"There are plenty of them everywhere."
"And what are your thoughts when you see them?" asked Meir violently.
"What should they be? I think they are very stupid and very dirty!"
"And looking at them, do you think of nothing else?" asked Meir, almost in a whisper.
Leopold opened his cigarette case, and selected a cigarette. Meir, plunged in thought, did not notice this.
"Leopold," he began again, with awakened energy, "you had better not buy that house in the large city."
"Why should I not buy it?"
"I will tell you why. They have promised you, as wife, my first cousin. She is a good and intelligent girl. She has no education whatever, but she always wished to have it, and she was very glad when she was told that she would have an educated husband. You are going to marry her, and when you have married her, ask permission of the high officials to open in Szybow a school for the Jews, in which they will be made to study other things than the Bible and Talmud. I will help you to conduct such a school."
Leopold laughed, but Meir, all aglow with the joy of his idea, did not notice it. He leaned towards the young man and whispered:
"I will tell you, Leopold. There is great ignorance here in Szybow, and there are many poor people living in misery. But there are some people—all of them young—who regret that they do not know another world, and that they have not other knowledge. They wish to become familiar with it, but there is no one to help them out of the darkness. And then the great Rabbi who lives here, Isaak Todros, is very severe, and he is dreaded by everyone; and the members of the kahal also oppress the poor people. You must come here and bring with you other educated people, and help us out of our misery and our ignorance."