Among those who have no portion in the world to come is he who reads the books of the strangers, foreign books, books of outsiders. See also Sanhedrin, fol. 90, col. 1. Now Rav Yoseph says, “It is unlawful to read the Book of the Son of Sirach, ... because it is written therein (Ecclesiasticus xlii. 9, etc., as quoted, or rather misquoted, in the Talmud), ’A daughter is a false treasure to her father: because of anxiety for her he cannot sleep at night; when she is young, for fear she should be seduced; in her virginity lest she play the harlot; in her marriageable age, lest she should not get married; and when married, lest she should be childless; and when grown old, lest she practice witchcraft.’”
Sanhedrin, fol. 100, col. 2.
He who multiplieth wives multiplieth witchcraft.
Avoth, chap. 2.
Most donkey-drivers are wicked, but most sailors are pious. The best physicians are destined for hell, the most upright butcher is a partner of Amalek. Bastards are mostly cunning, and servants mostly handsome. Those who are well-descended are bashful, and children mostly resemble their mother’s brother. Rabbi Shimon ben Yochai bids us “kill the best of Gentiles” (modern editions qualify this by adding, in time of war), “and smash the head of the best of serpents.” “The best among women,” he says, “is a witch.” Blessed is he who does the will of God!
Sophrim, chap. 15, hal. 10.
On the Sabbath one may carry a grasshopper’s egg as a charm against earache, the tooth of a living fox to promote sleep, the tooth of a dead fox to prevent sleep, and the nail of one crucified (as a remedy) for inflammation or swelling. For cutaneous disorders he is to repeat Baz Baziah, Mass Massiah, Cass Cassiah, Sharlaii, and Amarlaii (names of angels), etc.... As the mules do not increase and multiply, so may the skin disease not increase and spread upon the body of N., the son of the woman N., etc.
Shabbath, fol. 67, col. 1.
“For night-blindness, let a man take a hair-rope and bind one end of it to his own leg and the other to a dog’s, then let children clatter a potsherd after him, and call out, ‘Old man! dog! fool! cock!’ Let him now collect seven pieces of meat from seven (different) houses; let him set them on the cross-bar of the threshold, then let him eat them on the town middens; and after that let him undo the hair-rope, then let him say thus: ’Blindness of So-and-so, son of Mrs. So-and-so, leave So-and-so, son of Mrs. So-and-so, and be brushed into the pupil of the eye of the dog.’” (Quoted from “The Fragment,” by Rev. W.H. Lowe of Cambridge.)
Gittin, fol. 69, col. 1.
According to the Rabbis, a man should not drink water by night, for thus he exposes himself to the power of Shavriri, the demon of blindness. What then should he do if he is thirsty? If there be another man with him, let him rouse him up and say, “I am thirsty;” but if he be alone, let him tap upon the lid of the jug (to make the demon fancy there’s some one with him), and addressing himself by his own name and the name of his mother, let him say, “Thy mother has bid thee beware of Shavriri, vriri, riri, iri, ri,” in a white cup. Rashi says by this incantation the demon gradually contracts and vanishes as the sounds of the word Shavriri decrease.