Hungry Hearts - BestLightNovel.com
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I walked home on wings. My teacher said that I could help him; that I had something to give to Americans. "But how could I teach him?" I wondered; "I who had never had a chance to learn anything except what he taught me. And what had I to give to the Americans, I who am nothing but dreams and longings and hunger for love?"
When school closed down for vacation, it seemed to me all life stopped in the world. I had no more cla.s.s to look forward to, no more chance of seeing my teacher. As I faced the emptiness of my long vacation, all the light went out of my eyes, and all the strength out of my arms and fingers.
For nearly a week I was like without air. There was no school. One night I came home from the shop and threw myself down on the bed. I wanted to cry, to let out the heavy weight that pressed on my heart, but I couldn't cry. My tears felt like hot, burning sand in my eyes.
"Oi-i-i! I can't stand it no more, this emptiness," I groaned.
"Why don't I kill myself? Why don't something happen to me? No consumption, no fever, no plague or death ever comes to save me from this terrible world. I have to go on suffering and choking inside myself till I grow mad."
I jumped up from the bed, threw open the window, and began fighting with the deaf-and-dumb air in the air-shaft.
"What is the matter with you?" I cried. "You are going out of your head. You are sinking back into the old ways from which you dragged yourself out with your studies. Studies! What did I get from all my studies? Nothing. Nothing. I am still in the same shop with the same s.h.i.+rt-waists. A lot my teacher cares for me once the cla.s.s is over."
A fire burned up in me that he was already forgetting me. And I shot out a letter to him:
"You call yourself a teacher? A friend? How can you go off in the country and drop me out of your heart and out of your head like a read-over book you left on the shelf of your shut-down cla.s.sroom? How can you enjoy your vacation in the country while I'm in the sweatshop? You learned me nothing. You only broke my heart. What good are all the books you ever gave me? They don't tell me how to be happy in a factory. They don't tell me how to keep alive in emptiness, or how to find something beautiful in the dirt and ugliness in which I got to waste away. I want life. I want people. I can't live inside my head as you do."
I sent the letter off in the madness in which I wrote it, without stopping to think; but the minute after I dropped it in the mail-box my reason came again to my head. I went back tearing my hair. "What have I done? Meshugeneh!"
Walking up the stairs I saw my door open. I went in. The sky is falling to the earth! Am I dreaming? There was my teacher sitting on my trunk! My teacher come to see me? Me, in my dingy room? For a minute it got blind before my eyes, and I didn't know where I was any more.
"I had to come," he said, the light of heaven s.h.i.+ning on me out of his eyes. "I was so desolate without you. I tried to say something to you before I left for my vacation, but the words wouldn't come. Since I have been away I have written you many letters, but I did not mail them, for they were like my old self from which I want to break away."
He put his cool, strong hand into mine. "You can save me," he said. "You can free me from the bondage of age-long repressions. You can lift me out of the dead grooves of sterile intellectuality. Without you I am the dry dust of hopes unrealized. You are fire and suns.h.i.+ne and desire. You make life changeable and beautiful and full of daily wonder."
I couldn't speak. I was so on fire with his words. Then, like whirlwinds in my brain, rushed out the burning words of the matchmaker: "Not young, not lively, and without money, too!"
"You are younger than youth," he said, kissing my hands. "Every day of your unlived youth shall be relived with love, but such a love as youth could never know."
And then how it happened I don't know; but his arms were around me. "Sara Reisel, tell me, do you love me," he said, kissing me on my hair and on my eyes and on my lips.
I could only weep and tremble with joy at his touch. "The miracle!"
cried my heart; "the miracle of America come true!"
WHERE LOVERS DREAM
For years I was saying to myself--Just so you will act when you meet him. Just so you will stand. So will you look on him. These words you will say to him.
I wanted to show him that what he had done to me could not down me; that his leaving me the way he left me, that his breaking my heart the way he broke it, didn't crush me; that his grand life and my pinched-in life, his having learning and my not having learning--that the difference didn't count so much like it seemed; that on the bottom I was the same like him.
But he came upon me so sudden, all my plannings for years smashed to the wall. The sight of him was like an earthquake shaking me to pieces.
I can't yet see nothing in front of me and can't get my head together to anything, so torn up I am from the shock.
It was at Yetta Solomon's wedding I met him again. She was after me for weeks I should only come.
"How can I come to such a swell hall?" I told her. "You know I ain't got nothing decent to wear."
"Like you are without no dressing-up, I want you to come. You are the kind what people look in your eyes and not on what you got on. Ain't you yourself the one what helped me with my love troubles? And now, when everything is turning out happy, you mean to tell me that you ain't going to be there?"
She gave me a grab over and kissed me in a way that I couldn't say "No" to her.
So I s.h.i.+ned myself up in the best I had and went to the wedding.
I was in the middle from giving my congratulations to Yetta and her new husband, when--Gott! Gott im Himmel! The sky is falling to the earth! I see him--him, and his wife leaning on his arm, coming over.
I gave a fall back, like something sharp hit me. My head got dizzy, and my eyes got blind.
I wanted to run away from him, but, ach! everything in me rushed to him.
I was feeling like struck deaf, dumb, and blind all in one.
He must have said something to me, and I must have answered back something to him, but how? What? I only remember like in a dream my getting to the cloakroom. Such a tearing, grinding pain was dragging me down to the floor that I had to hold on to the wall not to fall.
All of a sudden I feel a pull on my arm. It was the janitor with the broom in his hand.
"Lady, are you sick? The wedding people is all gone, and I swept up already."
But I couldn't wake up from myself.
"Lady, the lights is going out," he says, looking on me queer.
"I think I ain't well," I said. And I went out.
Ach, I see again the time when we was lovers! How beautiful the world was then!
"Maybe there never was such love like ours, and never will be," we was always telling one another.
When we was together there was like a light s.h.i.+ning around us, the light from his heart on mine, and from my heart on his. People began to look happy just looking on us.
When we was walking we didn't feel we was touching the earth but flying high up through the air. We looked on the rest of the people with pity, because it was seeming to us that we was the only two persons awake, and all the rest was hurrying and pus.h.i.+ng and slaving and crowding one on the other without the splendidness of feeling for what it was all for, like we was feeling it.
David was learning for a doctor. Daytimes he went to college, and nights he was in a drug-store. I was working in a factory on s.h.i.+rt-waists. We was poor. But we didn't feel poor. The waists I was sewing flyed like white birds through my fingers, because his face was s.h.i.+ning out of everything I touched.
David was always trying to learn me how to make myself over for an American. Sometimes he would spend out fifteen cents to buy me the "Ladies' Home Journal" to read about American life, and my whole head was put away on how to look neat and be up-to-date like the American girls. Till long hours in the night I used to stay up brus.h.i.+ng and pressing my plain blue suit with the white collar what David liked, and was.h.i.+ng my waists, and fixing up my hat like the pattern magazines show you.
On holidays he took me out for a dinner by a restaurant, to learn me how the Americans eat, with napkins, and use up so many plates--the b.u.t.ter by itself, and the bread by itself, and the meat by itself, and the potatoes by itself.
Always when the six o'clock whistle blowed, he was waiting for me on the corner from the shop to take me home.
"Ut, there waits Sara's doctor feller," the girls were nudging one to the other, as we went out from the shop. "Ain't she the lucky one!"
All the way as we walked along he was learning me how to throw off my greenhorn talk, and say out the words in the American.