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1
116 __ t^IiLJL^!i^^i^ ^f r ^^T * 77~ whole age are no7all faoatml Besides , **¦ ~ *Si» Offen bach . ' ¦ with pr^ iflely ^^hSj^l f f lf c* Mt iYW t lt if i natics seldom ignore their victime-they j acquC s Offenbach was bora 1821 at Co- ^ ^^ ^^^ jm .^M i!|/-|IJP:'9JB f A?4U^ W «»de»n 4 belittb. .bein. Silence log „e , on the Rhine. His father was Ha- ^Tu E. " I T?'* dM * *S» " . 'S? . " - . ' ¦ . , nMrtJrt . is not in the nature of fanaticism. We need zan , 0 r chanter , in the synagogue of that Also this is enigmaboal , nl m0Bt J^| ptjblished every Friday Monsi^ct. a , . , j j l, k » , * ' Tr„ „ *„ ¦ * m Paris ou te a to "W philosophers , but nnt -t ¦ .^l i 'l BLOCH & CO Printbbb; 82 Sixth Street . B°t say that the miracles recorded by the ancient city. He came to ram quite a ¦ . * ,. -*' ' DUt * ot t o- aft! ^f ISAAC ;M. WISE , EpiToalfc PaoraiBToa . .,.,; Evangelists :can , not be true , becaus e it is boy, and at the tender flge of twelve be was Kn ow cnss, tne .centuries of oppr<^ Jp| rn BB«8' ThrcoP^^pu«. «n»dr»nce. Tbe almost selfcevident. If at the death of Je- picked out of several candidates to play the had an outside ea.stence: I„ ¦the^gfl 1 dbbo^ h la Dubiuhed^^^ sue an. ectips e of the sun and an earthquake violincella at' the opera comiqtie. It ts not seni or tne people remained utidist^li SI ^P S^ ^ ^^ ^^ had bappeJed , if the veil of ite temple bad generally known who instructed him in the wi thin the spiritual sphere of thj gl ffiS^SZ??^i»^ »^^S^ ,been> re^ m twain and the dead , returned science of music: It is onl y known that at tors , inherited and bequeathed i^M •^^^^^^ S^^^S^ to lifo.who in the world could have mas- an ' early " period of his life bV <w^^ ^SlS^^^^W'S rW^nth. tered the imagioatibn of an oriental people 80Dg8 for the comedian Gfcri jj after which ' ^^f ^^^W^f i^^ 150 I 4 06 | 6 oo | 10 00 not to deify the dying martyr and set him a h o wro te an opera , which , like tne large Ugian in the ghetto 8yfingogu e -f r ^ n i| B^Sffi^ thousand everlasting monuments it* the worka of almost all young men without was as bnlliant a musical genius Wj fpf X^ ^^l^ ^ ^ ^ ^ A ' 01 ^^' songs, mjths . traditions and literatureof the fvic nd8 , met with littl e success. Still , this beer , Mendelssohn , Hnlevy or Of^Sl ^n 0 '^ peop le? Just imagine all these things to be ^.ishap did not discourage him , or degrade The numerous original melodies ^p oh^^^o?" in^ P,,bU8,,edunU, orderedout ' aQd performed inoursight , heforeuRin thisphiU- his talent in the eyes of proper judges, for synagogue hailing from that nge of 'i^ M o,K^pm ? ^v^it^?^^^^^^ sophical century, with our cool , calculating 80 on after this he was appointed musical sion provei tbis boyond a doubt . T heftfoP £K»f#&^ and itftjoiring mturen; suppose wo should director of the-n«<er Francais , and aga^n , poet wbo breathed his sou l into a ^ Jff aim>niinio ' Bt»A riB;^in. * wrn t proni»t .;iittention ,Rhoii^ 8ee the dead rise -from their graves and shortly afterward , he set up a stage of his aeuc/ia/i , or J\ut tor the syhagoeuiii^P b a Titt '> n on but onn ilno of thf paper nri rt in ft plain ¦ ** » «• j ^- . ' r ., *l»«™ „,„ .i ,., ¦ ii_ j , ' ¦ ' B *> " TIM' Sil bold , tesiMo ht'id . wfith turgo . gpaeo botwacn the UacB. : CO mo to the city—how many uncountable 0W n , jundcr-the name of Bouffes I' ansiennes , tneir numoer in tne a ark ages is legioif^ ^t^^tt sx-vt a rri -r . ~~ thousands wo u ld believe everything Bo dem- i n the Pa ssage Chokeul . He opened it with frequently was as bri ght a poeficfil^ l^ r, .i iir v ^ n\ i , o ibbq onstrated , and how man y other thousands an operetta of his own , called Lea deur as the modern writers of 'the r . H* brfepj Fr iaay t Mprffing,... «Ctppey V , IBM. WO uld describe the event in the most vari- AvengUs. The success of this piece before ho <? «*» . * Wr aifati pff pf'' tIiQ ; [jk$| .__ . _—_ r --_ -77-- .,. r -.- : .. ~r~ ~ oua f0Ini a of sty le and conceptio n . Now the Parisian public decided the young man ' s T'ieRabbinical casiiisj ;? ' and e^Vj ^ls ^Go n^reeati ' oris andsociet.es are _ here- think Jn our plooe i of the or : ental8 , with ciueer . Every evening wo ipde-floW iiito ' ; ^o bibliM ^mn^n^s , ; th^|pi . by posiuyfly informed that we publish no thoir ; fiery im ai! ; nftti o 8 arld . tbeir love of his t h eater , ' so-that it convinced him he had .^ammariaris and lekibog^pi,^' ' ^ &M advertisement or coniplimentary rosolut^n tho mftrTeU oUB i Md pne muat comc to tilc ^ ^ &q . . -^ ^ t ^ hia . talent had . da rk ages , with^ spenfcihg of^Ur Mp unless ^ are sept with ^e same for paj - conclu8 j on tlmt the n nt8 clted &te cn . a p priate 8phere of actiQn, philosophers ,; - ph ysicians ' '^:0mM rnent ther e j of. # Letters of this kind wthout . . tirely erxoneous-^e is forced to it.. If the - Scordir^t o a law ea ting i h ,Fra Dce be ¦ . «ta^ « ofm^^*«eiiriS^ the payment inclosed , will rece.ve no fur- - .^.^ ^^ Jn ^ ^.^ ^ ^ , ^¦^ -^^ Jl ^pi^onii«it&' . -«^ . ' ^ c «:K#^. . t «^^l^ therjiotice. ^ ^ truerlegions; of ^Israelites; must bave-l been ope ra8 larger than one-act; hence ; the first . ' f?? v . O f ' . ™* *$$?**; ^'^h^J^p (Cbncinded from No. lz.v instantly flonverted to the doctrines of Jesus/ composifc ions -of ^cquei Offenbach; are ;nb" J ^J ^ The Xegal Trial Of Jesp Of ifazaretll. ^ dthoukndS rOfr monuments in writingand J fl rger;, than pne, act. , , Qn , receiving, license; 'tJJJ^y^^ :. ¦ ¦ ' : ._ , ' ;: '; ' ,. ;:> !.- nfX 'J ' . . vo. -:^ . . ; '' ,, * i- .\. ,. - Arftdition, , mBs;t i hava' j bec . Q - raised;; tO: I him. , to produce on -his -stagei(pie' ces .vofi t several ;could not iiehetrate; ' thetn1st; ! that ' omtiHi ' '€ ' Sel S^e^ ^ ; tb^ cb^lu4n - ftW thV: $^. ^^ admired,^^^: ^^ ^ 'M^^^rt i &^W^;ta ^S lS^So S ^ tot^^ ^ * - ! ^ '^p^ 8ito «$ m. t k %MW*W>^& Spi -demnakn, by the^y^lis ' Kijatth^wiana ' fe^ '^rk , us* sikl ^ ^ll^ISS^TM^^^ 4)bseJheymuM ieacl LMa u^^h^ S^ , &^^^^^il#^ rv selw could^ot ^ve :«een ' jesuj , ^ : J3g& any degree^bq^ihted^th; Jewish "^ g^¦ ^^^'W^W^^^? )^%- «M%^%^^^«'Wfe£# ?^^«*&rfi^iS^» I S-hnackLsiihice^ ^S&ries after tU;evenf^ey!d ^*-^hese :,operas vwere; .. ofteri ^ ,;S5ired ,;tte^^^ tions. v.i ;> . ' r<-. -i ¦ ::-¦¦ fi v- ., .- :w .^. -., ¦:, " ¦ .: - ¦ , - ' . ¦¦/ v *-: . ¦ ¦; ¦ ' . . - ;. . .^ & ; v-f: . - . , - ¦ ¦ •:¦ ' ¦ . ¦¦ - .., ., , ' The latest compositions of Jacques On^n^ the ,prqphets.in vfavorrof^hi8 the6ri&vi "Twm r- ' i-- j t u - ¦ ' ¦ ' i t i ¦ i ¦ r, :, i' whose name- t was ,Jesu8 r and a sect .origin- v ^ : r v: >v. o ¦ ^u P ; ; ^vi r. n ' '' ' »;; ,, - -nw " w;.V^- ^ . oLukJo ana John ; record no vlegal : trial but . , j it . t r j. f - ¦ i Vn. i-- bacn are Le Chanson de Foriurn s ,.Eox Bar- : «ev. Ur ^ Jlflkm an is lindly Teduosted ti ^ . ' J ¦ ' " : - ' - ¦ ¦ ' " - ' li b' -*- ' ¦j- : < ' ¦'¦?¦ ¦ ' ,: ,vr atp, d there wn0 cftI[ed themselves Chnstmns ,, - - , ; r . : - . r^i-Y e ' - - ¦• ¦ ' ¦ ' ¦ -¦^ ' •• ¦ ri' ¦ '->;.;' " . ^^i^iu- 'i - »«¦ ¦ ' ¦ : ¦? :: . : , 'i' ¦ '. ^¦- ¦;^- "" 8 :t P-^ ^the rtumultaryiiproceedinga ; of- . an- escited , ., t ^*l. - V ^. f. , ' , ; . ,. ' kouf, Lepout dei Soupvr s, Le . Roman Comique^ :TOember.;that^.Mo8es.;inew^ft^;nb ' ' 8ttiin* i " iS;^ im ob, and .ndt only^ ^ differ ,entirely and.ossen- .. ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ ¦ " :.i- ' ^ .^ ¦ r ~~^~^~~^~^ ^ Voyage* de Mr.. Kedeemer: except .GodJ andihe- confll S^^i :tiaUy frtohe ^ i > j - -/r ' '- "' ' - * ¦ ' •; ' ii ¦ ' ¦ ¦> ¦ ' ¦ ¦ - v ii '; ' -^.f ; mi »3<allthe ev;rdence. in existence on that side , . ; ' . :- . ¦ ' . ¦ ¦¦ ¦ . . ,;, t,^ ;„ vi ^ ' * : ^ , ; aJ p o d,^ater^ li y i f ^ 8 ^ h : p^^ ; firsUwo^angeh8t a ; at. .I e^ . render: heir : :nccount9: pro^bler ^u k ^^ John also, forgotithis. - . U is,, so .decidedly; ¦ w^_ .^.^if wtiiia knew nothing ¦ : aott^labulous almost , still-it is true ,) the *e?m 'S i the^r^^f j hbsts .^h e^Ho^f .ized^at^tho. cbief.judges . oX svl aw r ab.d- ; al ,y-^dli( ^^; to . .^- 3 - forod , 0 r«ni ' f tWr : ri i,ted- -. ¦ «* : n*^**-Bi* y- "^« *fR^™'< W » . Berlin, * t L o$^ , a ng ^ommupi^tha.lMuh.pnest^^ ^th l a%t! 1Q . :pr.^ .ol^n3 ^ po«it rrage. e.peci ^ ^here .ve^ ^ent , tll er fro^ldg,ng;,the , S A ; i^,^ ng, ^ .w^ou^prcoedent^para^ ^l . .oll.pd,:^sere^# 9 ^ T ^efore , we ^Meem , i^ecessary^ ^^ t0 |he fioath en , talea i6f a "Son of ear^l n the;pr 0 du^n of whicd he^s inex- ;l A^#»^i^'*: : iiiiii^ .subject,;,l f ; tbey^er8,afra,d,o M dies which can ^t be:ekplain^, because it ,Upn .^^^ , the:sueceed1„^tory, a ^s ; t^ i wa^no^ Tl,e:Mav ^? thc^o " -V P^ly . genial; ;" . V ;;' . - ; . ' ;! tWela,redeemer,^hesVpr^h^ ¦ - ¦ ¦ ^F# a S!& aM^^ief ^ulwa^nd the ¦ ab4. .i^ - ,i^^^^7- tt, . tottl ^; oon i - any detajls . cbncerning. this ihusical genius .., 2.^oini8e8^ of ; tKe , finalitrium>hr q^ dtlii hig h pr^ t had- not,rnflue^e en^ : ^a^Governor^iarresttJesus . i fv^^ | first glance.th atlErotestarit theologians have composer Haleyy.;; Musical organs/ especU; m ePWMW^^^ftew^' ^^ii mfluenp e enpu^^;have:him cr^d ^ ally in- France; do him justi ce,: an^ co^^^ ¦ W?*» 2 f W* .^ ^ e ' ohly. .Readily develop : their : finai victoryl^i -^^i! ^!^^ ^. additiwis; by Heathen trauition to tU ^ish to add A few brief remarks; Jacques, ^tory tells. J. ^"W^ ^leastt.iwiien^fh- e^i^ l^ 0r _ Israeb3e^ ^b^o XJes^; one mi ght arrive at thelbi- ^^^acH^s^iged-tMeav^aeriiwK^ 3 . Promisea , concerning .the;Dayidi aiid@ ; ^rusalenv^whsrereate the ^oitetoent at ]ow ; ng prob(lb j ft 8fcory : , Afc a tim6when tbe and that was , his good fortune-and go :to ^tyT^nclT^H^^ the most danjterdus ^ime ? The account I8 feiM dorninion had bo<JOni0 (, p pressi ve ih Paris; because then:it was almost impossible . filled in , Hezekiah , ;«r , aCoor4mg to .;p^ril too improbable to db dtscusseo. ' Judea , and the hope.of shaking off the hated for . the Hebre w youth to rise to distinction ' ; Zerubahel ,. aniagain, ^ceor^ng^ ^|| What lis true of it? Ad lftHe as otie can jrQ ke was: very dim , : a fiery and Visionary under the oppressive burden of German- 6re ' fche y a?e typical pi:JsrRetiii hd^il;B,faiwe|| oriti c nl^Bcertain Hrorathe NewTestamerit youth , froW th e ' lab oring clas*) , whose name Prejudices against the Hebrew, and geniu s But there is no*propheoy:-bil ; ' rebord:|toai^ of what Je^ua .abtoally: did or; tfaid , isb im- .^p Je8us of Naaare ' th , rose in Galilee , and not fashioned according to their stere otyped: speaks of a redeemer or savior frort|t|i |f possible is ft to aecer^ So Germany lost a dis- houso of Dayid. ; iwisj l^ Testament that such a perion as Jesusi;of< 0f Jiomo and the corruption of the rulers of tin B u ished son , and a thousand others from By an undue blending, of ;. the seid||^Ma»| / Nazareth ever lived, The people among the people v. ; ho ~ suffered that shameful yoke tan same cause , and France.gained a star of andincoherentpropheoios tlielw^ whom he is supposed to have ' lived—the; tn religion ho. attempted no chap^e , : but a, the first magnitude in the horizon of the of the Messiah were produced. Th^P(ictor| Jews—know nothing about it , and have nei- reform He opposed h ypocrisy and cero- fin& arts - knows that. * ' y . J- i^M&M ij ier in their ^literature nor in their tradi- mbnial holiness. Re gained gronojb among "The Jew's soul is fori of melodies ," an But take the third and; first ,q^«iw^ iibnv a memg rial of him , although they for- his otfn ' cluss of people, especially in Gali- eminent criti c remarked on hearing Meyer- prophesies to],signify the ppUUcal respalf got scarcel y one of their martyrs who fell lee, where the dojajnion of ' the Romans was Peer ' s Robert fqf the firs t time, This ls in, < tion of Israel ia Palostine , u nd^;, tt^ip|ii^| by th'e hands of the Romans. That the ac- hot firmly established. But when he car- deed a characteristic feature of Hebrew cal heab^^who is a king of tbe;-fiaviaW^3 counts of Josep hbs concerning Jesus and r;ed i his theories into Judea , the Romans composers. Harmony is the . ' form , the nasty. That king is nowhere calJedr the ' rli John are npurious is well known and gen- seized and crucified ' him as the pretending P^tio of music, and is reduced to laws; deomor or savior, nor can this in «i^^B| t er ' al lj admitted among the critics. The tal- king ' of the Jews , precisely as they did to mel ody is the free and seraphic .soul that bo called a reli gious doctrineJuotWithstaffldi mudical notices amount to little or nothing; every enemy of Rome. The disciples fled baffles descri ption , and is too ethereal to be ing the opinion of certain rabbi' s^:©? because , in the first place, they speak of an- to different lands , and taught the doctrines chained in Kws. In poetry the mos t char- contrary. Suppose a man be a republioaiit other Jesus , one who was a cotempory of of their victimized master , viz : Judaism acteristicidistinction betwbeu Israel' s and hy principle , and believes God did not aefc! Joshua bin Perachia , about 100 B. 0., and without the ceremonial law, and found a Grecian poets is decidedly the same; it is tine humanity to be always rilled by kid^l was condemned for another crime; aritT , in large portion of the Heathen world pl;e- the idea in the former , ;and the {plastic or ' (on the contrary the republican ! form ' ofl the second place , it was not committed to pared to embrace the doctrines of Israel/is form in the latter , which we admire. ; One government is that of the future Y arid^aatt Writing before the fifth century after the connection , of cours e , with many of their psal m of Asaph' s contains more truth than very man explai n the Pronheoies to boU ^I Christian era. ^ own , and their legends , fables and myths , Homer ' s complete works; while Homer ' s views is he not ' man o i' "$$' What would we say of the ^iatenoe of with which th ey afterward sur-rounded t h e forms of poetry are the models of all past n^hw «,»,« u- "'^I 8 * * 9 nr -m0 Zoroaster , if the Persian^ad no knowl- martyr , Jesus. In Judea. the lilo and death i' Precisely the sam e is the case Ju re- S^ ft^* ,?'^ SlSf edge thereof ; or of Confucius, if the Chi- of Jesus'attracted but little attention , but it liftion. , The Hebre w worshi ps the idea and IS " * ^ 1 nese knew nothing , of uiin. Precisel y the did the much more among the Gentiles, the ideal: the Gentile world clines to £)i« ' ^&J n w > .. , xiJ viiffil^ sam e is applicable to the existence of Jesus Finally, a new reli gion gre w put of the plastic. 7 g J 6 ! ' Pr " Eckmftn wel1 knows ^^ W of Nazareth. The Jews of ' those days were strange mixture of Jewish doctrines and Who of the psychologists can exnlatn ^m ' uT^ u"! the : rep "b Vloa * thfgf neithor an illitera^eople n^^^^^ dark age, that so remarkable and exciting a n^^c^edX Xuffi of their ^e^^ t«e hgislation of Moses, and the- training ^^^ fact as the life and miracles |f Jesus , ap- li gioni :That would not do-the Jews muat &nd drilling of the hation tor thirty-three R^h ^""M^on-ift' the air oslt ^9^ ^ obrding to the Evari geliats , should have es- halve dQne it, or , at lenst ,,dem anded it soiui . centuries in these laws, nrecents orA\. „.lu? ' . * v W t" 1 , he . c0me ^^l r *&W ? ped the attend of aU wrUers the.ip ^g Palcst^ ^ypt^b yo^ and ^ not The spirit of tU Hebrew race , hav - ^do , orhe giv^ s up king and king(|»si Nor is it likely that - all being fanatics in- , harc| to prove this; but it is 'impossible to lnS been h«ld for centuries in slavish sub- *u would like to read ah arauiaent v?" ^ tentionaliy ignored him: the . writers of a prove more. jje ction, on being freed ogaih breaks forth EEf 1r ' Si:tl16 P eB,() ' f 6u t TfS

Transcript of collections.americanjewisharchives.orgcollections.americanjewisharchives.org/wise/attachment/3218/TIS... ·...

Page 1: collections.americanjewisharchives.orgcollections.americanjewisharchives.org/wise/attachment/3218/TIS... · advertisement or coniplimentary rosolut^n tho mftrTeUoUBi Md pne muat comc

116 __t IiLJL^!i ^if r ^ T *

77~ whole age are no7all faoatml Besides, **¦ ~*Si» Offen bach.

'¦ with pr^iflely^^hSj^l

f f lf c* M t iY W t lt if i natics seldom ignore their victime-they jacquCs Offenbach was bora 1821 at Co- ^ ^ ^ ^j m.^M

i!|/-|IJP:'9JBf A?4U^ W «»de»n4 belittb. .bein. Silence log„e, on the Rhine. His father was Ha- ^Tu E." I T?'* dM * *S»" .'S?. " - .'

¦. , nMrtJrt . is not in the nature of fanaticism. We need zan , 0r chanter , in the synagogue of that Also this is enigmaboal , nlm0Bt J^|ptjblished every Friday Monsi^ct. a , . , j j l„ ,k » , •* ' Tr„ „*„¦

*• m Paris ou te a to "W philosophers, but nnt -t ¦ . li'lBLOCH & CO Printbbb; 82 Sixth Street . B°t say that the miracles recorded by the ancient city. He came to ram quite a ¦. * , . -*' ' DUt *ot • to-aft! ^fISAAC ;M. WISE, EpiToalfc PaoraiBToa. .,.,; Evangelists :can , not be true, because it is boy, and at the tender flge of twelve be was Know cnss, tne .centuries of oppr<^ Jp|rn BB«8' ThrcoP^^pu«.«n»dr»nce. Tbe almost selfcevident. If at the death of Je- picked out of several candidates to play the had an outside ea.stence: I„ ¦the^gfl1 dbbo^h la Dubiuhed^^^ sue an.

ectips e of the sun and an earthquake violincella at' the opera comiqtie. It ts not seni or tne people remained utidist^li

SI^PS^^ ^ ^ had bappeJed, if the veil of ite temple bad generally known who instructed him in the within the spiritual sphere of thj glffiS SZ??^i» » ^S ,been>re^ m twain and the dead , returned science of music: It is only known that at tors, inherited and bequeathed i M• ^ ^ ^ S^^ S to lifo.who in the world could have mas- an' early " period of his life bV <w^^^SlS^^^ W'SrW^nth. tered the imagioatibn of an oriental people 80Dg8 for the comedian Gfcri jj after which '

^ f ^^^Wf i^^150 I 4 06 | 6 oo | 10 00 not to deify the dying martyr and set him a ho wrote an opera, which , like tne large Ugian in the ghetto 8yfingogu e-fr^ni|B^Sffi thousand everlasting monuments it* the worka of almost all young men without was as bnlliant a musical genius Wj fpfX^ ^ l^ ^ ^ ^A''01^^' songs, mj th s. traditions and literatureof the fvic nd8 , met with littl e success. Still , this beer, Mendelssohn , Hnlevy or Of^Sl^n

0™' people? Just imagine all these things to be ^.ishap did not discourage him , or degrade The numerous original melodies ^p

oh^^^o?"in^P,,bU8,,edunU, orderedout 'aQd performed inoursight , he foreuRin thisphiU- his talent in the eyes of proper j udges, for synagogue hailing from that nge of 'i M

o,K^pm?^v^it^?^^^^^^ sophical century, with our cool, calculating 80on after this he was appointed musical sion provei tbis boyond a doubt. TheftfoP£K»f#&^

and it ftj oiring mturen ; suppose wo should director of the-n«<er Francais, and aga^n , poet wbo breathed his sou l into a

Jffaim>niinio 'Bt»A riB; ^in .*wrn tproni»t .;iittention ,Rhoii ^ 8ee the dead rise -from their graves and shortly afterward , he set up a stage of his aeuc/ia / i, or J\ut tor the syhagoeuiii^Pba Titt '> n on but onn ilno of th f paper nri rt in ft plain ¦ ** »• «• j ^- . ' r . , *l»«™ „,„.i,., ¦ ii_ „ j , ' ¦ ' B *> "TIM' Silbold ,tesiMo ht'id .wfith turgo . gpaeo botwacn the UacB. : CO mo to the city—how many uncountable 0W n , jundcr-the name of Bouffes I 'ansiennes , tneir numoer in tne a ark ages is legioif^^t^^tt

sx-vt a rri -r.

~~ thousands wou ld believe everything Bo dem- in the Pa ssage Chokeul. He opened it with frequently was as bright a poeficfil^l

r, .i iir v^ n\ i, o ibbq onstrated , and how many other thousands an operetta of his own , called Lea deur as the modern writers of 'ther.H*brfepjFriaay t Mprffing,... «Ctppey V, IBM. WO uld describe the event in the most vari- AvengUs. The success of this piece be fore ™ ho <?«*».* &° Wraifatipff pf'' tIiQ ;;£[jk$|.__. _—_

r--_— -77--.,.r-.-:..~r~ ~ oua f0Inia of sty le and conceptio n. Now the Parisian public decided the young man's T'ieRabbinical casiiisj ;? ' and e^Vj^ls^Gon^reeati'oris andsociet.es are_ here- think Jn our plooe i of the or:ental8, with ciueer. Every evening woipde-floW iiito'; ^o bibliM ^mn^n^s, ; th^|pi

.by posiuyfly informed that we publis h no thoir ; fiery im ai!;nftti o„8 arld. tbeir love of his th eater ,' so-that it convinced him he had .^ammariaris and lekibog^pi,^' '^

&Madvertisement or coniplimentary rosolut^n tho mftrTeU oUB i Md pne muat comc to tilc &q . .-

^t^hia . talent had . da rk ages, with^ spenfcihg of^UrMpunless are sept with ^e same for paj - conclu8 jon tlmt the n nt8 clted &te cn. —

ap priate 8phere of actiQn, philosopher s,;-physicians '' :0mMrnent ther ejof.# Letters of this kind wthout .. tirely erxoneous-^e is forced to it.. If the - Scordir^to a law eating ih ,Fra Dce be

¦. • «ta^ «ofm^^*«eiiriS^the payment inclosed , will rece.ve no fur- -. .

^^ Jn ^.

, ^¦

- Jl^pi^onii«it&' .-«^ .'^

c«:K#^..t«^ l^therj iotice. ^ ^ truerlegions; of Israelites; must bave-l been opera8 larger than one-act; hence ; the first . 'f??v . Of ' .™* *$$?**; ^' h^J^p

(Cbncinded from No. lz.v instantly flonverted to the doctrines of Jesus/ composifc ions -of ^cquei Offenbach; are ;nb" J^J^

The Xegal Trial Of Jesp Of ifazaretll. ^dthoukndSrOfr monuments in writingand Jflrger;, than pne, act., , Qn , receiving, license; 'tJJJ^y^^:. ¦¦' : ._ ,';: '; ' , . ;:> !.- nfX 'J '. . vo.-:^ .. ; '',, < ¦* i-.\. ,. - Arftdition,, mBs;t i hava'j bec.Q - raised;; tO: I him., to produce on -his -stagei(pie'ces .vofit several ;could not iiehetrate; 'thetn 1st;!that 'omtiHi''€

' SelS e^ ;tb^cb^lu4n-ftW thV:$^.

admired,^^^:^ 'M^^^rti &^W^;ta SlS^SoS^tot^^ ^ -«*-!^

' p^8ito

«$m. tk %MW*W>^& Spi-demnakn, by the^y^lis'Kijatth^wiana' fe^' rk,us* sikl ^ll ISS^TM^

4)bseJheymuMieaclLMau^^h^

S,&^^^^^il#^rv selw could^ot ^ve:«een 'jesuj ,^:J3g& any degree^bq^ihted^th; Jewish"^ g^¦ ^^'W^W^^^? )^%-

«M%^%^^^«'Wfe£#

?^^«*&rfi^iS^»I S-hnackLsiihice^^S&ries after tU;evenf^ey!d ^*-^hese :,operas vwere;..ofteri

^,;S5ired ,;tte^^^tions.v.i ;> .'r< -. - i ¦::-¦¦ • • fi v - ., .- :w . .-., ¦:, "¦. :-¦•,-'.¦¦/ v *-:. ¦ ¦; ¦'..-;. . . & ; v-f : .-. ,-¦ •¦•:¦' • ¦ . ¦¦-.., .,,' The latest compositions of Jacques On^n^ the,prqphets .in vfavorrof^hi8 the6ri&vi "Twmr- 'i-- j t u - ¦'¦' i t i ¦ i ¦ r , :,i' whose name-twas ,Jesu8r and a sect .origin- v : r v:>v.o ¦ u P ; ; vi r. • n ' '''»;;,,- -nw "w;.V^-^. oLukJo ana John ; record no vlegal : trial but . , j it. t r j .f - ¦ i Vn. • i-- bacn are Le Chanson de Foriurn s, .Eox Bar- : «ev. Ur^Jlflkm an is lindly Teduosted ti^.'J •¦'" :- ' -¦¦'" - ' li b ' -*- ' • • ¦j - : < '¦'¦?¦ ¦ ' ,: ,vr atp,d there wn0 cftI[ed themselves Chnstmns, , - -, ;r . : - .r^i-Ye '- - ¦• ¦'¦' ¦-¦ '•• ¦ri' ¦ ?¦ '-> ;. ;' • " . ^ i^iu-'i - »«¦¦'¦: ¦? :: .:,'i' ¦'.^ ¦-¦; -""8™:tP-^the rtumultaryiiproceed inga ;of-. an- escited •,., t ^*l. - • V ^. f., ' ,; • .,.' kouf, Lepout dei Soupvrs, Le .Roman Comique^ :TOember.;that^.Mo8es.;inew^ft^;nb'' 8ttiin*i"iS;imob, and.ndt only ^ differ ,entirely and.ossen- ..¦¦¦¦ ¦" :.i- ' ^ . ¦•r~~^~^~~^~^ Voyage* de Mr.. Kedeemer: except .GodJ andihe- confllS ^i:tiaUy frtohe^i > j--/r ' '•- "' ' - * ¦'•;'ii

¦' ¦¦> ¦' ¦¦ - vii ';' -^.f ;mi »3<allthe ev;rdence .in existence on that side, . ; ' . :-. ¦'. ¦¦¦¦ . . ,;,t,^ ;„ vi ' *: ^, ;aJpo d,^ater^liy if^ 8^h

:p^^; firsUwo^angeh8t a ;at. .Ie^. render: heir::nccount9: pro^bler ^u k^^John also, forgotithis. - .U is,, so .decidedly; ¦ w^_. .^if wtiiia knew nothing ¦ : aott^labulous almost , still-it is true ,) the *e?m 'Sithe^r^^fj hbsts. he^Ho^f

.ized^at^tho. cbief.j udges. oX svlawrab.d- ;al,y-^dli(^^;to. .^-3- forod ,0r«ni'ftWr:ri i,ted-- . ¦«*:n*^**-Bi*y- " « *fR^™'<W ». Berlin,*tLo$^, ang ^ommupi^tha.lMuh .pnest^^

^thl a%t!1Q . :pr. .ol n3^

po«it

rrage.e.peci^ ^here .ve^^ent,tllerfro^ldg,ng;,the,SA;i ,

ng,

^

.w^ou^prcoedent^para^

^l..oll.pd,: sere^#9^T^efore, we d« ^Meem, i^ecessary^

^^ t0 |he

fioath en , talea i6f a "Son of ear^ln the;pr0du^n of whicd he^s inex- ;lA^#»^i '*::iiiiii^

.subject,;,l f ;tbey^er8,afra,d,oM dies which can ^t be:ekplain^, because it ,Upn. ^^,the:sueceed1„^tory,a^s;t^iwa^no^

Tl,e:Mav ^? thc^o" -V P^ly .genial; ; " .V;;' . - ; .' ;! tWela,redeemer,^hesVpr^h^

¦- ¦¦ F# aS!&aM^^ief ^ulwa^nd

the ¦ab4..i

-,i^^^^7-tt,.tottl ;ooni- any detajls.cbncerning. this ihusical genius .., 2.^oini8e8^ of ;tKe ,finalitrium>hrq^dtliihigh pr^t had- not,rnflue^e en^

: ^a^Governor^iarresttJesus.ifv^^ | first glance.th atlErotestarit theologians have composer Haleyy.;; Musical organs/ especU; m ePWMW^^^ftew^' ^iimfluenp e enpu^^;have:him

cr^d

^ ally in- France; do him justi ce,: an^ co^^^¦

W?*»2fW*. ^e 'ohly. .Readily develop : their :finai victoryl^i

- i!^! ^.additiwis; by Heathen trauition to tU ^ish to add A few brief remarks; Jacques, ^tory tells. J. ^"W^^leastt.iwiien^fh-e^i l^ 0r_Israeb3e b^oXJes^; one might arrive at thelbi- ^^acH^s^iged-tMeav^aeriiwK^ 3. Promisea, concerning .the;Dayidiaiid@

; ^rusalenv^whsrereate the

^oitetoent at ]ow;ng prob(lbjft 8fcory :, Afc a tim6when tbe and that was ,his good fortune-and go :to ^tyT^nclT^H^^the most danj terdus ^ime ? The account I8

feiM dorninion had bo<JOni0 (,ppressive ih Paris; because then:it was almost impossible. filled in ,Hezekiah ,;«r , aCoor4mg to.;p riltoo improbable to db dtscusseo. ' Judea, and the hope.of shaking off the hated for.the Hebre w youth to rise to distinction ' ;>» Zerubahel ,. aniagain, ceor^ng^ ||What lis true of it? Ad lftHe as otie can jrQke was: very dim,: a fiery and Visionary under the oppressive burden of German- 6re' fchey a?e typical pi:JsrRetiiihd^il;B,faiwe||

oriticnl^Bcertain Hrora the NewTestamerit youth , froWth e' laboring clas*), whose name Prejudices against the Hebrew, and genius But there is no*propheoy:-bil ;' rebord:|toai^of what Je^ua .abtoally: did or; tfaid, isb im- . p Je8us of Naaare'th , rose in Galilee, and not fashioned according to their stereotyped : speaks of a redeemer or savior frort|t|i |fpossible is ft to aecer^ So Germany lost a dis- houso of Dayid. ; iwisj l^Testament that such a perion as Jesusi;of< 0f Jiomo and the corruption of the rulers of tin Bu ished son, and a thousand others from By an undue blending , of ;.theseid|| Ma»|

/ Nazareth ever lived, The people among the people v.;ho~suffered that shameful yoke tan same cause, and France.gained a star of andincoherentpropheoios tlielw^whom he is supposed to have 'lived—the; tn religion ho. attempted no chap^e,: but a, the first magnitude in the horizon of the of the Messiah were produced. Th^P(ictor|Jews—know nothing about it, and have nei- reform He opposed hypocrisy and cero- fin& arts- knows that . * ' y . J - i^M&Mij ier in their ^literature nor in their tradi- mbnial holiness. Re gained gronojb among "The Jew's soul is fori of melodies," an But take the third and; first ,q^«iw^iibnv a memgrial of him , although they for- his otfn 'cluss of people, especially in Gali- eminent criti c remarked on hearing Meyer- prophesies to],signify the ppUUcal respalfgot scarcely one of their martyrs who fell lee, where the doj ajnion of ' the Romans was Peer's Robert fqf the firs t time, This ls in, < tion of Israel ia Palostine, und^;,tt^ip|ii^|by th'e hands of the Romans. That the ac- hot firmly established. But when he car- deed a characteristic feature of Hebrew cal heab^^who is a king of tbe;-fiaviaW^3counts of Josephbs concerning Jesus and r;ed i his theories into Judea, the Romans composers. Harmony is the .' form, the nasty. That king is nowhere calJedr the'rliJohn are npuriou s is well known and gen- seized and crucified ' him as the pretending P^tio of music, and is reduced to laws; deomor or savior, nor can this in «i ^B|ter'allj admitted among the critics. The tal- king 'of the Jews, precisely as they did to melody is the free and seraphic .soul that bo called a religious doctrineJuotWithstaffldimudical notices amount to little or nothing; every enemy of Rome. The disciples fled baffles descri ption , and is too ethereal to be ing the opinion of certain rabbi's :©?because , in the first place, they speak of an- to different lands, and taught the doctrines chained in Kws. In poetry the most char- contrary. Suppose a man be a republioaiitother Jesus, one who was a cotempory of of their victimized master, viz : Judaism acteristicidistinction betwbeu Israel's and hy principle, and believes God did not aefc!Joshua bin Perachia , about 100 B. 0., and without the ceremonial law, and found a Grecian poets is decidedly the same; it is tine humanity to be always rilled bykid^lwas condemned for another crime; aritT, in large portion of the Heathen world pl;e- the idea in the former, ;and the {plastic or ' (on the contrary the republican ! form 'oflthe second place, it was not committed to pared to embrace the doctrines of Israel/ is form in the latter , which we admire. ; One government is that of the future Y arid^aattWriting before the fifth century after the connection , of course, with many of their psalm of Asaph's contains more truth than very man explain the Pronheoies to boU ^IChristian era. ^ own , and their legends, fables and myths , Homer's complete works; while Homer's views is he not ' man oi'"$$'What would we say of the ^iatenoe of with which th ey afterward sur-rounded the forms of poetry are the models of all past n^hw «,»,« u- "' I8 * * 9 nr -m0Zoroaster, if the Persian^ad no knowl- martyr, Jesus. In Judea. the lilo and death ig» ' Precisely the same is the case Ju re- S ft^*,?' SlSfedge thereof ; or of Confucius, if the Chi- of Jesus'attracted but little attention , but it liftion. , The Hebre w worships the idea and IS " * 1nese knew nothing, of uiin. Precisely the did the much more among the Gentiles, the ideal: the Gentile world clines to £)i« ' ^&J n w > .. , xiJ viiffil^

same is applicable to the existence of Jesus Finally, a new religion grew put of the plastic. 7 g

J6!' Pr" Eckmftn wel1 knows ^^W

of Nazareth . The Jews of' those days were strange mixture of Jewish doctrines and Who of the psychologists can exnlatn ^m 'uT^u"! the

:rep"b Vloa* thfgf

neithor an illitera^eople n^^^^^dark age, that so remarkable and exciting a n^^c^edXXuffi of their ^e^^ t«e hgislation of Moses, and

the-training

^^^fact as the life and miracles |f Jesus, ap- ligioni :That would not do-the Jews muat &nd drilling of the hation tor thirty-three R^h ^""M^on-ift' the air oslt ^9 ^obrding to the Evarigeliats, should have es- halve dQne it, or , at lenst ,,demanded it soiui . centuries in these laws, nrecents orA\. „.lu? ' . *v W t"1 ,he .c0me ^^l r *&W

?ped the attend of aU wrUers the.ip

^gPalcst^ ^ypt^byo^ and

not The spirit of tU

Hebrew race, hav - ^do, orhe giv s up king and king(|»siNor is it likely that - all being fanatics in- , harc| to prove this; but it is 'impossible to lnS been h«ld for centuries in slavish sub- *u would like to read ah arauiaentv?"^tentionaliy ignored him: the . writers of a prove more. jje ction, on being freed ogaih breaks forth EEf

1r 'Si:tl16 PeB,() 'f 6ut TfS