Showing Results 1 - 10 of 21
Public Access
Text
Linguistic folklore in literature is a component of realistic style. At first, new or renewed literature is usually realistic. The same reasons that introduce…
Contributor:
Meir Viner
Date:
1928
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
Russia! If my faith in you were any less great
I might have said something different.
I might have complained: You have led us astray,
And seduced us young wandering gypsies.
Precious to us is each…
Contributor:
Shmuel Halkin
Date:
1923
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
Older people still remember it. Younger people know about it from reading our classic writers of the older generation: how Jews once gave much thought to naming a child, long before it was born and…
Contributor:
Moyshe Altman
Date:
1968
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
Savitsky, the commander of the Sixth Division, rose when he saw me, and I was taken aback by the beauty of his gigantic body. He rose—his breeches purple, his crimson cap cocked to the side, his…
Contributor:
Isaac Babel
Date:
1924
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Image
Contributor:
Bruno Schulz
Date:
1941–1942
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
Day and night—
Shivering, we wait in bitter day
For moonlit night,
For the caressing moon.
Quivering, we wait in angry night—
For the sunlit day,
For the warming sun.
Day and night—
We must loom…
Contributor:
Leyb Kvitko
Date:
1923
Categories:
Restricted
Text
You, my dear, will survive me and remember.
How could it be otherwise?
—From a letter
Old people? What can you write about old people?
They barely feel anything!
—From a conversation
Contributor:
Dina Kalinovskaya
Date:
1980
Categories:
Restricted
Text
Osher Margolis was one of a handful of Soviet professional historians of Jewry. Like the others, he brought a Marxist perspective to his work. The work below, though focused on the nineteenth…
Contributor:
Osher Margolis
Date:
1930
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
[ . . . ] And we get out of their way; we move in the opposite direction, toward where they’ve come from, toward Petroshi.
And you see, they do not forbid it. And it may be that in Petroshi, where…
Contributor:
Itsik Kipnis
Places:
Date:
1926