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  1. Jun 5, 2020 · haLevi, Yehudah ben Shmuel. Publication date. 1924. Usage. Public Domain Mark 1.0. Topics. Piyyutim, Jewish poetry. Collection. opensource. Language. English. A English translation by Nina Salaman of the piyyutim of Yehudah ben Shmuel haLevi (c. 1075-1141), "chiefly from the critical text edited by Heinrich Brody, Ph.D." Addeddate.

  2. to make available this collection of 35 poems by Halevi in their original Hebrew, alongside masterful translations by renowned essayist, critic, and translator Hillel Halkin. Each poem has been annotated by Halkin to offer brief commentary and context for a poet who could be intensely erotic, confessional, spiritual, and liturgical,

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  3. Medievalhebrewpoetry.org collection of Yehuda Halevi poems in English, available for free online. From Medieval Hebrew Poetry online, a selection of Yehuda Halevis most well-known poems translated into English, including “My Heart is in the East,” and “Jerusalem.”

  4. Jewish texts and source sheets about Yehuda Halevi from Torah, Talmud and other sources in Sefaria's library. Yehuda Halevi was a Spanish poet and philosopher. He is considered to this day to be one of the greatest Hebrew poets of all time, and his liturgical poetry appears in several prayer rites.

  5. Jan 1, 2023 · Addeddate 2023-11-03 02:47:39 Identifier selected-poems-of-jehudah-halevi-arch Identifier-ark ark:/13960/s2v74978c1r Ocr

  6. Yehudah Halevi (c.1075–1141) is considered to be one of the greatest Hebrew poets. He lived in both Muslim and Christian Spain before rejecting its culture of Jewish-Arab hybridization and leaving for Israel in 1140. His most famous work is the philosophical text called the Kuzari. Poems by Yehudah Halevi.

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  8. By Yehudah Halevi. Translated by Peter Cole. all my desire is here before you, whether or not I speak of it: I'd seek your favor, for an instant, then die— if only you would grant my wish. I'd place my spirit in your hand, then sleep—and in that sleep find sweetness. I wander from you—and die alive; the closer I cling—I live to die.

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