My First Two Thousand Years; the Autobiography of the Wandering Jew
β Scribed by Viereck, George Sylvester; Eldridge, Paul
- Book ID
- 109801186
- Publisher
- Sheridan House, Inc.
- Year
- 1928
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 339 KB
- Series
- The Wandering Jew 1
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
My first, my incomparable love! Mary! What can existence mean to me now? You were dearer and more precious to me than the very breath of my nostrils. My life was ecstasy. I had found the perfect friendship of John, andyou! I was happy beyond all mortals! I dreamed of a love untouched by jealousy, cruelty, selfishness. I dreamed of a Paradise infinitely more beautiful than Eden. And nowboth of you are bewitched by this pseudo-prophet! Jesus dragged his feet slowly. The cross, toppling to one side, beat lightly against his side. Suddenly he fell. I bent to lift him. He looked at me, but beckoned to one of the soldiers, saying in faulty Latin: Help me, Roman! I was white with anger. Jesus staggered to his feet. Tauntingly I muttered: Where are your followers? Where is your father in Heaven, you fool? All have forsaken you. Go on! Go faster! Go to your self-chosen doom! Jesus turned around and looked at me. All meekness had vanished from his face, now ablaze with anger. I will go, but thou shalt tarry until I return. As Isaac, or Cartaphilus, as he preferred to be known, watched family and friends grow old and die while he retained his youth, he came to understand the meaning and full import of Jesus pronouncement. Wandering through different lands and down the centuries, he met and influenced the people, and witnessed the events that would shape the modern world. And his wandering soon became the pursuit of the elusive and incomparable Salome, and the secret of Unendurable Pleasure Indefinitely Prolonged My First Two Thousand Years is not for the faint of heart. The authors take no prisoners; repeatedly demonstrate that they hold absolutely nothing sacred; and constantly drive home the point that all of our historical figures and grand institutions are first, foremost, and above all elsehuman. Note: The cover shown is from the 1956 abridged paperback edition, but the text is full and unabridged (from a clothbound edition).
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
βMy first, my incomparable love! Mary! What can existence mean to me now? You were dearer and more precious to me than the very breath of my nostrils. My life was ecstasy. I had found the perfect friendship of John, andβyou! I was happy beyond all mortals! I dreamed of a love untouched by jealousy,
Two thousand years ago, trade routes and the fall of Jerusalem took Jewish settlers seeking sanctuary across Europe and Asia. One little-known group settled in Kerala, in tropical southwestern India. Eventually numbering in the thousands, with eight synagogues, they prospered. Some came to possess v