Lazarus, Emma, 1849-1887
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Lazarus, Emma, 1849-1887
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Lazarus, Emma, 1849-1887
Lazarus, Emma
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Lazarus, Emma
Lazarus, Emma, 1847-1887
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Lazarus, Emma, 1847-1887
Emma Lazarus
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Emma Lazarus
Emma Lazarus
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Emma Lazarus
לאזארוס, עמא 1849־1887
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לאזארוס, עמא 1849־1887
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American poet.
Poet, essayist.
Emma Lazarus (1849-1887)
Born on July 22, 1849 in New York City, Emma Lazarus was the fourth of seven surviving children to Sephardic-Ashkenazi parents Moses and Esther (Nathan) Lazarus. Lazarus was most likely privately tutored; she was proficient in German, French, and Italian. Her Jewish education consisted of knowledge of the Bible and observing a form of Sabbath and holidays, but as one of Lazarus’ associates said “the religious side of Judaism had little interest for Miss Lazarus, or for any member of her family.” 1
Lazarus began writing poetry inspired by classical themes in her teens, and from 1866-1867, her father published her first book: Poems and Translations, Written between the Ages of Fourteen and Sixteen . By 1877, Lazarus was pursuing a career as a “lady magazine poet,” contributing poetry to Lippincott Magazine and Independent among others, as well as publishing a collection of poetry ( Admetus and Other Poems includes a title poem dedicated to her correspondent, critic and advisor Ralph Waldo Emerson); an historical tragedy set in Italy in 1655 ( The Spagnoletto ); and a novel ( Alide, An Episode of Goethe’s Life ). 2
Historians differ as to the sharpness of change Lazarus experienced while switching her focus from Grecian idealism to Jewish immigrant and Zionist causes. According to Dan Vogel’s Emma Lazarus : “The awakening of her Jewish consciousness, however, was really not quite so sudden. It was more a matter of a latent seed developing slowly and sporadically, and suddenly sprouting forth. The stages, in fact, may be traced in poems written over a period of fifteen years.”
Vogel refers to several poems, among them “In the Jewish Synagogue at Newport,” which was written in July 1867 and published in Admetus and Other Poems . “In the Jewish Synagogue at Newport” follows Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s “The Jewish Cemetery at Newport” in form and meter, but unlike Longfellow’s conclusion that “the dead nations never rise again,” Lazarus insists there is still holiness in “the sacred shrine.” “In Memoriam: Rev. J.J. Lyons: Rosh Hashana 5638” written in April 1877, compares Lazarus’ Uncle, Jacques Judah Lyons, minister of the Congregation Shearith Israel, to the offering of first fruits given in the ancient temple. 1877 was also the year Lazarus was approached by Rabbi Gustav Gottheil of the Reform Temple Emanuel to translate prior German translations of three medieval Jewish poets for his hymnal. Lazarus agreed, hesitantly, fearing her lack of religious feeling would not give credit to their work. All of these beginnings seemed to whet Lazarus’ appetite for Jewish history, culture and Zionism. 3
An interesting record of Lazarus’ change in perspective towards Judaism is apparent in her essays written on Heinrich Heine. Lazarus held an early respect for the work of the German poet who was born Jewish and converted superficially to Lutheranism in order to attend medical school. Heine continued to struggle with his Jewish identity throughout his life. Lazarus translated several of his poems and published Heinrich Heine: Poems and Ballads in 1881. Lazarus’ two biographical and critical essays on Heine written in 1881 and 1884 demonstrate her shift of perspective; in the early essay she views Heine’s defense of Jewish causes as a coincidence of an overall belief in civil liberties and later changes her view and sees his defense as a direct expression of his Jewishness. In her 1884 essay “The Poet Heine,” published in Century, she describes him as “…a Jew with the mind and eyes of a Greek.” 4
With the onset of pogroms in Russia entering public awareness, Lazarus became highly involved in her work and personal life in combating anti-Semitic persecution. In 1880, she wrote two dramatic representations of Rashi’s life entitled “Raschi in Prague” and “Death of Raschi.” She began visiting Eastern European immigrants on Ward’s island in 1881 and became involved in efforts to create the Hebrew Technical Institute and agricultural communities for Jewish immigrants. Between 1882 and 1884, Lazarus published twenty-two essays and two editorials concerning Zionism, religious life and anti-Semitism in America. Songs of a Semite, a collection of poems and translations focusing on the above themes and previously printed in the American Hebrew and Jewish Messenger was published in 1882. A series of fourteen essays printed in 1882-1883 in The American Hebrew entitled “Epistles to the Hebrews” was posthumously published in 1900 as a book by the Federation of American Zionists. The essays outlined her Zionist ideas and plans that entailed Jewish centers in both the United States and Palestine. Lazarus single experimentation in free verse is recorded in a series of poems entitled “By the Waters of Babylon,” written in 1883 and published in 1887. 5
Lazarus's most famous work "The New Colossus," was created for an 1883 auction to help fund the pedestal for the Statue of Liberty (the U.S. Congress agreed to erect the statue, but not to build the pedestal). Before she completed “The New Colossus,” Lazarus worked on two less successful poems which contain similar themes and images: “1492” and “Gifts.” “The New Colossus” was read at the Statue of Liberty’s dedication on October 28, 1886, and engraved on pedestal in 1903. 6
In 1883 and previous to writing “The New Colossus” and “By the Waters of Babylon,” Lazarus fulfilled a long cherished dream and visited England. She met several significant people, including Robert Browning and William Morris. In August 1884, the first signs of Lazarus’ illness appeared. Her father’s death in 1885 greatly devastated her, and Lazarus again sailed to Europe to recover. She stayed in Europe for two years, visiting Holland, France, Italy. She wrote only two poems during her stay. She returned to New York on July 31, 1887 seriously ill with cancer. Lazarus passed away on November 19, 1887 and was buried in the family plot in Congregation Shearith Israel’s cemetery. She was 38 years old. Her death was memorialized in several sonnets and letters published in literary magazines. The American Hebrew published a memorial issue on December 9, 1887. The Poems of Emma Lazarus, a two-volume selection of poems and translations compiled by her sisters, was published in 1889. 7
- Footnotes
- 1 Vogel, Dan. Emma Lazarus. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1980, pgs. 13-15; Hyman, Paula E. and Deborah Dash Moore (editors). Jewish Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia. New York: Routledge, 1997, pgs. 806.
- 2 Vogel, pgs. 16, 27, 174-176.
- 3 Vogel, pgs. 123-135.
- 4 Vogel, pgs. 113, 120-122; Lazarus, Emma (translator). Poems and Ballads of Heinrich Heine. New York: Hurst and Company, 1881, pgs. vii-xxiv.
- 5 Vogel, pgs. 132-136, 141, 144, 154-155; Encyclopedia Judaica. Jerusalem: Keter Publishing, 1971, vol. 10, p. 1517.
- 6 Vogel, pgs. 157-159.
- 7 Vogel, pgs. 23-26, 174.
- 8 Dan Vogel. Emma Lazarus. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1980.
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https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q240959
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n79086283
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n79086283
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American literature
American poetry
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Jewish women authors
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Jews
Poetry
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Women poets, American
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