Di Grasso by Isaac Babel
"Di Grasso" is a short story by Isaac Babel that serves as both an engaging narrative and a nuanced commentary on the nature of art. Set in prewar Odessa around 1908, the story follows a fourteen-year-old boy who becomes entangled with a slick ticket scalper named Nick Schwarz. The plot centers on a poorly received theatrical performance by a troupe of Italian actors, featuring a character named Di Grasso, who dramatically confronts a rival suitor during the play's climax.
While the boy is initially entertained by the theatrics, he grapples with personal turmoil stemming from a stolen watch he pawned without permission. This inner conflict unveils deeper themes of familial relationships, guilt, and the complexities of adult behavior as seen through a child's eyes. As the story unfolds, it captures the boy's fleeting moments of joy and despair, culminating in a poignant reflection on happiness in the face of loss. Through its layered storytelling, "Di Grasso" invites readers to explore the interplay between art, life, and emotional resilience.
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Di Grasso by Isaac Babel
First published: 1937 (English translation, 1955)
Type of plot: Impressionistic
Time of work: 1908
Locale: Odessa
Principal Characters:
The narrator , the interpreter of the story, presented as the same person as the authorThe narrator , as a boy of fourteen, the protagonist of an autobiographical recollectionNick Schwarz , a dealer in theater tickets (a scalper), for whom the boy works in his spare timeDi Grasso , a Sicilian actor, the hero of a play performed by an Italian troupeMadam Schwarz , Nick's obese wife
The Story
Because this brief work is a sophisticated commentary on the nature of art as well as "just a story," it is all the more interesting for the reader to know that it is the last work Isaac Babel published in his lifetime, before he fell victim to Stalinist justice. Although the exact circumstances of Babel's arrest in 1939 are not known, it is believed that he was charged with espionage, a patently contrived accusation; he was executed in 1941. The Jewish author, whose collections of stories were often reprinted during his lifetime, was "rehabilitated" after the death of Joseph Stalin—and his stories were reprinted again.

"Di Grasso" ostensibly focuses its attention on the Jewish theatrical world of prewar Odessa (about 1908), where one learns that the narrator as a boy of fourteen has recently "come under the sway" of the "tricky" ticket scalper Nick Schwarz and his "enormous silky handle bars." Without looking further into the relationship between the boy and the older man who is his "boss," the narrator instead describes (entertainingly) almost the entire action of a very bad play being newly performed by a traveling troupe of Italian actors. In this play, a "city slicker" named Giovanni temporarily lures the daughter of a rich peasant away from her betrothed—a poor shepherd played by the Sicilian actor Di Grasso. Di Grasso pleads with the girl to pray to the Virgin Mary—a huge, garish, wooden statue of whom is on the stage—but to no avail. In the last act, when Giovanni has become insufferably arrogant, Di Grasso suddenly soars across the stage, plunges downward onto Giovanni, bites through his throat, and sucks out the gushing blood—as the curtain falls.
Recognizing a hit when he sees one, Schwarz rushes to the box office, where he will wait all night, first in line to buy at dawn as many tickets as he can afford, for resale. The narrator shortly remarks that everyone in Theater Lane has been made happy by the new hit—except himself.
Now an entirely new story line develops. It seems that the lad has taken his father's watch without permission and pawned it to Schwarz—who eventually grows very fond of the big gold turnip. Even after the boy pays off the pledge, Schwarz refuses to give back the watch. The boy is in continual despair, imagining his father's wrath. He suggests that Schwarz and his father have the same character.
Then one night Schwarz and his wife, along with the boy, attend the final performance of the Italian troupe, with Di Grasso playing the shepherd "who is swung aloft by an incomprehensible power." Schwarz's wife, a fat and sentimental woman with "fish-like eyes," is overwhelmed by Di Grasso's great leap of love. She laments her own loveless life and berates her husband as they walk home from the theater with the boy trailing behind. The boy sobs openly, thinking of his father and the watch. Madam Schwarz hears the sobs and angrily forces her husband to return the watch, which he does, but not without giving the lad a vicious pinch.
The Schwarzes walk on, reach the corner, and disappear. The boy is left alone to experience ultimate happiness; he sees the world at night "frozen in silence and ineffably beautiful."