The Best Short Stories of 1921 and the Yearbook of the American Short Story
neighbours-big for his years and heavy, with fat lips, eyes clouded, hair black and low o
he would find her, had come so, often.-He loves her. The man who squats
a thick throat, "look-w
s not care. She watches two hands-grey-caked over red-unwrap from paper a dazzle of colou
duck," he
er rump, feels its green head that bobs
ck-yours,"
stomach she swings her arm backward and pulls. The duc
iled thick drawers showing between his
had a toy and a playmate.-I am all warm and full of love for Herbert Rabinowich: perhaps some day I can show him, or d
e one that was hers. She dwelt in a world about the bright small room like the
it had borne her: her breasts were high and proud, they had emptied, they had come to sag
flesh? Had she not borne a song through the harsh city? Had she not born
hin lips of Deborah. Her bed with white sheets, her bed with its pool of blood is an altar where she lays for
e. Her child shall leap above its father and its mother as the sun above forlorn fields.-She arose from her bed. She held her child in her arms. She walked through the reeling block with feet aflame. She entered the shop.-There-squatting with feet so wide to
no eyes. I am a woman who
upon my lips gave
about my flanks g
ith gladnes
my vision my eyes, in l
nother misery
ny hours in order to reap my pain? Why must I work so long, heap the hard wither of so man
door open. The m
friends. I was worrying over
epped into the ro
Meyer. "We are so glad when your H
the children who do not attend her. A grey lon
Meyer sews and smiles. "A toy. He shou
uts an anxious fi
lovely that he wants to. There's money enough for such
does not
She turned to where Esther sat with brooding eyes. Her face was serious now,
e you,
" A voice resonant and deep, a voice mellow
time, Esther? You know, I shou
u, Mrs. R
the older woman smiled. "You got
arp words of his mouth. Esther does not look. She takes the words as if like stones they had fallen in her lap. She smiles awa
last to her b
now. Now we rea
t he lets limply rise.
ones.-Do come, som
u, Mrs. R
oy come when he wants.
to have him? Good heart, fine boy, dear child.
ike a horse, swings
ne in the b
!" Meyer said aloud. "I like the boy. He
er. She was silent, seeing the dull boy with the dirty mind, and his mother a
mall and white, the world is full of men with thick lips, hairy hands, of men who will
world of men with hair and lips against her whiteness. Where is the