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Discourses of Keidansky

Discourses of Keidansky

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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DISCOURSES OF
KEIDANSKY

By Bernard G. Richards

SCOTT-THAW CO.
542 Fifth Avenue
NEW YORK MCMIII


Copyright 1903
by Scott-Thaw Co.
(Incorporated)

First Edition Published
March 1903

The Heintzemann Press Boston


Note

The majority of these papers have appeared in the Boston Evening Transcript, and thanks are extended to the editors not only for their permission to reprint the same, but also for the many kindnesses they have shown my friend Keidansky and myself.

All the papers have undergone many changes, and numerous corrections and additions have been made.

B. G. R.


Introductory

Heretical, iconoclastic, revolutionary; yet the flashing eye, the trembling hand, the stirring voice held us spellbound, removed all differences, and there were no longer any conservatives and extremists; only so many human beings led onward and upward by a string of irresistible words.

"Outrageous heresies," some said, yet those who paused to listen for a moment lingered longer, and as they hearkened to the harangues, marked the words and followed the flights of fancy, it came to them that these dreamers of dreams and builders of all sorts of social Utopias upon the vacant lots of the vague future; these ribald rebels holding forth over their glasses of steaming Russian tea in the cafés, or on the street corners under the floating red flag—that they were but a continuation of the prophets of old in Israel.

Those who paused to listen were loath to depart and some prayed for a perpetuation of the things that came out of a throbbing heart and soaring mind. Faint reflections here of the outpourings of a soul, but mayhap they will shed some little light upon the inner life of that strange cosmos called the Ghetto and point again to the Dream it has harbored and cherished through the harsh realities of the centuries.

"Why perpetuate these things," you wrote to me, "since that life is so fast slipping away from under my feet; practicability is urged on every hand, and to-morrow I may be led under the canopy, perhaps elected to the presidency of a congregation, given full charge of an orthodox paper, or put into a big store on East Broadway, and then, what I said would only stand out to taunt and menace me about the life that could not be. Besides, I may become so radical that I shall not want to say anything." Yes, we change, and the castles we build in the air become tenement houses, and we are either the tenants, or worse, the landlords; but "life has its own theories," and if the fine poetry of youth be reduced to plain prose in later years, and wisdom teach us to be stupid, why, we are still a pace ahead and those who will come after shall put their shoulders to the Dream and move it up at least one inch nearer to life. "And if the dreamer dies," as you said yourself, "will not the Dream live ever on?"

Surely! And let me send you the glad assurance that death will come sooner than the presidency of a synagogue.

You are safe, Keidansky; the orthodox will never forgive you.

We change, yet those who fail also come to their own, and even lost souls make great discoveries. Did you not say that "Life is the profoundest of all platitudes?"

B. G. R.

New York, March, 1903.


Contents

I   Keidansky Decides to Leave the Social Problem Unsolved for the Present 1
II   He Defends the Holy Sabbath 7
III   Sometimes He is a Zionist 13
IV   Art for Tolstoy's Sake 23
V   "Three Stages of the Game" 33
VI   "The Badness of a Good Man" 41
VII   "The Goodness of a Bad Man" 53
VIII   "The Feminine Traits of Men" 65
IX   The Value of Ignorance 75
X   Days of Atonement 85
XI   Why the World is Growing Better 95
XII   Home, the Last Resort 105
XIII   A Jewish Jester 117
XIV   What Constitutes the Jew? 129
XV   The Tragedy of Humor 139
XVI   The Immorality of Principles 149
XVII   The Exile of the Earnest 157
XVIII   Why Social Reformers Should be Abolished public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@46701@[email protected]#Page_165" class="pginternal"

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