Rachel Luzzatto Morpurgo

1790–1871

Rachel Morpurgo (b. Luzzatto) was born to a rabbinic and literary family in Trieste, Italy. Highly educated in Jewish and secular subjects, Morpurgo began writing poetry at age eighteen. She was one of the first women to write modern Hebrew poetry. Despite her parents’ disapproval, she married Italian Jewish merchant Jacob Morpurgo. Rachel Morpurgo’s work first appeared in print in 1847 in the literary journal Kokheve Yitsḥak, where she ultimately published some fifty poems to wide acclaim, thanks to the advocacy of her well-known cousin Samuel Luzzatto.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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On Hearing She Had Been Praised in the Journals

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My soul sighs, fate brings only trouble. My spirit was lifted, and I grew bold. I heard a voice: ‘Your poem is gold. Who has learned to sing like you, Rachel?’ My spirit in turn replies: I’ve lost…