Creator Bio
Avrom Reisen
1876–1953
Born in Koidanov (now in Belarus), Avrom Reyzen (Reisen) was a celebrated Yiddish writer, poet, editor, and literary activist. Admired by early Yiddish writers such as Y. L. Peretz and Sholem Aleichem, Reyzen frequently published poems and short stories in Yiddish periodicals and journals in Eastern Europe and the United States. After briefly serving in the tsarist army, he settled in Warsaw, where he founded the Tsentral publishing house and edited special collections and journals of Yiddish literature. Reyzen moved to New York in 1911 and immediately became part of the Yiddish literary, cultural, and political scene there, publishing in the major socialist and progressive Yiddish periodicals and issuing his collected works in some dozen volumes. A lifelong supporter of socialism and workers’ politics, Reyzen is remembered for his mastery of the realistic short story and for depicting all strata of Jewish life. His emphasis fell on everyday working people, immigrants, families, and women. His poetry was noted for its mix of simplicity and sharp irony reminiscent of the work of Heinrich Heine, and many of his poems were set to music. Both of these dimensions are evident in “A Household of Eight,” a savagely ironic lyric, sometimes (mis)interpreted musically as sentimental.
Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator
Primary Source
The New World
A new world being made—one hears
In childhood that it has begun;
Then comes the passage of the years—
Is it not yet fully done?
The new world being made—always,
From childhood on—and on the day
The…
Primary Source
O Quickly, Messiah
O quickly, Messiah, come quickly at last,
The world is engirdled with serpents, in vast
Poisonous circles of famine and care,
Terror and torment, decay and despair;
The earth has denied men the…
Primary Source
A Household of Eight
Household of eight.
Beds are two.
When it gets late,
What do they do?
Three with father,
Three with mother:
Limbs
Over each other.
When it’s night
And they go to bed,
Mother begins
To wish she…