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Yiddish Tales

Yiddish Tales

Author: Various
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Chapter 1 No.1

Word Count: 691    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

eb Yoneh, such a guest as you never

sort i

Oriental

oes tha

of distinction. The only thing against

s he spea

bre

from Je

comes from, but his w

. We boys crowded round him on all sides, and stared, and then caught it hot from the beadle, who said children had no business "to creep into a stranger's face" like that. Prayers over, everyone greeted the stranger, and wished him a happy Passover, and he, with a sweet smile on his red cheeks set in a round grey beard, replied to

s head so that his fur cap shakes. "Shalom! Shalom!" he says. I think of my comrades, and hide my head under the table, not to burst out laughing. But I shoot continual glances at the guest, and his appearance pleases me; I like his Turkish robe, striped yellow, red, and blue, his fresh, red cheeks set in a curly grey beard,

er. It is only when the time comes for saying Kiddush that my father and the guest hold a Hebre

at means, "Won't you

" (meaning, "Say i

"Nu-O?" ("W

O-nu?" ("Why

"I-O!" ("

"O-ai!" ("Y

-i!" ("I beg of

Ai-o-ê!" ("I

-o-nu?" ("Why sh

nu-nu!" ("If you in

e, and shall never hear again. First, the Hebrew-all a's. Secondly, the voice, which seemed to come, not out of his beard, but out of the strip

Four Questions, and we all recited the Haggadah together. And I w

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