Morris Rosenfeld
Morris Rosenfeld was a Yiddish poet.
His work sheds light on the living circumstances of emigrants from Eastern Europe in New York's tailoring workshops, and he is considered one of a number of Yiddish "sweat shop poets".
His parents gave him a third name “Alter” after the cholera epidemic around 1870, during which all of his siblings died. Upon his emmigration to the United States, he changed his family name to Rosenfeld. Morris was educated at Boksha, Suwałki, and Warsaw. He worked as a tailor in New York and London and as a diamond cutter in Amsterdam, and settled in New York in 1886, after which he was connected with the editorial staffs of several leading Jewish newspapers. During the 1890s he wrote song parodies for the Yehuda Katzenelenbogen Music Publishing Company in New York, including Nokhn ball, Di pawnshop and Nem tsurik dayn gold - all published in Di idishe bihne and Lider magazin. In 1904 he published a weekly entitled Der Ashmedai. In 1905 he was editor of the New Yorker Morgenblatt. He was also the publisher and editor of a quarterly journal of literature entitled Jewish Annals. He was a delegate to the at London in 1900, and gave readings at Harvard University in 1898, the University of Chicago in 1900, and Wellesley and Radcliffe colleges in 1902.
Rosenfeld was the author of Di Gloke, poems of a revolutionary character; later the author bought and destroyed all obtainable copies of this book. He wrote also Di Blumenkette and Dos Lieder-Bukh. His collected poems were published under the title Gezamelte Lieder, in New York, in 1904.
Works
"Di gloke", Poetry collection, 1888"Di blumenkette", Poetry collection, 1890"Lider-bukh", Poetry collection- * First English edition: . Translated by Leo Wiener. New York, 1898
- * First German edition: Lieder des Ghetto. Translated by Berthold Feiwel. Calvary, Berlin, 1902"Shriftn", selected works in six volumes, New York, 1908–1910"Geveylte shriftn", New York, 1912"Dos bukh fun libe", 1914
- Songs of Labor and Other Poems. Translated by Rose Pastor Stokes and Helena Frank. Boston: Richard G. Badger, 1914.