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Updated: June 5, 2025
"It's taking away with the left hand what you gave us with the right," added De Haan, with infinite sadness. "I had thought better of you, Mr. Leon." "But you got a good many twopences back," murmured Raphael. "It's the future profits that we're losing," explained Schlesinger.
"But you don't look at it fairly," argued De Haan, whose Talmudical studies had sharpened wits already super-subtle. "Whatever it has cost us, it would have cost as much more if we had had to pay our editor, and it is very unfair of you to leave that out of account." Raphael was overwhelmed.
They were eight in number, three of whom, including Gillis van Ledenberg, lodged at the house of Daniel Tressel, first clerk of the States-General. The leaders of the Barneveld party, aware of the purport of this mission and determined to frustrate it, contrived a meeting between the Utrecht commissioners and Grotius, Hoogerbeets, de Haan, and de Lange at Tressel's house. Grotius was spokesman.
"That's vat I say," cried Pinchas. "If I set up this office, I can be your publisher too. Ve must do things business-like." "Nonsense, nonsense! We are our own publishers," said De Haan. "Our clerks will send out the invoices and the subscription copies, and an extra office-boy can sell the papers across the counter." Sampson smiled in his sleeve. "All right.
He did not return till November 6, but all the time he was in active correspondence with his party in Holland, at whose head were the three pensionaries of Rotterdam, Leyden and Haarlem De Groot, Hoogerbeets and De Haan.
Several of us here knew him well in Olov Hasholom times, but he is become so grand and rarely shows himself at the Holy Land League Meetings. He can help us a lot if he will." "Oh, I'm sure he will," said Raphael. "That's good," said De Haan, caressing his white beard. Then growing gloomy again, he went on, "On page 5 you have a little article by Gabriel Hamburg, a well-known Epikouros."
We must redress the balance. We must plead the cause of the People against the Few." Raphael's breast throbbed with similar hopes. His Messianic emotions resurged. Sugarman's solicitous request that he should buy a Hamburg Lottery Ticket scarcely penetrated his consciousness. Carrying the copy of the poster, he accompanied De Haan to Gluck's.
"I'm sure my wife would be glad to give you any information." "Of course, of course," said Gradkoski, soothingly. "You will get the obituaries sent in of themselves by the relatives." Raphael's brow expressed surprise and incredulity. "And besides, we are not going to crack up the same people as the other papers," said De Haan; "otherwise we should not supply a want.
"You've done so much damage to orthodoxy that we don't know whether to go on with the paper." "You're joking," murmured Raphael. "I wish I was," laughed De Haan bitterly. "But you astonish me." persisted Raphael. "Would you be so good as to point out where I have gone wrong?" "With pleasure. Or rather with pain," said De Haan.
"But that's advertisements," muttered Raphael. "The part surest to be read! The very first line of the paper is simply shocking. It reads: "Death: On the 59th ult., at 22 Buckley St., the Rev. Abraham Barnett, in his fifty-fourth " "But death is always shocking; what's wrong about that?" interposed little Sampson. "Wrong!" repeated De Haan, witheringly. "Where did you get that from?
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