My soul, seek God at dawn
Judah ha-Levi
Early 12th Century
My soul, seek God at dawn, attend His house,
And set your song like incense before Him.
For if you run to try to trap Time’s vapors,
Mistaking his illusions for the truth,
And wander wayward, night and day behind him,
Loving lazy mornings after nights of pleasure—
Know that nothing really is your own
Except a tree whose boughs will one day wither.
Then be…
“My soul, seek God at dawn” by Judah ha-Levi is a nishmat, written for the prayer that begins “Nishmat kol hay” (“May the soul of every living being”); these poems often focus on the soul (“the breath”). “Time” here stands for worldly attachments. The poem closes with words that echo the opening words of Nishmat.
Related Guide
Early Medieval Liturgical Poetry (Piyyut)
Creator Bio
Judah ha-Levi
Born in either Toledo or Tudela, in al-Andalus (Muslim Spain), Judah ha-Levi later moved to Granada, where he became a physician and leading poet. For the better part of his life, ha-Levi was a highly successful member of the elite class of Andalusi Jewish courtier-rabbis, composing poems of unusual power and lyricism, and maintaining relationships with prominent figures of his day. He later wrote, in Arabic, a theological defense of Judaism known in Hebrew as the Kuzari. This work was completed around 1135, although there may have been a first draft already in 1125. It took the form of an imagined dialogue between the king of the Khazars, a historical figure known to have converted to Judaism, and another figure, a stand-in for Judah ha-Levi himself. At a certain point, ha-Levi repudiated certain aspects of his Jewish courtly life and decided, perhaps as an act of piety, to travel to Palestine. He made the voyage in the very last year of his life, and spent most of that year in Egypt, but he seems to have devised a first plan to do so a decade earlier. It is possible that he reached Palestine. In the early summer of 1141, his ship left Egypt, and the voyage would have been only about a week or so. By the late summer, however, he was dead.