RABBI AND PRIEST.
A Story
by
MILTON GOLDSMITH.
Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America. 1891. Copyright, 1891, by the Jewish Publication Society of America.
Press of Edward Stern & Co. Philadelphia.
PREFACE.
Towards the end of 1882, there arrived at the old Pennsylvania Railroad Depot in Philadelphia, several hundred Russian refugees, driven from their native land by the inhuman treatment of the Muscovite Government. Among them were many intelligent people, who had been prosperous in their native land, but who were now reduced to dire want. One couple, in particular, attracted the attention of the visitors, by their intellectual appearance and air of gentility, in marked contrast to the abject condition of many of their associates. Joseph Kierson was the name of the man, and the story of his sufferings aroused the sympathy of his hearers. The man and his wife were assisted by the Relief Committee, and in a short time were in a condition to provide for themselves.
The writer had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Kierson a few years later, and elicited from him a complete recital of his trials and an account of the causes of the terrible persecution which compelled such large numbers of his countrymen to flee from their once happy homes.
His story forms the nucleus of the novel I now present to my readers. While adhering as closely as possible to actual names, dates and events, it does not pretend to be historically accurate. In following the fortunes of Mendel Winenki, from boyhood to old age, it endeavors to present a series of pictures portraying the character, life, and sufferings of the misunderstood and much-maligned Russian Jew.
In the description of Russia's customs and characteristics, the barbarous cruelty of her criminal code and the nihilistic tendency of the times, the author has followed such eminent writers as Wallace, Foulke, Stepniak, Tolstoi and Herzberg-Fraenkel. The accounts of the riots of 1882 will be found to agree in historic details with the reports which were published at the time.
With this introduction, I respectfully submit the work to the consideration of an indulgent public.
MILTON GOLDSMITH. PHILADELPHIA, April, 1891.
CHAPTER I.
RECRUITS FOR SIBERIA.
We are in Russia.
On the high road from Tscherkask to Togarog, and not far from the latter village, there stood, in the year 1850, a large and inhospitable-looking inn. Its shingled walls, whose rough surface no paint-brush had touched for long generations, seemed decaying from sheer old age. Its tiled roof was in a most dilapidated state, displaying large gaps imperfectly stuffed with straw, and serving rather to collect the rain and snow for the more thorough inundation of the rooms below than to protect them from the elements. The grounds about the house were in keeping with it in point of picturesque neglect, and were as innocent of cultivation as the building was of paint. A roughly paved path led from the highway to the tavern door. Two old and sickly poplar trees cast a poor and half-hearted shade upon the parched ground, and mournfully shook their leaves over the scene of desolation. The herbage grew in isolated patches on a black and uncultivated soil. Nature might have originally been friendly to the place, but generations of poverty and neglect had reduced it to a condition of wretched misery.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Rabbi and Priest by Milton Goldsmith
- 2: The people of Togarog assembled night after night
- 3: We are already burdened with enough taxes
- 4: But such an outspoken insult to the reigning nobility
- 5: Podoloff read the following Russia
- 6: Under an autocratic government like that of Czar Nicholas
- 7: Waxing warm as his recital progressed
- 8: Basilivitch was forced to admit that they did not
- 9: In a remote portion of Togarog
- 10: The daughter of Reb Bensef of Kief
- 11: With a pretty calf scarcely three days old
- 12: That accursed Jew has bewitched my cow
- 13: Hirsch was obliged to journey as best he could
- 14: You would love to come to Kief
- 15: Mendel was the centre of attraction
- 16: Podoloff hastily attired himself
- 17: Exposed to unutterable hardships and rigorous discipline
- 18: Demanded one of the soldiers of the half paralyzed Mordecai
- 19: General Drudkoff could now sleep in peace
- 20: You will find out when you get to Kharkov
- 21: At length made their entry into Kharkov
- 22: Mendel and Jacob had disappeared
- 23: It was a momentous question to Mendel
- 24: If we remain here we shall be drenched
- 25: A droshka passed them at full speed
- 26: Leaving Loris in charge of an ignorant woman
- 27: Suddenly she cried Where is Loris
- 28: Dimitri asked In all seriousness
- 29: Entered the house of Haim Kusel
- 30: Count Drentell was haughty and arrogant
- 31: And she chose Lubny for a dwelling place
- 32: Drentell examined the boy's arm
- 33: And the batushka priest was announced
- 34: The Count looked at the priest significantly
- 35: Who quitted Poltava with an incipient fever
- 36: But Mendel could touch nothing
- 37: Such was the family in whose bosom Mendel had found a refuge
- 38: A feldsher in the Jewish community
- 39: The Israelites were equally suspicious of the snakharkas
- 40: Yet here it was that Itzig Maier
- 41: Hirsch Bensef entered the hut and found Jentele
- 42: Itzig will have just arrived in Tchernigof
- 43: Shabbes must not be neglected
- 44: Itzig could not have returned by natural means
- 45: A school in which the Bible and the Talmud are taught
- 46: The great Rabbi Jeiteles himself became the lad's instructor
- 47: At his side sat his little daughter Recha
- 48: As Mendel gazed wistfully at him
- 49: Mendel again took up the conversation
- 50: Even while we are learning from the gentiles
- 51: Miriam had recovered her health
- 52: He had been known to eat trefa at the house of a goy
- 53: Referred to him thenceforth as Pesach the Generous
- 54: He recollected every man and woman in Kief
- 55: Interposed the childish treble of Mendel
- 56: But in giving up what you call superstition
- 57: At length stammered Hirsch Bensef
- 58: Bensef arose from his chair in sheer desperation
- 59: Philip remained in Kief about two weeks
- 60: During which Mendel worked industriously
- 61: Has Harretzki been putting these new ideas into your head
- 62: Rabbi Jeiteles was a learned man
- 63: Mordecai Winenki was reduced to dire want
- 64: Every Jew was supposed to possess
- 65: To morrow is Pesach Passover
- 66: And had the wanderers been in nowise related to Bensef
- 67: The Hagadas were again taken up
- 68: Had surrendered unconditionally to the charm of Recha
- 69: Recha observing his perturbation
- 70: Recha has promised to be my wife
- 71: A wonder working icon was brought from St
- 72: Beile was unattractive and uninteresting
- 73: But what has he to do with our Beile
- 74: For a short while Itzig suffered intense agony
- 75: Officiated in the place of the departed Rabbi Jeiteles
- 76: You whose daily business takes you to the hovels of the poor
- 77: Pomeroff was a strikingly handsome man
- 78: Mendel bowed and left the apartment
- 79: Mendel sat in his snug parlor with his wife and her mother
- 80: Here stood the vast Petcherskoi convent
- 81: If Mendel had any fears of the reception which awaited him
- 82: Who can wean the Jews from their faith
- 83: In a few days we shall have Yom Kipur
- 84: And many of them remained in the synagogue all night
- 85: And he left as unceremoniously as he had come
- 86: Pomeroff muttered to himself Strange man
- 87: By this pernicious institution of serfdom
- 88: And to all rabbis and teachers
- 89: And all of these Mendel answered calmly and convincingly
- 90: This Mendel positively refused to do
- 91: Let us open the records of Kief for the year 1879
- 92: Loris developed a disposition in which indolence
- 93: There is no danger of detection
- 94: Pomeroff sat in his chair as if thunderstruck
- 95: The French destroyed their Bastile
- 96: A Pomeroff has never yet stooped to treason
- 97: When Pomeroff awoke next morning
- 98: And Pomeroff was hurried away to the house of detention
- 99: Within a week of Pomeroff's execution Count Dimitri Drentell
- 100: Drentell soon discovered that Moleska
- 101: Governor Drentell himself pronounced their sentence
- 102: Our days at Lubny were pleasant
- 103: He still felt doubtful as to her feeling for Mikail
- 104: A week later Mikail arrived in Kief
- 105: And Mikail crossed himself devoutly
- 106: These batushkas belong to a hereditary caste
- 107: Mikail formed a noteworthy contrast
- 108: Mikail led a wretched existence
- 109: Offered him an important position in his consistorium
- 110: Recha had become stouter and more matronly
- 111: Tell me why you refuse Goldheim
- 112: Joseph Kierson was a fine manly fellow of twenty two
- 113: Rabbi Winenki and his wife and daughter
- 114: Always welcome guests at these affairs
- 115: Mikail the priest had just entered
- 116: Mikail suppressed a grimace of displeasure
- 117: His path led directly past Mendel's synagogue
- 118: The parnas reverently lifted the fringes of his tallis
- 119: Kathinka tried in vain to pass him
- 120: This flattering speech filled Kathinka with loathing
- 121: The Rabbi walked up and down the room in great perturbation
- 122: Kathinka rose from her chair and
- 123: Drentell interpreted her silence favorably
- 124: Kierson humanely went to his assistance
- 125: That Drentell will allow the matter to rest
- 126: Mendel sought that worthy functionary
- 127: When Kathinka had ceased reading
- 128: Kathinka was not long in coming
- 129: The Rabbi of Berditchef is my friend
- 130: It was a wretched night for a foot journey to Berditchef
- 131: Kathinka remained unmolested for some time
- 132: With General Melikoff at the head
- 133: Itikoff saw the act in a mirror
- 134: Verderblich ist des Tigers Zahn
- 135: The mob grew in numbers and in lawlessness
- 136: Pelikoff fought with desperation
- 137: Mikail the priest travelled in person through the province
- 138: When Mendel had finished speaking
- 139: Again Mikail confronted the Countess
- 140: But Mikail looked at him with a meaningless stare
- 141: I could not remain in Berditchef
- 142: Rykelmann refused to admit them
- 143: The ukase giving you their property does not exist
- 144: Mikail endeavored to bar the way
- 145: In vain did Mikail circulate among the men
- 146: Kathinka looked hastily about her
- 147: While his left arm still supported Kathinka
- 148: Simultaneously with the riots in Kief
- 149: Over eight thousand Jews had been expelled from Kief alone
- 150: Like Joseph Kierson and his wife
- 151: When he heard that my husband was from Kief
- 152: Leave your onerous duties in Kief
