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Bible Encyclopedias
Ya'aleh
The 1901 Jewish Encyclopedia
The introductory hymn prefixed to the seliḥot which follow the evening service proper of the Day of Atonement (comp.
"Let our Z ascend from eventide, And our Y approach from morning, And our X appear till eventide."The verbs are drawn from the prayer "Ya'aleh weyabo we-yeraeh," etc., specially inserted before the three concluding benedictions of the "'Amidah" (see
A fine eighteenth-century melody for "Ya'aleh" has been preserved as a general setting through its adaptation by Isaac Nathan in 1815 to Lord Byron's verses "The Harp the Monarch Minstrel Swept," which was published, with pianoforte accompaniment, in the "Hebrew Melodies," issued in that year. The melody as now usually sung is somewhat less elaborate than in Nathan's version. It has been traditional in the Great Synagogue, London, since 1750 at least, and is well known on the Continent also. Its expressive swing had made it widely known and treasured in connection with the Atonement hymn even before it received a further appreciation from the fascination with which it appealed to Louis Lewandowski, the premier synagogue musician of his generation. In his "Todah w'Zimrah" (Berlin, 1876) he not only includes it with its original text for the service of the Day of Atonement (vol. ii., No. 94), but he has set it also to the chief hymn chanted by the ḥazzan in the "dew" and "rain" supplications on the Passover and Tabernacle festivals (see
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Singer, Isidore, Ph.D, Projector and Managing Editor. Entry for 'Ya'aleh'. 1901 The Jewish Encyclopedia. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​tje/​y/yaaleh.html. 1901.