Grace Aguilar

Grace Aguilar
Grace Aguilar
Born(1816-06-02)2 June 1816
Hackney, London, England
Died16 September 1847(1847-09-16) (aged 31)
Frankfurt, Hessen, Germany
Resting placeFrankfurt Jewish cemetery, Hessen, Germany
NationalityEnglish
Occupation(s)Novelist, poet, essayist

Grace Aguilar (2 June 1816 – 16 September 1847) was an English novelist, poet and writer on Jewish history and religion. Although she had been writing since childhood, much of her work was published posthumously. Among those are her best known works, the novels Home Influence and A Mother's Recompense.

Aguilar was the eldest child of Sephardic Jewish refugees from Portugal who settled in the London Borough of Hackney. An early illness resulted in her being educated by her parents, especially her mother, who taught her the tenets of Judaism. Later, her father taught the history of Spanish and Portuguese Jews during his own bout with tuberculosis which had led the family to move to the English coast. After surviving the measles at the age of 19, she began to embark on a serious writing career, even though her physical health never completely recovered.

Aguilar's debut was an anonymous collection of poems, The Magic Wreath of Hidden Flowers. Three years later she translated Isaac Orobio de Castro's Israel Defended into English at her father's behest. Later her The Spirit of Judaism drew interest and sales in both Britain and the United States after being published in Philadelphia by Isaac Leeser. He added a preface to the work elucidating his differences with her, the first of many clashes her work would have with mainstream Jewish thought.

In the 1840s her novels began to attract regular readers, and Aguilar moved back to London with her parents. Despite her success, she and her mother still had to operate a boys' Hebrew school to stay solvent, which she resented for the time and energy it took from her writing. In 1847, she became ill again with a spinal paralysis which she did not let prevent her from visiting her brother in Frankfurt. Her health worsened and she died there that September.

Biography

Childhood

Grace Aguilar was born in the northeast London suburb of Hackney, London, on 2 June 1816.[1] She was the oldest child of her parents, who were both descended from Portuguese Jews. Her family settled in Jamaica and eventually in England in the 18th century following the Portuguese Inquisition. Emanuel, her father, was the lay leader of London's Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue, and her mother Sarah was active in the city's Jewish community as well. Her religious background and illnesses, both hers and her parents', were major factors in her life and influential on her work.[2][3]

Illness and education

For her first eight years, Aguilar was an only child. During this time, Aguilar suffered from a chronic long-term illness that led her parents to educate her at home.[4] She was tutored in the classics at home and (even in adulthood) was not permitted to move outside of her family circle. Her mother, in keeping with post-Inquisition practice among Sephardic Jews from the Iberian Peninsula, educated the young Aguilar in her religion and its tenets. Her condition did not stop her from learning to dance and play the harp and piano, common pursuits for middle-class English girls of that era, or traveling. After her brother Emanuel was born in 1823[5] the family went on an extended tour of Gloucestershire.[6]

When Aguilar's father contracted tuberculosis, the family moved to Devon. While Grace was taking care of him, her father taught her the oral history of the Jews of Spain and Portugal, complementing her mother's earlier instruction in Judaism. He may also have taught her Hebrew, which was extremely unusual for a Jewish woman to know at that time. Both her religious and literary interests date to that time of her life; she began indulging them both by making her first efforts at poetry and fiction and attending some Protestant services. A collection of conch shells she found on a Teignmouth beach spurred her to attempt a scientific paper on the subject.[6][7]

Sarah Aguilar's health took a turn for the worse during this period, as she recovered from surgical treatment for an illness that has not yet been identified from the records available, and Grace spent time taking care of her as she had her father.[8] In 1835, at the age of 19, Grace was again taken ill herself, with measles. She never completely recovered.[9]

Writing career

The family moved to Brighton afterwards, perhaps to be closer to London's Jewish community. The two Aguilar boys had been sent to boarding school, but with her parents' health declining, Grace began to think about her responsibilities to not only them but her brothers as well. She decided to try making a living as a writer, and that year was able to get her first book of poems published. Her first book was successful enough that a second run was printed in 1839, and she began writing in earnest.[8]

Much of this work was published posthumously, with one exception. In 1838 Aguilar's father prevailed upon her to translate Isaac Orobio de Castro's Israel Defended, an apologia for Judaism, from the original French for private distribution among Brighton's Jewish community. She added a preface that, albeit with some ambivalence, explained that she had softened Orobio's castigations of Christians as a result of the tolerance she felt Victorian England had shown to its Jewish population compared with Catholic Spain and Portugal. Two years later the family returned to London.[10]

There, Aguilar befriended the young Benjamin Disraeli, whose father Isaac was a well-known author. The older man was able to help her find a publisher. He declined, but on her own she was able to persuade Isaac Leeser, editor of The Occident, an American Jewish magazine, to publish her theological tract The Spirit of Judaism as the initial volume of a new series of books he was bringing out. The original manuscript was lost at sea, but Aguilar was able to recreate it from her notes, and it was published in 1842. When she received her copy, Aguilar was angry that Leeser had added a preface detailing his differences of opinion with Aguilar.[11]

The book was nevertheless well-received, and Aguilar began publishing poems in small English journals. Isaac D'Israeli now chose to help her, possibly introducing her to Edward Moxon, his own publisher. Moxon in turn introduced her to R. Groombridge & Sons, the large publisher that would eventually bring out most of her work in Britain.[12]

Despite her anger over the preface he added to The Spirit of Judaism, Aguilar continued to publish her poetry in Leeser's journals. She befriended Solomon Cohen, the first Jewish state senator in Georgia and his wife Miriam, which contributed to the success of her work in the South as they distributed her books widely there. In England, her domestic fiction drew readers and acclaim. However, she still needed to run a boys' Hebrew school with her mother to make enough money to live on, an obligation she complained about bitterly and repeatedly in her letters to Miriam Cohen, since she felt it took away from the time she had to write. She also anguished over the fate of her brother Henry, who had chosen a career as a sailor.[13]

The last years of her life were busy. In 1841 she joined with Charlotte Montefiore writing the periodical "The Cheap Jewish Library, Dedicated to the Working Classes", which has been described as "providing a context in which female authors corresponded and encouraged one another in publication, and thus [...] contributing to the beginnings of a Jewish women's movement in England."[14] Aguilar turned to nonfiction, producing Women of Israel, an account of the lives of Jewish women that was recognized as her masterpiece. In 1845, the family was able to move again, to a house on Hackney's Clapton Square, where she tended to her father until his death the following year.[15]

Last years and death

In 1847 Aguilar came down with a spinal paralysis; in spite of the illness she went ahead with a planned trip to Europe. Before her departure some Jewish women of London presented her with a gift and an address recounting her achievements in behalf of Judaism and Jewish women. She later visited Emanuel at Frankfurt, where he had become a successful musician. At first she seemed to benefit by the change of scene and climate, but after a few weeks she went to the baths of Schwalbach for treatment. More symptoms led her return to Frankfurt, where she died on 16 September 1847. Aguilar was buried at the Frankfurt Jewish cemetery in Hessen, Germany. The epitaph of her tombstone was taken from Proverbs 31, the section of the biblical work on the "woman of valor":"Give her of the fruit of her hands; and let her own works praise her at the gate".[16]

Literary works

Aguilar's literary career began with the diary she started at seven and continued, uninterrupted, until her death. Before she was twelve she had written a drama, Gustavus Vasa, which has since been lost.[7] Her first verses were evoked two years later by the scenery about Tavistock in Devonshire.[17] Her early collected poems, under the title The Magic Wreath of Hidden Flowers, were published anonymously in 1835; each is a riddle with clues to the name of a particular flower.[7]

Aguilar's productions are chiefly stories and religious works dealing with Jewish subjects. The former embrace domestic tales, tales founded on Marano history, and a romance of Scottish history, The Days of Bruce (1852). The most popular of the Jewish tales is The Vale of Cedars, or the Martyr: A Story of Spain in the Fifteenth Century, written before 1835, published in 1850, and twice translated into German and twice into Hebrew. Her other stories founded on Jewish episodes are included in a collection of nineteen tales, Home Scenes and Heart Studies (published posthumously 1852);[18] The Perez Family (1843) and The Edict together with The Escape, had appeared as two separate volumes; the others were reprinted from magazines. Her domestic tales are Home Influence (1847) and its sequel, The Mother's Recompense (1851), both of them written early in 1836, Woman's Friendship (1851), and Helon: A Fragment from Jewish History (1852).[18]

The first of Aguilar's religious works was a translation of the French version of Israel Defended, by the Marrano Orobio de Castro, printed for private circulation. It was closely followed by "The Spirit of Judaism," the publication of which was for a time prevented by the loss of the original manuscript. Sermons by Rabbi Isaac Leeser, of Philadelphia, had fallen into her hands and, like all other accessible Jewish works, had been eagerly read. She requested him to revise the manuscript of the Spirit of Judaism, which was forwarded to him, but was lost. The author rewrote it; and in 1842 it was published in Philadelphia, with notes by Leeser. A second edition was issued in 1849 by the first American Jewish Publication Society; and a third (Cincinnati, 1864) has an appendix containing thirty-two poems (bearing date 1838-1847), all but two reprinted from "The Occident". The editor's notes serve mainly to mark dissent from Aguilar's depreciation of Jewish tradition – due probably to her Marrano ancestry and to her country life, cut off from association with Jews. In 1845 The Women of Israel appeared—a series of portraits delineated according to the Scriptures and Josephus. This was soon followed by "The Jewish Faith: Its Spiritual Consolation, Moral Guidance, and Immortal Hope," in thirty-one letters, the last dated September, 1846. Of this work—addressed to a Jewess under the spell of Christian influence, to demonstrate to her the spirituality of Judaism—the larger part is devoted to immortality in the Old Testament. Aguilar's other religious writings —some of them written as early as 1836—were collected in a volume of Essays and Miscellanies (1851–52). The first part consists of Sabbath Thoughts on Scriptural passages and prophecies; the second, of "Communings" for the family circle.

In her religious writings Aguilar's attitude was defensive. Despite her almost exclusive intercourse with Christians and her utter lack of prejudice, her purpose, apparently, was to equip English Jewish women with arguments against conversionists. She inveighed against formalism, and laid stress upon knowledge of Jewish history and the Hebrew language. In view of the neglect of the latter by women (to whom she modestly confined her expostulations), she constantly pleaded for the reading of the Scriptures in the English version. Her interest in the reform movement was deep; yet, despite her attitude toward tradition, she observed ritual ordinances punctiliously. Her last work was a sketch of the "History of the Jews in England", written for "Chambers's Miscellany." In point of style it is the most finished of her productions, free from the exuberances and redundancies that disfigure the tales—published, for the most part, posthumously by her mother. The defects of her style are mainly chargeable to youth. With her extraordinary industry—she rose early and employed the day systematically—and her growing ability of concentration she gave promise of noteworthy productions.

Works

Legacy

The Aguilar branch of the New York Public Library, located in the East Harlem section of New York City is named after Grace Aguilar.[19]

References

  1. ^ "Grace Aguilar | Jewish Women's Archive". jwa.org. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  2. ^ Galchinsky, 17.
  3. ^ Brown, Susan. "Grace Aguilar". Orlando Project. Cambridge University Press. Archived from the original on 10 March 2015. Retrieved 8 March 2015.,
  4. ^ "Grace Aguilar | British author". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  5. ^ Emanuel Abraham Aguilar (1824-1904) was a concert pianist and composer of three symphonies, two operas, choral, vocal and piano music
  6. ^ a b Galchinsky, 18.
  7. ^ a b c Galchinsky, Michael (1998–2015). "Grace Aguilar". Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  8. ^ a b Galchinsky, 20.
  9. ^ Bitton-Jackson, Livia (7 September 2012). "Grace Aguilar: The Spirit of Judaism". The Jewish Press. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  10. ^ Galchinsky, 21.
  11. ^ Galchinsky, 22.
  12. ^ Galchinsky, 23.
  13. ^ Galchinsky, 24.
  14. ^ "Montefiore, Charlotte Simcha". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/105616. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  15. ^ Galchinsky, 27.
  16. ^ Galchinsky, 28.
  17. ^ Aguilar, Grace (2003). Galchinsky, Michael (ed.). Grace Aguilar: Selected Writings. Peterborough, ON: Broadview Press. p. 19. ISBN 9781770484245. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
  18. ^ a b Aguilar, Grace (1902). The Vale of Cedars & Other Tales. London: J.M. Dent & Co. p. vi.
  19. ^ Gray, Christopher (9 June 1996). "Streetscapes/Aguilar Library, 174 West 110th Street;A Library Branch That Wasn't Designed by the Book". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2 March 2023.

Further reading

Read other articles:

Orkestra Simfoni Nuremberg Orkestra Simfoni Nuremberg (Jerman: Nürnberger Symphoniker) adalah sebuah orkestra Jerman yang berbasis di Nuremberg. Tempat konser utamanya adalah Meistersingerhalle. Intendant (Direktur Artistik dan Manajer) saat ini dari orkestra tersebut adalah Lucius A. Hemmer, sejak September 2003. Dari musim 2018/2019, kepala konduktornya adalah Kahchun Wong. Kepala konduktor Erich Kloss (1949–1968) Othmar Mága (1968–1970) Günter Neidlinger (1971–1974) Werner Andreas Al…

Artikel ini perlu diwikifikasi agar memenuhi standar kualitas Wikipedia. Anda dapat memberikan bantuan berupa penambahan pranala dalam, atau dengan merapikan tata letak dari artikel ini. Untuk keterangan lebih lanjut, klik [tampil] di bagian kanan. Mengganti markah HTML dengan markah wiki bila dimungkinkan. Tambahkan pranala wiki. Bila dirasa perlu, buatlah pautan ke artikel wiki lainnya dengan cara menambahkan [[ dan ]] pada kata yang bersangkutan (lihat WP:LINK untuk keterangan lebih lanjut). …

The history of Tufts University, originally Tufts College, can be traced back to 1847 when the Universalist Church set up convention for the creation of a university for the parish. In 1858, the college was established when Boston businessman Charles Tufts donated 20 acres of land to the church to establish the college. It is the third oldest college that was founded in the Boston area.[1] During the 19th century the college grew. The official college seal, bearing the motto Pax et Lux (…

Hami 哈密市 • قۇمۇل شەھىرىKota setingkat prefekturMuseum HamiPrefektur Hami (merah) di Xinjiang (oranye)Negara ChinaProvinsiXinjiangLuas • Total140.749 km2 (54,343 sq mi)Ketinggian759 m (2,490 ft)Populasi • Total541.836 • Kepadatan3,8/km2 (10,0/sq mi)Zona waktuUTC+8Kode pos839000 Hami (Hanzi: 哈密; Pinyin: Hāmì) atau Kumul (Uighur: قۇمۇل, Қумул, romanized: Qumul, lit. 'K̡u…

Model kereta sapi asal zaman Heian di Jidai Matsuri Jidai Matsuri (時代祭code: ja is deprecated , Festival Zaman) adalah prosesi yang diselenggarakan setahun sekali setiap tanggal 22 Oktober di kota Kyoto, Jepang. Festival ini pertama kali diselenggarakan tahun 1895 untuk memperingati berdirinya kuil Heian Jingū, sekaligus memperingati 1.100 tahun berdirinya ibu kota Heian-kyō (Kyoto).[1] Jidai Matsuri diselenggarakan kuil Heian Jingū, dan merupakan salah satu dari 3 festival terbe…

Brickeln Lambang kebesaranLetak Brickeln di Dithmarschen NegaraJermanNegara bagianSchleswig-HolsteinKreisDithmarschen Municipal assoc.Burg-Sankt MichaelisdonnPemerintahan • MayorRalf JebensLuas • Total6,07 km2 (234 sq mi)Ketinggian14 m (46 ft)Populasi (2013-12-31)[1] • Total210 • Kepadatan0,35/km2 (0,90/sq mi)Zona waktuWET/WMPET (UTC+1/+2)Kode pos25712Kode area telepon04825Pelat kendaraanHEI Brickeln adala…

Questa voce sull'argomento centri abitati della California è solo un abbozzo. Contribuisci a migliorarla secondo le convenzioni di Wikipedia. Segui i suggerimenti del progetto di riferimento. MilpitascomuneMilpitas – Veduta LocalizzazioneStato Stati Uniti Stato federato California ConteaSanta Clara TerritorioCoordinate37°26′05″N 121°53′42″W / 37.434722°N 121.895°W37.434722; -121.895 (Milpitas)Coordinate: 37°26′05″N 121°53′42″W / &…

Artikel ini perlu dikembangkan agar dapat memenuhi kriteria sebagai entri Wikipedia.Bantulah untuk mengembangkan artikel ini. Jika tidak dikembangkan, artikel ini akan dihapus. Lampu navigasi berwarna merah pada pesawat Boeing 747. Lampu navigasi merupakan sumber pencahayaan berwarna pada kapal laut atau pesawat udara, digunakan untuk memberi tahu posisi, pos, dan status kendaraan tersebut. Umumnya, penempatan lampu ini diamanatkan oleh konvensi internasional atau pihak berwenang. Pranala luar W…

Sabuk Kuiper (bahasa Inggris: Kuiper belt) adalah sebuah wilayah di Tata Surya yang berada dari sekitar orbit Neptunus (sekitar 30 SA) sampai jarak 50 SA dari Matahari. Objek-objek di dalam sabuk Kuiper ini disebut sebagai objek trans-Neptunus. Objek yang diketahui di Sabuk Kuiper Hipotesis Astronom pertama yang mengemukakan keberadaan sabuk ini adalah Frederick C. Leonard pada 1930 dan Kenneth E. Edgeworth tahun 1943. Pada tahun 1951, Gerard Kuiper mengemukakan bahwa sabuk tersebut merupakan su…

2017 compilation album by Karma to Burn and Sons of Alpha CentauriKarma to Burn / Sons of Alpha Centauri: The Definitive 7″ Trilogy!Compilation album by Karma to Burn and Sons of Alpha CentauriReleasedJuly 4, 2017 (2017-07-04)Recorded2009–2015GenreStoner rockspace rockpost-rockLength27:44LabelH42Kitchen DwellerKarma to Burn chronology Mountain Czar(2016) Karma to Burn / Sons of Alpha Centauri(2017) Thee Rabbit Hole(2021) Sons of Alpha Centauri chronology WaterWays/Sons…

Sepak bola di IndonesiaTim nasional Indonesia bermain di Stadion Gelora Bung Karno, JakartaNegaraIndonesiaBadan yang mengaturPSSITim nasionalIndonesiaPendahuluHindia BelandaJulukanPasukan GarudaPertama kali bermain1934Klub±300 klubKompetisi nasional Liga: Liga 1 Liga 2 Liga 3 Liga 1 Putri (Wanita) Elite Pro Academy Piala: Piala Soeratin Piala Presiden Piala Indonesia Kompetisi internasional Piala Dunia Piala Dunia Antarklub Piala Asia Liga Champions AFC Piala AFC Kejuaraan AFF Rekor penontonPer…

Masjid Agung Baitunnur PatiBerkas:Alun-Alun Pati yang bercahaya di malam hari.jpgMasjid Agung PatiAgamaAfiliasiIslamLokasiLokasiPati, Jawa Tengah, IndonesiaArsitekturTipeMasjidGaya arsitektur-Menara1 Berkas:Masjid Agung Pati 1930.jpgMasjid Agung Pati pada tahun 1930-an Berkas:Masjid Agung Pati 1970.jpgMasjid Agung Pati pada tahun 1970-an Masjid Agung Baitunnur Pati merupakan[1] masjid besar di Kabupaten Pati. Letak Masjid Baitunnur ini terletak di sisi sebelah barat alun-alun kota Pati, …

City and state capital in Sarawak, Malaysia This article is about the city in Sarawak, Malaysia. For the administrative division, see Kuching Division. For the administrative district, see Kuching District. For the federal constituency represented in the Dewan Rakyat, see Bandar Kuching (federal constituency). For other subset of the Kuching district, see Padawan municipality. State capital city and district capital in Sarawak, MalaysiaKuchingState capital city and district capitalCity of Kuchin…

Chemical compound CiclotizolamClinical dataATC codenoneLegal statusLegal status CA: Schedule IV Identifiers IUPAC name 8-bromo-6-(o-chlorophenyl)-1-cyclohexyl-4H-5-triazolo(3,4-c)thieno(2,4-e)-1,4-diazepine CAS Number58765-21-2 YPubChem CID71949ChemSpider64956 YUNIIJK517QTN4QChEMBLChEMBL2105986 NChemical and physical dataFormulaC20H18BrClN4SMolar mass461.81 g·mol−13D model (JSmol)Interactive image SMILES Clc5ccccc5C/2=N/Cc1nnc(n1c3sc(Br)cc\23)C4CCCCC4 InChI InChI=1S/C…

Utopian vision in Chinese philosophy Great UnityChinese nameChinese大同TranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyindàtóngBopomofoㄉㄚˋㄊㄨㄥˊWade–Gilesta4t'ung2Tongyong PinyindàtóngWuRomanizationda去 don平HakkaRomanizationtai55 tung11Yue: CantoneseJyutpingdaai6 tung4Southern MinHokkien POJtāi-tôngVietnamese nameVietnamese alphabetĐại đồngHán-Nôm大同Korean nameHangul대동Hanja大同TranscriptionsRevised RomanizationdaedongMcCune–ReischauertaedongJapanese nameKanji…

American comic book publisher This article is about the publisher. For the publication, see Archie (comic book). Archie Comic Publications, Inc.Founded1939; 85 years ago (1939) (as MLJ Magazines)Founders Maurice Coyne Louis Silberkleit John L. Goldwater Country of originUnited StatesHeadquarters locationPelham, New YorkKey people Nancy Silberkleit (Co-CEO)[1] Victor Gorelick (editor-in-chief)[2] Jon Goldwater (CEO, publisher) Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa (chief creati…

Ini adalah nama Jepang, nama keluarganya adalah Sen. Sen no Rikyū karya Hasegawa Tōhaku Sen no Rikyū (千利休code: ja is deprecated , 1522 – 21 April 1591), yang juga dikenal sebagai Rikyū, adalah orang yang dianggap merupakan figur bersejarah dengan pengaruh yang paling banyak ditemukan pada chanoyu, Cara Minum Teh Jepang, bagian dari tradisi wabi-cha. Ia juga merupakan orang pertama yang memberikan beberapa aspek penting dari upacara tersebut. Berasal dari zaman Sengoku dan zaman Azuch…

Rebecca S. HalsteadHalstead as commander of the Army Ordnance CenterBorn1959 (age 64–65)Willseyville, Candor, New YorkAllegianceUnited StatesService/branchUnited States ArmyYears of service1981–2008RankBrigadier GeneralCommands heldChief of OrdnanceUnited States Army Ordnance Center and Schools3rd Corps Support Command10th Division Support Command325th Forward Support BattalionBattles/warsWar in AfghanistanIraq WarAwardsArmy Distinguished Service MedalDefense Superior Service M…

Motor vehicle Magna MILA PlusOverviewManufacturerMagna SteyrAlso calledMagna Steyr MILA PlusProduction2015Body and chassisClassSports car (S)concept carBody style2-door coupéDimensionsWheelbase2,575 mm (101.4 in)Length4,203 mm (165.5 in)Width1,925 mm (75.8 in)Height1,250 mm (49.2 in) Rear view The Magna MILA Plus is a hybrid electric concept car developed by the Austrian automobile manufacturer Magna Steyr, presented at Geneva Motor Show in 2015…

Evelyn WaughEvelyn Waugh, tahun 1940LahirArthur Evelyn St. John Waugh(1903-10-28)28 Oktober 1903West Hampstead, London, InggrisMeninggal10 April 1966(1966-04-10) (umur 62)Combe Florey, Somerset, InggrisPekerjaanPenulisPendidikanLancing CollegeAlmamaterHertford College, OxfordPeriode1923–1964GenreNovel, biografi, cerita pendek, sastra perjalanan, autobiografi, satir, humorPasanganEvelyn Gardner ​ ​(m. 1928; dibatalkan 1936)​ Laura Herbert …

Kembali kehalaman sebelumnya