' I said.He looked back and shook his head in laughing
reproof.'Another study in dirt and ugliness! Oh, you
youngsters!'My heart grew hot against his smug satisfaction with his own
conventional patterns and prettinesses.'Behind that ugliness and dirt I see the Christ,' I retorted.
'I certainly did not see Him in the Church Parade.''Have you gone on the religious lay now?' he asked, with a
burst of his bluff laughter.'No, but I'm going,' I said, and turned back.I stood, pretending to watch the gay parasols, but furtively
studying my Jew. Yes, in that odd figure, so strangely seated on
the pavement, I had chanced on the very features, the haunting
sadness and mystery of which I had been so long in quest. I
wondered at the simplicity with which he was able to maintain a
pose so essentially undignified. I told myself I beheld the East
squatted broodingly as on a divan, while the West paraded with
parasol and Prayer-Book. I wondered that the beadles were
unobservant of him. Were they content with his abstention from the
holy ground of the Church Parade, and the less sacred seats on the
promenade without, or would they, if their eyes drew towards him,
move him on from further profaning those frigidly respectable
windows and stuccoed portals?At last I said: 'Good-morning.' And he rose hurriedly and
began to move away uncomplainingly, as one used to being hounded
from everywhere.'Guten Morgen,' I said
in German, with a happy inspiration, for in my futile search in
London I had found that a corrupt German called Yiddish usually
proved a means of communication.He paused, as if reassured. 'Gut'
Morgen,' he murmured; and then I saw that his
stature was kingly, like that of the sons of Anak, and his manner a
strange blend of majesty and humility.'Pardon me,' I went on, in my scrupulously worst German, 'may
I ask you a question?'He made a curious movement of acquiescence, compounded of a
shrug and a slight uplifting of his palms.'Are you in need of work?''And why do you wish to know?' he replied, answering, as I
had already found was the Jewish way, one question by
another.'I thought I could find you some,' I said.'Have you scrolls of the Law for me to write?' he replied
incredulously. 'You are not even a Jew.''Still, there may be something,' I replied. 'Let us walk
along.'I felt that the beadle's eye was at last drawn to us both,
and I hurried my model down a side-street. I noticed he hobbled as
if footsore. He did not understand what I wanted, but he understood
a pound a week, for he was starving, and when I said he must leave
Brighton for London, he replied, awe-struck: 'It is the finger of
God.' For in London were his wife and children.His name was Israel Quarriar, his country
Russia.The picture was begun on Monday morning. Israel Quarriar's
presence dignified the studio. It was thrilling and stimulating to
see his noble figure and tragic face, the head drooped humbly, the
beard like a prophet's.'It is the finger of God,' I, too, murmured, and fell to
work, exalted.I worked, for the most part, in rapt silence—perhaps the
model's silence was contagious—but gradually through the days I
grew to communion with his shy soul, and piecemeal I learnt his
sufferings. I give his story, so far as I can, in his own words,
which I often paused to take down, when they were
characteristic.CHAPTER IITHE MODEL'S STORYI came here because Russia had grown intolerable to me. All
my life, and during the lives of my parents, we Quarriars had been
innkeepers, and thereby earned our bread. But Russia took away our
livelihood for herself, and created a monopoly. Thus we were left
destitute. So what could I do with a large family? Of London and
America I had long heard as places where they have compassion on
foreigners. They are not countries like Russia, where Truth exists
not. Secondly, my children also worried me greatly. They are
females, all the five, and a female in Russia, however beautiful,
good and clever she be, if she have no dowry, has to accept any
offer of marriage, however uncongenial the man may be. These things
conspired to drive me from Russia. So I turned everything into
money, and realized three hundred and fifty roubles. People had
told me that the whole journey to London should cost us two hundred
roubles, so I concluded I should have one hundred and fifty roubles
with which to begin life in the new country. It was very bitter to
me to leave my Fatherland, but as the moujik says: 'Necessity
brings everything.' So we parted from our friends with many tears:
little had we thought we should be so broken up in our old age. But
what else could I do in such a wretched country? As the moujik
says: 'If the goat doesn't want to go to market it is compelled to
go.' So I started for London. We travelled to Isota on the Austrian
frontier. As we sat at the railway-station there, wondering how we
were going to smuggle ourselves across the frontier, in came a
benevolent-looking Jew with a long venerable beard, two very long
ear-locks, and a girdle round his waist, washed his hands
ostentatiously at the station tap, prayed aloud theAsher Yotzerwith great fervour, and on
finishing his prayer looked everyone expectantly in the eyes, and
all responded 'Amen.' Then he drew up his coat-sleeve with great
deliberation, extended his hand, gave me an effusive 'Shalom Aleichem' and asked me how it
went with me. Soon he began to talk about the frontier. Said he:
'As you see me, anIsh kosher(a
ritually correct man), I will do you a kindness, not for money, but
for the sake of theMitzvah(good deed).' I began to smell a rat, and thought to myself,
How comes it that you know I want the frontier? Your kindness is
suspicious, for, as the moujik says: 'The devil has guests.' But if
we need the thief, we cut him down even from the
gallows.Such a necessary rascal proved Elzas Kazelia. I asked him how
much he wanted to smuggle me across. He answered thus: 'I see that
you are a clever respectable man, so look upon my beard and
ear-locks, and you will understand that you will receive fair
treatment from me. I want to earn aMitzvah(good deed) and a little money
thereby.'Then he cautioned me not to leave the station and go out into
the street, because in the street were to be found Jews without
beards, who would inform on me and give me up to the police. 'The
world does not contain a sea of Kazelias,' said he. (Would that it
did not contain even that one!)Then he continued: 'Shake out your money on the table, and we
will see how much you have, and I will change it for
you.''Oh,' said I, 'I want first to find out the rate of
exchange.'When Kazelia heard this, he gave a great spring and shrieked
'Hoi, hoi!On account of Jews
like you, theMesshiach(Messiah) can't come, and the Redemption of Israel is
delayed. If you go out into the street, you will find a Jew without
a beard, who will charge you more, and even take all your money
away. I swear to you, as I should wish to see Messhiach Ben David,
that I want to earn no money. I only desire your good, and so to
lay up a littleMitzvahin
heaven.'Thereupon I changed my money with him. Afterwards I found
that he had swindled me to the extent of fifteen roubles. Elzas
Kazelia is like to the Russian forest robber, who waylays even the
peasant.We began to talk further about the frontier. He wanted eighty
roubles, and swore by hiskosher
Yiddishkeit(ritually pure Judaism) that the
affair would cost him seventy-five.Thereupon I became sorely troubled, because I had understood
it would only cost us twenty roubles for all of us, and so I told
him. Said he: 'If you seek others with short beards, they will take
twice as much from you.' But I went out into the street to seek a
second murderer. The second promised to do it cheaper, said that
Kazelia was a robber, and promised to meet me at the railway
station.Immediately I left, Elzas Kazelia, thekosherJew, went to the police, and
informed them that I and my family were running away from Russia,
and were going to London; and we were at once arrested, and thrown
bag and baggage into a filthy cell, lighted only by an iron grating
in the door. No food or drink was allowed us, as though we were the
greatest criminals. Such is Russian humanity, to starve innocent
people. The little provender we had in a bag scarcely kept us from
fainting with hunger. On the second day Kazelia sent two Jews with
beards. Suddenly I heard the door unlock, and they appeared saying:
'We have come to do you a favour, but not for nothing. If your life
and the lives of your family are dear to you, we advise you to give
the police seventy roubles, and we want ten roubles for our
kindness, and you must employ Kazelia to take you over the frontier
for eighty roubles, otherwise the police will not be bribed. If you
refuse, you are lost.'Well, how could I answer? How could one give away the last
kopeck and arrive penniless in a strange land? Every rouble taken
from us was like a piece of our life. So my people and I began to
weep and to beg for pity. 'Have compassion,' we cried. Answered
they: 'In a frontier town compassion dwells not. Give money. That
will bring compassion.' And they slammed the door, and we were
locked in once more. Tears and cries helped nothing. My children
wept agonizedly. Oh, truth, truth! Russia, Russia! How scurvily you
handle the guiltless! For an enlightened land to be
thus!'Father, father,' the children said, 'give away everything so
that we die not in this cell of fear and hunger.'But even had I wished, I could do nothing from behind barred
doors. Our shouting was useless. At last I attracted a warder who
was watching in the corridor. 'Bring me a Jew,' I cried; 'I wish to
tell him of our plight.' And he answered: 'Hold your peace if you
don't want your teeth knocked out. Recognise that you are a
prisoner. You know well what is required of you.'Yes, I thought, my money or my life.On the third day our sufferings became almost insupportable,
and the Russian cold seized on our bodies, and our strength began
to fail. We looked upon the cell as our tomb, and on Kazelia as the
Angel of Death. Here, it seemed, we were to die of hunger. We lost
hope of seeing the sun. For well we know Russia. Who seeks Truth
finds Death more easily. As the Russian proverb says, 'If you want
to know Truth, you will know Death.'At length the warder seemed to take pity on our cries, and
brought again the two Jews. 'For the last time we tell you. Give us
money, and we will do you a kindness. We have been seized with
compassion for your family.'So I said no more, but gave them all they asked, and Elzas
Kazelia came and said to me rebukingly: 'It is a characteristic of
the Jew never to part with his money unless chastised.' I said to
Elzas Kazelia: 'I thought you were an honourable, pious Jew. How
could you treat a poor family so?'He answered me: 'An honourable, pious Jew must also make a
little money.'Thereupon he conducted us from the prison, and sent for a
conveyance. No sooner had we seated ourselves than he demanded six
roubles. Well, what could I do? I had fallen among thieves, and
must part with my money. We drove to a small room, and remained
there two hours, for which we had to pay three roubles, as the
preparations for our crossing were apparently incomplete. When we
finally got to the frontier—in this case a shallow river—they
warned us not even to sneeze, for if the soldiers heard we should
be shot without more ado. I had to strip in order to wade through
the water, and several men carried over my family. My two bundles,
with all my belongings, consisting of clothes and household
treasures, remained, however, on the Russian side. Suddenly a wild
disorder arose. 'The soldiers! The soldiers! Hide! Hide! In the
bushes! In the bushes!'When all was still again—though no soldiers became
visible—the men went back for the baggage, but brought back only
one bundle. The other, worth over a hundred roubles, had
disappeared. Wailing helped nothing. Kazelia said: 'Hold your
peace. Here, too, dangers lurk.'I understood the game, but felt completely helpless in his
hands. He drove us to his house, and our remaining bundle was
deposited there. Later, when I walked into the town, I went to the
Rabbi and complained. Said he: 'What can I do with such murderers?
You must reconcile yourself to the loss.'I went back to my family at Kazelia's house, and he cautioned
me against going into the street. On my way I had met a man who
said he would charge twenty-eight roubles each for our journey to
London. So Kazelia was evidently afraid I might yet fall into
honester hands.Then we began to talk with him of London, for it is better to
deal with the devil you know than the devil you don't know. Said
he: 'It will cost you thirty-three roubles each.' I said: 'I have
had an offer of twenty-eight roubles, but you I will give thirty.'
'Hoi, hoi!' shrieked he. 'On a
Jew a lesson is lost. It is just as at the frontier: you wouldn't
give eighty roubles, and it cost you double. You want the same
again. One daren't do a Jew a favour.'So I held my peace, and accepted his terms. But I saw I
should be twenty-five roubles short of what was required to finish
the journey. Said Kazelia: 'I can do you a favour: I can borrow
twenty-five roubles on your luggage at the railway, and when you
get to London you can repay.' And he took the bundle, and conveyed
it to the railway. What he did there I know not. He came back, and
told me he had done me a turn. (This time it seemed a good one.) He
then took envelopes, and placed in each the amount I was to pay at
each stage of the journey. So at last we took train and rode off.
And at each place I paid the dues from its particular envelope. The
children were offered food by our fellow-passengers, though they
could only take it when it waskosher, and this enabled us to keep our pride. There was one kind
Jewess from Lemberg with a heart of gold and delicious rings of
sausages.When we arrived at Leipsic they told me the amount was twelve
marks short. So we missed our train, not knowing what to do, as I
had now no money whatever but what was in the envelopes. The
officials ordered us from the station. So we went out and walked
about Leipsic; we attracted the suspicion of the police, and they
wanted to arrest us. But we pleaded our innocence, and they let us
go. So we retired into a narrow dark street, and sat down by a
blank wall, and told each other not to murmur. We sat together
through the whole rainy night, the rain mingling with our
tears.When day broke I thought of a plan. I took twelve marks from
the envelope containing the ship's money, and ran back to the
station, and took tickets to Rotterdam, and so got to the end of
our overland journey. When we got to the ship, they led us all into
a shed like cattle. One of the Kazelia conspirators—for his arm
reaches over Europe—called us into his office, and said: 'How much
money have you?' I shook out the money from the envelopes on the
table. Said he: 'The amount is twelve marks short.' He had had
advices, he said, from Kazelia that I would bring a certain amount,
and I didn't have it.'Here you can stay to-night. To-morrow you go back.' So he
played on my ignorance, for I was paying at every stage in excess
of the legal fares. But I knew not what powers he had. Every
official was a possible disaster. We hardly lived till the
day.Then I began to beg him to take myTallisandTephillin(praying-shawl and
phylacteries) for the twelve marks. Said he: 'I have no use for
them; youmustgo back.' With
difficulty I got his permission to go out into the town, and I took
myTallisandTephillin, and went into aShool(synagogue), and I begged someone
to buy them. But a good man came up, and would not permit the sale.
He took out twelve marks and gave them to me. I begged him to give
me his address that I might be able to repay him. Said he: 'I
desire neither thanks nor money.' Thus was I able to replace the
amount lacking.We embarked without a bit of bread or a farthing in money. We
arrived in London at nine o'clock in the morning, penniless and
without luggage, whereas I had calculated to have at least one
hundred and fifty roubles and my household stuff. I had a friend's
address, and we all went to look for him, but found that he had
left London for America. We walked about all day till eight o'clock
at night. The children could scarcely drag along from hunger and
weariness. At last we sat down on the steps of a house in Wellclose
Square. I looked about, and saw a building which I took to be
aShool(synagogue), as there
were Hebrew posters stuck outside. I approached it. An old Jew with
a long grey beard came to meet me, and began to speak with me. I
understood soon what sort of a person he was, and turned away.
ThisMeshummad(converted Jew)
persisted, tempting me sorely with offers of food and drink for the
family, and further help. I said: 'I want nothing of you, nor do I
desire your acquaintance.''I went back to my family. The children sat crying for food.
They attracted the attention of a man, Baruch Zezangski (25, Ship
Alley), and he went away, returning with bread and fish. When the
children saw this, they rejoiced exceedingly, and seized the man's
hand to kiss it. Meanwhile darkness fell, and there was nowhere to
pass the night. So I begged the man to find me a lodging for the
night. He led us to a cellar in Ship Alley. It was pitch black.
They say there is a hell. This may or may not be, but more of a
hell than the night we passed in this cellar one does not require.
Every vile thing in the world seemed to have taken up its abode
therein. We sat the whole night sweeping the vermin from us. After
a year of horror—as it seemed—came the dawn. In the morning entered
the landlord, and demanded a shilling. I had not a farthing, but I
had a leather bag which I gave him for the night's lodging. I
begged him to let me a room in the house. So he let me a small back
room upstairs, the size of a table, at three and sixpence a week.
He relied on our collecting his rent from the
kind-hearted.We entered the empty room with joy, and sat down on the
floor. We remained the whole day without bread. The children
managed to get a crust now and again from other lodgers, but all
day long they cried for food, and at night they cried because they
had nothing to sleep on. I asked our landlord if he knew of any
work we could do. He said he would see what could be done. Next day
he went out, and returned with a heap of linen to be washed. The
family set to work at once, but I am sure my wife washed the things
less with water than with tears. Oh, Kazelia! We washed the whole
week, the landlord each day bringing bread and washing. At the end
of the week he said: 'You have worked out your rent, and have
nothing to pay.' I should think not indeed!My eldest daughter was fortunate enough to get a place at a
tailor's for four shillings a week, and the others sought washing
and scrubbing. So each day we had bread, and at the end of the week
rent. Bread and water alone formed our sustenance. But we were very
grateful all the same. When the holidays came on, my daughter fell
out of work. I heard a word 'slack.' I inquired, 'What is the
meaning of the word "slack"?' Then my daughter told me that it
meansschlecht(bad). There is
nothing to be earned. Now, what should I do? I had no means of
living. The children cried for bread and something to sleep on.
Still we lived somehow tillRosh
Hashanah(New Year), hoping it would indeed be a
New Year.It wasErev Yomtov(the
day before the holiday), and no washing was to be had. We struggled
as before death. The landlord of the house came in. He said to me:
'Aren't you ashamed? Can't you see your children have scarcely
strength to live? Why have you not compassion on your little ones?
Go to the Charity Board. There you will receive help.' Believe me,
I would rather have died. But the little ones were starving, and
their cries wrung me. So I went to a Charity Board. I said,
weeping: 'My children are perishing for a morsel of bread. I can no
longer look upon their sufferings.' And the Board answered:
'AfterYomtovwe will send you
back to Russia.' 'But meanwhile,' I answered, 'the children want
food.' Whereupon one of the Board struck a bell, and in came a
stalwart Angel of Death, who seized me by the arm so that it ached
all day, and thrust me through the door. I went out, my eyes
blinded with tears, so that I could not see where I went. It was
long before I found my way back to Ship Alley. My wife and
daughters already thought I had drowned myself for trouble. Such
was our plight the Eve of the Day of Atonement, and not a morsel of
bread to 'take in' the fast with! But just at the worst a woman
from next door came in, and engaged one of my daughters to look
after a little child during the fast (while she was in the
synagogue) at a wage of tenpence, paid in advance. With joy we
expended it all on bread, and then we prayed that the Day of
Atonement should endure long, so that we could fast long, and have
no need to buy food; for as the moujik says, 'If one had no mouth,
one could wear a golden coat.'I went to the Jews' Free School, which was turned into a
synagogue, and passed the whole day in tearful supplication. When I
came home at night my wife sat and wept. I asked her why she wept.
She answered: 'Why have you led me to such a land, where even
prayer costs money—at least, for women? The whole day I went from
oneShoolto another, but they
would not let me in. At last I went to theShoolof the "Sons of the Soul," where
pray the pious Jews, with beards and ear-locks, and even there I
was not allowed in. The heathen policeman begged for me, and said
to them: "Shame on you not to let the poor woman in." TheGabbai(treasurer) answered: "If one
hasn't money, one sits at home."' And my wife said to him, weeping:
'My tears be on your head,' and went home, and remained home the
whole day weeping. With a womanYom
Kippuris a wonder-working day. She thought that
her prayers might be heard, that God would consider her plight if
she wept out her heart to Him in theShool. But she was frustrated, and
this was perhaps the greatest blow of all to her. Moreover, she was
oppressed by her own brethren, and this was indeed bitter. If it
had been the Gentile, she would have consoled herself with the
thought, 'We are in exile.' When the fast was over, we had nothing
but a little bread left to break our fast on, or to prepare for the
next day's fast. Nevertheless we sorrowfully slept. But the
wretched day came again, and the elder children went out into the
street to seekParnosoh(employment), and found scrubbing, that brought in
nine-pence. We bought bread, and continued to live further.
Likewise we obtained three shillings worth of washing to do, and
were as rich as Rothschild. WhenSuccoth(Tabernacles) came, again no
money, no bread, and I went about the streets the whole day to seek
for work. When I was asked what handicraftsman I was, of course I
had to say I had no trade, for, foolishly enough, among the Jews in
my part of Russia a trade is held in contempt, and when they wish
to hold one up to scorn, they say to him: 'Anybody can see you are
a descendant of a handicraftsman.'I could write Holy Scrolls, indeed, and keep an inn, but what
availed these accomplishments? As I found I could obtain no work, I
went into theShoolof the 'Sons
of the Soul.' I seated myself next a man, and we began to speak. I
told him of my plight. Said he: 'I will give you advice. Call on
our Rabbi. He is a very fine man.'I did so. As I entered, he sat in company with another man,
holding hisLulovandEsrog(palm and citron). 'What do you
want?' I couldn't answer him, my heart was so oppressed, but
suddenly my tears gushed forth. It seemed to me help was at hand. I
felt assured of sympathy, if of nothing else. I told him we were
perishing for want of bread, and asked him to give me advice. He
answered nothing. He turned to the man, and spoke concerning the
Tabernacle and the Citron. He took no further notice of me, but
left me standing.So I understood he was no better than Elzas Kazelia. And this
is a Rabbi! As I saw I might as well have talked to the wall, I
left the room without a word from him. As the moujik would say:
'Sad and bitter is the poor man's lot. It is better to lie in the
dark tomb and not to see the sunlit world than to be a poor man and
be compelled to beg for money.'I came home, where my family was waiting patiently for my
return with bread. I said: 'GoodYomtov,' weeping, for they looked
scarcely alive, having been without a morsel of food that
day.So we tried to sleep, but hunger would not permit it, but
demanded his due. 'Hunger, you old fool, why don't you let us
sleep?' But he refused to be talked over. So we passed the night.
When day came the little children began to cry: 'Father, let us go.
We will beg bread in the streets. We die of hunger. Don't hold us
back.'When the mother heard them speak of begging in the streets,
she swooned, whereupon arose a great clamour among the children.
When at length we brought her to, she reproached us bitterly for
restoring her to life. 'I would rather have died than hear you
speak of begging in the streets—rather see my children die of
hunger before my eyes.' This speech of the mother caused them to
forget their hunger, and they sat and wept together. On hearing the
weeping, a man from next door, Gershon Katcol, came in to see what
was the matter. He looked around, and his heart went out to us. So
he went away, and returned speedily with bread and fish and tea and
sugar, and went away again, returning with five shillings. He said:
'This I lend you.' Later he came back with a man, Nathan Beck, who
inquired into our story, and took away the three little ones to
stay with him. Afterwards, when I called to see them in his house
in St. George's Road, they hid themselves from me, being afraid I
should want them to return to endure again the pangs of hunger. It
was bitter to think that a stranger should have the care of my
children, and that they should shun me as one shuns a
forest-robber.AfterYomtovI went to
Grunbach, the shipping agent, to see whether my luggage had
arrived, as I had understood from Kazelia that it would get here in
a month's time. I showed my pawn-ticket, and inquired concerning
it. Said he: 'Your luggage won't come to London, only to Rotterdam.
If you like, I will write a letter to inquire if it is at
Rotterdam, and how much money is due to redeem it.' I told him I
had borrowed twenty-five roubles on it. Whereupon he calculated
that it would cost me £4 6s., including freight to redeem it. But I
told him to write and ask. Some days later a letter came from
Rotterdam stating the cost at eighty-three roubles (£8 13s.),
irrespective of freight dues. When I heard this, I was astounded,
and I immediately wrote to Kazelia: 'Why do you behave like a
forest-robber, giving me only twenty-five roubles where you got
eighty-three?' Answered he: 'Shame on you to write such a letter!
Haven't you been in my house, and seen what an honourable Jew I am?
Shame on you! To such men as you one can't do a favour. Do you
think there are a sea of Kazelias in the world? You are all
thick-headed. You can't read a letter. I only took fifty-four
roubles on the luggage; I had to recoup myself because I lost money
through sending you to London. I calculated my loss, and only took
what was due to me.' I showed the letter to Grunbach, and he wrote
again to Rotterdam, and they answered that they knew nothing of a
Kazelia. I must pay the £8 13s. if I wanted my bundle. Well, what
was to be done? The weather grew colder. Hunger we had become
inured to. But how could we pass the winter nights on the bare
boards? I wrote again to Kazelia, but received no answer whatever.
Day and night I went about asking advice concerning the luggage.
Nobody could help me.And as I stood thus in the middle of the sea, word came to me
of aLandsmann(countryman) I
had once helped to escape from the Russian army, in the days when I
was happy and had still my inn. They said he had a great business
in jewellery on a great highroad in front of the sea in a great
town called Brighton. So I started off at once to talk to him—two
days' journey, they said—for I knew he would help; and if not he,
who? I would come to him as his Sabbath guest; he would surely fall
upon my neck. The first night I slept in a barn with another tramp,
who pointed me the way; but because I stopped to earn sixpence by
chopping wood, lo! when Sabbath came I was still twelve miles away,
and durst not profane the Sabbath by walking. So I lingered that
Friday night in a village, thanking God I had at least the money
for a bed, though it was sinful even to touch my money. And all
next day, I know not why, the street-boys called me aGoy(heathen) and a fox—'Goy-Fox,
Goy-Fox!'—and they let off fireworks in my face. So I had to wander
in the woods around, keeping within the Sabbath radius, and when
the three stars appeared in the sky I started for Brighton. But so
footsore was I, I came there only at midnight, and could not
search. And I sat down on a bench; it was very cold, but I was so
tired. But the policeman came and drove me away—he was God's
messenger, for I should perchance have died—and a drunken female
with a painted face told him to let me be, and gave me a shilling.
How could I refuse? I slept again in a bed. And on the Sunday
morning I started out, and walked all down in front of the sea; but
my heart grew sick, for I saw the shops were shut. At last I saw a
jewellery shop and myLandsmann'sname over it. It sparkled with gold and diamonds, and little
bills were spread over it—'Great sale! Great sale!' Then I went
joyfully to the door, but lo! it was bolted. So I knocked and
knocked, and at last a woman came from above, and told me he lived
in that road in Hove, where I found indeed my redeemer, but not
myLandsmann. It was a great
house, with steps up and steps down. I went down to a great door,
and there came out a beautiful heathen female with a shining white
cap on her head and a shining white apron, and she drove me
away.'Goy-Fox was yesterday,' she shouted with wrath and slammed
the door on my heart; and I sat down on the pavement without, and I
became a pillar of salt, all frozen tears. But when I looked up, I
saw the Angel of the Lord.CHAPTER IIITHE PICTURE EVOLVESSuch was my model's simple narrative, the homely realism of
which appealed to me on my most imaginative side, for through all
its sordid details stood revealed to me the tragedy of the
Wandering Jew. Was it Heine or another who said 'The people of
Christ is the Christ of peoples'? At any rate, such was the idea
that began to take possession of me as I painted away at the
sorrow-haunted face of my much-tried model—to paint, not the Christ
that I had started out to paint, but the Christ incarnated in a
race, suffering—and who knew that He did not suffer over again?—in
its Passion. Yes, Israel Quarriar could still be my model, but
after another conception altogether.It was an idea that called for no change in what I had
already done. For I had worked mainly upon the head, and now that I
purposed to clothe the figure in its native gaberdine, there would
be little to re-draw. And so I fell to work with renewed intensity,
feeling even safer now that I was painting and interpreting a real
thing than when I was trying to reconstruct retrospectively the
sacred figure that had walked in Galilee.And no sooner had I fallen to work on this new conception
than I found everywhere how old it was. It appeared even to have
Scriptural warrant, for from a brief report of a
historical-theological lecture by a Protestant German Professor I
gleaned that many of the passages in the Prophets which had been
interpreted as pointing to a coming Messiah, really applied to
Israel, the people. Israel it was whom Isaiah, in that famous
fifty-third chapter, had described as 'despised and rejected of
men: a man of sorrows.' Israel it was who bore the sins of the
world. 'He was oppressed and he was afflicted, yet he opened not
his mouth; he is brought as a lamb to the slaughter.' Yes, Israel
was the Man of Sorrows. And in this view the German Professor, I
found, was only re-echoing Rabbinic opinion. My model proved a mine
of lore upon this as upon so many other points. Even the Jewish
expectation of the Messiah, he had never shared, he said—that
theMesshiachwould come riding
upon a white ass. Israel would be redeemed by itself, though his
neighbours would have called the sentiment
'epicurean.''Whoever saves me is myMesshiach,' he declared suddenly, and
plucked at my hand to kiss it.'Now, you shockme,' I
said, pushing him away.'No, no,' he said; 'I agree with the word of the moujik: "the
good peopleareGod."''Then I suppose you are what is called a Zionist,' I
said.'Yes,' he replied; 'now that you have saved me, I see that
God works only through men. As for theMesshiachon the white ass, they do not
really believe it, but they won't let another believe otherwise.
For my own part, when I say the prayer, "Blessed be Thou who
restorest the dead to life," I always mean it ofyou.'Such Oriental hyperbolic gratitude would have satisfied the
greediest benefactor, and was infinitely in excess of what he owed
me. He seemed unconscious that he was doing work, journeying
punctually long miles to my studio in any and every weather. It is
true that I early helped him to redeem his household gods, but
could I do less for a man who had still no bed to sleep
in?My recovery of the Rotterdam bundle served to unveil further
complications. The agents at the East End charged him three
shillings and sixpence per letter, and conducted the business with
a fine legal delay. But it was not till Kazelia was eulogized by
one of these gentry as a very fine man that both the model and I
grew suspicious that the long chain of roguery reached even unto
London, and that the confederates on this side were playing for
time, so that the option should expire, and the railway sell the
unredeemed luggage, which they would doubtless buy in cheap, making
another profit.Ultimately Quarriar told me his second daughter—for the
eldest was blind of one eye—was prepared to journey alone to
Rotterdam, as the safest way of redeeming the goods. Admiring her
pluck, I added her fare to the expenses.One fine morning Israel appeared, transfigured with
happiness.'When does man rejoice most?' he cried. 'When he loses and
finds again.''Ah, then you have got your bedding at last,' I cried, now
accustomed to his methods of expression. 'I hope you slept
well.''We could not sleep for blessing you,' he replied
unexpectedly. 'As the Psalmist says, "All my bones praise the
Lord!"'Not that the matter had gone smoothly even now. The Kazelia
gang at Rotterdam denied all knowledge of the luggage, sent the
girl to the railway, where the dues had now mounted to £10 6s.
Again the cup was dashed from her lips, for I had only given her
£9. But she went to the Rabbi, and offered if he supplied the
balance to repledge the Sabbath silver candlesticks that were the
one family heirloom in the bundle, and therewith repay him
instantly. While she was pleading with him, in came a noble Jew,
paid the balance, lodged her and fed her, and saw her safely on
board with the long-lost treasures.CHAPTER IVI BECOME A SORTERAs the weeks went by, my satisfaction with the progress I was
making was largely tempered by the knowledge that after the
completion of my picture my model would be thrown again on the
pavement, and several times I fancied I detected him gazing at it
sadly as if watching its advancing stages with a sort of hopeless
fear. My anxiety about him and his family grew from day to day, but
I could not see any possible way of helping him. He was touchingly
faithful, anxious to please, and uncomplaining either of cold or
hunger. Once I gave him a few shillings to purchase a second-hand
pair of top-boots, which were necessary for the picture, and these
he was able to procure in the Ghetto Sunday market for a minute
sum, and he conscientiously returned me the balance—about
two-thirds.I happened to have sold an English landscape to Sir Asher
Aaronsberg, the famous philanthropist and picture-buyer of
Middleton, then up in town in connection with his Parliamentary
duties, and knowing how indefatigably he was in touch with the
London Jewish charities, I inquired whether some committee could
not do anything to assist Quarriar. Sir Asher was not very
encouraging. The man knew no trade. However, if he would make
application on the form enclosed and answer the questions, he would
see what could be done. I saw that the details were duly filled
in—the ages and sex of his five children, etc.But the committee came to the conclusion that the only thing
they could do was to repatriate the man. 'Return to Russia!' cried
Israel in horror.Occasionally I inquired if any plan for the future had
occurred to him. But he never raised the subject of his
difficulties of his own accord, and his very silence, born, as it
seemed to me, of the majestic dignity of the man, was infinitely
pathetic. Now and again came a fitful gleam of light. His second
daughter would be given a week's work for a few shillings by his
landlord, a working master-tailor in a small way, from whom he now
rented two tiny rooms on the top floor. But that was only when
there was an extra spasm of activity. His half-blind daughter would
do a little washing, and the landlord would allow her the use of
the backyard.At last one day I found he had an idea, and an idea,
moreover, that was carefully worked out in all its details. The
scheme was certainly a novel and surprising one to me, but it
showed how the art of forcing a livelihood amid impossible
circumstances had been cultivated among these people, forced for
centuries to exist under impossible conditions.Briefly his scheme was this. In the innumerable tailors'
workshops of his district great piles of cuttings of every kind and
quality of cloth accumulated, and for the purchase of these
cuttings a certain competition existed among a class of people,
known as piece-sorters. The sale of these cuttings by weight and
for cash brought the master-tailors a pleasant little revenue,
which was the more prized as it was a sort of perquisite. The
masters were able to command payment for their cuttings in advance,
and the sorter would call to collect them week by week as they
accumulated, till the amount he had advanced was exhausted.
Quarriar would set up as a piece-sorter, and thus be able to employ
his daughters too. The whole family would find occupation in
sorting out their purchases, and each quality and size would be
readily saleable as raw material, to be woven again into the
cheaper woollen materials. Through the recommendation of his
countrymen, there were several tailors who had readily agreed to
give him the preference. His own landlord in particular had
promised to befriend him, and even now was allowing his cuttings to
accumulate at some inconvenience, since he might have had ready
money for them. Moreover, his friends had introduced him to a very
respectable and honest sorter, who would take him into partnership,
teach him, and allow his daughters to partake in the sorting, if he
could put down twenty pounds! His friends would jointly advance him
eight on the security of his silver candlesticks, if only he could
raise the other twelve.This promising scheme took an incubus off my mind, and I
hastened, somewhat revengefully, to acquaint the professional
philanthropist, who had been so barren of ideas, with my intention
to set up Quarriar as a piece-sorter.'Ah,' Sir Asher replied, unmoved. 'Then you had better employ
my man Conn; he does a good deal of this sort of work for me. He
will find Quarriar a partner and professor.''But Quarriar has already found a partner.' I explained the
scheme.'The partner will cheat him. Twenty pounds is ridiculous.
Five pounds is quite enough. Take my advice, and let it all go
through Conn. If I wanted my portrait painted, you wouldn't advise
me to go to an amateur. By the way, here are the five pounds, but
please don't tell Conn I gave them. I don't believe the money'll do
any good, and Conn will lose his respect for me.'My interest in piece-sorting—an occupation I had never even
heard of before—had grown abnormally, and I had gone into the
figures and quantities—so many hundredweights, purchased at fifteen
shillings, sorted into lots, and sold at various prices—with as
thorough-going an eagerness as if my own livelihood were to depend
upon it.I confess I was now rather bewildered by so serious a
difference of estimate as to the cost of a partnership, but I was
inclined to set down Sir Asher's scepticism to that pessimism which
is the penalty of professional philanthropy.On the other hand, I felt that whether the partnership was to
cost five pounds or twenty, Quarriar's future would be safer from
Kazelias under the auspices of Sir Asher and his Conn. So I handed
the latter the five pounds, and bade him find Quarriar a guide,
philosopher, and partner.With the advent of Conn, all my troubles began, and the
picture passed into its third and last stage.I soon elicited that Quarriar and his friends were rather
sorry Conn had been introduced into the matter. He was alleged to
favour some people at the expense of others, and to be not at all
popular among the people amid whom he worked. And altogether it was
abundantly clear that Quarriar would rather have gone on with the
scheme in his own way without official interference.Later, Sir Asher wrote to me direct that the partner put
forward by the Quarriar faction was a shady customer; Conn had
selected his own man, but even so there was little hope Quarriar's
future would be thus provided for.There seemed, moreover, a note of suspicion of Quarriar
sounding underneath, but I found comfort in the reflection that to
Sir Asher my model was nothing more than the usual applicant for
assistance, whereas to me who had lived for months in daily contact
with him he was something infinitely more human.Spring was now nearing; I finished my picture early in
March—after four months' strenuous labour—shook hands with my
model, and received his blessing. I was somewhat put out at
learning that Conn had not yet given him the five pounds necessary
to start him, as I had been hoping he might begin his new calling
immediately the sittings ended. I gave him a small present to help
tide over the time of waiting.But that tragic face on my own canvas remained to haunt me,
to ask the question of his future, and few days elapsed ere I found
myself starting out to visit him at his home. He lived near
Ratcliffe Highway, a district which I found had none of that
boisterous marine romance with which I had associated
it.The house was a narrow building of at least the sixteenth
century, with the number marked up in chalk on the rusty little
door. I happened to have stumbled on the Jewish Passover. Quarriar
was called down, evidently astonished and unprepared for my
appearance at his humble abode, but he expressed pleasure, and led
me up the narrow, steep stairway, whose ceiling almost touched my
head as I climbed up after him. On the first floor the landlord, in
festal raiment, intercepted us, introduced himself in English
(which he spoke with pretentious inaccuracy), and, barring my
further ascent, took possession of me, and led the way to his best
parlour, as if it were entirely unbecoming for his tenant to
receive a gentleman in his attic.He was a strapping young fellow, full of acuteness and
vigour—a marked contrast to Quarriar's drooping, dignified figure
standing silently near by, and radiating poverty and suffering all
the more in the little old panelled room, elegant with a big carved
walnut cabinet, and gay with chromos and stuffed birds. Effusively
the master-tailor painted himself as the champion of the poor
fellow, and protested against this outside partnership that was
being imposed on him by the notorious Conn. He himself, though he
could scarcely afford it, was keeping his cuttings for him, in
spite of tempting offers from other quarters, even of a shilling a
sack. But of course he didn't see why an outsider foisted upon him
by a philanthropic factotum should benefit by this goodness of his.
He discoursed to me in moved terms of the sorrows and privations of
his tenants in their two tiny rooms upstairs. And all the while
Quarriar preserved his attitude of drooping dignity, saying no
syllable except under special appeal.The landlord produced a goblet of rum and shrub for the
benefit of the high-born visitor, and we all clinked glasses, the
young master-tailor beaming at me unctuously as he set down his
glass.'I love company,' he cried, with no apparent consciousness of
impudent familiarity.I returned, however, to my central interest in life—the
piece-sorting. It occurred to me afterwards that possibly I ought
not to have insisted on such a secular subject on a Jewish holiday,
but, after all, the landlord had broached it, and both men now
entered most cordially into the discussion. The landlord started
repeating his lament—what a pity it would be if Quarriar were
really forced to accept Conn's partner—when Quarriar timidly
blurted out that he had already signed the deed of partnership,
though he had not yet received the promised capital from Conn, nor
spoken over matters with the partner provided. The landlord seemed
astonished and angry at learning this, pricking up his ears
curiously at the word 'signed,' and giving Quarriar a look of
horror.'Signed!' he cried in Yiddish. 'Whathast thou signed?'At this point the landlord's wife joined us in the parlour,
with a pretty child in her arms and another shy one clinging to her
skirts, completing the picture of felicity and prosperity, and
throwing into greater shadow the attic to which I shortly
afterwards climbed my way up the steep, airless stairs. I was
hardly prepared for the depressing spectacle that awaited me at
their summit. It was not so much the shabby, fusty rooms, devoid of
everything save a couple of mattresses, a rickety wooden table, a
chair or two, and a heap of Passover cakes, as the unloveliness of
the three women who stood there, awkward and flushing before their
important visitor. The wife-and-mother was dwarfed and
black-wigged, the daughters were squat, with tallow-coloured round
faces, vaguely suggestive of Caucasian peasants, while the
sightless eye of the elder lent a final touch of
ugliness.How little my academic friends know me who imagine I am
allured by the ugly! It is only that sometimes I see through it a
beauty that they are blind to. But here I confess I saw nothing but
the ghastly misery and squalor, and I was oppressed almost to
sickness as much by the scene as by the atmosphere.'May I open a window?' I could not help
inquiring.The genial landlord, who had followed in my footsteps, rushed
to anticipate me, and when I could breathe more freely, I found
something of the tragedy that had been swallowed in the sordidness.
My eye fell again on the figure of my host standing in his drooping
majesty, the droop being now necessary to avoid striking the
ceiling with his kingly head.Surely a pretty wife and graceful daughters would have
detracted from the splendour of the tragedy. Israel stood there,
surrounded by all that was mean, yet losing nothing of his regal
dignity—indeed the Man of Sorrows.Ere I left I suddenly remembered to ask after the three
younger children. They were still with their kind benefactor, the
father told me.'I suppose you will resume possession of them when you make
your fortune by the piece-sorting?' I said.'God grant it,' he replied. 'My bowels yearn for that
day.'Against my intention I slipped into his hand the final seven
pounds I was prepared to pay. 'If your partnership scheme fails,
try again alone,' I said.His blessings pursued me down the steep staircase. His
womankind remained shy and dumb.When I got home I found a telegram from the Parsonage. My
father was dangerously ill. I left everything and hastened to help
nurse him. My picture was not sent in to any Exhibition—I could not
let it go without seeing it again, without a last touch or two.
When, some months later, I returned to town, my first
thought—inspired by the sight of my picture—was how Quarriar was
faring. I left the studio and telephoned to Sir Asher Aaronsberg at
the London office of his great Middleton business.'That!' His contempt penetrated even through the wires.
'Smashed up long ago. Just as I expected.'And the sneer of the professional philanthropist vibrated
triumphantly. I was much upset, but ere I could recover my
composure Sir Asher was cut off. In the evening I received a note
saying Quarriar was a rogue, who had to flee from Russia for
illicit sale of spirits. He had only two, at most three, elderly
daughters; the three younger girls were a myth. For a moment I was
staggered; then all my faith in Israel returned. Those three
children a figment of the imagination! Impossible! Why, I
remembered countless little anecdotes about these very children,
told me with the most evident fatherly pride. He had even repeated
the quaint remarks the youngest had made on her return home from
her first morning at the English school. Impossible that these
things could have been invented on the spur of the moment. No; I
could not possibly doubt the genuineness of my model's spontaneous
talk, especially as in those days he had had no reason for
expecting anything from me, and he had most certainly not demanded
anything. And then I remembered that tragic passage describing how
these three little ones, sheltered and fed by a kindly soul, hid
themselves when their father came to see them, fearing to be
reclaimed by him to hunger and cold. If Quarriar could invent such
things, he was indeed a poet, for in the whole literature of
starvation I could recall no better touch.I went to Sir Asher. He said that Quarriar, challenged by
Conn to produce these children, had refused to do so, or to answer
any further questions. I found myself approving of his conduct. 'A
man ought not to be insulted by such absurd charges,' I said. Sir
Asher merely smiled and took up his usual unshakable position
behind his impregnable wall of official distrust and
pessimism.