(Attributed to Nathan of Gaza). Chemdath Yamim ["Delight of Days: Kabbalistic homilies through the year"]

AUCTION 51 | Thursday, June 23rd, 2011 at 1:00
Fine Judaica: Printed Books, Manuscripts Graphic & Ceremonial Art Including: The Alfonso Cassuto Collection of Iberian Books, Part II

Back to Catalogue Download Catalogue

Lot 229
(KABBALAH)

(Attributed to Nathan of Gaza). Chemdath Yamim ["Delight of Days: Kabbalistic homilies through the year"]

Four parts in two volumes. Titles in red and black within typographic and textual borders. Printed on thick paper with wide margins ff.109; 128, (1); 96 (i.e. 97) [ff.4-8 bound out of sequence; duplicate of f.81]; 103 [ff.29-32 bound out of sequence]. Light stains, a few old tape repairs, some wrinkling. Contemporary half-calf, rubbed; Vol. II starting. 4to Vinograd, Venice 1963

Venice: n.p. 1763

Est: $600 - $900
PRICE REALIZED $550
Rarely has a single book generated such extreme controversy as the anonymously penned Chemdath Yamim. There are those who cannot lavish enough praise on the book’s superior literary style and content, which is held to be conducive to sincere piety. At the other extreme, there are those, especially in the Aschkenazic community, who regard the book with suspicion, viewing it as the illegitimate brainchild of some lingering post-Sabbatian elements. Suspected within the text are cryptic references to the supposedly fallen “Messiah” that found their way past internal rabbinic censorship. Nonetheless, the Chemdath Yamim became a favorite within the Sephardic literary world and no warnings of the anti-Sabbatian R. Jacob Emden could wean Sephardic Jewry away from this literary masterpiece. Chemdath Yamim first appeared in Izmir in 1732 and then Constantinople in 1735. The present third edition is the most sumptuous. See I. Zinberg, A History of Jewish Literature, Vol.V (1974), pp. 151-60