Lamed Shapiro (there is background information on him in my prior posts) is one of the great short story writers of the early 20th century. He is a superb chronicler of Yiddish culture, both in the Ukraine
and in New York City. He was born in the Ukraine and died in Los Angeles, California. There is great pain in his stories, a hatred of senseless ignorant violence. "The Cross", about a pogrom in the Ukraine, is his most famous story. His "The Kiss" is a terrible, harsh story, stark in its violence and hatred. You won't easily forget these stories.
"The Man and his Servant" is set, I believe based on details, in the Central Park area of New York City. It is more of a "modern" story than the two I mentioned. No one speaks, there is little plotting, and we are left with a difficult question when we try to understand the ending. A man is being rolled through the park by his servant, the man is very old, his servant is a young blond man. They almost never talk, the man just gives a barely perceptible nod in the direction he wants to go. The park is full of lovers, cavorting in the bushes in various combinations (Lamed was pretty explicit about sex for 1910). A young woman sees him and says he a disgusting old wreck of a man. They approach a canon, from it seems The American Revolution. The old man begins to think, maybe of a different canon in another place.
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