Above the Jewish street, a grey cloud hovers,
spread like a dead horse across the sky.
Friday is a day of hurry and yelling –
Above the Jewish street, a grey cloud hovers,
grey due to the sorrow
that arises from the stinking gutters.
A Jew with hungry eyes,
his shoulders atremble at a shadowy gate,
shouts and gesticulates:
For sale! For sale — warm socks!
And lads stand over baskets of rotten apples,
women with bowed legs
run around with garlic, with onions,
their hands beseeching
for the sake of a penny.
From the butcher shops wafts the stench
of entrails and spleens.
A black funeral heads to the cemetery
with clamor and screams.
A Jew with swollen, decrepit boots
splashes in the mud
and huffs and schleps a heap of slaughtered fowl
with twisted-together necks.
Blind beggars stand near the gates,
bang their canes and awaken
the hard pavement.
The sun, bloodred, sets behind the walls.
Soon the Sabbath candles from filthy windows
will shine forth
and will quieten, quench the somber fair.
Jews in velvet hats will walk to the shul street
with yellowed prayerbooks, alert and weary.
From dark courtyards hoarse whores will emerge,
hang about the streetlights in the evening fog,
and whistle, brazenly, a street song.
Translated by Miri Koral
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