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The Women of Israel Part I, Grace Aguilar, New York 1854

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Details
  • Lot Number 45490
  • Title (English) The Women of Israel Part I
  • Note Women
  • Author Grace Aguilar
  • City New York
  • Publisher D. Appleton & Company
  • Publication Date 1854
  • Estimated Price - Low 200
  • Estimated Price - High 500

  • Item # 1206208
  • End Date
  • Start Date
Description

 

Physical Description:

Frontis, 270, [16 ads] pp., octavo, 180:118 mm., usual light age and damp staining, nice margins. A good copy bound in the original cloth boards, rubbed.

 

Detailed Description:   

Grace Aguilar (1816–1847), English author of Portuguese Marrano extraction, who wrote a number of novels on Jewish themes and some religious works addressed primarily to Jewish women. Her first book was a volume of poems, The Magic Wreath which she published anonymously when she was only nineteen. Her truly creative period, however, began in 1842, and in the five years until her death at the age of 31 her literary output was remarkable, particularly because at the same time, although very ill, she was helping her mother run a private school at Hackney (outside London). Most of Grace Aguilar's books were not published until after her death. Her novel Home Influence (1847), "a tale for mothers and daughters," and its sequel, Mother’s Recompense (1851), had considerable success, but it was The Days of Bruce (1852), a romance set in 14th-century Scotland, that made her famous. The best known of her Jewish novels was The Vale of Cedars (1850), a romantic, highly idealized picture of the Marranos in Spain. Twice translated into German and twice into Hebrew, it long retained popularity. She also wrote stories and sketches based on Jewish life and family traditions. In a more serious vein, she translated from French the apologetic work of the ex-Marrano, Orobio de Castro, Israel Defended (1838). She herself wrote The Spirit of Judaism: In Defense of Her Faith and Its Professors (1842), and The Jewish Faith (1846). The latter took the form of letters addressed to a friend wavering in her religious conviction. Her Women of Israel (1845) was a series of biographical sketches of biblical characters, intended to arouse the pride of young Jews in their heritage. Grace Aguilar was one of the first English Jews to attempt to write a history of the Jews in England; it appeared in Chambers' Miscellany (1847). She died while on a visit to Germany.

 

Hebrew Description:

 

References

(Singerman 1171 First edition - 1851); EJ